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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-12-30 - Orange Coast Pilot1-• WllllS • '1 trait . •· _ount1an • Another Oil Tanker Threatens to Spill THURSDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 30, 1976 vol. "· NO >O. J SECTIOfllS, 70 l'AGIES ----- II '· ' r ' • f 'Mosteller • • Jury: 1 ' I ~ Manslaughter~ • 3 .Killed, · I 2 Injured Traffic Bottled Up I Drinking· 'Binge' Defense I f ( D.oly ~le4 -""'"4• SWIMS STRAITS Lynne Cox f Los Alamitos fGirl Swims • 1 Icy Straits SAl'\JTIA<;O Chll1• r \P 1 ~ Lynne Co'< <if Los Alam1lo'> ; has becl)m<' lhE' f1r~t pt•r:-on ever to swim lht• 1n Strait.., nf Magellan. Chilean net,1,c,papcr" reported tod a~ Chilean nal1onal rad111 r<•port ed that lhe 19 year-old l T SantJ Barbara studC'nt from Ornn~e County swam t he straits W<'fln<•s- day in one hnu r. two rmnul<'.., Temperature 1n I he water" were reported al44 6dC's:rees It w as not certain which course she took in the strait._, which rangl' from two.and-a- half lo four miles in width The straits separate Tierra del F\.tego Island from the southern- most tip or South America. The Chilean news agency Orbe said the crossing was made at a point called Primera Angosluro, north of the city or Punta Arenas. Orbe said a Chilean navy launch was provided as a s up- port vessel. Miss Cox has previous ly t made chann«?I swims to Santa Catalina Island and has crossed the English Channel. Fake Money Ring Cracked SAN FRANCISCO <APl - Federal agents say they have cracked a counterfeiting rlna that was printing and passing $100 bllh in the San Francisco Penins ula area during the Oadltmu1boppin1 seuoa. E1Pt persons w~ arrested and about. Sl00,000 in counterfeit $100 bills were confiscated, Secret Service atent Dick Cameron re· JIOfted Wednesday. "W•feel this ta &he whole opera· lion... Ca1beron sa1d. In Wreck Three persons were killed and two others c ritically injured Wednesday in a headoo collision or two lightweight pickup trucks on Ortega Highway. A coroner's report identified those killed in the headon col lis1on about 11 miles east of San Juan Capistrano as -~llnda Diane Cordero, 24, of 26712 Avenue Shonlo, Mission Vie JO -Greg Thom as Tnllls, 16, or 9882Teresa Ave., Anaheim. -James Cruse, 17. or 1221 E Walnut St . Lompoc Two c riti ca ll y inj ure d tef'nagers now in Misston Com- munHy Hospital have been 1den· Wied as Thomas Cruse, 17. or the Lompoc address, and Samuel Robert Koutroulth. 16, of Quebec. Canada. According t o a California Highway Patrol spokesman. the two Cru!>e boys. brothers or Mrs. Cordero. ~ere passengers m the pickup truck she was dnvmJ( eastbound on Ort<>ga Highway at 9 45 a.m Koutroulis was a passenger in the westbound pickup dnven by Truhs About a mile west of San Juan Hot Springs, the Trulis vehicle app arently c rosi>ed over the center line and colhded headon with Mrs. Cordero's eastbound pickup, the CH P spokesm an said Cause of the triple falaJ acci- dent Is stlll under mvest.JgatJOn. Leaders Released MADRID CAP ) -Santiago Carrillo, secr etary-general o( Spain's outlawed Communist party, and seven other party leaders were released on baH from prison today. Their arrest eight days ago drew wide con- demnation from European Je/- llist.s and touched off violent pro- tests at home. Food Plea Rejected LOS ANGELES <AP) - Shei.ff'• deputies have re- fused pleas from a recent San Quentib parolee lo pl"O- vide food for him and his hosta1e wile. Lafayette Prultl, 3.S, has been barricaded in the up. atalu porl\on of hla two-bed.room wmowbroolc area home for two days. Re has resisted allemp\4 by officers, tncludtng • SWAT team, to either C:lJ>' ture him or talk him lnto •urreodtiinf. O.llr l'li.t StaH """'• Traffic on the southbound San Diego Freeway at Junipero Serra Road in northern San Juan Capistrano was backed up for a lmost two hours early today when the cab of a double truck and tra1ler rig owned by Oda Nursery of Westminster blew a tire. causing the rear unit to nip on its sid e across three lanes . The California Highway Patrol ca ll ed a SigAlert and divert<'d t raffic until the ~ was cleaned up. One occupant of the truck cab sustained minor cuts. but there were no other injwies .in the 7:30 a.m. mishap. CH P officers said . Off Puerto Rico Another Tanker Threatens Spill From AP Dispatches Tug boats were talcing fuel of( a Liberian tanker which ran aground on the southern coast of Puerto Rico in hopes of refloating the vessel. a spokesman for the Commonwealth Oil Refining Co. -CORCO aid. There was no immediate danger of an oil spill from the 735-foot Daphne which hit soft cor- al Tuesday night near the en- trance of the Guayannilla Bay, authoriliessaid Wednesday. The tanker carries 400,000 bar· rels oflighl c rude oil. "A part of the crude will be taken off the tanker, and then an attempt will be made lo refloat it,"t.beCORCOspokesmansaid. The crude was bought from Algeria to be processed at the CORCO refinery. Coast Guard personnel were in Guayanilla to keep an eye on tug boats taking fuel off the vessel, the U.S. Coast Guard said. In other on spUl cases: -Pledging lo put ''fly-by-night foreign operators on notice," a federal attorney obtained the &r· rest of the captain of a Liberian· registered tanker that spilled 133,500 gallons of oil into the Delaware Rl ver. · U.S . mars hals We dnesd ay aboard the lanker Olympic Games. docked by the BP. Inc , refinery at Marcus Hook, 15 miles south of Philadelphia. He was charged with violating U.S. antipollution laws by dis- c harging petroleum into a waterway and falling to im- mediately notify authorities of the discharge. He later was fre«t on bail. After Vlis m as' arrest, U.S. Al· ty. David Marston said, "It's <See SPILLS, Page A2l Progress '77 Tell,s Future Of Ecorwmy Continued rapid growth and in· duslrial di versification make Orange County a bright spot in the naUoo during 1976. Today's Daily Pilot brings an armchair look al the successes or 1976 and the predictions for 1977 made by area firms and unJts of government. A New York investigation con· PROGRESS '77 is a 44-page tlnued i nto wby a secood macuine prepared'° briog you IJberian lanker unleaahed one of up to dat.e on the st.te ol the bl.atory's worst oil 1pills off Nan· Oran1e Coast economy and the tucket Island. outlook for the coming year. The epl11 from a third Liberian It'• a apeclal ecUtion you'll W\ker wu beln1 cleaned up If' want to share with friends and eonn.ctJcut. . auociatea. VuWoe VU1mu. a G .... na-~ for PROGRESS '77 in tlonal, wu taken. tato cust.ody,,.!_Y 1. ~:·•,:ally Pilot. 1974 Postal Hike of 2 c Said Illegal WASHINGTON CAP> -A federal appeals court has ruled th al f~rst-class postage rates were increased illegally m 1974 when they were raised from 8 cents to lO cents. But the U.S. Court o( Appeals took no action to roll back the rate, which has since been increased to 13cents. The same m ethod used as the basis (or the 1974 increase was used to support the latest rate hike. The National AssociaUon or G~ting Card Publishers, which c.hallenged the 1974 increase, is also contesting the jump to 13 cents in a separate case pending before the appeals court. The court ruled that the ill· creaae lo 10 cents was not legal because usel'll of fhi1l-claas mail bore more than their shate or postal costs under the plan. The Postal Rate Commission justified the 1974 increase oo the grounds that raising first-etas" rates would not discourage use of the mails at1 much as rwing rates for the other three classes or mall, the appeals court said. The law re· quires each class of postal service lo bear its own cost, the court said. The commission recommends rate lrlcreases to the U.S. Postal Service. Commission ~llorneys con- lmded there was nothing lrl the deeiaioo to •t.ov the commission from utUnt rates ba&ed on other met.bod&. They said no decision bas been made on whether to ap- peal the court 's,,-uling to the U.S. Supreme Court. MOlft mall ..... cards aod letters -is sent first-class. An Orange County Superi~ Court jury decided Wednesd that Charles Edward Mostellet 53, committed voluntar manslaughter, not murder la May when he fired four buUeti into the head of a Costa Mes~ woman. i The stocky d efendant wa~ gripped b y frenzied sneezin~t when the jury decided on thev manslaughter conviction rather. than the second degree murdet'J ~~ict sought by . the prosecu-· 1 So. as Judge Fran k Domenkhini set Jan. 27 as the date he will sentence Mosteller. he also ordered a jail doctor's call for the convicted man. f Sneering fits aside, as the jurors l e ft the courtroom Mosteller thanked them for theil"f verdict. During his three-week trial, the jury heard and saw audio and video tapes of bis con/ession to police that he killed Shirley Mae Forman, 44. at her Costa Mesa home. And when he tes tified. Mosteller s aid he "must h ave killed her <Mrs Forman) because there was no one else. around." But his defense ccnlere~ around diminished capacity, ~ failure lo realize what he was d<>4. ing because of the effects or a: JO.day drinking binge. Mosteller testified that he ha~ drawn money from the bank thf" day of the killing and hac:t: purchased more liquor to con- tinue what for him was a 30-daY: lost weekend. Or:::e~7 C~a~t Weather Mostly cloudy with 80 percent chance of rain Fri· day. Highs near 60, lows in ' low sos. INSIDE TODA~ l1aiu1 .are 1hak:iftg long- ftand.ing spedal rtJatioruhip , between U.S •. and Caaodc. S«Oftd of th rte . articU1 . ap. pearaonA7. Index OAILV PILOT s Thur•d•y. December JO. 1976 ""' l•flnpl>olo LONG-VACANT MAZDA BUILDING REPORTEDLY SOLD TO OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM " Auto Mam Mum on s.te Prtce, But Whole FaeHfty'and Gtounde Were on Block . Occiden ta l ~.Mazda Buy ·confirmed T he Occiden tal Petroleum • Company is purchasing the long- • vacant Mazda Motors building in Irvine, sources confirmed Wed- nesday. Bruce Brusseau, president of Newport Nation al Company, verified that t he sale is in pro- gress and that escrow is expected to close shortly after the first of · Januarv. Although Brusseau confirmed · reports of the s ale, officials al both com panies 1nvolve<Jdechned to offer anything but "no com- ment" when a:.kcd about the deal Wednesday. The Mazda building is located · just off the San Diego 1''rceway. at Von Karman Avenue and Main Street. Brusseau. who served as broker for Mazda Motors, declined to re- veal the purchase price, but said the petroleum company is buying the four-story building, the entire parcel and the furnastungs within the building. Mazda Motors originally was asking $9 million for t he 166,600 squa r e foot st r ucture, plus $736,000for the furnishings. According to Brusseau, a sub- sidiary of the parent Occidental Petroleum Company will take oc· cupancy sometime during the firstquartero( 1977. i "Then, they expect lo build out on the rest of the property." the ' brokersaid. \ When the rotary enJtine auto '.company o r igin ally buill the , building, com pany officials ex- pected lo cons truct twin warehouses at the rear of the pro- perty. Brusseau said the subsidary company that will occupy the site is consid ered light industry. thereby satisfying the city's r e-l quirements. When construction began on the .Mazd a building several years ' ago, the auto company was at the . peak of its sales drive with its new f rotary engme. However, a fter sales began to lag the firm decided against mov· ing into the glass-wa lled building. Qfficials a lso decided against corulrucling the two warehouses. Gun P ermit s Chief's Work SAN FRANCTSCO CAP) -The city attorney has adV1scd Pobc(! Ouef Charles Gain that he 1s not bound by a ban on handfun sales that the Board of Perrrut Appeals wants to impose an San Francisco. In a four-page lettrr, Thomas M. O'Connor adv1sro Garn to "ex ercise your discretion" on each application. On Dec. 8, the board attempted to restrict local sales d pi11tols by voting 4 to l to overrule Gain's Is- s uance of a handgun to a Markel Street pawnbroker. A board of- (iclal said all future applications would be bandied lhesame way. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ""'°'-(A..o" 0•11• I'll«"""'~~·,·­,..,...., ,._, JU-n Pr~\. I' OV&ifl~ bot tn.OrN'loQI" (a.int PuDh Vh"O CoMcMtf'I¥ 5iifo,w •f41 fld1h1""1 ~" - r-tttt.UVod Mft"(j•v ''"°"1t" ~,..,.., tor <~•• HtA\•, ..... DOf1 lee<•. HYf'ilf'IQltft" 8-~"'/f'."OUft IJtJ1' Y•tk'r. lfVl1t•. kHl•o.< .. V•""'" t1t"Ct 1..,.....1Wo<h/Solll~GM\I A-•-1r<11 1...,,. " o-AMl'1Wd S.t"4'01¥" -.. ~•n Tf\• IW''"'"'°"'' oiwbff\lllf'WI """'' .. -' 1JQ ""'"' e,., )l•eort. c.o. .......... C•ll-ti.i... 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"I'm glad I didn't get a BCD Defense Still Claims Heir Aided Kidnap One of John Scudder 's ac- cused kidnapers contmued to in- sist Wednesday that thc L<iura Scudder food heir was a walling participant in his own kidnap1n~ lut August. Accor din g to <14 year -old William D. Wesson's testimony, the potato chip-peunut butter heir was to receive $125,000 of the $250,000 ransom. But Wesson, a former Corona de l Mar bank manager, ad· milted he could give no plausi- ble reason for Scudder allegedly abandoning the kidnap plot in midstream and claiming to be a legitimate kidnap victim. Battered and bleeding, the 64-year-old Balboa Island man fought his way to frC'edom as the motor home in which he was im prisoned 90 minutes traveled on a Fountain Valley thoroughfare. The next day, Wesson and his brother-in-Jaw, Ricki Dale Sellers, 21. were arrested and charged with kidnapmg. Wesson insisted in his testimony in Judge Richard Beacom 's courtroom that the food heir helped plan and tarry out the bungled kidnap ploy and was never in any real danger. As a matter of fact, Wesson said, he, Sellers and Scudder planned to picnic in Fl'athcrly Park while waiting for Mr~. Valarie Scudder to collect the ransom money. lnstead. Wesson s:lHI, ht' and Sellers spent the night 1>h1vcnng an ldyllwild whale apparl·ntly trying lo figure out what went wrong with th e a r $250,000 scheme With a touch or pnde IO has voice, Wesson dl•scn bed the elaborate planning that went in to the kidnap plot. "Total realism, that's what we were after. total realism,' Wesson said as he discussed lh1• ill fated caper. Fo~Jt R~nU•t• 'I j ust opened my wallet and there she was,· quipped comedian Redd Foxx as he s t ood in the m arriage license line in Las Vegas with hls 34-year-old bride-lo- be Yun Chi Chung. Foxx, 54, said on Wednesday they would probably lie the knot today, but didn 't know where. It will be his third marriage, her second. (bad conduct discharge). I was worried about that," said Cpl. E.F. Henry. 20, one of 13 black Marines accused in the incident. One was granted immunity in ex- change for testimony. Hen ry pleaded g uilty We<ines- day to conspiracy and assault t'harges, telling a special court. martial that he and the other blacks thought they were attack- ing a ~rour>o£ Ku KluxKlanmem- tx>rs. lie was the first to face trial in lhe case The Marine Corps is ex- \lt'Cted to announce next week whether the other 11 will be tried. Henry's atto rney, Capt. Stephen F. Biegenzahn. told re- porters he considered the penalty "an appropriate sentence." lie • had told the jury that his client re- allied the presence of lhe KKK did not1ustify the assault. The black M arincs were charged with aggrava ted assault and conspiracy after they al- legedly bcal t he whiles with clubs and stabbed t he m w i t h screwdrivers. Five of the victims were hospitalized for periods of at least two days. One man is still in the hospital. Henry, of Ivanhoe, N.C., said he used only his closed fist. Prosecutors accepted his plea of guilty to reduced charges of sim- ple assault and conspiracy. Henry' said he and the other blacks h ad a "little misun- derstanding" about which room lhe KJansmen were in. lie told the judge the incident began when he and the other blacks "agreed lo go over and jam (beat up> the Ku Klux Klan."'' They set out for another barracks and chose the particular room because "we heard a Jot or noise; there was a party going on," Henry said . When the whites answered the knock at the door, ''we all rushed 111." Henry said . Henry said he doesn't mind servin g t ime in confinement because "at least I'm still in the Marine Corps." Jn addition to the demotion a nd the sentence, his pay was cut by $150 a month for four months. Bicgenzahn said he Introduced <'V1dence about the Klan to show "1t did exist: it was at Camp Pendleton." Ile said it was "the kmd of thing that would stir a young black man, especially one rrom North <;arolina, to rage." /\t the sentencing hearing, the df'fensc called Pk Dennis L. Campbell Jr .. a n admitted KKK member. Campbell, who said he was third-ranked of about 20 Klansmen at Camp Pendleton, tcsWied that about five of the members lived near the Marines who were attacked. An investigation turned up a <'ache of weapons and white supremacy literature near the room invaded. The names of 16 KKK m em bers we re found on the material, and 12 were transferred to other bases. F rona P age A l SPILLS ••• high time we take decisive action lo put these fly-by-night foreign operators . on notice that they have to m eet higher standard!l.'' Mari;ton said the charges, bo\h misdemeanors, carry a m ax- imum penalty of two years in prison and a fine of s12.soo. In New York, the captaindthe tanker Argo Merchant said in federal court that his ship was being n avtgated with out-of-date !'lea-curTenl charts when it. ran aground this m onth and cracked open off Nantucket Island. That g roundin g led to a huge spill, 7.6 million gallons, now slowly breaking up and drifting away from land in the North AUantic. Official& In Connecticut Raid moel of the 2,000 gallons spilled into the Thames River by the Oswego P eace on Friday had been contained by boom11, but the remaJndu had coaled rocb and waterfowl down8lream. They said the c leanup ~hou.ld be com- plete by the end of this week.. China 'Chaos' Ends, Officials Report HONG KONG (Al') -Chin e troops have put an end to "great chaos" spread by supporters of the purged widow df Mao 'fae.. tung in the city or Baoding, about 100 miles southwest of Peking, according to official and foreign news reports from China. The reports. wruch spoke ot bombings and armed raids by the rebels, did not make clear when the antigovemment WB· turbances occurred. A Dec. 20 issue of Peking's People's Daily newspaper ob- tained her e said the armed bands in Baoding had been "threaten· mg the security of Peking so that they could usur p the party power" and were suppressed by army troops. A Hopeh provincial radio re- port quoted by the London Daily Telegraph loday said it took a "concerted effort" by the army to restore order after a long period of "confusion" in the city, the provincial capital. patch from Petlnc t od ay, "RepOrt.I reaching Peking say that armed groups supporting the ouated 'Ganc of Four' and op· J*lng Hua robbed banks, raided ammunition factories, eraln storea and st1op'8, hijacke d military vebicle1 and blew up factories in 'the cfty./'. The reports sajd the rebels sabot.aged comrnunlcalions and rail lines, raped and hid caches of arms a nd ammunition, she wrote . The army was ordered lo shut down "gang" bases in .Baodtni:. the capital or Peking's surround· ing Hopeh Province, the report s aid. It said the government or- dered the rebels to disband and hand over their weapons and am- munition or face ''severe punish· ment." The Morning Herald's story said the People's Daily, the Chinese Communist party newspaper, was among the ~ources for the reports. ""' Wl1""°to FIGHTI N IN CHINA Faction s Take Up Arms The Sydney <Australia) Morn- ing Herald's China correspon- dent also reported the Ilaoding disturbances. The Telegraph's Peking cor- respondent, Nigel Wade, noted that foreign travelers reported as early as last spring that radical opponents of the I lopeh provin- cial leadership in Baocling had broken into an a rmory, blown up f actories and committed murder . rape and robbery. Mesa Cat Crippled By Gift Pellet Gun The Baoding disclosures were the latest in a s eries of reports of disturbances directed against the regime of Chairman llua Kuo-feng and s aid to have been fomented by rad1<·al followers of Mao's widow, Chiang Ching, and her associates in the .. Gang of Four." The disorders are believed to have been most widespread in late summer and fall. T he Sydney Morrung Herald's Yvonne Preston wrote in a dis - A youth with a pellet gun shot and paralyzed a family cal 1n Costa Mesa Wednesday, in one of a series or ill egal shootings m the city within a 24 hour period. PoLice would not speculate on whether or not the shootings arc related to children with new Christmas guns, but at least four incidents were reported lo police Tuesday a nd Wednesday. Mary Ann P hillips, or 258 Ce-cil Place, told police her neighbors saw a youth approach her cal and shoot it twice with a pellet gun Wednesday morning. ~QUALITY TELEVISION ShE> said her C3t was paralyzed by a pellet in the spine and was to undergo surgerytoday. In unot hc r incident, a man called to report a boy ma s triped shirt s hooting <it birds in the Estancia Hills with a pellet rifle Wednesday afternoon. A resident told police he heard a gunshot near Orange Avenue and Broadway about 10 p.m. Tuesday night, and another C~ta Mesa re· s ident reported hearing shots fired on West 18th Street at about 2:JOp.m. Wednesday. GET THE BOWL GAMES & PARADES IN GREAT COLOR dLLnE?~l':H HEW 1977 100% SOLID STdTE (IHllOMA<tOlOI II 23,, CONS OLE COLOR TV diagonal T~ Tiie IAlflMOllE-HJUU Handsome Transitional styloo full base console. Casters 8eau11fully finished 1n simulated AnhQue Oak w11h the look of lino distressing. AFC. CALL FOR PRICING 13' 1 Versatile, Compact Dl~-'L Color TV TI..MAUIU H IJIOC Our most compact portable with 100% Solld·Slare Chassis with Power Sentry. Brd ll a nt 11 0 O.romacolor In-Line Picture Tube. Solid-State Tuning System. Ebony color cabinet. F~ ELECTRONIC VIDEO GUARD TUNING SYSTEM No moving pMs to wear out anr1 no conlact p0in1s 10 corrode 1n the tuners. Designed lo be lhe most dependable. most !>cns111vo tuning system in Zenith history. 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LaBelle, 20, was ordered to ap- pear in Superior Court Jan. 12 for arraignment at the conclusion of a municipa l court preliminary hearing. Sufficient evidence exists to ho ld LaBe lle to a ns wer at the higher court level, Judge Ken· netb L. Sutherland declared. Multiple cha rges we re riled against La Belle following the Nov. 30 aerial ra mpage which spanned t wo hours and ended when he landed his Cessna at the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Sta- lJon. Thursday. December 30. 1978 DAil Y PILOT AS Regional Share Suit to Force Smog Fight Aid Attorney Gen er a l E ve lle Younger today asked the state Supreme Court to force regional agencies to s ha re the costs of a new state-m andated regional alr pollution control district. The outcome of the suit will af - fect Orange and Los Angeles Counties. Both ha ve held up fund· mg for the new s mog district. 'Los An ge l es Co un ty Super visors voted to withhold $2.3 million from the new agency and Orange County Supervisors are withholrung $550,000. The new d istrict. expected to begin operation Feb. 1, will set regional air quality policies for Los Angeles. Ora nge, Riverside and San Bernardino Counlles. viroomental Protection A&ency could withho ld $1.2 m fllion per year gr ant earmarked for the regional s mog board. U the court decides to bear the case , a preliminary order could be lssued by mid-January. ac· cording to Deputy Attorney General Marc Mihaly.· Americas Cup Foes Seek Space He was armed with a shotgun throughout. The r ed-hai re d Cal State Umversity Long Beach student will only be tried for one count of grand theft of an airplane and three counts of flying recklessly in such a manner as to endanger hves and property. MISSION VIEJO F 0 •"• P1101 Sutl Photo LOAT GOES TOGETHER , PETAL BY PETAL BLOSSOM BY BLOSSOM Communtty's A rst, County's Only Entry Readied In Sa~ Gabriel Valley Tent Los A ngeles Coun t y Supervisors contend that the de- sign of the new dis trict is unfair. They point out that they are ex· pected to pay 70 percent or the funding, yet have only two of the 10 votes on the board. N EWPORT, R .1. (AP ) - J ockeying for prize Newport-area dock space and Hving quarters already has begun among com- petitors in the 1977 America's Cup yacht r aces. Truck broker -rancher Elmer Dickenson, of La keland, Fla., the plane's owner , testified he never gave La Belle permission to fly it. Viejo to Pedal Petals On the existing regional smog board, Los Angeles supervisors have four of the eight votes. The supervisors contend that if the s tate wa nts to c ha nge the makeup of the board it should fund the new body. The heavily financed Swedish entry, the 12-meter Sverige, re· portedly will bypass local sttip. yards for a be rth at J amestown, a neighboring N arragansett Bay island. Hundreds of horrified watchers on the ground witnessed the stu- dent pilot's maneuvers and low level nights over both Long Beach and Seal Beach as he new as low as25 feet. Wunty's Only Float Saih to Rose Bowl Because of the r efusal to participat e in fundiqg by both re· gional groups, the federal En· Howe ver, the Swedish team will stay in Newport at Ham- mersmith Jo'arm, home of Mrs. Hugh D. Auchincloss. mother of J acqueline Kennedy Onassis. Long Beach Police Officer George llanania testified LaBelle buzzed his patrol car at such a low altitude twice that the patrolman dove for cover under a Naples district bridge The police helicopter and the plane almost collided twice in the air , accord mg to testJmony. Defense Attorney William Began cited a variety of factors su ch as LaBel le's broken roma nce, a heavy CSULR class schedule and Job problems in talk· ing with news me n a fterward. The defendant's father, Ernie LaBelle, former executive direc- tor of the Long Beach Chamber of Commerce, s at hy his son in the courtroom. Cancer Group Backs 'Slims' Tennis Event HOLLYWOOD, Fla <AP) Am erican Cancer Society of· fic1als say at 's t oo late to cancel a local chapter 's plans to hold a benefit night at a tennis tourna- ment sponsor ed by a tobacco company The group 1s sellmg 50 tickets t o the J an I I round of the V1rgm1a Sltms tenrus tour The t our 1s sponsored by the Ptuhp Morris Tobacco Co By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of the O•lly Pilot Sutt Stepping through the door of the im mense blue and yellow circus tent at Fiesta Floats, the first sensation that registers 1s a powerful, pleasing scent of pine and fres h flowers. The second im pression is of ac- tivity -lots of bustling, fcvensh and youthful activity that has some how be en controlled and channeled into creal!V1ty. Down near the far end of the San Gabriel Valley company's floral assem bly line, next to Kodak's colorful display of but- terflies and arching trees, 1s a rather unique float. It is unique because it is Mis- sion Viejo's first entry in the an nual T o urn a m e nt of Roses Parade a nd because it is the only float repres enting an Orange County city or com munity t his year. Riding on this creation amidst the chrysan the mums, carna· tions, orchids, roses, greenery and hanging baskets will be Brian Goodell, the community's Olympic gold medal winner. Wednesday a fternoon, t he tedious, painstaking job or cover· ing every square inch of the Mis· sion Viejo float's frame was a lit· Ue behind schedule. But the 80 youngsters from Mission Viejo High School who had volunteered their tame were deter m ined to get the job done "We're behind a bit becau!>e we haven't gott en all the flowers we need.·· said float supervisor Stan Z1elinsk1, a Fiesta f<'l()al s employe who is in his first year of directing construction of one or the ro!lin~ flowe r shops. "But thl'S<' kids are really something ," he said. "They're pulling me throug h by ca tching us up, bit by bat." The deli very m ixup that left some of the orange and yellow sections of the float lagging was sidestepped by working on some of the other sect ions for which plenty of white chrysanthemums were available. The youngsters are working in two shifts of 40 each. The morn- ing shift rises a t 5 a.m. to get to the job site by 8 a.m. aboard a school bus . The second s hift com- es on at about 3 p. m. and works until midnight or later. Wednesday's tusks involved such things as pas tmg individual gladiola and tiny "mum" petals onto bare surface s or the float's structure. "Don't la y any regular pat- terns," Zielinski directed. "You lose t he effect we're trying to get. "We want every single part of that frame covered." '"Petals. peta ls. I need petals," was the chant from kids working in the upper reaches of the float, deftly coating the spidery frame of the float's gazebo with a fra- grant blanket of flower petals. The t wo sh ifts have been work- ing s ince S unday mor ning, almost around the clock. They must be done by Friday at 3 p m for the final Judging by Rose Parade officials. Why had they given up a week of precious vacation? .. Because it"s something to do, .. said J canC'tte lliggins . "'Because it 's somelhmg I've The local c hapte r of the American Cancer Society sent letters to m<'mbers announcing the aHa1r Th(' letter portrays a young woman holdmJ? a tennis r t1<'kl'I in one hand a nd a c1~arctle in the othC'r . I guess wc were stupid, but we JU~t f1gurNl we were selling t enni s t 1c kt't s a n d n o t cagarl'tlC'". · <.aid Ann Forte, director of th1• Bro"ard County chaptt•r 'Kong' Tackling Profits of 'Jaws' She '>a11l 11 ";i•, loo late to <'.tn rl'I th1• .1 rf.11r Wt• fl It "'1• "'1 r<• JU.'il "nrkmg "1th tcnn1., 111•11pl1• to r..11-;I' monry the "ay "'l' h .l\t' ""orkcd with f.!Olf f'l'OplC'. 'U( h a ... I hose With th(• J,H k11• <: l10,1'>on lnverrary \l,1si.1c. · \t r<; Forti• ... aid Dr c;<'11rg1• ~l <'~<'r, a Fort Laudrrrl .111• r :111 t nluJ.(1,l j nd .in t1smok1nJ! r ru~.11l1·r. hrouj.!hl the maltl'r Lo tht· a1t1•ntion of the canrl'r ~or 1c ty "s !.L.1tc and na· taonal orrir 1als '"Tht' P h1l1p Mor ris Co. sponsors thesl' tl'nnis tourna- ments for lhC' purpose or sclling more ci ga retles, :ind now the ~merican Cance r Society 1s help· mg in the promotion of a known cance r-producing product." he ~aid. "It ·s a form of prostitution. LOS ANG ELES IAP) '"King Kong" 1s roaring around the world. but" hcthcr the ·t(Hoot ape can take a bile out of "Ja ws" re mains to bt· seen In 1.500 lht>a ters w'>rld\\-1de. the movie has J?roS~<'rl mon.• th.in $26 m1lhon in 10 d ays or less, said Gordon Arm5tronJ!. a Sf!Okcs man for Italian prortucer 1>1no De La urenti1s IL opencd an 2,200 theaters on or im m erliatC'ly after J)(>c 17, but not all have rl'portc<l "'It ·5 goin g extremely well,' 0<' La urent11 s -;aid Werln<'~day "We'll know by J ,an 15 1f "''can top t h e goal ~e·\1• ~ct for ourselves." That goal is to top thl' $192 million taken in by ··.Jaws," the top money-m aking film of all time. At prese nt "Kong" is run ning behind the early take of "Jaws" in the UnitcdStaks. De Laurenti is · remake of Lhr 1932 film classic was considcrt'd a gamble. Ear ly m production. he Offices Closed Many Ta~ Friday Off County and most city offices along the Orange Coast will be closed Friday, New Year's Eve. Newport Beach City Hall is the exception with offices re- maining open unti I noon Friday. M~t fed eral employes are receiving an extra day otr Fri- day e ve n though m ail will be delivered and post offi ce win- dows will be open until noon. State offices will be open Friday, hut only skeleton staffs will be on duty. Most banks will move up their closing from 6 p.m. to 3 p.m. Friday and many private businesses will operate on shortened schedules. And on Saturday, New Year's Day, the majority of private businessd and all city, county, state and federal of- fices, with the exception of public safety functions, wtll shut down. I.JC Irvine will be closed Friday, reopenlnc Monday for the atartof thc winterquarter. Other schools also will reopen Monday. had diffi culty with the 4CHoot mechamcal monster. and some people thouj!ht hc had a disaster on has hands But thl' problems were ironed out and the film opened to gener ally favorable re- views. Kong, an intriguing blend of in · nocence and terror, 1s the star of the film Supporting hjm are J eff Brid~es, J essica Lange a nd Charles Grodin. Ear ly compa risons with ''J aws " are d ifficult because "Kmg Kong" opened worldwide, while Una versa l's ",Jaws" did not open overseas until some time after its June 20, 1975, American premie re. Universal spokesmen said they have not s eparated foreign from domestic box office figures for "Jaws" and can only report the $192 million total. "King Kong " took in $18 million in its first 10 days an 964 theaters in the United State~. wh1le in the same period ",Jaws" grossed $21 million in 409 theaters. Fi gures from Canada were nolava1labl e Yachl Freed, So's Sk ippe r LOS ANGELES IA P>-P 1vcrs freed a yacht tanglcd in an oil boom near the devastated tanker Snnsinena on Wednesday a nd the yacht 's own er , Dr. James Gard<'nhire. was released after being booked for investigation of drunken s ai ling. The city attorney's offi re found insuffi cient e vadenct• Lo pro secute. said Deputy City Atty. Steve MurdoC'k. Sl{l. Lloyd Lucy said Dr . Gardenhire , 35. of l.o~ An· geles was arresled after his 43·fOOl powe r yacht got its pro· pelle r tangled In Union Oil Co booms shortly before midnight Tudday n nr the wreckage of lhe Llb t r ian lanker that ex ploded Dec. 17. never done before and it's fun, besides," said fl arby S<·hrciber as s he laid one p('lal on top or another to complete the section she was assigne d . Jeanne Faranda sat on the ground, preparing t ra)'S of p re pasted flowers for t he float de· corators. "Som ebody's got to do it," she said of her les:Hhan glamorous ta~k When they 're fimshed the float will be Mission VacJo·~ parade entry, called "A Dream Come True.·• Besides the tons of struc- tural steel, wood a nd truck paru inside, it will consist of more than 200,000 whole flowers, pl us countless petals and tiny seed-;, each placed lovingly by hand. Secret Soviet Missiles Eyed ~ONDON CAP) -The Soviet Uruon may already have a missile to match t he U .S . Na vy 's Tomahawk. which the Soviets have a rgued threatens the in- te~national balance in long-range m1ss1Jes, a weapons expert said today. The statement came in the 1977 edition of "Jane 's Weapon Sys - te ms ." r eleased today. Austra lia n millionaire Alan Bond plans to house his 20-man crew of the Southern Cross 11 at Laurel La wn, an est.ate on ex· elusive Bellevue Avenue. The c rew of a nother Australian entry, Gretel II. will stay at a Newport a pa rtment house, both Austrahan crews reportedJy plan to dock the ir yachts al the Newport Shipyard Fleet Landing. Baron Ma reel Bi ch, the Bic pen tycoon, wall enter his new 12· meter France in the competition and will rent a Chastellu.x Avenue estate as living quarters for bis team . ofoSole! • \IH>t'" Ko ftu f c•11t 11rl' tltP (ollm ri ug ltn rdn·omf frmttc•K. c•igltl trtr!I lttuul t IPd C'flil Xl'ritt~fK• l'U.dtHH fif t.•d ''""""IH• lh tl'cf Hcuttu•c•11. nttd Kt>l f dt•'''"'"" ht ~..,,,,.. (nbrlc-111. H .-i;:. 1•r ic·t• ~1m Now '539 .-; F t. L o re S e11t ,. , 00 l .. e,,,, • ('h •,k •• of I !It ylt># t1t 9 e 11er o1u •nt•it1f1# """ flOU •• ,,,. ("/IOfJ'f(• " 7 it. or 8 ft. ~i:e. • Cl1om1e fhe •t11le tlaat b r i fl la f f o r fl '"' r r '""" from a 1vide 11efe("t ion of fabrit'11 iH<"l11dl11g 1•elt•f>f.lf~ tape#tr11 pri nt# and u •o1•e t1 pof tert111. Your Favorito Dosigner Will Be Happy To Assist You. PROFESSIONAL INIERIOR DESiGNCRS Opt-n Mon, Thun. & f ri. h 1n. 221S HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA, CALIF. A4 DAIL V PILOT Tnu11d1y. December 30 1978 co!::tng<:l Slaying Ends Siege "\ '~ Police Fear for Hostages' Lives SAVINGS DEPT.: The more ~u learn about what's going on ill our region these days, the lJlOre you realize how dlfficult it ik to save anything from our past that"s worth a damn. Trees seem to be a good example. . Consider the current and cont•· nuing flap that has engulfed authorities in the city of Irvine Irvine has many rows of tall ~ucalyptus trees that were plant· ed in a bygone era wbcn citrus groves and other crops were vital t o the economy of Orange County. The trees rormed so-called :Wind rows, to help protect the }crops from the v:.igaries or the !'Weather. Alas, many of the crops iare long gone now, but the tall 'trees remain 10 majesty, tall ~entinels that are pleasant r<'· :m.IDders of our agricultural past ·in a bygone era when we had :fewer housing tracts and taco ;.:;lands and a lot more open air. ! Anyway, it develops that the !lrvine Ranch people want lo :knock down more than ~or the ~nd row eucalyptus trees in the lcity of Irvine for .varied reasons, ~suggesting public safety and the tassertion that many of the tall 'Eiants are either dead or dying. : Tbat set the Irvine City Council :in motion in an effort to save as f many of the trees as possible .council persons appointed a :committee of three experts lo :Study the doomed trees and try to :determine ho w many really :.Should be saved. : A result or all this, as l now un :derstand at, is that 818 trees in the •Woodbridge area of lrvme will ltall to the ax while another 892 :'wind row trees are deemed h ealthy and s hould be preserved. ! Somehow, it1 seems a rather ·melancholy comment ary that we :have to go lo a committee lo de- 'termine how many trees we jshould retain in th1!\ re~1on and how ma ny s hould be knocked 1<1own. : NOW CLEARLY, I've heard f1 11 the arguments against dirty ,old eucalyptus trees They shed !hark and leaves all over t be }Place. ! Some people don't hkc the ;eucalyptus odor It has also been ·largely asserted that eucalyp- :t us roots poison the earth and you :can't grow anything <'lse an the :vicinity. Add1t1onally, 1l 1s widely :held that the eucalyptus will #drop 1ls IJmbs without warning, !forming a hazard to the un- :suspectang populace. , All this aside, the eucalyptus 1s •a majestic tree: part or the iheritage of our region and a thing •of beauty to behold upon our i1andsc:ipe. Th<.'y arc fast getung •chop~d down. ~ I WHEN AN OLD and dying :eucalyptus tree Calls to the ax. ;rar('ly 1c; it replaced by another :eu1·alyptus lree. If replaced al ';ill. th~ new tree will be some :h1and variety of bush that won't 'J?row tall into power tines, won't ~shed, won't dnbbl<'. and won't :.rnvt' roots that could po:r;s1bly ',cra<'k our adorable sidewalks. . ' Onre I work(•d for th1" t'd1tnr who went on a C'nLc;a1fr to \;J\l' .the only master cut•alyptus trN· JO has town. The chop down ad :\oc."ates screamed at him. "That .-o(';iJyptuo; I" a dirty trN• 'Uul h(• ;wnn th e b .1ttl<' whl'n he :::in:-wf'n'<I • "Yt•o;, 1t c; rl1rt y. But hy God, it'!\ 3 t fl'C' • . .. East's HAYSVILLE. Kan. (AP) -Un- dersherilf Sam Davidson said it w as "the choice or one life or eight .. that made him order sharpshooters to kill a former meotal patient who threatened seven hostages with death in a home in this Wichita suburb. Larry Leer, 30, was killed Wed- nesday night by two shots in the chest eight hours after he took Bonnie Horioek and her four Viets Asked To Halt Repressi.on UNITEDNATIONS.N.Y. (AP) -Acting ··more in sorrow than in anger, .. a group or prominent an- tiwar activists. including folks- inger Joan Baez, has appealed to the Communist government of Vietnam to ball its "grievous and systematic violations or human rights." The group of more than 90 persons active in the antiwar movement or the late 19GOs and early 1970s submitted its plea in a petition to Vietnam 's permanent observer at the United Nations. THE SIGNERS SAID at a news conference Wednesday they had "no choice but to go public" with the appeal artcr months of futile efforts to deliver the petition privatel y t o Vietnamese authonties. Signatures on the petition in- c I uded Miss Baez, New York City Council Pres1- d e n t Paul O'Dwyer. Episcopal 11 r i e s t Malcolm Boyd, poet Al· len Ginsberg, BAEZ R o m a n Catholic Bishop Carroll Dozier or Me mphis, Tenn .. and Rabbi Arnold Wolf of Yale University. Organizers or the appeal said sever al other prominent signers, including Catholic activists Daniel and Philip Berrigan and Daniel Ells berg. asked that their names not be used in a formal public slatemenl because they believed it might work against their interest in improving condi- llons within Vietnam. THE PETITION CITED re- ports or the detention of 200,000 lo 300,000 Vietnamese in "r e - education centers" s ince the fall of Saigon to Communist forces m Apnl 1975. It also referred to re· ports of religious repression and other hum an rights violations "too specific and persuasive for us to i"llore." T he statement told Hanoi: "The actions or your government constitute a great disappointment lo all those who expected not the "bloodbath' so eagerly pre· dlcted by the American White House but ra ther an example of ret'onciliation built on tolerance "We voice our protest in the hope that your government can avoid repetition of the tragic his· torical pattern in which liberators ~ain power only to impo6e a new oppression.·' Lutheran P astor Richard John Neuhaus, a founder or Cler~y and Laity Concerned about Vietnam and editor of Worldview magazine, said at the ne ws conferen ce: "We who worked against the immoral and unJU.'>t war do not withdraw in any way our opposition to that U.S. policy. Storms chlldren captive and held them with a pistol, rifle and six other weapons he gathered in their home. As the drama progressed, the Horineka were released and hetookaevenotherhost.ages. LEER'S INITIAL demand was to see his former girlfriend, Lon- nie Beam, Mrs. Horinek's sister. But after she arrived, the de- mands grew to include cigarettes, protection upon surrender, pro- tection from bankruptcy and commitment at a mental hospital othiacboice. As police and sheriff's deputies gathered outside the dwelling, Leer told bis hostages: "They (the officers) have signed our de· ath warrants." Two hours before the shooting, an Associated Press reporter telephoned Leer, who identified himself by saying, "You're talk· ing tothe man holdingthegwi." HE TOLD THE reporter he re- fused to end his life ln a gutter somewhere, adding: "A man bas to have something to live for and without the things that be lives for he must die. These things 1 must live for or I must die." Before Leer could elaborate, his attorney, Warner Eisenbise or Wichita, one of the hostages, cut into the conversation. Another hos tage, Sedgwick County Sheriff Johnnie Darr, aald, "When I went lnto the house, all the people were in control. They were vety calm and very cool. "IF ANY ONE OF them had made a bad move while Mrs. Horinek and her four kl& were there, I'm afraid we'd have all been shot.'' Other hostages, who came to the home at various times at Leer'a request or in exchange for the Horioek family, were Miss Beam, Police Lt. Harry Minor, Police Det. Bernie Drowatski, Police Chaplain The Rev. Byron D. Tracy and Charles W. Pickared, identlfle d as a counselor. Authorities said Leer had come to the Horinek home to see Miss Beam, who wasn't there. An argu- m eo t de veloped, and Leer grabbed a pistol, pointed it at the bead of John Horinek, Bonnie's husband, and threatened to kill him. officers said. HOBINEK RAN FROM the house, called police, and Haysville o U icer George Jameson, 32, was grazed on the head when Leer fired the pistol as he responded to the call. Minor said Leer let two of the children leave when he arrived, and another fled during the con- fusion. Mrs. Horlnek and the other child, .an infant, were re- leased later in the day. Ex-agent's Home Yiel~ CIA Papers WASHINGTON (AP> -Hundreds of pages of classified documents have been found at the home of a former Central Intelligence Agency em ploye charged with trying to sell CIA papers to the Soviet Union, the FBI says. The FBI said it found the documents when it searched the suburban Bethesda, Md., home of Edwin G. Moore II a fter his arrest last ( ) week. The statements came in an JN S ff 0 RT FBI inventory filed Wednesday with a U.S. m agistrate. -------------Meanw hile, Moore was hospitalized i n Montgomery County <Md.) General Hospital for treatment of a possible heart attack, the FBI s aid. Moore, 56, has a history or heart problems. Hospital orficials declined to dis· close his cond1taon. R.,.11 Te•t. Fol .. ? WASHINGTON <AP> -The Russians have staged their fourth test or a s atellite intercep- already ensnarled negotiations. Sadat, in an i nte rview published in today's Washington Post, said any newly created Palestinian s l a te mus t be formally linked with J ordan, a condition likely to be opposed by many Palestinian leaders. Israel has urged such a link. The Egyp- tian president also said Israel's withdrawal from territories oc- cupied in the 1967 war must be accomplished quickly. All Wl"""°IA> POLICE KIU MAN HOLDING SEVEN HOSTAGES 'Choice of One Ute or Eight', Under•hertff Seys 'Zilch' Outbreaks S~ne Flu PrograDl Ended for Year? ATLANTA CAP) -With the nation's swine n u inoculation program suspended for al least another rew weeks, some experts are predicting there will be no need to resume it at all th.is winter. The feder al Center for Disease Control (CDC) ordered Wednesday that the moratorium begun Dec. 16 be extended until the strange paralytic disease called Guillain- Barre Syndrome can be studied swine nu outbreak this year were more closely lo determine "zilch,ncxltonopossibility." whether it is linked to the vaccincs- tions. SEVERAL EX PERTS who rnct at the CDC here said the program probably would be reinstated only if signs or a flu epidemic ap- peared. They said there appears to be no threat of widespread swine flu or A·Victoria flu, last winter's majorinnuenza. "There is very little influenza anywhere in the world at the mo ment," said Dr. David J . Senccr. director or the CDC. "We hope that ilStays th al way." After the CDC announcement, Maryland's hea lth secretary said in Baltimore that his stale hari "permanently discontinued" its swine nu vaccination program Dr. Nell Solomon said he m ade the decision after officials in Atlanta told him the chance or a ONLY TWO CASF.5 or swine nu have been confirmed in the Unit- ed States since the moculation program began Oct. l, both Wisconsin men engaged in rarm work. A suspected case in Mis- souri was not confirmed. At a news conference alter the experts announced their recom mendation, several said there was a scarcity or information about lhe rare syndrome, which they said has ncv<>r before been closely monitored . They said they still could not be certain whether there was a n y connection between it and swine flu shots. Since the inoculations began, 19 persons have died from Guilla.in- Barre. Of those. 11 had been in- oculated against s wine nu. In all. 496 people have suffered from Guillaan-Barre since Oct. 1. tor this year, but it tentatively is ------------------------------------------ being classified as a failure by U.S. intelUgence sources. The Russians resumed flight testing or antisatelLite devices early this year a fter a lapse or about five years and the U.S. sources said the latest test was cooducted Monday. Ford to Lilt Control? VAIL, Colo. (AP) -President Ford is preparing to end govern· meot controls on the price of gasoline, a move already draw- ing criticism from a Democratic Congress that has the power to block the plan. Ford aide John Carlson said freeing oil companies of price controls would have litUe effect on the cost of fuel at the service station pump, but opponents or decontrol have claimed that such a move could increase prices by as much as 6 cents a gallon. .Jorda" Link A•ked' WASlflNGTON (AP) -ln a surprise move, Egyptian Presi- dent Anwar Sadat has described new conditions for achieving a Middle East peace settlement that could further complicate the Clear Last 3 days of our custom drapery sale! 25°/o off labor 25°/o off fabric 25°/o off installation 25°/o off lining ~ Ordy New England Remains Under Clouds • • Hl•ll Yw ... (. 10 1n \I YI ~· ,, ,. .. •1 21 •.• 7\ ~ m ·°' >• " '' 17 ,IS 10 .. 10 > .«>' " 18 .. ' 1• I •• • .(f1 \6 ?7 .. ' .. , 11 ,,, '° ,, ., 1l .. )4 u 1 .~ n II u JI llalu<NV 1"'1 ~11"11~ II """' do Ml ffliit'_.....,,. \fOt•• tn~., n., " Am call !11'1&• 10 • m. •"<l Y.•" ••i'Y *'II Ii. d~l~.O .. c.,....._,...,._. MM! 0<•"0• C.ounty ,.,.,. u a.011 N<vl-1 Hvn11119IO<I .... 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Tiie Netion.1 w .. t ... r !oel'vlCe -dlC1td ..., 80 Pf'r<•nl tl\al'ICf of ln- ltr m I lien t •howtrs unlll t~e --· ~.,.11,,,., bolll lhe tem__.- -,the -tevet 1re df'OCIOlnq In 11\e l'NIUftlalni, wltll 1 whit• .-tie .,,, the 9fOUnd lo the S,000.-llwl O.yUrM temMret\ffH et r~l wlll tff(ll Ofll'I' l bout 40, Wiii\ I~ -JS ...,.rnlQfll. .,,,. llHY'I' clOud covftr o..,.r ll'ID'it of 5'wlhem Celllornl• alMI will Dtl"Q too4 ... .,.~ HtoM •l'IOuld •e•h onlv About '° from,,,. CO.HI 11\rouqll dOwRIOWI\ Lb\ A119tlH and IM 5.tn F9'1\9n00, S... C:..llrl•I tnd Sift BerM rdlr>e> V•H•n. 1 .. Ille oewrts. OfllY • lllGfll <"*'<• ol r•ln •as IMKHI, b\11 ~ ..... sJlovld tie UIO!ef', loo, co .. tol 1t'~ather Chotnu ol •aln llw0\191\ Ff' .. y. ~lohl varlabl• winch ntoht enO """'"'llO """''· HIQM Frldey In '"' IOwtO'\ c:oHtll twmMralur•\ •Ill ,.,... MlwHn •• end •O. I nlend tem _ .. urn. Wiii fl .... betW-!!O -., t111 wattrt1Mper•lurew11111 .. 1, s-. ltloora, Tldefl THUllSOAY St<Ond 11191' •. )0 II m. U !M<o"!I lqw ll:Oh m. 2,1 ,lllOAY F'll'tlllltll >.'1•m. ,,, l'lmio.. t·07g m O• 'l«ond hltll 1 u p "'· JJ SK-low It ~llrn. U s,,,.,,,.,, "•m.,wt.t•.n11-m. ~r1-ll1 M1 m,.•\J l;Qe.n\. • Save as never before on a vast collection of beautiful fabrics that include prints, open weaves, damasks, jacquards . textures. seamless sheers and anhque satins. Save four greal ways by acting nowl , Cell for a JCPenney custom decorator to visit your home. Sale prices effective through Seturdoy, January 1. JC Penney AllOAOIA 111>\ 441 .... 14 HUlfTINOTON HACH ITU) ltt·1771 llALM l"UNOl 171~) 3'1·11tt CANC10A ilAlll< (t1JI llJ.Jl60 LAGUNA HILLS 2'"1 lh·7100 PUlHTI HILLI ii Ml·IJ41 CAlll ON JU O t .JtoO U.KIWOOO (2U t.a«·TOOO lllVlllSIOI 114 H ·JotO CUI.VIII ~IT~ ''Olt MILi.a' (212) JIO·tt'9 MONTCl.Alll 1'1 ) 11' ·Ht I U N llllNA~OI 0 (114) l .. •110 •ULl.lllTON tl4 111•430 NOllTHlllOOE (2U) H S.'414 WUT COVINA 212 lt0•2T1 t OOWNIY 12111 ~t-4M1 NIWllOllT ICACH (714) 144 HU TOllllANCI 11U) J71 .. i11 OllNDAIA •dal llllA' (21>) 240.1700 OllANOl 'THE CITY' (1f4) IJ.4·1100 WHlnWOOO n\11 i.,.Jllt ~"'~--~------ Mental Core Thursday, December 30. 1:17d DAILY PILOT ' •Skid Row S las h e r ' WHALE WATCHERS! State Seeks Volunteers E .. ty w .. ~.-.d du••nt J.,...oty M>d 1n10 f-u•v lun11l .....,otleft no,.1 • O .. ey'1 locket will off-t 2 W"6i. WttCll"'t Tr .. ttel\ dr, leff"'I I - -',.,., ,, .... ,.,. a.-o. ,..,11'°"· 400 ~''··••Ibo• r....,..,. 11l411?3-S2•S F•e $4 00 Adulu; $150 Chlld•e<1 l2 •nd ullder Drifter Guilty Of 9 Murders ,~··· SACRAMENTO <AP> Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. says the slate 1s starting a large volunteer pro· gram for two o( its troubled mental hospitals because money and doctors can't solve all problems. ~ . MERCURY SAVINGS LOS ANGELES <AP) Vaughn Orrin Greenwood has been found •. guilty or the "Skid Row Slasher" murders that terrorized Los Angeles '. I J ,,,,,, fnttn llO(lf'ittfilll~ The Democratic governor announced the pro· gram Wednesday after meeting with religious leaders who will help run H. Asked whether volunteers could solve all the hospital's problems, Brown noted he also has ap· proved an increase in paid hospital staff. TIDO Plane • ColUde LOS ANGELES CAP) -Two Golden West turboprop commuter planes suffered minor dam age when they collided on a runway at Los Angeles In- ternational Airport. No one was injured in the Wed- nesday night incident. One of the 18· ''( J passenger Twin Otter S l a I e planes carried only a pilot ________ ..;_ as it was taxiing from the terminal to a hangar. The second plane. with 10 passengers and two crew mem- berS', was heading into takeoff position for a flight to Santa Ana. Womo11•• Body Fou nd TRACY (AP> The body or a Merced woman who disappeared in 1972 has been recovered near here after her husband led authorities to her grave in exchange ror perm1ss1on lo plead ~wily lo a reduced murder c harge Timothy Bennett, 29, led Merced County SherifC's deputies Wednesday to a shallow grave southwest of California Hjghway S80 that contained the body or his wire. Mary Jo She was buried about five feet deep, 5-0 feet from the paved roadway, of· ficers said. Man Killed in ffe bt BEVERLY HILLS (AP) -One man has been kjUed and three others have been wounded in a run- ning gun battle through Beverly lulls and West Los Angeles after an abortive robbery. Pierce Hill , 31, ort..os Angeles, was arrested and taken to County-USC Med1cal Center with a bullet wound in the neck. hut his remale companion escaped, police said. Juli was booked on s uspicion or murder, police said. Bird Grin• 1\9ain transie nts two years ago. After six days of deliberations, a Los Angeles Superior Court jury Wednesday found the 33 year-old drirter guilty of nine counts or murder. GUil TY OF MURD&RS Vaughn Greenwood LA Harbor Greenwood faces life imprison· ment when he is sentenced Jan. 19. Originally. prosecutors had indjcated they wanted the death penally but California's capital punishment law was declared Wl· constitutional while the trial was underway. Greenwood was convicted of eight of the nine grisly killings at· tnbuted to the ·'Slasher." He was Union Oil Given Okay for Pipeline LOS ANGELES CA P) -Union Oil Co. has received the go. ahead to build a new oil pipeline linking its bulk-loading facilities in Los Angeles Harbor. one or which is on the pier devastated by the ex· plosion of a tanker two weeks ago. . . . However. the company has agreed not to use the p1pehne until after opp0nents have had an opportunity to m!lke their arguments before the board or harborcomm1ss1oners early in January .. "WE WANT TO BE sure concerned residents have time to speak," said II arbor Commission President Nate Di Biasi. The commission gave Union Oil approval to proceed with con- struction of the pipeline on Wednesday after hearing favorable testimony from industry, labor and civic leaders. The Coast Guard and fire department said they had no objections to the pipeline. ABOUT 85,000 barrels of crude oil is brought daily to Union's San Pedro refinery from Alaska and other sources. Most or that had been unloaded at Berth 46 until the explosion Dec. 18 of a Llberian- registered oil tanker That explosion killed at least four persons and caused extensive damage lo the pier ---- also convicted or a 1964 murder and one count or assault with in· tent to commit murder. The jury failed to reach a verdict on two other murder counts, and Superior Court Clerk Steve Brown said a mistrial would be declared in those cases. Greenwood was indicted for 11 murders, including two in 1964 and the nine "Slasher" killings between Dec. 1, 1974 and Jan. 31, 1975. All 11 victims had their throats slashed Crom ear to ear down to the spine. T H ER E WE R E ritualistic overtones to the killings. In· vestigators said they found evidence that the killer drank the blood of al least two victims and that he removed their shoes and placed them in a pattern aroWld the body. Salt was sprinkled around the bodies, forming a gruesome mosaic, authorities said. Most or the deaths centered in the downtown Skid Row area, with transients the victims, although the last two occurred in Hollywood. Greenwood is already serving a 32-year·to-lire sentence stem· ming from a robbery at the home or actor Burt Reynolds and a hatchet attack on two· men in a house in the Hollywood Hills. He has been in custody since he was arrested Feb. 3, 1975, in those <:ases. E11ecutlve 011/ces: 7812 Edinger Ave., Huntmglon Beach. CA 92647 Southern Calilornia Reg1on,1/ 0//1cos: 4140 Lona Bench Blvd • Long Beach. CA 90807 8955 Valley View St • Buena Park. CA 90620 20715 S. Avalon Blvd .. Carson. CA 90746 1001 E. Imperial Hwy .. La Habra. CA 90631 1095 lrv•ne Blvd . Tuslm, CA 92680 235 N Citrus Ave , West Covina. CA 91793 NEW YEAR'S EVE A Ragtime Dixieland • CELEBRATION AT Mo .. RetenaHOM Now To Dance In The Aisles 979-5000 • • 4248 M1rtlng1le Way. Newport Beach (714) 979-5000 · SAN DIEGO (APJ Onc·c again. San Diego County employes may fly PSI\, the only airljne in town Supervisors lifted a six month hoycott with a J.o vote Wednesday, saying Pacific Southwest Airlines had agreed to submit a minonty hiring program lo meet county requiremenL~ 'THE EARl.'S P'LUMllNG HU.TING AIR COND. n,.,. •'•'h ., ., ..... , .... , "°4.!it \January sa e and - _-~CLEA RAN C E The county requir~ that firms doing business with ittry to m eet its minonty hiring goals Pfty11iC"ion SentenC"e d tAl"i•,10!1 l/•J l • 41Atl, :/I "''" 1 , '' 1, 495-040 I 1' fA ~l A t • • ,.j1 ... Cl t• ~· • I SAN FRANCISCO <Al'J A San Francisco physician has been fml'CI $30,000 und sentenced to .~=~~6~4~2=·=-1_7 ... s,.3-:::==:! five years probation on 20 counts of 1llegally selling prescriptions for controlled s ubstances. ...... OPPORTUNITY knot•k, of11•n "hl'fl '11u '"" 11·,ul1 l:l'll111 i.: u.111v l'tl11t l'l.1 .. -.111 .. tl \cl, tu n•;1rh th1· 01 ,1ni.:1• l 11;1,..l 111.J I kl'l l'hlllll' 1;.12 :11;111 U S. District Court Judge Samuel Conti told Dr JrVJng Davis, CS. th~tl had he been practicing any place else but ~an Francisco's Tenderloin District where most of th<' res1denL'> ar<' "drug addicts and winos" he '4 0uld have sent him to Jail. --''--------"----------- THE MEWPORTER'S MEM'S SHOP JANUARY UP TO 60% OFF REGULAR PRICES! SPORT COATS SHIRTS LEISURE SUITS NECKWEAR 14.99 16.99 12.99 14.99 9.89 SJ9. s49_ 3.95 4.95 S.95 Values '85. to 11 5. SixH: 38 to 48 ValUH •21.so to 32.50 Short SfffYH Req. '20 Long Sleeves Req. '26 Knits Req. ' 18 Reci-Y aluH to 'I 00 Sins: 38 to 48 R9CJ. Vatws 7.50 to 12.50 THE NEWPQRTER MEN'S SHOP Further ~Reductio r , ns! women and children. now save I , --------~~~~~\@ e( ;') r~ 1/3 to 1/2 ~,? I 1n all fashion areas, on most items. Sh erwyn, Town & Travel, Youn g Attit ude, Fashion Gallery, Emphasis, Ch ildren's and Men's Shops We'll be open tonight !i!I 9:30, Shop Sunday noon till 5 Shop Mon-Fri. 10:00-9:30, Sat. 10~. Sun. 12-5. Bullock's South Coast Plan, 3333 Bristol. Costa Mesa, phone 566·0611 • . ,. A6 DAll.1Y PILO T E DITORIA l .1 P . G I~ Coastal Changes- Cahfornia 's landmark coastal con- t;ervation program moves into a new phase J an. 1 when the original state Coa.st&l Zone Conservation Commission and six region al commissions go out or busines.s and a new state commission is activated. · New t e mporary r egional commissions also will com e into being, and each will name a representative to the state b~y. The new regional commissions will not function unless the state commission de termines there is <1 suUicient workload for ~ them . However, 1t 1s anticipated most will be activated p romptly. By J an . l , 1980, local governments will have to present coastal land use elements for the ir general p lans. rollowing the guidelines or the Coastal Conservation Act. Wh en the~t· plans arc certified by the state, local governm ent will take over com- plete control, except for appeals to the slate body. t Under the new program, coastal con- 1 trols have b een extended further inland in some areas, but some already developed urban are a s will be exempted. So will some projec ts. s uch a!'> residential improvements, which formerly required permits. The s econd phase o r the coas tal pro- gram, initiated by the voters in 1972, re presents a compromise between d e- veloper s and environm entalis ts. But it will r e main unique in the nation in ils effor t lo preserve a priceless coastline. Bene fit Justified The U.S. Supre m e Court recently ruled that e mployers may exclude pregnancy from health insurance plans without violat- ing federal prohib1l1ons against sex dis- l'nminat1on. But the state or i''alifornia is taking a somewhat d1ff erent view_ Uegmnmg Jan. 1, California working womt>n who have contributed to the s tate disability ins urnncc fund through their pay checks will be entitled to receive six weeks o r pregnancy disab 1hty bc nl'f1ts, three weeks before and lhrc(' wcl•ks <ctf\er g1-..mg birth An cstimal<1ct 150,000 working women wm be eligible for the pu:vmcnts. based on wugcs and averaging aoout $78 a week. T he program will be financed by rais- ing the wage base for the 1 t'lercent s t ate dis ability contribution from $9,000 to $11 ,400 of annual income for <111 cmployrs Proponents o( the µIan pmnll'd out that µregnancy has forct..>d many women to ac- cept a total loss of inc:~Jc men arc e ntitled to collect up tu 26 Wl·cks o f s tate dis- abi)j ty be nefits even for 10juncs incurred in s ports, motorcycling or other male-oriented activit1l·s. The nf•w progrum w ill help alleviate some or the growing financial burden of pre~nancy. H i:s rea.sonable and huma ne _ Pot T ic k ets The California I lighway Patrol has been making a n l'Xlrn dfort this yc<:1r to round up drunken drivers In the process, it appears. the CllP 1s netting qu1le a few violators of the .state's IJbcraLizcd mari- juana law. T he Jaw. which went into effect last January, provid<.•s a m w<i mum fine of $100 for possession of k ss thun an ounce of marijuana -and that coultl m ean even part of a rigurcttc. (Possession of more thun one ounce can bring a $500 fine > er IP officers n'i:><nt handmg out more lhan 5,000 cit:.it1ons for thl' lt.:si.;-than-one- ounce off<·nsc in the <.'Oursc of making routine traffic stops for moving vmlat1ons. lt seem s a driver under the mnuent•e of marijuana is l1kl'ly to display som e of the same erratic driving characteristics as one under the influL·ncc of Likohol. And if the of- ficer making the traffic slop s pots or s niffs a marijuana <·1garcttc m the car, a cit ation is likely. Jn s hort. it m ay nol do a hit or good tu a ssure the officer, "I swea r I haven't had a drop_ •• "Even if it's true. The New Lawmakers ' Regulatory Boar<h Assuming Au:esome Pmoors I • /\ \ 1• r 1 l .1 Ii I t' r ,1 :; h o I Cl d m 111 I s t r ;1 t I \" l' .1 (' I I tin ~ h y regulatory ho;mh '-lnkmi.: down laws <.'JO now bt• l"<pcctt•d This Will be the 1nev1tahl<· r<•:.ult of the Slate Sup1 l'mt• Court·s stranK<.' decis ion huld1ni.: -.uC'h boJr-ds piay dl•cl.1r1• unco11st1tut1onal leg1~lat1vC' ads /\ I r l' ;i d y I h l' \ I 1· •> h o I 1 1· l\evl'ra~c Control i\PIX'.1ls BoJrd has done JU~I that with I ht• ltq unr µ r 1t·1· fixm~ laws I 11 a 2 6 p .1 J! 1· r u I 1 n i.: l h 1• board held tht• pri cin~ l,1\'' \ll'll.tlt•ll lht• c· q 11 ,, I p r II I I',. I I fl n rluu't'' 111 ttw ft•(ll'rJI .ind '-lalt• nmsl1tulum-; as " "11 "' 111 v :1 I 1 d u n d t• r I h 1• ~h1·rn1 .1n \nt 1trll),l t\<.·l Thi· tw .1rd nrny ht• r 1~ht hut tlw q II I' .. l I II n w h I (' h rn u., I h I' <''<.1m11w<I far mon• lhornui.:hlv 1:0. 1h .. 1)ropr1t>l y of r1·i.:ul.1t•1rv bf\,1rd11 in vul idall!l~ 1111 th1•1r n\l.n pohrv writh•n into la1o1; h\ I h l' p e o fl I <• ' 1• 1 1· c l <' d rt•prf'sental1 vc:s TKJS IS dangero~ly heady po~ rr to b1· •''<lt•ned<'fl to tho.,e who .1rt• rH•1lhcr IJ"\l'r"I nor l'11•c·t1-d lo 0H1<·1• II I'> mcn-d1hle th.it .1nv c·ourt , 11'1 .1lon<' the Supr<'ffil' Courl. "ouhl c·oncl'dt· that """'. t•ltt't•µllnJ.! JUllJ.!1•' ~houhl hnld "JC'h a"' t·.,om l' po" <'r N l'Vi.'rth <>I<''~ 1t :irriv1•cl ( EARL WATERS ) <1t the dec·1sion that boards could do lh1s sn the footnotes of its "'ritten opinion in the matlc'r of the Southe rn Pac1fil'. vs th·· Public lJLil1tiC's <.'omm1~!.1<1n Reasoning that the slatutt•s grant the comm 1ss10n \l.1dc )11d1c•1al powers it r1 lt•d lht• ckc1-.1on that .in .. u1mln1straltve ~igt•nry must act within the con~l1tut1on IN A bnlhaoUy sound dissent. Justice Stanley Mosk tears into t h is n e w ex t e n s ion of adminis t r ::ill vt• vowc>r dt·1•mNl perm1ssiblt• hy th1· maJont:. 'lndet•<I , ·· he wroh• pulling his finger s mack on the point. "1t 1s incongruous for lht• Wiii of lh1• 1><>ople of th(• stutc" n>Merlt·<I 111 their elt.'l'INI lt·g1-,lator.;. t•> lit· thwarted by a govrr11 m1·nt;tl body whi('h <''<J st!> unly I•• 1mplemenl th:1t will ·· lie wisely observes that C'Vl'n the courts. compost'd a:-lh•·y a r1• of l;1w yers with at lt.'ast 111 yt•ar., o I I e g a I ex per ll' n c <'. .1 rt· under standal)ly rt•l11r l ant t•) nullify" statutes hecuu.sl• .. I.a"'~ passed by a Leg1slatun• rrpn·.,t•nt the will or the pt•oplt-:md 11•m1nds that no rc-qu1n·m~nt exists for r om rn 1ss1m1t•rs to havt' J law cducallon o r l1•gal t·x1>~:rience The same 1c; lrue ur other st<i te boards :mrl nonP of the member~ of t ht• AllC /\pp<.•tih lk>ard <H<' attornc~·<. T ll E IRO N Y of till' eourl l' 1• d 1 n I! t h t• r 1 g h t t o a n Jdmm1slraltvl' bo;1 r(l to m<tkc o const1tul1onal finding 1n the very case whC'rc lht• court ruled thl· l'omm1lts1on was in err111 in declaring unconstitutwnal thv l,1w in question was not Jost on \1o~k who was prompt to stalt'. 'It cannot srnously be disputed that JUdg<'s, fo r all lheir 1nd1 v1dual faults. are more ahle than PUC com rn1:.s1oncr.<., for all lhC'1r 1ncl1v1dual vi rtues. lo d t.• c 1 d t' w h e t h <' r a I a w 1 s unconslilutmnal " Scoffing at the m a1or ily rnnlrnt1on tha t ra.se law 1s sparse on tht• rs ... uc'. Mosk para<lcs an Jrrav of m1thor1ly indudmg th(' n111rt ·._ own prt'vic111s ruling in a 1!17'1 1·h<ill(•nJ.:l' of the Coast:Jl Zone Acl that "an administrat1v1· aJ?enC'y 1s not the avprnpr1 ale forum 1n wh11·h tn C'hullt.-ngc tht• ('OOl>tllllllllll:thl V • MOSK C'ORRECTLYv1ews the ~eparal1on of power'> provision uf thr const1t 11lion which holds, · l't'rson s c ha r ged w1lh the f''<t'rC'1SP of one power may not {•XerC ISC e ither of the other!> l'\C't'Pl as pt'rm1tterl by the 1•11nsl1h 1t1on •· Ill• .s<1 1d , "Our lr::id1tion<.1l rt.'lul'lance lo invoke lhC' most <1Wt'somc powt•r m the .sJ)('rt rum of the Jud1c1al process should induce us to rc•s1st 1ls ass1.•rt1on by a lay t•ommiss1on. which, for ;,111 of its trappings of .1uthor11 v. '"~imply not a court or law ... = ·4 •• .. -.... u~ . . . . ,. .. \:' . . . "' NEXT GA~ ~UD\ mBI/\ ll.481 M\\.ES .. Witli Gov t•r11ment Blessing Destroying the Desert WASlllNGTON 'fhc dCM•rl lands of soulhl'rn Cal1forr11a hold rnany fragile secrets. It 1s ai;c.· Jess country, rugg<.'tl and scrub by, a spectrum of browns and purples. Underfoot. the soil 1s tawny a nd ac rid, foolpnnts from hundreds. even thousands or years ago nrn still bt• utcntif1cd They re mam unmolested un the empty de~crt . prr-.ervc.-tl b~ the dry. sti II air. They ran be f o und a m ong thl' s tunt e d , woody shrubs. which Lhemsel ve1> are some of Che oldl'st li v mg plants un earth Y<'t fe<kr<JI off1l'1;ds ho.t\'t' al lowed molon·ycll·S. Jc.>e ps an1t dune buggil•S to invade thl' dt•., ert. Permits have bt:t·n 1ltsu1•d for al least l wo desert races one a frCl.'·for·all motor cyclC' race. lhe other a hare-and hound race Under the• law. an vnv1rnnmc·n tal analysis 1s :.uppo-;<'d tu bt• made beforc such events arl· authorized \'ct both races hacl been held before the env1ronmen tal analyses had been completed Other desert events have been authorized, including a treasure hunt for a case of Canadian Club whiskey in lh(• foothill<; or the Avawatt Mounta111s /\ carav:m or jeeps and ctune b11i::g1es w:is admitted lo the Kelso Oun1•s Both are protc.>ctcll arl'as T HE BURE I\ ti OJ.~ Lc.inrJ Managem ent also wanted to c1t· velop motorcycle co11rs1~s in tht• Mojavr B<i s in. which would o.\ar Gloon1 y Gus If William Shakl'speart" were alive> today .. King Henry VI, Scene' II "i')rsl we go out an<f kill all the JUDGES.·· s.n. G,oornv Cu\ <ommft"" "'" ~ubtU1ffttfty '' ,.drr\ •nd do no1 ft•f,. ''"''''' ftflt<1 t~r ttl'l•W' of lhr ,..W\PAl)tr \•·~ yOUf oet Pt'•ve to OtMmy Gu~, D~1ly Pt lot JACK ANUE R80N mean clearing out smaJI trees ;ind scrubs. BLM aides were in- :.tructt'(I lo lakt.• rcprcscnlat1vcs of the Amt•rtl'i•n .Motorcycll' /\s s0<·1at1on into lhl' Mo1ave Ua:o.in to ehoost> a cour:.c. althoui;th re· gulatwns proh1b11 motor cyC'lt· r:Jcing 10 this ar <>a A. confidents.11 HI. \J lnl'lllO, signed by lR spct•1aJ1sts. as:..crt~ that lh<.•<;c <'nt:roachmt•nl.s havt• b<-en permitted by the agency 1·har¢ed with prol<•t•tin~ the.· dt•<, l'rt As a n•:;ult. pr••r1ous dt·~crt rl'sources have been dc:.stroy~ in \'iolat1on of tht• N~1llonal En vi ronmental l'Olil'Y Ad, a<:cord mi( to I ht• mt' mo Fifteen per rt'nL or ttu• protl'tl t'CI d<'sert '" so badly manaJ{ed. Jl'COrd1ng l11 the memo. that 1t 1s no lon~cr uscable evl'n <JS J r<'Crcation site .. Some areas arC' now so de~rarled ," th<' memo '>lates. "lhal the motorcyd1s1:.. lhem:-.dv l·~ find tht•m unappc;1I mg .. T HE M EM O also desenbcs ··growing discontent" among the staff, whic h 1s trying to preserve the desert a nd enforce the law "Many or us have appealed to the best senses and judgment of our s upe r iors . .. the memo declares ··our individual ex pressions have had litUeeffoct · The BLM boss in Calsfom1a, Ed Hasley, admitted that his agency has failed to protc-et tht• desert in som e cases. I le said that violators hadn't been Cf)n trolled firmly because, until (k tober, the BLM had no law l'fl forcement authority E ven with the new authority. he said, the enforcement can't be implemented for at least a year. lie had no comment on t'har g<:.s that the agency had violated federal law, he said, since those -charges arc under investigation. KISSI NGER 'S RECORDS- Not. all of Henry K1ssinger·s papers will be donated to lhl' Library of Congress. lie will withho ld fro m history the transcript:. o! his telephone con· versat1ons. They ar e n ow locked in a CIA· style safe on Vice President Nelson Rockefelle r's estate. A spokesm an explained that Kissinger obtained an opinion from the State Dept. legal office la s t January that th e "secretarial notes" or his tele phone conversations are personal The spokesman didn•t mention that the notes, for the most part. consisted of verbatim transcripts. During the Nixon years, Kiss·• mger's White House office con· Larned two tiers of tape re· cordcrs. according lo sour <'es fCJm1liar with the layout. In each Iler were three recorders armed with hair-hour cylinder&. Thus Kissinger could tape three hours of telephone talk without chang- ing t'Ylindcrs. /\II telephone calls, including his conver sations with presidents and girlfriends alike, were re· c orded Two of the four secretari<-s in the anteroom ad· Joining his office spent most or their timt' transcribing the con· versations ' KIS'.SI NG~R told us that only, official calls were transcribed. lie kept the transcripts, he ex· plained, so he would know exact· ly what was said. This is impor. tant m di pl om acy, he said. in or- der lo prevent inaccuracies and misunderstanding~. All the tapes were destroyed , he added. When Kissinger moved to the State Dept.. the use of tapes had become sensitive. So he relied oi-. his secretaries, listening on an extension, to take down the con• versations in shorthand. Kissinger told us he intended to use the transcripts merely to re· vive his recollections when he writes his memoirs. He will not quote directly from t h e transcripts. he said. Ile has hired his personal assis- tant. Peter Rodman, t.o help hlm assemble the documentation for h1s memoirs. Kissinger has re· ceived several offers from publishers. but he will wait until after his d eparture from govern· m enl neexl month before he makes any decisions, be told us. Wlw Is the Killer? Thoughts at Large: ( SYDNEY HARRIS) Marriage Isn't Negotiab"le Here is a r iddle l like llJ repeat every few years, withholding the obvious unswer ; what animal is 1t that kills to feed itseU, kills to clothe Itself, kills lo <.tdorn itself. kills to attack. kills to defend. kills to learn kilhnR. kills for thc love or abstractions, kills under command, and kills for the sake of killing? Can there be such <t totally murde rous animal rn nalutt•" eseapinJ! f r o m s l av~ry to freedom whe n they urc merely exchanging one tyranny for another. The greates t proof that Marx- ism has turned into an irrationnl religion in the modem world ls the fact that though it can be de· rnonstratcd lo be lnteUectually bankrupt a~ en economic system , its appeal continues to grow as a polilical movement. I have J C'Ollplc of with-it young friends who have decided to 1 shore up the creaking institution . of marriaf(e. Or, as they rather cynically put it, "to beat the rap." Marr iaRe is in such bad re· pute among 11ome of the young that they can view 1t as a penal ~entence. This couple could r<-adily live in what used lo be called sin, of 1 course. The re I would be no : condemnation : and scarcely I any comment 1 among the n· : peers if they jdid so. aut 1 these arc the kind of kids who would climb up the North Fnec of \he Bank or A.merica Bui l d lnR si mpl y because it Is there. Their idea is to sign up for mar- ri•ge, a11 you would sign up for a year or two playing righl field for the Red Sox. They have entered to a marriage contract. They ll me Lhl11 111 the wave of the &llure. lntcn)'ears or 10, they beliqye, lnsUtutlon or mamage.'W\11 C HARLES McCABE be like an agreement under the Wagner Act between the steel workers a nd U.S. Steel , or something. It w ill include. JS does their contract, fratures hkc mediation a nd arbitration. AU . OF T HIS rises lx-caUS(.> women think they are gelling a putrid deal in marriage as 1t stands. A lot of m en agree with thC' women, ond more men are binR forced to agree. The liberation movement has a lot to do with It, to be sure, but there ls a fell need (again, m ostly by women) to define the values they will share in marriage, and to nail down ·their rights and duties. Well. I give to doubt about the whole thing. There ls no tloubt thnt industrial and labor dl'lpute:s are complex thlogs, involving complex and bitter feeHnas, and that arbitration and mediation have worked wonders in their solution. But whert you have said everything 1bout the dllfcrtnces bftween capital aad labor It all com~s down to one tlilnJC · money Money i"s nc~otiable, whether it 1s called sick leave, or holiduy, or fringe benefits . And labur-capltal s trife wounds arc nol all that deep lhe"le days. since both s ides know the costs will be passoo on to old John P. Consumer. NOW. MARRIAG~ is the most intricate arr angement humans C':ln enkr ijnto. JI is maybe more intricate now than in lhc past. because lht" gmdelines of tradi- llon are al1sent. Hy tr<iditional standards, one of the parties to a marriage may be mildly misera- ble for half a lifetime, and the marriage could 11tlll be techniral- ly a "success." Now a good h3rdy spat. can be the si(Jllal for a bandonlne the premises. My real objection to marriage ('Ontrncts and such, though, is my profound feeling that you can't m ake rules about human feelings. This Is the basis for m y severe d istrust or s uc h dis- cipli ncs as s hrinkery and sodoloJ(y. the way a person fei!ls about anything Is the most prtvote part of his nature. The person does not. know WHY he or she fttla as ahe dots: but knows HOW, for 1 cer- tainty. Feeling!! are n_~dtstlnct u f people I.ITC', which is one C)( th1• retiSOllS why lll'Oplt-who fall tn marriai;tl.' rE>mai n puixled, to their dyinJ! day, as lo where 1t nil IU('Tll U)f(Jn!/ Tiff: ANSWER lS, nobod y knows: n e ithe r the peop!(> involved. nor the experts. laical or clt'rical, whom they may consult. The m ysten es of the feelings a re as inscrutable as lhe mysteries of creauon. We would d o well to remember this. especially when we dismiss lhc.· feelings of others, a nd most especially when we dismiss the reellngs ofthose closest to us. Succe11sful m arriages do exist. have existed. and wlll conllnuc to occur. How com<'? The answer Is much like th<' problem of crer•· ti on, in a way. We cope with It by uwoking those lnler1:\ely reol hut Impalpable things called love and faith and hope. Otherwise we could not cope with cit.her flut ex- istence on earth, or those we choose to utter as our sigh al Im· mor tality , our rn a t cs and children. And faith :m<.I hope) nnd love cannot be •rltten Into a con- tract. nor are lbey anywhere or <lt any Umc11~oti11blt' ~aming lo go from mlddJe age to old age is in a way the re verse or going rrom adolescence lo adulthood : in the latter case, we think we are there before we . arc r eady for it. while in the former we slope mlo old age well before we art' rc>nd y to acknowledge it. A "reason.able" person 1'1 not :1 master of logic. but one who knows how to get along with those l ess r easonable than hjmself -which 1!1 a rarer and much more valuable art. Our m e rits m ay impress others. hut it is our defects that make us congenial; and those who try rigorously to conceal their fl nws may be buying rupcct at the cost of friend!Jhlp One or the saddest ironies of history Js that people who nee rrom repregs1on and persecution Md aet up communitie~ o! their own do not. permit any m ore freedom to their own dissldenu than they themselves bad been QJlowed -thny im;iglno they aN ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT /fotwrt N Wt~. Publuhf'r flwrnns krr111I, 1-:r1110r Hurboro Krnlnr/1, 1-.r111011111 f'og" ed1111r 'rh<' l'flilorin l POI:?!' or the Oa1ly l'tlot «l'l'ks to inform and 'l1muhatc rcad<'rll hy prt'llentlng on thlll fl:lic d1v{'riH• comtntntary on lnplt''l <if intc•n•st by <1yndlcal· 1~1 rnlumn1 '!t'I und 1•artooni11ts. by pro' lilln~ 11 forum for readers' \ "'"' .md h,\ 11rc~cntlng th1~ flt'" ~p11prr·11 opinums ~nd Ideas 11n CUI rrnt I OJ>IC,, The tlditorial opinion!'! of lh~ Oally Piiot apJ)t'ar only in lhe c.>dltm iu I <'olumn at the top of thl' p&jtl'. Opinions ex- prt'1!'1td l>v thr rolumnfM:4 and ranoonlst' 4ncJ ltll<'r writers are their 1111.n ond no endort<'mcnt ot thrlr vlew11 hv the l>elly P\lot 'houlrl bt' lnfl!1 red. Thursday, Dec. 3>, 1971 Thur$day December 30 1976 DAIL V PILOT A 7 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_;...;;;.....;,_ Canada Relations Sour By PETER ARNEIT OTTAWA, Canada <P> -ImpatienUy stnving for a d1stinctive North American personality, the Canadian gove rnment 1s runrung up against some important U S interests . and there is a nsmg backlash of concern lll Canada and in the United States. The once.cozy "special relationship" enjoyed by the continental neighbors has been shaken by what U.S . officials charactenze as the "single· minded" pursuit of Canadian econom ic and cultural nationalis m at the expense of her southe rn neJghbor. .. "THEY'VE SAJD FOR YEARS that the U.S. threatens Canadian cultural and economic na - tionalism, but we're more on the s hort end or the stick now," said one U.S. official, detailing the areas of connict ( ~f::U '.' I\ 11.l'I') Canadians claim that lhe United States started lhe downslide in relations in the early 1970s with un- fair e c ono mic sur- charges. Relations belwl•t>n the' federal government in Ottawa and Wash1ni,rton are i.our in i.everal major areas. From the Allant1c Ocean to the Pacific, and up to the Arctic Sea, both countnei. are embroiled in border disputes ranging from the important to lhe trivial. The poht1cal differences arc allayed by close personal and business relationships between millions of Americans and Canadians EDITOR'S NOTE -U S CCl1JOtiJars /~hip ba.$ bun 1UCh that both countma boon of ftlanng the world'• longeat imdt'/nvhd border Bui ia~1. rongmg /rom the important to the tnVJOl, ~ an1en to aha.Ice thaJ IOf'lg. atcind1ng 1pec1ol rtlollon1h1p between Ottawa and Wcuhmgton A PtdUur Pnu-wmrung AP $J>ecwl cor- rel'J)O'ndent explore. them m thia second of three article! onCooodo. . ing seems lo diminish the further one moves away. Out west in Vancouver, an aide or British Columbia Premier Bill Bennett declared, "The federal government has wtnecessanly exacerbated distrust of the U.S. We have no hangups about America. "WHEN AMERICAN CAPITAL COMES up here, it comes on the terms or the elected govern. ment. We set all the rules. How can that capital dominate us?" the official as ked. Canada's 10 provmcei. arc loosely linked in a 110-year-old confederation to the federal govern- ment in Ottawa Each province has its own parliamentary.style government, headed by a pre· mier, wJth far greater autonomy than a U S. state On the eas t coast in New Rrunswic k, a newspaper editor said. "We'd like to trade more with Maine across the border, and our officials meet. But the federal government won't approve. Our relations with the U S are close We go down to Boston to watch the Red Sox. rather than see the (See CANADA, Page i\9) l\P'llll ........ Eflt>• Afri<"a Sovjet Pre s ident Nikolai V Podgorney will try to warm up Afri('an re lcrtions durmg a tour of the continent ten tat1vcly s cheduled for March. Des p1l(" Soviet pr ess downplay. the trip 1~ s een an a ma1o r thru s t toward a larger role in Afr1c:ia for the Soviet Union. THESE MAJOR ISSUES TROUBLE the two countries today Last Days For GI WANTED DI.\ 'tlO,DS • (iJt:,1S'l'O't·:S Benefits .....: Anti Amt'ri C'cinas m remains s tron~. particularly 1r1 Ottawa the ft'<Jcrcil eapatal and the industrial ccntc:r of Tronto lfowcver, leaders and ordinary Canadians an the Maritime provinces and to the west Sl't' Americans as much less of a threat, and some thargc that Ottawa 1s conducting a "smear eu mpm~n " t:m·t.'rlainty toward the federal gove rn- ment's all1t11de lo fon•1gn JOV!•::.tment has almost dried up the flow of J\mc•n can m oney. and in- creased lhl' fl ow or Canadian money into the United States WAS lllNGTON <AP) Friday 1i. the la~day you can enlis t in tht' m1htary and get full GI education benefit:. at government expense. After 1977 begins, new enlistees will have to contnbute some oC their own money 1n a ncu1, volunta ry CI education plan. Jewels by 1osep11s :s searc"·"g !o: d1a'1"0ras and gemstonps •!Or!' p::vate '"1111•duals and estate:; Cdreful e"am1nation and evaluatoo:i by ou~ exper1~ H1qhest pnces oaod Ca11 5-'0·9066 t0-9 da11y, Sdlurd .. y IO·o Surv.lay closed ask tor Mr Joseph iewels by ioseph SA~ JUA~ CAPISTRANO residents recently won a free, 7 -day Princess c ruis e to the Mexican Riviera courtesy of Howard Chl•vrolet in Newport Beach. The entry of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wingate was drawn bv Thomas B. Yundt. right. m anager of Crockc·r Nalrnnal Bank in Newport Center as Howard G ll1chards on. owner, looked on at the dra wing held last week. -GAS rRICES AND POLICIES, and protec· tiomst bills, have concerned the US government and Congn•ss The Canadian government 1s continuing to purs ue a "third option" aimed at pulling some dis- tance between the Canadian and American economy by d<•\·c•lop1ng markcti. abroad. It has had little s uccesssorar Both counlnC'S have made hC'adway on some Jong-standing border ti.sues including fishing rights. but a d ozen others remain unsolved and potentially in flam mablc "THE UNITED STATES ENTF.RS into our every convcrs atwn . 1\ takes up all our tame," said a government pollticaJ scientist in Ottawa. It is from Ottawa that the belief Oowi; that Canada is strong enough to takl' the nc('essary measures to reduce its dependence on America That belief is reinfon·cd m Toronto, not only by the English Canadi<tn intellectual ehte. but also by the vast anduMnal and N·onom1c strength that southern Ont;.ino has amasst•d U.S companies C'ontrol 58 J>('rcent or Canada's 011 and natural ga., rndw.lr). 45 pNeent ()[ manufac- tunng. 43 p<'rn•n t of rmnmg and "melting a nd 36 percent of lhl· pulp J nd pap1·r industry This amounts to ~O nf thl' !Jr~l.''-l JOO companies in Canada While this Jn~crs Otta \\" Jnd Toronto. the feel- __ P_l_1 H LI(' '0TI(',., 1--P_l_' B_L_•_c_."'_o_n_<_'_E __ FICTITIOUS 8U\1Nf \\ FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Ht.Ml STATEMENT NAME STATEME•H Tt\f .,,_,, •l"'l ru r H •• I I'' .,....,, f I-' Ortf)Pf:_ Ar , • 1 " t I ,..,, \ \ )I< J 'l I "/I. l 1 )o1t• P 'J i\ • ~-t l.jj 4'ti •' I\. ' ,,.,,., o.,, ... , \ F, t h ,.wDV' (\1 1'h t~A' 1\11 M i l'\.t .. 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Wtll lAM( St 10HN rnu~tv f•"''" ltAll'MM M'l'fl!S,Jll Loew C•r .. r•tton OIO Nowpon Ce~ltr Or • 11n !Mw...., &.uh, C•"'"'"'• '1MO P\1t>t1,hfld Or~f'\0-C.OA\t Daitv Pli~ °"'.,"""' 7' l•. 10, 1~76 U?&.76 PUBLIC NOTICE lllOTIC( TOCOlllTltACTOllSCALLIHO l'Olt8 10S \<f'tool Oh tr'<' (GA\t Co~•h C,,ll"QI" 01\tr, t 81d O-Adl11W" lt l)019 rn r ril'tAy fMh~rv1• l'Uf Pt,.<" of 8 1d 'hr ,.,pf o u., .. nt Pu,,,,..,,,.11 AO't"'I t .-.~,, ('"'"'"""'t' (f'lllll'QIP 0.\1,ict Aom1r11\tr11110" Au•irt•""'Q 111n Af'tt11rn\ Av•n,_. Co~t.f Mf''-' OrA"QI Covt\ty C•l1forn•,. Pro1•c' Nary,,. q,.,,urfAc 1rt11 nt l•~1' Cl\orn Al o, il"OI' (n.t\I Coth•O" Pt«• ol.tn .. ft',. f)n fllr 001,,. ,,, ,,.. P\1rc~•''"Q l<1""' '110 .\d•'"' 4._,.f'\ut'. Co\IA '-""'*"' C.11tl1lorn1.t .,,.,~ Pt.-.n~ m~., bl' OOt••'"""'11 ilt t"'-nfttc• of lttt' Purc~t •nq 4Qitnt NOflCF f' Uf'qE nV r.1vr 1.1 tr\.H t¥ •"'-'v'" n.•~ '\Cf'Oot th'\tnct ot Ora~ Covnh (f\l1fl')'"'" "'''nq 0• ttM fhrfMJqf\ ,, .. 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E~" O•d \l'Mlt bfoo .u c~rnf\M'l1fld "'" thir w-cur1fy ,,.,.,,.,,,,.., 10 n 1~ <Of'ltr.O do<u"""'"'' •net t>v '""'"'tot nrnno""" \Ull'W~tr1t<tor' ff'wi> O• .. lrltf ,,., .. ,,., .. , thip n <Jf'll to,...,,.,, Jln'f n~ "" h•d\ or to ""'"'"*" .tn't tr "'9UIArtli .. , fV into, .,,,,.11f IP\'" M'W ti10\ O• In ttw-b10tt1nq T~ Ol\tt1('t ""'""1,.rm11'V"d •~~""' P'""w•lllnq r At.-ot .,., di~ w•9f' hr ttw IOC•llh' 1n •h•r" t1"11\ Wf')f'\ '" tn ~ fll"''f0f"""11 tor f'•Ch craft or type al wor'-.mAf"I .-.~_." tn ,.11,.cutf' tNt nwitrM"t 10 bl'I '' tollo...,• HOU Ill Y HEALTH& ~llAOE llATI Wl!U'AllE l'l!NSIOH VAf,ATtOM L•-or Cl"""••I ' I XI \ ~\ \I U \ n P•lftlt•,O•u\11 10 JI ,. ,1 10 IS ... ,,.,., \P•o 10 n ,. 1 IO 11 t.nobiol•f, """'""'~" A a II 1 u u Tf'Wii torfllrQt)lf'l(J """dull' rtf f>l""• 1f1,.m .,.,...,..,I\ f'Mwd UOO"I A wotkt"" rlAY of •l~t II) hOun fhr "''Ill lor hOl•rffll'r •""'1 nwrtim•WM .. \hall bit .tt •t•'\l f1nw ano ""°""" H \h•lt bf! m•ndAtOrv u""*" ti¥ C"'11rAr tot ft> W'IOm lhlt conlr¥t ft ffWftrtffd. 4lftd ~ •n,. tub<:ontr"rtor. '"'~' h•m tn p.·w not I~"'"'"'" t~ \Atrt 'ot(lflfod ,,.,.,,&aUw•ufHin AMOlov-.dbv~n-,., '" 1~ .. 111•rut•~not ttwo contr1.rt No .... , "°'•Y •UhOr.tw "'' 0J(l f0f' A ~tnd t>t to.-tv f1vt 141\l dltY' 11ttl•r' 1,. Cl.Ht Ml IM 111"-"'"ll al bid• Prior loawarOOl •n• ton1r..-t Int"-'"""°' U.500 OOor "''"" a pay,.,.,..1-.S -• .. '1 .. _ce boM wltl bO rt11u<•Od ~ "'"' bt In trw •orm WI IO<!I\ In l!'lt Contr4'CA Ooomtnh COAST COMMUHITVCOl.LE OE OtSTRICT 80 1\ROOr TRU<,l[F<, 1' Norm•" E W•I~ S.<ftt•ry Ao.lrd~ lr\l'\IH O\Mfl JenU6•v '' 1'11 11 JO• m ''~"'• •w ~~Ot4111Q9 Ca•f1 °"'"'"""" o.<....m.r "I ltl•-1-ry• .,.,, IM-7• Those who sign up for the new education pro gram will have to con tnbute S50 to $75 monthly from their pay, up to a maximum of S2,700, tn receive GI edueat1onal aid. The Veterans Ad mimstration will matct· each $1 paid by the GI with $2 when gom~·to s c hool time arrives making a kitty or up to SS.100 per person availa ble. P URI.I(' NOTl('t: NOTICE OF NOH Rt:~PONStlllltTV Nl)t1 • '' ~,.,, nv '>'"''" "' lt 1t.,. "' t)r r •t'Jn.il·d W+ll nfll l'lf"• '"\pt)n-.1t'jh• tt•r uit 0-bt\ or t1•h•l1t+•' '""''"''''(f hy d"•t\f'Mll' t th•' lh.\11 m "'' 1t nn,,.. '"'°' '"'' ri.ttr Oat-cl th1\ )ltl\ f1.h• ,1 O• rrnbf, fU~ Mar.,1,.nt) ~ M.c l r ,.n n~f'X•tl'l\lllOW-'" lr1111N1 (A'llt\ P\,lblt\IW'd Or Jnqr (ll11\t 0,.11v Pil,,t O-r-1Q y, ,.,,.•"Id,.,,.. \ ,,,,, \ll'o) ,. PUBLIC ~OTI('E l'tCT I T!OUS llUS!H' H HAMEST4TEMEHT • •,. ',,.,, ...... ,.,_"*'',on• ctol"'' """"''".'' ... I( INVE'>!M(NT\ n•l><Du P...'11 Or-1v,. lry,,..,. (A9)1t\ Ot\r•' Zttnf\A M,,n,1·n 1 lit\ W t40 fJh~· AnAP\Hn"I (A ~)Mt ,,, , ttv· '"'''' rnnctu<t11d tw ·•n 1n J vr)!tt\I tH'I'• l M onvn (h, '-'·•'• "''""' Wl"I f•IM with I™'° , ,111~ r ltit 11 M OrAnf)•· C11untv on .,,,,,.1' •o ,,,,., 1t1•• n--d or..-nq1 (fti\~' 01tlfy 1>,101 , 1J }() t·o; .• uutJ~n;, \1111 \111 ,. PUBLIC NOTICE s ,,,,, SUl'f 111011COUllT01' THE ST AT~ 01' CAll l'ORHIA ,Olt TMf COUNTY 0" OllAlllGE Ho A ... u N OTICI 01' MEAll!HG OP' PITITIOM 1'011 l'llOIATE OF 'llllll 4N0 "Oii LfTTEllS TESTAM(H TAllY AHO AUTHOll!UTIOH TOAO "llHISTEll UHOfll TH( tNOll',HOl!HT AOMIHISTllATIOH OF fSTAT'S Af.T F\l•I• ol HEllMAl \l!MCI'< ~I'° •nt>w" u HERMAL P SEMON °""" .. 4'\M f'IOTICE 15 >4E llEBY GIVf"I llwtl \•O"IE'I' SEMON "~' 1 IMJ hl·•~m .t • ..,.,,,,O"I to,. Prob••• ot W•U .-.nc:s tor ... 1111MW• of l """''' ,,...,.,_.m411>ntMy ''"" Aitthor 1•t•on to Adm1ni\l1111, ""°"' tne ~~Ptrto.r.t Admtnl\lr"t1on t)f f \l•tt\ "'' t rftfrt.,."l<f' to which 1 ""'Mlf tnr h1,,her o•r11tvl•r' t'll\d thot IN-Ii'"* tnd ofMlll Of heer1nq th,. \t1f'1"WI" ht't\ ~1\ ·"'to,. Janu.rv t 1 tt17 •t to 00• m 1n ,,.. tourtroom of O~O."'""'~"' N9 J Of "°"11' <.our' at 100 Cfvtt Ct nt1tr Orlv,. WO\I '" Int Cltv or S•l\lo llno C•!Uorn•a 0.t""' 0 f'C 1J. 1'16 'lllll.LIAM I . SI JOHN Covn1v Cltrk fUOINf I SHAl'lllO SHAl'lllOANOMl\GUlll' ....... ~., .... -Wlltlllr• l!•d .. Sullo IOH -.nyHlllt,CA"111 A ............ ,..""-' Puoll\n.<I O••"O. Cool O•llv Pllol. O.C 7'. JO. It,._ Jan S. 1'11 PUBLIC NOTICE SU ... 1111011 COUllTOl'TMI STATI 01' CAL"'OlllUAl'Olll TMICOUH,YO,.OtlA ... & Mt A·-"U MOTICI 0" MIAllllllO 01' "l'TITIOH POii l'tlotlATI 01' Will ANO FOii LITTEllS Tl.TAMINTAllY AHO trOtl AUTMOtllZATIOH TO AO MINISTlll UHOllll THE IHOEl'IHOllNT 0AOMINISTltATIOM 01' lllTA.Tlli ACT l"lllOIATI COOi "llTHOI Et llle ol EDNA KRAEM!ll OONLAP ~·~ lllOTICE !S Hlill£1Y GIVEN !NI l.AUOl-lLIN E W41Tl!llS •nCI "RANK J Wl\T£RS n ..... ...,,,.. •• ln•Pt!•tlOll for Pro1>111e 01 w111 Ind ~' "w-• of Ul1ot'\ lHt..,.tnt•r'I' 10 thot .. litlollef• ...,, 1 .. euH-or!t•U-to •Clmh\C'1tr 11w Ul•!t UftClet' IM lflO•tNnO.ft! Ad• mlnl'14r41tlon of E\llltt AU ll'ToMlt Code ffl el Mql .. lereoce lo ""'le" f'J maot for turtl\tr Mf!ICOI•"· ~ ,,,., ow !lme •nd IM•h ol IWl•rln4t,,. ..,_ hil<bttn,,..l IO• J•"U8'Y II IUl,1110 Oii A m , 1,. lhoo tO\lrtroo"' ot DtOeM"""'I Ho Jot •••Cl cour! fl 100 C•.,< Otnlt' Ori"" W•••. '" "'" Cllv al ~I• AM, c.o111om1e O•tod Dtc•mllfor 11 1'7& WILLIAM I . SI JOHN, '°""''Cit•• llAYMONOJ UATON,IM> NOUAMAN,ICllUIOlll &MAHN A"""'"' .. 1.1 .. .. S'-'11"t•fH51 _,,._ w. ..,....,, CallMrftl• .. .,, Tel·flm••m• ........ ,fer ltlellen l'liOllWO •llte CH\I Cktly "'*· OK JO. JI ltlt"'4 Jan • "" .. GENERAL ELECTRIC'S CASH BACK TO YOU ••• DIRECT FROM GENERAL ELECTRIC CO. Here's how it workd ... if the old built-in di shwasher you're replacing is a Gene ral Electric, and if you're replacing lw with either a GE GS D·950 or GSD-1050 built· in dishwasher (betwePn now and 2111 '77) then a ll you have to do is send GE your "Owner Registration Certificate" from your new GE bu1ft·in d1shwasl'ler Con or before 317177) and you will recP1 ve a \50 00 check direct to you from General Electric Company 1 GENERAL ELECTRIC <iSD 950 BUILT-IN POTSCRUBBER II DISHWASHER • 5·cycle washer selecllons 1nclud•nq PowPr Scrub ryclP • A rn11· 1ng new Perma· Tur 1n1e.,or • Sound in~ut ''"" • D• il·A L• •Pl upper racl( • Decora1or revers1t>IP color p;in,•ls • Powc1 !o w•n•J drying opllon • 3-level wasl'tong ac.t•on • Built rn !.Oii too<1 d ~ro~.., NOW ONLY GENERAL RECTRIC POTSCRUBER 11 • EXCLUSIVE 10-YEAR PROTECTION PLAN fn ilc;fd1t!Oft to tr1e ••rr•nty rou'U t0'41'fe A .. ,.,"'''" COttlt•tf U'lal aaya 11 lho Per"1a-Tu1 .. lub Ot -llller 11tou10 '•" 10 conl11,. "'''" oue to man\llactun"o deleci. 1uch •• cr.ac:~lhQ ''"PP no rMllno 01 •u•''"O w1tt\•n the n1no f9) yeaf conlrKl '"'iod (•~·"'Q '"" ""'"' hom e>urch""' dll•~ C.Mr•I Eloec1rc •1U 1•pa•r or ••l>i•cn thn tub or d04'.:'-' Wllt-4t)UT CMARG( •01 .,,,,., PARTS "' LASOR un•~·~ '• ,.,,_ ., llu~ •o "'''U~ .. ---· it 401 MAIN STREET SALES ANO SERVICE 536-7561 GOLDINWIST & WAINER SALES ONLY 842-5596 A• DAI LY PILOT • Deaths Elaewhere • LOS ANGELES <AP) -A UCLA political l science professor, Dr. Joel Jail. 30, died from a cerebral hemorrhage. He eceived the 1976 pro- euor of the year award m Pi Sigma Alpha, a ,. lional political science 'society. CINCINNATI (AP) - Marloa Beeker, 73, coauthor of the highly succesaful "The Joy or Cooking," died Tuesday. More than s ix million copies of the book have been sold. ANTIBES, France CAP) -Prl.DceH Andre, '18, who married the late Aga Khan after be met her working in a chocolate s hop, died Tuesday. DALLAS CAP ) -Elec· tric blues guitarist Fred· dy K.l.Dg, 42, died Tues· day. Doctors blamed complications from an uJ. cer and a blood clot. ROS EBURG, Or e. (AP) -Richard Honeck, who went to prison in 1899 for murder and soon became a forgotten man who went without a letter or a visitor for 59 years. d ied T u es da y at a Roseburg nursing home. After a n Associated Press stor y was written about his plight in 1963, he was paroled in the care of a long-lost niece. NAIRO BI. Kenya CAP) -The son of Ugan. dan President ldi Amin, army Capt. Noor Amln, 35, coll apsed a nd die<! after a Boxing Day party Sunday, according to re. ports from Kampala. WASHINGTON, N.C. CAP) -Uodsay C. War- r en, 87, who b ecame <'Omptroller general of the United States alter J~ng S<'rvicc in Congress, dted Tuesday night in B e auf o rt Co unt y Memorial Hospital. GARRET PARK. Md. (AP> -Munro Lear, 71 , author of ·'The Story of Ferdinand" a nd more than 30 other children's books , died or cancer J'f'centJy at his hf'mc ••Ferdin and '' -the story o( a Spanish bull who would rat he r s m ell flowers than fi ght in the ring -has been translat· ed into m ore than 60 languages. NEW YORK (AP> Alex Rose, 7K, a founder of the Liberal party who became a k1n gmaker in the politics or New York city and state through his ability to s wing his splint er party for one candid ate or another, di ed TUl'Sday at his home here. IAL Tl.lll•llOM fUt4HAL HOMI Corona <Set Mar 6 73·9450 Costa Mesa 646·2424 --llUNOADWAY MORTVAIY 110 Bro1dway Costa Mesa 642·9150 ---McCOlMICll MOITUARIH Laguna Beach 494.9415 L aguna H tll'I 768-0933 San Juan Cao1,trano 495·1776 ---PACIFIC VllW MIMOll.ALPAH Cemetery Mortuary Chapet 3500 Pacll1c View Ori11e Newport. Ca1tlorn1a 644-2700 -...... AMILY COl.OMtAL '41Nll.U. HOMI 780t Borsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 -SMITMI' MOUUUY 827 Main St. H untington Beach 53~53G ---SMITH TVTHflL LA .. OUI WHTCUffl CHA,._ Mortuary •• 648-4888 427 E t711't St, Cost1 Me11 ' . P\JBLIC N011CE PlC'TtTIOUS •u1u1ns HAMIJTATIMlllT ''Ttlt follo .. 11111.,.rsont fftdolftlbu\1-... ,: OAHA INOUSTltllU, >HJI .. hunt "'· 21, Hllflll/IOIOll !loMCll, CA,.... J&lln w11111111 8ar11 ... '11 .. 1 .._hllnt -1ot...ttntte11 llliK~ CA ..... ~ Ito TllllO, 101'4 It CIM,.. ..... ,._,.,,, Vello. GA tt,. ""' .......... " ,, (f1191K\H ... .... 1..-r111ers11111- "'-' ........ o--.. CMllt Dlltr ....... '~ ...... Q, .. "" ...... .. I l'hul"ld!y. Oee•tnber 30, 1976 Five to Paint Inauguration To Be Artful Fl'oJD AP DbpakMa Jimmy Carter's inauguntlon will be im· mortalbed by five top figures ln American art - Alldy Warlaol, Jacob Llwrence, Boy IJcllteu&dll. Robert Raudaeabeq and Jamie Wye~. The Presidential Inauguration Committee an- nounced that it commiasioned the Cive t.o record their Impressions of the inauguration, and will raise funds for the event by selling 100 sets ol their s igned prints for $2,500 each. Warhol, -46, lives in New York and was a leading figure in the pop art movement or the 1960s, when his works cele brated such familiar images as the Ca mpbell's s oup can. Lichte ns tein, 53, of Southampton, N.Y., also figured prominently in that era. with d ot pattern paintings. Lawrence, 59, of SeatUe. paints social and his· torical themes. Rauschenberg, 51, is a Texas-born artist who lives in New York and Florida. Wyeth 30, a portrait artist, is the soo of Andrew ,.Y~ and lives in Chadds F ord, P a. • Three Chowchilla kidnap defendants were forced by other inmates to join in a brief Dec. mini-re volt a t tbe Alameda courthouse, an attorney argued in protest of their temporary loss or visiting privileges. Frederick Newhall Woods, 24, one of those charge<! in the mass kidnaping, told a hearing at Oakland that he had been caught up in the disturbance in· advertently and s hould not have lost his visiting privileges for 10 days. wooos The hearing was postponed pending further hearings on how jail regulations comply with Califorma Administrative Code minimum stan- dards. • President Ford, in the second week of what pro- bably will be his final skiing vacation as the na- t1on 's chief executive. swims in the morning, skis during the day and parties at mght. He hves 1n the casual m anner or Va.tJ, ( J Colo. PEOPLE In between , a ides say, the President studies ---------' his paperwork, discusses the transition lo the ad- ministration of President-elect J immy Carter and ponders his future. Ford leaves the White House on Jan.20. Whether he's working or exercising, Ford adopts the relaxed manner or the mock-Ba vana n village where the Fords have visited for nine Christmases. • An attorney for Lee Marvin says the actor never agreed lo share his e arnings with the woman he lived ~ith for seven years without marrying. Attorney Mark Goldman said Marvin will make no effort to settle out of court a suit filed against him • FREE Original Watercolor Print FROM \MARINERS SAVINGS Limited Offer ' ' We have commissioned artist Mork leysen to depict a waterfront scene along the Southern California coast. His expressive watercolor. titled "Newport Connery Docks" Is available for a limited time. Yours Free (Ofter expires Jan. 10, 'TT) You ore Invited to come to Mariners Savtngs and receive one of these ex- clusive 16" x 20" fufkofor prints to enloy in vour home or office. We have a limited number, so visit us soon. Mariners is Part of Your Community We ore aware Of the importance o f being a port of each c ommunity we serve. That's why we off er you some- thing of real value to introduce you to Mariners Savings. Not only do we pay more interest on your savings than any bank, but we also provide you with many more free services for your convenienc e. Earn 8.06°/o • on a Six· Year 7.75°/o Certificate of Deposit. • Sut>ieet lo suintonhol onterest penalties II prlnclpot ts w1ll'ld1own Pnot to motvuly. 18\ Marin~ Saving~ 'W' and Loan A .. -..~odatk•n NEWPORT BEACH (Main Olftce) 1515 Westchfl Or (Bayside Cente•) 1024 8dys1ae Or (714) 642·4000 by Michelle Triola Marvin. TheCaliforniaS~~meCoort ruled~atMiM -~~~~~~~~~-~~~-~--~~~~---~-~~~-~- Marvin has the right to sue Marvin for half the pro- perty he acquired during their relationship. The court said expressed or implied contracts bet.ween unmarried persons arc valid • Coll eagues expect Mich.el A. BilandJc to be u competent and colorless in the Chicago mayor's of· fice as he was in the City Council chambers, seeing to it that the garbage gets picked up and exit· mg without a nouris h. Arter bemg chosen interim mayor by the council, Bilandic, 53, repeated earlier s tatem ents that he wants the job only until~ special election ts held as re- quired under stale law within six months •t~NOIC J le said he would not return to his council post as alderman from the late Mayor Richard J . D1le)"S own Jllh ward, but would retire to his law pr actice. • He was struck by lightning, came down with a case of blood poisoning and suffered from frostbite. "Other than that, the trip went well," said Manlaall WUUam "Bod" Killaey Jr., 28-year-old Conner disc jockey who's spent 2''4 years walking cross-country from his hometown of l.eola. Pa. He was accompanied to San Francisco by a dog named Muscoda and by Maybelline. a 12.year-old mare who pulled a pony cart filled with hay and KJnney's belongings. D~a•h No•l~P• •LACCljlAN llE. f T'I' lll ACf(MAN, rnl~nl of ee. ..... clot Mtr, C.lllor"I• P .. _ _, Oe<tmbt• ,., "" S..r..t-bv -Jty l!l.c;lm•n two ""10'>f~• ........... lll•Omtn, P1lylll1W1l10nboll> ,,, P•,•d•n• twio 9r•noc"1IOl'ftn 1111< .... 0 -11.tfl>lpe,, WllM>n, brol ... r : C. &.•l•of tow• City, towe S..•lt~ wlll llo l'lold) 00 PM Friday o.c ..... 31 •I Pt<•lo< ll••w CfltP"I Off1<let1no h '""Rt• Oont ld W J(uU. Ent- P1<iftc Yltw Mpmof~el P•rtl, ~ h M:,., Ct . Pt<lllc \llew Mort,..ry dire< for\ IMltHAaDT CHARLES W, EHllHAltOT. ~-f ,_ \en llerMrdh•o, Calllo,.,.le.. .,.\._., _., OKembet n, ""· S<lrvlwd b¥ lllt Mftl, Cher tu W. E ""'"rdl ol CarlsMd; Ed.,erd M. IEl>rt\ordt of Ot-fde; clauqftter 9ttl><lra PllortrSK et Tu<M>ft, Arlroftt , broltwr JoM f.llrlle•OI o f S•,, Clemente; '•" v••,.d<lll ldrer1 ; •I• v r ••I· O--l>llor.ft. Crypl\lde ••rvi<M lo bt -Tllur\d<l't De<•mbt• )0 •I I 00 PM .. PfClfl< v1 .. Me....,.. I at Peri.. P9<Jfl< V .... Mot11MryOlre<l0<l. CA a Ta" IEllJ AMIN CAaTta, ,..,_ of PUBUC NO'nCE ,.,,.,. SUl'latoa COUltTOllntl STATI 01' U LI ,.0 .NIA l'Olt Tl41COUNTY0,. OltANG£ N•. "'"'9J MOnC1101' HIAltlNO 011 "tTITION ll04' "ltOaATI 01' Will AHO l'Olt LITTlllS THTAMINTAaY Ellalt of ANNE TE RES"GlllYWA. OecNMd. Death No• ic.·P• Laciune Hill!, Ctlllo•,,ia Pe•.....i 11wey DK•~-, ,, .,,. !>f°'VI<•\ t>HW:fJnq P..:111( Iii-Mern0<11I Ptrll Mort_., .. ,..tor• llt•IY JANE C. Fl llEV Ptn .0 awev DK.m-1'!ft Ae\lcloftt ol .._«t Per•. UK A"9f'•• 8. Newpor1 8Hc11. llelovltd Mot""' of 8•11y 8ult0ft of Newoor1 ht<I>, Ptlrltlll Hti. of S....la l'e, New Mul<o & ltlcherd Curry of Newoorl llU(h .. 3 IO•lll<I O••""· e1t,qi1•rt Prl•tl• S.t•lc•• Don.Ill""' m.oy i..m-tolhe HUii Funellnlll1uof '-"· M<•lllAHY LUCY M< ENE AN Y, ret'*"lof Oa!ltt M•••. Cettrornlt . P•o•O twt'f Clo<...,,b9r 1', lt16 She I• lUrvl .. d b't tlw• '°'"• """· Jouoh K. M<E-v. Fr•"l Mee;,. .. ,.., 01 Co•I• Mew; O.rt rd Mcl ftU"Y Of Ntw .Ht'MY! •S•lllO"ler Mary M< E nHny of Cotta Men; lwe 9 '•"d<"lldr•"· RctWry ~Y Otternber lO•l 7·•-etM.. .-T"' l!aotl\I Ct.Ur<" ~ Frld9y Oeamb9r21etl0 OOAMalsoalSI ~ Tl'w 8H11ft Olu•<h Int••"'-"' llt GoW ~"' C•"'••••Y l!•ll•·llttvetw1 firlr••l-dlreclors. PUBLIC N011CE SUPllUOlt COUltT 011 Tlotl. STAT a 011 CALlllO•lllA llO• tHI COUNTY 0 ,.0•AllOll ... A-. llOTICI 011 Hl.AlllNO Oft ... TITIOM ..Oa ltaO•ATI M WIU. ANO l'Oa L.ITTlllS TaSTAMllll· TAltY blete Of LAMIA 8. lAHLOUTE. Dec.atMd. HOTICI IS Httll9Y OIYef .,_. OAt'lllL. M. MWtl 11 .. tll.s"-'11• """"" fOI l'rotltw .. WlllT ...... 1 .. ._of LtUart T .. 1-1.-, '9 l"' •"'-' ,_.tr.Mt te wltlcll It fM!lt for fwt!IH -11C'lll•"· ....... '"" llnlf llfld llltel 4lf 11Hrl1111 lllt -1141• I . FURNITURE Design, quality and comfort at an extra- ordinary RB price! 7 ~ foot SOFA and 5 Yi foot LOVESEAT or the two-piece 15 }'2 foot SECTIONAL ~2SS Sectional, sofa, loveseat, c hair, ottoman with the fine detailing of saddle .um styling, button-tufted cushioning, and smartly styfed side pockets in the most supple real leather-look, easy to care for vinyl in lustrous shades of russet, bu mt ·gold, sunset, natural and cordovan. Decorating S«'rvicc, d elivery and full five-year warranty .1t no extra charRe· Oversized ch~ir ;3Q. a;s•tt•m•• 't()TIC:S II HIAl9Y OIVIH ~ Ml.Ilk ANO'lll W ORtYWA '*'filed ~ft•lletlllOft 10<' Probat.ofWlll.., IWl•w8nCeof I.ell•" THIO,,_.,.,IO ffW petlt'-• rtftt•,.o to -"1<11 '' med9 lor further p8rll<ultrt.. tlWS ltlt'I ,,. time •ftll o•ec• of 11earl119 NW.... lln Ml\ "1 for J•"'"" II, 1'77, •I lt;OD • m , I,. IM 'ourlrOom OI OecMwt· ,_,. ,.._ J of \otld <OVrl, •t 100 Q\'I< Ctt14tr Orlw WHt, In ttlt cnv fll s..t AM,~111om1., 9"911 .. I fflf J~ry 11, 1'1', .. IO;OO 111-------------------------------------------------------J &.I'll., lfl ti. '*"1-t* Diil '"*4 o.. .. Dee. u. 1'76. WIU.IAMe.tUOttM, ~·c­WIU.tMI 0. MAHOMIY • ,., INctl ...... LSM*a,CA...al .......... 1 ... llt'- ,.,..,.. 0 0 1199 C»att Olllly ~ OK. It,», tf1UM Jp, S, 1'11 .,.,,. No. • flf Mid (.Uft, .. ,. Owtt °"'9w OtlW WWI. 111 lllt City ff SeMa ~ Gllllfwllla.. O..~t1."" Wll.L.IAMI.•~ 0-..y(i.ttt OllOltM D 1"411" ......,., .. '--•1•1-11~..-.---­ua~.CA*'1 Te4:111JI ~ ........,_:........._ ..,_,.,...,... 0r._. CNtt Oelly NII. DK. tt, .. ""·--···"" ,..,. COME HOME TO RB FURNITURE ANAHEIM 1112 w. l.lftcotn • ne-1231 SANTA ANA/TUSTIN 1103 E. 17th St.. 5., .. 201 COSTA MESA 9'15 N. Harbor Blvd,• 549·8181 _.... .. -• 9"0' 1 DAVI A WllK • Wltl(DAYI 10UHTll1 • tATUlllDAV 10 UNTIL•· SUH DAY 12.30 UNTIL I• Allr\t mt •utt1111 c.....~•••1•••lNW•'1••• ,,. .,,~··•••<-# .... .,. •. ,.,...."'., ' \ . . . Cot a problem·) Then wntt' tu J•at Vunn Pat u ill cut red tape, gctlmg t11.e answers and a<:l wn you need to solve inec1uittcs in government and bu~•· ness. Mail your quesllon3 to Pat Dunn At Your Service, Orange Coast Dady Ptlot. l'.O. Bor 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 926'.t6. Include your telephone number. The column appear.! daily except Salurdays. n~• Vp tor Dblttea•Mr DEAR PAT: In August 1973, I purchaBed e1 Lady Kenmore dishwasher from Sears. After a few months the timer broke. and Sears replaced it. About five months later it broke again and was replaced. This continued for a period of about nine months. J finally returned lo the store where I bought the dishwasher and purchased a new timer. nus one broke after a few weeks. l'm now being charged ror service calls and timers. none of them have worked for more than a few monlbs. R. N., Costa Mesa· You say that Sears now has picked up your dJsbwasber and proml'ied to credit your account for lt. For problems with some appliances which have aot been dealt with satisfactorily by lbe dealer or muudadarer, tbe Major Appliance Consumer Ac· lion Panel <MACAP), an independent group of con· sumer professionals, olten is effecUve. Complaints should be addressed to MACAP. %t North Wukt!r Drive, Chicago, IL 60606. Future WUI Be Brighter DEAR PAT: In your Dec. 14 column a reader asked about where one could obtain a paper th:.it s topped silver tarnish. 1 buy "Pacific Cloth,'" which is a rtannel, anti-tarnish cloth, at The Yardage Shop in Tustin. This cloth is the same as that used by jewelers and tl can be purchased in any yardage amount needed. I find it ver y errec- tive. M.A., Irvine Tarnish is never a problem until stored silver bas Men used. Between the A VS sugg~stion of wrapping cleaned silver tighUy in plastic wrap and your s uggestion. perhaps our readers can avoid the time-consuminl chore of polishing. AJOtougb some of tbe new s ilver cleaners are very easy to use, this ls ooe chore everyon e would n&ber avoid. Frw.tPGf1eA7 CANADA ..• Expos in Montreal, even though both cities are about the same distance from us." CANADA'S ECONOMIC NATIONALISM began biting with a series or policies including the Foreign Investment Review Act that restricts foreign companies in establlsbmg or expanding operations. Concerned about possible discrimination against American firms, U.S. Ambassador Thomas Enders told a Toronto aud1ence that the United States' need for energy capital "is so compelling tbat we would be reluctant lo see a large scale in· flow of U.S. investment m th.is sector without being confident that Canada would not subsequently change the rules lo rusadvantage u s investors .. Another U.S. official commented, "There is a growing awareness in the U.S. that Canada 1s Cal, rich and happy. A lot of that is because or U.S. nsk capital. Once everything is developed up here Cana- dians ask 'So why is this America'>' lt's American because we developed it." CANADA WILL NEED AN estimated $90 billion in foreign capital m the next lS years "ll LS a nationalistic application or nationalist laws." commented a U.S. official on the cons1dera· hie advantages ~1ven the state-owned otl company. Petro-Can, to o perate 1J1 the High Arctic. Americans were angered by Saskatchewan Province's m oves toward talcmg over part or the vast potash industry developed by American n sk capital The federal ~ovemment's protective economic policies are having an unexpected backlash, driving Canadfan money lo lht' United States where 1t can be located freely without controls. THE UNITF.D !,'TATES IS digging in 1ls heel!> on some issues. blw:iUy tnfonning Canada that the Amencan consume~ or around one tnlhon cubic feet or Canadian gao; each year expect the same treatment as Cana<ban consumers. even 1f there a.re shortfalls. U.S. senators have threatened to retaliate against a bill that attempl<; lo stop the now or Cana· dian dollars to Am enc an border TV stations. The same bill forced Time magazine's Cana- dian edition out of bu.'5ine5s hy placing restrictions on Canadian advc.'rt1sements in the publkation. SOMETHING TIIAT ONCE SEEMED perfect for both countries, the 11-year-old auto pact that re· gulated trade in automobiles and parts across the border, may be in jeopardy with Canada wanting additiooal production guarantees and the United Stat.es pushing for unrestricted free trade. Border conmcts with Canada go from coast t.o coast. Canada is stall unwilling to accept tbe American view that the Northwest Passage through the Arctic Islands is an international waterway, but has embarked on what one American observer called "creeping sovereignty" to c laim the pa&sage. Both countries have strong feelings about fis· hing grounds in the Gulf of Maine that will be in dis· pule bttause of the 200-mile fishing zone. The Unit· ed Sta tea wants total control of the Georges Bank. Nut: A li'ailing Ortom. GRAND OPENING SALE! ..... ti' .... llllh4 .... .-.,. s.ct y.w -tceept tr- ..................... flNtt ....., le• ~ c ...... ...................................... ..,. OUlll T~NO !IAll l..0.UOU • MAMHME\lOW • HOT Ct*lllR\' • HOT P\JOQI • lllJTTflUICOfCM • W1Ctt> 4~! •NUTS • tflllAW8fAllY • ,..,.f4~1 I 00 I SUNDAES JJOI HAllOI IL.. COUMI C.nM COSTA .. SA Thurad1ty DeMrnbe"r 30 1976 DAIL V PILOT A• II . ' And now lod1es ond Gentlemen, here is our 10 Feet of Gutter for I 44 More s19n1ficoM, here 1s the list of oll the things you moy need 10 f1n1sh the 1ob ... ond all on speC1ol. QUANTITY NEEDED RAIN GUTTER ACCESSORIES ITEM 1 O' DOWNSPOUT INSIDE MITRE OUTSIDE MITRE DOWNSPOUT OUTLET TAP ON END CAP LEFT TAP ON END CAP RIGHT SLIP ON CONNECTORS DOWNSPOUT ELBOWS 4A DOWNSPOUT ELBOWS lA DOWNSPOUT ELBOWS 3B DOWNSPOUT STRAPS DOWNSPOUT ELBOWS LONG STEM GUTTER STRAP HANGERS GUTTER FERRULES 44 10 FT. LENGTH UNIT PRICE COST 2.49 1.09 1.09 77' 17' 53' 53' 53' 13' 1.09 ]]' 3' 5' HAPPY NEW YEAR YOU GUYS OPEN TIL 6, DEC. 31 CLOSED NEW YEAR'S DAY WATER I] LJ HEATERS ELECTRIC WITH 5 YEAR GUARANTEE !J~ SIX GALLON .......... 5500 TWENTY GALLON •.... 59°0 THIRTY GALLON .. "" .. 69°0 JOHNS-MANVILE FIBERGLASS SHINGLES 20 yr. guaranteed 1 900 Clan A fireproof roting. 100 SQ. FT. >•·· ..... '·JOHNS-MANVILLE !J~ 90-LB. ROLL ROOFING Choice of colors. heavy mineral coat (and if I said it didn't have a coat. only a veal. 688 would anyone believe me?) '• POLYTECH PLASTIC TARPS Clear or block. cover fwuiture. machinery, boots. bikes. whatever. It' a a heavy gauge 2 99 ao plan on reuaing it. 10'x25' HENRY'S PLASTIC ROOF CEMENT 1 67 GALLON I even like the name, "Henry". It's ao folksy and, by the way. they are a family buaineH and proud of making good producta . FORTY GALLON ...... 7900 FIFTY-TWO GALLON .. 99°0 GAS WITH 5 YEAR GUARANTEE TWENTY GALLON ..... 59°0 THIRTY GALLON .•..•. 69°0 FORTY GALLON ...... 7900 FIFTY GALLON .•..... 99°0 DELUXE GAS WJTH 7 Y2 YEAR GUARANTEE THIBTY GALLON •... 1 0900 FORTY GALLON. . . . 1 29°0 FIFTY GALLON .••.• 15900 TWIN RIB ALUMINUM ROOFING In the old days we used to get thia from the Kaiaer. l don't know where now. "Natural" aounds ao organic. you almoat think they grow lt. Ught but ao atrong. 2s"xB' 4as Natural 26"xl0' 599 Natural 26"x12' Natural 26"xl4' Natural 26"xl6' Natural 729 a•9 9•9 26"x8' White or Green 26"xl0' White or Gr .. n 6•• 917 26"x12' 1 029 White or Green 26"xl4' 1 1 99 White or Green 28"xl6' 1369 White or Green I FESCO 32GALLON PLASTIC TRASH CAN Uk• l aald.. it'• better than a goat becCllW• you know h ow fuHy goat• are about their diet•. 399 KELLEY GALVANIZED TRASHCANS 20 GAL. 30 GAL. 40 GAL. 377· 4•• 599 GALVANIZED HEATER HOUSE Can't leave the heater out all night. It'll get cold. Beata building a space for it. 1997 Thia is the one that makes strong trashmen weep. defies even those guya who jump on them. FIBERGLASS ROOFING 26'"x8' 3 25 26"'xl0' 3 97 26"xl2' 4 89 Comes in Green, White. Beige, Clear or Yellow. So filter out aa much aun oa you want and still have light. PJ~;.;, ~.. . ... . ·~ ·~ · ........ ·. FOIL FACED FUL-THIK INSULATION 1 I :Q.FT. 15'" OR 23"x4 INCH Just about the easiest way to insulate. No big deal. no great aldll needed. 15" OR 23"x6 Yz INCH The savings in fuel ore enormous. If your houH lan't properly Insulated. do it. I' crying out loud. l"x24" ALL PURPOSE INSULATION Uae it to deaden sound. to 7 C adcl to lnaulatlon. you nam• it. SQ. FT. ·!J~t WATER HEATER ,..-.............._ INSULATION KIT 1700 I Llke putting an overcoat on the bea1er. (t cuts down b9Cd loH, you figure out If the thing la worth th• price • , AJOOAILY PILOT Thursday December 30, 1976 iKTLA Relives Past SPACE PATROL Earl\ space series featured. from left ; llappy. I,, n Os born<·. :\laJor Hobc rtson, Kl'n Mayer: Carol. \'ll'gu11a llr wl'lt: Buu Con·~. J<:d Kemmer. and Tonga. :\ina Bara 'asl n· galh<•r:-. lor KTl.A ,innt\l•rsary show J<Jn 22. PURI.IC NOTICE I PUBLIC NOTICE CP )))I l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS t;OTICE TO CllEOI TORS NAME ST ATEMENT SUPEAIO~COU RT OFTHE. fP'l,. tollow1nq nt•r on 1 do1nt,1 bu\1 STATE OF CALI l'OANIA FOR no "~ THE COON TV OF OAANC.( 100111..-!Nf L" rABl r flOAl'i No A ••••t ~ .. ( r.H1•4;. Av~ H 1 (I)•'" MP'it· t:·t•h ,,, r ~tANCl\M 1r1 r1n ,., r 1111 '''·1'1 HOU r ORD U••' • 1" t1 tmnn 0 Mt)rtrm ? 111? f'tw--.w.lh1 Nt)T It f I') Ht ~r HV r,1vr ti''' lrw-• Or J.-l l(Jun,, N1Qu••t t:"<illff)rn, 1<rlb1I , ,...,,,,", t)I 11'1• .tt')t)v1 n 1011•1t<t< 't Ito nt '"• l>U'•tt"lil \'I I, C"Jf\tJUt:ltd OV o'\O H't lh..tl ··"pt,.. ron\ "tY1nq , 1.11r11 .,,, .. ,, I !JIYU1•t ~I trw• 'w:IHJ ,,.., '""'""' .,, r•·tt•11t• ·1 "' 11. I Oonno MtJrlt>n t~·n"I w1tt1 .,,. ,, .. , ,. \ 1• v \'•)•I'!,,..,, 1• Jn1. I th·rn1 "' wt lllrd W1lh fhf• '"°" nrt1r1· ''' '' It ,k .,, '"" 1n.1v1 "" rn»"'V t '"'"' nt Or~-''Qf" Countv ''" 11t11 ti 111n ,, 1, l''' '" 1111 '" ,. t1 "" U.· 1•1ur~, 1 1q1" "''''t' J'V"' 11;• h·, u, "'1 u ntj.·r 11rv·O F•1"41C ''"" ltw ·lh 1 11 ft1 :}M/\-.I IUl-l•J P 1r.t• twf1f)'"'"'fl""(n ~.10 . .J•lvP1lot t\7t P 1 '" I• \ftl•fl I ... , •• I C>••ruho , I l'i ,. lO 1·u,., ,,,j'q ,,,, Pl'RLIC NOTIC•: Pre-Trek Crew Was Space Hit '"' Light vca rs bcforc> television drcaml'd of Mr. Spock board•nil Star Trek 's Enterpr&M' a crew of hearty. paom.•er television personahtaes were busv chart1ni.: the FICTITIOUS BUSINESS heavens, On a la\'(', 195(}'s •~. , N~:.e1s~~~.~~ME~~.,.~ 0., T\' craze <'ailed Spare.-' .. .,, .. "'" ,. Patrol. If you've wonder ed wha t happened to pioneer TV personalities hke Koria Pandit, Harry Owens. Hilo Hattie, Dick Garten, Doro th y Gardine r , ll awthorne, Enameer 8111 and many oth e rs whose fa ces dominated 1950's local telev1s1on, KTLA has a surprise in store. In celebration of its 30th anniversary as LA'> Angeles' f i r s t com . mer c i a 11 y ·Ii c e n s ed television station. KTLA <Channe l .5), h as put together a two -hour. nos t a l g ia -pa c ked special. "Happy Birth d av . L os Angel es Telev1 s1on · · "HAPPY Birthday, Los Angeles T elevision" will air on Saturday, Jan. 22 a l 8 p.m .• 30 years to the hour of the station's first telecast. Produc.-er A rnold Shapiro spent more than three months rounding up dozens of pioneer personalities for the re. union, as well a s m any4 rar e fi lm c lips and kmescopes from some of tclcvasion 's fi rst s hows. ART LINK LETTER. a J<r-';'ear t e l evis i o n veteran. wall host the special. Amon g th e THE CONTINENTAL Renzo Casana Troy Joy Rehashed On Show Remem ber 6 foot 4, 240·oound Charley Stahl Jumping on sof.i s t o pr ove that Tro y Upho ls t er y (·'Troy, Troy, what a JOY. . ") could take almost any abuse" R e m e m ber Eddi e Gevirtz of Regal Furs. wh o pleaded wi th viewers to buy furs from him because he didn't want to give up his ex ' pensive cars or home an the hills . ., LA SAW SEER Chris well, 1962 OpM Hi,Mfy 6:45 Matiftff -S....d• I :45 THEATRE I CAR~IE 1r IHE'I' (R) ONLY KNEW SHf HAO THE POWfR THU TRE II __ .,. "MARATHON MAN" IRI • Unttedwa11 Thanks to you Following in the tracks o , "ON ANY SUNDA y•• t ~~~~~~~~ ~~ii·~(;~ .. St•u•nc -M•1coln' Smith. U.S. PREMIERE r ..... ~~~~£Cc~l~~ ..... J ,__,.............,,.,.,.,.,,.,..,..,.....,. ,~·~ta '''•t•• "Wholesome back to nature ... Woutd make John Denver mighty proud!"-~' ..OW SHOWl,.G U• cnt CllHftotA '>•"')ti 6.\4 )(lt, $&.IO\.tlACI P\At. l rO"O~t~IM"' The Adventures of the WILDEl\NESS FAMILY u• lOUTH coot '"' ..,.,. ""., .. "°""'" ... ••HU i, I •'.t Vf "t r I I l'WI' llMITtO lHGAGlMEHT ltOOI KV•\T "4 ,,.... ,. .... k C.• .. n.o riu. r .-:,, Ill .. lhO~ll °'•"'Q•Al1 l'*N' C .. U. ~"" -"°l)W ..... ,.,. ,,....,,;, n ..... ''"'"'"' ,, .... , rri:>1v;..1c ffl f ttt4..tt Ir For the ere"'· h(\adNt :;~.~SL LO~o '·~~: .. ~;·~·".::;~~~~;'",:;,>-;~~ ,., by Captain Buu Corey 11111P.,..,.,..v ... ""·' '" ... ,,, .. ,,,.,,.'1,..,h <A•1•.u <Ed Kemmer 1. advcn personalities on hand for the reunion are the original "Spa<'e Patrol" crew, Cliffac Stone. Mike Sto key. Belly White, H arry Owen s, Jac k Latham. Doye O'Dell, Dorothy G:irdmer, Dick Garten. Da c-k Lane. Broderac.-k Cra wford, Peter Potter. Koria Pan- d 1 t . Cr1s well , S tan Freberg. Skipper Frank and Webster Webfoot. Alas. Troy Uph<Jlstery 1 and Rega l F'ur!> <in• long gone. But, Stahl and Gevirtz are stall around and wa ll bt' ft•<1 lurcd Jumping and plC'ad1n1?. re-enac ting thl'ar 1·11m m er cials o n J\Tl.J\ ·, special OM\ f P•C..C ~ ,.,\t1i •CC.,_ ttworks.~===========~~~~_. ~~~ul~~;'~'1 ~l~O •IU J ,,,:~,: .. :"'""'"' '' onr!url• I I>• """ f U r (' S I n S I) J (' (• ""M""~•o•E•«u•"• o ..... ,~ K•ndt \r sometimes seemed to "Vb•• "'"(If' 1no• (ht· I 0-4 ly P 11')1 o,, .. \fdlf"mprU w<n f+t••f1 Nil" lhir I h h d v '"· '" '"" •" ' I I~ ,,,, CIJunlr Cl~·· ot O•Anq• ('>univ on riva t e s eer a vcn I"" " °'"."'"'" '° 1•1• lure of cf o 1 n ~ a l s f)lm t <lrnp lhi: 11.dl' <:1•1 .1 '""\\Ith" 111\\ I" l IJ.111\ l'il•tl 1·1·"'1111•11 \.i P.,1>1,..,.,0,.,,,,~,,,..,0 .. .,/!:1 minute. Jav(' tele\:!-1nn °"' n 10 •••6 •no J1n ~ 11 ,.,, s how. fi ve davs a week. ' 3 '" '''1 "'" weeks a vc.ar on loc:al r --"' . . I 11..vt• -.omcthm~ 1,, -.ell"' t~lev1s1on . a half hour. Clai.s1IH'll ;11h du 11 wt· II hve network s how. thrcc> - -ta mcs a WCC'k. ,rnd a =============:;=;:=iii we<'kly radio 'cr!'>aon of J.tt 'Tiii' MIJRD(I the show ~•IA lfl Four of the original ~~:-;~--c11mmn ON Tiii crew mC'mbC!rs were re united for the first tame 1'-. ~~~SDAY' ORlfNJ in 18 yc•a rs. during the• ,, (IDltFC'C' taptng or KTLA 's 30th 11\L.-~ anniversary s pecial F o r th ose who:-.c ~ ... memory need!> a latlll' u.IL D Jogg i ng. Lhl' Space 2001 Patrol crew a IM> in eluded M aJOr RobC'rt'ion (Ken Mayer>, the sec!U(' ti\'e Tonga I Nana Har;.i >. Carol t V1rf!10&a lll'watt J and Happy llhl· latr, L.~n OsborneJ A 1<11<' k111t:"~cup,• vf th•• l'Jrl,> sho"' °" 111 I.ii· -.h11w11 1111 aspaceoclpsey u===================u the :-.Pt·1·1 .il "NICKELODEON" IPGI "NETWORK" IRI "THE SONG REMAINS THE SAME" IPGt CHILDIUH'S .. THE SHAGGY 0.A." P'RIC ES "RIDE A. W1LD 'OHY" IGI ADVENTURES OF A WILDYNESS FA.MIL Y c~~1':"' "MISTER SUP& IHVISllU" IGI "MARA THOH MAN" IRJ "ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST" "CARRIE" IRI "THEATER OF ILOOO" IRI "KING KONG .. IPGJ ''THI LAND TIME FORGOT' BIG FEATURE! • ...., l I\ 4 H \ 41\.I )0.• I\ WILDEMESS FAMILY :!i.: O All Y t 'JO J '10 .,. '"'O .. "'I .._,, hA--(oAIN MAflNI l WILDE1'NESS FAMILY :~~.: F ILM CLIPS fro m 1940's and i~"O 's shows. include.-Space Patrol, llandv Hints. Whteler and i~ourke. Juke &x Jury. wrestling footage wi th Gorgeous George, Spade Cooley. The Con- tinental. The Tom Dug. gan Show. llopa lon g Ca!isidy, Oscar Levant, and Johnny Carson in one of his first television shows, Carson's Cellar. ~ \.OGA,.'S ilUH" W 'FUf'UREW01t ... i>· t,.GI ftH ll ' HOPPING C£N HIE 1)RAN(.,t "'>1; b721 ~ CITY CINTH CIHEMAS I SA f RWY IMANCMESHR Ell I G G ~RWY ICITY t:Q EX I A WALT DISNEY'S V ,1'HE SHAGGY D.A." IGI "tUDE A WILD P'OHY" ,,,"}, WALT DISNEY'S Y '1'Ht SHAGGY D.A." IGI "RIDE A WILD l"OHY" "CAIUUf" ~ "ROLLHIALL" llU "ADVEHTURES OF THE WILDERNESS FAMILY" IGI )poc1ol P11ct IJ JO to 1 00 pm lnc.,.t S-. & H I Sl.25 Optn Doily J 2:30 p.m. For Ad Action Call a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 MARTIN BALSAM • BEAU BRIDGES· MARILYN HASSETT • DAVID JANSSEN • JACK KLUGMAN WALTER PIDGEON • GENA ROWLANDS . i.OCK1 PETERS·OAYIO Glli.MNTHDllT DAVIS·JDE KAl'P A FILMWAYS PRODUCTION/A LARRY PEERCE ·EDWARDS FELDMAN rH M Screenplay by EDWARD HUME· Based on lhe novel by GEORGE La FOUNTAINE Music by CHARLES FOX• O!recled by LARRY PEERCE •ProducedbyEDWAROS.FELOMAN • A UWVERSAL Pre ruAt (ajR£STRtCTtD =~·j lECHNICOLOR' • PA"lAVISION' .. • I .... ci .......... ,,c ... , ••• " ......... ,_ ..... , .... , .___ _____ _ .. , ~ Nothing less than the mo!)I exhilarating entertainment o f the film 1, <'M to date." " I 11 •I I ,,, I 111111 th": I (I,.,, s,.11111•1 \rn ··I THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION --A -.Sward• lV CINEMA WEIT M>'''"" ,.,,.,, t! Goto.,,_, --,.,,_ "'*•• l fl '">HJ :..I• --~ Clll> ORANG! , ORIV( IN l PLUS ~-~ ,C UDO" U t1 't" •••la .................. _ .. , .... .M.! ... ROBERT REDFORD FAYE DUNAWAY 3 DAYS OF THECONOOR ... " .. •• ,._\ I I+ ,\ • ..... ,0 . - HOl IDAY SHOW TIMES AT EDWARDS CINEMA 1 :00-3:30-6:00 8:30-1 1 :00 IN THEATER #2 (PG) FROM THE #1 BEST SELLING NOVEL ' HIS CIA CODE NAME IS CONDOR. IN THE ~i!XT SEVEHTY·TWO HOURS AlMOSl EVERYONE HE TRUST'S WILL TRY TO Kill HIM. BEN GAZZARA · BRITT EKLAND • • BEACH l'LVD. AT ELLIS • • PAll ""Ml:lc• n KCl:tuu WYNN HUNTINOtOM BEACH• 841-0318 Hmnt.LU . LUVV1 . . THE NEWEST. PINKEST PANTHER OF All! I • ,._ ~ .. Sllfh!IQ HERBERT LOM ,.,,h COLIN BlAKHY lfOHARD RDSSITCR • l £SLEY-ANNE OOWN Att1m1l1on b1 RICHARD WILLIAMS STUDIO Music by HENRY MANCINI Amc11le Produter TONY AO AMS Come lo Me Sunt by TOM JONES w11mn by FRANK WALDMAN and Bl.AKE EDWARDS Producrd ind Oimted by BLAKE EDWARDS 1.1med 1n PAHAVISIDN CDtDR by Oelule --. a. EDWARDS 'IJ NEWPORT CINEMA -.. 111•;.,\Yl'I -OIUV(lllj •"' ••• ••1d ,... ..... ,., •• ·-"' '"•""'Po_, 'l••ch • t..&4 OlbO H•oct. ft• •·••d , ·•~•h ef 4.1., .. .._ U•(h• "••• "'""'""''.!,!11111 •">l• h -.. LA MIRADA 4 • LAKEWOOD CENTEll 4: WAl.l•lll IAllOAI• PlllCI tt M ltOtlOAY • .., tATl/llOU fb-'"4'"'9) ll:at .. t• llCIAT a MOUOUt U• .. t• ..... ,.,_ rn·tUO ..... ·-~31 9~10 CUN! LUTWOOO THI IN,OICH 1•1 .... ,.,,,~.­..• ~ .. ~ ....... ., THI ADVlNTUllU OI TH( WllDllNUS fAMIL Y 1•1 OAKT 41 I oo.J-l e.P -•-to UO lllotllN nu SOHG H ... INS nu SAM( f POI 'IVI LOY( & DIATH1101 tllM LUl'WOOO Tl41 INfORClb1 """ MIOH VILOCITY 1H I °" .. .,, ............... , -.. ,_ ... .,.,. O'NUl NICl(ILOOIONtNI ""' MllT & W&UU 0010 MIW TOll1N 1 -· ',, .... ,,.,. ........ -· ........ Tl4f •tONT !NI 11\vt NOlllUN .. IS THAT YOU?1N1 -· .,,. ... ,.. ...... , ............ 1411111 CAHll111 ""' ROUlllALL111 -Ml ,, M _,,_,. ..... , tlMW- THI IHJOllClht "v' HtOH vnocm , .. , -""' *' llUlll CAllll1111 "* IOLUllAU111 nu AOVINTUll WILDHNISI •AMILY 1*1 Ma. SUPli~~VISllLI 1 Barney Shifts To Adult Hour ByJAV SHARBU1T "MOllMAHI IS TNA T YOU1" CNI "SUMSHIMI IO'YS" LOS ANGELES CAP> -After months or asking ABC lo move "Barney Miller" from the sanitized,_._. ... "family hour," producer Danny Arnold is getting his wish. The series starts tonight In its new 9 o'clock time slot. (Channel 7). Tonight's yarn aa about what occurs when lhE gang down at the copshop consume brownies laced wltlt hashis h. The eats were given by a lady to de· tectlve Wojo, who didn't know the brownies were wt.red. QUESTION: COULD THIS epic, with its men· 'tion of that potent marijuana derivative calle<'. hashish, ever have aired in the family hour? "Yeah. I think so," producer Arnold said. He noted that ABC originally scheduled lt for the old 8:30 p.m . "Miller" slot on Thursdays before deciding to reschedule it. for the show's new time period tonight. "THERE'S NOTHING PARTICULARLY con· troversial a bout it. We've done shows far more con· troversial than this. l just thought it was a very fun· ny show and it's good to start the new lime period with it." Arnold 1s one or the Hollywood producers who last fall won a major court victory when the "fami· ly hour" was declared unlawful as an industrywide standard -but not as an individual network stan· dard. Until now. his "Miller" series has appeared in the "fa mily hour" that in September 1975 became part of the national Association of Broadcasters' TV code. The policy was adopted in res ponse to public gripes about violence or sexually oriented programs aired early at night when kids still arc. watching the tube. ARNOLD FEELS THAT PARENTS should be the censors of what their kids watch, not the NA B or the networks. And he doesn't buy the s uggestion that youngsters who watch TV early at night leave when the supposedly adult stuff arrives at 9 p.m . or an hour earlier in the Midwest. But, he said, "arter 9 o'clock, the theory always has been that they're supposed to be away from the sets, that you have a more adult audience and the l41U ,,.tt1SI S-1'1111 IHl "•"•C '11AIATHON MAN" 00 ,.,. , .... ,,.,,,~ . ..., .. "3 tAYS Of THE CONIHI" t'.Je P.M.. U ll'IM-' -~t•tt S . COAST PLAZA l4IOl111l1I SI S-10111 ltll "'""' UDU,,ILIM THE SOHG IEMAIHS THE SAME" J,)t.t-0 'AT/IUM-J') .. 4 4._J ..... ,, IUH• Marlltt lo>'u •l»lWI ltll '"'"" "Tit[ SEVEN-PU-CENT • . SOLUTION" (PG) IJ , .. ,.,._. tk 0 ........ .. censors are less apt lo whack away at your ....., _______ ,, scripts." ~1.ht 1\1, GENE WILDER JILL CLAYBURGH RICHARD PRYOR M~.A1<11~•n1.,11l"f llM "SILVER STREAK" AMllll llM11•.1•, r,tJllNliiGCIN'>PI< IURl ~~o~l'.~i'rv-currnNJAo,Al' ••• ,PATRICK McGOOHAN ... Rt.,..u.o..,,~ ... ( •• t,1 .... "'f•1 •t"""-JMAhNAAN:::,OtiOF-r •""' fOA,Ntl. "tf\hLAt-"' .. r>oo.x"" r., fHOMAS L MllLLH ·"''' l DMAO MILKJ!:> °'"" hlJl>t AA1Hlll< Hll LUI ""'"'"" 111l.OLIN 111(.A,INS IPGJ~~·~ ~!'''"-~flt~ "'' " h; HlNllY MAN(.INI t.Ull ll18' lll lll•l ~. [l~~I ~ o_:i: M•'" • !>d~ 0'111~ 0 CINEOOM E 70 Ch.11)man Av~11ue di SA Frwy. Or .1nqr • &.34·2553 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~ ·~~~~~~~~~- HOLIDAY SHOW TIMES 1 :00.3:30-6:00 (PO) 8:30-11:00 HA BORTWIN H.OHOI A I -SOM, COSJ A MUA 646-00) .... u .. CINEMA WEST wtJTMltr•,THATQ.Oti.CllWWIST WUTMIM Cff'Tfl H2A4f) ,-SORRY, NO PASSU .. SORRY. NO PASSES . ;;n--WiWAM DUNAWAY HOIJlllC . rtnR ROUllT MNCH DllVALL. XITWllM .... QIAn:n.t DAILY SHOWTIM!S 1:30-3:50 8:15-8:30-10:45 .. JSfO\ Al .... CAUHV'I • ~•0-7444 Are You Ready?' ,..., TIEii v · •ePPllRS Ny MAN ' ANyW~ERE AN TiME ,' BURT REYNOLDS TATUM O'NEAL "An ingeniously contrived spree, with one of the wittiest wrap·ups of any mystery' movie." (PG) Poulin• Ko•/ NEW YORKER . ARBRA STREISAND RIS KRISTOFFERSO (R) HOLIDAY SHOW TIMES 1 :00-3:30-6:00 8:30-11 :00 EDWARD CINEMA HAH otAf.oo .... s COSTAMISA .O .JIOZ PLUS (R) "3 DAYS OF :rHE CONDOR" ROBERT REDFORD FAYE DUNAWAY UNTIHGTON CINEMA .aACHATkUl,HL DAILY HOLIDAY SCHEDULE 1 :00-3:00-5:00 (P.G) 7:00-9:00 ~ORRY, NO PASSES NEWPORT CIHEt.'AS HL .. COUTH ...... &MACa•THl/I UW?O.,-0 C1:'"1:• 644•01' 0 - CAR WASH AJ%OAILY PILOT • PUBLIC NOTICE ADVl•TISIM INT ,Olt e10 Suble<I 10 llte (Of>O lhOM l)f'n<rtDo<I bf Uw Mndef\•QnHI \f •l•f'I bM1' ¥• I"" Yl'-'lon 1'-0<••~ V••• \<.""°' Ot•ltttl Mlllll U'9 Sulldl~ for IM IOllOWlnQ lt_, Eartt\wor..-. Coner•••· Aouoh •Gl.r09ntry L.•lrt p,,.,,., f. <.rJU-W•" Welle.o.td Con\trutUO" 4'0cun"lf'"h 1>tf'C.,.,P•J OY AnthOtly a. a....not0-ro Ari'"'..,. h wm be eva1i.1>1e on O.umb<rr 1'. l~I•-will bel\)UR(IAll ... Con~truc.t•Ot\ M•"•O"'"' OU•<•. Mof•r\ Co.A~cru111on (.-. )11' ();.not Slrm, 4 1Mm1H•, <.A ~llOJ f•I• t71lo )./. ,,,, Oc••n Vtel# ~ t\olJI 01\hH;t M,ett\ tef\Antt Fttc llHY 11'H W•tf'tt:f A~nu. Hunllfl'lton ~··~ CA ~1MI, '~"" Edw•rd\l f#l/ff" "'" l'J41 AIU) No bid' will lM-rt'f f"l Vt"d •fl•f ' 00 p ni J•nu•rt u . 1ff/b 8 10\ will bit ret..-1 wt•d di Oc••n View ')or hool D•\h tcf "1? Warner Avvnu• Huntm91on f~it<h, <..A ~M1, ATl Miiton A it•·,11 All bid\ a rtt reQulr .. d It'# h•V• • S."e btd Y"<.uf"tly •1t•ChtO with fh,.11 O•°' Bid torm\ 1'rf! •V•tiljjble •t lo<.1t1011\ dtv ,1tiiitd•b011• P\Jt>UV,,.d Or•n,.,. f.06\t Odlly PHot, Of.i ~mt>tr lO, PH• •no Jtt,.U1HY 6 I'll/ )}91 I• P UBLJC NOTJCI!: CP ll)I SUPEAIOlt COUAT O' THf STATE Oll'C4Lll'OANl4'01t 'THE COUNTY OF OAANCE No A ttU4 HOTICE 01' HEAAlHG OF "JIST AMENDEO PETIT ION FOii Pll0114TE OF WILL 4ND FOii LET lEllS T£ST4MENTARV [\l•I• ol ti0WA !i0 A WllHERS l»<f'tt'\f'l'.f Thursday December 30, 1976 PVBUC NOnCE ,l~I TIOUSeUSINISS N4MI STATIMf:NT Ttw foUow nQ 0--""°"' •t t: dcM.,q t..i\I llf~U\ M T \ INY!STM(HI\, IJ7 E.-•••oen L•oun• &••<" C4 C-don L Mwnl\, l)l 1:""''•10 S.r u~B .. <n CA ti Jene """""'' UI (_,..., &1 1A9....,.8 .. <ft (A Thi\ IUl\I"•'\ I\ tOtUJutteid by • ._,.ntl'etp•rt"""''"'P C'°'OOnL Mo'"'" l"'' ,, ••• m.-nl -·~ hlt-(1 wun , .... C.ounlt Cler• ol ()r ~n<I" Cc>unly on Orr< 10.10•. FMIM Altwl\N>'1 O'·•"'>" (., .• .,, D_,1ty P;Jot Ot'< 1• 1l .)0 111/4.rnc.1 J .• n tJ 1'fl1 )14'; ,. ' PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS llUSINE\S NAMESTATCMENT TN> tollowtng penon I) doing °"'' ,.....,, .,°' MOPED u ~ 4 , 111316 Word f'Ql'I\ t•ln 11•11'1 CA 'lllOll C.N C.olfJ""ro, 10691 El C6mpo, r GUnt••n V•lttoy C~ ~111>¥ Thi\ bv\•~, .. '' <ondu\. t•d DY oH 1n OtV•du4)t C.•rv c;q1<1cwro 'Th1\ \fbtfMrnt w•\ f!IN'J W•t._ thiP ('punf'f Cl•t'~ o, Or.ingr-Counlv Vf1 ~ ·' 19/t FtOJ"4 P\lbfl\n"d Or•nQt' Coct't 0.tlty Ptlot De< JO. 1'1••RO J•n b, IJ 10, "" ~:"316 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS llUSIHESS N4ME STATEMENT lru tot1ow1n9 C>l'r'»On '' CS0."9 bu't ..... '" (04 S'T L"N O')C4PIN(; M4t .. H NANCf, 1•111 BtlQr'"'"" "1 E•Toro CA'1610 Man1u1 \cott S"'• nttl, J.tll1 &:ituttnPt El furo (AY7h~ lt-11 t')U\lrw \\ I\ ( Ol'ldUC h•tJ IJy •Hl t~ tJ1Ylfh.Utl Fear of Communists Cited in Oil Hold,.out BONN, West Cermdny CAI') Fears of Commurust takeovt>rs 1n France and Italy and or a new re cession m the Wes t are umong Lhc re- aaons that Saudi Arabia 1s trying to keep oil price rises low, the Suudi 011 rrunister ts quoted us suy ang Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani's state ment came m an interview with the West German news magazine Der Spiegel. The edition will appear on newsstands Monday. SAUDI ARABIA AND THE United Arab Emirate:. refused to go along with the 11 other members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC>. which decided to boost oil prices IO percent Jan 1 and 5 percent more July 1. The Saudis and the UAE opted for a single 5 percent hike Jan J. That would boost the pnce of benchmark crude 011 from $11 51 to $12 09 ll S ex perts predict a I-cent a·~allon in· crease m the cost of gasoline lo L' .S motorists for e very 5 percent n se 10 the prn:e of crude oil . "We arc extr<'rnl'I)' worned about the economic s ituation II\ the West - worried about the s1lua1.Jon in Great Britain, Italy and even France, along with several other nallons," Yomani was quoted. "And we do not want another government to gam power 111 1''rance or Italy." ASKE D IF 11 E WAS refcrnnJ: to poss1 ble Comm unast takeovers 111 France and Italy, whose economics have been hard-hit hy the five·f<1ld rise in oil prices s inc·e 1973, Yaman1 replied; ''Yes. Even in Spain the situation is not very healthy. T he same applies to Portuga I. Jo'u rt her more. if an economic r ecovery does not take holtl, it not only would have polit1<·o l s ignificance for Saudi Arabia It would hurt us economically "And finally. there is a lturd factor We are working together with you and try to do our bes t in Uus respt>ct Till' West can be a ssured that it ha~ a friend here who can do much for 1t." From the 'Nes t. Yamaru said, h<' <•A peels "con cessions on raw matenal\ the transfer of technology and on lhl: solution of financial problems of 1..h.·· veloping countries" al lhc next Nurth South dialogue between rich and pc1or nations in Pans. Chilly Way to Fly "Brce1y" 1s the <'"<perimental aircraft built by mr mbers of the Dt•tro1t ch apter of the Experimental Aircra ft Association to mark the rC('f..'nt 73rd anniversary of the Wright Brothers' firs t flight. On board arc Roger Perreault at the controls and Gil Baker. · B1 e ezy" c:ru1!:>cs at 65 miles per hour and has a one-lank range of 200 miles. NOii( l •'> H E Rf ev r,IYlt• II •• JAMC~A WtTH(R<,t,_. ft•t-tt~ , .. n., f-.,,t A.nl .. (ld• ,J 1•,·1111 ",,,, Pthr._,,.,. ut W••t and hH * .u tt' •• td l•·lh•~ I• •dJmt"'lhu 't t>, lh ~fltllit\f• r rt frl~n· .. to wnu '• • '" 1d '''' h1• ff•, '"'u11t:yf.,,. ...... ,, 1n.1t t111• l!M• ... ~rt(1if•"• (1, tw .. tt1n11 lf1• tll·t fj • ,,, II ~ f f1Jf J·•nu.tr y 4 '''II 11' t 1 nu .1 n• "' tri.• 1 r.1urtHJ(H'1 <1t f.h fMfttt1• flt N•> • 1f ·• \J 1tu1tt ..,f 100( to11• t.1•t;h•1 l111111·W1•\.I 111 tt1•(11;'Ut ~1ntitAn1t ( ,11t1urn., f"°MIPd (Jfft•fJ\t)i t ) ) l'fllri Wit l tAM f ,1 JfJHN, (••unt.,< ,,.,._ JAMESA WITtlEAS M'"'""r 'ln1•rrlll Tfo, .. 1 .. h•m.-n1 W.I\ • I~ W•IP'I , ...... tounty (tc.:r ... or OrdnC)«.: (.(1unl, Uh, ..... " I I~/ •• FU>60 P•.Jbl• ,twd Or 11n41• (CM .1 o.11ly f.'1!01. ();"C" J J. JO. 1q/f> oO\J Jon ti t 1 1'111 Colonel to Cut Chicken Prices Attornt'f •t L.1W p 0 8o• ~,~ P•lm Spronq• C•. 'lUI llit1 na ,, .. Pf.fthOMr 1n Pro Pttr P\zblt\fW'1 Qr.ft\'}1 (OJ J U·ill1 f'1l0Jl 0-c '3 H llJ I'll' \JI/ '" P UBLIC NOTICE "OTICE TOCAEDITOllS DI' llULIC Tll4NSl'Ell I~<' 410t 4101 UCC I HOI•''" i\ f\,.r,·t>'f qt""" t'l ,,,,. cr .. ,,11ru .. 11 ~ONA~ 0 M OtJMA'• ~or•Af '),.( "''' t4•J AJ? 61 ~'10'4 TflJO ,,,..,,.,, ,,,...,-..,, •• 1•)'1,,. ..... 1 p,..,. s11q lb PUBLIC NOTICE FICT 1 TIOU\ llUSINE~ NAME~TATEMENT Tnt '" 10..,_.io9 °''' "'n. "c (1()1,...) 11\1\I ,..,.~ ...... fl I\ R C,JO~AC.f )t.0 ~woort 8fvl'f (I')• ftt M t\ f CA"''""' J M .. tth1•w 0'-0"'"r # l'l H•'m•f.J~Ln N•wnort8•' h rA "''•f'I' J. R'•~~ 1 u t 0,,.., Cl Cvr"'"' (A ,,, \ 11•1\ff'Wlll''\o ,, , ... ,,.1 lf-.J lrt ·•" ut1 111 ,,,,_ •.ti ·I ·' ,. .11 0•1 CotN-r lh1U't di "-"'lt\1•r n D I M·•l'tl•·w () f>f)• n~ Ttu 't•h.tfh ~• It·• I ltd w•tt\ '"""' Kent ucky Fried Chicken of Southern California Wlll cul its pnces an average of 6 to 7 percent. The price n •duct10ns announced Wednesday will make it the first mll· JOr fast food organ1zat1on to take s uch action More than 225 outlct.s throughout the southland will take part in the price reduction program, which goes mto effect Wedne!'.day Announce ment of the pn ce cuts was made bv Co l Harland S anders. founder,· and Jim Colhns. Southern ( ___ TAKI_N_G_ST_OC_K_J California spokes man Collins said reduced 1lcms include the three-piece box of L'htckPn \\1th mashed potatoes, gravy, colc ~law and a roll. which will be reduced to ;m average price of $1.00 from its prcst.>nt average of $1 89. 14.,,,. ,,,,.. t ·IY'>• f4,1I'>', 1tJ .. nn (Ql,,,,,., °' °' 11\,,,.. \l.1h ,,, ( ''"'''"' t ,,.,,, ,, bulk tran'" r •\ .tbOul 1 , rw m.iitO 10 CH4~LE!> ~ >iAR I L( (ANO MARCI" /\ HAR It EV Soroa 1 Sf'cur11v N .-, )/\' f'.if> 1)1\8 And SS6 48 1\1# f r ctn• ft"'*' w no\ .. .00'f'"\ 1\ t"'lt l p,.,, Ounl,.•Qtt Cur'" Ctty of N"t1111too,1 "'"·"" Countr c.t Or¥"~ S••t,-or C•lilorru• ~~:~~~·;~ \,,~ 01 '"Q•• C<Nnty on I,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;;.;;;;;;;;..;._ The 15-piece bucket. which currt•nt ly sells for an aHragc of S6 79. ""II come down lo an average pnc<: of $6 29. while a 21 piece ch1ckl·n barrt'I Thf> proa.r-tv f'> tK· HAn\ft-rrlld 1, kx"'tf"'C .)t CAI P~ltlil P,.vf'nl.I#' (tfV of B•IOO• f\ltt"" (.ounty of Ofltnqt' St.tlPOf c .. 11f•1tn1>t Sttiti r>rCOfl"'V 1 M• tr•rr..d tn 9fl'W'tdl <t' All • 1111 • '" h ~dt· 11 ~ IUt'"\ •flu·pmtont M'IC1 flOOO <#Ill ot tnl\t ff"~t•1.1rotnt 1)11''""'' • """'" •t\ Rr. JUN CAJIJN R~\l/\ul'<ANI Ann"" 11•0 i&t )Or Pott• Alil'~nu• (d'I Ot U•tlf#M hldnd (ounlyi ul (>r,ml)•· ~fttT•• ot Cd1,•orn1..- JN tw1.-''"'"..,'''' w ill f'fl& fl!n\Utn m ,.,tPd ,..,.. "' 1\tl~r 1'1•• llt\ fl·''f ot J AnUAl'y I'll I , ••I lfl ,f m ttl Pro•1•\\•0''""' ( "trlW ,r·1vl• .. , wM~ Mklf'e-a.-. ,., w11 th>rlh I 11 td1 ""'''"°"' ~nta And ( ti,,,,,"' t So ,.,, •• '' •n wl"I! ,.., ,~,. Tr&f'l'il .. rll"• • ,,11 nu-,1nt t1.1rr" 1M addrf'\\r\ •J· ••ff bv If\. l "•'rt '' '"" ffY VWP-'\ftr,,.....,,,..,1,,,., .. \AMf O•ltn ~ ""'°' r 11 f 1 ' (ti.Hit·\._ H 1Utlo t M •r· 1-4 4 ., _ _,,, .. , r,.,.,,.,,.' f'ltOl'(SS10N4L E \CltOW SEllYICES F-Puol1\hil-"'1 l'l< • .,.,. (tM\t o., .,. ,_.,,ot 0t I' 16. lJ. )C> 1 ,,, 1Hd J•n t. IYU 'tl!0-16 PUBLIC NOTICE ll'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS N"ME STATEMENT l ~,.. tr.11ow1n9 ~r\On\ Art• Ck>•OQ bu\I nfl\,\ "' Ill MB A<;'iOCIATr'> 12\ M 0 AS ~t~TE..I) 1bOC..ent1,nn1dtWriv TU\Un CA9'111JO (•rl H11rnld Mull•f')i'ln ttHn Mon ,,.,.,,fl 0'1\lf', Huntington Beo<n. CA .,7,, .. , ROhf'rt T 8.trm1tt'I 40#1 Ondd, NPWQl)t f ht•~( h (" •1~ '"'' OU\lt\lf'''' I\ C<H\durt••<I b t Cl ()"'n.·r4'1 oi11rtn,.,,,,111 f trlM l'l'°I"'' ,,.,,, \1d1Jtm4\n' w t· hlPd w ith 1Ni- Countf (l,.r .. nf Q, .,H\itr (vunJ'{ on ()~, "mbP°r •. 1'''" F.aJl\' P 1bt•Ch"'<f Or '"''1"' Co• .t Ddtlf P•lot. ~r 'I. I•. ll lO, i.l• 5141 ,~ P UBLIC NOTICE 1911 N"'1• Tu\lon 4•enu• "CTll IOU\ BUSINESS S.nl•An• C•htorn14 HAM£ \TATE~EHf l.w.,....No 1• >ll l '" 11')1'•1"" nq C", .nn , "°41"\q lkrii• PtJt>l "••t Ot,...n f' t" d Ill tt•t P W.-1 "4"\\ t ()li>.o •mf>'" • ,.. ~N AN(.0 ''''"'"'~11.\f)'iill)ff"'\ \d'\ -------1 . .,....,,. (A• • T> Pl'Rl.U' '\OTI( t-: r,,,°''° •H•'N \ ,,. ~ \UP[ 111011 COU I> T 0~ fH[ \TA TE Q I' CAlll'OA"I" FOii IHE COUNlY OF 0NANC,I ~o A'"'\ N O T t(t O F H(A --I M ~ l)F l'ETITIO" f Oll P ROllA 1£ 01' WILL ANO ~OR \t If~ .. \ ft\U'llf N 'TUIY AND AU IHOll l ,.TIOH f 0 4 D M I N l\Tf" IJ N Orll ltl ( INDE l'(NO[ N r ADMIHIHll4'fl0N 01' (\'411£\ AC I ' ,,. .. , t H + 11>t4 UI ,, • 1 , I •t t ftl~~H11 fyl••tto\1f W ll "'Ii I ro fJ,. I ... ,,.,,. po• I • t1 ti~ ,, /It f o1•\t1. o f,. • I I ~ 1t If 'f ,H~ t J\•1f"' t 1 tl1 ,, I A I• \.ol"ttll t l".-,,_..,.t., •;. '1l A.Qtt "' ff t' " If \f th• At •'• n.-; ~ t • ,,., ' ,,.,, ... ~ ., '• f ,, I• t1f'i• f ..... At •1J1""1 •t t ~ ,_, 11., I• '"' 11 .ti • ti•'"' n ,..,. "''''' •• "' U•nut,..•r t r, I \ ~Jrl 1if 9"1 f'•1•f • I o VIII , I ( " ' ' I I'\ • t tt I fl\ ft fJ ,.,.., W tl~ IAM • "JOHN I o RrCHAll!) l M<Mt (HAH 11'11 <•"''"° c,, ... ,,r•M '\••• 110 \...lt't .f-...f\CAIH\t'.t~ (.A '1''\ Attor,...••~ •••·he~• '' '"' .... , (• 1 • • ~h•t I P l'RUC 'loOTlCE Cl' IJI I ~Ul'C lllOA tou"' 0 1' THC ~TATE 0" CAll "011H '" rolt TME COUNTV0,011 .. NGC ... ,. ..... NOT ICI' 0 1' HrAlllHG 0" P£TITION FOii P110 9AT( 0" ""'ll AND "Olt lETT(lt\ TEHAMIEN TAllV AND AUTtlDll ltA flOH TO 4D M I N l~T (R UHOCA TH( INDIPEND[N f 4DMllol!Sf"AflCIN Ol'l!~TAlESAC l E't"i. 01 PAUL llLSfAl M"JUS °"'"'''""'" NOii( E ,, HF Q( av c.ovr N , .... , THOAAAC,, l l fl~ o n .. , t11t..., ""''"'n (II O'ltltlon tt)r S'\1no~'" of W lfl •f'WJ t~ '' "Uttn<.f' o• t ,.,,.,, r,,,,.,m,.,,, •. ., to 1~ Pfttatlonf"r """ evtP,or1111110on tn ~ mH'tl\t..-''""' •''"'"' vnM,. tN> 1~0--n ~t Adm1n•\tr•lion ot E\t•tf"\ Act'• e.,.nc• to •"''" '' mAc:kt •or t.....tt.r ~rt~u'"" t11~th4ttf'l.fll~~ot•" ot f'W•rt"Q ,,_.. '"'"''" "'~"· ~ "'' tor J-ff II 1•11 ti 10 00 • m In 1 ... courtroom OI OtCM•tni'""' No lot ~Id court ftt IOO(hlfC Cttnr,.r Or~.,_~'-1n ,,,. Cll•ol .....,la 4na c •'"ornr• 0.led O.ombor 10 1•16 WILLIAME StJOHN (.ouf\ly <,,.,, TltOMASL LOltO .. _,., ....... W teJU DS21 f'_ .. VAier>< ia ....._Mltt1.0UUl "'11t ..... rl~ ,,.. Per (lltl "1·,. Pubf•V>ed OrMooo Ct!••I Oelly Pllol, OK.'3.t<,>o.191• P UB UC NOTICE ll'ICTITtOUS I USINISS NAMI! \TATI Ml!NT .a ... J ,., tlf\~Ql.1 Q~'''·"' r, tnl '"' 1 i1• H, 1• , It' t ~ ;_ .. I'°> Alnl ,, .t l.1411-f t'dt\f ;n1 '' Pl' BLIC NOTICE '°iCTI TIOUS IUSINESS lj4ME HATEMENT TM• ftJllOw lr''l µ.. , Yl'l .... ctOOlq bU,1 ,...,, t P()Rl A '11/\RINC 1N f'LJ'1"8lf' f\hA T~ ?'rU C.OlltQ' Av,. (cr.t• ~\.A ( •• 1)1\),. ~n 0 Morton 1111'1 C "9•'\wiil'J Ot .,. Lit'l\if'l.l N1Qt,il"I C.Al•tO""Ai°Jl•ll '"' ""'''""''" 'lMt>vc•tO trv •• n It' (h.-' ) M '' ,, '" ·' •'• ,,. t '.,...., w '" ""' co...,,,; ,.,~, •.•. ,,.,,0. ...,,., '"' 0..t .. mni.·• ~ ,.,, .. FMU I P.,N ,"t'f) 0'·~~ t'A~'t {).l·ly P•)yt 0-r .. m~' I I• 11 lO I'll • \t1" 7• PUBLIC NOTICE I --"CTITIOUS IU~1Nf'$S NAM( ST4TEMIENT t•· 'lUOWlfll\()ptr14)n °'t10•"Qbtl\.I•"°"'\ All PQfllC.oON PQl'lOU{T'> t]'V ' ~Aln ,,.,, \1)8 \o11n• \ AfM (A ., ,,,, A~ '''"~.,.,. ,,,._s M A1n ,..,.. <.nF-\ '8r'' A.'"' (A 11 ")I ft11' l'l)\lf'WI''• •\ ttt>n()urt,.ft Div M\ '"' n,.,,,..,,, Jiil 4 .. •Cl" '"'" \to\tN'n'"' WA\ t+INI Witt'! tM (.nunty Cl•r~ Of O• >HHJ" l '>u'1tv '>" O..t 10 1 j/~ .... Ml Pl1ttf1\f'\#'1 Or t9'r,.t rn t"tf n .. HV P,,ot (>or 14 11 10 l'/h ,1nf! JM I, jqfl ~171 lb PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS a ustNESS NAMI! ST ATIMIENT Tiie 11>11o••no """"n " dol,.q tiusl ~"'·" AMIERIC4 N StiUTT£A & $H40E CO ISO 4 P•,.w1ty LOOI> lll\hn, CA .,.., l to L&dl!nMlm, ).I .. L"CI'"" Cir , Ca\I•"""" C4 ..,~n n.., bt.nlM \\ •\ c.ondvct.ct bV a.n lf'J "'"'~"' lf'O l-1°"'""-'"' Thi'\ \tatemf'nt w.-, tll•d With ow rounlY Cltr' o• Or1n91' Cov<\lf on Ooomber 'IO, t'76 ll'nou l'\IOtlt!IM Oran~ Co.t<I 0•11~ PllOI. Of< n. JO, "" •nd J &n ••• ll "" ~IP6 PUBLIC NOTICE J.U1 "CTITIDUS aUSINUS NAMI UATIMIE NT r,,..1o11ow1no .,...."'"' ••• e1a1no tiu1t• ,..." ,.,. TA 0 L l ENTFRPlllSES, et HI. Yf A HEAL THY I.HO ;. MEHY HOLIDAY ly TUltY ~IUMT, ll.1'11. We will proba bly not haVL' the oppnrtur11l v tn i::r 1•ct e;ieh and l'V1°rv one of ynu ril'r~•>nCtlly, M>. we would hkl' to use thh re~ular ad ~pacl' lo exprc~' our '1nrcrcst wt~h lo everyone Ill our community for lhe happ1e'.'lt and healthieM of holidav sl'J~onc; We hope lhal vou arid vnur family will cnroy l h C V C r Y b e• c; t 0 f '''t'rythmi:: .it 1111 .. , ... ry 'ill'l'lil l l1m1· or tht' \l•,1r And 1r w•• 1·;111 he• ol 't'f\ 11•1• In '1111 in ·'"' w 1\ we• ~!Jncl rt'.ld~ 1<1 h\'lp YO U O il Y O U lt DOl'TOll ('I\ 'Ii Pll0'-1'~ C'S w hl'n vnu 111•1•11 ,, clcllvl'rv Wt• wi ll 1h·hw•r prnmr1t1y w1lhr.u1 l'\(ra d 1ari,:e A i,:n'al nt.111v 1wnpl l' rt•I v o n tl'i rnr lhc1r hl'allh nt•Nb \Vp W(.')COrnl' I l'(jllt'SI .. rnr <ll'IJ very "t·r" 1 "'' u 11!1 charge a\'Counh , ••• UDO ,H1UMl.Cl' JS I Hotpltdl Rood fr'ff Dellnry ~ hoch 642-1510 I . Strip Mine Action Suggested BOISE, Idaho <AP) Jim my Car ter 's pre- sidential trans ition staff has suggested that In- terio r Secretary. designate Cecil Andrus couJd help set a new tone for the department by re- newing the moratorium on federal coal leasing and supporting strip mining legislation. In a thick briefing book designed lo acquaint An- dr us with the Depart- ment of Interior, trans1- t1on staffers s aid those and 12 other possible im- mt'd1ate actions v.ould "make a clear delmea hon of new directions" for J nterior under the new administration. The book said some ac- tions could be done as soon as Andrus ta kes of· fice, with others "simply by a public statement at any time prior to taking office would avoid poten- tially cumbersome OMB <Om cc of Management and Budget> clearance." l' . .fr~ of course! (lcg.Jntly \IVINI. 1•ll1r.icn1lv orc1~n11NI HA ZH 's p,lll Orama Of plannrn. C~lrmfar~. 1ndrxr~. rar<l holdNS- all rn handsome washalJle l1tnd1·. , ,4 "''''· ~ fll>llow1n9 ~''°" b cloinQ M l """": 1111 'Ortllld, Coron. ci.t M~r. Oto 11-••••••••••••••••••••••••••lllllJ llontlO B. Wal-Ins, •1ll 04.,mplc II Mlt. SWIBP, rut S.llWI OI', H11<'1t lftllon fMe<h, C"'7t'7 ' Jedt K1lly AllOU'°" l .. t S.IN' Or' , ~l"Olon &•a<ll. CA • .,._., Thi\ bu•hwo I\ <""Clu(lod by on In dlvlou.tl JKlt Andrtr\on 'n\lt tt•1•-l'll ... , '""" ""'" .... Co\lnty Cltrlt ot Ort"" C-r Oii OK...,..r6,1'7' llMJIJ N411"H Or..-.. CoHI OallV l'lltt, '*4rnClotr •• I .. u. )0, .. ,. "~" Of'. tit1Mtf\91<H1 6~•<11, CA tl&o4 Tlmqlhy A 51&0 ..... n\ 71t•r. 0.Cllld Coronaelel Mer, CA '2tH Tiii• &111lntu II con<luc ltd by • 0.-el Pat1.,.r'11to llOMlcl8 WAl•IM T"l!lt ltalt,.,.nl ••• 111~ with 1i. Qlunly Clor-of Orol\Ot CO.it'tlV on Oto<tlnllef 1'. 1•h ,..., l'l*f\M4 Or•l>09 Coan o.11, f'llOI, Oo<-r )Q, 1'7• enel Jel\11.trv '-ll »,ttn ~>-I• NEWPORT STATIONERS. INC. 4229 Birch Street 328 N Newport Rlvt1 1640 SJn Miguel Or 657 9212 642·2998 644·8444 Newport Beach, Cal1forntl\ 92660 NEW YORI< ... AP ) lom .. ,., '' ~~~~~~:d"i ~\~1 ~w"'~~ IOf"l.t'll ~(Uf"tflf"• ''0\'\ c I Dealer \ A\\n ov .. r C.uUr J fld tn.+ 'C>un1er 8 ttn)t 01\nty M l"\yr,•.nt~ & ln<JU\' Otltft Oun ,, •• \llJClli O.t• 1\1) AEL l..S '"° 0 '1ft In /4FA PtS b , ()r·f ,, In AID In, I 1 ·1 0.l(lb A•l AVM Co 't , .. 1>1~1 O·• AOd1\n W •"-11, DtLu• C A°" 11'" J"' • 0.-1 (•n I Albert\ 1 1 1)1 • C>t Int Ur Attro '" v•. rn .. OP.,.., I ' All~rq Pn ,.. 1• \,. Otam 't; Allyn Bir I' t '"' Otvn (t•1 Am E •P )q ' •O C>Ku''"' Am F'1nf fl~ 1 ~·~· r, Am J:urn 1'· 1 ()wrt\ '• Am f1rP·~I ' I ~·, ~.,1,. ht' A M 1(rO 1·. 8-"' 0.1nt 0n l, Am f•l•v It 1 1<l'. °"'"u 1 Am Wll"lfl 10'• 1\\. EtW"flr1 In ~mtr Ov "' '• [<Qn lAb An1lCM~ iJ \•flPA\f.I Ann-U\ 8 )I~ 11'" f lOfu 8' A.rd "11 •'I I • I • f IW N1t1 I .Ar":W~c, i\ 1' • f•f"< Mr>d A.,rc &'1 11•· u · fMr9.,. t Atl(,.a• U I\'• ti~ [t'llW .ti ::~ ~! 1! ! '~ ~~~ ~;· B•am Rlt 10 10 f •I> f, • 8'4t\\Atf F t 11 .. 18 f 1tJUn l t ~!1'~ M: ~ \~ ~~ ~!Bi'~~' 6'>11 I •b 1R 7~ , ~\I fll>•I ~:~ ~ 1t:; 1~ ~:tv~-r~' ::~c~ftt\ 10~ ,ci;: ~::."~~cu aon1" ,,., 11., )•l)i1 ""'\t 0 fuad!n ) 11 1 f ftn1011 fv1n11~ Jl'e f °Vfl f O'om~I Ar;\ Sea 74' .1 7!i•. rrktn ~ D ~~~~~~ ~:~ :I~: ~;~•r;. :. I ~:,~·(~m ::; 1z~ g-'i.~,',~1. <;AIW!>v l? ]]• f,ov r r1n (.ompl ( n 1 l\• (,r.•oh t II Cdnrill(f H 1' • J•11 <•''""" Mt ~:~,;-~:, ~ ' ;·~ ~~' .~~~ ~P ff't 1"'• 1 , GvrMt\ CA,.,.. C.p l .. l"'f H.,,,,.., P C.••"'Vt PS '~. l)~ MMtf ,,, Cl'lm l f",1 10\• 11 i.,. H•nt"'1 r O'W!'-1 UI 10\. It'• ~·1lt)41m (1\1 IJffdQ \'i '\1 Hnov ~~~·.';Co ,ft·,,~ ·I~~':,~ ( .,, " F 4 • ) 'I ... .,., , t f1t1n11t A. l'"" ll , H\'"t' '"' l .. t1nt)I 8 ) •111 \1'• laj ,,,,, 1, ('Mk M t JU'• U • ll"lfA l"'J n~ C.o ,. , 1 tnt•• r, ~ ~r,"' tJ .. ; ,. ~ :~:~~~ '" Coml Sn n , ·• tnttmt I will be rt•duccd from an average price of ~I 29 lu $8.4:>, hl' said, representing both small and large cities, s aid Wednesday it finds "dis- turbing evidence" of funding dis- parities "that cannot be traced to not meeting the principal criterion for as- Wlndf all S tirs A"9ft" WASlllNCTON CAl'>-A S2 billion public "ork,, "' ind r .Jll h<.ts stirred up a l'<Ht trovt·rsy u l the Economic Dl'vdopmL·nl /\cl mlill:::.lration follow· m g chargl·S tha t unemployment was not adequately considered and that Inf.! c1t1t's got th<' short end of the stick. sistance high unemployment." Busines• Worbhop Set Taxes. capitalization, management problems. legal requirements and selection of good busmess location Wlll be discussed dunng a free Small Bus mess Adm mistrallon-sponsored workshop set in Santa Ana, J an. 19, The Commcrce Department agency has s1gnall'd 1t will probably approve 2 000 public works applications. The money, approved last summer in lln antirecess1on move by Congress after two Ford \'Ctoes. goes to cities. coun· lies and specia l units such as water or sewer districts. The session v.111 be held m the Santa Ana City Council Chambers, Building No. 20, Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana, from 8:30 a m. to 4 p.m. Registrat10n will begin at 8 a m. fo'urt.her informa- tion is available at (213) 688-3226. The National League of Cities, ( h ·•·r T iu· Countt·r NASO Listinqs n1-. 141\.lti lU1 .. ]1' .. "' 11 • •4 I~ 'J) '"• , . ¥ • 1 \ , .... I I, 1• 18 7 I• J• ,. 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NL (Witt\ th••·J"I t TburMday'K A fter JJoon P rices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Ol.ol•H••" lnclY<IP , ....... "--Yor,, "".,,_"· l'le<lfl< l'llW _, ..... 0.l•tlt ..... Cln<I~ ..... '10<' •a<'*'90•.WW ,_.,...Cly 11'9 Notloft•I A\\OCl•IJO<I ot Soe<1><ll,.• 0.•lot• -lftUINI Thursday Oecerot>M 30 1C1T6 s DAILY PILOT A I 3 Dour Diets Additives List Grows By MO.TON MOSKOWITZ ll:lve you looked recenUy al the food you and your children are ea tin a ? One of the greal sports of our times has to be reading the lngred1~nt lubels on food pa<'k~1geR. CauUon Is necessary. The food may not make you sick, but findlng out what's in It. rrughl. General Jo'o<Kls (Cf'), one of our largest food processor.i, has been concernoo c.twugh about this hazard to use some or ita many udverlismg dollars to eJCplaln why we have lo eat. such substances as propylene glycol monO\'Stearate. CF's answer: "Propylene glycol monostearate 1s a food additive that enables certain foods to mix together." To help make the case for addallves In food. G F has even pro- Money Tree duced a booklet. "F()('us on fo'ood Adda lives." wbich you can get by writing to Peggy Kohl at the company's head· quarters in White Pl.1lns, N.Y. 10625. GF EXPLAINS TIIERE THAT ALL its add1lives have some positive effects on food and are perfectly sale to sn- gcst. Still, you might wonder 1f you bought the product. Orange Plus. which GJ.' adverllses as lasting more like fresh orange JU ice than the JU1ce made from frozen concen- trate <which GF also sells under the Birds Eye label), and read that al contains the Coltowing: "Water, sugar, syrup, concentrated orange juice, corn syrup, orange pulp, citric acid, tnpotassium phosphate, cot- tonseed 011 , modified food s tarch, sodium carbox· y methlycelluose, potassium citrate, ascorbic acid, tncalc1um phosphate, natural and artif1cual flavors, magnesium oxide, xanthan gum, artifical color, copper, gluconate. niacm, pantholhenac acid, vitamin A palm1tate, Uuamme hydrochlonde, vitamtn B·6, folic acid, riboflavin, BHA." It sounds a tattle Lake the mad scientist working in the laboratory, right, This product has more sugar and syrup m 1t than orange 1u1ce. But to make 1t taste like fresh orange 1wcc, there's orange pulp And to make sure you rec«>gruzc at, G F throws 10 some art1hc1al color READING TH E BACK OF J\ CEREAL box these days 1s lake being ma drugstore There are so many vatamms in the package that you wonder 1f there's room left for lhe <'ere al One of the best labels l hav<• seen 1s the one that appears on Jeno's pazta rolls. Look at all the goodies you arc gettinE: when you eat this tiny roll· "Enri<:hed flour, tomato puree, waler, pepperoni (pork and beef. salt water. spices, dextrose, mustard flour, sugar, lactic acid s tarter culture, oleorcsin of paprika. sodium a.scorbate. garlic powder, sodium rutrate, BHA, BHT and citnc acid added to help prote<•t flavor ), vegetable 011, oruons, celery. pasteunzed processed Amen can cheese. modified food starch. red and green bell peppers, low - mo1sture part-skim rnozarella cheese. textured vegetable protean (soy flour and caramel coloran10. sail, egg yolk solids, sugar. isolated soy protein, cheese whey soy flour blend (sodium hydrox1de added to standanzc acid1ty), yeast. spic<', dextrose, parmesan cheese, vegetable gum, Jeavenang, Romano cheese <made from cow's milk). monosod1um glutamate. papnka, dried whey, sodium slearoyt-1 lactylate, calcium sulfate, zanthan gum, de- hydrated parsley, garlic powder. calcium propionate." Whew ' Now that lS some pizza roll. It has more water and tomato puree than meat. and the meat itself 1s a clever combmallon of many things, ancludang good old sodium nitrite It has gum to hold al all together -and there's even a pinch or caramel colonng somewhere an there. You couldn't makclhat 111 your kitchen SO Percent Cut Coffee Boycott Called Too Slow LONDON (t\Pl -International corree experts say a boycott by coffee dnnkers would take months to bring down the high prices now going to growers m coffee producmg countries. A boycott sought by New York City's commissioner or consumer affairs. Elmor Guggenheamcr, seeks to have cof- fee drmkers cul consumption by 50 percent and force roasters and makers of instant coffee to reduce prices. A WORLD COFFEE SHORTAGE FOLLOWING the frost kalhng of Brazahan plantations last year has raised the US. retail pnce for coffee to $2 50 to $3 a pound m most places. up from around $1 59 a year ago. The United States consumes about 42 percent of the world's traded cofh.-e. and a consumers' hoycolt, 1f widely supported for an extended pcruid, could rf'duce world coHec pnces. dealers said. But wholesale cotfec d('alers <m the London Terminal Market said the boycott call has had Iii tlf' or no crfert so far. Lower prices on the commodity markH Wednesday were the result of slack trading over the long holiday period and a reaction lo spiraling pnces earlier 111 the year, they added "ANY HOVCO'IT AJMED i\T REDUCING coffee con· sumpt1on would have to bate dc<!ply lo ;:iffccl pnces, .. a ma· jor London dealer said "It would tak1• ~11>out two months of sustained boycott to force price:. dnwn Experts said 1t would t~k<• <'Hm lon~er for the price pressure to reach back to the grower~. now gelling high prices because of the short ,1gc "Imports of coffee dunng the Inst year were much higher than in previous years bt•causc or the world coffee shortage and roast('r.; and mak('rs of soluble coffees have been stockinR up before prices rise any further In lhe Unit- ed States alone. lmport..'l of soluble tn!>lant coffees to the end or September this year were 40 percent higher lhan in the same period last year and this as also true here in Bnt1un. "Somewhere in the p1pehnf.' there must be an awful lot of coffee s tocked aw:iy. and the first ctrect of a l)oycott would be to hnng this coffee nn the market before anybody starts losing money · Two Busine sses to Open In Huntingto!l's Village Two leasu with a value In l'xccss of $100,000 have been ~iRned at The VlUage, a neighborhood shopping center al 8olsa and Goldenwest In Huntm1tton Rench. Jack Spencer-Jones, a trnvcl agency, will open Feb. 1. Dr. V. Stella, o.n . an optomf.'lnst. will open an office In January Port Cooperation V~d SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -New San Francisco port c-omm1ssloncr Rkhard Goldman snyl! he wall work for more cooperation and less compet1tloo with Oakland, the world's second larg«'~l container port. Goldman, swom in this week, saJd the rivalry with 03klnnd doesn't belong in the maritime bW1lness and be lhou1ht U1e two cities Rhould slArt plannJns together. ... • . .. ·. ... Al4 DAILY PILOT Thursday December 30. 1976 Tonight's~ ,. TV Highlights KNDC C!J 7 30 America : The Young Experience presents Part One of •'The Sellin' of J amie," drama of a slave family torn apart by a slave auction. KCET ~ti B·OO Mast e rpiece Theat er presents Part Two of "The Five Red Herrings," meticulous mystery by Dorothy L . Sayers . KCET ~' 9 :00 Two dramas by Alexis DcVe:.i u concern. "The Tapestry" and "Cirdes. ·• depict the pressures on black women to settle for life as it is. ' TV DAILY LOG I THURSDAY I EVENING 6:00 0 0 , 8 10 ( 11 3 ) Nuo o ni 6 1 29 e > m "'•' O 12e1 Slat Irr~ I 6 1 Gomer Pyle Ill Gun\molr mi' rtd&e r1mily m .12 m ric Company EB Ot1m1h( Srrirs 139 01n1hl m little l!nols -6:30- 0 01n1h' t ••,1 '" 11 '' • <..t1''""'' hll I I" J r,. " ~ 111 ; 01 llul/dld I'. U•'j 1n.1 ''""" ,, l!Jnd 6 Andy Gulhlh 10 Merv G11fhn Sh°" Q) f1m1ly Aff111 ( 11 J ) Cun\mo~r fD l«Jm 7:00 B 0 1:> 6 ID ID Hrw) D ims Club 6 My Thru Soils • e To Tell lht Truth 0 Colltrnh 1flon m 1 lOtt lvcy (!)The FBI ED Cu toons L •ti• " J,,o dramas ~1 Altus ll•V;,u" onctin lh• tnormous ~1es 111r. "" bl3Ck women lo s•tllt 101 lrlt I\ rl I~ 'JhP fipf~ll1 ' fQCU!.t~ on a W•Jn•Jn 1tl0ul to ldke htr law ~1hwl tl•nll .md .rars Gto11• Jones '~hui11 Cuti•\ is ~bwl d 1uung I'" I who l•11la;11n •buul bP1n11 4 d.tncrr -9:30- 0 ( ~· ( 8.) ~'' The Tony Rand1ll Show ludgP fr.nkhn is ottered 3 lurr.111vP po~1t1un w11h his old lallj l11m and l~ce\ lh• <lt•c1s1nn nl "h' rhH 01 nnl lo •lay on lhe b .. nch ffi Wom,n's Coll 10 :00 O ( 11 l ) a Bu"aby Jones b Hlfwd IJ1llln'" rul'\I\ J ol P'•· l' , • • 1lhl•lr .. ho plol ) d lhr ull V m•lhon dollar d•amond hfl~I Iha! 1n1ol••d 1n •vl1•1 bui11a1y to obldm t '" nl tr·• \•cu1111 ~ .l•m 2ua1d1n~ II• I •llunt 1n f•m~ 0 23 6 0 G1bltn1llt Alie! , w.1111 A ~ 111r ''"" .. h, u I I. bh d t I •t ~f flJ ,.ff! J 1t j'J ;J ••• w "'~1 '' 0 0 Ntrrj • 6 B1ech1n11 Sole Prices G0041 Thrv Wtd., JOn. $ -s .. ,. cm New T•I'• Day frWoy, Dec. l1 -f·S D D I \ ~'W<:make quick work of cutting Jobs Remember how cutting wood meant Qet- ting out the old crosscut saw and pumping away 'tll your muscles tired and your hands blistered? Well, ache and blister no more, friend -you can cut through the big logs with the greatest of ease with a Village Blacksmith 10 Inch electric chain saw. #9110 ,,_ Andy Crifl1lh m Thr M1cNt1I Lthrt1 Report ( 29 8 8on1nu 0 ( ~ 8 ) ll St reets of Sin f11n<1sto ll•a1! ''' Ah•• (fit l'ih•n • .11-.mr. l•lt4l otlN\ SI m1lhM I r llt• u· P• I 111 It r 11pe mu1d1•1 r I '11• rt \U~hlff 01• ,,,. .. t l1Hn inf,, ~ h"'• l1u A I 1t1hr11 ru "'' t·v• •yon•• I t•P lh C11lltCI r~---- .. W Addams family -7:30- 0 America: The Youns Ctperientt 'lh• '>•lion d )Am"' f'All I I•• lrd~I( ~'•m • "' ~ \l.<1• t.i111lv I• " ap~rl bv J ,1.,. Ju•'""' .,r,~ th•11 .Hten1pl lo l'Ul11I• "'" ,, 1.ir1tl1111111 O Bowline lot OOllm I 6 Tht Odd Couple O The Gone Show 1 8 C1nchd C1mrr1 0 The Jo\tt'\ Wild '10 2l 6 Mitch G1mr Q) Tht B"dy 8u11th ( 11 3 ) The Wllbu1n Brothtt\ ED Tod1r's C«Jl 1n1 l:zfi Hoc•n'\ HrfOU fD Clt1nne6 21 Ton•&hl ID P11u Is R111U u lyt••IMU Oil Sen.tr W Fl1slt liotdon • 8:0 0 0 DRAMATIC CNCOR(' * 2nr WAL TONS SHOW' 0 I 11 3 I 8 Tht W1hon1 f ,,. d"•t,1•'' l'l 1 Ntth _, 11 ,Uf1t·.Jk!'i '• r f I t "I' f'" t-1• f ' IP• tn I 11'-~ m· ~ I ('hr t lrea 1' t 1 :it '"' ti " j l 0 2l o m Van Oyi.r 1no Complf'1 1 If',.. t 1• ,1-.,,_, • 1; I O Mofle c (llo11) ' lfl1t Min hom i.10' hh ~ : " , t', [· .. " ... ~ • & "'°''' c (1hr) "l1n1, Mu• dtfl'' t11.41 I l t 11 1 r) U ( 29 a ) n 'llltlcomt Bu• aonri ~ ' • · • I I .. 1111 ,, ' t J' "t. to I' • I i1tt 'f I '" .... ~ " . ' I '' 0 .... ~ t: llh<I S.nb1d lht S.11ot 1 ' -I I loll 'I.I 10 lftln H Q) TM U~.000 "r•1tfltd m '"" ,.,_ m S.111u111 Moott '2' ~ c (lh1) It.ow lll1tn1 hunt Mtn 111 t11t1r lly1n1 .. .Chinn ( "11 t,\ J fl1 /J I fD Muwpirct Thut1r m Futurt film ID llPIMM UntUllt ''0111111 -8:30- • ( 2t e l Whal', H1ppt111111 Wh•n l•n• I I•••"· I, Avn1J l•tl•"t nr innlhN lh,11 hr<""'" ••P•lltol hn1n school t.v t11>1n~ ho lathr1 1nl 1 ROtn« to lhr v11nrto 11 1111 him, h• ml\l&ktnly lh•nk hr " hnmr l1n (IQ\"""' Q)Clou·Wrh 9:00 Q fl\ !61 CJ Bnt Stlltri· O!Ke •n Ul.'Vlt1 6 Sdm O~mnn ~llC"SS dtl•ndi Pvt IOf 811nd in a Ir t w1lh •dt•'I nvrrtonu and Donny 0.1mM d•liv•llnR ho\ ctn\ valtndiclnrv Add"v pit ad\ tnr Arnfura lo 'Vil'~ 1nv?lvtmtnl m lhr ealhtllnR Pat1I• "!' IJ ( 2t I. ) 3t 81tnty l1hlltr (R) Barntfs d•lrcflvPS falt a N•w Ytar s Cwt nl 1umpr•~. d•unl\ p1C\ POC\•I~ and ' '0a<H\h ~P''''"r r•l)l'Cl1n1 mother 'boul IO,,., b11lh 110 Mme: "l1lt Sle'"'" Tllrud" (dti) 66-Sidney Po•t•fl CD Tennesset Ernie rord, * P1tf1 Fountain And fil Hurt Join Mtrw T oniaht CD Merw Gnlf1" S'- Q) Virpiiu fB Mo SuiUdtn fD VISIONS "hpestry" '* ind "Circles" En Vllions "The hpesl•y" and ffi Crerhncl from Grrm1ny 26 Gunsmoke ED £1 Bien Am1do -10:30- CD m ED Nnts , ID Bruk Pmpect1n on lhr Hews I 11:00 0 0 e ED 3t lltw\ 0 2l 6 10 fins 0 ( 29 e ) 26 e Atr1t11c1n Sl)ir 6 Su Hunl 0 Celtb11ly Rout CD Miry H1r1m1n Q) USC l1urtb1ll ( I 1 3 ) Stump I ED Mov1t "W1llt -11: ry H1rtm1n hlrln. tan t Torudors" 0 ( 11 J ) a CIS Liit Movtt llOflk B n 6 tf m »tuwiy car-e Tht I'll Club U ( 29 I )' lt Streets ol ~" f t1ntl)(O Din Aucusl CD Htin " Tht 100 Club ID lie in I Mew" 12:00 0 S.sl ol Groucllo 0 liloVlt "A Wom1n ol lhe ta.in· ,. ; l l "~ f1flt Alhr(' Q) MOY•I "You Belo"~ lo Mt' I ~ t Ht tr~ 1lit"\ih) • t 1, • ~ l't ,,, -12:30- 0 All N11ht Stiow· "0 SS. 117- 0oublt Aatnl," "lht A111u1n1 Trans partnt M111, .. "Hou11 ol f u1" Q) lilo.ie r. '1ht Slnr" • h "• t •• IA '11,. \tr 1:00 0 )3 & 10 Tomotrow ID nir 'TL Club 2:00 0 lilcwtt 0...bttlrltutt 'Opet•· hon 0.YUer. "11111 of £vents'' Q) All ll1&hl Show "llold to Glory," lhe ~o Mn11M" -3.0S-o MoVlt c "0111 M fo1 Murdtr" 1•~• I q,, Y•ll1r l •'i' f(f"ll• omtlrl[ M6Vt£S 0£ClMBCR JI llttow, for your convenrence, 11t lhe d'y's t!IO\~s. 10 00 O "lnctndtl(f Blonde" 1 lw ~~ R•llv litrll~n B~orv fil1~n1hl fh~rlt~ RuRpl-. A• Ii•'" •I• r otdfl•i ·•up the lhver" (lorn) .1K l'"\top fo\ltr hny M41f1n rh'"" B•~\ >S C "W1ckyWorldo Mother Goost" (com) 6/- Mar1are1 Rutherford 11 00 ClJ "fly1n1 U1th1necks" f.1d•) ~l lohn W1~11t Robt1I 11\an 12·00 Q) "It Should ll1J11tn to l'eu" (com) S4 }ud, lftlrday, lacJ l rmmon. Ptle1 lawfo1d Morh1•I 0 S~•a 2 00 O C "five 8'ld ..,,_. .. ld•a) S'l ltff Mli"o"' Mmy Andm hm Ros~. l1b11 McCalls. Cu1nn Wolhims J 00 ,~ c "Cx1pe" (dli) ·71 _ Christopher Cttree Avery 5'hrP1ber Mrnlfn Muon. W1lh1m Windom,. ffunt1 Hill, Glo111 G11hamf J:JO D tt l "Tiit V.1111 ol Ille Ya" (adv) 'IJ Oesi Arn11 1,. M1k, [van\. Btvttlv Galland. Skip Homrit1 Dtltll Rttse 1 ;: KOCE T e levision (50 ) :t: .... IAMI ITlll IT :;: ltttti.1cco11o•ANY I: .. MllT 111 •001 Ill H 110.. llOltMOOO •:• ,,.,.,,.,,...,,.AcToav •:• MAN AND INVlltCMMINT "lltli.t Sy•l•rm" 6:• 'llllMANDSICITCHIMO "SltlCllrwi"t 0.r~M\\" 1:• lllAL ISTATI ANO VOU ''SlloutCI VO<J lt9flt 1 1:• T"I "'IACI O~MI e!• WONDlll A"l'lif t :• f'l~OIU.YClltCUS''a.llftsiw..• Ptn2'' • ,.,. JIANNI WOL,. WIT" "ltfdd ireu 11: .. ntl.Mac .. 111./\.IMlllll lllP'OftT I I 1 for the tv sportsman The Odyssey 300 la for peo- ple who like action on TV - action where they can par- ticipate. It turns your TV Into an exciti ng electronlc playground. 3 poaltlon switch for novice, Intermediate or expert play. Olgltal scoring, action sound. automatic serve. It's greatl Hooks up to any TV e9as AC M1ptorb1n apeclal purch11el Odyssey 200 Play tennis, hockey or smash right on your TV screen. Features on-screen scorln\), action sound, ball rebound, vertical and horizontal player action, speed control, 214 player awltoh. Make your TV more than 1om•thlng Juat to alt and watch. Hooke up to any TV. 39111 Cr llttla chain saw ••• mighty results The Remington Limb 'n Trim · electric weighs only 4 'h lbs .. l'las 111. hp engine and cuts trees up 10 16 In. thick. Truly remarkable. 2595 Wide angle door viewer lets you see who's there before you open the door. Adjusts to fit 1'/. in. to 2 in. wide doors. By Kwikset. Reg. 2.56 1•• grid fllppln' food artist Hammon Beach's Lltte Mac is the next best thing to having your own short ordflr cook. Cooks hamburgers, grills sandwiches. #2108. Reg. 18.95 1588 a slmple pin secures the door Here's added protection for sliding patio doors -can be used to secure sliding windows. too. 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Reg. 7.99 Giiiette's Dial-A-Curl does a better Job becauH. It hu adJuatable hHt control and molaturlzlng steam to lock In th• curl. #SW-2. Reg. 18.94 1511 14'' 5•• 14'' D , r I l Trick rider Montie Montana made a surprise appearance at the lunch. He and his horse, Rex, are 44-year veterans of the Rose Parade. They 've All Reigned On Parade By DENNIS McLE l.LAN Ot 1r.~ 0 .. 11. P1tot $tc11tt Only SR Y.Omc n so far c·.in d<t1m mNnbersh1p to this elate grouµ Thl'Y art· lhC' ones Y.ho have bl·l'n c·hoM'n to n·1gn ;is qucl'n of tht• Tournament of Roses Paradl' Through thl' ) rars the former queens haH· i.t•allcn'tl afar Hut once a )l'ar they ha\C' <tn op portunaty to get together ag:un lo !>ee old friends and meet lhl· new queen and h,•r tourt ll 's lhl' Hose Quet•n Luncht·on. sponhorcd by Kodak About t wo dozt'n Y.C're <:x peeled to Lum out for the oc caswn held 1n the Pasadena Hilton Wednesday. (One n1es in every y('ar from Minnc::.ota J Empt) bleuchcrs a bl0<:k away on Color,1do Roulcvard g.1vc h! tic 1nd1t·.it1on that by Saturda) morn 1ng I 1 ler a I ly l1•ns o f thous11nds of ~pC'clators would be lining the street ll Y.as 30 minutes before the first guests bt•gan tnckhng into the large banquet room filled Y.1th photographers and TV crews. Ot.:TSIDE IN THE lobby, a dark haired man walked by lie held a JO.gallon hat and wore col- orful, ha nd-tooled boots and a cowboy outfit fes tooned with roS<'S a nd a bicenlenrual flag on his back. He's trick rider Montie Mon- tana, someone said. lie and his horse Rex are 44·year vete rans of the ann ual parade. "H~ wanted lo ride his horse into the room ," said a public re- lations wom an. indicating the of- fer. for obvious r easons, was quickly vetoed. The room began fillin~ up Cameras clicked and television hghts illuminated port.ions of the room as former queens greeted and embr aced one anot her. "GI ad to see you," said one "We ll, hi How pretty you look. I love your ha 1r." Four o( the nine former queens who live on the Orange Coast turned out for the lunch. Nancy Davis Maggio. who re- igned in 1963, now lives in Hunt· ington Beach with her husband. Frank and t wo d aughters. SHE'S BEEN to a ll the annual get-tog ethers. "It 's the only time we get to visit each other .'· said Mrs. Mag. gio, who was 20 when she was honored. "We also get to know the new queen." Re membe rin g hack to her year. she said. "It really was a shock to be nam ed queen. It was Diane Jene Ramaker, left, 1977 queen, ·m eets Holly Halsted Ba/this (1930) and Ann Mossb erg Hall (1957), both Orange Coast residents. an extre mely enjoyable ex- perience.·· What do her d aughters, Kim. 11. and Deborah. 9. thmk or hav ing royalty in the family'' "They think 1t 's neat. but because we don't live an the (Pasadena > area , they don't get as wrapped up in the activ1t1e:. " They plan to watch the p.iradc on television. But Mrs Maggio feels the t rip to Pasadena for the lunch is well wort h 1t. "It's nice lo be on an ego tnp once a year." she said with a laugh. "It's nice to be someone again " MONTANA, ON E of the l;1st of the glamorous cowboy!>, ~trolled into the room lie spends much of his ti me appearin~ an horse shows and rodeos. he said La!>t year he relebratcd his 50th year in s how business Did he really plan on riding his horse into the hotel? ··1 have Hex her<.'," he said "But they're a fra id of him " There's really nothing to worry about. he said . "He's perfectly ~afe I've had him in every hotel m the country I've ridden him an hosp1lals ;rnd on top or the Em pare Stale Build ing. You ought lo have seen the elevator g uy 's eyes "l retired t his Rex lone of eight> several years ago. but r11r indoors he's unbeatable." <The secret . he said. 1s thick rubber horseshoes.) JN ANOTJI ER part of the crowded room. photographers s urrounded Ho lly llals ted Balthis. named queen in 1930. while a student al UCL/\. Mrs. Balthis. who comes from a pioneer Pasadena family, lives in South Laguna . At the lime of her coronation. she said, the queen was allowed to chose her own court from among he r friends. "[ was thr illed ." she said "The following May I was lo be married in my coronation dress. Th a t all tie d u p in my memories." Ann Mossberg Hall (19S7l and Barba r a Schmid t Mulligan 11954) both Ii ve in Corona d<'I Mar. They often run into each othe r while shopping Mrs. Mulli gan attends the lunc h eve ry year. "I look forward to it." she said, "It's very exciting.·· "IT'S NICE lo get together with old fri<'nds." said Mrs. llall. As queen . she said, she toured MGM Studios where she met Bing Crosby. She a lso appeared BEA ANDERSON, Editor Thursday DOcember 30, 1976 Bl Seeing old friends prompts Orange Coast residents Nancy Davis Maggio and Barbara Schmidt Mulligan to attend annual luncheon. on the Lawr ence Welk Show and on radio with Hob Hope. Following more pictures and interviews. lunch was served Toward the er. I. un excited woman rushed over to the table. "Any photographers here?" she said. "I have a scoop for you. We've been sitting at Montie Montana's table and in a (cw minutes he's going to be riding in thal door ... "I wonder how t rained he's got that horse." someone muttered not knowing whether to believe the tip. MINUTES PASSED and the in· lroductions or numerous VJP's were over and the closing re- marks begun when the doors to the room flew open. "llere he comes:· som eone shouted ' as the aucticncc gasped. Montie Montana. atop Rex. waved his hat in salute as he rode across the room. "I'm Mont ie Montana," he said, t wirling his !anal m frootof the laughing, gasping audience. "My horse has hccn photo· graphed as much as any of the queens. "lie JUSt w anted you to know t he Old Wes t hasn 'l died yet. .. and we lcom e to Pasadena." . TV Violence: Switch Rather Than Fight~ EDITOR'S NOTE -P~hologut~ u.ted to say, "Don't hll tMlad, you'll warp hu ~r1onal1ty " Now theTt! u concern that 1f the k"1 1ees J>f'<Jplt h1ttmg each other. it'll warp hu persOtJal1t11 Whatever. the argument over vwlence in teltva.non u getting violent. By MIKE GOODKJND L OS A NGEL ES f AP > T h e r e's a s imple w ay to e limina t te levision violence from the hom e. Peopl(' can tum their sets off -if their kids let them. Now Dr. Thomas Elmendorf, past president of the California Medical Association. wants to help adults exerc ise their paren· tal control by letting them know in advance If a particular pro- gram episode Is going to contain any violence. He thinks parents have -right lo Jrnow if "Stars ky and Hutch," Cot example, are going lO knock the teeth out of their prisoner . Dr George Ge rbner, Dean of the Annenber g School of Com· munir ations at the University of Pennsylvania, doubts that most parents have tbe authority t o control their kids' viewings. "In the a v e r age ho m e. children control the dial. Whal we need is to change program· ming," s ays Gerbner. But Elmendorf wants at lea.-;t to give parents a lighting chance. HE B ELIEVES TRAT 9loJent television "Is an ele· ment in antisocial behavior." GordQJ'l Van Sauter, CBS' pro- gram practices vice president, ls less lure. "There i.s no agree· ment on the effect of violence," he aay!I. Elmendorf and Sauter aaree, however, that lt ·• up to the parents to decide wbat kids should watch and that public opl· nion and prasure is aby iowha\ you see on the tube. And Elmendorf is quietly pre· ssing for greater public aware- ness -not censorship or even a radical change in program format. "We want the networks to have m a ximum fr eedom and minimum g o v e rnment in- terference." says Elmendorf. "I would really like to see the net.works release something that would go into the TV listings which would au ist parents in sel•cting appropriate viewing for their eblldren," says Elmendorf, who practices emergency medicine at Davis. ' AT THE AMER I CAN Medlcal AHocittlon's annual convention last month in Philadelphi a. Elme odorr sponaored a resolution aalcing the networks lo rate each profram epllode by a formula they would Ml up tbem..Sves. 1'be AMA turned d o wn the pro posa l because "the intent of the resolu- tion was already being earn ed out.•• In efforts lo define TV vio· lence, the AMA has turned over $25,000 to a Washington-based nonprofit outCit called the Na- tional Citizens Committee for Better Broadcasting to compile ratings of individual shows. The money , s a y s an AMA spokesman. was directed as a first step to "encourage the TV industry to reduce the amount of violence." The NCCB received wldeapread medla coverage when It ranked each show last summer on its relative content of violence. Over a six-week period, the service recorded each instance of violence and how long it ap- peared on the scr een. Then all 63 sbowa seen on each network were ranked rrom least to most violent. THE INDUSTRY OBJECTED to r ating all forms of violence from slaps to knifing -equally When a new study is r eleased by the end of the year. says NCCB E xec uti ve Directo r T e d Carpenter, acts o! aggressive violence will be rated separately from s uch things as pratfalls in comedy shows or natural dis· uters. The wide r d e finition of violence was used in the original .s tudy, h e s aid, becaus e Gerbner 's research bas indicat· ed that all forms of violence, re- gardless of their context of severity, appear to affect small children equally. The winner or the first study was the Bob Newhart Show, a situation com edy depicting the life and dally doings of a Chicago psychologist. Ironically, the two mast violent ... . shows in the fi rst batch of ~nit· ings, "S WAT" a nd "The Rookies" have been can<:elled. Netw o rk a uth o rities agree violence per se doesn'l bril'Jg rat- mgs. Carpenter believes a rating system m ay be helpful. "B\lt what we're really trying to dais put the pressure on the induatJy itself." Elmendorf thinks the raUngs would lead to greater S>ubUc awareness -hence pubU~ pm- ssure. Tom Ke rsey, ABC's W~t Coast Broadcast practices~. and Saute r are oppoted lo published violence rating,, even though both networks monitor the violent content of shows for their own use. "I TWNK IT'S NAIVE W U • sume that someone watchintJCo. jak in the fifth year of lls U· iAtence does not know what Ko· Jak ls,'' says Sauter . t -. ·- Thur'lda Oecf'moer )() 1976 on't Take Steps Lig·htly (Ann Landers ~ DOUG'S FLOWER SHOP 3. It your married t'hUdren have problems wltb tbelr mates, eo· couraie them to co(9e home, no m 11 tter what. Usten attentlvely to aU eomplalnts and point out additional faults which may have gone 11n· observed. Re member, single drops of water can wear away a rock if the drops keep falling long enough. 4. When your married children have financial problem s, r ush In with the cht>ckbook. If you are having financial pro- blems yourself, borrow, II necessary, but let them know they'll never hav1: • to do ~·ltbout aoythlng bO loog as you are a round. S.Jf a married cbUdba.tV a drinking problem, tell hlft'I "~ mate drove him tolt. lt wlll make blm fed bet~r. Everyone needb someooe tobl,me. 6. If 10ur zqarrled son gets an opportunity for advaocem l'nt whic h takes blm to :-another city, tell hlm "famll.> Is more Important than money." It be leav('s an) Way, rt'· mind him that God pun.ls hes tbos1: who I&· nore the commandment, "llonor thy father and tbymother." 7 . l f t h .-r ,. a r e grandchildr<'n, -,mother t.bem with glfu. U t.be pare ota object, tell them to keep out of It. Af&er all, grandt'blldreo :are to ,.pou. Sneak money tot.be little ones secretly ii you bave to. They'll love you for It 8. If four married chlld has a difference of opi· nlon with hls mate. get ln· to the act and give them both a s ample of your wisdom born of years of expnlence. What do THEY know? You've Uvcd ! 9. When your married sons or daughters vlAlt with their chUdren, make a point of how thln and tired the kids look. Get :•' # (": :!urning Frowns Upside Down .... I .. .. For thosp day..; \\hen you 1·:1n 't must<•r up a smile. J ane D.iug hl'rt.\' ol Ht·nton. \\';1:-.h "ti! cln it l(lr } ou for <• pn<'l' Calling th<· sen 'H'l' l~t·nt .\ Sm1k. \!rs. Daugher ty anrl dau~ht1•1 s will clrt.·~s np a:-. Hagg1•d} Ann and Andys or an} nthl·r f'h:tr.1cler ;md s ing .ind d.111te their \\ay into <m\ mll' s hl'iJI t. lhl'' pr<Jmi-..1· 'C:ancer: Accent Wishes ft\ SYD' F.\' 0 '1t\RR ··Rmi\ \', UE('l·;'1nt:R 31 ARIF.S l :\t .irlll :!I \pnl 1:11 You t«1n ha"r .1 ~·011<1) t1nw v. tlhout t11•·1 'l"'n<hn,• to.now 1f :11 t ,11<11rd111l'h 't'ou 1 r1d1.1hh 1" 111 hr•·a\.. '"1111' r 1·-.01111 1011' rm 111•-<ll,111•1\ 1l11V. 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J, 'lar1f•t 1' l••U ,,f "'ll'l' of tl11t'1l11111 '·' C'I t l'nt rnt I nrl ll-.11 <'II .11 h11m1· h.1 1 " 1rp11~1 • 01 cur \'fR(,l) I All~ ·1 ~·pl 2:! 1 ..,, '' out of tr.•ffH· 11 at nil r11..,.c1 hll' I l'n1!1 "'' I .. Ill , I 1 Ill\ OI\ •'Cl y, Ith , .1r1·l · , drl\ "r'. Jl' 1 ""'1" "'ho m,1\ tw 1111•h1 r;1t1'(f \ r1 lal111n1>h1p ,., '"'lf'f'I u n RA , \.\"pt :::i ou 221 Y 1111 t 111rl """ 1·1d •nr t< rnv.,lt•r lou' <'<·rt..1 111 C'vent<, ~<'•"TTI to r1•1w.;l thl'nl'fl\•" \1111 ft 1•1 .111r,1 111 111 \ l•·r, p1•rh.IJ'' lh1• Ill 11tft \111 1 1h.,111vP1 ho"' 111 ttl'h that < c•rt ;11n 11• r · 11ri " n•ull~ 111l' .111-.. I 11 \ 1111 Sf'Ot< 1•ro '01·1 :!:1 '· '" ~ 1 • \ 11u ,. ,, 11 l1·:1rn 1110•;, l1,11•n o!Jo;1·n•'. l'•t'f t• flll't'fl 1'1 /11/• of Ill Im rn. 111111 (lt11· <'Ill"•' In ·"'1, , 1111111• 111.11 :ind m .tt•J •n<lt11 I >llft ~ ... ' "'\<.IT r \t:ll S 1 ">m __ 1, .. ,. :-1 , 1 •• 111·11. r11" \ .1 1 I -s ' o 11 1 11 n I 1• J ,. hr •• t ,. •• II d .... In f I it•ntls lllf11t1 111 • fll'll pll' \1 l't•ll' Ill lt1' 1j \\lf1\ ''"'" "'h" ll a11• 1n : ' r p,, t. '·•l"' c \I' RI ( (I It ' I D1•1• :'".Ian I " I lt1•. 1 011lrl lw 11111" or \11111 n111 ... 1 '\ 111111~ t'"" lo <1 '"ilr Sp1·<ulat1nn 1·x<·1t1•m1•111, ;·mollonal rf''Jl"ll"''" .tnd )II\ I' ;1r c• real Ill I' I , ,, .. 1·11 .sion of (111.irll·•"•,, ~our rn~n prosp1·r t s 1 11uld pro \ 1 1·nlt ~hle·nin~ .\ () l A H I l' S < J a n . :!ll F1'b IR I You h<tVt' mtll'h t o be i::ratl.'ful for thC' pas t yea r h~s sPn rd as a tl·s ting. try- mg Jll'no<l. You 'r e now 1111 r o;1d ln gr~ater fulfill- ment applit•s emo- rcorrnll v ~tnd also whf'n• rnnnC'\. 1s cOn('rrn1•d . PI ~ C F.A I f'' t> h 1 !} \l:Jl<'h 201 R r with p1•r ""n" \I. h<•"t' views arc 1111t nmr r Jd 1 ctory to your 1m n tlh ·ans lhoq• v. ho ... 11:1r C' 'our hcl1efs. ideals v.m1lrl b1• hoon compa- 111ons a<. the old year fadl.''> .1wa\ If Dt-c~m b t-r 31st is vour hlrthda\•. you ar<' loval. dl'd1<'aled, ha\'c h•11dency to brood. to be 111 love with love Birth- clny patter n ind icates \Ou t·o uld hav<' been scparatt'd from one or hoth parents at relative ly early U){l' acrou the me .. a1e that you don't llke tile way yo ur beloved graodcbUdren are brin.( caredfor.Askrepeaaedly what the.)' eat and ~ they bave ao many colds. If a kid break• a &ooda « ls lnJured durln1 play, get aU t.be delaU1 ud place the blame on lack~ matemal supervl1lon.. lt.lryouraon bas a but- ton off bis s hirt, uy sometblng. Also menuon the bole la bl• sock or the spot on bJa coat. It wW ran the names of self.pity and cou.ld start the rtnal fight that ends ln the divorce court. Junk DEAR ANN: My wife had an affair with her bosa. I was aware ol it and wuited patiently, h o pin g 1l w o uld terminate. FinaJly I told her J knew. She admitted everything and ended the affair lmmt.>diately. We have had a perfect rela- tJonahlp ever i,lncc but I' can't get that man out of my mind. Whenever we make love l think or him in bed with her . I can't afford therapy. What should I do., -NO NAME. NO TOWN DEAR N.N.N .T .: I've said this so often I'm beg,bullng to sound ll.ke a cracked r ecord. My e Old ~ Image , AT WIT 'S END By E RMA BOMB ECK Welcome to the Twilight Zone between Christmas and the new year. . It was all r athe r predictable. wasn't il? The trash can is full of pictures from the can't.fail-so· i:.1mple a ·<'h ild·can·opcrate·il camera that makes our family look lih a moon crater. The rummaging lhrou~h billfolds for sales slips that wc threw into tht: fire when we burnt the paper. My hus ba nd spreadin~ joy by announcing every three hours. "ThJs place b i:oing to burn to the ground." Th<' ~ea rch for off-sized batteries that are available onl) m Communist countries. My husband warning the kids they are going to be sliced in half if they don't stop dropping their flip tops mto their cans. A food s hredder. l wonder if Farrah Faw- cett l\1ajors got a food shredder for Christmas. I 'II bet her yearbook didn't say, "Girl most likely to ha,·e her cold treated by a Vt>t." The poinsettias are going. 1 knew they would. What the heck. I saw plastic plants in church the othe r day. If you can't grow real onei:. in church, what chance do I have? Mom want~ m e to go to the after -Christmas s ales tomorrow . 1 don't think I've got the strr ngth. Whal was it my Dad said? "Your molh<>r 's been gone for three days, but I'm not worried. She's only shopping." Can you believ<' someone actually bought me a social calendar? Let's see, I'll worm the dog on the 18th. rotate the wheels on m y vacuum sweeper the 25th and maybe I 'II visit my m eat in the food locker on the third of next month. Thank goodness the bicentennial year is over . It's just as well. t didn't recognize anyone on the bicentennial minute anymore. 1977. Mayva says the reason I don't make new year's resolutions is because I think I 'm perf~t. That's not true. I don't know whe re to start. I 'd like lo be wonderful. punctual, wise. un- derstanding, patient. and if God has a minute, l 'd like to see m y hipbones before I die. But you know what I'd r eally like to be again? Selfish l 'd like to love me. Be gatient with m e. understand me, listen to me an most.· ly -be m e . Beginning today, the re 's a fram ed bl ackboard on mv wltll that reads, ''l'M ME! l 'M WONDERFUL! 'CAUSE GOD DON'T MAKE JUNK." Happy New Year. And thanks for laughing. Peering Around CELEBRATING 30 y ear s as owners or Anchor Trailer Port in Newport Beach with a Christmas party in the park's clubroom were Bill and Helen McTag. gart. Entertai nme nt was provi ded b y P a ul Scruggs. accordionist, They started building the park In 1946 after their ar rival fr om th e Midwest. The name comes from the lSOO·pound anchor al the entrance, from a lumber sailing s hip that s an k o ff New p o r t Harbor. apologlei to all who are slckolll. Tllerapy IS av aUabl~ IOI' t-boae who unnot pay. Coatact your county or state Mental Health ~­ soclallon. Check Com· mWllty Referral Servlre. Help ls as near as your pbonebook. Do you feel awkwarll. self-consdou~ lonely'' Well'omt• to the club. There's help for you in Ann Landers 's bookll't, "The Key to Popularity." Send 50 cenb in coin with your request and u long, st amped, self·add rr~st-'d envelope lo Ann Lander~. P .O. Box 1400, Elg m, Ill 00120. 0 1899 PARK AVE IC-P.ril & I 'tit St I COSTA MESA !"HOME 631·3944 NEW YEARS CORSAGES Carnations '3'~ Orchids •6so Roses •59s ORDER EARLY PHOME 631-3944 FREE BOUTONIERE ...._ ttl l t od Oflly SftECIAL • Roses '295 doz . • Mixed Bouquets '2°0 & ~ • Potted Mums wtiile "'W'f loll LARGE SB.ECTIOH O~ VASES d}~ ONE POUND OF DIAMONDS $3 1,000,000.00·. Consisting of 2,272 one carat stones. brilltant rounds, [)..flawless quality 'Median retail price Oct 76 RAY BEAUDRY Master diamond C•lll!'r Graduate A po1c1•'>Pr 666 Bal\er St1eet 11C-353 Costa Mesa Ca 92626 • (714) 540-6664 INtlf hn .f\)I ,. • •• ,Mil•• 'W.~~" r,t 1 ,,tn Cr i11 t f'I ,,. V1s1t our showroom or your favorite 1eweler 1·NTIRE STOCK so3 1i1 OFF .~;; ~~.?' ... • • • l,.. I-, , ·~~I oragmol retail G \.:~ ~' '. ticket price . { ; v,t~· ! 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I 1W:1, I lllJ 1111 ! 11 f 1111"'"1 .. 1 I I :;.1l1 . ' i 11 i.:. :, I l I I 1.:, v1,ll"r'"'r,,1 t,:1 ~Ip~~: GALLERIES. LTD. -<: 2542 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach, Callfornla 92663 (714) 645-2100 I I I c 'luna by L1moge:s, Wedgewood, Rosentl .. 11 .inJ olht>rr; 11111' E11rop in ,11,J Amt·m.·an cut crystal anJ art ql~:.s, ~ l"r.-r!l 1111 liq·mr.• . Ir 11.'• • 111 • liirrntun chanJeJ.ers and oric of the lar 11 I d1&i1ldy.:. ol h11• • •W• Jr·1 in llti' !•Ju:r.!.-....j Everythll'lg from 20carul dw1:1 11d sobt.HI'(~ lo c;< I 11« "l i.<11ti:. FREE ADMISSION TERMSs B,.mlt AmPrlcard. Master Charge, Person.11 Check, T<'rrns. ADDITIONAL INSPECTION HOURS: Mon .. Tuus. & Fn. 10 a.rn. to!::> f' m . $;11 1 :' noc•n to') 1 rn , Sun. 2 p.m. In :.i p rn. AUCTIONEER: Art V.v111 .. I I I I I I WE .BUY FOR CASH l OR SELL ON CONSIGNMENT. _) '---?.~~=~~:~:.i=~-~~~I~~==~::r.:s~ BOOMER by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson INSIDE WOODY ALLEN :! 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TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE PEANUTS UNITED Features Synd1cale Wt<1ne..~•1'1·uu10 So•.eo ACROSS ldC.'t!' 1o re1a1 ,,,. 5 \ 101 Mr t•t" 1 o Siuo9•5" 1 4 Co,,lv\{•,J '5 T1~ \Ir •' 16 M ,,., ,,,,,r,. 11 C41' e •H abouJ 50 Cert11n Ir act t•l1\ •?Re~•~ '' Smd mar1ri(" an~., ' ' l '' c I .animal 5~ Httcrd~ ol l\Hl i C• 11~ I "S "~'' I I[ '11 '"'•er t9 M•'•~ >4•,w t1•• :10We\ll' ,.1 1 1,, (ng1ts,, i) 1.1•4' ;> & <lt WO•O• 71 Mni 1 '"•"' , , cn~f\o•· ,,, 2 J 51'CPl">d•• r ' ()()\ I Of'I lorn f 'Crtml' 11• ~ 7~ ve•d1nt .5.r t•!'"'" 76 Ag•rrd ( d Chc.a1 N n 30 Pu•o11 '" dr "° 3 4 5"ow ~• Belmonl 35Con Will' l'l(l•P ment 37 Stern 311 lllum1na1cd 39 Bolsl~r •2 Sign of a h1I Abbi 43 Tiie "A ' ol ''U A R " 45 Literary compos1 t1on 46 Moreno and Haywortll 4 8 W1nd11s ""' J• '"ii' t'J Bueeth 10 C.GS un11•, 71 Sec•ud11d valley OOWI~ 1 A1medcon· lt1cts 2 Minor J Direct w1lh fo1ce .c Canocr 5 Check 6 Household implement 7 Singer Nan , c L I o -0:'T'T1 r--:r ' A ~'"a L t '1'1i'f"i AM AH ... ~ ( (J •• Ill 0 "'" c. Q "' ~· f f ,~ u I A l L •• 0 "' N E O IMO U ~ • L It S•Gt o I 'N r 11 T I • M. l u It f I~ Nu 1 • £-OlflP A II , u p l ' " o-LIAl01£ N N fl P IU N I" < l A TlfIO•~ U I I ) N·•1'1IEIO•C U • v E ~ ll • .. 0 In; v •S PI N I ( I f •-a ,. 1 . ~ . " I •4 A S JA ll 14 '> T A I t r It Eli[' r c A• • s !: • , r ' d l ,, ~ < 'At ")u~nr ly 'l 1rl~ ·I ' Re.i< n,.11 "' '0'l' I I 1 l•t:oil•" m('l"'f 12 MllMQ v•elds 11 Berlin t8 Ah1canan· tetopas 22 Kind 01 cur ren1 24 Pace 26 8001( ol maps 27 Lose one's 28 Ravi s 111 strumenl 29 Drugged 31 • · Breve 37 01 the ear 'J Petulant JG Pon!JerOu\ IX><~kS •O Outd•O IY<' IPSStOnatly 4 1 W;11b t'S 4 4 Nonsense' 4 7 Pierced w1tn a 5take 49 Consent word 51 Hertd1taty system:\ 53 Brazenly uncivil 55Hum1d 56 Soy's name 57 New star 58 Guide 60 Submissive 61 W1ckeel 6:.1 \lend 6 5 Dined ~~E ~·~l ;;;~i)1\;..: G~Jl'~~--" 5,r;:: . r ~-!J JUDGE PARKER ALL 27 MEMBERS GOT ON E VOTE EACH ----- ' Thursday Oectmbe~ 1976 DAILY PILOT OF CDJRSE~ TH1S IS Jusr MY PR£-NEW Vt.~, GET-I Ac:QUAIWE~ WARM-UP GALA. by Charles M. Schulz ,..-~~~~~~--. '-iv.\\U.:';;\.. ::-..,_ .\E.JJ~;.. S.R 0...:: ~~ .\ .... '.l.~::i . 1'\~\ E ; i .-. ~ ~ us . by Harold Le Doux by Tom I<. Ryan '4 IJll.UON Pl.AVERS IN iH! 6-AME: OF 1.IFE:, ANP l m™MEP WITH 'THE 'TDP-SEEDEf7 SCHNOOK. THE GIRLS -.. ..... , .. . ... "And while our plan to wi pe out our deficit put uii deeper into debt. I'm \Un you wrll all agree 11 wa~ very cxcitina watching the horse~ race." DENNIS THE MENACE ' . ~ I I . , ..... USC .Coach Still Wary Of Michigan Air Attack P.assi119 It fJf f The Indiana lloo!--iNs udvancetl to the f~nal :-. of the Sugar Bowl bas ketball tournamt.·nt in New Orleans. defeating Georgi a 7i1 -·52 Wc<.Jne:-.day Hoos1 er s forward Rich Vula\'ic-1u~ passes the ball off as Walter Danid s cl<1sl'ly g uards him_ i'll Be Scared, Says Bell . . . Michigan Best We'll Have Played rASADf:;-.;A 1,\1') ~1uthcrn Cahfor111a ·, All Americ an tailback H1eky lh II :11lm1b, "I'm scared""' henc\ t•r I go mt11 a ~amc and Mic higan will I><· thl' best dt• feruuvc ll•am "c'\f' playt."<I "f reSpl'Cl lhl•m \'Cf) mul'h " ~aid Bl•ll. a 218 pound wn1or. lt•d ttl(' nation 1n rushmi.: with I H75 regular season )'.t r<b tn 1975 lie was averaging 2Uo ) .,1rcb Pl'r g<1 mt• for t he first hvl· i.:uml'S of 1976 until s uffrnng a hip llQintl-r and then a sprained ~mklc Ile remains lht• hN1rt of a l 'S(' OrfCllSI.' for the tt•am that J>'>Slcd lO strai~ht \ 1dor1es afl "r losing thc opt•nmg ga mc to M1ssoun "There IS no scorcncss Ill rn:. ankle now." su1d Bl•ll, \\ho ha:-. Ix-~ pract1c1ng al full speed for thf"'New Year's I>ay Ho\e Bowl b,1ltle a~ai nst '\1 1d11gan "It s J~ not as strong J" 11 11 ... l'(J lo l>t· l Jhlff1< tl """111 lw ,1 coup It· of months hl·forl' I ~l'l the fu ll strength hark · "Despite thr hJ<I .mkll Bl'll tvok over I hl' Jnb JS blO( k in~ fullback an L SC ' 2-1 11 \ ll'ton l\vcr UCLA that v.on the Par 8 t1 tie and the· Jl,,.,,. Hm .. t h11I 1 h1· other fullb.1c k-. '' 1•r1 hurl ,ind lht• ·rro1ans h.1d .1 t 11•.1hlt> t.11lha< k r~pla <'em .. 111 111 fr ,·~hm ,1 n Cti<1rle .... Whit t• ··w~·n· "'"' k 111~· llell onl) Jt tuUb"I'\., ftll t ht• Ho-.•· He>" I g am 1· . • ' .1 1 cl 1· o tt 1· h .In h n R<>btnson ( lu1 rullbal'k!> Jrt' 11' ;id v Sl•n1 or I>,,\ 1· 1",11 rn1•r .0 11 .t !~or Mtt,1 I 1111pu .1 ltl•rn.111• .it fUUbdl k .Until ht' 1un1nr yt-ar. Bt>ll UlOu.l(hl ht• °"ould lw µla~ mg fullb:wk .in<I he d1ctn't llehrvc th•· M~ttch to t.11lback until thr f.ill pr.ict1<'l'' of t!ln st:1rt1'fl ' Hefort: the first i:a11u· l11Jt .Y•·ar I wno; so nf'nt)U.'i I couldn't :tlM'p and I <'nuldn 't eut I JU'il dc c:ic1ed I woulll go out and do my lwst I wnuldn t thmk dOOUt An thony Davis und 0 J. Simpson and the other great L'SC runncrs I really did thmk of myself more as a power runner." Bell said that in hi s junior year he sometimes out r an his biol· hrs and "1f I had JU.'l '>lowccJ down a tenth of a Sl't'o11cl I might havt• gamed another JO yarns We'd look at the films and the coaches would c·rit1c1zl' and td l me what bhould h<.1vedonc." Trojans Edge Pitt; Bruins Sniash Foe ALBUQL;ERQUE <AP> Forwards Cleve Porter and Paul Henderson combined for 43 points Wednesday night to spark l'SC to a 76-67 111ctory over Pit- Lc;burgh in first round action of the Lobo Invitational college bdsketball tourney. Southern Cal advanced to tom~hl 's championship game in the 12th annual tournament and \\111 Cal'e New Mexico Porter dumped in 27 points to take game scoring honors. Hen ders on ..., a~ the onl~ other Tro1an m doubl(' figure~ as ht• tossed Ill 16 point~ The T rOJ Jns Wl•re play111g .... 1thoul lhl'ir top sC'orer and re- bounder. :-ienior forward Greg White. But thc pt.•rformances by Porter and Henderson , whfJ replaced White 111 the starting lineup. paced thl' Tro1ans to their third victory 111 10 pulln~s. The Tro1ans snapped a four ~ame lo,1n.t: slrC'ak and led almost all of thl' contest Pitt managed its only lead, 26-2:1, mid way through lhC' first half. ft tTTSa U .. GH ft1 ••,,n ,. .. , R, ,. 111, • ,._.,,., mf nn l N"'1''l"" I ~ •"" 1• .51H , .... , 1nd ~ t'V•~l'l•"'QI"'°' 4 81'\Vrl t W •1, .. m, SOUlHf .. ftif C&.L U•1 ""''-''" H t-4•-ntlolt...,rl\ ,,. Hot\•nQtnn I ')""'" 1 ? J004'\ )* N• 11 I Mt(IOO.•¥ \ r,,.~i.-r) W +tjlt .. ~ Hatrt1,,,... \i~#IN!f'n (A \ r,n l°)l•'Qh "IO f.-,t_.I '""' ~' l•\.bt'' lhi '" .... ,, .... 'P\ (Al I' r"""''""' '"'' ..... ,,,, ,., .. ,,.,. .. I .•• W•lhAm. ~r\.Qt'I '"'"n•t.tl t , ~.t~ nf..' t~"., l•••\ LOS AN\. El.ES (/\I'' E1~hlh rankl'd l'CLA. s parked by fory, ard M .,1 r4ucs Johnc;on 's 31 po111ts. caml' from behtnd to defeat Utah State 88·68 \\'('(inc~ day night in a nonconferencc basketball ~am<' Johnson. who mts'>Pd three games w1lh an 1111urcd left knee. played hii. Sl'COnri f1nl' gaml' 111 a row as he appe.,1rt'd completely recovered lie <.iho grcsbbcd seven rebounds The Brums . ..., ho lraikd by <1 prnnt at halftime. CJmcout hot in tht• Sl'l Olld half. Sl'Ortll~ S I!\ straight potnls lo takl-llw lcacl for thl' first tlml· 111 thl' game al 45·42 Utah Stale 's Agg1c:-., "ho wt· re IC'd by Mike ~antr>!'>' 30 r>c1ints. wl'rC a blt• lo stay w1th111 reach unlit UCLA ran off Ill stra1ght points m id w;,iy through the ~econd h.alf for a 61 ··18 lead. The Urums , 9·1, also got 17 points from rt•s crvc guarcJ Jim Spillane Haymond Townsend added 12 ai; three of the UCLA starters could sl·ore no more than two points UlAH \TATE l•tl '1w•n· 1'l 11.>ol..,\& ~""'' 'X> M,.rt+n,._.,, & W Ul °'""' .. H '".,-r 1 UCLA 1u > Ot•m•• l•H°"nv-•r1 i1 (jr~·nwl'VN1 10. HM'lllton '1. tr1wr,~ .• "''' '1 Vrrim •'•.., '-~~~ '"" 11 <,,,..,, ~ ... llttm,. Ut 1h ·,11th ••J '1(.I A 1 f nut .. ,, ft••' ,. .,.. ~fn"'-'" ,,., ti '"'''' lJli\'°' \Ht.• P Uf'l A. U l• hn t U flu-I .,_ .... ,.,,..\ /4 t .,., Van D alllllle Dies OHA~GF:. France IAPJ 1110 Van Damme" the Belgian track ~tar l'ho,1•n as his country's Athlete of lhl' Y rar iusl two da}' ug9; died Wednesday after a car t'rash. Authonhcs satd Van l>1tmml'·._ car was trnvelin1: north along the Autoroutl' that links thl' Riviera to P.irts when 1l crossed the diytder and collided with a car in the south bound lane Rescue workers worked for two hours trying to free Van Damme from Ute wreckage and he died in an Qaaae hospital. r'W'an Damm<'. 22. wns virtually unltn~wn until lhe Summer Olrmpics in Montreal when he ~ two silver medals l ie was f,d the Cuba's Alberto Juan- a m the 800 meters and . ~<'<'ond to New Zealand's John Walker in the 1.500 meters. After Montreal. Van Damme set a European rncord for the 1 .000 meter s of 2 15.5. lie was tamed in 1 :43.9 in the 800 meters the third best time in the world in 1976 and clocked a 3:36.3 in the 1,500 -the second best time in the world this year. Van Damme had been training near MarseiUe for the World In- door Championships. Van Damme, the son of a policeman, was born in Louvain, Belgium. He was an employe of the Belgium Olympic Committee and was named his country's best track and field athlete for 1976. He was engaged to Rita Thys, who ran the 1,500 meters for Belgium at Montreal. IVO VAN DAMME Uy GLENN WHITE Of .... D•l)f Pli.t !>t•H PASADENA The Uruversity of Michigan has earned the re- putation or fteldtng footba ll teams which ( 1 J wi.n (2 > rarely use a modern :>lratcgy callt.'<i the forward pass. And so stats will vl•rify as the 1976 B ig Tt.>n l'hamp1on Wol\'erines brace for Saturd<Jy 's Rose Bowl encounter with Pac-IS litlist USC. Michigan only went to the air 99 times this season in posting a 10-1 record and except in its duels with Navy and Wake forc..t. the Maize and Illue never puL the ball Pitt Coach Raps Bo, Robinson NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Coach J ohnny Majors of No. 1· ranked Pittsburgh says the Michigan and Sou ther n California coaches arc suffe ring from a superiority complex in claiming the winner of their Rose Bowl meeting should be college football's national champion. "That's the most ridiculous farce ever perpetrated," said Majors, whose Pa nthers meet fif. th-ranked Georgia in the Sugar Bowl Saturday. "If Georgi.a beats us they'd have more of a claim than Michigan or Southern Cal," he snorted. adding that un- beaten, fourth-ranked Maryland also should be considered. Majors was visibly angry when he beard the remarks of Michigan's Bo Schem bechler: "I think the Rose Bowl should be for No. 1 and I think most knowledgeable college football people would agree with me," and Southern Cal's John Robinson: "If we win, then I can claim the national championship." WE DESERVE NO. I "I wouldn 't be :-.o pre- sumptuous to be answering as a knowledgeable college football person, but right now we're No. 1 and we deser\'e to be." MaJ<>rs needled, noting that Pitt is 11 -0. as 1s Maryland. wh1h• :;erond · ranked Mirhigan, No. 3 Southern Cal and Georgi a a ll are 10· 1. "We weren't upset by any three-touchdown underdog," he added, citing Michigan's 16-14 loss to Purdue. "and we haven't been tromped by any 6-5 team." referring to Missouri's 46 25 :>hellacking of USC. Majors s aid teams fro m Michigan's Big 10 Confer ence and USC's Pacifi c-8 find it daf. fie ult to behcve other areas of the country can play on their level ... or above it. "It's evident that some people have a superiority complex llt!cause they've been in one area all their Ii ves," s ays Majors, who coach e d in t h e South e rn, Southwest and l:l1g Eight Con- ferences before coming East to Pill. "When you get out of your yard, you r ealize that good foot- ball is played throughout lh<.• country. LEARN RESPECT "You I e r an respect when vou've been beaten by a number or people, rather than playing in leagues with very ltttle balance. You learn that other people pl ay good footba ll. too. We played Southern Cal's Pac-8 champions three years ago when we were a very mediocre team and it took them until the fourth quarter lo beat us. "You get a chance to prove how good you are Saturday after Saturday," he continued, "and we've got another c hance to pro- ve it this Saturday. lfwe lose, we don't deserve to be No. 1, but if we do lose, we'll still have as much claim as Michigan and Southern Cal. Jones MVP NEW YORK (AP) Quarterback Bert J ones, who steered the Baltimore Colts to U1eir second straighl American Football Confe r e n c e East Division cham pionship, was chosen National Football League most valuable player by The As· sociated Press today. ~Bis Rose Bowl Trip Began in '02 ' . ~ADENA -Since history pectstobeinthecrowd.0(106,000 Up" Yost was the "point-a-W1l1Je Heston rushed for more ~ repeat Itself. tt might be at the game as the 1'76 version of minute team." rt won all 11 of its than 2 O 0 ya rd s f o r l he sable for Southern theWolverineatakeonthetatesl games. outscoring opponents Wolverines,whileNeUSnow\\'as · rnia's football team to stop edition of the Trojans. 5:i0-0. voted the game's top player alter llatsch from going to the Batach was 11 in lll02 when his "We took 15 men to the coast -scoring five touchdowns. e&wl game. father, Henry, took him to his just four 11ubs," recalled Yost In One newspaper account of the ery time he has gone, fintRoee Bowl game while in the an article written some 44 years first Rote Bowl game described J11ao ba~ won 49-0. area on businesi. 8atsch wu 57 ago. "We went from a tem· the moment: "Twenty-two slripl- e last tlme was in l!MR when when he nut journeyed from his -perature of 10 below zero at Ann ings argue for an hour over the Vlolvertnes blasted Southern Toledo, Ohio, home to Pasadena Arbor to a temperoture of 8S profress along the ground of an ~:The Ont time was in 1902 forthegame,Andhetookblsson. above for the ~eme. We had to lnflatedhog's hlde,andlawabld· they clobbered Stan.ford i.n "I didn't know much about play on a dirt field with 001od, In ing citizens bound up and down be lnauaunl of what has football, but I remember them black dust throughout." on the seats of their trou.se~. e the "sranddllddy" of all runnJn& up and down the field," Yost nld, ll platen went all wbll~ demure maJdeU hammer he u.ld of the 1902 pme. the way for hls team and Stan-pl\ll hats do~n over the un of Bata!h'~· 15 and a Michigan The 1901 Mlchl8an squad of ford "left tbe game before the their escorts wlth their law 1cbool alumnus. Jan. 1 he ex-fabled coach Fieldlna H. "Hurry full lime was up." All-time ireat para.sols." . .. . . . ..... . in the air more than eight Umcs an any one game. Jn those two exceptions the Wolverines passed 14 times. Asked If lack of a steady at'dal assauJt m a kes at easier to defend the Wolverines, use t'Oarh J ohn Robinson replies, ''if a club hus only one weapon you can s hut them down. "Hut I 'm impressed wit h Michigan's total offensive abili- ty. If you take away the outs1dl', they can go inside . If you plug the inside, they go outside. "And, if you overplay tht· run they'll throw. True, they haven't thrown much. But I recall a Rose Bowl game with SC and Ohio State when Cornelius Greene <OSU ) only threw eight trmcs. Yet he completed six, each i.n a key yardage situation and that helped them win the game. "I've seen s upposedly non- passi.ng quarterbacks suddenly blossom in the Rose Bowl as passers. That's because they have three weeks after their fi.nal regular season game to devote to perfecting the pass.•· Bo Schembechler, head coach of Michigan says, "I think you should be able to pass some. And I bear about how good of a pass- ing conference the Pac-8 is. Yet I notice that its dominant teams - tJSC and Ut' LA .ire essentially runn111g h•am:-. "In our lcuguc, M1dugan and Oh10 Stall' have bcl'O in nine strai~ht no~l' Howl guml's and we are teams that bt'l.1c11e i.n run- nlllg." Asked 1f he lhoui;:ht the winner or the Hos<• Uowl i.hould be declarC'd naltonul champion rc- gardll'ss of what No. 1 ranked Pitt does 111 its bowl llff with Georgia. Schl·mbechlcr says. "l can hardly bl'heve Pitt could beat USC. I lh111k SC 1:-. one of the J,:rC'al tl·am ~ we'll have ever played If I hC'y beat us, they gel my voll' as natwnal champion. IC we Y. tn, no one will ever convince me ""c aren't the national cham- pion. "ln the early years of the Big Ten· Pac-8 Rose Bowl pact our conference's teams could come out here and dommate the Rose Bowl game. But it isn't that way anymore." &hernbechler also touched on lhe versati lity of his All · American back. Rob Lytle ... lf you see him on film, you may not be impressed by what you see. But if you play against him, you will. "He's a great team player and a leader . If l play him at tailback, he's the best we have. If I play him at fullback, he's the bes t I have. "He's the first fullback we've ever had to gain over 1,000 yards in a season. He runs with power and s peed. He's the best back I've ever coached." Sc h e mbechler ran the Wolverines through a rough practice Wednesday and had lighll'r drills planned today and Fnday APWlrtplloto PHIL HUBBARD (35), ROBERT COOPER GO FOR REBOUND. Friars Win, 82-81 Pressure Is Over For No. 1 Michigan The pressure is off; thl' wan rung streak ended . Mich1gan ha:> lost and coac h Johnny Orr 1s re lieved. "You hate to los e, and like tw i.ng No. 1," said Orr, "but there's an awful lot of pressure. I ha11(' never been through seve n game's like I've gone through this year." The seventh one provt.>d the toughest of a ll. Un r a nke d Providence, the hard-working crew with a center whose name reads like an eye chart. beat the Wolverines in the final mom!'nl or the second overtime We<Jncs - day nlght. "It was m y fa vorite s hot and I knew I would make it," s aid junior pivot Bob Miscvicious. whose s hort jump shot with one second left gave the Friars an 82-81 triumph and. as a dividend, the championship of the firs t rriar Classic. "This is unquestionably the greatest moment of my college career," said Joe Hassett. who shares the Providence captaincy wtth fellow senior Bob Cooper "It's especially sweet for Cooper and I because we've been here (or four years. We bad been in the rmals or five tournaments and hadn't won once. We wanted this one badly." So they went out and got it. Bruce Campbell scored 25 points, Hassell 21 and Misevicious 16 In helping the Friars hand the Wolverines thelr first loss after six Victories this season. .. Thlt ls tbe first Ume I've ever been lnvolvtd, either as a player or a ~ach, •galns t a No. 1 team, so YoU bav~ to say it's one of my 1reatest thrills," said Providence coach Dave Gavtu, wbote Jl'rtara arc 7 ·2. "Every vie· Cory ii areat. but maybe this has to be a ltttl<> s wet-ter ." It °"as won I u rgely on the hcroH'S of M1srv11·1nus. who bad forcNi tht• M•1·ond o-.crtimc by s1nk111 g anolhrr shnrt jump shot. Thal knolt('d t h(' Sl'Ore at 71-74 with 1:1 sc•conds to ~o in th<> fi rst cxtr.i pt•rtml hdure a howling crowd of 12, 150 at the Civic Cenl<·r M1scvic1ous came through again ~1flN M 1chigan's John Robin~on was foult'<l and missC'rl his first free throw tn a onc-an<J- one situation . Th<•re were 20 seconds to go and the Wolvcnncs WC'r<' ahead, 81 -AO "Campbell made the play,'' said Misevicious . a 6-9 center who became ehgibl1· for thi<> tournament after sitting out the school 's ft r s t semester for sch olasti c r e a sons. "He pe netrated and took three Michigan players with him. 1 was frl'C, and went in for the !>hot." The shot was heard 'round lhe college basketball world. Irvine Loses BOISE, Idaho -Irvine had a cold shootina night after falling behind in the early going and dropped a 76-55 deci5ion to host Boise State University in the opening game O( a (Our-team basketball tournament here Wed· neaday night. UCl'a Anteaters return to ac· lion tonhcht again!llt Sitcramento State in the conaolation final, Jof>l(fM lloclQe<1 (Nftdltt """...,. ~-' L.ovJ119..r UClrvlM CU) le n 111 Ill t9 11 ,t 9- ' O ' I Heir 3 J $ Ii ~ 0 2 10 Kr>U!lwn 0 0 S 0 Ol •IS.OC. 111S O•>•Wltll(WI 1011 ' J J • .-V.IOt><J 0 I t I J ' J • '10111\ tt 11 n u lt.lllll"lt : 8olRSltlt,'6 U . SPORTS El Toro, LB Play For Title It wall bl' an All South Coast League s howdown at 8 tonight when the El Toro High Chargers and Laguna Beach Artists clash for the cham- pionship of the Elsinore basketball tournament El Toro advanced w1th an 86·57 victory over Elsinore Wednesday night, while La$luna Beach rolled past Dana Hills,67-48 . Dana ll 11l s meets Elsinore for third place at6:30. And in the Chino tournament, th e University High Trojans of I rvine, defeating Laverne's Bonita 60-58, tangle with Alta Loma for fifth place at 5 tonight. Alta Loma top- pled Escondido. 69-52. El Toro quickly dis· posed of Elsinore. out- scoring th" hosts 28-13 in the second period Guard Bob Charles scored t t or his 25 points an the second quarter and con- nected on nine of 15 field goal atte mpts for the night. From the fret• throw line, El Toro canned 22 of 23. Des pite a 2J -po1nt performance from Scott Cook h e s tarte'1 al Ncwburv Park last year the Oolphins couldn 't Ovl•rcomc second and third penod blitzes by Lag11na Beach The Artists. led by n1•n Bacon's 16 points. out scored th<> Dolphins 34 Ill in those two periods Diahlos In 55-50 Setback By a Dally Pilot Wr1ttt The Mission VieJo HJ~h D1ablos and Brea Waldl'als get a rematch at 6:30 tonight· although both were hoping it would be tn the championshjp finals of the Brea brusket ball tournament. Instead, they will be playing for third phsce after La Mirad<i toppled Breu 69 -5 8 and Fullerton's Sunny Hills upended Mission Viejo S.S-50 in semifinals play Wednesday night at Brea 11.Jgh. In consola ti on sem1 f1n als action , Carden Grove's Pacifica beat Garden Grove79-70, and Fullerton's Troy downed Garden Grove's La Quanta 70 59. Pacifica and Troy collide al 5 tonight. Mission Viejo beat Brea 65·55 in the Laguna Beach tournament on a night when the Diablos shot over 70 percent from the fl oor. But they came nowhere close to that shooting mark Wednesday against a taller Sunny Hills team that took advantage of its inside game lo lead throughout. The Diablos only shot 33.9 percent against Sun- ny Hills' zone, but over- came a 42-31 deficit early m the fourth period, cut- ting the i.:ap to 52-48 with 31 seconds left. The comeback bid was sparked by Bernie llawktns, who scored eight points in the last period . and by Mik Roster, who tallied six. But Sunny Halls s three free throws · six seconds to hold a 55-48 lead with 10 seconds re- ma inmg. But for most of the con- test, Sunny Hills held an eight µoint a<lvantage and led 2ti 19 at the half. connect in~ ''" l 0 of 2G (acid goal tries 10 the first two periods. an c-o m par.son to M 1ssaon Vie· jo'snineof31 Mlt"O~ Vlr10 I ~) f ,,. ,, .ltf'I \ (>.(. f ,, p °"""' \ t-i•wil "' '••tnt A'P, >ndt'·r tq U 1114 Ip ~ I I •t • 1 1 I '1 " '" t n ~ 7 II II) \<Hf' by Ou•,l•n ; 1. ,. jl') J t/ If I\ \ Thur•-d1/ 011 t mt.::.:'.:.:1r_10..;;.._1.;..«r;;...; ______ OAIL Y Pll Dr tJ:"; Marina, Servite Collide for Crow By llOWARll l .. HANDY Of I,,_ O•llY lt1lol St•" Manna H1.:h Sd)()Ol's Vikings of lluntangton Beach advanced w lhe (1nals or the Orurage Op t1m1st baskctbull tourna mc.'nt for lhc fourth straight yt':tr with an l'asy 69 42 \'ll'tory over the host Oranji(l' High Panthers Wednesday rught The Vikings will face Servite's Friar~ o r Anaheim m the cham- paorusbtp gume tonight tit 8 .30 In the Orange ltigh School gym . Servile gaint•d its spot an the finals with 1154 51 victory over Manna has won the tournament two of the last three years includ- ing Inst season Dunham Gets 38 Coat"h S tf'vc Popo\1ch 's \'1k1ni::-. scored the f1r:.t e1~hl poLnts of the game and never looked back. They outscored the Panthers on a 2 to-1 ba111s for the entire first quarter. A full·<'ourt pn.'Ssi.ng defense coupled with a sagging man·lo·man un- der the basket limited Me sans the PnnthNs tu 42 shot!. potnts "'llh guurd lA.:land from lhe rlot1r, wath only Bruce addm~ 12 14 connecting. It wa!I a mis match The Manna defcn~c from the out..,et as four forced l!J turnovers with dJlferent M artna player:. guard Charlie Koeller s cored the Cirt.t four stealing lhe ball four baskets. time5. Tony Warren bad the hot hand, hitting eight of 15 shots from the floor and closln& with t9 The Vikings have \\-On six or lht-ir Ins t S('V(,'0 games and Popovich feel~ the team is comini.: mto its own in llnw ful' tht" Sun!lH w.u,.o <••rA>\ "'"'. '°"'"'' KMl••r ~ ,,_ 11--.,.J.•n woo. L-'"'"' To1~I\ ~.11 .. 1 .. 1 •• I ' • u I I ,~ Estm1cia l\t Santiago Tritons Upset In 78-56 Tramples Unbeaten F . Rosemead Katella, 93-82 Victory By ED BURGART Of a. D.Mty Pli.t St•tt The suddenly-explosive Tim Dunham-led San Clemente High Tntons take the favonte's role Into tonight's 8 30 champions hip game of the Katella tligh basketball tournament against Long Beach's St. Anthony I ugh. Getting J8 points from the 6 2 Dunham, the Ttitons upset the host Katella (Anaheim) Kmghts, 93-82. In the precedmg Wednesday night game, St. Anthony turned b~ck Fullerton 70-57 Jn consolat1t)n acLion, it was Rolling Hills down- ing Long Beach WiL<;<>n 64-46 and Beverly Hills beat- ing Loar a of Anaheim 74-49. Stan DeMaggio's hot-shooting Tritons. who con- nected on 61 .5 percent of their field goal attempts, never trailed , opening a 49·40 h alftime lead and holdmg an 8·10 poinl margin throughout mos t of the second half until mid way through the fourth quarter. That's when the Knights, playing the aggressive, pressing basketball that typifies Tom Danley. coached teams, cut the gap to 79-76 and 83·80 before Danley was called for a technical foul on a play that Katella scored a layup. On the layup, the basket counted but the Katella player was citect for a charging foul, drawing Danley's criticism. J ohn Mc Donald 1>ank the free throws on the foul, giving San Clemente an 85-margin with 3:()4 left d Dunham, who sank 1 f 19 free throw attempts, hit · al shoL'i esenhng the Tri tons with a seven-point le t a Katella could never over- come. It was the best game San Clemente, now 6-3, has played this season. The Tritons. who turned the ball over 14 tames, seldom had trouble breaking Katella's full-court press. and Dunham dazzled the crowd with fall-away Jumpers a nd outstanding pure shootini:. For the 111ght, he hit on 11 of 2J field goal tries. The Tntons also outrcoounded the s maller Knights 36·27 and ~ot "trong ms1cle shooting from 6-6 John Carson <ind 6·6 T(.•d Hettinga. both of whom tallied 12 points They al!'.O hauled in 11 and 10 re- hounds. By A Daily P ilot Writer Gary Wills scored 14 points in the first quarter to give the Costa Mesa High Mustangs an early lead and they went on to post a 78·56 victory over the Savanna High Rebels of Anaheim Wednesday night to advance to the consolation finals of the Orange Optimist basket- ball tournament. Coach Larry S un - derman's Mustangs will play the Foothill Knight$ of Santa Ana , coached by ex-Costa Mesa mentor Bob Sorensen, for the consolation crown at 5 to- day. Foothill advanced to the showdown with a come-from-behind 81 ·78 overtime win over Garey High of Pomona . After Wills' firs t quarter spurt, Savanna was able to tie the count twice in the early going of the second quarter before the Mustangs put it away. After hi s seve n straight baskets at outset of the game. Wills shot only five times in the next two periods, mak· Ing two For the game he hit 13 field goals an 20 at tempts Most of his shots were from the corners ;Jl<in~ the baseline lie finished with a game hi~h 26 points. Steve Parrino had 21 S..n Clomonl• "II 1t.t•••• "" for the Mustangs and ': :; ": ~: added four s t('als .uong (.uv,., f,I .... , I V fr~HUi N~ty fti t t pt tp GrH>f\,. o ~ , "ttltt•n ,. ) I • -Oo>n-.011 ' l 'ti .. ,HJ .. ,.,, ,, At • nn '""" ~ I ltf P4h14 • a ~ Wh1t10il" 1 0 11 M Ah>•ne 11 ,. •1 lo••'' S<0u by 0~~ •If" SunC•,.m.,.n1 1 ~ ;> n •l _.-ttf'_.A It/ '\ II If IQ 11 , Wlth being one of the top ·~ , '~ Mustangc; rcboun<l .. rs. , • The game was nc\cr o ~ close in the secontl half ~ ,, with the Mustangs w;mg o o their full ·court pressing JIJ 11 1' 11 defense and reverting Lo Vies for Title By ROGER CARLSON Of "'9 D.lllY ~•IOI StaH Fountain Valley JIJgh's unbeaten Barons. rQ!l. ing to their 10th straight victory Wednesday nigl!J eye their third straight tournament champ1onst\Jp tonight at Garden Grove's Santiago tlii;th School. The Barons of FV coach Dave Brown tang.le with Santiago's Cavaliers to.night a~ 8:?0 for ~ championship of the 11th Santiago lnv1tat1onal. . It was a breeze for Fountain Valley Wednesd however as the Barons raced past Kennedy Palma, 9°3·58. Santiago edged El Uorado in the half ofthe~emis Wednesday, 37 35. • Had tffe Barons been hot from outside. therfit no telling what the final scor~ would have mounted' to. . 1 Unable to connect with consistency from. out- side, the Barons simply went after the offensive boards, taking rebou{ld after rebound and shooting until they scored. It was close for awhile ns istrcaky Kennedy hit from outside lo l:rab an 18 16 lead after the G period. But Fountain Valley outscored the losers. 65· to assume a 77-52 lead\\1th :1.4li left. • The Barons finisht'<.I with four players an double figures with Rogt.>r Holmes the No. I scorer with 19 points. Bo Boxold cameo(( the bench in the fourth quarter and scored 11 At the end of three penods Kennedy had hit 18 of 36 from the fi eld <50 percent). but trailed, 6442. due to Fountain Valley's domination of the boa.rd&, The Barons got off 59shoU.. making 28. The fast break. sharp passing, assisls tty George Barrios and Brett Wilkinson .and tough ~e· . rense overshadowed Fountain Valley s of( shooting from the perimeter Fo .... tal~ V•llO t•ll ICfftfWtdy IH I W+uonot>n tM''IO\ Hnlm; • \vftl\l1111I C.Htnll ""•Ol<t l~•flrh'-v tu04n Ht'1U. Rtift'f t'>fal' lq 11 Pl IP I 0 1 " "''•1)4tf' IN•f Hl.l''\flJ't1 A 0 I~ n I I) If t.,~fln•A11f\ 7 I l\ll+tt"'" t. Hutt'\\ 1t ')vr>k• n\ t 01r·t1 d I !I TOIAI\ U I , tq II I ~ p4 ,, \ I ' I n ' II ' ' 0 1 (I 0 ' ,,. J 0 I ' II fl ' .( I I 11 0 0 ) " , .. ~ I '" I l I It /1 •J Sc or .. by ou .. rft H •• ' rount "n VAlh• / '& 1• 14 lt ... f tf1 f'fl1•tJy ifl I\ 'I l~.!O Edison Co1neback . Falls Short, 62-5~ Roger P<>1rier . \\ho wound up wath 22 po1ntc; connect<'d on a tv.1) footer with 13 sccondi. rP maining in the gam<', g1vang l'mvt'rs1ty a 59-56 lead. Ronita cul the gap to 59·58 with 13 second., left, but Mark <;rcen sank a frt•e th1 ow for I na with three second., 1 t> maming EtTo-.tMI Area Basketball Oil City, Tars Win benches "1th about 1~00 left to play With lhr score tied Mi tO going into the final period, the Chargers:. after a valiant eomebark 1n the third quarter, seemed l<> lose momeG· MA t-t •I H/'ifmt· .,,.., .. ,.,, ~Hll A < ""'''•\ e:» rn..u t•' ~"·U'Of'I f•4lH~ I( HJtenV'I• ,,,,,,,, ... " ... to J ~ I ... I " . " I I ' ) ~ 11 II ii "" \<or~ &y Otr.1.rhn f ' , '"' I h,,n.i. ' ,,,, . ...,,., pr.,,,, ..... I/II•' ... ~"'""' ••• , .. ,J k.,'lf~y ~,,,... .. .... CJ,,, ff ' ' .. , '" !Iii ·~ I"' •• q II I \f f ,,,,, ..... 401 I• II ,i flt ,, • 0 !t< ... •?av.,,,.,, -· ' ' ' •n I In """ ... , . Jv•uo• VAIHITY u"'.,.""' ,.,, , ... 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UQh't 'Mtl" "'"'""'''""" Gnmol ~~'"'"' r, .. ,,., ~wold t ,,, ' n , ' • 1 0 I\ 1 n 1 n o II ~ I lot•I~ 11 ti r1 M \CH"e h 0114flH> o. ... ~llf\ u • ~ " .. V01>"4 llUCI\ ' IO •• '" /1 • ., Colden West College races Santa Barb11ra In the championship finals of the Fullerton College basketball tournament tonight C9l after a 62·59 dec ision over Long Beach City in semifinal action Wednesday night. In other nctaon, Sad· d.Jeback lo!it to Mt. San Jacinto, 116-96, at the College of the Desert tourney In the semifinals and will meet Citrus tonight (7) for third place. And at the Palomar tou rnamen t, OrRnge Coast lost to Grossmont, 77·57, In lhe cham- pionship game. Ttalling 43-42, GoldC'n West was sparked by J ohn lllrschl cr who scored nve point~ tn on 11-0 blit7. that put the Rustlers ahend ••• , •• i • f Jtl.f')I'! II I ,., .,, '0 • .,,,.. ,_..,, ... ,.. f f· j fft Ii I ,,-an- • lf1vw. f)''"O •l"t r,""' 1 H 1 It ltt• l '11 -'tt I\ Zt Prep Scores ryp, ... ,&1 C•"~t)"' •t l..t •t.tbf'lt \4 '\()nnr.-•\ A~~ A.t•m•to\ I\ 'nANittm f1 'wtnt411t An~ 1f f'ftltlOr~111t t.1 G••""&I W111111., Chn\l1An~1 W~"•rn &1. N•ll 6() lo""'lt 11 ,,.,,., /1 '>o••ll• SI El M-n• H Foot""' ti c;.. .. v ,, •OT I SA!IOltO•<~ t1, F•r.l"tJIOn 111.o ... 111 S\ c;...10.11 HOll41nd '°"""' ~l'OCOtt te.et~ut Om•n llnlt!I Y••clt•'I' """'t"i.,1M Tola • H•llh,,.. T"lrd Pl10 C.•1• Mou Int f7U C•""" ~..-. '"' f'" tt1) p,-,,, • FM•• f?I ~ • 111 Whl-•fH '·~ " < • 111 r>on.f"°" \tA,1r1H;~ f)l c. f4 '11rqu~n W1ll.11Q~11m t1 ( i\) F-'~"'°"' (,_\14 M 11•1f4 VO• Inf} UD\ WHll-fn"- 10 R1(f\8f11""'nll l1;tl"ttntt f'tut~ M'°"•' JA 1f S1u1tU1"11t\ V"I• Mn• 1111 1161 VIII• Plr~ n~wr t)t , •l1d Al,.r111 Ft1'• 111 M lltl<llnqlM f l\QOh 1ftf,11f110t-• "'''"" ,,, '"' (, 1410-""" ~.Hu"Ul,,.t•" 41 ('. 1111 ICttf'nOtlr fM \1M•no ... on' M1 "•'O"'~" l. W II .ft""\ , I 0\0" J lt""lf'.f'"' VP .... It Edt\Ofl 1u 1 101 C•nv°" ""''r a, t HPt1 ~ ..,., ... ,., ") ' , .,,,,,,,,...,,., f ¥0 n l U ' t I l)Orw~ R,,l\il"t H (1 I ~t•·fnil~' °"''" ·• 2' r. ,,,,. .,.,,, ffj• •O"' (0' "I \th H"''" 1 W· "'°"'' J ~MAtJ• I d"l"l'"JWlffl'\M Cotti ~'H fUf •SOI Lo\AtntOM IJ"""'• t A,,.....,,...,,._ r •'"' , r () .• , ,,. r nq ., r '~' .... ,. .. , ·~"' " '' ,, "" ""'' w ··~""-n 't r. 1 r' 11m•• qn M '"'''"'1 1Uh\ Mot t\.Htj " 6 "" '"'' 1 ·~· ''''"' '""' ,, 10 , '"' f I I rJ I ~'I''' .. t 44 J •' .t .-..,..,, rn• 1• IM lowe11 Ttv•n•1 \•mUlnAh . M•h••11V••1011111w 1 a .... r tvnn 1•l ' 1~u [W~ ~ """"""111701 r f IAI "'""'°" ~·M '' r 1101 Z•1 k '°""' 11n1 r. 1111 < uo11~ 8'1tw•,.v l•> r, , .. ,~.,,.., .. ,d MV vnrlnt) '""' r rn~t t 1. ""°*'' ''· Undftr • R•1.111r hAllll~ MV '' l1 tum. .. Mccourt led the com- eback and was the lead· ing Edison scorer with 17 pomts-13 comini:{ in 111)1 second half. Ed Bell added 14. Dcfensave l v, t he Chargers were not abl#? to contain 6-6 center Ori an do Ward . The talented junior scored t~ pomts and hauled Jn eight rebounds for O\e WJnncri.. .. ,.,.,", r 1(jJllW" ...,.,,,,,,__t'tf•f 8"11 M<(~ufl DIV!\ f•Jtoh L••AmtflO\ 1411 •• " pf ... ~ 0 > •• \ , t u ~ ' t, ... I q .'J t. '" tdl\on 1171 0 2 ,, ~ tl ~, ,, 14 ,.. "' l 0 ' t I I ~ I 1b 0 J ' ' • 0 1 .. ' • > 11 ' ' \ ~ fl \I Pro Scores . . .. ' .. r hur!>J .. 1 1.J ... , ... ... ' PUBLIC NOTICE SU" IUOll COUllf 0, Tiii ITUI OP'CAl.IP'OllNIAl'Oll l '111 COUNt'f 0, O•ANGI -NO A·f"U llO'lte 01' "IAlllNO 0' 'ITITIO" ,_. P'llOIATI OP' WILL ANO l'O• LanlllUUTAMI Nl AllY l!U•I• ol EMMl!TT CLl!V(l..'NO ~l!~ll NG ••• EMMEi IC ICl!.51.ING O.Cuwo IOOTICE IS HEllEBY G•VEN ""91 l!MM[Tl F ICE\LING "•• 111•0 -.Oft• l)Orl•llOll fo-1>100.te 01 Wtll - fw ''"'an<• of l •""" t•\tA1"1HWt.,., en l"t Ot•ilo>"if' '•'•'•""• to wt\tC.I\ '' fTWldlt f0< tur1twt ~rocul•'' Mtd tM1 "-fl,,_ •f\4' 01•' t Of "••"N> tN '\.,,.... l\e'\ o.en Ml to,. Jenu•tY ti 1911 ,., tO 00• m 1n IM covrtro<>rn r>I °"'°"''' """""' NO J Of ,.,d tOVfl ial 100 C.lv11 (.wnl-" Orlv• W11\t 1n IM ( 11'1 01 s.nt• A/\•.C.•i•oou" 0.ltd 0.nmbor 14 '"• WILLIAM I SI JOMN, County Cler~ 'OtlNA OUNCAN -........ , ....... •ltN...,por1 Ceftler Ori .. SullAo ts.JO _,..,lee<~. C•lll0<nl• t?MO , .. ; 1114) -JJJO l"loe41!olW<I O••~Qt CO•\! 0~,1~ Puo1 Ow. ,. :JO "" •"d J•n \ 1'11 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI INVITING ~ALIO 'llOl"OS.AU lllDll N>R TII I CONlTllUCTION OF USUSlollNT OIS'flllCT N0. 7~1 4 MIU.ION GAi.LO,. lllSl!llVOtll CO..TllACT NO 1 lllVINI llANCM WATlll OllTIUCT NOTICE t\ HEllf8Y GIVCN ""°' u. Bo.No°' 0•,.•<10" ot .,.., °''"'" •nvlt•\ t"O .. ut ••(•'" ".._, °"' OOWI• llWO•I uo lo IM "°"' O' l )0 ~ M °" 11\e lllft 00 o1 J•-· ttll •t II• Oft•<• ol WoochlO. IK.-• i "' \OCl•te\ lft( ., Oh'•" MIOW IOI 'V'hl\fll:t fl\V lo ,,.hj Dhtrltt ••t trMl\OOft•ttott mal•tl61\ f'\lV'f)f'YW'nt l•Qhr \f>tv•t.e\ •nd \UOOth·\ f'll«~\•r• to tort\trutt \AIO wior-few- ,,. 01\ltlrt, "' w•u<.Pt titt\e wict pro PO~I\ w1u .,. oublit •• ooenf'ld ..,n ,,._.d ••oud fl t h• ""'"* nt W000St0E/l(UBOI .. °'NO A~ '>OCIAI E!>, INC , .. , So\llh Biren ~I• A"" Ca11to•n•• '11101 \told Bid\ \"'911 eonlo•m to -°" ,.\OOft\l'll,. to tNi tout,•<t Dot."'ntonh ''~ 'did wo," ti\ n••retotor• •PCJtovM by \elll 01\tri(I •no "'U•I "" &((Om O.f\h~d th' •~• \~turltv rt!t~rr4td to tMrtttn (l)po"' ol t•• <.unu <K 1 Ooc:.-1\ citre on •it• •nd m .. y bf. •••nm"''° tn tnt ~le• Of ,,.. O•\l•ICI •n.J In '"'" .,.,,.. -,--------------I :. ~~~: :io"c::~~ & A-.oeo"t~, Inc PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE lOClllOITORS SU,ElttOlt COUllT 01' TMf "'&TATfOl'CALtl'OllNIAl'Oll THI COUHTY 01' 011AN01 Ne A·H'41 E•l•I~"' Will'""' 8ALLMAN ••A ""'ILUAM BALLMAN SR 0..HY'O NOTICE 1S HER£ BV Gii/EN to l9- tr9d1tM\ of the •bov• fl•mf'<I Of'<MJlll"'f\I jl\et •II per\On\ n•'llnQ (IAlm\ eQ ... f't'\t "lM \.aid or<ecH"' ,,,~ rtQu1rfid to tll• INtn ••1" U\f' IWKfl\\UV YOUCr.,.\ '" "'° ollKt of , ... Cler' o• •~ •bO"""" ltltf!O<OUr1. nr to P'f'\4!nt tlwm. wlln tt\ol tM.KWrv vou<"'"'" 10 '"~ undlff''kJtW'd "' ,,.. otli(~ ol BURTON G"ULOIN T-SON ANO NELSON AtlorfWV\ llt I.Aw. IU• Souln l>dtnt., A~ Wl\11 -· C..lif0<nlo '!0607. wnoen 1, •~P'•t al °'"'''~' ot trwt urulef\IQneO 1n au ,,,.u,.n per1e1nlnq fO tnt ,.,,.,,.Of \._tld ~I. wllhln tour montlh ellt!f ti>t ~ p,tbllCdhOnot H\I\ ~Ot•C• J' o.tl'O ~~·;N~r.&ql :~~N .... E•ecutrl•ot t,..Wollol Ille AbO•• n•me<I Oe<f'(INll .VllTON. GAU LOIN, TMOM50H ANO NELSON -ylelUW •H 5ovl" '•Inter A•• Wloltti.r. CA -t Att-Y• for 1 .. c ulri ~ P\11>11\l>t<I °'""~ l'..oa•t OA•ty Pilot Do< " n :io ,., •• ,,d J•~ & 1Q11 ~,,, 16 P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINEU NAME SlA.T[MEHT ll\tfotlow1no Ot>r\01"1\llft ~t'tQbU\1 ,....,., l(OlL N°'ll0N"L NORTH l'IOI Dov• \hf"• t N t w oort f\1•,ttl\ C.lltornoA ~'IHI 1 Dorutld M l(Oll &O'f Vt• L1d0 ~ Nt •OO'' 8fl'.J<n (.)t1•orn1•fl>6fJO 1 0 P M10dlfltn"'t '' t-t .. n ~ 8" 01,.,,. Cofona a.-• ,,,.,., Gt11tom11.1 tl61\ J f..,.,.rf>tt Oav1\ tit 114111 ~w Ot"1w Nflwoort 8•••<h Cal1IQf'thttV?~ • T1mt)lh't l Str.tdt t 10".W\ Pnft l\lb•n\ Nttwoor I 8t11tCh Califrw-n•A '™'° ~ 'Sf1ml•1v F 8r'>"""''" \ Pn1n1 "'-'' Or•W. H"'""'°'.'' A1•Mn (Al1fnff"ll ••}?Jlrlbtl 6 r...OfO" 0 GtD'"" ,, )I I Ut•l l .. "ontJa ltoao w ood -.1d• C1ttttn,nt..t 'M067 > Rnrw•'' A r""'',, tfn-4 N• w \Yol"l(I 0"V"" \4n Jn'' (' '1JllOU'llf• ~ W1111,.m J nt "''"" 11G44 t~Jm bCrlantJ 0,,..,.~ C,Ar AIO'l4' C..Allf(Jrn1,_. 91()111 IJ lnl1•r••·•• (nn10 .. ny ORA ht f"liff),n1,\ 1'' ,,w••n.-,11 Inf NtlllM>tl L1H• f.ttnl•tr Nit\.,v+ll' f1•nnt.•\'J11'\'" l17YI rn., nu''""'>' '' nnnu(lttd ov i\ qtfnfltAl(Mr\,,..1r'\"IU T1mn1nv 1 ~''"'""' Tf'll\ \t~t•·m• •1t w" llliHO with ,,._,, (Ounly r1...,,1o 11f Or.1f\q1• t '""'" (AlitCJrn1,. °"ti,., ... mt)f r M 1 u,. ,.,..,.. P\Jt>h~ 0'*'"0"' ,-•• t· t CJ ti•w ,,., .. , ~ 1J .IO Hl6 ond )dn > II IHI ~II 1' PUBLIC' NOTICI:: NOTICIE INVITING Sl!ALIEO l'"OPO\Al "> t811XI 1'011 TMI CO NSTllUCTtONOF ASSUSAllENT OISTlllCT NO 7\.1 'UM,llE"AllLITATION. IOOSTlllSTATIONS ANO I'll TEii l'L'IN T CONTllACT HO I '011 THE lllVINl llANCN WAT!ll OISTlllCT NOTICE IS WERE'IV r.111EN IMI ,,. eo.,.o Of o., .. , IM\ <'II lAMl o.~·· ( t ~ aftd WO! rrfP111• \llJAlflld C>"' .,..,\ l80'7\lue>1n1rw>~'"'' P "" OJ1t..,,. l ,.,_ o.11 M l1t1'11J.tfy f~p) ,11 U'W offtt~ ot Wooch•d• • uO,.t• .\. ., \OC.l•t•\, 1 n( .-"' l)I v,.n Ofll'fO* '"'' '"'"''"tno lo '"u1 U•~lr•<' 111 tt~\00f1.tlt0f'I m1tl"''"'' ~·(lif'ftl~t llltbof \efVIC•\ •nd \UPDI•-\ A!tC~'l.41 , • C9Mttut' ~" wor• IOf '"'' 0·~''" ~ •I ...nk h tlfNll W~d Pf'tK10\AI\ Wiii bft Q\A)l1' If~ flncl ff!.,,•l•uO •f ~M()f1'1(tr'tf WOOO~oOE llUBOI A ~A<, ~IATES INC Hll ~Ulh Ror<n ~'"1 ,.n,• •n• (4'11forf'l1•~M' ~ &Kt\ \.NU , nftt'"°m to ",.., o. 't"\PClft\lW to lfw. (nnHAct Oou...,....,.,.f\ tor 4-t•O-or• ... rww'ttl)ftW"e .tW',.......,,fl• W .td 0.\tfl<t..,., 11'1U'\f ~ .c:CO'"°"'"•flG "''MW<vt1t, ,. .. ,., r.-o 1n lf\H"fl>fl'I ~ Of , ... Contr.c I °"'"'"""" ., .. on to• .tftl1 "'"' 0t ,. •• ,,..,"""O ·~ ,,., el1k• of,,. 01\lrlc.t ~ '" '"'-Mft(f!f)Ci ~ ·~·· 6 A\\O( , ... , Int •1 ttM~4tdd,_\\ (~"Wt" Ot Out "•Vf) •' '""' f)f••• • .. Waect\tdlt 'ttwbat• \ 4 \VW"" •I~ '"' .,.., IWY"""""'t ~ \)C) M lJill'' •I .,.., '"'" ~· I\ f"Of tfl'fU.,,,4'f'tU• f~dlrt (fl .... ~ ,,... ,,, .. ., ,,_" '°"lhfttt!N\\ .. ,...U'"nrtf Pt.t"' """ \Of'',,.,.,,,_,..'" will f'w" ,,_.."ed \JICllOf"I ,.•'1U>"'-tt It) P'OJll09"f,.,,. "'<lrten trw tl'I t')•J1l·~~I U 't) "" ~ r..t~11t)fOffJ._.,.,h• l)\tolpo.r~ .,.._ .. "O tri ACttlf'd4Mf' "' ·~ t.,. l.At>or C.00.-rtf th-~t•tt ('f ( ••1ft)rn. • ,,.. Jrv.,,.i •-"" W•t•r 01\fr1r I ,.,., •v"'"-.,_,.,.., "''"'"''""'11 ·•h') -()0~'" ,,... ~ .... prn•1lu,q ••t• Qf P"r a1•m -~ ~ IN QlfM'r.t4 ()uv,ohfll') tlllflt tor lf!QAI "°410..y •"d Olif•fi•m., •Mtl th ,,._. trltttfft' tf"I wPh(~ •••'1 Nm• I\ to 1» o-rtorrn..<t fftr •It' n <'•" fl~\\lh1 "''...,,, OI ,.,,. t)f """''"m"n ""•o.ct to_,.,.,,,,., "'9< ... tr .. I, An(J II \11111l)ot1!'"'°'4ill<y ~ l""" ContrM tor tn •Mm tt. (..M trtM;t I\ ••M~O Af\G "°°" •ny '"')("" lt'«lof vno.r htm to P"Y t'W)1 W.~'\ '""'"' \olld •Dl'<lllMj r•to\ to •II ""°'-""'" -lo'f"(I In 11111 ••<KUllOft o1 ""' (l)n tr414:t A COily Of IM 9f""r•I ~••lllnQ , ... ,Of W-0-' I\ Oft ftt• lf'i ttv Oft1(• Of llw 1,.,.,. 11 ... cr1 W•lor Ol•lrlet iond -II be 00\1.0 ., .. , .. 100 ..... °" '"' 0...trte IOt ~ bfO O< .,.._.,, ...... be - llUI or -"'"° ..., • IO(m '"'""''"" A\ 1»'1 ol lllot Conlrec1 Ooc-" Ml<! ......sl oe eccomptnled Dy • t-, J ,Cfle<~ A <•r11fted <lleO 0t • lllOOtr \ PICI 1,,.,, """"'"'not teu ''*' IO"lo at o.-o1111e ~ • ....a.~ to or-. of.or tor ,,,._ltol,- Ohlrl(I, .. I,.. o•• mn ... -NC1I Olclor~l •ll•ll be_""'_"""' """"n.. ~,.,,.,., of 111e Otwl•t •tor ...._. tllo """' tn ""' "°"'"""""""' T1IP .m-,,,.nl'-d C""O Cit -v..i111to1 .. 11.,4.,..,,.,,, .. _.,..._. ~ wlll ..,,., onto • CfWlffoKI Wllfl '"' Ol«rttl II ..... ,_ Ille w<><k. MCI wtll lie OKl""4 l~ttd ti lllt Wcc.tAllll I ._r ,..i.,,,,. to enttr Into .. kl ~ _.-cl (Kii 1>10 or or-Ml "*I tit IOC -"''"' .. ., 1111 11•1 ol pr--.cl ~ C""4-1•n n.. ll"Olti<I IM luM\ Ille <-trvctlon --111 bOMl~r \l•loM\wll!llltllWll ""'""""· -Ill ·~·••med -ffl1•r _...,,, rKon\lrUCll"ll h.., 111 ...... CO•l\INCllll9 '"'" m cftttoolc ~Ion •ltttloM, COlltlrtKU"ll -• ICI tw'ft_.. cont rot "rucl~•. '"° Ill 'Mllflt ~wlmtl•IY 100 l"1 of I .. lftCll ~I< lllte l11•l0t Oii tldllltll 20o 'lllctlc_r.,.t p111911,,. "'9t9-t1t1 Otre<IOl'atl.,_ Ol.Crlo ,,__ ,,.. •19111 10 "lee' M'fr -•II .iee ~ 10 w•I•• ..,, and •II If\. ,...,Hit\ Ill lilly OIO SY ~OE" OP' THI BOARO Of' OfftlCTOllS 0, THI lltVINI AAJIOIWAlElt OliTlltc;T OMed: o.t•-14, ""· 11 lett• J. W!loelet ~ A\41'1tn! *""llrY I 4 ""911111*9 OrllllOll CNal Oelt\r 'lltlt. , °'""'4ltf n. IO. 1'1• $1't-16 Coo1e\ '"'"v M ou'< h•'*<f al tf'W! ot tltf" n1 W<,,O<h•d•· M'ubt.S& & A~'A)(••l,., •I\< bY lHV'l~1tnl Of UO 00 Pt",. \ot't ~ thi\ ut\t 1\ Mt rt-funMott '~'Uf"''t d ~thet t"f Ol•n\ .tfld \Pf<,ttlCdhOt" •rtrftturnf"Ct Pl•'-~ &tl\O \Of'( lt•t4'11on' NHI br .,,.Hed UDO,, tf!t)Uf'\f IQ Ot'"MiC>e<h..,.. oeOOiPr\ fOf' •n "Od•hOn•I 'S 00 f~ retund•bl•) IO "'OH.·' '"" (0\.1 Of t.IO'tl.eQI' and f\ano1tnq In .tccorditn<.-with Uue l..tbot Codie ol 1"'9 ~tAtt o• C.tHfornt._• tntt 1tv1tw R .. 101 W•I•• 01\lr)<I ""' •M:ffl•lrwo dlt•rmifte<I and '"ooo•eo lhe 9E""11tr~1 onrtvl lhnq ' rtt o• oer diem w~ lWKt 011R 9't1tera1 pt•v•lhno r•t~ 1·or 1~1 hOlfO•v •rte! overt1mP wor"-In t~ k)reflt~ In W"lth \•lo work •i to Ot oertorm«t for l'•Ch c r •ft <.l•\.SHKAhM or •voe or W01"t1,m•n nrt•ded to •te<utf' ,,... COfllr4V I aoo II •"•" ti."""'°"'°'• uoon tnit C.Ofitr•cto, to wPtOm '"' "°"" trect I\ •w•rdt'd •nd uoon i&ny \Ubeon tr&<tor Undl}r f'llm to~" nor 1n .. 1'•4"' wld \Pf'(IHed '"'""' lo •II .Wlitmf'ti JMOIOVt<I on 19-t ••<vllon ot ti. Con trM:t A cop.,. ot lf'tt! Qtl~r;tl l)n!llifAll1nq re-tt\ ot •MQ", J\ on ro~ •n ttw> f'111t•<1· "' tht lrvtf'Ht R•nt h Water O•\tt•tt and '"•" "" DO•l•d al •ach loo >It• bv the tontrMtor E•(h bid or 0«>00••' \r,all II" m-oot or 'ulHnllt~d on 11 form rurni~d ~~ l)frl of lh(> Contr.ct Oo<.,,,_t,. anc1 mu~t b .. 11ccomp•n1ed by it '""'".,.,, rtw)c• 4' '"''t•••ed Che<,, or" bt~' ' bond 1n ~•n •mount not lt"'\ on..<> 10'\. o• the amount ol '"" btd ,,,_ pay4t>lo to tM o•dn of °' to- fht ~f1t nf \tJ•d Ol\trl(t _,,,~r~v· rrwv tw .tnd f&c n ruo o, P'OQC)S.(tl \.halt ~ w.~•'tO ~"f'J hlPd **'" ,.,,,. S..r•tl~f• of I~ Ot\trtct ~I or twfor~ thP '"""" O" lh1\ not•t fl' orov•Of'd fP\t ..tOOv•• ment 100~0 <ht c "-or bond \holl t ()'!Yfl'\ I\ QWJrt!lnttt th~' fM "'-OOtr w II .,,,,.., into• contr.ct w•ttt the O.stt•<t '' •••rOf"O 1~ wt)r• .tno will ni• dftr<IArt'd fOff,.tl-d tf lh• \UCf~\•ut btt1 Ot r 'f'fu~~ to"''"' into ~10 <OM'"' t E«h btd or orooo· •• '-"'dll bl> Mtorn o,an•-d t>v tf'lit lt\t ot orooosf'd wb<on lrKtOf\ T~ <ont,.a.ct ron\1\t\ 01 ••<4..,,.l•f'll co"\ltuct•no and hdc U 11unu o f mtthon ~11on U?\trvoi:r d'KI '100llft1~ """' WOI'• Tl\f" Bo"rd o·• 0,,.., '"" ot lht> b•\ tr1<t tP\lltVf!\ tl'tu t•Qht to , .. lt<.t anv dJt\d ~ .. btd\ ~no to WdlYC """ ctnd ttll lrrM:aul•rlt1fl in dl"IY blC'I 8v THE OROEll OF THf BOARD OF OtRECTORS OF rHF 1Rv•N£ llANr'1WI\ TEA OISTRICI Oat"(t 0-.(f"mDll"r 1 J llfl1ri B-·tl y J WhPPfPf """ ,t.,n1 'M!C' '"''"'f "11')(1\t"'(t OrttnQe COtt\t Odilt' Pllm CNtl'r>l!l<' /1 JO IQlb 11'l0-16 PUBLIC l"OTICE S J7UI HOTICf TOCREOtTORS NO A·H2" SUPE 111011 COUIHOFTHF ST°' TF Of' CALI f ORNIA FOR THECOUHTYOFOAANGE '" 1•1• Mo41•1•r ttl thf' ( ,f,'\tf' n1 l<OAff<I A LEMMON O• "''""' '-lot• f'I '' r.-••bv ''""''" ,,.. ~ r~ji,,,,, h-,~•N) t •• n •'J 1 •'l I Hu t htt di 111 •n t , 4•d •·l rn· " "'' ft•f·• 1 1rw· r• OI tn• At ••• ... n ,_nurl O' lo')C)t .. Yr\I 'homfOll\ ~""'''l'Jll\l•f1Afff'Wo toft1, .. "Jf Wilt IAMl 14RAN0LIN /UIOR>;EY Al L°'W \1) W ">llllH '-TREET tlJI ft l/tt. Ill lf\1 ( h 'lt l"l A.,,,,,.._.., In l M An'l"'""' f ,,,,.,,,v .-n,,.,., '""'"' "' t • ' ,,._ 01~ 11t O•l,•fl'"'" t)f t,,_ ,,., rtr-•\• 1""'"'1 1n All ,,,,..llr" O' '141n flf~ t ' J ,,~,,. \u1,.. , '·'''"• ""''" '"' ,... r •'•"""' ,., mu.ttwt1l"id<>'O'· ,,.,,, ... ,, , .. ~· ., .. ~,,, """'"'" ft1'ur 1non1n~ 4tif ·• trw-fir\I OU04•< M •QnOfl1'11\not1t• (Htffd 0.cflmbr'' tO llllt. (AtHFRINEM CARONNA E. tM:utru:ot the w1H Ol \4•d0f"f .. Of'>nt Wll.LIAM T lllANOLIN "".,_,..,,.uw mw StXTMSTltl!IET SUITllt .. LOSANGIELU.CA'OOU ~~t~ Or"n()f' (Oit\I D-'tlY PHot !>< •• II JO t91• """ ;.......,,, • 1011 )))) I• PUBLIC NOTICE S~'l-4ft1l NOTtCEOI' T ltUSTEE'S SALi NIJTlr E ·~ HfoREB., v•VEN ""'' WU1'1ERN ClltE"> ESCROW <.X>M PA,,_'Y' 4 ff),.-par.tiOft ., tht ~ftl Tru\te• u"d .. r tr.• d-•a o t try'' ,..,,.,,,..,,.,, m«nl•oneo ••II •~fl •tthouf WA,,•nty ot A>ttr kind at pyt)t1f -110" 10 llW ••O""" IMclcM• tor<•'~ tf'l IAwt\it ~' ot 1.w urut~ s..t•\. .. , ,,... I•--Pte<e M"Gn•l«I Dflow ,,, ,.,. C,O..,.,,h Of Ow StAt-Of Caltton'wA &-\•IJn•t""" br'l&w .ett ot '""' ,,qihl ''""' ....., IM.,.f!K1,,.,.. MIO av \410 Tr\f\J .. If\ ~ to .. I that C1"'1olll'I Of"C>Otr1Y'WN<h1' ....... .., '" "'° ,_, •• ,,., '"'"'"~ ~ Tiw ,., .. , oilddr•'\\ 11 M"Y or Of,_.., l'f)f?'I"'°"' Ot~if>"'•t•Ott II ""y Of .,,d or-r1v '' ~• tn•1n be-~d -ot lr11\I ..... ..Cut..cl "" '"" lr11\tc>r O-<l<Jn•fO<I .,.,_ ""'1 ••• -~-...,, ... <Ml• '"I ... -...... , ,,.. -...0 •• Oocvmtnt N-• o1 Otlocl•I Rt<ord• In tM ()ttl(e ol '"" C-1• llt(or,,., ot w•d '°"""' •II .., ct.\t9f\Atttd ~•ow .end t.onw.,.O WIO D'f>D•''" to f"f" ffv\tte '"~r•1n ""'''".., ~ .. ot '~"' 0'0"(1y ... 11 llt -nur'u"'" to th• d,.mAnd o t th• Q.,,..11< ••'• ullO•r Uld Otlf'tl ot ''"'' -by r••'°" ot <lti•ult In Ille Pllvm<'nl O< MrfMll'\Al'K• Of ObllQ•lioM W'<u- bv Wo<I do!eO Of t•u<t tnCl\1<11"0 '"" Cit f.tutt, no1tC• ot Wf\l(.h WA\ t9(.0f'Old on ""' dlll~. •n ,,.. Boo-. •nO •I Ill& -.ond ., Ooc.-•nt Numbflr ol \.tld OI ll(IAI Rf'(Of!l .. \O.\IQr>•INJ DllOW A\ uwd herein ··rru'\tor'' \Mil t.O-- -to _.,. ••Tru~ton" II .-.e '""" ..,,. l r1Al0t '' Cle\IQO"Aled llPIOw. ~"° "llenetlco•ry' ,,..11 b<! _....., to ,_ "a....fi(IMI••" II ,_-e"'8ftonf' ~11<1••• •ae<ul.O IM Noll<e ot 0.tAull ""'•l,,.bo•• ml'fltoOftld Tiie .. _ .,,., l>ftK• ot .. ,.. -""' llOn ol .. Id ~rty ... d otfltl Gott.I re ,_,_, i.-.. •re•) lollow\ County ORANGE lni.tor JOt1N E WAllNUI •""' MARILYNN No. WA•NElt.~--•le l>Mdollrutt 11-<ord•ll<l'IClll•Jutv t•, t•H. 8-I U ff .. ~ 1'9, Clo< ... """INo 1M» NClllCI ol 0.l•u•t ll*<ord.Woan ci.t• ~r , •• 1'7t, Boolt lllllS. ~ ,, ... Ooc-•'40 , ... , TI-ol Sele It ·oo • "' 1111 J..wrv •.. .,, Jl'IOQflltS.te· Soulllf"'"lertlrotl(elO lflt Or-..,.. Otuflly tlcl Counlltluw, O!Y of s.M• AM, Sl•te Of C:..t11on111 ~~°'°'""--­,,, ... u .... ot Old P•Offr1Y. 112' P rh<lllt l•t1•. Newport B .. <11, c;.llfon'lll ~ Ottc<ljMklll of ~.: I.Gt JJ ol Trl(l No 11~, In lllt City Of *-1 lleec11. <..,,.,, of Ore11oe, a~ o1 C.tlllomle. ""r mn rt<ortlld '" tlt)Oll 52,,,... 11 Of MIKlll-~. ltl 1111 offlq Of Ille <OVnly r.corotrof Mkl ewflly. Doted O.Cttn.,.f ti. 1na 90UlHIAN CITll:t IKltOWGOM,.AN'!'. • torpor•t!Ot\ , SW\111111.cl Trvme. C.lt Ill.ANO At&lfl.tnl VK• ftns ..... T~l~WAAHER flutlli-Ot•noe Coett o.ov Pltoe. Dec 90. tt7' •..O J•n t , U, ltl1 QR·1t PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI 0 1' AOO~TtON 0, llHOLUTION OP' INTINTION l'Oll ntll CONITAUCTION 01' C«llTAIN ~ILIC IM~llOVIMlNT> WITW 'IP ~llTINANTWOlllC IN Tiil lllVINl llANCH WAllll O"TlttCT OltANOI! GOUNTY, CAll"OllNIA P'ILINO 0, •& .. 011 T AHO ''"" AN O ~LA C I 01' MIAlllNG TilllllON IA-..,,._I Ol•lrltl Ne 7~ II NOTtC' •S Hl!lllllV (,ti/EN 11\tl "'-laoerd of Otre<tOr't r.)t tfW ,,.._,At 11-n ""'•'•' D"'"" °'"-Count• C..IUor"I• "'0 ~rt '"• 1)1" Of'v u1 Ot<.9mO.r t'1• In Dt Of •.cf'""" undr• ''-' ¥v'-1C•U•I 1mornv•mtn1 '' 111 1•11 01wl\IOn '1 ot Ow \tr .... , . .end HIQflw•v' COOi> edOC>I 11\ rt"l!lllt<>n nt lntentton A•\Olvt1fl" ""'" '"• ''" dt<.1¥1"0 u~ 1nt1Htllon tn nrc:Mr ow con 'tru<tt<wt of tttt••n OuOlll lfll()tUW Jntftt' wltft IPOUr1fltnAnt WOt~ In tn. ,,.,,,. ll•ft<ft W•re• O•>trlrt tovn<• ni OrM\Q'ft, "n(i orct..r+nq M 0 Wuod\10.1 WOQ0\•0. '(uOOf<J '1M A'\r11t•1~' •rv Eno•~ .. , ot Wot-•o u,,..,.,, t"11,,1•0fvt o\ ff'Qu•re<J bY '"•" Mi;n+< •Ol'tl lt"f10'0"" -nt "''Of"" NOTICE IS FUllTHEll GIVEN lllnl w1d EnQtnt"•' ot Wor" hn\ 1111'(1 "'' 11• Pot"t a.no tMt \41d ref)Ort WA' .,,,.-...nttfd to w 10 6o•r0 •' .. '"f'IJUl~r fnt't11"0 nf Wld tl<Mrd lleld 011 '"" 11111 MY of C>Membe• ttt&, "~ 11\•t \61<1 ll<Mtrd (.Gn\lc:tfofed •nd PiA'Vd Ctn \ft10 l'",.00(1 NOTICE 1S 'VRlHE:ll GIVfN tn.t IM ll\1 O.y Of J•nu•rv 1•11 &I • w pm, et t,. 0Utc1\ of the tr¥lrW' AMKh Weter Oi\tr1c1 470• C•m°"' °''""" 1rv1~ C•llff)rnl• .,1tfJ dr .. thP o.v ~·~pt~• tor tM nrt•r1no on \1,tlO ,notut1on of 1nttnhon •"0 vn w~ ,,. pot"t ~" •no "'",.r~ ~"¥ And All Otn.oft\ "4.vnto •nv 001.c-11~ O" P'O lMh to tfte P'oPO~d 1mprov~mf'nt ._,..,. fldt'1'1f Of ,,..,. ftSY,,Menl <Jhtrict or-1n the oroaowd •\W\'tmrnt m.tv •DP9•' betor• '41'1 Bo.10 "na ~hO"' r .tUW -"V "-~work \hit'Nld not bi--cAr•.edout '" &e.corcMn<t •ttn 1a10 rf"\OfuttOn Of tn le-nUon ~ Wld rt"OQrt An• per\On 1n ~,.P\lf'O m•v f11,. ~ orotf'\I or ob~«tion ., OfO'llOtd '" Wtd M unltiCHf lf'nOf'OW rn('onl •ct o• 1•n Au o'o'•''' rnu\I t>-'" ....,,U•nta c:t«-""be ,...,. or1>0trty OW'f'tl"ct bv ,,,_. ''CJftt'. fftO ~ fllM:I wlfn '"" Se<r•t•rv ol w•d D•\tr•ct not l•t~t t""9n lnt "°u' ~• fo,. "*'•'•no Ttw tnM• tt\tl~t'"d Co\t ot '••d urf)p(Ked wor~ •nctur:l•no 1nc1ri,ntAI ••Ofl!n,,.. .. '"" \b 160 600 Rtff'lr.-"r .. ''ht tt"by ~It' ~,, re"-Oh.11'0f\ of 1nt11ru1nn ~M \.o't•o ,.,. PC>tt on Ill~ with \el<l 'Wcrat•rv 1n h1\o• flrP tor" ()(lo\(r10t1on ot \Al rt""°'., M\CIUf ow d"\\4\\mt"nt 01\tr1Ct i'1d f<>r tu,U~·r 04rt1Cult\f\ 4 Drw• df'\!rtPtlt>n ul 1r'H' mopo'it'c1 1mprovrmen1 I\ At, tolfow\ A the con,trucllon ot <"''"'" wn1Mfl; '4f""t' 1mprovf'mt•nt\ fOQt'H,,.r wHh •OOUr1t'n1tnC•\ •n Cul"W•r Orh1e lr0t11 tne ••l\t•nQ '''Wt'' llnti •n Cu•~-, at El<udt>ro Or1vt1 nCJt 1M1t\tttrtv ft> lnmw &oul•\ltrd <tf\cJ in Irvine 8oute"W•td lrom Cu•~r 0'1v• to • 001nt 'liOP'O• 1matetv ) 000 t•t!f \OUln,.._ .. ,,,,Y thr<t'O' .tt"ld 1tt M l!..t .. meftl N•",..'" - °'dj .. ont lo'°'* A T &S F lt•llw•v lrom C.ulttt Or1v,• to ., e>01nt '100f'O• Hn•t .. h 1 100 I• tt \Oulfttt,.\lt>r-lv thereof and 1n ltflf\ AYtftllt trom (Ul'llfl' 0 flvf' tn It or11nl dt"C)f'"f')• ,,.,...,fl',., .00 , ... , M>Utt'f"•\tf'ft, ,,,.,to. An<l•n Tt •t>"<o lto•d l"'OfTt I~ ~•l\t1nq \A'w.•,. un.e 1n Culw,.. Dt1.,... \OUl'W'A\t"''' to Y•I.-A'l\'f!IV Y•f~AftnU>t trom Tr•t;vc.n lfr1.,40 twijtth"o"t"r1v tu lrv1ne-8outf'V~rd ttnom trv1.,t SOvtt viHd horn y ,,, ... Avf'nUf ID •• PO•nt 1lnc>"O• •mar11v 1 JOO ,,.,.1 u1''",."'1 •. , 1., t~reuf B fh,. lon\ht1<t 1nn of cr,t•1,, ~,., Wft!iar .. .,~,,..m 1mf),f)'l'{"nY11t ... tooetlhet w Hh "PP\Hfflnffn(.t"'\ Inc: IUd •"9 4 M1t11on G•llon Clrc~•otr Prt't"'"" Concr,.tt Rewr~r .,, "" ,.,,,.,.tmo ho,,uw •"t-d "Delfi')• •mdtfllY ) #)) l~,.I nor Hu i\'.t,.r"l"WI of lhl 1nt1•,V"<f!0•1 ot l alt' Av~nut' itt9d Hn.11. (Al't'f")I'\ ttlnnt') #!ft\ w"'IMltfW ,,,( 111"0 "'ttrind•nq \Outn11rlv Anc1 tht" Vl\;fl'h•tP\l~rly •.t' 'l't'ii' H•• "' (lf'lV!ll\ l~rwtt Wt-\tert9 I'> 111• A.v .. f'I . .-tnd•"I Y.tlt •vtftUf ''nm Hitli:' ( 1'"'1 '"' \0111th11ift.-..rtrtv '" Traovro AOdfl •"" 1n Mtck• C•n•on llo.1d '''>m Y41l«' 1n t w,. .. ,_.,1y d11et lnm .,.,ount1 II• IM.p 1r, i>v-. Pint" fl tni\ ~"' ao•vo•·m.1 ... iv 1 JC10 ,,.,., nortttw ,, •. ,h ot '(ti• ""'''"" ,nil '""""' ,,.. • \(lllJ'tftw1 ,, .. ,,, ,,.,.-,(fll')n •OOrt'I• 'l'\.ih Iv soo ..... , to,,..,,,..,. 9,,,,1 ...... ,n ~·n tr¥1M 8ot.1ltv•rd tmm,. 001nt .,001tt .. mAtf\ly > lt/Wl ,,..,., 'll)rfhw"'''.,''" o t Y .ti• 4v•nu,.. WUll'tf'.t\l,tlv In Jl"fl,..f'• H(\it(J tfl(J1•1 J•llnoy Ro.td JJu1ft~· '"'''• ''""" lnonr Oov•rv.oo to 91v1tn .AV't!"not And 1n er''" Aivtnuit ''nm J""'""" QcMn r.ortnw"''"'''" t (vi"", OrtvP ,,.. , n"lru•( I tu ctn •••1\t1nrJ -Mt .. rld(.tllf't .. nn1-. W•~twooo trnm 8'¥•n AvtnUf" 1n .. nQf"tf'..-,1\\t"'"' d•r•<t•On '"' Northwood It> ,. OO•l"I nortnwMlflrl'f f)t V.tlr Avf'lhv#. t~t•• nor1""'•st,.rl'1 1n thi· oropn\••d ,,,,..._,, n• ft11'\t_,1i..,... fr.ti I PlfO ,,, .. to ''"'"'' 8oulf'VMd "'' " p.">1n1 ,.,.,.,Hn111'""''"'~ 1 300 ••1•t 11otlhwt-\1••r•• o• Yah• 4'Yf'n~ M'l'J•n \oul~wooO trom "°"" Av11nut; \OtJlnt•"Orly to E1t\fWOOd ~nd In Ea<twood tmm Soutnwood nortNM\IMIY to Qry1tn AVfll'\Ut.' rtn<t in "" Enem•n• Nor1hfony ot OM S.nl• An• Fr••••• ttom CulviH 011vf1 t'\Orf"w~i1"rty tottw• ••1,•1nq pump station dt H•rvArd AWf"A\if" S.ld WllPt t41t<.llltlt1' Ah.O 1nc.lunt lhir lollOWI~ 1\trt'l\ -•ler Slatten Ho t •«•I,.,,., tP\e we\ff'tly (O(Mr (if Hlf" "'°"vnn Ro.Ad •nd Y •I• Avp~ to Oto VIOf" MC~'\•rv CKe\\U(f' f()f' tnt ... "'"' 1¥ ooroon ot uw A\WUmflnt <N\itl t .,., 1..-iv~I """"'* .............. on .. ,.,,"9 l r.oc" No ICMM 018• •• -1111 '°' tnt ouroo~ of rflOUl•••nq l'MIMOhlr ornwrts In tl'U\ •tH Mid '-•Slallo'I No 1 l<IC•lod nort""''• ol llW S<tnt• M" F,..,.,., • ., •f H4'rv.tro A"'fl"t# tn pt0v10- ~0inq t Api9ttly to \ftfYI' f~ Wltffil'f '"'"m •M f••d 1r.t ,,.~,..,o•r ffttJ ,,,... tflrf\l~tltAUf)n ot Well• Ho H •lld 11 l()f"1'ft0 M M1tc,,.lf AYftnUI' bJl11M't9f'I ~,. l•,,., M'IO Utt Or1vf" ~l~ ~NUii,. S4#1t•lnlftQ \tetlofl •«•l..S ., T•-o l!oM And Cul ... r ()t,w-10 Ot"OWklt •n ~m,.roencv c~ Uan to ttw ••1\tlnQ w•t1r11ne .,, CulYflt' Ori ... -~ ..................... - ,, .... c:.tttrtol V•lw '" provlC)ll • connection tn ,,.. """ lr>Q 70 ttKll low preHure lf8"'"'4<11<in m&ln •I Mylnrd llCMld. •lld n.....c.t•-'< ~,..recllonSt.ttlen• 1001ed ftonQ •h• ••"lino 10 111rn ''""'ml\.\ton m•ln C Th"' c.on\Huc 110f'I nf ,,.,t,,1n '•<l•l"'ro ••11' fee iltt1t\ tOQtHW'• w4111-r1en•nc ... 11K•u01no• P'lller"1.tlll touted •ooro••mftl.ty l 400 1 .. 1 nor1M .. terty ot Y•I• Avenut ~'Id Wt<k\ CAlnyon, 1ove1,_.r "'Ith• Df!>ttlne .. 1 ... 01119 1ovtnwe\lerly •lon11 '"" ctomot<t•< ••l•rll,.. •<•~' Mlt-• c" ft¥OI\, lllltKe "'"'ttrly to Y•le A ....... ..-d•n V•ttAw- ''""' HIO\ Canvon .OUlllWMl ... ly to lf.OUCOR<>ed -lr> HlcU Clflf911 ·-lro"' 'f•I' In • wntt•IY Olrt<t•Oll M'OUnd lf\e IOOP to P•r• Pl1<• lo•-nl ~·t-ffly I JOO 1 .. 1 ""'1-IHI ot Y•ft Avtni...tf' .. nd II''•" "' • llM""6t .... 1v Otre<llOll •POro•1-'"1Y ,llOIJ -to ,,.,,,.. Boutn•rO -•~ dl-liotl t•111>rutm•tety JOO '"' 10 1n1,. ...,,. •• rd; •no •~ '"""' ............ .,_,, •point •POfO•lm•tth UGO leef 11erl,.wu1er1y ot Ya t• 4'wenut , toWll*hltrty 10. 001111 '"°"'"'""""' 1,aoo fttl norlllwe•ttrty 01 _,..,,.. llood;-lft All • ...-.-....... ·-M41ieffny ...... ~lerty from trwtn. Ooulev .. o lo ....... Awnue' -ill ary ... A- trom • 001111 tfllClfO•tm•t•ly 1,300 '"4 "°"""' Jtttrev ltoeo non11-.1«1y to -'-·•llOlll Wn -"'°"" lf'fttll A-111 t llOf'l ...... terl dtr~llOll to H•rtllwOOd to " pain not111wft ... IY Of Yete A.,.11111, 11\11\U llOftllttSfotr1' lft "" ~ slrWI\ of Tenlllll ... fr.Cl NO tl:M 10 lftlr>fl lloute¥trf " • oolnt ·~~tmeltl• I ,)00 te•I 11ort~•••l•rly 01 Ya• ·--ill .......... ,~ .. "~ PUBLIC NOTICE ,n t• .ti to} Tr•Cf\. NO '°61 titlt ~ ~ IHI lur lfw puroo-. of ,..,,,,~,nq tt'llt l\•Qhfltt Ol"e\\Uf•\ tll tf\•\4fr• 4"lQ ,_.ill!••" Nt I loc•f•d norttwfh 1f tt\4! '\Ml1• Ana ,..:, .... ,•'ti•• v.Jr•l .,.,,.,,..¥1' 10 "'"" Jil' uump.nq <•a.tc tv t-> \•'v• tr•., • ..,,.., \Y\tf!m a"C) h .. 0 tru• t t W• vo;r ~ fht rtfWbtht•t1ono' WtU' N• t16ftd18 '°" .. ,.., ~ M•,tPWll .,.,tthW t»t.....,..o O.OUU l •n.t ~o Ull Orlwtt ~· """~• SVtt4h\t,..... ~•UWI ioi'Att>C't at fr"hu<n k0o4a •"'1 (ut_..., Or••• •o Ot0¥•0. •n '*"'"' °"""(. v <•...!An« h~ to ow •••\tlnq ••••' l1ntt 1n C~w• °''""" MWt ""'""'• .a .. wl11Unq ti.,.. ,,o,. (.efttrt• v.1 .. ff) ~0¥10t • U)fHWr "°" 9u ,,,.. l'A•'ttt"'J lO H'Wh k)w Ott\wr.-.. tr••hml\\lon m..,,. .c M.-.o,o R.0'1d •ttd n .... C•t-IC Prote<llOft ""'-ICX•tf'O •'->r.o tf\• f•1'tt1nt,t 10 lf\(n ''•n\ml\'\fon m.un D ln" (On\tr•u t1un "' ""'t•11'\ ff'(lliliM•d Wifttttr Ith 1ht1,.\ l~Uwr t¥Hh •PC>Urt"n .. ntfl't 1t\1 IU•hf'l9• S<r"nl"' l'l•ftl •oc ,.l•d AOOtO•ltnAt•l'f J 4100 lflll't nofl'w•,trl'fv ut v .,," Aivfl'hOf• '"d t111 "' c ""von too.,.tn .. ,. w ''",.. p.Jll It~ ••t~noino 'outn""'''''1" 41<.tNJ '"" 00,,,,..,\ff( W4'1UIUW •«' '0\\ t•10' (..a nvon thfnte •e\ttr•t to v "'" AWt!'V'• .no •~ V•leAvtftW' ''"''' HU '" (fHlVOn \(Uithwt•\h••ly to h4bu<o A040 4no 1n With C•ftYOft lt .. O •rorn V•ltt •n e Wt'\ltir ly rt1rect.on 1t'l'>t.ln0 ow 1000 to P4r• Pt.c-t tott t(Nnl PUBLIC NOTICE \ J7MI NOTICr TOClllOIT01t1 Ne A lttt• SU~llllOll COUllT Ol'THI 11'Af(OI' CAL,,OllNIA l'Oll THf COUNTY 01' OllANO• In llW "'•flt• ot I ... E•l•I• ol CLI F <'0110 llAYMONO Pl!ll(t tl\O •no .. n ~-(LIFl'O"O P•EllCt OotN..0 ~•c• '' Mreov oiwt" 10 ''90•tOr\ "'eVJftO tle1m\ •Qt1ln'I IN Vtd oei<• ~"' to flf• '"'Cl c t••m\ 1" me O'fltf' Of t"'° (ljfl>n Of '""' •ftJ,l'l"'91 t U 1U't 01 to or~• them to,....., ,inn,tr\IQl¥0 lh '""' OffO<O Of L"VRfN"" H'INOLEV "' l0'"•Y •I l~W tl<tl (.r•rt\t'l"W 8o\ll•""'d 101 1n '"• (.tty Of LO'\ ArtQf'lf, in l i .. A.,., ft'\ (t>Unh wf\ICll t•tttr othc~ '' thft pl.r,. of t)ij\INr".,. tM "~'~IQNO In All ""•U•t\ Olfrt••n '"'<a to '•1tJ .,,., .. Suen t ,,.,"" wttt\ '""° fWll(f\\.tt'V VfMJ<",." mv\t ~ fllf'd or O'•'fl"t•d '' ator .. ,•ld within f®r mt>nO\\ ,_fft-r tn. flt \I OVOI•( •t•U'I Of ,,,1~ oot•q• lllBE<£ Nl£L">EN e 'OC'\llt1 • ()f '"'will ut <,.41d ~t f'd•nl LA UlllN M NAN OLE¥ Anomo·•H.A• U4J CreMft•w Bl•tl Sult• JOJ l o•4-lnCA'- P.,bfl\l>td Oren~ CCMI" O"'ty Polol, 0..•mbo< 13 JO 1'76 4r>9 JAn ... ry O, I J 1911 \.114 16 PUBLIC NOTICE •OOtO•lrnctt,.tv 1 >no ff'fl nonhwit"\te-rl'I 1--------------- ot V••~ Awenu .. •"ti '"•~ II\ ,.. '°"'"""'tf"• Iv dltK hon •e>oroa.,Nlrt" )QOtfft to Irwin. 8oul._.vAtd ~th lr•iM a.wl•••td trom • pot,,l •POtO••metftly ) 600 fft'I norl"••\ttrly o• Y ._,,. A\tflnv,. "'1)UffW4'\terlv to• 001nt •ppro.c1mntf'I., t lOO ff"tl nortn••~'f""" o• Jtfl,.ty Aoed .,,., '" AnE•••m ... t&et- 1'.,., II Nd•"" JellNty ANd '°'11.......,..\l,.rtw ff"Om Irvin(" &ov1 .... ,..d to 8rv•n Awnw d"ld 1n lr'f'•"A"e"M trom ,. 001nt 11oprox1m1ttttly , .m ,._..,., north Of J•Utey Ao4tO nortnwntt11, to "-'''twoocJ •r'ld Ht w .. 1wooc1 ''°'" 81 van •"""Uf' In tt northf'oft\CUh• '11r,..ct1nn to NtHtn.,..ood 10 .,.. oo•nt no,.1tiwt'\I"'''" ot Ydlt" ~vPn~ f~<· nortMtt\t~rty In thf" oropa'ftd \lr~t~o• f(lnt('lllVI" fr_.ct ,,_.o QH4 to Irvin•' BovltY•td ,,. d Qittlnt lPO'O•IMottty t 300 ftt•f ttOrlhwti~tl'rly ot Vl'tlr Avt'nue enrtm ~Or1~,.ood lrom Wt\twond \Outhr,')\ltrly 10 (•""'°"°. ~"° "' '•" .. 000 ffom Nortl'lw1JOd \out hw~,1-.rly to SoutllwOOd ~ncj '" \oul~wood ''om Ed\IWOOd ro Y i111tt 4vr"uit o fh•• 4cqu1"flon 01 11u ""'"'M~'• ''Q"" ot Mtt'i td\f'mtif\h 1tnO lflrld "'-'(t"\Vlt V lo "'(0"'01•'\t. tt\f" O'f\1t"ft l!ot furtrw.r o~r•·< ul•r\ 6\ to tM- dft.\C.ttOt•on 01 ''"' wo,." ot 1morovt• rntnt\ 6"0 IOt&hOf\ ,and ••l-ni Of Y id wortt ,.,t.11nc• '' •''° m~<>-to w1cJ "'40 orf'Y•OU\ly •ODtOV4'«1 ent1tle-d p,.ooo\•d Sou""'',.'"~ o• as \ESSMENT DISTRICT NO /1 I NOIHH 1111/INE AllEAI S...d 1n.tO 1\Qin 111,. In lhfl ~f1rt11 ot tl\f! ~rf't "'Y~ In.. (),,,,.,I 'Suit" )b() 001 c;..tnoU!oo 0•1vr .,._,,..., C•••ft>rni" ~nu~ lnQJl•I._., rt-Qdr(httq ttw•y DfO'"t"d •no· '""utd 111m..oe11 '"• ott•c. (II f"-' ~rfll'tttrvo11~01\tt•tt Su1t•M -t101 C.trnw' 0,..., .. trv,rw-(491ttnrni•'?ll1ti ArM(OO.• IU 8)) 1771 fl~ll• J w~""'''' A\\+\ttlinl ~ rrtdry Of thf' lrv1nf' Raricn W1'1 tr 0"1r1ct Qr ... n~(.oun9y (Alllntn1" Pubt•\,,..d Onnn•1 C.'M'tl O••'Y P11ot 0.-<tml>I'• 7) )0 1911> PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME HAT:OMEHT TtH• 1n1tnw1nq i)flr'.on, .1r1• f)()•fH> b\I'~ ht'<'''" II 0 N ( 0 M P II 1 r R A P Pl l(;ll llON't 1711<1 H1wll>n•"< 81•d c;u,, .. )1~ rnn11nr1 t .,1,ff,n.,1.•GlQ50\ \('1W .. R11 (,188 & HON INC •tr -''•'fi't\'~ fl•• tJ<tr ,H1(1n tlOJ ~YOt•~ '.,u1t .. ti\ Nf'Wpe>fl Bt-dth CAl1lorn1.l <nt>IJO '"" bu\1nP'\\ t\ <onnuu""f't oy a C'~' "°'''·on C.Chw•rtt C,u>h& ..,.,,,. l"C' Tn., (16t~tnl w" l•tM w1lf't tr. Cdunty ll,.,~ ,t O,.ttnQ• (~,nty on Oto<tml>"r 70 1•1~ H'Ojl Pubtt\Md Or•nof" ro".ct'I 0.a•'v P1tot Olk )) lO IU6 "no Jon 6 ll "" lJIPt PUBLIC NOTICE S UJl' SU'l"tOltCOUllTOJ'TMt! ST°'TEOF CAL.,OllNIA FOii THE COUNTY OF ORANGE No "·'"lt NOTICE 0' MEAlllNG OF PETITION FOii AUTHOltlTY 10 EXTENO l.EASE 011 01' llEAL PllOPEllTY E\IAI• ul RUHi IEFFERSON RU~l ''" R JE~rERSON RUSI ()tifflA\rO NOTI CE' ,., MER(l)V C•VEN ,...,, CHAllLE!i WARREN RU .. 1 ha\ ltlt'd rwtre1n t'I ()l .. t•l•OQ •or A.vino, 1tv '"'•ttno '"'"-• nt '•di J)rnntirty n.:te,,.n<,. to wt\l(t\ I\> Mlt<1f• ff')t h'''""' JltVl•(IJl,V\ Ant) th~I thf• llm,. Anet C>ll\f,.. C)f ,,,.rH l•\Q t"" \_.m~ ".," bi t-n ,,., to• '""•.,•'v " 1~'1 4tl Q t)O r. tn ln thf (011ft'1JC>ln '>f [)p.Qdrtmf.lnt No lot \ala f''tutt ·•1 l({J (hllr C~n'"' Orfv~ W t•\I 1'1 t~ C•tv of S.."t4'f\'M Citllfo'n'" (Ml•'i1 N')Yf'lmQM 18 \Ult\ WILLIAM E SI JOHN, Coun•• C•tr• IUllllE, WILLI AMS•nd SOllEHSOH An-yu1i..w SulleD60 Ulllltcl C~llfo"'I• 8111-81tl<i , 107Wlllllll"O ll•d, Lot A"Pte\, CA 00011 An-v• ,., PotlttoMr Pubtl\l'W'd Or•"O"' Co.,~t D-"•'• P11n1 Dr<""'Dtr >l )0 ttl6 Silil,. )b PUBLIC NOTICE S-0110 NOTICE Ol'TllUSTEE'SULE f 0 F No ••It 11, JS.OU /4 TtU\t o .. -d ,,.nt~r tnt ., OUl'f •e>oo•nted Tl'"\l\te• "ndtr th• to•-•no Oe\<"l>f<I ., .. do<""" W•Ll. SELL Al PUBLIC AUCTION 10 THE HIGHEST BIOOEll FOii C4~H 1,..y. bf!' •t t1rM o• \ale 1n htwtul monr·v of the Untteo St.1tf\) •11 r •ont l1llf'~ 1n t•r.,..1 c00tvev•d to •"d now rwld by •t undtr Wld 0.-.0 01 t•1J\I I" l""or-r ty twr11n•tter df4Krlbed lRUSTOll Wllto~m C c .. rlbtVQ - ln•ydhanl't\& CArtberQ Hu\b9nd A Wll~ BENEFICIARY Prl\Clll• Moo Mo!llOll 41\0 '1•own "' Prt\( •II• Groin R~nrdt1d Of to~r lO 11111 "'\ tn\lt NO mo1 on l>OO• 11)'161 fl<l9'' 10~ °' ()I flCl•I Aecord\ 1n 01t' otHce ot tM l<t<O'dN ot 0,.nqv (ounly \<\Id Offd M tru\t de\Cf"lbe\ t"-tot1ow1,,q t>rO °""' " lo;o•eh<>ld ~•tale "' ere.too by 11\at t trlf'" •e~•·· r,rrelnarter ref~rrtO to 1nan<1to LOI Ill Of T 'Ml •1'• on IN> Cll'f OI N•woort B••c.h C.ounh ot 0ri1M1Qill St•tr of C•U•ornl4 ·~ '\hown on• mao lti.Pt*"Of rKorOPd m Boo" IS7 09Ql:J\ 1 to 14 jf'll( IU\llt/f" ot Ml"~llAnf!tO\i\ MAO\ ,. tor<h of \.d•O totMtv MAY BE ALSO ICNOWN ftS t1'!4 Gal~•Y qoad .... .-.woort B .. •ch Callforn1A , • 11• • \t•~t HdrP\\ or common M\lQn(ft~ 1\ \he)w n.tl')Ovfl Nlwtr•~ tv '"qhref\ "~to 1l\ t omotel&ne-\' or cor tf<lnM\I T""" bt"nehC1Arv und~' Y id Deed of TrU\t l>v rH\Ofl ol • t>reecn or O.·<.oull •n tf\e: ObllQ•llon\ \f'CUfed thereby r.,.-•rofo,-,. ,..,.r,,11'14 <Jnd othverPO tn ttw ~\IQIWd A wr1tt•n O.C:t.,•tk>n o1 °"'~" •ncl Ofom~no lo< Sat .. .,,., .,.,,11trn nqllt,. of b't-dl h ttnd of elf<t•an fn r!lUVI I~ 'JftMr\l'l'lfl(J tn \fll \Ali! orQOoPrty to 'Jl1\f'f '·"·d obl•Q•Hon\ dnd t~'fcllffr I~ .. uf\0 .. ,\11Jnt<1 '-"U'WCI w•d not1c .. ot brr.tC' tt Afl<I ot •••nu:1r1 to bf' R~orOtd Yt>tt"'Jbfir 10 ltl& ., tn1c,. ND 10611 In b<ln~ 11811 CMG" )bl o1 "IOCI ()tf1p4t Qf"f or'1'- Sd•d ~ltt will ~ m•Oe tM.Jt wonou1 (C-IYe'ndl')f yr Wd,,•nh l"•C)f"t-\\ Of IM pt Hid r-eq.Mfllnq HI!• OO\\~\\lon or tn t vfN>rd'\<fll\ t'l o•v ,P'I,. tf'm1tln1nq or1n <•JM \um of thlll "01~ t\ • ~N" •Hf'd b, 'Wl!1n ()(>t"d ot '"''' w 11h 1ntf'rf \t t\ tl'l '-.t1d nnte prov1dttd •O..,AnCe\, If \rt¥ ~r tn..• 'W''m' or 'l-«Ud O.-t'o of fru\t IW\ <h.&rQf'\ t "d fl"Pflln\f'\ of t~ TfV\I~ -tn110' HWo tru,t\tt•llP\1 by .. a•d Ot1edof Tr\"t Said \;tll" W iii ,,. ht\lff nf1 Ml'lfttidy 1an0dr1' l1 ·~·· ,, ,, 00 AM Al 1n.· froiit •l'\l•mu~ tn ttvo othc ... , of Com mQl)Wfl""" I &M '111 .. (t)m~n· 171() N 0r(M,lw"'"' San! 'An~ (.~lltormo U4h•d 0 , dffHlflt q 11Hll TAUS! OEEO CENTER IN( A\\.ittd Tru,IN" 8v(o"'monw• .. llh und lttl• (.omoanv ~()flM Bvw ataoll '1•uo A'\\•C.t•nr S--<rf'1Arv Pub"'""" ~ttwpon MA•t>or N#low\ p,,."' <omt>tnt'd tlf'·lh tti• 0,~ Cne\1 0..1ly p,101 C/<'C )1 lO lql~ 6"" JM • 1q11 PUBLIC NOTICE CP Jtl' NOTICI!. TO CR I! OtTOltS SUPllllOll COUltTOl'TME STATE OF CALI l'OllNIA f'OR THI COUNTY 01' ORANOI Ho A-4t E\ldltOI OE.AN MOORE Gil.LETT akaOEANM GILLETT 01'<•'<1- NOTICE tS HEREBY GIVEN 10 ll't!' c.rl'dlton of th• abOvr n•med OK~l th.al all OM\Of'\\ nav1no c laltn'\ Ml"'"" Jne 'MllO cltt<-nl MP roQulred to Ille them, with ,,, ... ntce\"rv wOUCf'IOf'\. In '"" olfl<~ Of IM Cl,rk ol l!Mt '°°"""''" ltlltd court or to ore~nt lh!lm ... 11n 11\P N'C.t'\'"'V YOU(hef\. to thP unO""f'\U~ at Ille law ottofP ot 8 I FARllELL 1101 OQ"" Sir•.i Suite 600 Newoon Bf'a<.n, (At1fOfn1d cnMl(), Wf\l(h f" th(t pl.tee ot bu\lnt-\\ ot tl'le under\H~rM,'d I" alt M•llt" e>erteononq 10 lf'lt' ~t•te Of '>..)•OMCtdent 'N1th1n four month'\•''"' tN! tlr\t pUbllt al•Ot\ Off P\j\ nott(9' D<trN:I 0f'C""mbfor J t976 FRED AllON GILLEn E .. tutor ol ,,.,.. Wiii of IM •Do•~ n•mtOO.cedr'nt BJ FAllllELL ll'OI OoYe St . Sulle MIO ......._, llH< ... C• tlt.60 mo1n ... ss AttO<Mylo<£recut., Pvbll\IMtd Oronqt Coa•I 0.Cly Piiot Oe<.....oer ~ •• 13 JO t97& ~u1 h PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INVITINOSEALIO ,ROl'OSALI lllOSl FOii THE (l)NSTltUCTI~ 01' ASSESSMINT DISTRICT NO IS.I WATl!lt, SEWElt, ANOltECLAIMIOWATlll IYITllMI CONTRACT NO l fORTHE lltlltNI ltANCH WATl!.R DISTRICT NOTICE IS HEREBY GlllEN 1""11111! llo.>rdOI Oortt<IOr\of Mid 01\lrttl In v•tf'I\ ftrtd wlll rect1ve W'~l_.d P"OOC>'\al\ CbfCl\I L1C> to'""' ~ur Of 4 JOO m Of\ tM 11111 day ()f l•nu•rv ""·&I tnt ollicf'OI WOOd\10. 1<ubota & A•-•<1tn. Ill( •> Ql"'ln .,.10 .. tor lurnl\lllr>O to '-ftlO Dl\trtct ~II tr MSPOnallOfl. m•t•rl•h. eQulp ment l&bOr \tr"WICe\, And \uocM ... \ tW<e\.,,ary to conttru<t MIO wotk tor the~' lrt<I •1 whl<fl lime \dtd pfof)Olal\ '"'" br oubll<ly OOPMd and r•i><I a lOUO •I t!W' 11111<• 01 WOO(h•d• /llubOt• A"" A\.OC.l•t••. Ir>< • 141 s South Borell, SAnl• AM c.n111arn10 '1?701 S,,.ld t111t\ \r\1111 Conform to.-.~ tWt r~U)On\1~ to ttw Cnntr .. ct Oa<umt!f'lt' t~r \Aid Wotk A\ hftr ~tofnrP App.tOved by WUJ 01\tfl(t end M\l't t)e •<~Otnttd by t,. witu,.lty rff}ft,,f'O 10 thert'ln Coo1 .. of tllf' Contract Oo<.,,,.,....,t,.,,,.onftl••~ may bf't••mllW'll on ti.eot fif'" ~ tM O·~•ritt •n<J tn ,,... oftl(~ 01WOCM1s10f!'1'Cubo1A Anrt A\WKIAfff, In( 4t lhelll>Ovoedclrt\\ ~·may I>" f)Urtho\fld el l""offlc• of WOOO"OO "ubnta ftnd A\\OCl•hl•. ltK by payment ol \40 00 poor "'' M<I Ill" cCKI i. not r.lunO..Ole re~rOln• ol _...,.,~,. 1f"f' O'~\ •Ot1 \.Of'(lf•c•'tOft\ "'' r'1~ Pl•n\ttnd\pe(lllUllOR\.,lllbfo""°'lf'd Ul>l><'~I IOl>"O~<IM!b-n lot.,. eotl•llot••I IS 00 lnonrel.,._.,,., lo COW< IM <O.I Of DMl•oe •oo "-lllQ In '"«ortlan<t •Ith Ill<' l.M>or Cc* of the St•1e ol C"lllornto Ille lrvl,.. lllltl<I> W•ttr O•>trl<I hn •'<•r1••fW'<I Clt'l•rmlned •ncl -td lfl*OtM••• on valllnq rate of.,., d'"m ,._., .-fnt 11"f"'rot P<"e••llll'IQ r"'• IO< "'9-111\ollday .,.0.....,.11,,.,...o<-on Ille 10<.oltly ,nwlll<ellWld _., IStoi..-nor,,...,toree<h <r•ll ctaulllcetlO<'t.,.. IYDtt °' ...,...,,,.,, i....-to oucute Ille u><1lr<KI -0 H SllltlDe mMld•tory uoon 1114< Contr«l0<towl\oM tM Gonlr0<I l\•w•rOtO_,. on any worontr.clo• unO.,. tim to,..., no1 '"" ,,..,, \e•d -c11..o r•tH 10 •11 _.,,_ tftlPIOvecl In lllfJ HIKvtlon ol IM Olfll•ICI A~ ol 11'11 Oltf"r•I P<"9 v.i11no r"'"' OI ._, 1, on""' 111.,,. office o1 IN '"""' Rtn<'ll W•'91 Olflt1<1 --II brPOStedete.ch loC>tl .. tpy tr.Conlr.clor E.c<1 otd or Df~• •Pl•ll 111 -""'or WIWNtt.cl on• IOfm luflli\fleO .. ...., "'t~ Conlr•I Oocumtnl\. ...O musl be K~lcld Dy. c•.i.i.r H~O OUfllll.o<IW<~.<>< • bl<IOcr'•llond1n•n•-r>oll .. ,llwt1100..of t,...""'°""1 11111111 bid mtllOt P•V•l>I• ~ llllordltr of. or for 1111 lltnotll ol wkll Olt!rlct, •\ lN <mt _, ~ -ea<fl Dtd Cit Clr-' >NII !If' _..Hid -llled wltll the S.C.re1•v o1111e Ot•tr1c1 •tor.._. 11111""' '" 1110 ,..,<* "'°"'-Tiie _.,.. mtnl'-0<"*0 Of bolltltMll IMIO•...,. ... OUM.,.,.H lll<tl lboDl-r wlllenlor I" '°. C ... lrec I wllto ,,.. Oltlrlel 11..,.,dtd 1111 ---· -Wiii oe _ ,_ -ll<HI 1411\e •utteulut Ollldlr r•t-.1oen1or 1n1owt0Contr1t<t E.ocll l>IOor ~Ml the II lie 4K com pen led by ltw! lltt (II oroDOMtl lUl><Oflff K lon TMCoflt•KllldMfled>MolOUt 1•1v-.i .. """"'.. OoltMlty o..c~- ' '4,000 L.F .. lllCft lo 1 .. lllCll W•1ffllfttt I J.OOOL F' 11 onc:n to IS itl(h s.-r l.IMt II .,000 L,' .. IM,. to If Ill(" Wotttftlft_, II 4,000 l .F ft lll(n 5'wtr Llrw• Ill ,.,000 L P' 1 lnc:lllo11 tn<ll W•l•rlllltt Ill 12,000L F t ln<,.totHncllS.-rLI"" 010. •re to .,. ,.. ... on .,.. ~" • ......,,., <>< ....., comblMllOll ot --Tht eo.ro Of OlrKIOM ot 1111 Olttl'lc:I ..... "'" ..... rkltll IO"''"' -.,,., •II bid\-to,..,,,. ""Y <Ind •II f'"911tllfl1~ Ill ..,y DIO llY fH& OllOl!lt 01' THI OOARO ~ OIRICT0115 OF Tl41! lltVINI llAN,MWATElt DISTRICT 0.ltd Ot<•"'"*' 1• .. ,. 8'olh J W""otf A\\l•IAtll 'le<mtrv Pllbll-""Or~ Coetl Diiiy f>llol. ~ n. JO. 1tlt ,_,. 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I . .. , -· .... ,.,..i;, on ,,,. '-••1,.t l.v.•1 DAILY PIB.OY CLASSIFlrc&> ADS One Call Sefv~ Foat Cntdtt Approvol ~.~~ ........ ~:!!.~.~ ........ I~!~!.~~.~ ....... . G-c al I 002 G~ I 002 G......-ol I OOZ I ...................................................................... AX l SAVE $42,110. 3 Spacious Ult • 28A. ro1.y Christmas fireplace and country kitchen llurry. J>lt!ll!lt! call 898-8755 540-3666 Unl•ertlty ,ork Braod new Townhome Jo:xclusi11e area One level 2 bedrm:.. 2 1:¥tths. d1n1n~ room .ind 2 enclosed pat1ol. Sharp lookrn& w Spanish ttle roof. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 642-5200 9 UHITS.OCEAN PRIME AREA SIH,500 2 short blocks to ocean in pride of ownersh ip nct~hborhood High sta- ble income will s how cash now with minimum requiroo down payment. llurry' Call for complete details and preview of lhis unique opportunity Ca II 96J. 7881. SLEEPER In the Baycrest/Back Bay area lurks this delightful 4 bdrm family home. The 4th bedroom. including a bath, is over the garage, making a perfect teenage or in-law arrange· ment. The home also has a pool. large covered patio and deltghtful neighbors. All in perfect condition <even the neighbors). A fine find at $U6,000. UNIVUI: fif)Mf:§ REAL TORS·. 675 6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mat ,11so '" M"~" V1•11h• ,11 ~·16 '>990 GeMrol •002 G.-rol IOOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESLEY N . •' TAYLOR CO. H.E/\LTOH.S' •• SillCl' l !H() L [lfllff!JHI UDO ISLE HO .. FOi LEASE Lovely 2-story. 3 Bdrm & den home incl. lge ms tr BR w/lge sundeck. Spac. LR & formaJ dining. Cpts. drapes. tin. furnished. Sl ,000 mo. By appointment y COSTA MESA CHARMER Fantastic J Br family home Costa Mesa ·s most popular area As· sumable VA loan Easy m onthl y payments Don 't miss this one 211 I S• J°°""" ... Road HEWP0ttT CEHTM, H.I. 644-49 I 0 1002 GMffof 1002 ..•....•.•......•.•.........................•. P $47.500 full price. Call oow646-7171 .J111"'1i 11; .J •• , , ,, ,, r, , , ,.;~, liif1B THINKING AIOUT SEWNG7 Well now is the best time of the year t~ lis t; historically. act.JV1ty is best in J anuary, right after the holidays. This year. it will be frantic. FQr best res ults. get started right now ' Call : I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 MESA DR.MAR Super sharp 4 bedroom & family Fresh paint, new l'a rp e t s thru out Ikuut1ful kitchen Large yartl on q uiet street Re11dy t.o move into Of f~r<>d at $68 SOU. Call 540-1151 ~HERITAC(> .... REALTORS CUSTOM -IUILT . TO LAST Exceptional custom home. bwlt by Leimke-Lalh & plaster construction. Has poten· t1al for RP zoning on over ~':lrd . ucre lot. Beautiful 3 bedroom, family room home is in brand-new e:onditio w1tb many custom grades. Separnte 12'x workshop. 12581 New Avenue, Tustin. DONALD M. BIRD Auooote•. lleoltor( sa BUILDER'S CLOSEOUT Durfleld Homes In lr"Yine 2-<:ompletely decorated model homes from $84,995 2-Popular S Plan from 193,495 673-4400 DMslOlt of Harbor In•~ Co. Geonttol COVINGTON 4_..LEX $123,500 1700 sq. ft. owner's suite with fireplace plus three 1002 OCEANYIEW North Laguna Beach Condo L<!rtotl' I bcdrm. I' 2 bath. flr,.place Ex- lens111e ~undeck w /(an- tasttc 111ew t:'ICIUSIVI!. $8ti.500 644 7270 huge bedrooms Tl}rec 21..:;; .. ;; .. ;;;;iiiiiiiii~ bedroom. 2 bath ;ipart· ments . s car ~a r age. WATERFRONT HOME Bes t buy in lh1s VERY popular model Call lo· Unique and Umvual with day.646-7171 h r1c-k. b ea m s and <">•~"''""""\•w,10~'", warmth A 2 Story unit [ -I attached for income. F.x· • . ' ·• c1llnR :J Bdrm home with dm1ng room. ram1ly rm, pitched beam!> & stained glass windows. The ren- HO!HO!HO! HOLJDAY Sl'ECIAL PRICE $102,500 t.al urut has t BR & Ion. with I or a kind 2 story Uving room. S239.000. - WATERFROJ'llT HOM CS REAL ESTATE 63t·140d Quick action will put you in Uus debghlful 4 bdrm . fam1ly 1din1ng. MesJ Verde home. s1tling on 4 large lot, among custom DOLL HOUSE homes Natural wood cabmets, lalN>a lay '"°P· no wax noors. lot$ of wall RNtton paper and wood paneling * .1..75•7060 • accent th1:. charming R d r 1111 home Qwc l tree Uned ea Y or orcupancy.1·---------1 street near schools and open daily 10-S, except Christmas and New 31EDIOOM shopping Pnccd to sell Years . Sale ok. located PLUS 22 • ZO ~ <J~rry' Please call at 1117 Deersprings Just FAMILYIOOM •H•N "'q"'"""'o1t1N~•· orr Deerfield Rd Ph ~-S2ll.Agt. a::;~~~~~~~~1.¥!~ [~·lt~IH;~I STEP UPTO street. Walk to sl'hOOIK. . =---·-·· -MEWfllORT churches. porks und HEIGHTS shopping center Cust.Qm Beautiful 3 bedroom or 2 built 22 x 20 fi'am1ly Owner lewlv to bedroom and walnut Room with beam cell llUJ call"'"' .,..67 Move• 4 Dedrms, or s paneled den with sliding mgs. .........,, · "'ass doOr lO 10 x 20 lat-Ol'fN ''' "· •• """' •o"' ,.,.f · and den. l~ Bath. Love . If>' [ I ly quiet neighborhood. ~~~~~c:~:~:~~~~:;;: e 11~tdi1[ aean ;::,~~ electnc range and gas . --11101 •it91I•• oven. New carpeting less T..,.., ... Ytr than one year o ld $:J4 OOO Be B 962-44•S Formal dining room · st UJ I~~~~~~~~~~ br1gbt and airy home 3 OeJrm!I. good •tarter I· throughout wttb large home• B r l ght 11nd back yard Seeing la cheeey. believing only $93.000. 1941 c-t C.11546-2313. -r- Ol'fN ft• 0.") •VIII 1()8f \ll(t• 1110 I M191'110 at 1"11111 ~~T~-:~~~2~;4Fta~4~9S~Yly~~ NORTH TUSTIN Larse home on " larRe lot ror " tarire rnmll.y 4Br, ram rm, din rm Quiet resldenuat location nr the Junction of 00/Nwpt Fwys. $71.000. m.E HOM F.SF,LLERS 7S2·5m WXUIY IHllGCAMYOM Just reduced S20.000. Spacious three bedroom, ram1ly room and dining room wilt! rantaatic view ol t.he 't\wp01'\ Harbor area H well as n1ghl lights Beautifully up· graded with enclosed private patto and attrat- tlve lnnd1capln1t. Now $21$,000. Call t1734WO. !i.iMill ~~!!!.~~.~~~ ....... , ~~~!! .':!~.~ ........ ! ~!!!.~~~ .~ ....... 1~~!~~-~~~ -~~~ ....... . a,...,..1 I 002 G~ol I 002 GtMral I 002 G&Mral I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ''People Serv1119 People" COUMTIY KITCHIN 3 B l' cl ro 11 m . :1 hath. wl'l bar, large corm·r lot . H.V or boat <H'· c es s. ;1 11 Io r $78,750. lhur). it woll't last! CUSTOM COMTIEMflORARY l'<·nm~ul,1 hum1• I lh :llroo111 , :.! halh, Lt'rra11.n, h U g t· I> a l I 0 , lnrm:ll ll\mg ;1l lb best. !Sl:!2,tJO.J 640-9900 1470 JAMBOREE filie~ 8~ 9'~~ Valley Realty I Getteral 1002Gueral 1002 .....••......••....•.•........•••••....•...... Luxurious 4 BR. homt•. F'am1 ly rm. & forma l dining. with view toward Harbor Island. Boat slip. ~25,000. . BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Ba~1de Orive, N.B · 6 75-6 161 1002 Gen.rat 1002 •••••••••• .........•.. ..•.........••••••.•... J ee'::!i~~t.~~!'"'" carpelln1ot. I•• 1111: 11111m and chmni.: roorn. p.11wl ini:r. large 1·11,1•rt·ll p.11111 fr wt trel'i. 1 '11"'"'' 1 .ii I for apporntnw111 Si., tMHJ Jasmine Creek E:xc1tin1: i.rht l1•\t'I hmnt· wllh <K 1-;,\ N V JI·,\-\ many hu1lt in f10,llu11·~ beautiful m1rrnr'. t hr"'' bedrooms & famll'r room, ind utJto, :.l t hr i: u a r d i: a ll· d 1· n t n clubhouse, pool & Jac·u111 :ind TENNIS l"OL:RTS S PANISH MANSION OH HILL POOL + BEACH S58.250 Sl.'l·hnll-11 1·•1111 I\ .1rd "" In 111 rn.1v111111 .. 11t enll•r t.11111•1' l'"t1lli11u,1· \" .1ull 1·11'1·1hni.:" ,1dcl d1 .1ma to ·"'"'" ... 111111· llui.:1 llt•JI !tr 11 1f1n1: 11 •" 1\11111! I 1rt·pl.11•e lotHll ITll"I pull \. I l I ht• II \I .1 "' I \ 1• h11l1•,1\\,1\· 111.hll'r "u111• 1i.:1w,1 qu.111<'1-. 'l1 •r 1,w1· ''"'' l•~1J,' .,parkl1111.: l~•rl.~ J.:lc11111<t... %:! iXXI Jte m cm lll'r. I II H' 1n1---------· J asmine C"n•1•lo. amt 1l ' ju.'t gredt • 18 Canyon Isl Dr. n 1i: C',1nyon c 1111 oomin1um 3 l\1•1tr 1111111 111 .. ! •kn l'.Jlh<'llr.11 r1·il ln.:s. !>IMllllU'. ):t .1n11u• ll\ 1n~ 1'1101 ,t,. lt·nn" m lh1• ht'atl uf ="'<"IWll Be<11h SI~ llMI COLE OF NEWPORT FH.1\I. fOH~ 2..)15 1-: C ''t llw• C "•l \1 675~5511 Think Future! HAPPY NEW YEAR 1))1•· I• \•·l .• lwdrm :!1• l1Jlh l11rm.tl 11111111~ l.11111 h ~-II • h l" 11 '\ U 11•11 h• r 111 :h ....,, 11,1111 ~'""' \\1 lrdl,t1dn JI l'nll 11 "" •••••••·······••······· ...................... . JIMFBIYMAN . . . has joined the ~ales staff of Select Properties. Jim. a Co sta Mesa High g raduate. rece1 ved his bachelor's degret• at San J ose State Uni versi t y. Hi s background in .banking and marke ting give him a solid basis for real est ate. For trul y professional servicing of all your real estate n~. call Jim al 751-3191. C::: SELECT I PROPERTIES G~ral I 002 GH1eral 1002 ....••.........•......••.••...•.......•....... TWOUHITS \ 3 bdrm 1-~111.l!lt' 011 IMgt' H 3 lu1 :< llll '"m mt'r winlt'r rrntal Ju,t -.t1•p s t o th•• on~an l'm·t.>d at S97.5oll tii3 3663 W:! :!253 1-: \ t::. associated llAOKEAS-AEALTO AS l OH W lolboo •11·JU 1 4 BEDROOM . 1<11: to lie11ch from th•~ bl'autiful l11J:h lv uµ ~rndt•d homl· llug1· l1v 1ng room with \ aultcll l (• I I 1 II );! ~ I; "u r m '· l k1Lt"ht•11 with lurmal dint• \S!>Utnllhlt• v /\ P•I\ rn cnt.:s ~7ti uo ix:r m1111lh I lurry' C..ill !IC)J.fi7Ci7 * .... John Shearer 2006 Vista Caudal Newport Buch Y11u a re tht• v.1n1wr 11( :! t1tkl'I:-. to llw Sports, Vacation & Recreational Vehicle Show :it lht• :\~All .. : I '1 v1>.-.\ ~:Yno-. n:NTl·:tt J.itl 2 lhl II J ,HI 'I t .ill t>-l:! 56711, 1·:0.I :1:t.l to 1'1a1111 your lll·k1•b * • • GOLF COURSE VIEW Btllh u11i.:1ad1•d \1•1\ :-.par1011s h11m•· on J.!ulf l"•Htr.,.• I tub, rn."t1•1 110" n .,, , h.1 I r1111 t1111. l~t· f <<01 rm 1.1.1'1 h.ir ,\ C.,pJOSI\ t• \ II " .'>I-> ti l!H MESA VERDE HUGE LOT BEACH ESTATE $48,250 Steps to poundrng ~uri and t:r):.lal :..&nd ! Biitk y.&nl 1:. Hay area pla) ground. WindrnJ: wooden w<1lkway:. to st·l"IUdt'd en ll> ! l:ourmct kitchen' l..u\li.h l1\•1ng r oom' Swct•p1ni.: m a ~ll'I ht-droom' Sunsh1nc brcJkfa,L pJl10. Pool . J<1cuu1 \Ollt'yball make lhll> i.:ard1•n Ii v1111: Jt tll> l111c't. Won t l.i:.l. C:Jll 1147 0010 t'f. I • ' ~ I fl "I I • t TUSTIN lkaut1ful $pat1ou:. 4 Btlrm L,.:c lot. 1mrnl'd (IC"l'UJ)ant•y Sh0.!J50 THE HOMESELLERS 752-5351 COVINGTON 4 PLEX P IL I ~1 .. : II u n t 1 11.: lo n fk•Jt"h l11l",1lHIO 1.t:'t U~ ,how ) ou how you ('Jn ll<'t·oml' lht• proud owner ul th1:. pruh·ofo1o1.nl'ri.h1p .j I'll'' c:rt·at 1n\(•:,lml'nt for t,I\ shrltcr and ap prcl·1atwn 3 bedroom o"nc·r ·:. unit with l1replate plu:. three 2 l!C'droorn unit:. o~ner 1.1.111 ht'I µ f1 nancc "'or morr 1nformJt1on c all !Jli.16767 ABANDONED PRICE SLASHED 4 IR + POOL pnvate roadway leads Lo triple <:<1r i.;<1ra~c &·duded CXCCUllH' Liit• l•ntrv • l>n11ni.: t•11tcrta 111 m t• n t "; µ t ,. u r t' a n k 1 t c· h 1: n ~ 11 .1 r 1 n g :-.ta 1rt J~t' lo bedroom rl"trrah l.u"h tropical baC'k~ ard " 'h1mmerini: -,ummer fun pool Skinny dipper-. dl.'!1.:ht' Owner hought 11c1o1. ~1u:.l :.cll Tn ff!!~) tot.ii down' 1147 Wll\ , .. .,,, ,.,,,.., [ ~ lfiallilll H04o!1H For Sale ...•.••.•.......••..••• G ..... ra.I 1002 •.......•.••....••...•. Freshly Painted Hunt*Jfon .. och l>eanc llome Cle1an . ne.il . .i bedrm. f,1m rm, 1 t'ccntly palntcd 111 and out Moat door. p.1t10. li:e liatk yard :>..Int (Jn\11)' home. Offercd Jl ..i lo" ~.50u Hurry on th•~ nn•·' ft A .SUPERB OMES RrA TV I (" 1555 W Baker, C.M. Nol 10 Markel Besk•t 549 ·8b5S -------- Corona del Mer 1022 .•.••..•.•..•••...••... PRIVATE BEACH ACCIESS 4 IR Reduced to SI 09,500. The pnce 1s r 1iiht. thl' location 1s ~rl'.Jl, thl' m:.tr bdrm &:> l(l<int. the ) ard ll> pool Mted. lhl' IJnd 1:. ft.'1:. Lhc bathrooms arc t~o a111I the fireplace:. dre loo 644-7211 em CA~l EO SHOR ES Li v rm. Sep l>imng. 3 Hr. JIJ:i P r of dee. Pool. parklike yd. $189,500 lJ) owner Ca II &4'&·4140 Costa Mesa 1024 ....................•.. FIXER UPPER In ni cc ne1 ~ h borhoml Bnnit your µamt & TLC $KU,OOO Jre a . a s king Houses For Sal4' ••.........•..•......•. Thursday. December 30 1976 O.'\'L Y PILOT 111 Hwwti'")ton hoch I 040 H04o!H• For Sd• ~r Rtal b tot" Ottltr Rul &tat" . ............•...••..•...•.•............•..... ·······••••·····•······ .............•....•.... INCOME lr•IM I 044 Commrrclal Conwntrciol PROflERTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• flroperty 1600 Property 1600 2 HOUSES Truly • · •· · · · •· • · • • · · · · · • • · • • · · · · · • · •· · · · · · • · · · · · ••· OH A LOT Snooty! T,wo lurnc llt'V. home~ on l'rt.'~t1 Gc \\'uuilbnt.li:t ,, lot lot·,1tl'<I m pnml' 111v.11homt.'. uho11t :.>OOI llw1lln)(t1m Beac h renlJl sq fl 1n::.1dt'. 4 ~droo111:-. att>J t:Jch homt:' hJ., t3J J b11th.:.. ramtl)' room + three largl' bl'droorni. 11<-n. hnl'k lln·plun·. um .mtl duublt.' garugc Tht' quc 11\Jl>ll'r :.wlt' WU\>ll masst\'l' k1tchen:1 have purqu1•t 1,:nlty · .. '11rm1·1 <ill the built 111::. Ownt'r 18 m<l<h·I." $.'18.!150, UI\ H v.1llmg to ;,ell on 1m m t Jll Mo-1720 XLNT INVESTMENT ll•rl·i.l only loan C111l Cor 10 Offices + 2 sccn·tm y's ofCices. t- room for large law librnry & reception room ; includes plan:; for con~iderable l'XJHuls1on $235,000 Wtth good lt!rin~ available ii how1nl( lll>IJOllltmcnl TARBELL <714 ) 842·2535 I i'J ,II Y • \ • ! f'J l I S&S Resale Spec1alusts. 3, -I or 5 bdrm models avo1l, !>Orne w, poob. 968 4002 ~nnington Propcrtici. FHA ASSUMABLE Cho1ct' opportunity for a good home and o grcat loan in the t·t:nter ol JI li Masi.t\l' i.lone f1rtplace. 24" f<im1ly room. curpd· m~ and drJpe' $15,000 d own payi. to Fll A balanc·e and $-109 p1•r month pay,, all. SS9,000 full Prt<"l' llllllrtY! 531 5800 International Real Estate Network REMODELED COTTAGE "ASn I In Collfonda" M1cn11b-lrvine 1(1·.,\l .TY t"O~l l' \' Y WOODIRIDGE TOWN HOME Thi:. beautiful 2 bl'droom Houses For Sal• Housu For s• l~ lhe least CXpt.-0!\l\'e U( ••••••••• •••••••••••••• •• •••• • ••••••••••••••• • ferini: in thl' \'1lla.:e Newport Beach I 069 Newport Bea'h I 069 Spurk hng cle<1n t!t shm) • ••• •••• •• •• •• • •• •• •• • • •••• •• •• •• •• • •• •• • • • •• • new .. <tnd 1f you HUIUt\ llG CANYON Sl'Yt:l.,\SS 1111.L, \ u. ;1 )"Oumay!>Ullchoo:.e)ou1 VIEW · S215,000 Ur :! 11.1. l..ii.t lJ1;1r1d nt"V. own c..irpel color. Fan \ 1c" N1•wporl H.1y lo hou"c !)~ 11w11c1 ~ t Kli09 la:.lll" lol·atron! Walk It C...tahnu' Iron ~ak 1•n IJkc' The .. Good Ltfo' try M..immoth II\ 111.:i---------• t-an be your:. for onl) roonr "1th \ 11-;w • ~1Jr LIDO ISLE $16ti.OOO I W31 I tile llr1·pl.u 1· 1'.111l'11•1l Lila llar~r 752 1411 lormal tlm111i.: room Wt'l _ ___ bar Sp..1c1uu~ k1\l"h(•n &. WILLOWS $62,500 Grcat family home. :! UDllM . 2 baths Unu~ually lur~t· lnL for l<im1ly l'llJoym1•11t. Onl' or the best l.Juys 111 I r\'lnc. pantry. 1-:xtrJ lari.:1· masll'r wing <: la,!>t•tl v11.'v. patio Lo.uh of stora~t·. :1 l"a r i.:..ir J)H" Call 11ow for 1w1!.onal pn•vit•w. 7~2 1100 (1q ,, ,. ' :! Bdrm + r.kn . frpk, :! IJ.tlll~. IJl•i.fmt'(l l"l•11. hL rm $1 15,lkkl 3 lldrrn . updall•d k1ltJ'I • ( r p I . "111 1• & :. pan ! $147,IJOU LIDO REALTY . :1:177 \i11 l .itlo.'.'i.ll • *673-~300 * 10?6 1----------1 •• •••••••••••••••••• ' •• JUST LISTED THE VIEW ALONE IS W<HtTll Bran d rll'W curpcts. drapt•s. paint and Leaked floors. f;nclo:.cd garden r oom h1g hl1 ghti; thh spet·tatul..ir horoe. :I llcdrm . 1 '1 Uath. 2 f1rt•11ldc1·'· Ju-;t a "hort lf5l3 C.otPUSDl·IRVINE 1.1...ilk from golf l·oursl.' 111 --Or'EJll DAILY NEWPORT SHORES A homc to n•mcmhl'r' :! Bed rm ano den. 1·1• b..ith Cumplt'lcly t'.1rpclt•1l Atriu m view fr11m bedroom & II\ ini: rm EnJOY the "Jrmlh of wood and charm or mir rors. Ubll' J:Jr v. .iulu opener Ownt'r nl•ed:. la~L $1 lfi,001l MoH· 111 lltl\\ ROYAL REALTORS 1694\l<"ummodc i-:. .. lrell;1 l'Jpo lkh. 4!JJ.;!14J o n c o f II u n I 1 n I: Lu n 8 A M. TO Ii P M. ~arh0l> hnl•::.l arl'a:> All --------- \tlJ.1n•nl c>t·1•an & Mann..i \IC" t•:-.t..ilc '>llCd lot 111 .lrl'a ur ~150 ':!00 <foo horn1:~ :5111.000 for lioth. th1::. for only 583,000. HOLIDAY SPECIAL Ta~c 4 Bcdrms. l>cn and Family room. add pool. JllCUlll. fire ring JOll superb dl•roratrng !'ct 111 lovt-ly ne1Rhhorh11od on pnn1tt-. lrl't:' hncd Cul de Sac·, pay only $92,0UO and happ1nc:.s ,., .,urf? tu follow 1 • Roberts Realty llil41 firath Hl•d Hunun11on •••rh 1048 ......•.............•.. sale. <:all 5-IU 11:;1 ~HERITAGE · REALTORS COMMERCIAL J AHCHOlll.AGE LOTS INVESTMENTS f.'rimc l'al·1f11· Coast 17141 496-771 I llwy loc:at1011. Two c .11----------'---------....J lots & three I< 2 lots 'I olal packagl' $231 .C~Ml NORINS REALTY * 494-8057 * MYSTIC HILLS 3 hr. 3 ha. Sauna, :;pee la1:ul11r v11. Krcat E>.l·t• ho m l'. $155.0110 . Ai;l 67:1 7ti0l LAGUNA HIDEAWAY HEW PRIME Waterfront Cando 2 Ur. 2 sty tn 11•\ cl. lorm:il din rm. till' lloal "l1 µ s200,ooo l'h 55:! 7tl'J I NEWPORT SHORES 2 Br 2 Ha, rlt•n ;i IMllO" l ~Ly villa. $73,000 ti-12 •H17 Ownl·r Income Units Nr. the Ocean Ii llN ITS ON Tiii< 1.11.LWF Wmll'r & Sum· ml'r rl·ntab t:ood 111. v ~· s l ml' 11 t I' r 11 pc rt y . S:MS,<JOO ~.!!50. Agt. 673-7601 •_• _-•--------• 2 Bedroom & dc·n 1n Canvon w i.cd11d1'd rear y;ird I' alio. lt•rral'c & tn'i' house One mile to town & bcach ,\II th1:. ror onl v !1'>4 500 Ca II now ltJ :>l.'l0 1>45 tit>-16 NEWPORT BEACH Rluffi. 3 llr. 21, haths large family rol•lll "; Pl;1n llnoh!>lrurt<·d \ 11•w or H..t l'k ll.i} ''" IJr~t· )(recnbcll L1 kl• lll'W concl Walk to pool<; Ferr l>alt: hy o" 11t-r .1i:enl $1 :rJ.WO 1;41 li5W t·\ cs 152·JC14 l rla v:. 2 tJN IT~ 'IJl':W, n1·.1r on·an 3 llH, :! R .\ nwnt-1 ·:. unit :.! BH. 11" U/\ rl·ntal lllllt SI02.ROO. JAY W \'E1\T::-. CHOICE ~ASTSIDE 4llll 2BA home near Wesltliff :.hopp111R & !>choob Pia} howw 1n n• ar yard, bout C'ampt1 :.torai:.e CALL tcKJa~ to :.t.'r this fin e f.im 1l} home. 645-6&16 BeJch Property. :! hr start1•r home Olc1 .ind small hut t-lcan and neat' Only $12.000 T1) lW. down l'nn<' only l\c•nl Hogt•r-. Heall-., twl! 8300 . HUNTINGTON LAHDMARk 1 lps t;i1rs I Hr Condo Posses!.1011 3 , I $15,U{)(. ca::.h lo $18.000 loan a1> prox. Appl only Eve~ .--------•I 5pm.Spm. 960 2583. Pnn c1pabUnl}. ----- /(" PRESTIGE I HOMES JWN. Ne"port. N ll TRADE/SELL Hew Listin9-Yiew Newport llRIS homt•. xtra Ir~ lot w man) pos!.1b1htws Loh of t''< lra.., hl'rt' C1\l.L now f'.xtra spat•1ous I bedrm UNITED BROKERS home. mint cond. Ire JohnC'areyGRl6~1i·7414 fenced yard. secluded. ----- Closc·m SS7.500. PENINSULA POINT '"Z" Reafty 494-861 I Charm111~ 2 Story homl', H EAi.TO HS 1!1\1 2:!:17 San Juon Capistrano 1078 ..•.................... Charmmi.: <!700 i.c1 fl. 4UH. on Jppru\ ', cw11•. FnrmJI 1hn. pan"ld forn rm " wt-l bar l'ror ly lci"><'P<l .:round" Slti-1.500. •BOHO REAL TY• GALLEH Y nf I 10~1 ES 17141831-9411 • South Laguna 1086 1110 t hd :! 1111 : ,ton hum•• 111 d11111·p \11·~~ \'c•rtl1• lt.1li.10 till' 1'n 1ran1·1•, li.:1· I.I< " I'\ 'tnlll' frplt-(11111 din rm f,1m l.1tl"h1•11 I 111 rll' '·" '<lrt•t•I " '" ·' 11:" lot '>I~ :>-1!JI COMPARE THIS 2 Separate Houses on l ~ot. 1-\J II of Eastsidc Charm. S8S,OOO. Seaclfff s•dor Gorgeous 4Br, fam rm, JBa, 3 car ~:irugc, 2 frplcs. btrl he ated pool w 1Jacuui. '" hlk from Country Clb. te nnis & golf course. walk tt beach. Anxious owner. $115.000. ---2660 sq rt. 5 Fir. 3 ba, lgt' MOBILE HOME family rm, ti.: veranda. ....................••. . Happy New Year! ln lli1:1 d1.11 mm.: .tlm11,1 llt'W 4 l1Nl1 rn la1111h r1w1m, hr.11n1·•t 11·1!111..: horn1· II\ 1ni: r<•ttn liHI I. B.1v 11r1•a ..,p;, ·~~I \\, 'I n llant .. r ,II ·11ii1.11 hrn • MESA VERDE (lr't 111 t1111 l h1111·1· -..1111•r .1 hl'llrm • d1·11 F1•,1t1111111 .! I 1n•1•l~1t'•··· l11t" II I p.111 1• I 111,: "tllp.q•• I plll'lt I JJlh I•··· 1 .. ·.tr "" \ .11 .1ri1 11· ,111\ 1111 \11111 trl'il'"' I 11111 l'rt• t·d 1101\ ~11 l~HI C0Jll ;11, "®I . ... HERITAGE •..• REALTORS F101I v.h.11 .•• I "tnl '" ---------U.uh 1'11.,l I I 1 .1111·!1 \\,1111 \•l • THE CAREFUL IUYER'S DREAM Gd m o11· f11r .\ottr 111onl'y with th1~ oubla111!1n~ T11rtl1• Hot:k ;1 bdrm. home onlv ·I hnu ~l'S lrom park & puol, with fJrrnly 1 norn . din111J..( rm .. atrium &. t·11u 11t rv s l \It• woodt•n decktnlo!. SX!J,~50 Land 111(:tudcd G""'°I A COl.DWIEU IAHKER <.:O. 644-17 66 2161 SAN JOAQUIN HlllS AO IN NEWPORT CENTER 1002 G.-rot 1002 ···•········•···········••···········•····•••· cae: 110181 BLllNS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SCRVIC[ FIRST OffalHG! • LOYR Y UDO ISLE Delightfull y n cro r a t e d . 3 Bedrooms +. Features Unusual Walt Pan e linic & Coveri ngs. Master Bedroom With Separate Dressing Area. Walk-in Closets . Street to Strada Location. Large Patio $149,500 Ill DOYH D•IVI 631· 1800 ----------~ Below Market """ '"u' ""'" r.1nrh in , ·····"· ... 1.:11·"11· 1.1 hi1 f\ It 11 Jiii Ujl "f "" ,11•\ I 0,tll\111\ I \ I 1111111 \ Onh ..:no 1>1r a•11·. "'" cnm.1tl1·1 t1,1t.!1 &i{i :cl.?X ••\ l"' t;l5 15ii Lachenmyer Reall0t S82,000 ·1 Borm . bonus room. hll!!l' country k1t t•hcn with frpk. <;n•aL lm~ation n1:11r park & tennis 1•ourt.s t2lnet l'Ul de s:ic o;trN'l A~:.umuble V A. loan alff'•'; C. F. Colesworthv REALTORS 640-0ofo $59,950 -I Rcdruum, i halh, 1 harm111.: home with m·dr nt•w plu,h c-.irpel· 1n1: Wood :.hmitlc roof H1•aut1ful lanllHaptnl'? wllh spnnklers L.ocat<'d in fin(' n<>1ghborhood nr S ("11;1.,t l'l:l/O 11 Newpo~ 64i~agn ANYTIME I 002 General 1002 ...........•..........•........••.•.....•..... macnab I Irvine realty FRONT ROW IN THE ILUFFS Beaut iful "Uelor cs" m odel e nd·un1t. View the bay & wide greenbelt. Lov<'IY kitchen w /brkfsl. room. Custom mouldings + oak cabinets. J bedrooms w /"wn lk -rn" closeLc;. Newly carpeted & draped + handso me wal l cove rin gs & appointment~. All this for S152.500 leasehold or ~uhmtl on lcasc /opt1on. Catl}y Schweickert 642-8235. (W29) PROMONTORY IA Y 4 bedroom h o m e on e nd of Pro monto ry B ay. Br<J i ilian Rosewood den accented by lus h carpeting. SL Charles kitchen. Sauna +jacuzzi. Slip + pier priv. Alarm system. S.165,000. Roy Romey 642-8235. ( W30) 642-823S 644·6200 901 Dover D~lvt Harbor View Ctnttr lrvlne at Campus Valley Center 752·1414 3 ledroom/2 Both Dbl. garage. Fenced yard. SS0.750. Term s. Ray McCardle Realtor 181 0 Newport Costa Mesa 548-7729 APPROACHING PERFECTION In design . in 1111alily m ltvabihly this impcc cable Mesa Ver de ex ecuL1ve ramtly home can hl' lhc answer to your 1977 dre;im:.. Fl'atunnit formal II\ mg plus a big family room Eat h w11h a fireplace Formal dm mi: and a large kitchen S big bedrooms 2680 s11 ft rn all The rest 1s breath . takrog. I st lime ad 'ertrsed. $112,500. Cal I 546-2313. A~ Hose Si mon111n PACERA REALTY (213 >9'15 2621(714 )522 0872 MUST SELL Facing Foreclosure NC«lo; a httlc work, 4 Ar 1.1. Ba. covered patio yard w1rru1t trees k1tr hcn w lot<; of t-up l.X>ard-.. nc>ar :.chis, shop ping & park ONLY $57,000. 846-8579 ens. lrYiM 1044 Large. 1969 Star mobile top s1dt• deck. l'crfccl home: 26x43. m Laguna rnolh cr·1n -law unit Beach . Large l o t . w 2ndkitch.Nrorcan& secluded & quiet. Moun· bay Simple f1nanc1n)! lJy tainviews.$13,000 o wne r . No p oints. Owner/AJ(t. SHJ.UOO. Ph mfi~1k;H:c>© 673 3JSO. rn@fi:\Il~~ 1-------1 499.2aoo Prime Area $19,500. Lovely 2 br . apt. Oen side of Hwy. View. 497 3595/494·6320 Agt Newport IlerghLs ho me arrud trees & nowrr'. 2 BR, den, 2 lJa i::,tr:i lariie II\ in,:: rm. with ---------•brick frpk + 2 hon11~ ..A6lan REAL ESTATE QOO Gll.'nnl.'yre Sf.- 494 9473 ~49 <Ill& rooms adJOl n&ng dhl t·ur gara~e on alley. $119,500 Oceanfront Largest & best duplt•x in town . S pec tacul;i r 2 [JH, 2 lfo, newly der lHO Ucgrcc oct·an v iew. Puhlic hcach iH'cc:;'..o;. $125,000. 492 6700 Print'. only _______ _ Westminster 1098 .............•......... $49,950 SUPER DOOPER 3 Tlcdroom. de n. c·l·nl:t'a l air. 111c c fcntcd ya r't.I. ( 'onvemenl lo :.hoppmg & Wt::> I :>IU INC. Hi Quality Deh ghtrJ patios with waterfall and frwt trees: stone fplc. leaded glass. white water vu ; 2 bdrms $115.500 coastline vww~. 2 Bit & 3 OtfMf-Real Estate BR. with f:im1lv rm . !\ ba . 4 frrks , 5 endos<'d • •• ••• • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • garages. Many extras~ Mobile H o•s Fine<;l in evt'rylh1n.:' For Sale I I 00 S350.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ---------· :-.'1 l 0 •H· H •-' M11b1lt• M111l11 l.1r Home & _A~~ l.lwldmi.: Dl'l1\c'n . Sci· PRll'lm 1'0 S ELL. by owner. $85.000. lmmed -~ up, & ~rv11·1• ti75·7$70 RI." 1. I Y for fret• est or info. ,..,., 'lrwporl l'o•I (l(flt • EMERALD BAY By Owner I Lie. Bkr.) H • d O<'t'Upam·y Luxury 2 BH ac1en a library, Rancho San .Joo S.outiful 3000 Sq. feet Quin Condo. fo'ully ap Whlte·woter ocean view Pc:rdo Verde Park Ole! Elegant arc hed ex-point e d , in c ld air Opcn·beamceilmgs FEB> THE DUCKS Spadous 2 Ur. l"•B;i, lcrior. larae es liite 547-3987 or aft. 5pm & t'rcdBri,Rgs AJA .. fr o m th e I .RC . " d d terf t ti k 2 st s pool & rec facil, 11uu·k grounds. 5 bedrooms, 3 wknds544·5704 es1gne wa ron t'<' : ·.' y .. I. · .. un • I •• b sale. Sl7,000. A~ ltv:.c baths, family room + t mmg room, uen o . "" P nyrm ; " u. S1mon1un . den. formal clrninl(, wcl 1---------• 2 bedroom 2 baths Xlntc·ond. Walk to pool~. har, built-In vatuum. THE TERRACE lrg lot-rm to expand tennis &ocean $00.500 PACERA REALTY Tr u I y s n 0 0 t y Beautiful .. Cardiff" l'HICES189.500 CAYWOOD REALTY (714)522 0872 ncighborhootl, nKn. cull model home localed on Call for apJll. 494-8371 * 548· 1290 * (213) 945 2Ci21 , 540-1720 i:::~rr ~r;c~~l~.r ~~";~ LC199"1 HI~ I os2 ·-------lnconw P~operty lOol) TIRIEU "# I In Caltfontia" By Ownr. Clean Colle~e Park Jbr . 2ba, pool, xtras. 833-8690. OCEAN VIEW Pres tigi o u s a r ea. Custom home at r e - asonable price. Call for Info. 641-3474 .... 1.,.,·-1- •Extr1 nice Spanish 3 BR. family rm. ftml din, new paint, paper, crpt & roof. lla:i c-verythlnit 2110 Monrovia, CM . 64&-1009 Owner. carpets. custom dra pes •••SEATERiiA•C•E•.. B~n~~~~~~l3L~a. ••••••••••••••••••••II•• and shadei1, Llnted .Rla!ls fam. rm. poss. tse/opt. 8UNITS on clcrestoryandk1tchcn 48R 2ba popular "'J " Uy owner.752-539l wmdow!I Super sharp 2 Plan. Corner lot. Qutet bdrm home with double cul-de·sac. heated pool garal(e, at only $72.500 Located in the private red hill ~ .... 55 2-7500 SUflERI!! C'omm -4 Lennis court<;, rec. cente r . walk to beach ENJOY T H I-; GOOD LIFE. $12S.OOO. Broadmoor Turllerock --------••t wit h se l ec ted w a ll par.ers. lu s h landscap nil. lanai. 4 bdr ms.. formnl dlnln11. romity rm. "9'J,950 ~~;,ooo~-VI LL~ REALTOR COUNTRY COMTEMPORARY Rustic 2 bedroom, 2t,;, bath townhome on roll· Ing h illside. Big windows with wood11y views. 26 foot master suite with study alcove, format din· ing room. open to pnvate 11arden patio. SOT.800 C:J Coldwell Bonker 131-0136 Sell thlnl(11 fast with Doily 496-7222 Pilot Went Ads. 1---------1 BLUFFS BEST BAY VIEW FRONT ROW END UNIT EARLY AREA Ver y choice 3 btlrm .. Dolores plan" Totally redecorated (new paint, carpeting, draperies>. Fantastic waler . view. Neurby Pool. Just r e · d uced to $132,500 for qwck 11ale: also avail. for I t $675 th .. i!i.1 •1 111111!• ~~·ti .. i!:l'.111111 11 ' Rr,1• I 640 ')C,1;(j l\ny l1111ro £ .1·.lt.lufl 1'11o1I 111<1,1 Santa /\na. Five 2 bdrm. & 3 I bdrm. Prime pro- perty. $125,000, l~·" down llLLGRUHDY REALTOR 675-61&1 UNITS '1 4 -4-7-16·18-30·32·48 · 64·80-224-286-SOME Fix- er Uppc•rs. SOME btlRld new, SOME pride.of· ownership l,.Quail l '. liilPlac• · Prap•rtl•• 7S2·1~20 1400 OUAllST HIW,Otl llACH UNITS-10, Ensti.tdt'. s h o wa pride o r ownership! Call 645·030~ Foresl E. Olson Inc.I Rltn. I 1 I I r 88 DAILY P1L_O_T _______ T_h_u_ns_oa.._y_D_ece __ m_t>e"'-r 30""--1"'"97_6'-- ~ R~al Es tat• ~ Unfwnllhed .....................•. ·••••••·••······•···•·· .....••••.•....••...... l~omr Pro.,_rty 2 000 lalboa lslcand 3206 cO.ta M•1a 3224 .......................•......•..........•......•......•••......•.... RESORT PROP. llOUSI:: WANTtm on yrly siss 1 ur d upll'>1: i,.~ uul 3:! VNITS on 4 n<'rt'!4 111 ++l ':~.i~a ~":'0,&.ml' S1n~l e' fo'ee SlS ilo"' nluwn IH<; lll'. \I( :1 alM> ~ m•> b7:J 5!1lh Lk·al·hcomb::r. 631 2011 hlk". Irvin IJke l nrn1n Capistrano S.ach 3218 KIDS IPEfS OK " ):JU,OVO ~1 I) ~ .. lie~••••••••••••••••••••••• I ' l'lll'I' 1" $!lll,lKMI ')IAJ, Ltu..,n1f11·c-nt Clt'l'llll \ 11 w :!br. E ~Ilk ~J'' ~.•rd. I S JI 11 " •· S2!J5 mo 675 lS:!5H 111 • ow11 • l' "'' "! c ,1rn l'\N' home 3 ll1 . :J 11.1 &16 ·~Iii IMl.IO<'I' .1l H JI Ow lll'r l'honl! '1~l6 177:! 111°!\jk'l'UlC, lll'l 0\h (:,1i.h 01 t1 .tdl0 CALL 645·6646 e HEHIGE I HOME~ :-. \"' I 'I. 1-: \11 .-; I I. 111•,i\Cll l 'M 'IS '"I HIPLEX' ~11.irkltn~ •:! :! ~ lvw11h'l' 111111:-. 111-.t :! hl11('k' Imm "urt. I Y1:. 111·w ~11'.l,.MI • • I· O l ll I' I I· X ' ' """·"'"'"'" w l'I I pl.tn111•tl :t :I:.!:! JU'>l :! 111111 .,., lu :-.111 I SI t.5:.'!1 ~"'"" !Sew ilsl 1111: lll Sl:J!l.[~KI •Ill': HTJI \ 111•::" H'r' • I< I·.\ I.Tl Ht:O. 1!1:! I 1 :! I •t!) l>tl !\l,1r S.rn I h 111 Costa Mesa FOURPLEX .t u.·dnw1111, '.! l1.11h ,1n1I :! lt.·lll'IKHll, I l1o1lh UllllS \\'1fl 1'011,llh'I 1•\f'lt:tllj!t• l'rl\,111· p.t111" 1•\l1a large un1h <:11·,11111\•·~f llll'lll pt1ll'llll.il lei~~~~~ Properties . 751-1920 ... 1400 QUAii sr NIWPOQI lllA(t< Mt•,,,,1 V 1°1 !11• :Jhr. 2ha . Corona del Mar 3222 dl.111 & pil'ltY ~11 5 :uoo • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~(j mo;a b 1-t ut:k1 •S of llv. \, 111•w1•r 3 hr, , :!bd, fpk. 111111 ~ 1111 111·ts Dano Point 3226 t l't j!ar ~Pf.J t11 :t l~IUO ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ~fir. lll'W q11' drpi. ln1·!1 )11 F1 pl '\u tlui:,.. a fl ll-. onlv :);17., 1:.t J,I K:ll.J •• :!'..:5 SToro 3232 .........•...•......... RENTALS Lt•.i)l', ht•aul :J BH 2 lt.t J \S '\11 "It~; l' It E Eh · S homl' Ila-."' I' tll·n n1•\0o 11111:..L vvµular· 111odt·I ly p1t1nlt><l mMde 1111·•· 1'J,1n 2 "'llh :! lwtlrlrh If. lr1d:.cp'i.:. auto i.µ111klr-. d t•n , tJll i.:r .. c·nbdt w 1th t'O\ paL1n ~Ofl p m11 •N'••an Vll'W from J>Jllo A Call Ku't), ::,.1!) 1>!62 IJar)!.llll Jl sns Jll'r rnlh m1 yearlv lt·ll~l' lrwludc:. fowdain Valley 3234 •• I I a m c n l l 1 "" ' • ••••. • •••• ••••••••••••• l°lUbhUUM.', pool Jat'U/11, n !Cf J 1J •> 1J t tc•nru' l'Ollrh C el'. f • ~ a, llU l'j.J :., n'\/ BE<:o-..1 \ <'hai m <lrµ:.. rpk 1•111'1 pdt10 ,., I I $375 11111 :Jh3·45ti!J 1111: -Ix rm "" ""' ner ut. 531 !IS.15 ,, t No f , , '\o pd:-. or d11ld1 en ~54.l i: i:t 11t•r mlh 1.G 3 Ult. :J HA. frpl, () :'..: L 1\ It 1-. S I' U H .. 2 d'h"'"r !\l uny uµi.:rJth:s ltdrm, 2 b.1th, 110 pt'l..,, ~31'15 7 H :11,:1 l!'llll) 01 (Ille l'ar !;(a l' S.170> per ~II !l:;,i!'> A~l , '.'lo F t•t· rnlh, )t'~lfl) kasl.'. \lcry uwc :1 lllJH 'I J 't BJ P n ·,ui.:e ON !llG t'O Hll "lt \ afcil S IOO mo. A~t Ill-:,\ C II II H ":\I;.": rt:-. 9b2 1471. !'>4fi XJCJ:I I >HI\'!': Fahulou'> Vww. I bdrm~ rumi·rLiht.•l,G Bo1111' Hm .I BH.<! 1lt·11. Fabulou' , •l'W St;5(1 BA, l rpl. 1l"h"':-.hr. q.1h. 111:r mth Yi·Jrlv lt'.isc r~1 fl' ( .rll ,il1<1ut uur oN \ST. /\Vf::>.U~;. in old llu-:-..1.m.1 \ l1011u~ S:l!t!i l'orona dl'I l\l,1r 2 bdrm 71 l t/l .. J o\,~;:J 111· 5Jl !J..11!> unit w ,1:araJ,?l'. IJundn /\J.,'1.. Nu 1•1•1• 3 Br. <ll'll. ::? II.II I pit'. hlll.!<' Housea Unf..,.,.~ H~sH Uftfwnl.Md HouHI Unfumi~ Aparfl,wnta Furn IMd ~·•h l.lilrfwft.. AJ* hanh ~ ..••••.....••..•.•...............••..•..•................•....•....•............•....•..•........•......••.......•. ··••·••············••·· Ir-tin. 3244 Loguna Miguel 3252 San Juan Newport a.CKh 3769 Costa Mua 3124 Costa Mffa 3124 ••••••••••••• •• •• • • • • •• •• •••••••• •• •••••• •• •• • Capi.1tranio 3278 •••• •• •••• ••• • • •• •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LE/\SESJ\VAII.1\Hl.1<: OCEAN. vu;w. J<lult ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0C'\'llllfront 1:uruuc Arl. ;i Wfl(C 2 br, 1 b". cot~l(C :.? Br w/gar. $?30. N <'W l.1vc in lrvm0 V1llt11(i: 1•ornmunity ~I'·"' :! Hr, IM CH "'RMIM,._ Br, 1 b,i, nv P<'t~. 1111 µd . Kncl 11<1ra.:t•. Jo.ulll (. M crpt, hte tncd yd w /patio. Weh3vl'l1<.rml':.uvu1I for den.:: UIJ , hie $475 mo ._ ... Aviu l now lo 11/30. SJ25 Adultis only, no pcb. W.iter pd. 2224 .. 0 .. lt>~c m •• too 4'11l2 OLD SAH JUA... mo 646 2510 $300 ~ 5300 Pl11ecnU<1, call bctwn 1·~. W.ilnul S'}UaH· • Th I., (' h II I Ill I 0 ~ 2 ----636-4120 Randi l'al llomt·' t 1 own \ .illry ll11thl.in1h ~room, 2 l.talh & dcn ST1':l'S TO Beach, 3 br 2 N1('c l l>r. fr pie. pool. ---------- Un•l1wlr1 l n1\ f'k J llr 2 ha, him rm •'Ill 111 homt! ha ... plu;.h rarpet h :i W n l r. $ 3 5 0 ,idull,, no ~LS. S2l0. mo Lovely Sin&le dwelling 2 Cuhenl.1lt• Col I' ..irJ.. kit Ir ~: 11.·nmi·it 11 • rm 1ng, f1rl'µl atc, bwlt Ill) & 213 t1ro Jll0.1 !>411 47~7 or1>46·379"___ br, n.-wly decor. l l'ar Tulllt• H•lf'k "' frpk !I.cw µ.11nt, drps ' W , I M 'ed I '.• '-·trr11. •our 1·t11111·1· 111.·1 & l'l•h t\11 JJ>fll t'\l'l•I -1 c.i~ c~arlJI 1Kl',, ~:}dt a st 381t.:t11 1.toth.2<'<1r Adult 2 lx!droom beam gar. aldrn cp s only, -"' • nng .i io\6 :.1..., uy:.. ~t·ilin" 110 n.·t~ ~·oo ""u 1.10 c h i ren. $300 mo. from $J<lll lu ~100 "'~hr tlrv1 l ~t· 111 10111111 'I ~ & i;ar. \'ll'W. r.69511no. • ... ..-~ ""' ~uo :1 lwlrm, your t•h111t••· of 11 f•ll•I ~· 11·1· 1'11 ~1:~1 mo ~~·l·k~.'11~1~ t•vt•nings Ai.ll'lll646·~ W Wilbon rnq aµt C ~ 33l_O_. ______ _ 11 0111 S.:IJJ lt• S.17J I I') t<ll i.I J .ii t 7 II Ill . ' .. D Point 3126 •.ul·"J 'hr lllJ t•iil ('l~,-n ON1'111':Bt::ACll,Da••h , :! fir apl 'I G us 11a1u ano ,, l1<lrn1 \<111r <·h111"<' c1f •· '"" .,. 11 1 o " d I .. " • u • • • 0 adult:.. Ul11 pd. /\ u ts. no pets. 400 m er ••••••••••••••••••••••• florU>l:ill to~'>5U Miuion Vl~jo 3267 "'ashl'I. clni•r pool, no Sl40 67S·l!Ui5 rtm;l<' Way, Apt 2.2eR, 2BA lwr. dupll''<, '\oo h ·t·'I ••••••••••••••••····~·· J'k'ls ~7 .. 4!U o:115 ~17!1 l!lll gar Nr bch. Avail Jun l . RANCH REALTY 'l llr <"onc1t1 l\u t>t•I 1''"'1. 1.l'X nc\Oo J 11r, :!':-ea. Souttl LCJ9UftG 3786 bl & last $250 838·0l93 551-2000 ··n<·I i::ira~'" SJ:!~ mu L"'nhrn 1, 1111 Marina. ••••••••••••••••••••••• * * * 11.it J:!:!o 01·n \'11 , 11·1• 1111•11 $.IOO 2 BH, :! h,1 on th~ O<'ean Richard Scudamore Wc1<1<llmdgt•Ty,nhml· 3 Ill mo ·l93111;n111 !•!11 1537 1-\Jrn $'700. unrurn SliOll 7 Solona Dr. 2 llJ , A :C. up~rJ\fr:,.Lo,,All:.o V11f..t,311r,:!llr Tolul s1•cunty,1•lt•vato1 ~. lrrlM lakl' & fl\Kll pnv. &Ill tl5~2 l'umlo, vat111, t•m·I ~ar, Santa Ano 3280 rec fo{•1htic~ -1!~1 2X35_ You are the winnl'r or :! S,,_.. 1 1 . 11 1.. 111~11 I ,11·1 Sl:J5 :1:17 ;;:,!If ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll"' "'" lo thc . """"' •u1 1 < 11 l'J:e al I. 1 ~nts '""'"' I':'<. Lg, 2 br, 2 bu. frpl. dressmg rm. Adults +I t eenager. "'mm $295. Ga s/Wtr. pd, 1 8r. wlfrpl. ~25. ull ulll. pd. 496 7379 --------!loll hull ... l' lmmJl' :i 111 t. ll1 1\11"> \ 111,1 ,, n1nd ;i llr h:i-~.in nr Tu5llll ,._.._ __ , .. _ _. c.-..,, Vac:otion 1\H• & lrvrnt• Ulvd , S365 vn...-1...... ~•a :! l1<1 S.f75 Jo;\(·~ 6-lu 1;,:11< I r11k, tr t•.sh p.11nt '\oo mo K.i:! 7151 ·"" for Nan ••••••••••••••••••••••, & R.c~otional Greal Ocean View. 2 Hr, !."~!~7 \\Jil um~ ~iO mo c~ l'rul•tl.1111 h•l• ~al 3802 Vtthicle Show ~~~ ~ 1~:2i7°~.~! * RENTALS -. .,.;,., 0 .io, 328 4 •••••••••• ••••••• • • •• •• .it the an 6. """ 1111t d,·n sm ~wport leach 3269 ~.~~~~••••••••••••• 2BR WATERFRONT ANAllEIM -------- ;:Bit, tlt•11 . SJ.Ii' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bwlttn:., crpli;, drP'>, B CONVt:NTIUN HwdinCJlon leac:h 3840 ·>------NEW,m•vl•r ltvcrl111,µror. I'" h •c·' k , rJ"' '''·',NTL',R ••••••••••••••••••••••• :! lilt ~ill',r· -----~ rln• Twnhm :? llH :! ha '"'' uu ' ul'c ' i;a ,,c ' r " ., llH "-I''' ON Pl"NINSUI /\ ' ' $-13.5 J an 2 lhru Jan !'l :? br, l'pl!i., pool, play yd .. -,, ~., • • • • • ~plll lcv , V.Julll•tl t:cil ""''"!. L'[Nl,L'.'' A\i'~. •"' u l ~HI< , :!' · ll.1 SS!\11 fo.xr1t111i: 3 Bdrm hc11Y\{' U\ -rm & din rm. kitl'li ..,.,,., r r. r, ., o LJll 042 56711, ext. :J:J:I o no p e l s. 2 2 0 8 A, :! UH , 2 fl.1 . . SMKI w beach &. wall·r a1·rosi. "' bllns air m ud, 2 l'ar JACOBS REALTY claim your tickets. Delaware. 536·0959. :1111<, llcn . . . S°•Oll tlll'-.trcl'l M!lll mo l-.1• gar "' auto cir llPl'llt:r 675-6670 * * * Heer L•e Park 3 Ult. 2 l.ta S.Si5 }o.')Pl-:CL\LL Y LAIHi r: a d ·, · t o '> "' 1 m & lalbaa P-lnsula 3807 LC: fo: 1 Br. lots of stora0 e, Deluxe 3 br, 21f.a ha, utl :1 111< ~'ll, 2 , hJ . >l..tl -I Bdrm & d1•n l•'ro11 l lh , t . b . .... " 3 l'I' • l'.i '-I'.'.'> ..... \ 1cw or wa11.·r Liu 1t' '1 eraJX( u 1~ 1""1 1,, aero:.-. ••••••••••••• • •• • •• • • •• i: Jr. n e w Pa 1 n L, no dbl 0 ar • patio. rm Jc. 17 I :J • ' ' • ' · · · "' -. · ' ~ ~Lreel rom u11 & ll'n111s "' '" :1 l11t , ., Ba ........ ~>IJO Sp)gla!>!> ll~ll. SS75, mo. l'lob E Z ,11•1.,.!>,, to Sun 2 Dr. frplc·. yrl) only, $325 ch1l<lren or JX!ls. Mature Alabama, 536·3465 or :J llH . .! H.1 ::O:Jtl~• /\gt b31 1·100 Dil·~o. Ganfrn Crovr & 21.1 .. c>' prc :.s. Ca 11 : ~n:r~ o~.q~·~~~~ ~~o~~: 536-1718 ______ _ :1 111<, :! ll.1 ~1110 tj()S ~'rwys Vr ll':tM' S7<KI. 536-6617 B ...,00 J llll. FH s.1·•5 + l'ln fre 645-3-187 l r..... mo. :1 111< :! Ila d<·11 s.17~1 II A n 0 T O f" I N D rno l)uy~. 171 1 >~17 7004. 2 BR Uupll'x. Cro:>s st to -------16591 LeGr and 311H, :! l!J ~1 111 E,1..,tbluff i':\l't' hume l2~3 d~!lli~-12 ~>. Eves beul'h Yc•arl). P vt. ply 2Br, 2ba. new rpl, gar , ____ 84_6-_39_so ___ _ ."Ill'._ . ., . II. . • ,.c·.111 •thr. :.!ha. f.1m rm. Soft (:.!1 >. ·II ' S375 559 52!11 pallO. $250 mo " ' ~ "" 548-0!!16 :J hr. 112 ba, frpk, patio, :I HH. :J H..1 . . "1.CHI wain. \~\'i'k apL ... ~rp", WHtminster 3298 Steps to llr h ~135 lJtil pd l'nl'I gar Avall Jan 1 I Hll. :J B.1 . ct..'ln p.unl •1 10 "t' 1111"-••••••••••••••••••••••• s.!2.5 l't.;H ~lo. Adult:. 2 hr, SJt>5: 846·49!xl · · ~llH,:! ~ H.i .... ~,,111 "h 11p~. lc·nnl'. 1°11111 Gar.ap1>I' Fl'e red hill :;;:1~ .. 552-7500 Si~ll mo. L-.r lll'f , 2 Sly, 4 hr, 2 bJ, nu t'VlS. l\t,un lkntali. 540.53711 lndr\' laC' s. End Gar t;,IU 677!>or Ii i~ :.!:!Ill cfr!)!o, fplc, l)W S.t351mn 20t1J°Mtiplc. Mt;r. at Aµl. 96:1-4569 531-9545 Agl. Nu !J'g 31\r , :!Ha )rly. lkh, U,631 :l:.'77 foe , l l' n n 1 s, f q1 I , pa t 1 o . . - . ctsh"~hr, l>ltm. Adlts, nu N1rr 31.~r. :!ha, ups~ta1r~. ~o Nr llamillon/Brookhur:>l <!br , 2ba. gar, pul10. Sml t•hld vk. S285. 962-0778 Wa11l .'Ill', p;1rl111•r \\ '!•1111 for pur !'h·"' 111 "'•' 111 Ir 11111 111 up w L!rn ·I" 11 rl.1hlt· .Juli11 \1 1 '"llh' 11 H'I' :r.111 l.rt·1l1l1l's & n•lnJ.: s.ioc lot'r mth Yt·arly ll!J'l' COLE OF NEWPORT p:il111, so£L "'ti , di) h~el•---------•1 llV llms, Carm1•I 3 llr -l Fil. nr p.1rk & school s;..'JIJmo 7~J211tifi 2 STORY I hr, 2 ba, ne"' JX!ls. $<!()() mo. lH0·93:J5 l~ls. -kids ok. S26S. J0 .. 7 l'Pl & drp:-., I rpl Cor lot. -\ <t I l' n c 1 a Boal gall• CJll about our Capistrano Beach 3818 ~16 0080 5"1Hi985 ON BEACH lli".ll h d11pl1 \ I r ''""' In HEi\LTURS ;t;,15 E { ;.l llw \ C:<l ~1 675-5511 pn v Cl\\ Ill, &lt15 rnu. be llluHs l ,fl•\ rl J llH :! ll.1 968 :.!352 :J llr 2 ba. un cul dl· s.11 I~· IJ•\l'IY grccnhdl t.\ pool Hwttinqton B~ach 3240 •..••.••.•.••.....•.... \II do~l' 111 Mhl~ ~ pll .. ~Jttl i\J.,'1.li-M 1133 s:li !i I ~ l m II. II n I)' 552 (~130 ,tit 71';\1 Chnstma' Uonu~ s.150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -- 7U·!lli3-45m or ~I !15.15 OCJo:,\N\111-:W dplx, :!Br. 2 Br. bltns $200 Agt.:'»o Ft•c 2ba. d:.w:-.hr, refrig 57-IJoano Street S!S(l/mo. Ph· 4~H534, 645·3417or846·886S Bachelor S280 I BdrmS29S 2 Bdrm from $320 3 Bdrm from $495 l111ild 011, 111111•• 111111 'In ., JX:dronm.. larg1' openl•---------•I 111 '11""11 l 'llnt 11111.' -h1•Jmed l1°v1n g room , Ft>ll LE1\S~; :J bt>drm, 2 ~EW1'.ll :i krt, l 11 \,<'Pl'>, l.11gc f;1m1ly 1rr dmtnl.! ba,t.rantlnc"'.171Jlbq.fl drps, frpl, d:-.ll\\-.h1. 11111rn 111,,h-...Jshl'I ..'!. Landmg humc w :1 c·ar palw, s;r.;) il l·~lf,:I 15ii!J I Jiit. 2 LI.\, frpl , I hlk ~ from ot·c•un \'rly 11 .. n I.ii $1i5. M,'1.. 540 l151, A~k for Les Condominiums Unfurnished -.....,___ -- 3425 Corona del Mar 3822 BEAUTIF'U L new Rac h upls. l"in •plac·e, r('fri.i. 1nrl. $200. 6-15·8256 or 979 3376 • Summer &. winlt:r :it beach is beautiful •Vie w s of ocea n, Catalina & Palos Verdes •Large private decks •lleatoo Pool-Saunas •/\...signed covr'd prkg •i\dd1t1onal free park mg •Maid ser vice av a.al. "Furniture avail. llt•J1 h [11111 pit'\ 11111' \I old II<.'' hu\ 111 I lu11l 1111.:t"n 111 ,,..11 11' I II •I••" u Prtn• otth l,ullf In -.. firc·pl·.ic··· nr.)JI !1515 1\l!t . No l'!•c• , -g.1r S~1:!" rno 1nl'ldg Kl'ftt Rogers Realty 848-8300 N II IJ11pl1•x, '-11Mi IHHI 111 rn.1k• 1111•·1 1 .. :1 .t!Ull all ,, 1'1 111(· univ INVEST "''' r·r.11 1111 o m 1• pri1 1••rl11·' for 111· 111 f'" 1 Ith· ''" h.tll .. ,,, l ,11h ,,, .q1pot1tl ""'Ill Richard D. Forney & Assoc·~., Realto r s lilll 111111 'lltll'l I 'I( llt1t1I J 11. h .: \\ . ..,h,•r & <ln~·1 in garc1t'nl·r '\oq>t•l.., 1 hulnl. 1;u<11I fol'JllOn FOR LE \S 1-: J hi:drm :! ....,.,011 month lil!J 11:1511 bJ, lir.1ntl m·w l!llHl "'I H T1·nn1;,, S\Oo1m J.:, S.1un.i. Pvt Community, :! hr. :! ha , (; 11 11 rJ 11 . f) ' W . W:i 11.ti 1llry cr. $:J25. 1\llltilli l.Jndmg hnmt• w rurm.rf din rrn f.1m rm. wl'l bar.s:,7;,, /mo 111l'lt1 i.: ganll·1wr. No pch Roberts R~alty • Jlr . 1h.1111111,,• \lnn1h tu, ____ 8_4•8···1•6•8•8---r n,1111th ... ~~I 1• '""'tin fi..!11 I!• )11\1' I llll 1\t 1h n, fph' 111 I pd I 111 •' tu twh /.l. I " I' I ' ~ :1 ;! o) 11111 1 ... I I J '> i fl Ii :l :1,, or c.;:, l~MKI l'll'..1n. :1 hr, 2 ba, I< U r ph drlJ" :: l'ar hJr ~ 1.) \J1i:1 l.111!1 531 :15~5 Ai,'l. no ft'!' 1m,, 111 "' • .111 p: 11111 1111 C osta Mesa 3224 I HH I 'orulo, pool lt•n111s. ha11rlh.ill & h .1"kl•fh,1ll si:,11 mo !17!1 iHXK "I 'II llOtl \&it ., .n _ 'i ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. 11 1, 11m DESIRABLE 11 r\ 1• • .1~h loll\ l'I 1111 •1~1 • ,qtl t '!llll'ir \ II l' \lt1illllllll >'I \I' 1,.,1111 It ti 1111""'111) It f('' I \ •II ,,:111 110\11-: 'Ill:. : 11.1 llt'u. 1·111111 •Ir p I• 1 , 11 ,11r 11,.,, t ... h di JI 111111 p.11111 d ,1 i!I W ;i I 1'1 111 I I\ I llr. :.: ,,\, :.:•, Ba, hlt11., '' w l l.ll t.1m 1 m Su11er t It ,m • ~li:l '""' •1,,;1 n.E \!\ :1 Bit :! II\ trpl. 1hhw ,,h1 ,:: C'.11 ~.•I' $;1 l!l 711 !Jti3 1;1m i>r 5:11 '.Cit .. ,\i,'t :-; .. 1"11• IH\'1~1': 2 llll, I Ila . :)71~.CI :! llll. 2 K,1 . . . . ...:l:!j ;r,,, :! lllt, :! H.1.. . . . '175 '1:!:-i :t Jiit, ~ ll.1 , . . . . ..,:j\t;", ICflO 3 HH. 2' ~ha .... ~11111 h'.!:> 4 Bil, :!1 i Ii~. rurn .. s;i!>:i 1 llH, :!'~Ila ..... S795 H~l 4Bl<,3 11J ... ~1JO lll<i c' \ \l\'UI\ J Bii, ..!' · llJ .... ~100 If 513 CA111PIJS Dt· IP.Vll'IE OPEN I) \IL Y H ·\ ~I TOH I' M ,\/ l·:AH ,-.; 1-:W 2 ~•':I •I !Ir, :.i •, 11,1, r.inl rm. q1b, drp~ WALK TO BEACH :JBdrm Du1ilt'' ~MU mo C<l ~I BESTSTIU.~. I' l.1ke new 2 bdrm w ) Jrd & garagr SSOO mo PENINSL'LA POINT I Bdrms w ball·uncc" .........•............. .•....•...•............ U-asc S525. Spac· Hancho ----------San Jua'Jwn pi;·nth!>l' 180 degrel' '-ll'W, 2 Br. dcn, 2 ba. luxury llv1nJ.: nr :.t'hh,, golf & UCL Im med occup. Cull !'.rt 831 943:! or Chns ISJI 2715 CORON/\ OP.L MAK Tri plcic. 2 Br. l·'• bu. Fam r m w •frpk. C/O, UW, no ix-ts, $335. Ph 63J.t)496 NO PETS f'rc· t1grou~ wornl 111lr & Townhous~ :! l:lr Townhou~l'. frpll' Pool, tennis. Some oc·can & l'at;ihna Vil'"°''-Clo:-.<.' to "hopp1ni.: & hni: bcac·h b+I ail I Hew Townhouses Instant move m. 2 BR. I' 2 h;ilh, patios, air, de· luxe. adults. S280/mo 19 1!1 Anaheim St 5'16 4111 . Mgr Uav<·. Open M-f,9:305 :30 Sat 10·5, Sun 12·5 1•\tr, l.11.,.11Hs & warmth Unfumis~d 3525 s~oo /~ 1 ly ,,,. • •••••••••••••••••••••• Huntin9ton Pacific SI IUllT l.SLh TO lll'll BRAND N t;w 3 Br 2 1 ~ Ba. l111m;H·UilllC & "'IKld'>l'\ rpJt', ',m l r1orn [)ohenl') rnh'nor 3 Bdrm, .! i..; :-0.l Ik h 61 1>,111,r Wharf 711 Ocean Avenue (714 )s:Jn-1487 \'aeJnl and rt jtJy 11n S.150 1wr mo h:l4 fl21S2 11lt·d1,1tt>l\' ~lllfl mn fl 5P:'>t . 5:!•1 JCJI:! Jo;," W1\Tr:1t?·no-.;1 1 10~11-:s 6:SI 141Hl 1.l!I.' :1 llr, r'arn Hm, clt•n 1hn, :! f'µlc "• 2 h.J, p1111I ll'nnis. ~!J5 ti7:J oH:)i! or 1,73 !17110 CUTE I 11 Jiit i:aragc, no pets or Ma naged by 2 Hr, l.aJ.:una N1gul•I One lwdroom , Olll' hath rh1ldren S:!4 5 Call W111iamWaltcrsCo. L:111a1 rm, Vl('W .11lulh ap11rtmt•nb Snulh ur li4H·Oli3S. :m; E . ltilh St, ------dbl our. l'ai·iftt• Is l 1 h t l'M. Nl•wdduxebeat•hapl.l& ,.. llJ! \\o:I)' l'hi:..• fo hl'UC' I 3 Un, quiet an•a. \·111aue. S:Jll!">. ltfO ltlll ."< an1t "ho1" S:.!50 p~·r l'li•an 1.ie lowt•r 2 RR in 960·1934 5"18·21173 m•mlh t\:.k l11r .\hs:-.1. 4 pll'X, crpts, (!q,,.,, gar . ------ WOOUSTnEA\I :1 br + tii!l:!.'lll adult~. uo pcls. $220 L~e l &2Rr,2ha.Arlults *** honus.2ha.l >rol<lmdl __.,,.,._,.,~ ~57"'85 ~nly •. no pets. Pool, Wayne Weber B..tC'k llav l'pli. drp.., . • Jacum. 1-'rom S220 mo. 2'41 1/235thSt. Ill I" t5!.15-t:J. THEBASILLEAF :!llll.c·iit.drps.K1<t...OK 19132 Magnoha,962-1800 1 11'· ~ -oJ b • '\p\\I) n•clnorall'd 2 N1q11:h S!OOmo 5-llllH/13 ---- Newport Beach i;u; I Iii-I hdrrn, I liJ :i pl. l'uol 2 Bedroom smglc bath. You arc 1he "'1nnl'r uf 2 • Ne.ir lw.1d1. /\dulls . s:iou :! Urt Garden apt. f''rplt, S250. per month. Call tirkl'L" lo lhl• Aportmrnh Furnished t111.1 1bhw:;hr. pool. P\ l. patio. 846·9401 Lon for Sale 2200 •••••••.•.............. \•lull """ 'I" I" h I \I I· lth\!'-11\ \Ill I, 1., I I I I 111111 l I ! I 1h ,, I h1 uuul 1)1·p 11·t1 ti I Br hou~c· ,I\ .111 """ ~ 1,111 !Xii1 h.11h-. 1·1tt-dq" l.!tn" 'd •11,:• 11.1'1 S rt V ti ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·0883 ur Irvine Ind. Area ---------po s, aca on 557 2841 3 BR. 2 BA w 1fplc, s.15tl. Ar Recreational Balboa Peninsula 3707 Avail now. Kent Rogers Vehicle S how ••••••••••••••••••••••• ="ew '.! IJr. l ha fqJk. lilln.,, l.,\Hl;E l & :! hr aph Hl'alty 84fl-8300 l ots-<:osto Me\o .. \ It t 11 I It II• ' I• I 1111 \1 I • '""'• t 1 I h·r 1 1 • 1 IO ~ I I t til Ii llt• '' \ I , It 1••H ... . . Rolph Lucas 17911 Corron1a lone Huntinqton Be ach ' I I I I II ~ I I I••~ ' ,,. th• Sporh. Vacot io 11 & Recrrationol Vehicle Show \ \ '" f I 1 111\\I'\ 111. It \It 11 111 • •I~ t171M· ····I 1 \Loi ~1111• 1 lor •I··• •JI 1r Iii.ti \ti'''''"' roltl 1olr, lll1X \I 1 \ 1 tl1• .11 t'.1 t hr : t , , r pl "' !Jlln,, lg1 1• '"'1 1·11• I h<11·I. "I , \I t \ J '• •I• II , I \1111111·,ut ,1 •Jlr 'B.1 ,111111·u11ol11 t.1lo H···· .lrt'.I I • 1111 ht h . ~·,1r '~"1 l'h 1.111 •,t~I~ L1'1tc:1-;;1 ,t\ .llu :.i•,lla, I.am 1rn 11111. d'hw .hr. <I 111 ht h I ,ti I ,rl11111t 11111 I 'he 1 1111.1 ~ Ii.mu ~1·1:, ;11 •lti:I t ~11~1 111 ;,.it !J:,1.1 \J:l '\11 I , ,. 11" I lt.r, fl IL;• '" pt l"' ' I' '"I I 1'·111" ('11 .. 1n 11,. h.1q1 ·1 11r ·• ll;i S.:'.tJ nit... •Ir I" hit n • I 1w• I '\r \J.1 fl, /I.• 'I hi '> 1111 "' ,. h tl1•1 11r I • ,\. p.1!111 111 I • '''f I I , .. :~~~'.t '11 ' '. \ I II I I l. ;1 hr I 1, h1,dltl 11r ""'' l'<'f', ())\, :);t~lll 11o1. ·~m I Hr .! fl.1 I pie 1 pis clrt1' l11fri... ""' .i• 11111 X'IX 171) I I \I t I II I 111 I I ti I •ol ' oirn \ .. , ... ' 11 I • tf I h I I I I \I 1011 I I ~\ I .i~ o o •t "" 1llt1f • t 1 1, • • I 1ntd hntrl• I\ 11tl .1 l11t \\ I lit fl IP \ 1' ""'' "'llr I ' H.1 I""'"' I 1n·11l.111• I 11111 th\ :'\Pl\'', . .1f"••.t 1u,a1n t•·n • .iu·t· tr.• ~:~ •• 1rr10 ·~.I K, l)j • • • Mountain, !>uPrt, Re~ 2400 ·······················' '°''\I I\\ I 1t I II',\ ft I .,,., II • II• II 1. I f I I' ••• ,..,,11 tl •• ,,, I ~ tpl: .. ,,q ~ilf· Rentals .•..•...•.•.••..•...... I. Iii I 11 •1 Jiii ,\ 'lllll'I I It 111 • • '' .l l 'u !;i •~tll111 •rl•· .:-11 •stm v. 41\r 1 Lim rm 21 h.1 ~p11111•1l .i!I' SIJt1·r .1r1 .. 1 s.n1 ~ .. 1:1 m13 ' llr 1 , ll.1 I \Oo nh-.1 :! I" 1lr·.1n 111111'1 ~:i:t 11111 I.Ill Kl l I 1 .. 1 I • I 111 I •• 1111 lt•"•I' ::·1\~11h"'''· I \\ frplt-holh 1111111 1.1111 1111 I"'· :•fir l '·lla "p,1f111' 1 lpr11 ""'' 1111,.:11·'~ I \t IMll•I 11111.,·t , 'Hi:t l:!lli \ 11°\0o I urtl< "" k J,., f :I I I 1'i. F.1111 II m l11•J11t ' fir :! 1\,1. 11" ••Pl l1111kllll! '\ .. wporl \Oollh l1.11<'1111y & !i.i.1'1:!:11 OVf'I' Ila\'. I I> It' """ 1'.1t 10 lfonw :! hr :.! h.1 • xtr.1' S\\11l1m111g 1"0111 J.1111111 \!11111~ 1,,,. ~11111 11111 .;:.;tu ell-. 1·1111111 1111 .l.111 5:! I !Jt>:I I :! fir. :! l\;i I ow 11houw ('11111, t•l11hll1111-.1· ~:111;, \\,Ill llllW o15l 11:!!1 \1·WI\ 11t•1 t '111 l'k llnw Jhr "ha .11nurn ,,. '''·" ''I.> ~,,, ill.>'I. i1;)i "Ii I I Ju1t ... r111k lhr ''h.i f11r111.1l 11!11 1: .. 1tr111111 11111·, 11·1 fac·il 1111°111 111 r"l11p. ll'11111' ,11,,. poul -.1~10 11\H \\:1111 l.1 L~··li 111 IX IOCI!'> '\1" f't•lf'I •, 'I f1\\11h11m1 I l'l.tn .1 llr :.!1 , ll,1 \ ( 111'~1 ;111, .. " Jiil ""'' :0..1.111 11111 ,,, : ... 2 111.>1 .. I .11x11r\' :•hr Tw11hM'. /\ ( H.rnt ho S.111 .111.11p11n \ 11·\\o nf l:il..c• ti. u111f I tllll""l' -\ \ ;i 11 1111 J \I lw Fl h I I 1;7 5-">.•ll mo Houws Furnishf'd \fl~\\ 111111-. I fir 't •. 1 I If'-dll•' I.HI l lfl • ;1 111 II hllll'<, flv I Ill ltjtlo 1111 •I \II, rd ..,IJ:1 \1•\\ ··~~·· 1111· 111111 I U'I( h rn 111 '1111\ 1 h 1w1.:f1hrhcl, I llr 111·11 I 1111 rm l 11;1 I t .1 r J.: .i 1 . ~ 1l:; 1n 11 Loguna leach 3248 ·••·••••••••··········· Balboa blond l 106 "'",;I(,"''' i.'ll :ri7:J ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l .. 1 t !'1th :\ Rr. :! Ba. hui:e ~· 3 Br 1· 11 fo\ld,..., Pt.'l' :>flli 1·1111,11·1·" ftl'I• t.1111 11111· 1m. h! ~d. OK 1-'1•1· \'1,11 1\ ~r;,\f,,111 11 11 1111rl •·ntl pool, rr1·-.hly Mainlknlals.c.111 ;,:r.o WILLIA WI 11 11111l·1I :.:1t1a mo. M HTON , , ~1 ;,. :! BR Concfo. ""J>4'r d t•an 111'.ol E 1.11t· " , 1.1:11 crpls, clrp..., pool & club Costa M~sa 3 124 I 111 ' h.1 l'Jni rm. frml hou~l' $21ill !17'1 iKAA ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1110 rm, 111\ <.'ly Jrl'a . ""~ \ ll'W 111 h r h. $7:>1L '""'H_.__""...,..;;..~ WOO I lk, ulll' pll Upl>. I .~i:, 1;>11!1 ..-uuur 3242 (..'h11,1 ()f\ t-\•lt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mam R1·nt .1b ;,10 :,370 " fir, lft·n . .! hu, i:?ood E· 3 Br. 3 ha townhou~t· RENTALS l.AGUMA BEACH 3 lll>ll M ·n(•wt•r homr 1nr.1l1·d 111 1'11rt.tf'11111 I. ;1 ){ U 11 a . 2 II a t h '> , f1rt•pl;1t'l', lll'('Jn \ ll'W ~;\ll'll1·nt fJm h11mc ~'>.'I() 1\111 .11 lh1• \°'11/\l I t-:1 \1 ('I):\\ '" '\ 110°'11 l'Ei".'Tl·:ll Li:t• :! br :! ba md ulil gar.II!\' /\!lull:., no Pl'l". Hsh"'!>hr. pof)I, Adults ---- ...,, twa<'h s:l2.'"> 1115 W Sl>IS MO llllO F'r11m S2lfl mo .. 1.!<1~ pd BeachTwnh:.e4 Hll,2s ty, B;il llh·tt !16:.! 0.)!J5 Pvt leach Access! iill Sc·utt l'I , orf Placcn· 112 ba, nr t ennis. clc. Costo Mesa 3724 :? Bil. blln .... •1pen bc<tm.... lla> ~12 J(nJ ----$325. 963-2532 or S36·146l .Jan :! thru J an !I <'a II fi-12 :.67X, l'X l :1:1:1 I 11 1'1.11111 ~our t1c·kt•h ••• -.;,·-...porl llLl. nr <'hrr fir :!111, 2h;c. f)!•' lut <•lll''ol ri•im ~ep ~1;:; liolti :Ji5i '1·arl.~ 2 HH & l>cll. 2 li.1 . h1111ll' Frplt, D , W, clhl ,.:.1r. walk 111 hl'l1, voob & h'nr11s S.135 mo fi 15 l~:lti .......•.•••••......... $40.00 WEEK & UP •St11cl111 & I BH Aph •T\' & Maid &orv 1\\ 1111 •Phone ~en . llt<l pool :!3i6 "it>\\ purl Blvd ('\t 5-UI !1755 or r,.15 :N1;1 SUS CASITAS Mmutt•s l11 N B I BR furn. J\c111lt ~. 110 1wb :!llONt>wporf lllvtl CM llOLI lli\ Y l'f.1\Z,\ vul:tnl. cxlrn nit:t'. $:11)5 mo, )rly. No kase 11r ftoe:.n•q 'd A~. 644-8567 2hr J hJ ;ip\ w 1).(iffaj!l' /\llulh only, 1111 vet-. S.f!"Jll mo Ind ulil 1;.m 7i 10 Sunny 2 Bil art in Duplex. l"rplr, r rpb, drp" ,\!lulls 2 lllk" rrom Coil:.t llwy. s.150. mo. 675·34al E"'t'<· homl'. :J llH :1 llJ JncJ l'onl l.c.i"l' B) o wn.1.:r ~!)OU 11111 J>,1\,,752 !l1 12 nr r.75 lhl7 Oelm.c I ltr • .1pt SIKIJ mu 1.1 H ,\ N () · Jo; W . :! Adults only. no l>l'l:-. 1965 l>t.'dmom. 2 bath a pt over Pomona AH•. /\pt IS garai.:i: & lfl'llll'hcd from I'\··~ Complct<'IV rurn, 1 br adulb 1111 l.ll'IS SI •15. 646·7~3. 1:11 f"I OWl'f 11\'ll :! hr & dt•n 01 :1 hr S5:!5 A~·I .Jan IHh !J.M 411117 1•\ e' Studio clc·rnr fu1 n, p\'l llH/\:\11) Nl'w Bl(; ('\'N 2 JJallo. Wah'r & !!llS pct , t \ J h 1 t,.. ., l u d' ~1 R.'>. mo l>lli·!l330 1-...11h't'. oq•rl1111l..m)! ~olf OCC Spcr ial , s:;:; U~ls t 1111 1 "r· IJ r .1 m J ~ I l' pol l-\·,- .1rl'l11ll•1·t1ir1· l'uol & 1 l•n Mam Rl•ntali> MO 53711 111' ~~Ml m n 111 X7'1 r.~.117 ull"I 1 STUNNI NG L g. I hr I n '" >a I u ionu~ rm J:llrden apt. l'ool rct main hou~e. Very prn alt• (;nod So. o f Coast llwy lo1•atwn 2 hlk~ from CclM beach. /\II hulll ens cnl'I. t ra"h ('om pa cl or 1-'1 replace. i:urai.:c. larJ.:c :-.undeck. ltll•JI J pt Adults, no pcl-; $150 A\·a1lable J an 15 li7:) 311!">.'! l J"'ta1rs I BH. $300. 831-0554 Nl'w t'•Hfl & clrapt•s • . t.uc· iialw Lu~h b:H·k ~ea. $215. 710 W. IHth Sl. Costa Mesa ......•..•........•.... 3824 ~.ml Wt1tt•1f:1ll & f1~h Huntinqfon leach 3740 po11d SS!l!i 1'1•r 11111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• <'/\!;,/\VICTORIA llt\\'&111-:\1'11 liACll $120 lJlil~ ml'l'rl 1&2 UH.unrorfurn.,l!a~ Jtfo;AL TY 7:;:1 1~ 11 b t & lasl. Sludcnl over & wtr pd /\dftc;, no pels Pool, re<· rm. sec gate Ill<~ C ,\NYON \. lt'W of 21 pr<'r'd :liiO 4225 525 \'u·tona 1>12 8'170 liolf couri;e & lakt'. 2 hr:! loquna Beach 3748 - ha, upgratlrtl. $1>5~ 11111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br 2 Ba, rplC'. pool. 2 s ty Sl<'ps to Tenn t·rt, pool, S!.'°•O. 1'urn hl'aut. 1 BR 1': S1dl' l 'hilllr1•n OK. i:1t•11111. <,('r 1~1 I :>4•11 .cpl. nr lwh Ht•s p cmpl'd $200 5411·Cl9tfl NEWPORT HGTS. ,1dlti> lll ii pit 4!11 4:!00 <.;,,'<a de llermosa ;I H<lrm, 2 IJJth, 11111 r m :! N~wport leac:h 3769 c'Jr ~ar. 9lOO monlhlv ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oul'>1de P<'l" onl) /\)!t BEST BUY r,15 V'JSO 0.12 4r,03 $235 2 11r. T II. l>onl ~1n~les OK. Fee 2br <Jl'l w;r1rt•pl11rc, t 1 ~ hath. range, ovc•n, d1~ h\\ t1sher. S320 Also 3 br (!leJI hldl() $370. 160 W. W1hmn 3 Br, 2 ba, luxury lwnhse. /\d ull 1':·S1de l &2 hr apb End gar. patio, pool l.1k c n ew, n o pt'ls 4·PLEX, 2 BR, 2 Ba, W /W t"rpls. drps. $215. mo. 963·2532 or 536-1461 644 Ot17s ______ ... 1 BR Garden /\pt, adulbl. $260 3 BR, 2BA Cpt.-.. drps u1i:.trs. Fa mi 7942 I Jolt. S200. mo. To gt'(:. 673·3055 I~. n~ pets. 5'1 5 52S4, NF.W 1 br, frplc, beam ~l ~I.I Cl'll, bltns. pool, volley 1 & 2 Br apts, $175 to S!JI) _ba!!:_gar. ~35. 842·0034 + dt•ix1s 1t, 3l0 W1l~on /\pt l ,Cl31 2177 Orand new lux 2 br, 1 ba, hltns. $275 mo, c hld/srn S175. Coty l Br. Smgks f)(.'l0K.1-82Cl-~16 __ _ O . K F e e S I 5 1 Br .. $215 & 2 Ilr ... S2f.5. llear hcu_mbcr: 631 ·2011 Util pd. 2 bl ks bt·h. Ca II 536.3.JJ l. A PlnECAEEH 1 Br, pets OK. $210 mo 3 blks b ch . 32n· 13lh SL. (7 1 4 )960 .. 183 2 . (213 )431-5618 ------- DUPLEX • 2 Jlr, P~ Ba, yd, gar, S27S mo. 848 0265 ---------- 1 ..... ----------. $135 l Br. Garage. Kids, pelo;OK. Fee 2300 F 0trview Rel Co!>lrJ Meso 545·2300 from ~240 lwo of Orange Coun1y·s mos! beaultful aportmenl communlltes. A relaxing semng W'lltl streams. waterfalls, and mojesllc rrees Feo1Ur1ng pools, Jacuzzi, souoo. bKllOrds, and excll1ng ckJbhouse wllTl sockll events renols, gym, and voneyt>on or The VIiiage. More of everything you're looking tor Furniture Is ovoloble One and Two Bedroom Aelul!LMng. Qnlces open 9:00 lo 6.00. Now renting. Main Rentals, 54().5.170 Pel OK l Br. $180 Fee Main Rentals. 540-5370 ,--- $17S 2 Br, gar. Pool, kids OK Fee. Mato Rentals, 540·!l370 ---- SEA Jlreete Twnhac. 2 ht. hr., 2 ba. Pool, Jacuzt1, sauna. Gar. $300. 968·52111 Hwtti!")tOft HarbOur 3842 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $330 Nr. Harbour, 381{ 2BA Triplex Bef Sam or afl 6pm; 2131592-2fi66 lf"YiM 3844 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HewportB h 3169 '"''' 1111 ~r.5 mo. Coll Sparklinl! n e w l'On1I -.••••••••••:•~~••••••••• 1;1.••111~. $470 . Call ''L1l .1'', 2 nnnM. tlOl\tF., Ii.ti' ~lUlllN·k w /OCean v H'W I.iv. rm. with f1rr plm·1• W 'W ('arp~t thruout l;.ct r hPn w ran,:!c & men Sl.!5 Mo. Mnin Rental!!, 540·5370 Some peopll• !lay you .ict whal you pa y ror' We Of· fer morr 1\nr1 lhc• prirr is less. Ml'mberi.h1p in a lleallh l'luh A t ennis dub F'r<'I' t1•nn1" le"MIOS. 111111.irds. s"' 1mm111j!. 1:olf Uri\ 1ng lla11.1te ~auna 'I + 1:1<.'at ar- t1v1l1l'S S11ncl.1y BBl,ls. PartlC:-0 Wllh fi v(' bands . to'rce Sunday hrunr h. New 11 hag & kil appl. llul!e mstr, Npt lits loc. Call 63:170MI1Jr 5-15-4931. WOODBntOGE P INESAPTS 2Rr, 2h11 Opl'< t.v,111 "11" .I 1111 .~ h.1. r.1m rm, frpl, 8461371 or R.lft S451i <.'VI'S lo June 15 :!HI f'rt"f)('l'I l '11111p l11<hrpd. £111.:d MOVEINTOTOUt\Y St S100 mo SIOOt· h l'h .. 1. :! 1·ar i:ur. ('ul de s a c. SA I r. 1 o ;\I O RR() W 541Hltl1 2. l:!l:J rllf~I 1117i ... 1110 1"15 '"17'! ____ Hunt llrbr lBr. 2 ha. up St."'i :J hr, 1 ha, 2 cur .:ur i:lrs condo, all <.'Ice • \\ w :! llR I Ua. Yt•a1 I\' ~1·111nr :1!111lls only No Jrl'h $.'l75 + util I tflli W Ort>aMronl 1i7:1 n.1M7 ;\l<'l' )ti cpt. car PQrt & enl J(ar w/boal shp SS75 m o. Call Darlene~~ 4;193 Cir Chn:-. fl-12 6368 ~·15 :! llr, T 11. K11ls OK Clawso n 8:1;;. 71>1 l fur l 80RM /\PT. al Woo<h Cnve Beach . Lan.ii w ~w1m pool. Onr or tht· Ix-st r <.'nl:ils Ill Lo~11m11 for~5 MO MISSION REALTY PHOME 494·073 I LI---sUnL·-'ish•d FN' appl __ ----:IBr 1x•<"t10\11 t111l1ophm .---.-n "' 'fain Rent.1111. 5111 5370 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Irvine 3244 w 111'1,I..• •• wall•·• p.11111 G.Mral 3202 $?15 2 Br 1 II. K11l~. p1•fs ••••••••••••••••••••••• T11111•on1l ~fl!! 2>11i ••••••••••••••••••••••• 01\ F\•c· T l'RTLEROCK Laquna Hillt 3250 Trt ·lcvcl ronrln, :l llr _ Mnm Rrntals 5-10 ;,no :l Rr. fnm1h rm, .1tri11m. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BRAND NEW BIG CANYON ~ln~le lev1•I, very dl'IU"<C :! bdrm .• 2 halh ~. i.:orgeous. sweep1n11 l(Olr rnurse vlt>w. Now nvall ut S7SO per month (or •,11lr at S12S.000) m,Hllllll\!\ .~ l!:11 .. i.!{r,ilt11rn Ronq b40·5'160 Anvhmc E<1stbfull Prr1f Oldq Great IOl'<e llon. l rv11w Mt-;s,\ v 1-:1un; 3 hr, 2 ha, 11rc11t vu. lot!> of xtr .• -. NEW :1 hr. 2 h:i 1 ..;ty Ave .. W/on U~11v. Ur. lo ('l'Jll rlrps, lrpk. fom rm, S.l!Jtt>imo fl'1il ·lfi41i lwnhiw, :? r.n· i:u1 . lrH·tl 2Br.1 ba .18l~ChCf0rive ~oo.btrt>:Hn C<>ntlo~. un r.1n~r. fl w . LJ.:Asfo: Lcm;i• :i Bit,:! Ba hmm·. patm lmmt•d or1•11p11n ~per mo Urive by & it N --s $420 I ()('r mo 7~1 flt]()(l lgt> <.'ountry k1lr h, NI\' r y <114 I 8'10 IAA7 lhcn cnll 8rlll'<' 642 63611 ••Unltedlrolrcr' p1.1t1 0 Nr :.chool' & Mrt John C'nr~y 6'1fi 7111 Collt'l:I' Pnrk. J llr, 2 Jla 'hop'g $3G5 P m o Call Lea~ J llR. 2 lh1 nl•wly 3276 ....._ frplc, dshw<1hr 11 yard n t . ·54s-t862 • p:nnird lll!<tde ~·1»1r;1tt San Cl•rnente ~151'u-.lln nu crpt' & drp11, 205 u.'i ), -ram rm. frpk n•11tr:il ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br,2ha,frp)(',clbl Loyola$42S Pct(!Harr ctt WOOORRIDGf': utr <'ond. c·ulde~oc 't Nn Sun Clem S~c ca gar,cpt,bltn" /\mil Rcnlty tl42 5200 or Madison J llr. up11raded. fnrd yd $37!\ mo Call n)on ocn vu :J Or, :.!bo. Jan I Ph .G41l 13llO. MS 5000. eJCt 408 $650 h1r Rkr. f14(1,002CJ Ru.-.ty, S49 lltli2 lam hm $395. 831-1013. a Your rent dollars i:o even furlh e r .. •A terrific ma111\cnanl'f' rrc-w , pro· rcss111nal manJjlCmcnt stuff lhal ro1 e-.. u nd friendl y ncq:hhor~. Model~ op<'n druly 10 7 Sorry, no onr 11nrler 21 & no pets Ronmmutc sen ice av:ulal.11<.'. Mon· lh lo· m onth oe1•11p11ncy. Oakwood Gar11rn Apt'\ MllO lrv1m• Cut Ir.th) I 71111><15 11~'\4) 1700 lfilh St Int Onver) \ii4164.! H170 1. 2 & 3 bdrm units. IST MOHTH FREE Desi'gned like ear ly B Syd Townhouses Californ ia bungalows. From $270 . l lS 2 hr. l '' ha from $295 /\1r Prntslone . Ofc h n13.5·30 rond, P\'l pt1l10s Adull.'1, wkdays, 9-5:30 wknds Sec Mgr 1:)20 Meyer , off 552-04 19th. Wkdu~·s lJ.5. wknds •---------00 10-4. 642 02!12 Cotta MHO 3124 Costa MHct 3124 LE:t' 3 hr. 2 ba townhoust' lnQwel complex. Garage & putio Arlult~ only. No pct!! S.125 645·338l o r 8JMl517 2 Hr, n1c<.' & clean. c lost' to shopplnlt. Ad11lti1 only f'oo pcu. 645-8939 ----HOTICE how Onily Piiot Cla!lll· if1f'd 1111!1 dh;play thcnr mc.~'l•llt'S with l.-glb1Uly und lmpoct .. Our ad.5, we art proud to iu1y. ri!ally ll<'l ruu lts. Phone 642 5078 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 5MftSttlN(j/ A winning comblnotton of odull oportment homes with luxury appointments and superb recreation 01 o premium locotlon. Tennis • gym • merapy spa • swimming • bllliords. One & TWO Bearooms, One Boltl Q '='" u.~o. /'dl'f< ~""5 ~.--.. 550 Poularlno Ave., Ooata MHa 7fl-ftt5 ,...... ........ ...,... ) Thursday Oocsmber 30 i976 DAILY PILOT BO Add ti Hulld 1t. .D1~ne1 11 .. Hammer 1t Car~t 11 (em1•nt 11 W irf' 11 Hoe 11 .. Clean it...Move 1t .. Prr••,.., 11 .. Pr11nt 1t. .. N a1t 1t . Plaste r 1t. .. Fix 1t SERVICE DIRECTORY p I um b 1 I . at c h It. . I pe It (: m 0 ~ I Roof 1t .. Land5cape 1t .Tile 1t . Trim 11.. Sew1t . Haul 1t.. Add it .. Plant 1t A ltr-r 11 Learri 1t ~anuRepolr C.,.twvlu ChldC-. G••edSerTI~• Ho811ct.Ll8• J Le*c"lrt9 CllnttncJ/Paperin9 , ,._._ /1l.,. Roofin9 • .....•.•...••..•...... •·····•······•·••···•·· ....•..•.••••..•.••..•. .••........•.........•. .•....•........•....... .•..•....•......•.•.... ··•••···•····•·•·••·•·· ..•.......•.•••.•.••... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ArrLJANU: IH:l'Altl $10 ::-.... r\l\•'l°ttll 17141 .• <111 ~~ ~m)J(IO • bleitm C'h:itl Uc'd llny Ca~ for lnfan~ Re!>poruuble h1Jusci.1llrr CLEANING BY ANN Dog r n & 0 ' Br t t> n Parntln" Int 1-:xt Kl'j!I. VERY N EA1' PATCH Repair-. t. ('ompQstllon uiit Color bnghlencrs & c.oddler-, Loving care Bu.sancqmMn rww to O c Expenenc~od. w1lh n!f11. l.1 ndac a pi na Calm dcpcnd.ible ~·rue ei.t JOSS dt T~XTUtu-: Sh1n~lt'~ I t11'Pt'cl 1c>n1> wh 1 r 11 r p l1> 1 o m 1 n Mai<nolla & Ad11m11, llA will ~e11it yourfl while After$ PM , 493 06llO work. s prln k ler 1 n Cull Jay 6'U 7965 Fr~>t: l!:tlt. 800·143!1 lnsrd lkd Low prices Ir hh·ac•h C'leunllvrm.dtn Av1dlJan18th 9623277 lll't:klntc his own Avail stall/repair Compt --- . PAT('llPL~"T EFUNC e5l8JO.S020orMI~ ~r.~ ............ ~ll~t l~:~!.1h ~J~I. l~ti';.~r r: Couttrod;;-----!~. J~:.~ Pl~~~~~~~ ~~u~,E~L~'lf :~~ ~.\ ~:1::dlllftJ~ u ~~~ ~1 . Wotn~~~~~r~~ {:~!,~ d .. ALL TYPE.'>•. T••hJon R.,air W\11 ll11hy1>11 'Ill·" 'niar~ c;u.1rt'l1m llt'l•ltl•ir Crpt ••••••••••••••••••7 •••• 1560.C M.C11 hf 921126 WOMEN treework. sod lawns, 25_Yrsexp 6420295 Freeest ~4o tllf,25 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'v" ov1·r nil•• '1 ' l111m•· • l EE M JA"VI" ---673·7776 R 96-0702 -----CANOPY TV SVC CO "· "' •', ' n •µu11 IJ 'r' ,.,iir 1)(1 • "' ., ~~ ea.a• •CUSTOM PAINTING• Homes·Add1t1oni. Resluc t:I TOfo 7tiX 85011 v.u r I.. m "' l' If It cf <i Additions & flt'modellng •-..., lnlr/L'xtr. R<>a• Ralos blk II ""' bl Tt.itt: Serv1cl.' ~~I UIUI ~ 962 SS73 Llr 31711.W ....................... Kings Carpel & Cleaning M•a.y "' "' ~ ~ l'O over Wl:I t. r' cc al Fa tr P11n·~ 9Cl0 1633 Ca-penter _ -----YOU llAVE IT READY Co. "We do 1l all" Holi· ••••••••••••••• • •• ••• •• Call Bruce 532 2045 eve:o; i::'l• low _!'3h'l' 5116 4892 _ Tia. ....................... Olrpel M.1111<111 l.oy H>ur .. Goldlt~ I U .HAULITAWAY daypnces ~~1 t'ree t;st. Dlockwalls, Don't be horni.wagglep ...................... . FINl ~ll. HE~llll>l.I. ~ vr m111t: ttvv11 1r, & .. •:·:00~ .... ~··...... TIMS486306 Housecleaning Salts fac· <sl umps tont'. br1t•k Yorrmequal. puinliil)(& ~ Rpr :-.mull JOI>" OK i•lt·aiu11u too' <:u11r work WEl'.OINli (,1.EANUPS -------lion 1u11r Xlnt refs fles1d /Comm·1 Hvu.s ltltr prices loo C'all •••••••••••••••••••••••Ceramic Tlhna ~howvr~ Reas !fl!I 037!1 td blg..:t·r i.av1111o:.., f"r ei.t •Wet>kly Ma mte11ance • Soflny & Jer Free haul· Kalhy 751 7716, Leigh Uc l28S86 Bob 750 9M4, Kachard I h1 pressure: to •; otr w 111d Plumbtnit kit. enlne:o. Re~s rt•I • tl45-Jb46 Fret> !-:st 642 9907 mg. cleanup, Lrec work ~O 960-39s:I clean hri.l . do they·• wtr s\s. lcuk~. buthrni Sm)Ob_OK 842 ~ Fuu::.h < at1" utr' l'unl'I - --fur usabl(' 11ems Fen mg. door\ t.lltlfll'I), I'll: Cement/Conc....t.t CARDENlNGtCLEANUP ces t bld":t removed HOUSE"' L'ANING t'ireplaces ·Planleri; Llc/lns836·~ end Reas 832·2461'.1 TrwW.iu I ' II v I h r1 Re l N rt •-6 """"'c.. - - -••••••••••••••••••••••• .:a 111 1« 1 11 u ••••••••••••••••••••••• as ra 11s cwpo °' M72006 Byreliablecouple BnckConcretePallo Ori9Supet"CJrGPhka PLUMBElt·Rcputr. re 5368'17~ St:C~lltlT'l'Blll .IH.HS CObUIMes.i &l~·75tl8aft - -Refs 963·5813 DlockWalls BBQP1ls Cu.sLomMuratss36-5SSS pipe. 1n s l~lfjt1onRemov<ll S. tnmmin~ I All plltt'>l'' c·u111 tt•lv ~PM lfaulmg, movmg, cleanup ----Rers. F.sls 646-0464 - -s erv1cl'::> G G1r1 lt')' prurung. frl!C e5t l.11: II C~t Ser• ce ht uck,,.,,111 ,11111 'u,.111m S71up. Treework Reas. llouseclean1nu weekly Mo Mc) --~SP"'l...,.l ... G ".1293... F\llly1nsured 642 2624_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• rost r l84245.97 & 'f ..--... 8' ~ "' " V' "'"' hnck """'k I nl·nsl·d Jl\d IF YOU • reees _ _ _ Xlnl work, good re· Ex""r'd Re»~ Hates ----St .. am t:h·J111111 .. h' 1 m. hcmdl•d t;.1:;.20:11 . ferences. 64S·6SS9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ,,_ '. • · • · HOME SAVERS PLUM Wlftdow Ca.oninq 1lln rm & hllll .1\ i.: rm.~ ha vc a serv11:e to orrer or Get nd of unsightly trash Hauling MO\ ing Free E:;l l: 811 Gene RING & 111-~A TING. "'ree ••• ••••••••••••••••••• • $30 1-'n•e U1•olluron1 11.1vt--.uml'lhm~ )nu "'Jnl ~oods lO llt'IJ. place ilo ad & debns. C~llege sld'l, Classified ads sell big Anytlung _5:12-0458 c~l. $10 fir Honest & ••SUNSlllNE BOYS•• Crpl repJir. dcfleJ & de t.o self? Cla:.sif1l'd ads do In l he 0 a 1 I y P 1 Io l !1~~d S48-6428 _ it.ems, s mall ilems or Anywhere. encl 2T lruck. Re liable 5(-rv Hof A di Qu:il work . free t'st. odont1' IS'i1sex11 Uoo<.t 11 wvll Call NOW, Cla::.s1r1ed Secuon any item . Jus t call Fast, expr. very reas. SE.LL !dlC' items with u Mslrchg. 1347 0383 & 6'40·8409. 673 2410 refs ~31·0101 1;12·567K Phone 642·5671l Sell 1dle items 642 5678 642·~1l Wmlon 5-46-3048. 67~714 D~uly P1lol <.:ta::.s1fwd Ad 751 3150 ev /wknd Af*f19tnb&Jnfw1'. Rooms 4000 OHiceReftfal 4400lusinessWant.d 5010Lost&Found 5300TraYet 5450HetpWonted 7100HetpWmded 7100He4pWCIRtH 7100 •.••..•.................•............•.................•..........•.•..•..••......•...•.........•....•.......•.•.....••......................••...•..•.•..•••••....•.•..•.•••••.••••..•...•.•.•..•••.••.••...•. LogYna S.och 3848 Sll~Jlini: rms ~l·$105 mo DELUXE OFRCES INVESTOR-MGR !-'OUN o : Black Lab EUROPE $1829. :>wk!. all ••••••••••••••••••••••• All S50 _wk ~harl' k~t l· Comm! & and:.ll !>pacl!s :;eeks pl-O~nership Joe male.w/tan collarm vu· expense. 2 meitl s, IOYSAHDCirlRLS LIVl-:l!'IACASTLEW1d~ b.ilh ~hown Mon Sat 200to2000sq rt ,\s luw l'ravelARenc) P O 274. Del Ob1sPo San Juan England. France. ACCOUNTING 10 lo 15 yt>ars. l':arn Oreao vu·ws, I>: I IJr apt ·ll·onf I}.. .C'all ~fl !pm as 35< sq. ft. Lal( Nil(ucl & t:dM 92625 ----Capo. 496-3964 Austr ia. Switzerland, ~~!!~:ee~~~~ft~~~~o Iii ceil "'s l; artle 11s e ::. reQ d. 556-0058 or M I V ...... ~ -to L 5025 Italy & Sea Cruise lO ~ ~ ,., ... ~·5.!J!'>-1 iss on •eJo ureas ~Y oari FOUND Pl'l. 'lmall 1tray Yugoslavia & Grcete. CLERK scnptlons to tht' IJatly pool Cls to hrh MJlur Handy lo S D F'rwy ••••••••••••••••••••••• P ilot Trans portat 111n prures~wnab ~l mo ROOMS S25 wk up with Call K:ll MOO v er Y r r 1cnd1 Y hen 494~110 provided. No dell' ~nes 1..._14l'o5Jor49'1 f~117 l-.1t1:hcn SJ7 so wk up --SC~HS ch' r kl' n . v I c . l!udo~Rt& For newspaper accounting office. or collecting. Phonr apLo, :>41197!'>5 Balooatnn,$250 mu incl Lake cr .. ~t. 11 u Ph Pnt--atton Mus t be accurate with figur es .. 0>7.y S1ud10 2 hlk:. b<·h <1 ulll 105 Muin St, Balboo HOME OWNERS borrow ~ 3132 d 536-9"1l2 town Singh: pcr'ion, n Roont w,kttrh ~rival G75"8740 atluwbankratc:s tocon ••••••••••••••••••••••• Operate a 10 key adding m achine an pets lltil 1ru I smo J <1hn l>'i·m 111• only c o-. ta -solidatedcbls. pay laxes. L 0 s l b I a ck I gr c Y Sc:hoofl & electric typewriter Wlth skill. This is a CAI DRIV~S Taylor. 292 <'pre-.!. Dr \\i-s.• '~~ 1 ulil :HS 61&2 CdM 390 to 1050sq fl Cpts take a vacallon. room cock a poo ' 800 ie r " IMtrction 7005 full time pos ition. Work in pleasant Menor Women Apt B 4!1-1 1.ll:i drps, A tC. Ja nitor , addil1on. swim pool. pay wslsidl! CM, 12·24·76. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · h d Musl bt!25orovt'r 3867 ltm w l i.;t l-1 t 1:h1:n purk'g Mas1er111\73·4120 otr cx1s1ang 2nd or any 6455700 MEN WOMl-;l\ environment wtl goo company Apply lnPerson Mission Vit>io rim ilt•J.:•"• SIU mo> i::ust ---purpose TRAIN FOR benefits including 2 weeks vacation Yeflow Cob ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ~I ~ ~!r.111 OJo'J-'ICE S P A<.:1': N B MECH" ... ICS 1,os1 Sm White Curly after one year . company paid group ll251Sl.itcrAvenue ' 1 w 1·rr L> ...... ·--• IARTENDIHG 2 Br rondo, .... , ol.. n«• 1649 t-stc • r J\1r HATIOMAL IA.MK Ha•r..-u Dog l:!/23 Needs insurance. credit union. etc. Apply at: i-·ountam Valley pct !> $ :! 7;, m 0 ROOM FOR REMT µvl lollel. etc Two unlb 17141638-3 .. 54 fY(' mt>dl<"illJOn. Vil' Irby TWOIOWEEK CLASS on ...... GE CO"'s· D"' 'LY -LOT -----Ph ~5 J.'8:i or K.Jit.Cl!.t ''"''~'>!I 400~<1 ft ca.$200 mo.nu .., Park.area<>!Edwards & NAT N-WIDEJOB 1uu.. "'11 "" r1 CASHIER CLERK ext M6 517 xlras On{· uml 1300 sq G o Id c n we s t . II fl PLACEMENT 330 W I Street Costa Mesa to work t·6P~. Mon· Fri l'r1\ .ill' entry & balh Wt~ fl . 2 toilets. as 1:.. I st. 2nd & lrd T.D.'s Rewanl 847 0734 ASSISTANCI!: • ay ' . rn CdM Good refs. exp Newport Beach 3869 1·k~ ~ forqwctemplfrm. $400 mo PA C l Fl C LOANS AVAILABLE GOOD JOB w. .... th'"-°-of l:OOAM-S:OOPM & energy reqwred For ....................... Hd:. S130 646·!1502 REAL ESTATE. Gene Credit nol amportanl Lost EYE GLASSES, OPPORTUNJTIES Call for..,....., ... pteaM intcrvit'W t·a II ~ rll PARKMEWPORT 11.111.6420200 673-488.'.IBroker women's bi focals . AMERICAN 642 4321 xt 276 Adams,644·i_s;_s __ _ "PARTME ... iTS !loom w •kitchen pr1v - -Amber rim::. Vic Alpha I " RTE ..a D t R S • • • "' " \1 F'em S12S1mo. uttl m APPROX 800 sq ft , c 2 at Mott~s. Tnast Heta 17th St or Ht Time "' " 11; Equal Opporturuty Employer l Or2 Bedrooms Jt1d 11 M:i .l(J2J 1~ E. 17th St. Suite T DHdS 5035 Deli. <.:.M. Dec. 24lh. SCHOOL Townhm1~1·-.. SlSQtmo. Do> le 54R 0479 •••••••• •••. ••• ••• •• ••• 646-<1790 1104 t:. 17th St . SA t'rom ~9 SO Vocatiot1 R~ats 4250 834 1960 0f)t'n 9 6 l>Jlly •••• ••••• •••••••••••• •• Exec ok "wl~ overlook LOANS 9% F'OUN 0 srNll blk do..: 1111 Schools Coast To Coast Http w onhd 7100 H.tp want~ 7100 Spa-Pools Tenn1:-. Mounlatn Relreat·rental mg fabulous Np II arbor "··-2nd TD I ---LVai m ps&on'sb\'t Vda 11,e y Jobs w~ 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• AC'rOl.S frorn Fashion Spatwus 2br's. frpll' & the Pa<'1f1c Orcan Lux --.._.., ew • pri n g a c • Island al Jamboree on adults. no pels Close m. furn mcl'g secretary & Fairest Terms since 1949 1197 6287 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bahystller. rt-!.pon,.1hlc & Bannatd wanted. no ex San Joa~um 11111:. !loud pl'rfrct weekender to #!Cl recept. from S385. No lse SottMr MhJ. Co. -/\pl Mgr avatl Jan I. Ex run luvm~ nct'tlt·d for ~ yr per necells. Good pay S3 C7141644-1900 away. ElCan:.oVlllagc, PH 1714 1675-4030 642·2171 545.06ll Found Chihuahu11 T ype per. mature. educated old e11cr1o:ellc l1oy. 11 30 hr Lil Ag8JC s Har, Black & While mall' do~ "0 60 U Pr I.' f ft cf lo 5 ~on· Jo'rl, m y home. 847 5411 •DRUXE• $275 678 1314 SAVE SS Brookhurs t1!:>ldlt•r .llB 213/384-4214 Urookhursl 11 am1llon . ., Rentab to Shor. 4300 841siMH Rentm 4450 s.'16-1953 Y-i:.-w~ -7100 H B. 962 627~ Eastllluff .I hr,~ ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pn'lale1larty w11tb11y ,_.,.. ...,....... * ... CASHIERS WantL'<l ror self !>erv11:l' ~ slaUons Part·llme & full lime openings 1n Costa Mesa Herc 1s d perfect opportunll y for ~·ou housewives, m11frlll· agers or semi retired lo s upplement your Ill romc For morl' in formation call Purl Timc, Inc :!13 925·0431 Lease Incl ::.pat· m.1 .. 1cr ••••••••••••••••••••••• , • your2ndT U 642 35i3 LOST Grern parakeet.••••••••••••••••••••••• su11e. din 1 m & cltil AVOID INCOMl'ATIBLE NEWPORT ~Cll STOR~ lk "J .. H AAAAAAAAAAAA l(arai.;c Auto door HOUMM1\1'ES! 2630AvonSt S27o~to ta s.namc oey as SECY/wENOFC Baby<;1tlt-r. work1nl( mother needs dcpcnila ble s11ler for IP, "" old boy P e rf s•Jmt'one w 1own rar. for a£l srhool, no later lhan 11 P M. lrvlnl' & OoH•r 11rca. S ta r t J Jn ;1 ~ 1712 1111 P;tts 246BedenAn. CHILD CARF.. Luvrn.: pen on n eed ed . m v opent.'r avail l'nol & JcrryWynn <2131477 7701 ltt&2ndTOLoans 2 tegbnds CallS4Bl!!Hi9 Accountmg/Recep1 ret"reallon .ireJ Adult" ~£ (J)ATtS ONu, .. ~rrm Hus 1 n c,. s H c• n la t ll~.r; 641).8292 m •:W/\RO Male Siamese Employers Pay All f.'l'cS only No pct,. Frum $360 Takl·~ the Uuesswork llorticullure Pref <wilh Irvan" Par1f1c Financia l Blue Pt. w /ID t:ollar & l..12 Hcmders Atcency l!65J\m11(11s W11y 11utoffmdtnl(lhal f 6312626 ------letter.. C.T & ph • Dts 4020BirchSl,Ste11>i Man.i~l'<ih' RllilITltOOMMATr-: un um. aecom i · AIWOAlltCefMrrts/ a~ared l2fl7. Crom 1-: Newport Beach 8338190 GranadaM).(ml Co tl324134 Sinl'el!l71 IC~~allbtwn fi&7P:O.t Prt'SOftd1/ Ocnlront. Bal Pt CallforAppl/Estab '65 --7WJSq. fo'l ore avl P1Jc Lost&FoUnd 67~or6734450 ---------•Jo rec llc:nt. P"l I br mob C'sl Hwy S200 mo Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----A llskpr. hve·tn. refs Sal IAYF«OHTHOME hm t:~th p lime !>Cl \. Robbie54R0757 Amounc:.._nh 5100 I.OST 4 y r old M1n1 Pvt r m /ba.TV.hteeook. 3 RR. 2 ba $2000 Mo yrly ~1rl rnduy 97(} 4256 - ---••••••••••••••••••••••• Dachshund. Las t sern CdM 644-96661644·9806 STE'S TO BEACH Industrial Refttal 4500 Sun pm t 2-:t6 Vtc llilllop, ucean ''u home ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ar_~1J:_~ r& C rkafdl scr:nenn Brookhursl & llamlllon Archllectural Draftsman. 3l:$R,2ba .unr $425 To ~hare w c(lngenial . na."'""" or w n ra H B c 11 f r d . Res1d exper. North 3HH,2 lla .unr $400 male s Ownl'r is infre. Lca!>e or Rent. lttC' in· Sal e, major s hop ·~ . a I oun • American Development associated BROM £115 ·PEAL TORS l 0, '. Ill> lolboo • ll ·I U I qut'nl 'we•'k~nrl \'ISll•'r •-du.'ltnal 14.000 ~qft. 17• ct-nter. SS p riay MO 0940 962.205<! Co 3 2nd Cdu • • v .,. .,......._ h y pu· ~1 .. 111 Ave, '" "'ould m"•nlJtn !Bdrm .., ..... ~s. ca' -r. K1"". Penonalls 5350 759·0213 I , . "" off11·r::. Ac to:.s fr Ol • • * __ ---_ {f/'<.l 1-. \/Clllr,. 4;~r·2817 1\11 port Call 546·<17:.JI J-L.. o~ ........ -••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~10..a o :'>ill 17\:I ~· ..,... ~ nnnkmgproblem·• ,., ,.....,., " Shan· llH h1111c PJl.ittal vs .. __ . v'I 149 W . A•enida CallAlcohol Helphne GUYs-GIRLS cit·e,infronl aµl unlll June lu5ine-ss/1n•ed/ Cometlo 24 hrs ii day 835-3830 OVER 18 w rnutun· vrof pc--rsun Rnanee ~------Ms Sands 1s now in- mi m11 ti'i:> ~ Jrl S 30 ••••••••••••••••• •••••• _. C~~ PREGNANT., !'>pal'IOUS nt•w :! & J nm You ar·t: lhe w1nn~r of 2 lervtewing ror lO sharp Bd 2 I h ,. .. _...___ • Car in" conf1dent1al I t t t rm-. rnt un11~ -~• uckets to the " young peop e o rnve ·•lTot1:odromOCl'llnrrnnt & Wanted , rem rm mt OpportwMty 5005 ~ V affon tounseliog & referral w/fun J(roup lo New nt'w t'1l> n•crt•JtlOnJI de :!bdrm jpl an Panecreek ••••••••••••••••••••••• • CK Abortion, adoption & York . FI or 1 d a . & 'elopmen\ lmmed fl<' \'llla1tl' C::'o1 Tennis. -..,.IWIMTO•ft"ft .cncrtloetal ~~~RE 547 2563 lhroughoul USA. No ex cuµjnC) FJm11ie, «< IJ(lOl.ch $170 l\75·09SS NifTS'2ooo MO. Vehicle Show per necess w/2 week ex· pets accepll'J 5335 up Rm mt "'anlt.'tl M t' shr Plushiest bar tn area al lht-. * SHAROa...J •5 * pense paid training pro. 675-49\ I Brkr 2hr I wnh:1e nt S Csl But1Y SLreet Outslandm~ ANAHEIM " Rram Above average r.arkin1t. Owner mu~t CONVENTION OUTCALL MASSAGE earning thereafter All On The Boy .,lnrn Mark !17fH}599 aft (;Jo'NTEH 499-1224 tr a n s po r l a t ion l.o'd> lbr :? bJ upper I )1 !!vestalelohall/\dlepro Jan.2thruJan.9 furnished. Applicants Ut•am 1 p1J1n1< rrptt·. . -uale property nxious Call 642·56711. exl 333 to "THE EXPERIENCE" ml.isl be neat. single , & Bahysttlt'r Wantt'ii for 2 c hildren art \C'h<iol , :! ~ 30PM Non ~mok('r He r s ~f c:::.J Verde 540-lMJ Babysitter wanted 1n walking d1 s1anre of Monle Vasta schl for 7 yr t(irl Wed fo'rt 2 S. SI hr Ca II 642 7fi00 J\ M Babys1\t1ng. rl•liable person WJO(eJ ror 7 yr uld & ltll• h~kpn g Wl'd t'ri. 2·5PM in Clack Uay area S3 hr . own lransport 64.2 7600 AM . ------ Babysitter w 1rcrs ror 2 children. Wknds & tK'cai. wkdays 640·507R Babys1t t er 1 ll 1kpr 7 30am·4pm ~ F L,o'. ang. depend Own transp. 831·1S48 • Costa Mesa llome. Start m J ,111. full You art• lht• winner of 2 tJmc. 2 Children 551 54!17 uckcts to the Sporh,Vcacaffoft & RKtfftioutal VehlcS.Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENT JON CF.NT ER Jan 2 lhru Jan !) Call 642·5678. ext. 333 to clJtm your ticket::. ••• lootCcrpenten Pacifica Hffda Skilled Carpe~ Must be exper Xlnl ro be n e r1t !> Apply· at. PactfH'J Uy Kipper Yacht::.. !128 W. lilh St . CM (.'1lurch Secretary. I, time Good lypmg skills l\hth t y lo meet P"Oplt• Mature woman dei!lred. Ca II 631 211811 C1erk Typ1sl Reccpt. Ex per for LaRuna Niguel Real EstJle ofr $600 mo Wntc Ad lli7'l. Daill! Pilot. PO Box 1500. t:.M. Ca 92626 ------- COOK PART-TIME Dldl Church's RHtaurant 2alg Newpurt RI, C ~t Cooks All shifts. good pay App ly Jolly Roger. •100 S.1 Cst llwy. L 8. Cooks& Camtw Perso.ef P/Ume Day:.. Apply an person 2·5pm Tues thru Sal p11t 111. 4hhw~hr .Ra r f waml"(l to :;hare mce Goodterms.A((t 837•4ZOO daimyourllckets Adull motel. Closed able lo leave IM Sllirai.: .. s.5.50 tiil S719 o furn hou'!.~ near bch. IURGB STA.HD • • * cui:wt TV f'or Reserva· M E 0 I ATE Ly I-' or ---------•I ---~ 17.!I> 'loB '1n 64-5S.'>4 a!! 7 bOO!I, 645-3967 personal interview call IG'*llWI Boat Manuf Company Cori's Jr. li971 Mar1\rthur. lrvint.' ~m-aps for Rent 4350 Lagun~ Beach 1 · Car Pool 5150 Ms. Sands <714> 557-8700 UHIOM i"AMK UHE FOREMAN ~~-;;1::.;l~~:r· ;:;~·::::;,~,,t •••••••••••..•.•••••••• ~~ :i~~~~ ~~ ~~kdl~: ••••••••••••••••••••••• •KAREN'S * eoxl 1595. ThuTrhs &RFod:>r-1 only Has an 1mmed1alc open !~~.~~ct;,~'l~ha~~z:x~ coo11s noor nlun t·,,11,. l'nol Gangl' for renl $30 East· Gl'06ses $15,000 mo year N1E> ED R1dt> to Lag HlC lls OUTCALL MASSAGE 1l am·RPedmh"lt e& B ewlaly tnl! for a Safe Oepos1t ft \dull~ ''' ia.•c, •:1111 SJOe()1111WMe~a64!>-2679, round Owner retinn~ ark&R1dcor Lag yn 6PM·2AM 838·1780 l~~S E Ba lol Sn/\s o, Clerk Th•!> per::.on per Call835·9311SA::.kror Experience Preferred. f"4' .. •l;}l~I .. ~ •IHftll Wtll accept 29<'~ down or IAig Bus Sta From -" · n s • should ix' adept 4t work Jack Wllke_n__ Bul Nol Necessary Yr l.•• ll.11 "' 1 .. r ·~11 1\ll 111.i t•I • 111 ( .111,11 II ll'f' f, I • W!'-.t• 1111 11o .. •i.1 11.1 frpl1 • I ' • t 1 I.• I p.1l111, "',, I , r 1lr), t pool ,otlulh ~11•1 mo fij'\ •11!1'1 I.I IHl l'-1 I ... H.,~ I ' I I I o<1•11w hi.I )(JU(/, \~ \ r I It "' "' ftlll WILL M1•,,1 l .. 1dy whc 1:11111•11 r•· .ipt fur her n ·11r1•1t hu'bjnd, pl:.. cull :..11H!122 2 Br. 2 ha. dt•lu'( dpt I Blk to bch S:\50 \ rly C1tl 6'1s.UM Lffw«M~ A ch~rm111~ 3br. 2ba cpt & df"ll!l. w11lk lo buy oce:in 6 12 1334 u (;.(:' jq) 3876 ....•••............... •!-PAflKLINl; • :!hr. I ha UPI, J\l"l fl' nm olll,.I '• hlk~ lo h1•h Sl25 & $:':\.\ S1ovr rdr11: l ~U 1 ~2 W ~t·alone:1. ~an ( lcm <t92 7072 -----~ .... FunaisMd orU ......... d 3900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 8374201'1 Uanu Pl . Stoney Hill & AIORTIOH A.ulomol1ve mgwithragures.beprofl· BOATS Oay&NrghlSh1f\11 4400 ---de I 0 b 1 s po . W r k Counseling & Referral EXPEtUIHCED rient on a JO key add mg GEL REPAIRMEN Available ••••••••••••••••••••••• COFF£E SHOP 491 9745, ask for Alka Pteg. tesl·avail wknds PARTS MAH machine lru• typing & Apply In Person li~i~il.~i·F NETS~ MO Hm af\7PM493-!f25l ~HrHelpllne547·9495 lldveanea\apµearanec EyxphelrCo'd . M63aclGPrlegor s..acJ&ShopMo.• • I' rl M & I' 1 -----Rolls Royce & BMW On· ac rp, I acen· ~ E. Csl Hwy. CdM ?1i h!fl e c~' o~ d opt o~~· Lost & Found SlOO •SPIRITUAL READER ly dealer experienred Please afjlY in ""rson lo lla, C-Os:_<i ~a. L·~ual Oppor Employer --__ ll!l ___ !lll.,__ lion <'l',. an 1111( >Ul ••••••••••••••••••••••• "\tUy' ·-n·-' need apply Apply in ... ""i AllC!_..... 111~ w11h 11l1·111y or p .. rk .. .....~"""' Dons 11chell . 1110 BookkeeJ)('r. full charge -/~-._,_,,,, 111.,, flna'" 1,..,..1 tr~fti~ FOU ND Black Lah, 18JSSEI CammoReal ~rson al l540Jamborce N l c l D ,. - - -., " ... --,., .. J .,,. u , d N Be ewpor en t•r r. 'A. llllltrucuon t>Xper p.,re· Cooks. full & p/Ume Over .t,-I-·-"hon h<iu-Good female. 1a11 3699, M.V SanClemente.Forappl. a. cwport ach. N.......,..rtBe h r.cac'>Gn fd u l " ..... "' ... _ _ ~~.... ac ""°.__,.,, • . .. ai resum~ to 4:2 18. l Yr coffee shop e>C. ~~~=-term~ A.i-i 1137 4200 ~rca 58l·~ ___ 49'2·9034 492-7296 Automotive F,qual ()ppor Employer Cortland. CdM. Ca. 9't62S per. Refs req'd. Charlu:'l Zs.w, _ .... _ Auto W~k&-. FOUND 12·26, Syberian Nicole & Sammer. attrac New Detail Shop needs _ ----Bookkeeper, F iC. P /time. Chl11.549-03St_. / ~ ....,..,. ... .., Hu.sky. Fem. approll 2 tive redheads would like help. '°' -----SlGOO ~toNET yrs Mission Viejo to meet Gentlemen for Top wages paid Engine e•iuviNG Perm or small malluf COOKS Orange & LA Counties .,,_ ''""'-Mus t have exper. & M 1 1 581 41SS day or eve fun. 535·5363. ~-mers, eng pamlt!rs, TB.UR kniiw'l 'or all areas of bk· a e or Fcmu e over ~II locations .. \tlly hcensed .... u ~. Ii h •· l k hls I\ I '" •l MO t'RE:f: RENT• -A$.'l RJT 4li00 FOUND ring at Mesa HOME·OFFICE-:-P_A_R_T_Y_ hol~~':r;" fha~:~~e~~: P/llme. Mon, Wed. Fri. kpng L D Plastics. 1 ~;;:; mg ·. PP 'I -v 123 Rm. offt«~ from Theatre on 19\h Sl ~everyonelnthl'pic· checkout,ptckup&de· 9-S·:JO+occas.Sals.for !:: Wakeham . S/\ ·DetT Call Mr. Howard 645· 6101 SIH Pl'r m o AdJ Ro~&,.... _!:ady'sLoung!:644~ lure. Photographer on Uvery.Applyat our S. Coast Plaza ok. 54HI043. 1720Su--'~CM. Arrportcr Hott'!. No lease Nels 13.SOO. mo. FOUND Grey /Wht male call for the ho It days 2009 Harbor Bl, CM ExC. prer'd. Cull Ml~s -IOOKKEIPU P""""' ~, """ J223'rll noon San Francisco '!tyle l 673-8104 ~1030 Ku . ~4006. """"" Person operation Bu~y cat. approx 2 yrs . CaftfotNcl~al w/lunc:h tine exper wanted lmmed. Apply in ciaJ at.atemenu & taxes penon. 2·5pm. Braitley·,. Commercial property & Steak House, 33 1 ~7 m anagement. Exper'd Olrn_!noCapistrano. SJC: only. Reply to. Classified UNTER Help Pu't 11 od no. 778 c/o Daily Pllol, full time. Apvly m pers. PO Box 1560. Costa 3200 E. Puc:. c111 Hwy, 60•PHSQFT 1617 WF.S1'CLlf'F NB AGT 541 !i032 --- 1501 Wntclff Dr. _Newport t'ananc1RI Ctr Uotin9 Offict Spoct Call on SM Mano11er <714 > 642-31llext246 tr You NN<i /\ Staffed & Journlshed Offl<'e. l'a II T II Jo; E X F. C U T I V r-; Sl:ITI•:. Rent inc lude~ f11tmc recept . phOnt' & n'latl !ler vire. utll & JilnJtorlul SCcy·s & of<' equip avail Newport <.:enttr 640-~70 Mall loc Only $31,000 Mediterranean VIII, CM. • * • ScrY'--Ir Lo Cull prlC'e. wilh terms t2/24176, SS7·8022 C..,,. Keilft _,.. Clft Aat 9837-4200 - ---AUTO SERVICE 3333S. BrlSll)I, C.M ..,... ·----FOUND· Lng haired altrd 9711 La Caplh A••· Equal Opp Employer COCKTAILS male Tabby w/whtreel& Fowtt•aValley m tf Newport Beach chst. Wear1ng flea collar Vou are the WIMCf' or 2 J .C . PIHNFf co p I us h . 11 ea ls 100 Delsons Mkl. on San Joa · Ucketl to the 24 F9IWcMa ltlmMt Part n er ii I e u d Ing . quim Rd. S44·0lJ9. Sportt, Yacotloft .... port •ech BANKING Trrms Al(l 837 4200 Found. Large Blatk & Ir R~ Hu an openln1 for TELLERS Mma. Ca 92626. CdM. StMI Fabricotl0tt Brown Christmas Puppy Ythlcle Slaow ..._.Hve IOYS AND GIRLS N fo:TS $2100 mo Dec. 2S. N B. 64S· 1 l43 un at the Set wtce ,ff'IOll PROOF OPR for Dilly PalO\ rou.tes In Misc. sleet. Workangl)l1•1 7 ANAHEIM Arc h Beach a r ea o with contractor:. ""'P t. o s T m 0 n c y & CONVENTION ExpenentereqUlred Lnguna Beach. Must be run Rc'•u1r1•11 no •·x l h f CENTER Outat.andingcobenehts Our beauUful Newf)<>rl al least 10 years old. perlcncc ... Owner will mous ac c m~R~ rom Jan. 3lhruJan. 9 XlAt workinl conditions Beach Branl'h has cur Phone 642·4321, ask ro --~~-~~-- COUPLE to m1nage EK· per & refs req 'd. l:? Unit1 uruum.. Co!Jta Mesa. 2 Br house for yard care fr managem en t No c hildre n . Owner, 532·5939-train Good terms. Agt 144 E., B.i~ ~e:'s'~4J~r Call 642-5678. ext. 333 lO Apply In person rent operungs for Tellers CtrcuJation. 837•4200 any ea 8 ' clajmyourlickets. ll>amT04pmMon-Frl & Proof Opr Recent -----DELIVERYMANrorear ------542-971!6_. ______ 1 * * * EqualoPpemployermtf comme~ial banking ex IOYSAHDGIRLS ly morning L.A. Times ~"9 a lus? Lost· Blk Toy Poodle. :::--:--:-~~-=--:----:-1~~~~~~~~~!1 per. is necess In return. Mission Viejo . El Toro route. No eollectlng. 2"°' Over 500 Ac\lvc local fem Univ Prk, Irv erca Wanted, witness to .accl·i----------• we orrer xlnt co bene· area. Earn your own Hrs DaUy ~t 1 bu.s. lhiUnas. Pl\lase call Reward 545-«M» dent Nov. 23 In drvwy nr ftlx 4' pleasanl working money ~lling aub8cr1p· or itop by for f~e tnfo __ _;_ ______ ,Tr•• Ami' o s AVON conds . H qualified. uonu.fterschool. Forln· Delnry,IH.wsp.,., Tli&: EXCJTING 1·0M dlx ~utte:i from $150. PALM MISA A"S. llt1l meld. !\JC. 11mplc MIN U"r~TONPT plc~.JllnllOr675 0000 All categoril'S & t ypes. LOST In ll. 8 Black R estauran t . C M . '' plcue call the branch to formation, call 830-0913 Permanent part.time Job We guarant~ to please ~,.~!" ... ~ttc•r, r eward _Re_w_ll'd.....;._· _»T_,_711_1 ____ 1 Santti Claua schedule an Interview deUvenng early morning YoU. _, ~ LA Times to homtw tA MASSA'll T• Aly_,. $$1 7'4f7S2-0HO Irvine/NB area11. Muat BCll. Pnme loc11tlon In Hunt· Bach. L&2 OR. 1 n It t on D •a c h o n from $195 Brookhurst. 800 tq.uare Adulta, No Peli! feet. Single, garden t,ype 1~1 Mt3• Dr. 11toru or o<rke. Coo4 ex· cs Olla Eul of Now port J>08UN, U J1lg11ed park> Blvd > ln•. CAii Mr. Plumintr 646·9880 ....... -·1 ~~---~~~~1-.........,~-•v-~-~~~~ 751-3741 found Voun11 Siamese UNITED 8USINESS Cal w 1whlte nwrklngs on lNVESTM ENTS nose ln TU!!lin 832-6881 1525 M~1 Verde Or F. (ac~from Kona LnsJ l.osT. Sm brown Poodle, SUlte lOll, Costa Mesa n1Jme "Coro", Reward UBl Open 7 days Hunt'~ Harb IJ40 1419 GARAGE SALE 1d1 In You don't need a 1u.n to "lnterlor Design" Need GARAGE S/\LF. adl' lo the Da1l)t Piiot brln& hap-"dnw r11t11 wha you active talented lnv~stor the Dally PHol brln« hap PY n:tulta. To place your place an alt ln tbt Dilly In a well esL1b'd NB py "'5ult.3. To pl»ct your drawing card. phone Piiot Want Ad•t Call now shop 67&·$S48 alt s.:t-O drawtn.c card, phone 642 !18'78t.oday. 642 5C78. pm 642 S478today AGu11Mooas lt"PR~sEN~A-;.1it. For Ad Action ~~~a~~~~!lh::;l~w::: ISCOITS MMt people, payoff hOh· CITY Call a Salary $300 mo. 546--0235. OUTCALL OHL y day bll13 & start saving 6] 1.~· 11 qam. Lat talk about It u•noNAL ly Pi Delivery Person .e Call ~1ou or Zenith M Dai "lot zs.~ Hrs • wk . Own 7.we. a•u1 tranap: reimbuNlemenl I& there a Gentleman will· M I "VISOR for tnllcage. Costa Mesa Ina to m eet a lonely EquaJ ()ppor Employrr IUI" Med 1 c ,. 1 c e n 1 l' r wtdow new In tow11 ~Don't .I~ up lhe 1htpt 642-5678 Pharmacy.&U-0106. Yrs old ltcply l\d. 458, "Wat' It In claHlrled. Dally, Pilot. P 0 Boll Sh ip ti) shore result.I! SEtJ ldlf' llem'I with s F\nd wt\At you want l 1.5e0. C.M r.me IM2 ~8 Dally Pilot CIU!ll~ --------Oa1ly Pilot Classmeda. • . • ( .. •I • N1 s 9 .. 8J0DAtL Y PILOT Thvr~ay Oecember30, 1976 ~~.~.a:'.'~.~ ..... ~~~~1 ~~.~~·~.~ ..... !!.~~ HelpWo .. te-d 7100 Ht4pWanhd 7IOOHefpW•t•d 7100 -----------. . .. ... . .. .. ......... .. ... .. .. .. .. . . ..... ... .. .... .. . .. . . .. . . .. .. . ... ~~...-...-~~....-...-.... DENTAL OFFICE MGR. E-c1w1 H·nr <· nccc~'J' y uu,y 111 ..11"111'1" :-.ho rl ~ork w1•1•k J11·1wlll' ll unt1n ~l u n lh'J l'h ~17 0071> l>t-:N'I \l. firo1~1h1n Mun11grr t o 1·nod1nJlt• ti Jrl dcpb Hl!mlcr111j.?~. dl·i.1gn, pro- dUl t1un arl. l>llk screen. dr11ft1ng & rnt design A <:h..lllen.:mg ~1llon w /a .:rowth oncnted 0 C. Co. 550-3937 Mr Hammon~. GUARDS MOTOR ROUTE DELIVERY Sond .. y Only dl!hn•ry uf the Du1ly Pilot to <'llr neri. 111 South l.:J~unu and La.:unu Niguel Hl' QUlr~ i.tul1on WU)(Ull Ill \Un Phone 642 4:t.!L, ·•~k ror Harry Seeley. t::quul 01>1lortun11 y Ent1>lv)cr WL ESTATE CONDO CONVERSION SPECIALIST UH!'> Nl•wporl Kl l'M l'/\1.1.~ 77HO WASHER-DRYER !'.11l1tJ IHI~ tip<' J>ln'g Sl!l Xlnl cond ~ , b::.l 01· (~1 644 7005 Kound Cherr) wood 0111 '~ !o ~l. 5 1·hal11>, $1 75 Walnul t•offrl' tbl. l>un1'lh "l} h'. S.'l:i /\ mlwr hun.: 'i: lanl).l SIO 540 07011 ~·::~ ~!fA IU-:c:t-;l'TIONIS r t;x)J\:r cl, N II virile 4'111 ~ 111 CostaMHa f't•rmuncnt. l''ull & Purl lime Phon\• & lrunsp re HURSH AIDES •t'd Relired welcum1• 7<Jm·31>lll & Upm 7um .. ,.1~•r'd Ca ll M6 0274, olr hn• 10-2, t:i.J>t•r. prc!'d, wrll le Jiii l>1splay Ut·~•~nt•r , " ..... 111 prt:l>t•nt.1111111 nndt•r l'l0c>t•dY.'t•d11e!Sduy mature person w /a11 , I . . S'•f J'J:n -litL11Jc for pos1t111n. Mt•su If you have ~ubslant1al experience in all phases of l'Ondo conversion and are prepared to become Vice President of a dynamic. expanding company with spectacular growth in the investment fi eld (Salary & profit sharing), Write Don Ber man . Pres ident. QUAIL PLACE PROPERTIES, 1400 Quail Street, Newport Beach. Late modt•I. 11u111•r cklux Mul\1 <') 1'11· hk1• new l'l'I t l'tlllrl ~tll' II ll(•c' .1 l ~:a:. tor hot h l' u ti ;:,1 5177 :! IXJOH l"HIGll>M Ht-: sso •·15 :11110 l'ollt·t· laule. 30xlill bt'Ulllll ully 't'lllplUl'<'ll ,1 n l 1 ll u t• ).: 11 I ti I i: r n " I 11 ~ cl g I .1 :o; !> t ll Jl ~· 3516 Gala New Year s Eve Party RENDEZVOUS Ill~. su uiv Ol>tll '' ll:ur Styh~l w11ntcd. 33JJ Verde Cnnv lloi.p, 001 Mr.Jldmm1.m~ lln :,lol St . \M. 510!18811 CAnturSt,''M 1 Vr\\t•i.l 111~h1111...,·1dn..: "'~ -'-' ~~ grcl'll, .:ti r 11111l ~125 i\pply 1r1 t>t'1..on. Mgr. ----1:1:n 1:1 11 I' ,. t I' ti r l y 1 :! p 1• u fl!~s1nn11llv d1•1·11ra1 1·cl rms full. ":X/\M l'LE i\ll lll'r!'ulo11 sot:.i & lo\' 1•scal. w 111atl'ht11i.: chr & ottoman, i.xl $975 Only ~195 Thomus \ Ille bd rm rum .• 111 "'Vllll lbh for 1ll'n l'il hv rm, turmal din mg rm 'el. 11u1lb. p.111H •nits. Ma\IJJ.! \l shr & dr) r hldl!·tt l>l'd . 1976 f'ormerly The Monterey Mansion. 260 I Pacfftc Coast Hwy. DRAFTSMAN SR.DESIGN t-'af.tr OFFICE MANAGER I llAIHSTYLIST ~:~~~ t\~~~l.~·~:~o~:r~~ ~~'!.~:'.~·:.~ ..... ~!.~~ ~~!.~~~·:.~ ..... !!.~~ !!~!~~~~••••••••••!~.2.~ Newport INch ~tructur.tl dr.lll1111( & 111' "'!:" e;1.pcr \111,1 lw .11Jl1• ll> vr11du1·" ch•IJ1I 1lr,1w !OJI!> pt'rlJlllllll-! lo !>II Ul' .l~J!.· hu..'y !~il~ly :,calon Et •>fc mi;:r lo ~UIJ•'r\ •~c ~.....,;r-"""-......,:t"""......,:t"""~ I urn. 5116-2211> l'lcnl'al :.la ff ad mm1s lt'1 Us 1-: U . ltt-: 11 l 11. T & <iuuranll't'cl i\ll I' p1•i. p.1n,.. r~·µJ1 r~ Trade 11\!> .l\·1·t•pl 1-.l liJ I 21111 Fealw IMJ the great 0... P'll• Jcm 9'A tel l>IMl«s, cociltall. tr... pcriy fcnon •~..w..s..,p.tect lural "'"''' -.\. t •llH r .. 1 .. w a mm ul "11""' '1!>1011 <:Jll 752 1:;1111, 1111 1 llunll!>OO .. ,1 :11 !-.<tu.ii Oppor 1-;mpl11 \•'I rn I HAMDYMAH--. oil' pr~edur~:. & dv lok • · 1 v _, 1 1, kpng. S..'Od rc:.irme tc, or I.E. M.AHAGfMEMT: Vice _President opening exists for ag gress1ve Apartment Management pro fessiona l. Must have managed over 2000 units. be ready to move up lo Preside ncy of compa ny quickly and have a following. Salary plus profit sharing. Our staff knows of this ad. Submit resume to; Ad #812. Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560. C.M .. Ca. 92626 548-9'l5/ l:.xJ>t'rt ant·~ Iii> •Y c ull 1133 2lHl\I 1!1111 a11µt 011ly 11>1 <:ulhvt•r i. Tom:.1c. 12\l'J Ma1·1\rthur lll''>laUI JOI. (.all .Mon Biid, Sulll' IOU, Ne'< 1iur1 th.ru Thur:. IJt•l" n !I IUd m Bcul'h CJ 9:_'66() •:\ ... W t·s1-:u 111K1-;s . llU\ S1•ll Tradt• 1•,1rl1t & H1·1>a11' Slo..1lcbo.1rd., Speciol Hew Year's lrunch, S.."., Jan. 2 I 0 AM-3 PM Chm • •pe htchlded t\. 3 5pm 11111 )' 11141H DHIVEH W\'l'l t-;11 :\l.t1·,\rthur Hhd. lnml' Older cpl lo hvc 111 & t•Jrc ~·m1 rl'lirn l 1111J11' ,. nw my <'Jr:>-II ~1r1·.t 11 \11.1hl·1tn 1l,11h 77:! 111 Ill cl.I\ .. 1,111 2tfill ,., •':. ~ for hOlll>e & ~;ml ll11U'il' un lkh 30 min from l'u~rtu \ Jll.trl.1. :\h•\lt"U Permuni·11t J•>h Wnlc PO Hc>'I 1!11:1, NpHch t'a DRIVERS I Cross-Country I No :.1)t.'t·1al he rc·11'1I Mal'Gr<·i.:or \'adil L'orp lli31 Pla1T11l 1..1, <' ~I ELECTROMIC ASSEMBLER Happy Holidays lrvint• Pl'rs onner /\~ency IKH E 17th Costa :\lcsa !'.u1tc 22-1 642 1470 HEAD BUSBOY SET-UP MAM ct'Cll'tl for banquet dept Ex pr nee. M u1tl :co pt.' ilk t-:11~11:.h & Spanis h. App ly m pcr1ton <il lhc ::.ale~ 0H1l't• blwn !iam i\1rporl1·'r Inn llokl 11!700 McArthur. Irvine l•.h•t1 ru111r., i\1 ti: ha:. 11n mmt•d 111w111111::. for dt" trun1r ~1 :.,t·mldt•1 ., :-0.>ltlrnni.:. 1tlull1111:. I' I' hoar<I ri·q Xl11t h1•111• 111 d .I! ITI<'ll d1•11l;1I 111.;r 111 1<·rv11·w T111·.,/W1•ol Thur-; !I am 111 'I p11l 111,1· I n~trumt•nh IO:! Ila l..1•1 :--1. l'o~r.1 \1 1•,,1 l'h ---------- !li!I ~1J-; 11 I ll1Jt>ll"SS. part Ume. /\ppl~ 'I · I , in .1>4:r.,011 Hurry'!> Ne'< 1'. 1·i·1rn11w !';ufip' !'.lui.1 York Uar & Grill. 4241 11l'l'cls ,., v~ 1 11 • uunh r ,, :\I rt d· 1 W· N Urh '·''l''>IH.'r""" ""' ix:u ..... ,a.,'" at.' ay, fJ .1 l "pm Escrow Officer Escrow Secretary \I ""'°" \ 1t'Jt1. 1-:1 'I 11r11 .11 l' J . :'lo 1·'< 11 It· \I 11 l chant·,. fur :.Hh.1111 c· mcnl TrJn,,1mt·111 .c 11 lk In' Co ~iii !i57 I EXEC. SECTY for <·on:.trloc I 111n ~ n •al , . .,L.1ll• 111•\ !'lo p111t•11l Struni.: N .111 .. n .d < 11111 p.1ny paid 111,111 ;im1· .11lll \,lt'lJ(IOll ;\IU'I hl' I ,JIJ.I 1,i,. 11 f lli111dl111i.: \\ 1111· 1,111g" 111 ,.,.,,,.,n,111111111•' 1111 l111l1ng p11hlil' , ,.1,1 t 1un~. ~1111w t 1 ,1 \ c·I ma_\ 111· l\'ljUll 1·d l'.qu.tl 1111 1~11 lunll.\ 1•m11h1\ t'I. (',111 •Ir ~t·11d , ..,.,u 1111• tu .I .11 k Torr .. , I 'n •,1rl1•11l Tt11 1 t• ( 11n~trn1·t11111 11111 l>ll\ 1• ~I . S111 l1• 1 111 -,; II -;:.i 17'10 Food Co1 kr.111 WJ1ll I''' •'\l>l'r .\p1>h 111 I'"''"" I IJ1 rv ' '•·w \ 111 k ll.1r & (;rill. 121K \1Jrl111d alt- W.1\ ;>.plllh \II 'p111 FOOD ORDER ASSEMBLY I ull T1m1· '1;11.:loh \ ppl" In l'••r,un FAR WEST SERVICES lti7:! Ht•\ rwlc t ... \11 111u- ln 11w h•111.1I Op11m 1':111 plo1 "r HOSTESS /CASHIER J>.t~' Apply llJm lpm •l.11 I ' :\11 l' a ' a :\I t• x lk:.lJuru11l, 29b E. 17tt' SI. t'o,lJ :O.k~a JIOUSEK E f:P 1-:n Live 111. ;1.lnl 1wt t1tr .... i,:uod :-<llUr). :10 15 fi7fl-:!:!56 llouM•kt·l'~'I . ll..1m 7pm ('«r n"" I .\dll, :.1•1111 111 \ .1 ltd ;HI! :l:JS:! lllll 'SEK l':El'~:H I' T :1 ~lorn:. wk, mu!>l !>IWak . 11·arl •"-wrtl<' f:nl! & lit• l'Xlrt•m(•iy fll'j.!.11llll0 lf 1·.111 ~Ir " ~t·wm:.111 \\ k ti S' 7:1!) U:lli:I e V 1• :-. f..W!IMti HOUSEKEEPERS l.1-.111 llous1·k<'e 1a•r & l U ' I o 11 I ;i 0 II u l h .I I I :111 I' \I 1, 1• n I h11 .. µ11al •''<l'l'r '"'I ti .:\I 111 l11•11t·l 1t ' !-..c II <' l 1• m 1· n I" l; 1• n 1• r a I ll1,...1>1ta l. 711 4'Mi I 1:!:! KITCHEHMAM \11111 lhr11 Fri ~·'l"'r 11rd d, but nul lll'C App h Hu'>I V f'l'lll ,111, :11,m - •jlnl, :!i;J..'> W t°Uj !\l llwy, \i1•1.\pllrl l\4-.11 h I A'l-!.cl :0..·1 rd.1r\ rn.1 ture Io ... t.11 I allt•r th1· '\;('w \ l'Ur 1,l-l 5iJO LEGAL SECRET ARY v" r N B . I a " II r l' 1 'nq..,1rate cxix.·r hrlptul l ',111 Kt•rry 540-5100 LOOKIHGFOR 1•.1rt 111111· 11h1Jlll' "'•irk ~ deliver)' SJ hr 835 0211 , l'Xl lli:JY PAYROLL CLERK The Joll)' Ro~1·r. Int· '' looking for II rull lime P<Jyroll (;li:rk. Expl'r must indud~ fum11iari1v w /large com vulcr11c1l payroll, qu .. rlcrly tux n · turns & othc•r p:iyr 1111 1 t• latl'<i dul1t·~ This 1111:-.1 llun rcqu1 re:. Lhc a 111 Ii l' to deal dlt•t:ll\ely " ;111 h.•\'t:h ul m.in<ig1•ml•11t :'-lust lw ·" .1il.1hlt· lu \\Ork mcrl1me whc11 ll' q d S a I J r ' 1• 11 m mt·ns ur.tlL' w Jl'\l>l'I Please apply in pn,un 170-12 (;1llL'llt· In 1r1c 8am-5pm :\lun thru f n l'EOl't.t-: l'EHSON Exe1· ntctb p l11n,• a' we 10 \\hslc -.upph Ful ly cap1lah1cd 6i3 2223 PHONE SALES Phont• Salt·:-. p1•oplt•, mall' or female. W l11 115 year:-. CJ( .igc Guar.1ntt•ed wa~cs or cornm1s:-.111n:. 250 Ea!ol Lilh Strt•t·I , Su11e 0 ('nsl n Mc:o.a . bct...,een 5 tlO & I\ :10 p m l•HH2:!l t•:oual Upporlun1t~ 1·:1111110) "' PHOHE SOLICITORS Eils) plea::.ant L"venmi: \\ork 4 9 Mon t-'r1 Nt•ed 15 l'l'Ople 1mm1·d l'all aft :!pm, Mun Thur' 1:.!13 t IU10·\l~Jt.I 111 1711 J 5<10-~t>I I' t ~alt•' S.IO S70 "k llfl :\lt'n. IJtlll"" -.tud1•nb EH·~ ~JI J.tl 71\5 1 !Wi~. PL HI.I(; Rt;L/\TIONS l'urt time. ~nml' cleril'JI. Nl'wport Bch. 640-t!IHI Help Wanted 7100' He-Ip Wonted 7100 ....•.........•..•..•...........•..••.•.....•• RECEIVING CLERK AT EASE in Fashion Island, Newport Beach has an opening in its receiving dept. 8:30-5 :30 Monday thru Friday. l'tease Call 644-5070 Wfftldcrys Ask F« Mr. louquettt Help Wanted 7 I 00 Help Wanted 7100 .....•..•.•....•....... •.••....•..•.•..•.•..•. H 1-;nu:ATIO!'f AL si-:R \'IC ..: ~I' I\ TIO:-: /\n cpl1ni.: .tpph1°Jl1111h i\TfENOE:-.iT t "r r l' t· r l' al 1 fl 11 .1 I Ev<'OlnR hr~ ;\pµly 10 su11<•n ,,.,r \lu'l Ii<·"' 1•r ~r1tun 3928 E . C1tl 1114 y :!I. <"\l>t'r 'tl \\111k 1111: CdM w 1t•cnag1· ycoulM i\pply • -: .-- - l.ukl' Fores t Ht•:Hh &. Servin• !'ldt1011 /\llen Tl'lllll!> l 'lulJ. 22'J:!l 1t1Jgc dant. _exper'd Full or lloutl'. El Toro parl-lrmc. J\pply /\rco Stut1un. 17th & lrvmt•, l'\t TELLERS Hunking l'Xpvr only ContJd Hob l'rl'1t.:hlon Jrvmc Nalmnal Hank 833 J"i(l(I RESTAl'fl,\'IT l'IZZ \ "low a1·1·•·11t1111: illll'hl·:o 111111'> fur 1mm1·d 11 L1111l' cm ploy mcnl M 11-.1 h1· <.!Vall tn work 11111•' & wknd!> Shuul<I lw :.!O 0 1 11\r Call fur appl w Shuron l't·rr\ 1t 1'11.1a Tr a\'cl f\i.:ency N<•wport lk•at·h 1;;3 1:11;ii SECRET ARY RM RELIEF Supl'rv1i.or 3 l I l.\':-J 7 3. full 111 p llml' \k.,a Verde Conv llusp. 661 Center St, C :\t 548 5~5 Si\LF-C\ IMSIDE SALES Cust Boat Consultont l'hJll1·n1t1n g pos 1liun w1lh lht• '<orld's larl!l''I t".t most rnp1dl~ $:fll'< mi.: m.1nul uclu1 ('r nf qu.thl) kit ho.11' ta1t \\l'll a ' 1·um pl1•ll'J Minimum :! )r:. t'XJll'I . bu1ld1n l( f1bcr.:lai.s boat I:,, I "'1lh w •HHI 1 11 l 1• r1 o r I s > K11owledi.:e uf plumbml!. t•lecl ril·al. l'll!(1nes & (•arpe11lr). A wl'll or to l'rl'Sidenl. Ofr11·,. :\t)!r St:irl1n i.: ""IJI) S700 SOOO µ mo Mu.,I ha\l' 2 )rs l'1'1l l11 quaht) <igcnc~ for 11\T,\ ATl' <ippts. Call lor ;ippht·a \1011 op ::.t•ncl re:.ume t<1 Spalh1111 ln\1•rnal1011al. SOO Ne"' 111irl CC'nler Dr • :'\ B 9261141 or rall i5!11115;. UTILITY' WORKERfl>RIVER PARTTDIE Tuesday through Salur day. S3.ltl hr + hl'nd1ll> & un1rnrm s l'honl' 6-12-1321. i :IO<i m 1111on i\.~k !or Gene Lanc·y Equal Opp11rlun1ly Emplo)t'r UTOTEM ""UALITY .:am.ted, µcr!.onuhll' self-..,. s tarter who enjoys 111·0- RET/\ILCLEllKS Wanted. Opportu111lil'S !or advancement a"ail Openings Jn (;nsta Mt•1ta. Anuhe1m, <.iardcn C:rll\C & Wt-:;tmlnstcr COMTROLLER pie. detail work & paper Lan(·oln !\1art· l\' \t-l\Ct ~ ~ l') d e ~ l'o, i.lllH Nl'wpurl Uhd ,C. M 61:.! 7!110 II\ rm en::.l'm hll'. ot· ca,,ion<tl chrs. Ii horse~. Uv.stock 8075 MisceUaneous 8080 <:irb ~C'h\<11111 hlkl' lll'H'r uw cl. :1 !>pd ~iO. Cull K3J 3259 ~addle~, l&jt•k rm ~up-••••••••••••• •••••••• •• •••••••• •••••••••••••• • JI l 1 t':.. a I., o ,, "I It n g Ht>$: Mnq;.1n m;1n• hrokt• Ut.-.iull!ul c:.L.1te. Slrtcll>• to r1\J1· ~ 1t11' 1·. hlk LUGGAGE TAGS hy u11pt SJll' will end parade '\1111 g,1n gcl1l111g. Thur:-day dl 7PM . 1':ng , \\'L''>lt·r11 li l-I J ~ Blt')\'ll'' 1 I!> ~11 t , :!G ' ~7 1 15-13 _ _ llS 101 l i:d <'ctml .~l.i .""! ofr ·, .ibo ~hcl i l'e llt:drm ~l'l :'liew • 1111) ' ~o S t 11li.:rJ) ~200 ""k111i.: ~1050 or Miscell~s 8080 ~JU h~l-ul1 l'hllllt' l'Vl'~ make orr ().15 l;lr.i7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1115 78!" 1 Rare Ruy<il L>ou l\on ~ Cameras & GcracJe Sole 8055 <.:101:.onne + ~I old }!1111.l Equiptnent 8030 •••••••••••••••:••••••• wah'ht•i.. + l vt·ry ti: ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lols of lhmgs mcludint.: pure am<•lh)!->l nnJ.( ~ u pamlmgs for 5'k.' l o Sl very luq(l' '"Old l'a" 11 · Complt'lt· Darkroom St>tup. hl..t· m•w Omei.:a cnlari.:t•r, tnanv '\Ira~ $175 rirm 1;1:1 ~II:! CVl'S. llJ.I 7021i da~ ~ 25ZS Newport Blvd, C.M t urquc)tse p1·nd a 11 1 645 41ijJ 64&7tiJ8. 41:!7 l' llila1 Ill -----Way N IL CN1 11 11,11-1 llouse Sold, all mu:.l i;o llo:.p ) t8302 P ammy Ln, ll B. Doqs 8040 12 2R-1 2 llA'.'v1 ·5PM. ••••..•.••.....••...... POODLES-R·PEOPLE All <'Ir' 1711 1516 :?lilll t\hC Gulden ltt·lrie1 t•r Pups. xlnl hunu·r,, fJm1· ly l>t:l, wlr dog 4t13 b8til l'E\1RROK 1-: W El.Sil l 'OH(;I Pl. !'!'I E!l C;i II ~lfl 4!128 :\11111 £>a di (; l'Ollc tun.: h:11rl'CI mJIC K 14 lo.:,, i\l\C 1 •• 1gun..1 tkh 4!17 3.Sl2 Garnge rull of furn. piano, dr l\', toob all kinds. IJ1ke . t•lc.:. 5111 2306 R.\UIO Conlrul dcclnc ;\lOd{'I l'T Uoal. O\"Cr 3 rt. long. siren. v. .tier can· nun. 2 :-.~e<b, etc. \'er) 1toph1sllcillcd toy Ovu ~1800 rcp}a('cmen t Sat·nh('l' ~I l ndude~ l'H'r~ th int;. tii5·3662 or 645-2200 2 mall' "hl m1n1.1tun• Horses 8060 Poodle::., AKC. Sl25 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wks. 640 01\lfi ~·or SalC': 2 pome:. & :.how Fr~e to You quartcrhors1·. 8045 Call!S.17 -ll~JI ..••.....•...•......... ~cw Wallan• Sll·r l1ng S11\·cr 17tlpt·!o ) :!O', un cll•r :\tarkt•t l'rtt't' lh·a11 ly embos!><'cl. li•lti 7ti311 ".127 l'. lhlanJ W<1~, II INr llc1d)t!lo1t1> I i Seth ThomJ., :-.hqn. clocks. ont• w l>l'autirut chimes <S290 1 i;.is 76:Jll 41Z7 C. lhlana W.t) N B 1Nr lloug llo'p I !land n:.iflcd 1tte1n,,, & jewel ry 1r1 l o\('I\ porcelain, collcclor!> 1lemi; 646 7~ 11127 C l!Jlari:i Way, N .U <Nr l loug !l~p_._> __ _ WANTED TOP CASll UOl.Li\H ff ri P J\ l D F 0 H Y 0 U It * • • Rare 0 e ng JEWl::LRV. WATc11..:s . Vince Le"hoff lll'g But•k:.km q u;1rt1•r AllT OBJECTS. Cl)LO 2619 17th St. 11 o r H' Show l' x S IL VJ::: rt S E H v I(· I·: I rom your husines1t l'<ll ti Semi one card fur t'Ul'h l:J!: pl~ 011l' :,pare \V1~ rl'lu111 pcrm:.inl•11\I) 1tcul1'fl utlracll\ l' l ul! & str,111. mcct1ni.: a1rlt11c I U r1•qu1 rements l'r•· H•nl lo!'<!. & lhefl' Fur J pcr~nal11ed la.: t•nc 111:-.1• \\tJllµupt•r, fahrl\' or '"U:.iy (;lo>" paper & "'~ will bt11•k & tnm )our lags. Or lry l'<o C'unb l><1ck lo hal'k. l'HIC ES S! t•;i or 3 S5 4 5 lal(:. SI .f>O l'a Ii \I lai.::. SI 50 ea lO or mon• SJ . 10 ca Sale:-. Ta' lnC'lmlc1I NO CAHO" J)rJw \Our own or !>1'1111 nam1•, · alldrt'!>:>, "'"'"'' & w1· II mak1• 1111l' t•ard Jl\T IJ.: Add 25 l':tl h Slmd check or mom·) ur lier to PILOT PRIHTIHG I' 0 . Box 1560 (;o:..La :\tcsa, Ca !l:!t;:!1i Hecrdrufler. hold!> 1 c h n: nf beer. nt•w c.:01111 S!IJll. H73 5276. <:all aft 111\:\I CUSTOM WOVEMWOODS 50', TOl!O', Ul''V (her •10 in :-.lock palkrns 1\boMl:-.ll Bhmb 1>15 ll!i50 tlJJ !177U Jll.'rll'nn•d l'n•fcr ndL"r Fl NJ::: f'U fl N & /\ N Huntin<jtonBeach w al)lltly 1M :!-~4G5 or TIQUES.6452200 Ski Boni:.! Nord11·a You an• lh1· Wlllnl'I' ul 2 1_;.12 J..171 Mt•ll'or:. N<·\'cr ll!>t•d . l1l'kct:. lo lhl' W H 0 L I:: SA I. 1-: A I I Ex1•1dlenl t•onl11l1on S11c Sports, Vacation Wcstcrn ~a!ldk•1•qi111a~mn Shaklee Produd:. <it lllml-<l ::Oli5 ·1!>4 :!117.itl. & R•creational Jool'al. 1-.X\"l'llt•nl. SISU l.'ll~l! 2007 Santa 1\n.1 r1 V-.. 1'cl• Show r1rm Bl'lon• I l.11n or Ave . CM 5-&!$ 525:1 '"' "' atll'r!Jpm lilS-1238 a t the --.-Mo\ln jl . .Mus l "'<' 1m /\NAJI f:I M Barn )ola!ls n_1''<. SSS. Pipe mcd1utKly Broyhill h<lrm CON\'l::NTION 1>Wll~ 565. hi,:hted arena sel.Lot of mist.~·1776 Cl::NTER ~I m~ J<in.:!thruJ.in !I _ .. _ ----l 9-cl:? 1-;xqws lll' l'hrncM• Cull 642 56711. ,.,1 3'.13 Lo Houscnvld Goods 8065 Oncntal ruJ!. prin·d lo I k l • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 11 6 16 7 ti3" .. I '>7 I • l ..ll,m)ourt11• l' "· • . ::.c · o .. -" * * * Sohd ;'of ap.lc din I bl. 2 Hilaria Wa). N II t N1 olll Engh!>h ~h1•1·11 l>ol(. ~t.1lc . 3 yr!> T u .:ood homl' Xlnt J1t•d1grcc h75 1784 lcu\'es. -i Cu pt t·hr-.. S250 HoaR llv!\p 1 Frost rrce rdng SIOO ~lfJ Si5. :.m tbls. lum1>s. 2 OmJtel) 1 ur1t•d Ch10t::.c &olh<'r m11tc hwhlcl ~tis. chrs & tahlt•, rt•a lly ~7 4112!1. beautiful & \'er) old. no J I - --- 8 - 0 -70 pncc1> g1vl'n ml'r phone ---------•I ewe ry Seen h> a µpl 646 i638 11£1.I' w i-: N1-:1-;n /\••••••••••••••••••••••• - llOME FOil 2 P upvirs. WA .... TED Prime grad(• (1n"h1•d (:ol<lcn llctrirvt•r / ...,. Douglas F1r :!'"xt2".71\ Gl•rmun Shcphrrrl 1 umh TOP C i\S II DO L Li\ R lngths. 2·5' lnJ,tths. Sf!O for J> J\ I D 1-· 0 H Y 0 U R a ll. 536-0406. l Male , I l"em;tlt: lO Jl';WELRY. WATCllt:S. -- week:.. llarl l~l 1thols. Alff OB.JECT S. GOLD. Selhni.: anythinA with a Net•d lnv1111t f.1rnil)' S ILVl::R S ER VICI-:. l>a1ly 1'1lolClas)oll1cd i\<.I w 1c h1ldren & yard . FIN f: F U R N & AN· i!> a simple matlor . I lrallhy & (•an ·1 keep. TIQU ES. 645-Z:!OO just cu_ll 6'12·51i71\. Call ('\l('!I, 645 711."l7 ---- ••• Brian Chambers 2647 OrCWMJe An. Costa Mesa You arl' the wmner of :! I.Jekel!> lo lhl' Sports, Vacation & Rec:..-ationol V.ttlct.Show al the ANAHEIM CO~VENTION CENTt-;n Jan. 2 thru J un :i Cull 642 56711. e'<l 3:.1:.1 It) cla1m your tickets . *** -------- Like new 270 lmport1·d blue :.l('cl harrcl rifle, :!:! & llmm rirlt•. IHti·7tiJK . <1127 C lhluna Way N II. 1Nr. 1loag110:-.11.) 1;\I. FIHl>\Y I' 11111" l11r puhllr .11 11. 1111 Mu'l lw .11 t u 1 :•I•· " . I 1 1: 11 r ,. ' op .. r.cl1• I•• lo.1 1 .11111 l! m.1d1 ,\ 1" 111"11 11•1 "' 'k 111 1 .ii I lo I ' cc 11111 .111\ 11111• I A FUTURE? \IJJOI' t'orporallun need~ ,, lt·w i.:111111 1wn11l1• lo l r.11 n 111 ~1a11ag1.•m1•nt 1.,.•1l 11111 in a t1•I J ii rl1N1r . '<Jll 1·•1H'fllll! & p.11111 For a hq!h quulit y work, whu 1i. an ex s ailhoal manul . <:•1 ix•nenccd i.ailor will find Know It'd.:<' & <'XPl'r in a reward ml! I uture. Call clet·trH·al & mt•1·han1c:1l Bob Gale!> ;il Wl':.ls:ul i.ys tems net'C'":. us wL'll l'orp.1714 154!1·971 1 a:. a knowll'dge & JUllJIP·l•---------- m l• n I i n carpt•ntry ----------· 642-7702 WAITRESSES i':xpcr '<I i\ppl1 111 person. Mon lhru Thur!> bt!twn 3 5pm. Gulln·l·r ·!\ It c s t a 11 r a n l. I 8 .t 8 2 MacArthur Uh cl, In'"" Sh(•ph4.•rd m1;1., 11•111.111·. ! 1110 :-old FIND YOUR NAME ! t,Jlt' \tU'-1r1I' flt ,tt "'4, m .1 I u 1 I' , II • I I r t' .t " "'' " m ,. \ 11 1• I ' 1 11 , ....... 111. ''''"I'"'' 1>1111• h ll ll.'1l0 ( 1l'lll I ,1! I lff 11 I \I 111ir1· l411m.cn l11r J.:••n I •I knuv. h·tlJ:• ol .11 , ""nlln~· 11n11 •·cl11r1 & 1n\ l'l1lt1n , onlr11I I • 11,1\' fM'I v.t.. K\\l ll'\1 '1'H llllh GlHERAL OFFICE \t.1 tu n • 14 11 m .1 n ;\I V .1t1•<1 KnowlNl1:1· 11r l)tN1k kl't'l>lnl:, \Int I\ 119'\ rt c 1•pl1fln1 .. t l .111 tur .1pJ1I ilill l:lM Mr~ 1\\l•rv ""~"''''' Cl'\i Tll E JOI! TIL\11"1M: I ;111 I() Ml'" t-:Y \.I. 'liT Fl:1 l 1n; ~-\ '\T AST I<' BENEFI T~ l .111 11r ;1pph ;\Ion Fri. 'I 'I ('111111 I Ile'. l~l!ll II " ,1 I h u I \' d ~ • .1m1n •.t1 1 17 11 1 H!JH .!'.!XX ,\I \I;>. I I-:'\ \ 'l'": I' t-:H::0.11' rnr rf'l1r1•mf'nl hm 111 l.;11111n.1 lie h M u'I 1h 111• 1714 H !II !ll:iH MANAGERS 1'~x11 ll 1·011 l1n1s h1ni:. Ahll1tv lo pt•rform w mint m ,ii :-11i>erv1!-o100 & ri:r., re q 'cl <.:all Bob l; all's, .1t Westsa1I Corp 5-19-9711 REALEST ATE SELL HOMES LEARN lnvesbnent Sales SALES SPECIALIST J .C . PEHMEY CO 24 Fashion Island Newport Beach Art• yQu amb1t111us" II you un• Wl' hu\C 11n npt•nini: in m .1Jor ap pllunl'C S, Sl'Winl( mal•hinl''> & home clec lrmm·s dept. Eiqwr. pre f11. Xlnl co bencf1h i\p pl y 1n pcr -;nn Mon Fri IOAM -4PM Equal opp l'mployer m If Waitrcsse!> full & p llml' Lajluna lon1t111n 01 ,.r 18. 1 Yr coHl!l' :.hop 1•x prr Refs rccfd. Ch1t1ht· s ( '11111. !><19-IJ.15 I. WAfTRESS Experienced in dinmi: room. Cttll btwn 10·l2 AM. Ask for Mr. t.ilclc. LAGUNA HOTl-:L 4.25SoCoasl llwy, l.B 5a7 771:! aft tl nm Ucoi:lc. Lri l'olor. 5 ) rs. femulc. 557 77 1:?aft llprn. lnsh S cllf.'r. 2 ) rs old Need:. room lo run 5-iR Ol!JO 8050 ··············~········ **I BUY** Good used l-'urn1t11rf' Appliance s OR J will :sell or SELi, for You. MASTERS AUCTIOM 646-8686 & 833-962 ----------· µk Ill manUl(l' f.I Ulllt!i. Openings ext!ll in Or11n11c ;ind Newpnrt Hcuch for l'~xpcr1cnced Sal<'spcrl>•lll:. intcrel'ltcd m 1nvestml.'nl!'. We :.ell uml hsl SJ lo $5 million Wanted live 111 huU!>I' keeper. !loom. hmml & s mall salary. 2 children fl & II. Call eves. 970-0175. !Yorba Linda, J\nahl.'1m llill~ :.ire;i. > Moving. Mu!ll !'ani(1c lmmcdlalcly. four pi~ Broyhill hl•<lrnom !lllt, · complclc l'OC.\ICIOP<'dUI l•1mps , v ar clenner · rot I s ""' r 1 c • b 11 o k s \ hoakca:;c, etc. etc . (il'nl.'ral lll'IJ'I HEW OPEMIMGS 1.11rg1' Ortinll<' <.:nu11ty 1n d1•pPnll1•nl lflli llr.1nc•r • 1 ~l'lll' y 01u•n in)( nt•w r,1ull111•, 111 FuuntJ 1n \,it In & Fu l11•rt11n b M'"k 1111! lra inccs .\ 1•:ic l"-'r'd orfit•c help. RH.,tioftists CYSt Sen Cl.,-li Auto Uftderwritet-1 Auto Claims Ci.rte $525 to SI I 00 Salary Commc11~1Uratc With F.xpenence St nrt IM Ml-:OIATl-:Lv '\II Company Aenerlls 17400 llrookhur!<t Slc WR l"ounlm11 Vallt•y lln1on Federul Snving.~ Bwldin~ Call Doily 549..a I 64 .1tlull 1·11mpl\:"I , t' M 2BH. :?ha. upl, ulll's & ~ulary . S11ulhl :1nd l'rnpertll'R Munoi:cme nt, ~ 63()11 Ma1t•r M•chanic ~ant1•d lo rt•hu1hJ & modify 1!173 l'hryi.lcr Im · p~nal 1-~n.:tnl's /DMV t: tran ... m. P\l party. Ji'ee open Hl'f, reqd. Call for ;1p1>l ~haron. 751·9800. \IA l'l 1u: WOMEN for hou11cc lea ning service. c:.1r nt•t', lop S. 64S-5123 ~H:CllANIC·Service Sla. Cla.c;., /\ s mog Lie. No muJor work. Great op· por. A11ply. Jim Tice Chevron, 2590 Newport Blvd, CM dollars per month. Sales ----------1 quadrupled las t year. Pl'('St11(ious oHiccR. 60 lo 70 lo 100 <,;, C'Ommission spht. video nnd personal traming. Write lo l>on Herman. Prcs 1d<•nt, (Jua1l Place Propcrt1el'I, 1400-Quail St.. Su 1l(' J :lS. Newport Beach, Cah_r._ Realtor to head R e11I a,tale 01v1son. Must be able to organ11 e & supervise sales force. Xlnl renumeration & US· sist. 646-7117. RECH'TIOMIST SALES SPECIALIST If you're al{gress1vc. ilm b1t1ous & exper'd in i.cll IOI! Fine J ewelry , W\' muy h.avc an openml! ror you in our Fim' Jewelry Dept. Xlnt co. benefits. Apply In Person Mon lhru t~n 10am·4pm J .C. PEHMEY CO. 24~1a1Clftd Newport a.ach Equal O pp Employer m /f ..•.....•.............. ~1776 Antique• 8005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ulul' l>U<?de 7' sofa. 2 chr~. Wonderland w/rhrmc hnse. end Lb l, r orquc. pmball m orh. Of Antiques! r141 .. 2<J63. ll U G E w a r e ho u s c LI l.X) ISl.fo; SA't.t; crammed with over 50C Beaut. e ntry t-:ng. din. music boxes. nickclo rm. set, 8 uphhilrd ch.rs: deon pianos, circus o r· hghled china l.'ab. brn gans, wall clock~. velvet patchwork ktnl?· l{randfalhe r c loc k s . sz bedspread new bdrm fascinating antiques. ensemble. /\mer. ;mlt OverSl.000.000Worth que dC$k Ir.:. <1mounl of Attractive. over 18. for American International 1-·rnnc111can lluc1enoa HEALT~ SP/\. We will Secretary -Personal. In-Gallenes; 1802-T Keller pall. d1Shes. hllll.' girli.; train righl person for H ome . Dlv•rsified ing St., Irvine . T e l. b1cyclelikenew Ph . easy run joh Mr Gee, duties. P /tune. tits flul· 7S4·Jm . Open Wed thru 673 9443 ll75 5767 MECH"' .... IC (24h")752·956\. ble.968-9949.HB. Sal9AM to4PM.Vlslt! --d 1-""" Oak fin b rrmc w / 1x ---workmg or not. check R ptl • t ECRET"'RY P/T HORSE DRAWN WATER s prngs $25 : Oak nght GEH. MAIKTIHAMCE this xlnl opportunity. ec:e~ll S "' WAGON $IGOO slnd SIS: 6x9' ovl i;hag HELPER J\utomobiles. Class A Uc. 5 days ll week ror Varying evening & wknd 552·709\ brnt o rn g ru ~ $25 : rt'q 'll . s4oo +pe r wk hairstyle salon. Mus t hrs. Cal1556-1421 968•8146 Rcq'!I Corpantry & Vehi· r:rslblt for a()()(f man. hnve expr In public rela· Must sell-private anti· ------ cle mRlnt. sl11l11. C&ll "' ti Sal & 11 h S_. ITARY I k II l ' nnt t•ml all1tn t•xper .• ons. es gt Uc· ....,. que coc co ec ion .sofa & t.ov esea l. ~·1421._ _ __ _ tuncu1>11. clcc. expet etc. tnta. Apply in person on· New Mra Co. Costa Mesa some antique furn & col-brwn/bclgc h!!r!'ulon, 2 (ilrl t'rlday -We need 2 CallS81..S1&4. ly 11fl l PM . Regis nel>ds f/llme alrl with leetnbles.96:t-64~. wk!lold.$250.8401637 sharp gals lookln1t for H&lr11ty!e11. South Coust typlne, s horthnnd & 10 ~30 hr a wk jobll w/i•x Mitml Tme, perm. Eam Phua,CoslaMesa key cxper. Company Appllmteff 8010 3-pcmaplellvtngroomset • St 75· S.200 wk. Fu Iler benefits, sta rting 1alary ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 end \bl&, l coffee tbl. Opetfrl.celn• rDuuntnl~nsit lancslmudael.1 Hrusb Sales, M4-185l. RECEPT'ION~ST (l'YPIST open. Call G42·7840 Corin-Mart•a 0811 0-er, like ~·6027 " for Roi ~state ofc. tervlew. •r ...:....:-------- typlnlf, phonn, corrrsp MODF.LS Sharp. well 11rooml'd nt-w SlSO. OF. Elt"C dryer SAVE! JAN. SAt~E. New "as11lltlng in 11hlp le rec Photo crapher needs FRONTofc. appearance. Service Station Allen · S'f5. Krnmore Gas dryer & uaed rum, appl '1. If you're looking ror a charis matic attractive Outgolna ~nonallty a dant, •xfer'd Doy & M5.Guu/del546-8672 misc. Wllton'a Bar11aln pum. l)08ttlon eall for fi-urt m odel. Contact must! Gd. typlna 11kllla. Ewa. ft\il & p/Ume, Ap· Nook. 2 Sloree S4S & 814 • appt ~ lntarvw, Tht' Biii Hamilton (7 14 ) Call Mon. art. 8:30, ply, SMll StaUon, 17th & Have something to sell7 W t9lh, C.M. 642 7930 Ldok, S4<M500. 5.58-1782. 83USSl lrvloe, N 8. Clasillled ads do It well. 548 32162 • WIN TICKETS WORTH $5.00 lY't: Wut'1 ler9ut ..,._.~E'('"'Y & lvpo-Mr. ... ,,,., • "" H""'"·· '""I'"' t,11, Wh~·"''\, v )th. (Q'nJ-• ' • • ', j .. ' • n ,, !i h .. 11 AcCU\-y1r DOORS OPEN: Weekdey1 ...... 2PM Weenend1 -12 Noon ... T SHA'M( 8••1w9un 'S.,..._Jt ,...1 G>HG SHIOB.P Soy""(fl•h JflM lllSTIYM. W-lool- Adult• 1:2.50. Jr.'• c12-1e) 12,00, Kid• (8-11) $1.25 llllhlMI Clffllu ~""0•1IY t '<"W•,."" ,, ,,,,._,~ f •'lh• "I DAILY PILOT 8 ff 8oott, Mcriiu~ '1ocrt,, Merine TrC11tsportotion Autos Wanted 9590 4Mtos, lmpo~ 4vto•. lmpomd I.T~hu~r~Sd:!!a~v:._D~e~c~e~rrt.re...:30~.:;19::..:,7.:::.6 _____ ~~~~~-=..;..;;;.___ IE .. prntnt 9030 Equipnwnt 903 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••·••••••••••••••• ·o·::..~:_·•••••••••••,•7••2•0• ••••••••••••••••··,·,·:·: Autos l111ported .utos. Used 4.vtot, UHd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C~. Solt/ TOI' OOLLAll ---. 0,.1 -.v •• ; •• ;_•••••••••••••4'•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------------lent 9120 PAID ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cougar 9fll Mercury 9950 LARGE BAIT SAC 7x7 Fathoms SO+fathoms wings. approximately 7 fathoms crowder, 4 dip nets, 4 chum nets. like new, perfect cond. •••••••••••••••<•••••.. IMMJ.;OIATELY '71 Dal..lun 510 4 dr. 1Zr11, '73 Opel GT Xlnl cund Volvo 97 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·10 vw Pop Top 0 <'.1m1>er Fon ALt. lt 11. 4 :cprl " con,olc-. Red. r.11JiJI l~l>\I. 1111 ••••••••••••••••••••• ltCH \',11l A\l "" 11 trk "'C JIU-:11:"'<.;Afl<; C'Uil!>~lnt,!j().wum1.0n.: rnuHlt•r 1.uS.11 s:11100 '76COUGARXR7 11 ·~.6,.~0!4~h V ll, \lerco rl'bll en11 \lnl ('Al.I. O IH.'OM i-: I "I 014'flr 1151> ;15;i 30K~ olr 11111 I 'i711 Jfl hpm 'J 7 Co 111 l' i; " 1 t h \ II rnrul 1'.l3 4llOJ 'IO~t: .. ; l'S .iuloltlJll• 1 ... 1,11 & .111111111.1111. 1 ad lo &. ...,.,UIDORT IMPORT.. ·7c.; ~>Z S1h er, toadt•d, .... J 1,.1 .• 1~1" ,., ,t,.11111 .. &. lw,1tt•1, '"'" t-r .ctccnng "'-""'"''" o. 'OOGJ'tt•Jl:.haq1'!"t•1lo "~ " " k d'~kJL SJle I! Sleept'r :-hl'll hkt' ~" " cupboJnf,, ~ ctr' curtains. boot, Liahlb. top vent. xlra nice. Cnll 5J6.1M7 JtW\ .t;.,tll~S'.nu apprt'l'1,1lc SltiW All 11 tlu Plltc' \ouri.for1m V • ""., t.1ke uver be P) mnt VOLV hr.tk\•i., , rnvl 101., .111 lt1 J l'S 011 r •'Oil UV\I 6 ~2-9405 17l-lJ9680l3!1~--orwkn•l•.496·7f•S l'ond • IO•Jkln.i ~0011' ··' I I I• ry (I 1• -. • ~ ,,. Vourb for 1ntml•dr.it1· ril' n11."U1,1 l' t l' •' c • • • • ·71 Datsun Pickup. i:;ood Ponclw 9750 HERE N 1 1 v ,. r y 1 s l' r 274 i\1M.'I/) -------- 646-7638 ~I fl50 WE UllY •l SEO t' \Rs I( TRU<'"S• Come 1n 01 <.::111 l'ond Sl8.50. •• ••••• • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • 6A9311~3713) $4 58 6. 496 " 52511 61 Pond11• 1tio11S 1·.1h •MIW C RS $5486. ·•·····•·····•·•·•····· • \FREE AppralHI • -------------MiscellaMou$ 8080, locrf1, Marine 1!174 CB 3GO Honda, 7 mi, 1-'uinng Lugl( r ac SJ)l'e<l mJ. 552·7382 6 I Groth Chevrolet 111211 Beach Ufvd. Huntington Deach 'ii D11tsun PU. 35.1100 1111, H.esuirJIJlt' or 1'·11 " 1'•11 •MIWM fiL S dlr, A)J l".\1 , xlnt l'Ulld, ~>. G7~ .to:!()(I Ultt•1 ~ $3000. 496.3986 Huge fU\IU)gS II rll '67·!112, ictrJ c:IN111, 1dl<J,H;, mainlo& n ttii. & GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Be a ch Blvd Huntington Beach • •II : . •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • E .. ,.,..nt 90 l 0 HF.OWOUD l.l ''\111~:1{ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Many ~lie:' ::?>.:! I~. <!x:J llJ\OIO t'o11t1111 l•;ll•ctnc de. Sm11111h llt'.1,on,1 MIXl<!I l'T Js.1.1l "' l'r :1 It ble 675 .'.!175 Ion.: !itren. ".1lt•r 1'.111 '71 S111uk1 'l'\11:!'! L1k1· llt'" 1711)9fj8 4t:'n .llt loJlr11 Motor Homes. 847°6087 * 50-3331 fiat 9725 AM ffM l'ussettc. 1750l:1· · Dem0-1 in sloc. LVO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~1.so fi7!'i 0111 MAltQUISt XLHT IUY S950 'till l'mvh,• •111 11 !II I MISSION ,JO '68850Spytl1·1lii:l111!1:1 1-:ng, 1t•bll 11.11" '' 11•;11 831 ·2880 4. ·1210 ('fl d . h. II 11 I ' ~:Ii' 0 Cl ~-0006 OUNGE OUHTY 842-8844 : . ; : # # '66 /lh•rt• 4dr. n11. ,, c llt•st huy in lown S!:!.1 !ICOJ rn1w ~lovin~ Urn cl•• ~:J l.;imµi. ....S \'.11• 111 .. 1111·r SW Hrn1l<1"' t' ~· C't1· ~~ J7ill n1in, 2 'l't'•"I' 1'11· \ t'I\ "111h1:.t1c·a1t .. 1 111\ 11, ,., Sll!UO rrpl.11 ••r11t•11t ~.n·nlln· ~·,011 1111 llroh•' l'\t:I Hhllll-: lio.1 ;11,11.! 111 t.15 Z:..11•1 Sole/Rent 9160 ·••·················••· :!ti' t:Mt: ~Ill I llHJ 111\l I-: !'ih1:.l1 Wntr r.1t.-' l'\l Jll) 113.'I ~'i;lh TOP DOLLAR PAID nrn CL~:AN IMPORT CARS ALL MODELS ·73 F'l1\T 1:!8 Sl.C R~bll. cni: . 11111\· lU,000 1nr New 111l1•n11r & cpl f.'larc~ v.hb, ~· .. rran ~1 JI{~ H.t';ir rnold,·tl ~potl,•1 . v111) I top. Spot lc:~l> new paint. $.1000 fi45. 7511X aft 51'~1 ~!'!~~~.~~~~ .. • • • .. ~?.~~ F'\l'l,U~<;f,.';.,, 01. \'O "l 0£AUR IN U.S A. 1...r11 .. 11111"." l"'"11·r '70 EhmtnJl11r I~"' .Ill:! llur:.l I ''"' I ·~1 1'11:-.1 llt''l 0111•1 11\ 1•1 ~.!Oil ~lh '(!17 MmtoncJ 9952 ..••.••.•••..•......... 1111)1.#!•'t lf~ll!\. ROY Ill Or 1.J-:,\-.i-; CARVER i1 :o:t'T 114~ 111!17 '" 111 ll\f)IO l'onl111I I lt'llrtr J\IOcJt>I l'T 110.11 11H·r :111 F1ht•ri;111,., \l11ht 1111 :-..1l>0l 1;Mc L .. tt' 7J. ,1111 , 1111d loni.:. "n•11 \\ .1lt'1 1·;i11 l vp,• 1h11i:h' ~~' nun. 2 '11c.·1·d-; I'!• \'1·r~ 1.11. 1~1:1r. 'Ip:. ti, :)Ill ~Hiii l.!.IH '74 Ill! Wgn Yc:llnw Ll·Jr Jt't Mert!Q. ~ncm llr"" ht l'ond $2200 l'I' 55 I :!:IOll l'-----' ;1~~~I:~( m~, l'olon'>. NB H:ll "1tth 'i<lph1,111"'''''I Im lht•1 I s1so11n·1tl.tc1•1111111 Troilers,Trcrv~I Sdl·nf1r1• ~Stlll lndud1•-. lk>ah, Pow~r 9040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'V~r,)ttUn)! hi.a hit>.! or ••••••••••••••••••••••• :Ji\8Spilrt.tu I r1r fluh• MS 2200 1'17 I llt"lo11 \\ h.1h 1 11 ;1 ::.:!.000 l"t 111 r lh'.1t'h 111)\ ... 1'11111'\'rl i5 15 hr> .l11hn "'" 11111tor J-'11r 1nlo 1 Jll Xl7 1~1:17 \\Ith 11111\ IU h11111 ' )141MI firm 1<1·111.11 • 1111111 1 .. Jue s.nm 1·,111111• 11x:· • IH kt'(-. (111 .... 1lt• lolh l"CI\\ l.k•r :11~1 litU 1 '>t.' <:ournwl l1111t h1·1 1 .. 111 ... Ill'\ t•r' ll""f. Ii.II llil I lioo<I i..1•111111111• ",1,lll''" <tlll.'t'CI \/. 111'.f ~7:1 '"" h 4~1\i tl:i:.!7 Miscellaneous Wonted 8081 Iii •\11,lot I• 1,h1·1111.111 ;!I '. ~lll•l'I 1111 ,1111.111111• & rn.1rl111 'illMIO ! Ill ~11.1 l'll 11111 ') 111 I 111 , , ·' \ '. ;>L'i.;ltJMl, f'.\ 1'' 1, 11 l:lli:! 11 ' l • ..r'lln F ti ;\I 1•r1• !)1)11 , 1•11•1 'I.II l tilt tr .ult'r -.1111 • 1111rl !>1:>75 11Ht•r !Hill o·""I Musicol Boots. Sail 9060 lnstnunents 8083 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• • • • ••••• •• ••• ltuhu.• 16. ll'lr ru·w tr .. ns & Conn .\hn 0 \J;11 11 1·11·1• mon• ~I l.!.1 1.11; 11:!5!"1 r11 nr.l(an. cudknl 11111d1 5111 7;105 tmn, S/;t~I. I' I' ,:c 1:!5!1 Offic• Furniture & i-; It 1 (' !'> •> :-. :! 'I 1 '111 'i:! PumJ l1·nl 1111 hrl top -.1µ, lo 511110 11,1 ufr1 ;,JG ()4(Xj Auto Service.Parts & Acc~ssori~s 9400 ··•·················••· VWEMGIMES USIW II r:Ht 11.'I' W 111', 13110 1:,110 lfilliit'l' 1)11.tl 1'11/'h ;,:111 1;!1111 l>l';H Bl 1;1; Y SllOI' 011ts1flt' Sun \'1.-.11 '"' IX 111 '.'»I Cht•1 l'l 1:11ocf umrl Hl"" :.:u, i111 1 Autos for Sale ·······••·····••••····· G.Mral 9510 ·······•••···•·•····•·· li/J Ford (;Jl.nh· rlJcl ::.175 73 U111l.:1· l'l l1111 ~~!', &15 :!Sill "' l'f UIM' r.11 1 "-!I IHXI of· E~pment 8085 11•r 1.i.1 1x.111 ,., ,.,. & Antiques/ ••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • "kntl:'\ Classics rx-.. i..~ !\i,\ :." 1', I 1 h,11r' ~Ill . """ 'h.11 .... ~:!5 t'Cllll(I "'I "' .1IH1\ 1• ~I ~II t\ll 111 \hll 1·111111 1;;·, ·10110 Pets 8087 ·•••···········••·····• BUILD YOUR OWN BEAUT. WESTSAIL WORLD CRUISER 9520 ......•••••....••••.... '54 MG-TF I 500 Wm· v. hl'l b I. 11 11 . & 1n ··~n·lli·111 r 1111d1111111 :\f II ' I h I' ' •• 1• 11 ' Ix I' Et.:!J!lll, BEACH IMPORTS _ _!losto sv ... oAn 20' S. Manchester till ll-l Sport lJflod cond 7 -~ · 750 2011 1"~1. ,.a~seu.. M 100,bst Soab 9 60 A 111e1m - Autos, Jmporled ufr, lr,ull' Iii.! 011111 ••••••••••••• •••••••••• U -~ •••••••••••• •• ••••••••• Saub 96, \'4 & I 1111 "hi tlr. Jos, s ...... 9701 . ~ I !•••••••••••••••••••• Gent'f"al ii Ftal ,, 1!1 'l;u tires rush :.uh'. t'a\11111 .1.111 'i ol 9901 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mag "hh ,\ \l f-'\f II l'onH· 1.1 l.1· i 11111 ), trk. many ~tr.•:-. :i.t1nt tJ'•:! hr ... ~ 19••••••••••••••••••••• RARE '62 MASERATI lSOO GT COUPE :; !-.l>d'. m•w tin·'· llor 1nni wire wh<·t•h. fud in Jl'\'lron. aluminum hotly Xlnl 1·oncl \'t•n · f.i-l' :!:I cM~I ;\I 1 'l'O\J h11t ll1r Ill.\ \\ I I 1• 'I' r ;1 cl 1• I 11 I' ;,Ulll\'lh111i.: laml•I' I 'au 11•1 .1, l.utui.. }o;l!· ''' t'\ 1 ply i;n :itic..! 111 IW.J :!:!I~/ 1·11nct , S<lltlO hi.t ol 1 ;,11; 1~u1 Toyota 97 'i ·I !'ila Wi.:n 121 Tl' tir1·.1l i·ond, :.!11,00ll m1 st70ll :>'8·~1Ci ;1fl f>p111 MUST SELL! '75 12<1 Sport l'nupl'. 111 lll1 lii5 M5:l 8·12 l!K!>I ···••••······•·•····· '77 TOYOTA· HERENcN t'Oll\ ert1blt'. t't :\t V:\1 ,... 75 ,..,,., XI 9. xlnt t'Ond. • .... EW coeiRs .MW 97 I 2 ca~'<·lle. I ,pJ, Sl:.!00 •MEW M"" LS 4!134:.!li v •••••••••••••••••• • • •• • llu~e Sa\'1n..t~" \LI· n · Honda 9727 ma 1n1ng ·'' 111 ' .\ SADDLEBACK BMW '77 BMWs HERE NOW BMW SALES ill :!1100(.;S-I Sp 1:!:J.'>1. ·vs 1 i:!~'Oll:! \ l'•JSRKI\ l ••••••••••••••••••••••• Demo~ Brand Hew '76 MZRr/H··1·~~~01rA HONDA Cars :v11.· • · ''1 ~ .. 10 OVER 100 . 831·2. 495-1210 To Choose From! UNIVERSITY 71 Co~· 111·" p .11111 \ ll'Jll. ) .10 Jll1W Oldsmobil• .. -1 Honda Cars • GMC Tri':'!; •••••••••• !?.~~ Trucks •••y• 6 Trium h TR7 21l:-'4i llarlx1r Uh <I I P (' t· \I , lll·'ll;t!O ti . 4 ~l)l'etl. IKl\41'1 o:. a · e:,,, " · 11 twak!' .... lil'a11•r. t 1111 \h• l';Jl"I'\ 1Hl1 OWll 1·011 11 .. ,·t:. 1itmm· Im lull rn 111rmJl1on ,1\ l>I:! lli!I:> .. .. flt Jon Cowan 3700 Mewport Blvd. Newport Beach You arr 1h1• ~111ner of~ tu keh lCl the Sports, Vacation & Recreational Vehicl~ Show at !ht• ''\; \111•:1 \l ( <I\' l<'-:'1'111;\ n :'-:T!''lt .I.in ;!1hru .f.rn •1 c .rll 1.u :.mx. 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'" 'l>l"ln~ ""'" l'l 11'!> llll .,Pl't'1,dlv 11111•1•d 'l'Oll 11n11-lw1I "K 111111 u W1·-.ha1I p.wl..1~''' Imm ~1:15 for hull \'-'l>rl1•1 I.' 1\1.ll.'1111 11111 h1111.i ... s f11rumi. \11111 ,\ \\,.tJ I'\ t'' ltt I 111d 11ul Jh1111t r111"h1ni: p,11 k.1,i.:1·' & r ... lnrv .,u1111rn t \\\• ... i-..111 <'ru,..101• I 1·1111 r . t.1dn \ 111 .. .:c t't•nh 1 . !'\u1t.-21JJ :loll;! V1.1 O(lcirto. NewpOrl '"""'h 'J.!hf,.'J 675 5190 LASER :: 121•1'} IL1rC' 'lrao; & 752-0900 ·:.,.1 t:ht'\' I' .11wl 11·iill t'11..: J. 1/n1e: ll'Jlll 1';1111 .. ll\ fl'!>lOl't•d M:Sl"I or 111,1 k1• 11fr 1!1/l IUIC 9S50 •••••••·······•·····•·· 11 < 'h•''' I' I ' • ·· Ton ,1111• ltcnb O .S t1tr,, E'll 1 on1I, -.1 .. n•o. ,hl'i I. ~15011 rrrm l!l'I 2:1ib i3 Toyota Lancr111:.er mJn} xlra::. S390U ;157 i74:! art 6 prn I 11.,1, < 111 rhrd Si25 Trucks 9560 t .. u, lUK'tut ••1~ inKl ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ,-i1 Uat-.un I'll \ l ' IH -.10111> 'II" I 3111 OU! \\I F~I. II() l>umpo·r Ind ~·111 ,., ' 1111 .'':''"1 :< \1111 n111d '11 ltallt•r) '"V N14 pll ·"'"' k;il "11-11 'hork' tun1• Ill> Iii:! I.IHI Iii llnh11 1 .it" 11lr .1ft I Whl hull'" hl1w ,.111, ~r1:, "l2 2:![•2 '67 t:hcvv ·' • lon tr 111· k P;s P;R. posr.tr.rclwn su.,p. $1500 ft7'1 855!1 t I ll11l11t• I '.o! hk1• llt'\\ 1"l..1ni.: ~I ·•111J h1" I t1l 1· 1'.d I .i.x 1;,:1.I HOllE C 4 T l . 5 Meter '5.> Ford ~.ton I' l ' 1, 1) I ·1-spd. $290. hf 'I, :l/t 3 1•1:! 7~"Vl ; l l>aU.un FIJllwd I' ll Sl lOO 7 l II .11 ·' " ;1 1.~IXl.l"M l 'i5 :!IKli! I\ Ill:! 11 l 'I' i5 5J01,\ 1\ l!l(lli,\J n; I SAODLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831 -2040 495.4949 CREVIER &I ST 6 U OAl>WAY SAMIA AHA 835·3171 lHf UlfllOTI 0111v ... a MAC>ttNI!' Jl:tl'Ul.1l1" ( IH5,,,, ,. I JCIC)UGr 9730 NOW SSS95 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT DATSUN JAGUARS 76's AAS nm ~:sT ="cw Muv l'lan, M.m:.11> :'\EWl'OHT llt•:J\1'11 l'J.1me1it s Str111·tu1 833-1300 hkt' a l1·as1• (';ill fur,. quote. BRITISH CAR ft). 2131990-251 714/694-2'4 'i:! Xt-; .. : :! + :! ,11 rn1l.--. 1 . d tires >. nl con • o95 p h Loaded <> • 494.s1119 aft __ ARXJ6 TR's 7''s Xlnl huy pl:1n "11 h "'"" flit' r1.rym1·nh !'>I rllt tun.'tl Ilk<' ,1 1,.,...,1 l\·r nflr ,ltw k 1111 h.11111 BRITISH CAR CO. 2131990-2525 714/694-2854 '74 TR6 '71 J •USED BMW's• Sharp • engine. t\C' AM 1''~1 slcrt'O So 1111 ,. AM, f~1 Call for Ir>-Can Lea.,e' V\'I \ 111 '73 Davari a. (906LVY) '752002 183.1NJM I 'm JOOJ. IZXXS&i > Closed On Sundoys ORANGE COUMTY'S OLDEST pymt.A>MPTI. rrull?li I0301DU I • eftlSH CAR CO. BRITIS H CAR CO. p131990.2s25 2131990.2s25 714/694-2854 7141694-2854 .:;n. 9738 ·11 Tl!ti :!0.111111rn1 Xlnr #•'••••••••••••••••••• t~ontl Tan 11H S lliUU I Mnda HX:l Coupl'. ·l 846·00<l0.841i 1111:! 1 lf.ICI, under wrnly. \'ery Volksw•n 9770 ~lean >t37·3'Jp2 •••••• ••••••••• •• •• •••. S11lc!l·Servil'e·l.e11sin1 ; HXJ Wag.:\ rnnd rnnf '<i5 \'W. 1111011 (•111111. nc" RoyCarver,ln~. r:al'k, 1 spd Lei-:. than hr:il..1·~. nhlt 1:ni.: H11lls flo} ,.,. llv1" OOtMJ m1 's on c•ni;: t 1111 rh & SOOOlbesl ofr ti7r. !17:!:i lS·IOJamoorre cooling ~,·,.1t·n1 ~1150. -~t·wport Bc_ach_i;.1or144 S3H)5S6. · ·67 VW, i.:oml (•111111 .111,1 ·····•·······•········• ~ 9010 •···••·••·····•••····•• lt\utn 1·111111.i d11tr11 \lr•lrl l'I ll•o,11 1 ', 1 I It ltlfll'. •lf1•n \\ ,1fo ·1 I ,lfl ( I l ' / fl ~m.1111·1 '"r '''"' pf ll11h11· 1 i. ,\ U I L1lo.r tll'14, n1l1111·.f ,,,11, :11111 t'\tr." "' .... 1 rm 1111\1, ,,,,,I·'' \I I\ l.1 I "~Ill l•7"> :11'4:~01 til • •_po l.11>0 II rH'l 1 1111111 ,! u11~:r.111t'rl 1 .. 111 "' ..; 111, t'U\t•r t,. Ir It I lpl 1111 tin '71 Oalsun f>.U, ~ IOO l'h .'>II; MOO or fl.JO I Iii I 'f:>I 1' uni I 1111 c.impt'r ~h• II looks xlnl !)1 llKI f;t2 f'3.'i1 7 o 1• e r h o.i u I ,. ti ., !1 :i o '75 2002 SUllruO(, Ulr, o\M 'l"M . xlnl o ncl ~t.19~ 1111 r Ii 1(>11Cilih ~7 OSlO !163-2532 vr :;;JI, 111; l Mercedes len1 9740 '62 Bu11. 1ww 1·ni.: ••••••••••••••••••••••• good. S&Stl f\1111' non ·• 'I"• .t, , 11 \ ,., , "'J)h1~1111111·.J '"' t '' 1·r <1111111 '•lfl 11 1m1·111 !-.,wnl1< • """' Inc 111!11·' ,.\f'r' lht11L: "' , ~·,•· • 01 t~1:, ~,,.,.. ,1111,1.:e .11 '" "' rl111 I. ~liU) IUfl 111~1 Vam 'Ii 3 For 11 \ .1 11 . '\1;1 11 I S 4111 "·"' Ito.ii 11• ', ~heels 1101111 p.11n1 .~. Ill>· nrw ''"" 111•\\ 11 Ir lkt hul . I lln' 1:111111, $11511 t•·r lhan n•·" '111 ":!."•O 9715 Lease Mew-Used OVER 100 MERCEDES OH DISPLAY l';i II l!Hi 52!'1!1 'li6 VW 14 117 n ·hll \'llJ.! Pully r11-.1orn111•tl ltrn/\ mags. S'i1k1 1111 c; 111 i•i2 I ·m VW Oui?. 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'n I'~ \ I n y 1\1•\\ 1 'un,1~IH '1.1lly llrllpc'rllt..Jv n1•1•rl ~Pll<'I' /nr ('1\1. •, I 1·mpnr11r~ 01\ 1'41 :,c1111111 li7:1 if\;)• srno ~ 111 J!1m '71 ('llUfll' flt• \ 11f1· .di \lra' In m1, "·1· l11 "" prr1· ~~!lri. [1'il :i;'illi • l)lf~ \.'°'4111<1'/ .. ,\I l1lft fl:Jll;I looh. Marine Equipmtnt SI tp "ti.111• lor :!3-:t5 7600Wcslrn1ruitt•r f\lvd 9030 f1bl.'q;I:"' \,ttlbout. Westmlnstrr 1193 7551 Newporl lk .•t'h 6i5·72l3 ---------'71 Fom Van Runs good loots, Stor~ 9090 $ro0/ofr Rutlials. stereo. ··•······•············· D.,SW. 9720 On the Santa 1\na rwy. Claulc Mercede5 '66 VW B111! l't·rt ntnd new uphol & hrk:.. we t1 apprec 557 71120 t9·70 280SE Cmt. Xlnt '65 VW 1111:.. l'.l11l rnnd cond. Sl7.500. 552-7091 Must sell th•~ W(·•·k Uc-. ----of!er. !l611·051.~J New I l foot lift• rart 4 cost SlJR.oo. will 111'11 for 011ly m:i.00. C'n II 1!)5 1Jll5. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpt'g. 675-2S7t BOAT STOHJ\tt ~; san --- monthly. (n·1• f:iunch Autos WM~d 9590 IOwaffVHFRadio Sail /Pwr N1•wpor1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• DRIYIA LITTLE ••• SAVE A LOT MERCEDES IEHZ Hou" of Import• (213) 921 -851\8 C7t4) !!23·7250 '88 BUG New 1600 l'ng., Seat cov .. l(cnc•rntor & Ures. s102:,s.51.:mR 1974 Cadillac Uroui.:ham Mctnll1c hltH'. \I nyl top, hi U\' 1.:ru:shc11 Vl·lvcl mlenor. LOADt-;D Full Power. I.ow m11l-agc' $8,000. J>uy:'l, 630 1710 Eves. 6.'\J·D~~t S200 f>IR~AA6Mt4 pm Punes.&1111.'llll CASHFORCARS! -............. ....... 9100 ........... _, ..... w 9100-Top s Dollar S paid fo .....,_._ "'"' ~ " clean used cars, trucks• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Corvettes. Ask for P11I SllOP&COMPARE IARWICK DATSUN San Juan Capistrano 831-1 175 493·ll75 Holiday Greetings ,,._ I. J. SPGrllccr Cemer 0,..... c-.,.. #1 .... o..i.r Ont' I U ......,...,......., Cert Av....._ .......... WflC ..... 914 ...... , ........ a..,. s..ti.,. Mii Iii 4•ell ... Dw411t Ow Y..--d • $et. ........... ._.... Ow liiii1 LAICH S&.ICTIOW OF 9f Xlf''•& 124 SPIDas s ..... Sil A Lanie Selection of Iii Extra CIHn ._, Used Sports Cars w • .,.,.....,...,.~ ............. ,,._, _..... .,.. l ....., ... Stnlce hpt, .,.. "'"" .... 'Ht t ~ Wtt o.,t. 0,.. W.w \'Mn hyl O'Neill. HOWARD Chenoft Oove & Quail St' NEWPORT BEN H --------- WEPAYTOPDOILAR FOR TO? USEVCA R." FOREIGN, DOJESTIC orCLASSCS lf your car ls •lta clean seeusflrsl. 1.4UERJUICK 292SHarJor Blvd. Costa Mesa 9'79·2500 WIBUY CUA"~AltS .1nUCKS NEWPORT DATSUN SPECIALS 8210 4 Door. 4 !'p1•cd C78S71SJ. MOW$2895 888DOVESTREET Near MacArthur &Jambor~ Roads IJl-1300 '74 Midget. 23,000 ml. TOP IUYltt pelf. cond. 12790. See us rlr:\t & l astJ Top 498 -138\ dolli.r paid tor import.s. MGI 97 44 COST.4 MISA ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONNill DATSUN '87 MGB G'I,'. Xlnl cond. DeM•ery 2345 Karbor Blvd. low mi ' wtres, radials, Service & port!( nnw npnn C'U£YROLEJ Cost.a Mesa 54()-6410 new c~t fl paint. SlSOO on S11t 'a 8 to I lor you1· •SALIS •SERVICE •LEASING Oveneas ifl ofr. 497 39«J. ronvenltntt• 2828 Harb<Jr Rlvd. 1915 Datsun 2807. 2+2· SMOG EXJ::.MM' COST5 ~A1M200~A Lolded t Hu 4 a peed· alr MU1t aee to bell ever •-~ •• AM /fM radio A 642·70'71 , rmp. (950MOQ). ts?OO. --------1 ~~e:· 0:1f~~'sf l~r~~ Pd.!Cf. 581-7981. Oood body, manu11 I 1974 Dataun 710, ' 1pd, trans. v.a. runnlna o AN/!:d bftly t:>.GOO ml. not. Nell. 5JS..2980 xJnt . SZOC>. 5$1-1711 '76 Coupe Dt• \'Ille, 12,11()() m1. Cl11rrllwht llhr tnp & int. all xlr.rs, 5111 ·5171 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Chevy Malibu. 10.000 rni, Ownr must s11c. Call an. 6pm:..<!J~~- CottthMftfol 99 l 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . '71 MARK Ill. Bluck. l<>lided, tll9S/bcst offer Phone 675.JB.SI_. --- 9933 lt70 COUG AR XR7 · Loaded Inc. air & pwr. brue.. Good condition MUST SEL.t.! (~lADZ). ~I. pt.y Call 752·61 ~p •weekends. Nabers Cadillac Quality and Pri ce Guaranteed ....... JUST A FEW FROM TH E LARGEST SELECTION IN ORANGE COUNTY 197 6 CADILLAC COU,EDEYIUE (02204311 1975 CADU.UC ELDORADO COUPE 1725KY$1 1975 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE (802NAYJ 1974 CADILLAC COUPE DEVIUE [084KZll I 97 4 CADILLAC COUPE DEVfUE (204KGJ) I 97.f CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE l233HBX) 1973 CADILLAC ELDORADO COUPE (OOOHSU) 1973 CADILUC coua-EDmLLE (64 2GRKJ ss995 58695 S7695 S6695 S6295 SS695 s5495 54995 12,000 mil~ or I 2 Caci oc alu• Prof. S•rvfc• A9re•rMnt Available on Pr.-ownf'd 1973·1976 "ffftt IHs "'°" 50 000 MllH. WE WILL IE CLOSID AtlDA Y. DIC!MIM l I ™-U SUM DAY. JAHUAllY 2 Cadillac Master Dealer 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-9100 ------ CON NEU CHEVROLET AND GENERAL MOTORS ANNOUN CES CASH REBATE FROM THE FACTORY FROM HOY. 11to JAH.10 If you purcha.,f'.' 'rny nc>w 76 or 77 Chevcttc or Vego 1n stock, you 11 receive your S200 facrory cash rebate See us today' OYER 70 IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY NEW 1977 PINTO 2 Olt HDAH 4 ~0'1 f, r1• I ,,.. J" •u-..t CiPttf ,.,pr ru:ir w t ,, f, 'nr t 0 . 'rl J I . ' ' (J t , "' • <-; T ~} I / 11'\1 '' s3372 I I f I • I l • NEW 1977 MUSTANG 2 Ott HD TOf' 4 "'od '"11 1•'\C<, ro'11<111rn1 hur ~1'1 •,nat•; I ic ti 1mo ;1n 1 '• ·•nn .,,,,.qP<, whl c1w; c >1 >' ••·v•• I o•. ~TK063 '1143661 s3772 • MEW 1977 F-150 PICKUP Cust S1yrec;1dP nmrnPIP• and 011 o<essure gauq"~ ""'' v•nv' seal '3 sod. auto tr.1ns 5 78• 15 8 oiy t1rl'5 owr ,IPC• ,fl( T 0147 {026342 s4974 j Plus lax and L1cenc;o l • • ·' HURRY FOR FtMAL CLEARANCE DISCOUNTS ON ALL REMAINING 76's! '75 DATSUN 12 sz795 NEW '76 DATSUN Fl' • I\ • ,, ' ., .... *" .. ., .. :\ ~ I ••• 'I 1 •"' "''I""""' ~ S)695 '75 DATSUN 2802 "')! vi-4 0-.. .., ~ • '9' •' J ""*" A•• fl. ··•>& '6995 MEW '76 DATSUN 710 • •r' '75 DATSUN 710 f IJt,Jf•f \ ,.,.._1 J•~ .. """'"" 1•"'1..A ""' A·~ • .,, t J HEW '76 DATSUN 710 • f"' r,. "• 1 A f\•'• J ' t ,.,., 'J I -,. ... "J - 2 HEW '76 DATSUN PfCKUPS • t "' ••• • .,. 'l S)695 '75 DATSUN 710 (14.Ji..r 4 • ._., 1 o ... -•"l s3295 MEW '76 DATSUN '""• f ' .,, .. 1' •• ! :I'' I 4 s3995 '75 DATSUN 710 ,,,. A ~, 1 • 1. ,, .. , ''t "i •"\I t s3195 20 1976 1·21 Os in stock A ",.-,'ll It t«, ' , J;1 t ~· t"''1' rtr!I' 1 , ... "'"" , v """•"'' in.om M, 1 t , ..J '' l'TM~t '<'V"' '"' .,,,..., .... , ....... It 13195 SALE ENDS 1-3-77 JUST A FEW FROM THE LARGEST SELECTION IN ORANGE COUNTY 76 CoupP deV1lle IQ:.>20431) .S8995 75 Eldorado CouoP S8695 ( 725KYSl 75 Coupe deV1llP . . ••. · S 7695 C802NAY) ·74 Coupe deV1lle . . . ..... $6695 !084KZI) ·74 Coupe deVille . . . ..... S6295 (204KGJl '74 Coupe deV1lle . . . . .. S5695 (233HBX) 73 Eldorado Coupe .••••..•. S5495 IOQOHSUJ 73 Coupe deV1lle ....•...•. S4995 (642GRK) 12.000 .. Of' 12 ol•• ''of. Ser•ice AIJ"H-11t •oilable Oft ,,._WllM lt7l-1976 '"' "'-' SO 000 Mlln. We will be closed Friday. Dec 3 1 thru Sunday Jan 2 • ••••• HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM BUY FROM IKE '74 TOY OT A CORONA 4 ~peed radio f025LJD1 ,s2399 '7~YOT A MARK II W AGOH 4 d air cond1t1oning AM/FM rad1 991 ) 'i899 '74 ~-ro RUNABOUT 4 speed ~ heater '274KKYl $ '74 DA UH 710 4 speed radio CFJ s21 9 '6 7 COUGAh;PE. Aulo !rans air cond1"'11ng radio heater wn1tewa11 tirC's 'lied glass wneer covers 'WXF824 BRAND NEW 1976 D O · N SELECTION IS WHY WE'RE No.1 IMMIOIATE DBJVERY TODAY Wh~rever\ you UM In Orange County, buying a Used Car In (:o•ta Mesa from Johnson & Son "Just Makes Senaet" • '75 UMCOLM MAU IY 2 to rho<'l:.e from These 0~ lu:\urv CJrs an.• all '>er\'il't'd ,md reedy lo .:o Sto1> 1n & :.ce tlwm lodJ) <691LPY1. Priced as low a:. '8895 '7J LIMCOLM COUf'f lleaut1ful dt·c111-:n•<'n w v.h1l<' \Im I roof and full ''°'"''r n1r l'Oncl . ,11uo 0 mul1c t rJll' . 1\ )J f-'\l rJr!ro 111511 i::z l Th" be<iul} on '"le now only '73 CADILLAC SEDAM DEVILU lland~om<' 4 dr with lull rx11H·r. air l'•>nd . auto lra11sm1:.,1u11, ~l'Cll hrown wtlh makhmi;: 1t1lt-rt11r S\:1· 1t now. Stk # 1812,1 Only 54895 '74 FOllD EUTt 2 Dr Cpc 1'11wl'r hrak1•, & 'll'<'rrni::. •nd10. autll. lr ,rn,mt'''""· \'tn) I roor. wire whcl!I t"<l\ er" h~ht lllue body wrth dark hlut-ro1r & 111tcnor Buy sl toda\•. 1380K XX I Onlv '3895 '7 I LIMCOLM 4 Oil. SS>. Gr<'al fam1lv .,rdan. full PQ\\'._t'r. r..id10 .• or t•rnd t322KIJ11 '2695 '75 MHCUllY MONTEGO .f Dr St-d Pov. er !olt•enng & brJkl''" ~ ..iir rond . radio. a ntrl' l'll·.m r.tr ..it 'a real-.d\ tn~., 171~\l:'l:G l. Onlv 53195 '72 COUCUll Xll-7 Pow1•r hr.1kl"" & '>ll'l'rtng, i\ \I rad11J w l..iJll' d1·c·k. bu1·k,.l 'rah ;11r rnnt.I . medium gn•c•n with white inl<'rior . & wh1tl• Vtflyl roor 1 l:l.'>l lGC1 '72 ,OMTIAC 4 Oil R & l I . p 'lt•errni.: & hruke... air <"ond . \'Inv! rnor. i:nltl with IJt'1~e ml crmr I ~901-'Li\ I 'I 995 (@C SHAPE Of THINGS TO COME ·•· -\ Al\PfUCE YOU CA.N AFFORD TODAY. NOW ONLY •ptus Tax & Lrcense M ulacturer s suggested 1976 retail ce P.O E Does n ot lnclud Inland transportation. local xes or preparahon charges & ace ones. FREE THIS WEUIMD OML Y Wftlt Tiie '-re,_. fJf Al'l'f MO Ml~-~ M.l.C. J v-. u .ooo Mite w~ MEW MG. MIDGET , I . · •.1/'1' All of our cars have a S year· 50.000 mile warranty available ~ Mrle So. or the San 0!990 Frw-t. Between Adams & Baker FREE FOR ALL • FREE PARTS • FREE OIL • FREE SERVICE For 2 Y~on or 25,000 Mlltt AND THEN .•• 5 YEAR, 75,000 MILE Factory W orr..ty 0.. Allllotltf"'f~ HEW MAZDA.s START AS LOW AS 52 ·794 (STC36219J • OUTSTANDING RESALE VALUES 1973 MGI ROADSTER 4 soeed AM 'FM stereo 8 track & w1re wheels 614GOTl SALE ,ltlCf '3299 • J 975 MG MIDGET 4 speed AM/FM radio & only 1 S 000 miles .989NKKl SAU ,lllCE s3599 • 1974 TOYOTA LAMOCRUISBt 4 wheel drive roll bar custom wheets & tires & only 22 000 m1te'i - LIKE NEW' (490MPR) SAU PRICE S 3 999 • 1976 MG8 ROADSTER 4 soeed stereo & racll -UKE NEW' (219PHC) SAU ,.ICE s4 599 " RDATE ON ALL NEW 176 & •77 PACERS IN STOCK Delly Pl .. 1 .... ,. lty htrkll 0'0...11tll Sign of the ti met In Turtte Rock, Irvine pHture. Taxpayers Losing Land Use Fight Hurts All By LAURIE KASPER 04 llM Dalt' Pllol ~1•11 Con-;umers and ta~paycrs are lhe t l•al !""<'rs in the Orange County "arf arc between environmentalists and developt-rs. proponC'nt~ or both s1dC'-; agrt>e Wht'n askC'd \\-h1ch group 1s win · mng, Gil F<'q:uson, the CXl'Cutive director of Caltforman" for Environ· ment, Employ ment, Economy and Development !CEEEO) who has often spoken out in favor of develop· ment, said he couldn 't caJl the win· ner. "It's easier to tell you who is los· mg," he said The loser, he added, is the consumer and taxpayer. Shirley Grindle, a former county planning comm issloner who bas onen spoken against development, said the developers are winning "hands down." However, she later said the people affected are the tax· payers Although Ferguson and Mrs. Grin· die often have stood on opposite sides of issues and sttll retain thelr differences, they also seem to share some views. Ferguson said declining interest rates and a losening up by the county have made 1976 a "banner year" for the building Industry in Orange County. He estimated from 25,000 to 26,000 housing units have been built. But with the backlog which bad de· veloped, he said, there is still a tremendous shortage ot housing. As a result, the prices ot both new and old homes has risen, he said. "Everybody's paylng more taxes for the same old house they qve m:• And, he predicted, rents also wiU be rising soon. Although the new housing has re· lleved some of the pressur e on mid· die income people, he said, it has not yet reached the moderate income population. These people, he said, are feeling lhe pinch or rising prices and their children are finding they can't af. ford a home of their own in this county. . He figures 25,000 to 30,000 new un. its will have to be built in each of the next 10 years to reduce or stabilize prices. He said it's not a malt.er of de· velopment or no development now ... but how can it be done in a way compatible with the environ· ment. Politicians have not dealt with air and water pollution and land and air transportation because they are dif· ficult problems, be said. As a result, be said, moderate in· come and poor people are caught in the squeeze between the vocal special interest groups of environ· mentalists and developers. From the one band, Ferguson said, government ofCicials are plea.&· Ing environmentalists by such things " limiting sewer capacity and re· fusina lo bulld new roads. But on the other hand, be said, they allow new building without the necessary support s tructures because they know houses are needed and the developers have con· tributed to their campalgn.s. Although both special interest <See DEVELOPnNT, Page it) Sleepy Era's Past Groves, Farms Yield To County PoPulation ByCHERYL ROMO OUM Olllf l'lloUC.1" • They came to the land ·or citrus groves, cattle ranches and farmland seeking homes, jobs and a better way or life • , • and they were ~elcomed. Citrus groves and farmlands were cleared • • • and the cattle moved • • . and the once sleepy county helped its newcomers by building homes, roads and schools for thelr children. Businesses came with them, and soon there were shopping ·centers, colleges, civic centers and an airport. And now Orange County is the fastest growing county in the state, . sprouting from an almost rural · population in 1950 of 216,224 to tho latest census count in 1976 of 1,7(9,900. An esUmated 26,000 new housing \lilita were built in the county this bicentennial year. It was a "boom" Ume for t.he real t;State buainess, reminiscent of an earlier goldru.sh in California . In 1976, the average price of a 'home rose to a staagering $66,712, forcln« many young families out of the housing market. Cities were busy expanding com· munlty-orlent.ed programs by ad· dlng parks, greenbelts, equestrian (See PROGRE~, Pag~ !) PROGRESS '77 Orange Coast Dally Piiot December30,1978 -o.lty PAM -• ~ "klllN IC .... ..,. Cal Trana' new $13.7 mUUon, three-level Interchange between the Corona del Mar Freeway and Route 55. Freeway Job on the ·Road By STEVE MITCHEU. 04 ... Oally Pit.I Maff There's some go00 news, and bad news in frecw ay construction for the Orance Coast in 1977. The good news is, three CalTrans projects r elated to the Corona del Mar Freeway will be completed. · The not-so-good news is, no one knows what will become oC the plan for a $50 million extension of Route 55toCosta Meaa's southerly Umitll. The CalTrana staff and the California Highway Commission have been in conflict over inclusion or the so-called Red Route through Costa .Mesa on the stat.e's six-year plan. Costa Mesa civic eroups say they are 1oin1 to place completion of the freeway at the top of the.ir priorities next year. Costa Mesa jeweler J .C. Hum· phrles, president of Costa Mesa Tomorrow, a civic organization formed lo improve the downtown portions of the city, said his group will push for completion of the Red Route. "Now that the Corona del Mar Freeway construction has been ~s· sured," Humphries said, "the time bu come for the city and state to get to&etber with s urrounding com· munilles and resolve the Cost~ Mesa Freeway problem." Construction work is nearly com· pleted on three projects related to the Corona del Mar F)oeeway. The first project ls the realign. ment of MacA rthur Boulevard from Bonita Canyon to J amboree Road, a 2 DAILY PILOT * December 30, 1979 CMlly ...... ""4• '' LM ,_., ... Uppef Newport a., .....,... 9t ....,. tide preMra • (t6oture of tranqulllty behind bultllng Newport Center. The baJ Mr¥ .... a twme for blrda and IMd,ne lfe. By KA TRY Cl.ANCY Of-Oelly .......... The future of Orange County Airport, reorganization ol county de. partmenta and recovery from a year. that saw one supervisor convicted ol felony char1es ill oftlce will face county supt'h'llon in t.m. Nevertheless, Board Chairman Ralpb Diedrich ls IPPf08ChiDI the new year wtth opUmism. "I think some of tbe problemt that were naHlDI -some ol the serious problems -have been solved," Diedrich said. "I think now we will go on to greatel' levels ol efficiency and greater response to the dee· torate." The Fullerton supervbor said be was pleased with the ekct1oo ol Supervisor Phil Anthony to the board. The former Westminster mayor replaces Robert Bettin, who res~ from office after his coovlc· lion oii felony charges. Anthony said be will spend about three months acquaintine himself with county 1ovemmerrt operations, then embark on proerams to en· courage employment, redevelop. ment of older commun1Ue1 and greater cooperation between city and county 1overnment. AIRPORT FtmJllE1 Diedrich aaid a major l.ssue facin1 the county thls year will be the future of Oran1e County Airport. An environmental lJilpact report on the county.owned facility ls ex· pected liter this month. Then the board will beein d~I the airfield's eventu1I fate. Diedrich warned, ''Fran.kly we are eolnl to abed blood before that issue ls decided." However, be said, the newJear and the new Democratic feeler ad· mlnlatraUon may revive hopes that either the Camp Peodletcn or Lot Alamitos mllltary bases could become available a an alternaUve Jllrport Ille. . • BOSPITALSOLD ·!J'he1 .,....liGlt....,. ta. ,,,,,.,. "' the former Orange County Medical Center to the UC Irvine Medical School as the county's top ac· compllsbment for 1976. The sale, completed after three years ot ne1otJaUon, will save tax· ~en $5 mWlon annually, Diedrich said. He also pointed with pride to the 20 cent.a per $100 of assessed valuation IUPft"vlaon were able to alasb from tbfs year's property tax rate, adding he bopea that cut can be sustained tbroulb the next year. REORGANIZING Diedrich explained supervisors would be contlnulng their 1overn· ment reori.anlzatioc durina i.m. He noted the two-year-old ieneral services agency, which cooaoUdated building services, data processlnc and other functions, bas saved about $3.5 mllllon so rar. And , Diedrich said, the board would continue refming the county environmental manasement agency and begin forming the new human services a1ency. The supervisor said he also hopes the county's emergency medical care committee this year will begin atudyine stiffer ambulance flnl\ re- gulations, certification ol various fevels of paramedics and a rating system for hospitals accordin1 to their capabillUes.· Diedrich Haled as a disappoint· 'ment this year a f allure by cities to agree with the county on formln& a county·wide paramedic district. EQUAL SERVICE That proposal, by Supervisor Ralpb Clark, would have euaranteed an equal level of service for all coun· ty reaidenta. Diedrich said. Du.ring 1971, Diedrich continued, the county adopted populatJon limits for the developing southeut county area and laid plans for the future of the Irvine Coutal area. And while there aW1 will be some • 'trowtni paln1,.. the aupervilor said, tbe maJor growth il$uea baYe t'r,~i1~,:.~4a1u1)1" '' 11J1111/1h) I (lu.rl"I Upper Bay Reserve Expected By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of Ille Dally """SUit A start at preservation of the 714·acre Uppe r Newport Bay ecological reser ve is expected in 1m. Besides esthetic value, the reserve plays a key role ln the continued ex· iatence of the birds ol the Pacific Flyway and marine life that are de- pendent upon the coastal wetlan~ of Southern California. The Upper Bay's wildlife re· aources Include 80 species of fish, 19 species of amphibians and reptiles, 10 species of mammals, 75 species of res1den~. birds and 89 other species or birds that are occasional visitors. The endangered Ught·footed clap- per rall ahd the Beld.ing's savannah sparrow are among the rare birds that nest within the reserve. The state department of fish and game purchased the land from The • Irvine Company In 1975 for $3,481,000 and the reserve was established by the fish and game commission. In September of this year a bill sponsored by Stale Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newpmt Beach) was passed by the legbfature, allocating $1.l mUUon to the ftsb and 1ame de· partment over the next~ yean. The funds will be available In January 1971 and the department, backed by lnput from ' public ad- vlsory committee, a technJcal ad· visory committee, city officials from Irvine and Newport Beach and the Friends of Newport Bay will begin a senalUve tuk. The objective is to restore and maintain a valuable ecoloeJcal area without ellmlnatinl public use and enjoyment. Plans call for a pilot marsh rest.oration project, dredting of the channel between the malnland and one of the bay's three islands and construction or a t.ralJ system on the west side ol the bay. ,.,['.~,,,,,,~ '"· ... ' 111 •• ,. From Pa1e 1 PROGRESS. • trails and playgrounds. Programs were developed to assist senior and handicapped citizens. "Redevelopment" was added to planning voe a bularles in cities along the Orange Coast. Healthcare and public transporta- tion continued lo improve, and city and county governments were re· organized to streamline their et· forts. New roads were constructed, hotels were built and shopplng cen- ters and businesses continued to grow -giving birth to hopes for a healthier economy in im. Former Los Angeles County resi- dents recognized the familiar orange tint in the sky as the ever in- creasing pr oblems of pollution touched our coastaJ shores. And the future of Orange Coonty Airport continued to spark con- troversy. Supervisors are awaiting . environmental reports to determine its future. The cities of lrvine and Newport Beach, and the Friends of Newport Bay, joined forces to preserve the 714 acre ecological reserve in Upper Newport Bay. Adults began returning to school, seeking richer and more rewarding lives, and the community colleges and the University of California· Irvine expanded their programs, brin1tn1 the college to the com· munity. And those who came ... seeking homes and better opportunities . . . round them in Orange County in 1976. PROGRESS'n December 30, 1976 Orange Coeat I •t1''1QI{t1 I Robert N. Weed l'ffll*Al aM .,._.,.._ George A. Lektal E•11 .... -lal l«tleM GUIDE TO ADVERTISERS ADV•ATISElt f'AGE •&CLUM~ 42 Air C..1110<!\la :II ~ 1notvttrta1 Com111u n Airport,... llln 1t Air Qu911ty Pn>du<U 11 ._of Co\la Meu IS 8ay I. llHCfl Aully • a19911r1 l'umlture 13 ....... swl<k lndli~lrln n C.lllornla Cen.011111 B•nll 16 c.tllornla l'lr\l 8anll 11 Clwlncll"'' Furnltur• 11 Clly of °"'a ~ ,. ~I Comm....i1y Colleos 01\l•kl 11 Col•of N-p0r1 AHllors :n Coota A.WM a.em.,.... o4 Com!N«e «> CootaA.WwCovntyWattrOl\lrkl lJ Golla MtW H..,..lal H Oi<tl1 Bradley AHllY 71 C>Hlon PIHi Tra .... 1 • l!arle lkt lmPOrtt • f ar ~I Services • l'MNonl\1-1 l'9"I Aer-• I. Commu11lcellon\ :n Geldtn Wttl Alrllnu J6 ~-1•1 HOlpllll·PrHbv14rlan JI HOOdaylnn o10 .-C"'91on 8eacll·Founlaln Valley lloa<clof ANllort lO -..11191on BHCll lnter·Communlly HOW>ilal ,. lnclu\lrlal Pipe Fiiiers I The lrvlnt Co-1' l' ,,.,..,.,..u_.e..,.. JS INI ... $.tvlnQ> & l Olll It Je<Ollt A .. lly )6 JoMIOn & Son II u-CMPOratlon 10 Merl'*' Savino\ I. Lo111 ~ Mltrodlla •• MIMloll k«h< r alt tt MllMGll VltJo lmPortt 10 --1 H•rtlor Bo&rd of AHllOf\ " flle~lnn IJ ThePMPleM.clll... " QllAll "«• Pr-rtlt• • Rale19h Hlll1 Hotf>ltal 10 AOIMl, I"'. JS Seclcllebe<kBMW ~ Seftllltl!O --11 $lnltl\ I nternaliOMI n Soulll OM st Pl Ata '' Soull\C:...11 Pia .. Hotel JO s.-11-Bank 10 Trewt ~,.,,., • o Oft~-I W .... S LffAMC • W1t.rfronl "°""'' 1• WHltrn 0'911al 2• ~\tftlfrll_, Mall II 1..1. • I .~J&.. '""" What Now? OCTD Has New Boss By KATHY CLANCY ·01 ll>e 011ty "'~SUH For the Orange County Transit District <OCTD ) 1977 will begin with a small cloud or mystery in the form or the new Orange County Transportation Commission. Lesgislation creating the new five- m ember commission was passed this year. And the commission, which is to oversee all bus, road and other transportation measures in the county, won 'l begin meeting until January. But both OCTD Board Chairman Ralph C lark and Director Al Hollinden don't see any cause for alarm. Clark, who also serves as a county supervisor, said he believes legisla- tion creating th<' commission was written spec1f1cally not to disturb wt}at he s aid has been an erticicn( OCrn opera hon And, Fountain Valley Mayor Hollinden. the only J>('rson so far ap- pointed to the comm1ss1on, sa1d that 'Ahal<' the new agency "will have some ha ~1 h p a ins .. it should b<:n cfit tJxpa\'l'J • 1 don't SCI.' 1t ncces::.anly h:imper ang OCTD ;1t all .·· ht' said llolli11<h.1 l'xpla in('(j the nrw com miss ion \~ill ha\ e to relah hu" oper atit n'> to thl:' transportation pi e tur<' ac; a ,, hol l', which is something OCT D 1. rHil n·qui n>c l t,o do at pn• s~nt And th at lar ~1'r PH't Ur<' of tr,1nsp(1r1.1IP•n -.lwulil "nrk tu the r1•111.•n ~ 1•f1t.h1 • ... ;11d Cl:irk pu 111 ted with pridt-to OCl'l )"s p<i 4'l arl'omph-.hmcnL'i, not· inc the d. lratt startrd four years ai.:o \\-ll h r \ t' buses and 110 1!. has 339 cin thr r 111 .• :l. 'l. he s wd, m• ·r ... h1p ex- t•r·1 <l1'tl l 11llion far1·-. rlunng some munth, t , y€'ar and -will Jump to .1bovt t 1 millaon 1>.i'i'>engers a month<. , 1g 1977 ""'' I .h ' rull) mo,·f'd into a '01d , ~. ;>ly an g a much nt"edt•d 4'f'r\ IC'l' r lh<' pro pit• Of lht" ('llUnly," Clark s •.. 1 Rt>fnrc OC'Tn started, hl' said, the rounty "as the state's s econd largest. yC't lackcd pubhc transit. A!!. for critacasms about half-empty buses , \lark compa red transit operation , to frPeway sys tems. When traHac i11 light, he said, people don 't c o m pl a in about e mpt y fret"ways. And jur.t as roads arc built to carry cars. Clark said, buses are built to carry Pf'Ople. Duse.'! must run even though they aren't totally filled, he said, because some passengers will depend UPon them for transporta· ta on Clark listed OCTD's youth as a weakness. saying It is growing and needs to build a reputation to gain pubUc acceptance and use. Ano«Jer weakness, be said, is in the legislatjon which created OCTD. That legislation, he said, requires OCTD to buy any business with which it competes. And that r equirement lead to a court ruling las t year halting OCTD's minibus door to df'stanation Dial-a-Ride program in Orange, a ruling handed down in a lawsuit filed by the Yellow Cab Co. Clark said efforts are under way to amend that legislation so both can <See OCTD, Page la> . DAIL V PtLOT S Hew look f_or OCTD buses. More efflclent route• and aervtce are planned for 1977 Traffic Holds Newport's Eyes By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 th• 01llr Piiot Stall For the city or Newport Beach, 1976 was a year of ups and down~. The population was up to a nl'w high of 63,000. The tax rate was down a nick<'! at $1.11. And if there's going lo be a theme for 1977, it will be the Year or Traf- fic. The city's continued growth in both residential and commercial de· velopmenl has made traffic one of its most serious and engrossing pro- blems. City offi cials say they want to be especially rareful that in solving the city's traffic dilemma, they don't cause some other, more difficult ·problems with some other aspect of life in Newport Beach. As the city moves into 1977 most of its resources -including citizen ad· visors as wt>ll as staff members and consultants -ate being directed, In one form or another, at problems r e· lated to traffic. For instance, the Irvine Company is working on development of Its final 900 acres inside Newport Beach city limits. To move those developments along as smoothly as possible, com- pany representatives, headed by Tom Wolff. executive vice president for land development, plan to meet regularly with as many city officials as Possible to discUi.S development plans. • CENTER TO DOOJJL£. One or the first meetings was held in early December and wa.11 limited to a discussion of traffic to be generated by the completion of de- velopment in Newport Center, where the commercial noor space will double within the next 15 years. Those potential traffic problems will be studied in the coming year by t.he TransPortation Plan Citizens Ad· vi1ory Committee, a gro\lp of dty re• sidents appointed by the council to advise city fathers on traffic mat· ters. This citizens group was in· strumental in helping the city taJk the state Department of Transports· Uon (CalTrans) into building a new bridge where coast highway crosse~ the Upper Newport Bay. BRIDGE BOTnENECK The old bridge, built In 1932, L• woefully inadequate, creating a traf· lie bottleneck that plugs during rush hour and on weekends with beach traffic. According to Joe Devlin, Director ol Public Works, the plans for the new, six-lane bridge will be put out to bid In 1977, and if all goes accord· Ing to schedule, the project will be completed by 1979. Another traffic botUeneck is the Intersection of Bristol Street and • · (See·IMEWPelt2\ Pl"a''''' .. DAIL V PILOT * bectMber 90, 1'78 Mesa's '77 Plans · Center on Space By STEVE Mn'CHEU OllllilDeltr ..... Meft Coeta Mesa sees progress along several fronts 1n 1m, including de- velopment of parka, open space, the P·aramedics Aid Mesans Paramedics became a part of Co.ta Mesa'• services to the com· munlty In 1975. Who are the paramedics? A elty spokesperson said, "'Ibey are mem· hers of the Costa Mesa Fire Depart· ment -who are not only trained u fl.re fi1hters -but have received hl&blY specialized traininl in treat· lq persona who are seriously W or Wurecl." Tbrou1b the para.medic proti'am, 24-bour medical care ta provided to the dtheDJ ot Costa Mesa. Th1a medical treatment 1a provided under the direction of an on-duty pbyst. dan. Followln1 emeqency treat· ment, patlenta are transported to the nearest recelvlnJ hospital. . Prior to institution ol paramedic lerviee, the Fire Department re- ffived approximately 100 calls per month for medical uailtance. Thill put year, c alb were in excess of 300 Jlel' month. · For emereency service, call: 'Widening of several roadways in the city, and improvements to some areas of downtown. The most ambitious program at- tempted by city officials was the ac· qu.lJition of about three acres of land in the city's downtown for a com- munity area. 'lbe city expect.s to acquire the last parcel for the so-called Super Block in January. The $2.8 million project area ls located between Plumer and Center Streeta on the north and south, and Park and Anaheim Avenues on the' east and west. · Plau for Super Block Include ex· pamlon ol the extstlng library, 1 $S00,000 lire station and a communi· ty center ln the refurbished Boys' Club bulldlnl at SM Center St. FIRE STATION DUE ConatrucUon of the fire station lbould be under way by July, ae· eordin& to Coeta Mesa City Manaaer Fred Sonabal. Refurbiahlnl ol the old Boys' Club bulldiq ii expected to be tlnished by mld·J anuary. Another promlslni project for the dOwotown area ls 1 boualne project for elderly ciUzeos. 'Ibe city bu ap. plied for a crant from the Depart· ment of Houslnl and Urban Development to support the project. The plan calls for a private de- veloper to build the 75 lOW·COSt unlta for senior citizens and the ban· New System Bob Dekker, flefd MrYlce clerk wtth the Co.U MeN County Water Dlmtct,polnt8 out the location of ttt. dfatrtct'a new tMmetertng iptem. Th• Ulllty MrVH Coeta MeN, parts of Newport a.ech, _ Orange County Airport and aome unincorporated tanttOty dlcapped on publicly-owned land, tbueby cuttin1 the cost of rents to people on fixed incomes. It approved, the clty wOuld grant the developer a partial subsidy from Housing and Community Develop- ment Act funds, renting him.the land for $1 a year. NEW SOCIAL PROGRAMS The city's three.year old housing and community development agen· cy ls expecting to receive $847,000 in federal funds for new social pro- grams next year. The agency's facilitator, Tony (See COSTA MESA on Page 33) M9-1111. ---.:....:---~~~~~~~.....:..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ BAY & BEACH REALTY MOVES TO NEWPORT CENTER In keeping with the spirit of the business and industrial community of Orange County we are moving to a more modern and much larger office location in ''Newport Center" as of January 1. 1977. Bay & Beach Realty has been serving the harbor area continually since 1949 -and we have had an office on "The Highway" since 1954. Therefore 1t is obvious that this move was a big decision for us. We will be located on the first floor of the Great Western S/L building. 450 Newport Center Drive. The new phone will be 75~1 1 . Many people have asked -"Do you think your move Is timely?· Also. they ask, "Is this a good time to buy real estate?" Our answer is "definitely yes" -based on our own experience, also the "Real Estate Corporation of Chicago," a national real estate research firm who has addressed our annual "California Real Estate Convention'' for the past 20 years or more on the subject. "What.'s Ahead In Real Estate." When their president. Or. Anthony Downs. sPoke to us at the recent convention In San Francisco he rePorted that Orange County was so far ahead of the remainder of the country he thought their staff must have erred In their computations. But a recheck proved them true. So he concluded that the Orange County real estate business should be "nearfy heaven In '77." Please Come To See Us In Our New Home! •.. is our very person.iulo n11d twlpful B.111quet Director. Lynn will be hnppy lo assic.t \ ou in pl<lnning your party ;1boarcl the RC'ubl'n E. Leo or 111 tho GortlJ Li:t. Do give Lynn a jingle nnd see how smoothl y your s1wc.ial dinner party. group luncheon or ht1nqurt C•m lw nrr.rngrcl. Lynn Oswald a t 675-2302 or 675·57UO l'"AR.~ES7: • :::::> elt.l.X.C.eh, l!lC. December 30, 19'78 DAILY PILOT 5 .. , UC Irvine,-10 Years of QUGlity, BalGnce "l don't think there is anc1ther un· 1versity that has developed with quality as rapidly as UC Irvine." Such is the comment of Dr. J ames I. McGaugb, vice chancellor for academic affairs at the University of California, Irvine. "For a s mall campus. UCI has done a very good job of achieving halance in programs and also in achieving quality with the balance and we've d one all this in a period of just over 10 years," McGaugh said. Beginning In the raU of 1965 when 1,589 students cnroll<.'<l in classes for the first time, tpe Irvine camn110: ,., ( __ e_d_u_c_a_ti_·o_n __ } tht• University of California has grown to a foll·size gc·neral campus wher<' more than 9,500 students are t•nrolled in morl' than 30 under· gr::iduate, graduate an~ profrssional degree programs . lnstrut'tion is offered in UCl's five hasic schools, biologic·al sciences, fine arts, humanit ie!>, social ~«it•m'cs and phybit·ul s<'ic•nct•s; lhrN• inrlc-pendt•nt programs, social 1•rnlogy. compar:.iti \I: C'Ulture and in· formalion and compult•r scienct>, • .ind t hree prof Ps:-.1onal ~rhools, 1·ngincering, m<'diC'1nt· anti ad· 111mislration. ··nut teaching b 0111> 011<' third of lhf' mission of a land.grant uruverst· I\ ... Saad UCI Chancellor l>r Daniel • (; Alt. rich Jr. "He~eare h :.ina p11hlit servlCt' as \,\ t-'ll a:-tl·;u·hang are our respons1b11tt11'' "Thi' univPrsity is th(• onh publit· 111-;tilution in c~1hforr11.1 charged l.\llh lool..1ng into lhl· rundamentaJs 11f our universe doing b<isic re- ~ e ;i r r h . w i t h t h 1• a d d 1 t 1 on a I rl'sponsihility lo b\• of st•rvice lO the statf' and nation puhltt· SC'rvice." Rt•st'arch at \Tl Mcompasscs both the thcorelil"lll :.ind the prac· t1<·..1l. uf 1mmeduH<' us<• tfl society. Wlu'lher exploring fundamental questions about lifo . c>n<'r~y and m;llter or seeking solutions to 'Pt•c1fic technologu·al :.ind social prnbl ems, resc a rd1t•1 s in the physical. sorial. liiolog1cnl and ht>alth scit'nct's unrl 1·ngint>crini? are f11('using on un~til<"h('<l areas in the· p<1IC"hwork nf humun knowkdgt• s (" I (' I) t b t s • I' h y •q " I .. rl :r; a n d •·ngtn('('nl to~t>th<-r \,\1th their ~tu· 1'4'111 and staff rcst•urch teums -arc• '4't'kang new <'nt>rgy sources, study· mg pollution and t'n\·1ronmental 11uality. syn lh <•s t zing n e w mNlacin<?s, problns: <'Osmic rays for <'hl('S to the organization of matter 1 anti U'l1ng the knowlroge gained rrnm monitorinR <'osm1c· radiation to , 11<'v1st• a m ethod or n·cordlng the 1111t11ral radiation of tht> human body for mf'dical studies I Rf"11f'arC'hUll art• ictudylng the ~f'llf'll<' .. ,,ode of hfr" and pattC'rn • formation in living t•cll-;, tht' origins of <'an<'t'r and olh<'r d1:-.<'aS<'S, br ain fun r tions und<'rl yini:: thought and l)('ltav1or, the phy!'tology of aging, lhE' impact of sot•i;1l 1n~1itutions and mores on mental h1•alth. th<'Orics of 11t'rreption, n t•w 1t-d1n11l11J<it•s in Nlur at ion and du 1 h II r.. · the list ~o<'s on trr r r ese11rC'ht•r, ... t1uJ,v1ng at· mospheric C'hcm istl') rar:o;t dt'lcctcd thE' global dangl•t' of two common l111or1)('arbon gas<'s to the earth's :-1tratospheric ozone shi<'ld -an ex· ;1m!)IC of. 8 blUllC reMU41"CA .. r~;.ci that reaches directly into the realm of immediate environmental, social, political and economic concern. Other work in land planning, city manage m ent. working environ· menls and community development has been a direct benefit to the com· munity at large. ''In a sense, everything the lln• iversity is engaged in is public service. be it teaching or the pursuit and preservation of knowledge through research,'· Aldrich said. Clear examples ol service to the community include University Ex• teusion and such cooperative service groups as the UCI Industrial As· sociates which aid in the free now of information and research materials between campus and community. The UCI Industrial Associates serves as a liaison between UCI and the business community. The or· ganization fosters the exchange of t echnical information, research data. rPsnUJ"-""'• ...-1-...u;..w-... _ -.- courages the employmenl or stu· dents and industry participation in graduate research. University Extension utilizes the resources of the Irvine campus and the surrounding community to pre. sent a self-supporting program of continuing education for adults. Lee· lures, seminars and classes are open to the public and cover a broad spec- trum of topics in fields such as film, rnusl_c, social, ecoloi!lcu""'"· Am1>ru~w-__ -.; __ • .,.., aav nure, numanmes and sciences. Our product. Mon0y. We muke 1t g1ow Tl1at'~ wl1y so many people save at Manners. W e pay high interest on savings As much as 7 75% • which equals 8 .06% annually when earnings arc left to accumulate. $5,000 will double lo $10,000 in less than nine yoar~i w1tl1 that kind C'll interest. It makes sense to save at Mariners. You'll like our product, 1t really grows on you I BRING MONF.Y TO MARINERS -IT GROWS ON YOU 1 ' ' +,I 11 'I ltOllRS Mc.nil11y tf,ru Thurrdoy 9 v n1 1 1(1r 111 F11d.1y" 9" m t> rm S ... 11 .. .i,,, u ,, 111 l r " Mariners Savi~s and Loan A§S<KlaCIOn NEWPORT BEACH• 1515 Westolllt Orlvo (Main Office) (714)&42-4000 l \..-•• . ........ a'••··-·-- .. ...-... FSLIC ... .-J -~ 6 DAILY PILOT * December 30, 1979 FLEET & LEASE PROGRAMS A.VAIL.AILE SEE OUR FINE LINE OF * HOIHETS * GaEMLIHS *MATADORS SHOP& COMPARE LOWEST rtt.ICIS &SUPl:RIOlt S&VICI SIMCI 1953 IMMEDIITE OCCUPANCY NEW BUILDINGS: · ~09250.n. 64,177 SQ."· 101,388 SQ. "· PLUS RAIL SERVICE, DOCK· HIGH LOADING, EXPANSION LAND, PROTECTEDENVIRONMEN~ EASY FREEWAY ACCESS a MORE. For 1nf ormatton on these or other building alternatives, call your broker or Craig Lyon, Manager of Sales & Leasing, nt (213) 628-4204, (714) 833-1010. AVAILABLE NOW AT l~~~IAL COMPLEX ----------.-.-....---.-..............----- College Over Lunch Taped Telecourses Offered Employers now have the op· portunity to assist their employes Ul obtaining college credit during their employe's lWlch hours. Coastline Community College will provide videotapes of any of nine telecourses produced or of· fered by the college !or the spring 1977 semester. The tapes are of the sa me KNXT, ~:.\~. H~ . .!'~.~~-~v. ning F ebruary 7. ' ""'""· Business-orient~d programs in- clude "Making it Count, lntroduc· tion to Computers and Computer Application," "Law for the 70's'' and ''It's Everybody's Business." "It would be helpful if intereskd companies possessed their own video playback machines," said Charlanne Jelen of Coastline. "But that should not be a deter- rent from inquiring about our col· Jege credit programs -or from encouraging employes to enroll for al-bome viewing." For info rmation about Lhe pro- gram, call Ms . J elen a l (714) 963-0811, ext. 231 or 233. Progr a m s t o b e offc1 ed 10 February are: -"MMI,,. II Count-lnlroduclton 10 Com PUtt r\ •nd Co mpute r Apot1t.llP>o · IBIS 100, T•ck~I 10S) A oent•JI "'111<. "'"~ cou'~ 1n computM\ A orner•I education cour-w Jn comµut..,, and lnfof'm•Uon ~v\ttm\ ~Qned 10 1·uo. v1ck a bds1t uncMr\t"ndmQ l)f "omuut1 r \ &nd tMir aoplic at1011 v'ttw\ tOt• ~ omoutr, ' role it\ a tool 10 ~ U\t"O In m.Md('1"'1#1nl Of• (l't•on m•!t·~ •nd 10 ~vste-m" "t ldrQt• -.,Law fer Utt 1e•a" f8 U\l,...\S '°' Ti<ltl 10414 ~'""•' •l~wol prooo-or ~ wm•li~ lw CoMldtrallon ls o•wn 10 ,,,. l•w <o•,lr.-ch \ale\ ne-QC>Uebte 'ns.tru. n~.,,, c.un\umt:r P'Oh .. ·cuon IHt\t,,, (f"i\I orOQf'"y &nd bu\IM\\ •Uo<~•t•~ On> t>ittf'\ family l•w. trim1rw1 ••w a"CI 01tw•r telAt.-d Al t.4\ -"lt'a f'veryllody~s avsJNts" fOu!i.inf"\\ 101. T1lkel 103 Pro•l<lo> •n UOO.r\l•nd•"9 ol how I"* t>vslness fnQul•lnQ '"''"" 1><0-•iclH Q')Od> &nd provision,, .,,d 1tcom~­nvu"Q fl"•nc.•no on the: follow1nQ l) au.oun· 1.alllty of Ille l>uslneu lnQulrll!\ lo the bu<i- rl'f'"uowner \ •nd employe\. 'J) 1n.anaoemtnl ot reM:IVrtA'\ toorQ.anu•Uon•, tlnanu ng, POtdvc:· llon•ndmtr~ellno. lnOther telecourses cataloged for f!-Spt , .. ., .... '"'"" Jf Gardener,'' • • DimcnS'io n~"l6 Culture, a Study in Anthropology," "Applied Techniqu es o f Sketching," "Chant to Chance," "Search, the Quest for Personal Meaning" and "Classic Theatre, Humanities in Drama." Ms. Jelen added that McDonnell· Douglas of Huntington Beach has successfully orrcred this lunchtime program since the spring of 1975, using a sketching course for its enginet.'ring !>Larr and "Law for the 70's." Public Uses UCI An avera~e of 650 public events are held each year on the UC Irvine campus. These include fine arts pro- ductions, athletic events, University Extension programs and lectures. Many programs are open to the public without charge. THIS YEAR: WHERE? Plan your vacation on this map and we'll send you there. .-:~------~~~ --~ --~ ----~~ ,r '1 r 'I). b ~----Jhj~~~l > ) ~~~~ <y;; t.11\; v "~t <T l 4 I ,. ci> ·~~· L .::. ~~~ ·\' '--; s IJ , ~~·"'. ·; ;;;t I '~. ~ W · '.ti ··"i: ·. I ,:~ > '"'·a.·~.. t ~Plaza T oovel is o fully oppo1nrcd oqency We ore °""'°"'8d oqenh f« all major on.-, tteorr.hip ~.hotel,, ouro comp:iMt•, and row compone• onc:Ulinq 0..0 Medote<ror.e, 0..0 '-"-WI. etc. Co.mwciol occounrs ore wekornt>•J Th<!•e " no •ervt<e chorqe. ond free delive<y W!fVice. Mojo! L.aedt cords ae occcpted. --------------------~ Dwsigners of Personalized Travel Commercial and Vocarioo Mondays thru Fudoys 8JOA • 5Ja> Q Sotl600y\ I O.OOA · 2 f1J' ' 24 ~ serv;ce ovoiloblo ' " 1111 [/ :; !G~ J PL/\Z/\ TRA Vf L / .>0 l\J,... po l: Cr,l. Dr. I!, r _g,_,1 •. C,,.9?660 1714) 640-0620/833-3508 -- -- Med School Ex p ansion Pla ns Set lly HILARY KAYE Olt.,.D•oly Pllot~i.11 The de.in <if tht• UC Irvine College of J\led1 c•int• bc·hcves the most significant change of 1976 was the fact that the school's .. expansion plans hll'rally were cast in concrete. Dean Stanley van den Noort ooint· ed out that the coll ege's expansion plan is no lonP"~ ;,....i .. ~•-'~--...... u~hVVl now llas the bnghtest OP· portunity for growth and develop· ment of any mcdic<i l school in California.·' the dean said. "W e are the only medical school in a rapid stage of growth, in facilities and resources," said van den Noort. "We have the best locau on 1n terms of a rapidly growing popula- tion and we have an abundance or space in which to grow. I think we have the pushers and movers to make it happen," lhe dean said. Looking back on 1976, van den Noort noted that it was lhe year that the state provided S8 million lo purchase the O range County Mechcal Center -a 500-bed hospital on 33 acres of land in Orange. A m aster plan was developed this past year for a $15 million renova- t10n project for the medical center, van den Noort s aid. Tb.is year was also the year that construction began on Medical Science 1. That first perm anent building will double the current space in the medical school and will cost $15 million. The new buildings are due to open in July of 1978 and much of 1977 will be spent recruiting faculty for the new facilities, the dean said. Otht>r achievements during 1976 included· -Improvements made in the Community Clini c of Orange Coun- ty, in Santa Ana -An 1mprovem<'nl in the agree- ment between tht' pediatrics depart· ment of the College of Medicine and the Ctuldren 's Hospital of Orange. -Improvement in the educational program run by the medical school at the Vt>ter ans llosp1lal in Long Beach. Construe h on of a new outpatient fadhty at the Veterans Adminlstra· tlon H~pital in Long Beach NEW CHAIRMEN Van den Noort also pointed out that the recru1tmt'nl program advanced &really during 1976. I le noted that Dr. Bruce CnJ l ins was appointed chairman of the new department or anesthesia and that Dr John Swell was appointed <.'hairman of the new department of anatomy. He said the medlcaJ 'lchool has almost completed a searrh for a new chairman of the department oC ob- stetncs and 1ynecology While 197& wu a good year ovt'rall, there were a few sad evt'nts, van den Noort sa1d The death of Dr. Henry Elliot, chair m an or the pharm<'Cology de- partment at the medical school, wasa major loss, he said. And there was also one pro· fessional dlsappointmt>-nl -the dts· ruplion of the r elationship between the medical school and 1''airvicw State Hospital. December 30, 1976 You're DAIL V PILOT 7 UCI Provides Speakers UC Irvine professors, ad· ministrat.ors and staff are available for s peaking engagements on a wide variety of topics ranging from health and medicine and social issues to education, university administra- tion, humanities and science. A Cull listing or available speakers may be obtained by contacting lhc UCJ Speakers Bureau within the University R elations Office, University or California, l rYinP ~.nl t1 O't7• "• -u:r C"B.Illng a customer. Not a sh9pp.er. Shoppers ore those anonymous bodies attached to cold cash. You 'll find them nearly everywhere. At Fashion Island, we thinl~ of people as customers. That is, people who co m e bocl~. Friends. So we treat them lil~e w e expect to see them -again. Warmly. Fashion Island is a special shopping exp e rience. With open-air courtyards and o ver 60 fine stores. It's a place where people are speciaL So whe n you're tired of being treated lil~e anothe r shopper in a crowd, experience Fashion Island. Where things are warmer for the satisfaction of our customers. NEWPORT 0 CENTER 8 DAILY PILOT D~mber 30, 1976 Coast College District Stresses Vocation By CllERVLROl\IO Ol tlM O•lfr ,.. ... Sutt "Education is changing, despite what some critics say. "People are living longer and healthier lives ... man's accumula· tJon or knowledge is doubling every seven or eight years ... "These circums tances poinl up to the absolute necessity for lifelopg eduL'ation," said Dr. Norman E. WaLc;on, chancellor or the Coast <:ormtn.n•u.,, .. _.,. ___ l)fc.J r:icl The three·college <11stncr'currem· ly has a total enrollment of 110,000 full and part lime students, making it the largest community college dis· trict in the country. Av erage s tudent age is 27 years Dr. Norman E. Watson and rising. Many of those attending the tuition-free, tax-supported in· stitutions are pursuing a traditional education and plan lo transfer to ob- tain an advanced degree. Many more are not. A large number of students are enrolled in vocational programs, which will qualify them for a career in areas such as fashion merchandising, food service management or airline service. These are two.year or certificate programs. - --"'l..,..wjna nwntwrs or slu· dents returning t0 scnoor,-111au, "' their senior years, to enrich their Jife by taking courses that interest them. Dr. Walson say's he is particularly pleased with the success or the dis· tricl's public affairs s tation, KOCE · TV. According to the chancellor, Channel 50 has increased its viewing audience by 26.4 percent in the last 10 months. • "Five or the ten most popular pru· grams surveyed were courses for col· lege credit. 'Freehand Sketching' and the David Susskind Shuw were Lie<! for first place,·· hesa1d. Other pl'ogram~ in the lop 10 wcrc. "Food for Modern Families," "The Adams Chronicles," .. Real Estate and You" and ··A~ Man Behaves." Or. Walson fe els Chann<.'150 1s fill· ing "a vital need not filled by any other vehicle." The s tation is just e mbarking on its fifth yl'ar, and has incr eased its nationwide viewing stations from 27 to 48. KOCE is supported by fodcr&il and s tate fund s, s ubscribe r s a nd .. friends of Channel 50." Upcoming programs for 1977 will be in the areas o r child d e vel opment, U~l()U~ li()M~i REA LTO RS~ Mesa Verde • 546-5990 Corona del Mar• 675-6000 - astronomy, biology, humanities and political science. Coastline Commwa.lty CoUege, the innovatjve ''college without walls," opened this fall, and according to Dr. Walson has more than20,000students enrolled. The college, with classrooms seal· tered throughout the Orange Coast area, is administercd by President Bernard J . Luskin. Three new re- gional centers arc located in Westminster, Garden Grove and Costa Mesa. 11~'" •--":..:..,., 1Jlf1:.r cuun~eling service, provide 01ncl's 1"1 '"'"' _ .. ministrati vc staff and funl'lion <1S a meeting place. A fourth tenter in Ncwpoi-t lk ac h is slated to 01Hm in 1977. Coastline has a faculty of !100 part time instructors, all of whom Dr Watson says arc "oul~t anthng persons in their fi elds." Tht• mst1lu- lion also has an Eml'nlui. I ni-.t1tulc which employs rctin'(i ind1vu.luals to work with senior citizc11i. groups Offering 1,000 c I asses anu '.!.7 l·om plete vocational program-... ti~ l'lll lege will continue lo UM· communi ty based sites. r anging from c·hurchcs to high schools. Coastline abo has the responsibility of off1.•nng and produc ing KOCE"s lt•ll'v1s 1nn courses for credit. Orange Coast Collegc, for tht• first time in its history, opent.'<:I this fall with all its staff and t·lassei-. in permanent buildings. A new literature and languages building opened this fall, a major re· landscaping project w<.1~ in it 1<Jted and many of the older facilitic•s were remodeled. During 1977, Ull' school plans lo ex pand its business c:><Juca lion and science buildings. occ·)o, Preside nt Robert 8 . !'doorc said, "Increased enrollment has seen an increased use of facilities for cl asst·s. lt•clures and workshops Those facilities are now being ulihzl•d extensi vl'ly during previous slack pt•nods late afternoons and weekends.·' Golden W ~st College cclt'br atcd its 10th anniversary this year with ma jor building <idditions to the mus it•, mathl•matil'S·scicnccs and library learning 1.·1.•11 lt'rs. . The coll cl!L' plans lo hegin l'Oll· stf\J~l1ur1 uar '"'" -.. .a -""'•'.'i°"' . rt~ and health sciences buildings' 1il 1977 f'utur t• plans include a scco11d technulo~y unit, health st•rv1<'t')o, t'Clllt•r and u forum·dassruom com plex Prei.ldf'11I R. Dudley Boyce !.Uld I hat during tlw Yt'in Gulden West ur1 dcrtook m aJor "conccptu<JI and structural changes" in adm111istra tum and go••t•r nance · Efr1C'1enl and cfft-ctivc opl'r Jtion has been a l'Onccrn for a numlt1·r of )l'ars. and 'H' developed a !.yskm of managcmc11t by-objectives lo help us The plan was complctcd thi.'> year .,. h1•n wc began preparing budgt•ts on the basis of objectives, .. he i.a1d ··t.ifrlong ll·arning must be all mch1s1vt• and encompass such pro ~rams as adult basic eduration, ot• cupational training, independent study. parl•nt education, educati on for personal development, rl'medial cducalion, ro11tinuing education and education for those with special ne{'Cis," Or Watson said 1n .... 1alla1 ron of l.1nk '>. borlr>ro; J11d production machinery All typ<>c; of p1p1nq ·111.ldNJ screwed, PVC. f1bl'lqlass ancl torper F.1Jwcat1on and erection of 1111'.<.:Cllrincous iron and structural steel C0n1 1ct1• founclt1t10Ps ..ind masonry walls llllllSTl~IAl.4 1•11•~n11rrrr~1~~ 1720 E Garry Sant.1 A11,1 CA !J2705 ~lmJ~ P 0 Box 15711 .__ll[.]lil.,. T<>lt·phone 1714) 549 ')202 :,C""'.J , December 30. 1976 ' DAJl V PILOT 0 Hoag Hospital Expands Over Quarter (:entury 1'\\ enty five years ago, Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian opened as a smaU, 7S.J>ed, one-story community hospital in Newport Beach. Today, it ·is a 47 l·bed, multi-story [ health care } health care institution -one or the largest, non-profit, community hospitals in Orange County. Costa Mesa Hospital Works Fast (;osla Mesa Memorial Hosoital is a 99:bed, acute c;are facility accredit· ed by the Joint Commission on Ac· creditation of Hospitals. Located in the heart of Costa Mesa at 301 Victoria Street, the 24-hour emergency department, with an emergency physician on duty day and night, has become a key emergency treatment center in the Harbor Area. The outpati('nl surgery program is a solution to spiraling hospital and health care costs, say h06pital of. fkials . Amb ulatory patients needing minor surgt>ry which m ay be too complicated for a doctor's offi('e, but not requiring post -opcr;.itive hospital care. are admitted. treatl'd. remain. underobser ..-a l1on fnr a fr~ hour-> ;md are released the samt'da) This refl ects a 40 to 50 percent s;i\'· ango:; for patients who were admittl'd the nigh t b efore an o pe r ation and scheduled to remain in the hospital another night for ohs('rva· ti on Prior lo acl m i~sinn , laboratory work is sch<·duled wilhm 48 hours of surgery and pre OJ>('rativc diet in· structlons are prm-idf'd. In a continuing effort to pro\idc the newest a nd most effecti ve medical equipment, the radiology department recently installed an Ultrasound machine Thi:. pro- cedure involves no radiation and in· troduccs sound waves into the body through a transducer. fn ·addition, complete angio· graphic capabilities will be availa· ble when the development of the pro- posed s pecial procedures room is completed in mid 1977 The h os pi tal w as r ecent l y purchas ed by American l nstitu· t ional Developers, Inc. The firm owns 16 acute care hospitals totaling 2.583 beds . Tom Richards is admini~trator and Benjamin Kraut, M.O. is chief of staff of the Costa Mesa facilitv. UCI Ranks 12th Through the years, Hoag bas added many new services and built a number of additions. A radiation therapy center was added lo enable cancer patients to rec~ve treatment close to their homes. An outpatient, minor surgery center was built to :JaVf' ~..., UJe &Df'-""''" J .. vue or two night stay in the hospital. A computerized s canner was purchased giving radiologists their first good Jook at the brain and other organs and giving patients speedier, more accurate diagnoses. The open heart surgery team began Its delicate work several years ago in Hoag's vast surgery suite, another service added to make this life-saving procedure available to those who live in surroundinJt communiti .. c: · The hospital recently became a paramedic base, and physicians on round-the-clock duty in the emergency are unit provide medical advice, by radio and telephone, to thr('C paramedic units in the field. SpeciaUzed services have been added to rm com munity needs. The hospital has units oriented to the needs of children, orthopedic pa· tients, the emotionally ill and the disah\P.d needing rebabWlaUon. · Hoag also offers counseling and many community services, such as, referral service, health education and estate planning. Se rvices to be offered in the next 25 years have not yet been defined, but the hospital will continue to strive to meet the needs or the com· munity it serves. EARLE IKE IMPORTS ... FROM LUXURY TO ECONOMY VOLVO 242 SEDAt~ "'i\~~ TOY OT A CELICA GT LIFT BACK YOUR ORANGE COUNTY IMPORT CENIERI COMPLETE FLEET AND LEASING PROGRAMS! WHERE IT ALL -COMES ¢, TOGETHER ••. SERVICE & PARTS OPtH 6 DAYS . AWEB(I ••• 2DIArMOSTIC MAOf.INUfOR f Am.R SERVICE AND CONVENIENCE! • VOLVO ••••••••••••• TOYOTA '. ,, . ' ,':•' .. 10 DAILY PILOT * Alcoholic Treatment Rendered Raleigh Hills Hospital in Newport Beach is exclusively devoted to the treatm e nt of the disease of alcoholism. The hospital is one of nine located throughout the western United States. The first Raleigh Hills Hospital was founded in Oregon in 1942. Raleigh Hiiis Hospital In Newport Beach treats persons suffering from alcohollam "The program involves several types of treatment," said Jerry Creedon, hospital administrator. "A typical patient spends 13 days at the facility for in-patient treatment, and then undergoes a one-year, after- care program." Real Estate MGrket Seen Accelerating He stated most patients are in· volved in conditioning reflex treat- ments,'' p opularly known as aversion therapy, which makes use of the Pavlovian theory of condition- ing. Raleigh Hills' counseling service is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. For information call; 645-5707. "We accept calls from anyone, in fact, over half our calls are from what we term 'significant others,' such as a distressed spouse er family member. We feel it is imperative for the whole ramlly to be involved in the recovery of a patient," he said " The real estate market is boom- ing, and we expect it to continue to accelerate in 1977," says Christy Corson, executive omc~r. Hunt- ington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtors. "Property values have more than doubled in the last decade ... real estate is the best investment you can make today." The board, with offices at 17931 Beach Blvd. in Huntington Beach, is a trade association of realtors with more than 1,700 members in the area. All members abide by a "code of ethics." (Unear] LI NEAR INSTRUMENTS CORP. LINEAR is now a five·year·old California corporation, manufactur- ing and marketing graphic recording instruments for analytical and industrial laboratories throughout the world. t-.-1-72_8_2-. E-a-s.t_m_e_n_A_v-en_u_e_·-lrv-.-ine-.-C-A-92_7_1_4_·-(7_1_4_) _64_6-6_7_7,..6-1 u near It is recognized as the third largest real estate association in the State of California for dollar value ol sales in multiple listings. In April of this year. the board broke all previous selling records in the processing of $54,756,707 Multiple Listing sales .. "We basically deal in resales -in this area there's a 75 percent turnover each month," says Ms. Corson. The board recenUy installed its 1977 president -J erry S. Gillespie, president of Jerry S. Gillespie Realty. CM Chamber Over 1,000 -The Costa Mesa Chamber of com· merce is one of the largest in Orange County "ith more than 1,000 mem· be rs. "The chamber is the voice of the business community, the public re- lalions entity for both large and :>111 .. 11 """inpsses," said Nate Rec.'<!, manager. "Our main goal is to serve our member s." During 1976, the group distributed over 50,000 Costa Mesa-Harbor Arca maps free of charge to the com munity. Another, accomplishment was the printing of 15,000 books giving sug· gestions on how to start a new busi- ness, as well as 100,000 business directories. 1977 will be a year of new projects for the chamber, and the group is currently working on a new civic directory listing all clubs and or- ganizations in the area. Over 100,000 of the diredories will be distributed In January. The group has formed a new transportation committee to discuss the freeway situation and an educa· Uon committee which will work with local colleges and the school dis- tricts. Werner Escher will serve as the 1976-77 chamber president and said his main goal is, "More service to members." ' r December 30, 1978 DAILY PILOT U Irvine Company's future Holds County Key By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of the D•ll• ~1411 St.I" The coming year for the Irvine Company is best symbolized by a question mark. Orange County's largest land bolder faces a number of unknowns in 1977, not the least of which is the ownership of the company. Al present the James ln•ine Foun· dation owns the cont.rolling 54 per. cent of the company's stock, but un· dcr the 1969 federal Tax Reform Act, the foundation must divest itl>Cll or the stot•k by 1983. Negotiations arc currently un· dcrway with three principle bidders -Mobil Corporntion, Cadillac Fairview Corp., a Toronto-based de· velopment company, and a con· sortium of financiers and investors headed by Charles Allen, Jr. of New York and Alfred Taubman of Detroit. The bidding which began with Mobil's two-year-old offer or $200 for the Foundation's shares bas gone over $300 million and no one, not the bidders, the stock holders, nor Irvine Company management 1s prepared to say where it will end. Company President Raymond L. Walson says he is hopeful that the new owners, whoever they are, will adhere to the philosophies that have characterized the Irvine develop- ment s o far. Summ(•d up briefl y that philosophy holds that growth is m· evitable. but need not be d<.'st.ructive if it is planm>d. There is a sense of respons1bhty within the· company that Walson tr aces back lo the will oC James Irvine which ~tablished the foundation. His ins tructions were explicit - the ranch was lo be kept whole, not sold O(( piCCC'mea) for a quick profit -and lh<' planning for the con- version o( th<' agricultural enclave into an urban area has been based on that idea "Our !llze Is s uch that we can't jusl ht> concerned with profits," says Watson "Only someone who holds a small piece of land can afford to opt'r3l<' that way and then get out tx>forc an) one has figured out what happcnC'd." One· or the rompany's conUnuing projc<'ts In 1977 will be the develop- mt•nt of the coastal area. a large parcel ol about 10,000 acres from the ridge line of the San Joaquin Hills to the ocean lytng between Corona dcl Mar and Laguna Beach. The paat two years the company engaged ln • massive planning and public opinion operation called TIC· MAP (The Irvine Company Multi- Agency Plan) which was an attempt to get comment from concerned gov- ernmental enlitiea before develop- ment plans were finalized . ... The effort culminated in Augusl 1976 with county approval of D. general plan or the area Uult calla for development or a population of about 50,000 with the use of about three· fourt,lu of the ridges and canyons and all of the beaches as public open space. Don Cameron who beadS the c.om· pany's planning effort for the coastal area says the plans aren 'l exacUy ready for groundbreaking. As far as he's concerned 1977 will be a series of question marks, start· ing with the new state coastal com· mission. The <'Oastal plans have to be ap· proved by the commission, but the county, which has adopted the plan, will not submit 1t to the coastal com- mission until after the first of the year when the new coastal regula· Uoo.s take effed. "'lbe new regulations aren't writ· ten yet and we don 'l know what the ground rules will be," said Cameron. "About the only thing we can be sure of ls that it will be a Joni· winded process involving the com· pany, the county, the rqional com- mission, tbe state commission and probably the cities of Newport Beach and Laguna Beach, both of which have a sphere of influence ln the area.'' The other question marks seen by Cameron include the aspect of public ownership of the parts or the coastal area designated as open space. ''Tbtre'• llO dMbt in my min.d that some or all of those attas will belong to the public. The questions really are bow much, bow is it going to be bought, by which agencies and when," he said . · Cameron says be expects to spend 1m getting the Irvine coastal plan through the coastal commissions, and in spite of the Wlknowns facing the plan he says be and the rest of the company are looking forward to 1977 "with great enthusiasm and some fascination." If We Didn't Live Up To Your Standards , We Wouldn't Be Living Up To Our Name. -----r-~ =~---=-==,.. -, The Store of Fam ous Names 1514 Nur1li f\1.iiu , S:1111:i Ana (714) 541-4391 lntl•r ior l)c,i~n A\\istancc. C.1q>ct & l>upcry Srrv1cc, O~l"'cry Ser\ ice, Comc11i1•111 f"i11a11 ci11g. TutsJ.y. \\'tdnt\cl•y. ThumlAy 3nJ s.1urJ.1y: 9:30 to S· 30 MonJ.y: 12 1u 9i rnd.1y19:3010 9 •• -: ........ -: .. :-; •• •.• •.••••••••• ·f\ .... ·~.· .... ••••••• ........ ••• ... ·.-4 ... ~--:.~ •• ""' ......... ... 12 DAILY PILOT Saddleback Second Campus Slated Saddleback Community College District is coming mto its own. "Enrollment reached 14 ,556 this fall, representing a 21 percent in- crease over last year," said com- munity affairs director Dan Armstrong. · The Mission Viejo campus boasts a new, $2.4 million physical educa- tion complex, which includes a 2,000-seat gymnasium, activity center, locker room and faculty of- fice building. And there's a new campus in the future. HIH Has Decade Of Care Huntington Jntercommunity Hospital celebrated its first decade of service to the community in 1976. The ho!\l)ital expanded its cardio- pulmonary programs in addition to its established cardiac catheteriza- tion laboratory -the only such facility in the locale. A new medical office tower, adja- cent to the hospital, was oHicially opened this year. The new buHding provides access to all types of health tare. Obstet rics and pediatrics are among the hospital departments ex- panding in response to increased pa- tient utiliintion and the children's mental health unit offers a place for short-term treatment or emotionally disturbed children. Jn an effort to meet the needs of an increasing population, a satellite facility, at Myford Road and Bryan Avenue in Irvine. 1s slated to open in September 1977. "Over the Inst three years, we have been building an off-campus Construction on Seddle back Community College continues In Mission Viejo Huntington Intercommunity Is an established paramedic base for the West Orange County area. It also has a team or mobile intensive. care, certified nurses who provide radio instructions to paramedics in the field. ·program utilizing high school classrooms. Over 2,000 students have participated per semester. Using high schoof classrooms lirnib the college to teaching only evening classes. With the addition ol the new facility, we'll be able to offer both da y and evening sessions," said Armstrong. The second campus will be locat. ed on 20 acres, and will grow ac- cording to the response of people in the area. The satellite will offer all classes necessary to obtain an As- sociate o! Art degree -or to transfer to a four year college or university. Armstrong 'says the cost or the project ls s till being determined, but the second campus wlll open with 20 to 25 classrooms and will be staffed with tull and part-time in· 5tructors. Facillties ror laboratory work and food services will be available. The LOANS FOR THE MOVERS & DO'ERS SWING LOAMS: FOi' real eslate buyers. sellers. brokers and salesmen Santiago Bank will tree-UQ home equity Swing loans are available 10 provide quick. low cost. :short term oap linanc1ng to ourchase 1hat new home SBA LOAMS: Small Bu5ines, Adm1nisrrat1on loans are available "' amounts rang1no from S90 000 10 $388 000 uoon aporo,,al of credit. Borrowers can take t1ve to ten years to repay, and on certain requests a ma1omum of lilleen years /Ontlaqo ~nk 535 EAST FIRST STREET • TUSTIN 4700 CAMPUS DRIVE • NEWPORT BEAOl 832 5200 '"orn1 n r('l•C 752-9200 I campus will eventually have its own bookstore. The firm of William Blurock and Partners, Newport Beach, has been contracted by the district to design a master plan and a building com· pl ex. "The district encompasses almost SO percent of Orange County, and we feel the satellite facility will be a full-fledged, second campus in the future." said Armstrong. Richard Grundy, hospital ad· ministrator, said: "We look forward to continuing progress in meeting the health care needs or the com- munity. As the oldest bo&pital In the area, we have a deep-rooted com· mitment to the communities we serve." eJacilities andJlexibilitr Joryour grOf!P meetings • Del Webb's Newporter Inn, on the c~staJ bluffs overlooking NcwpOl't Harbor and the Pacific, offers the total concept of resort ple:1sures with facilities that are flexible, varied and unique fot the perfect banquet or group meeting • 14 Executive Conference & Banquet Rooms • 3 Magnificent Banquet Ballrooms • Profcssio n31 Convention &. Banquet Staffs • 325 Guest Rooms and Suites, all with color TV • 4 Private Villas, each wi th Fireplace and Private Pool • 4 Unsurpa.~d Restaurants • 2 Lounges with live music and cLincing nightly • Golf • Tennis at the JOHN WAYNE TENNIS CLUB • 3 Sparkling Pools • Fishing, Sailin3, Sun and Swimming in the nearby blue Pacific • S minutes from Orange County Airport with complimentary limousine service • /I'. IJ , "' JOHN WAYNE TENNIS CLUB 1107 J:unborn Ru.id, '\11 ''Porl ll.o~d1 l .111f11rnia IJ:.!M10 (711)h11.J j\I() Ford Ranks As Newport Top 'Boss' Ford Aerospace & Communica· tions Corpor ation 's Aeronulronic Di vision is not only one of lhe oldest companies but the largest industrial employer in Newport Beach. The Division came lo lhe city in 1958. It was then a Division of Ford Motor Company. but through a suc- cession of corporate reporting rela- tionships and name changes during the ensuing years. it became a division of F'ord Aerospace & Com-mun1cal1ons <.:orporataon. On a 200·acre site leased from The Irvine Company. the firm designs. develops and manufactures defense systems for the United Slates Gov- ernment and m any allied nations. Among its products and systems are tactical and air defense missil e systems, targeting and weapon de· livery systems. guidance systems employing laser beams for use with air defense and other miss ile systems. re-entry and ballistic mis- sile defense technology and hot gas valves for contr'olling stages of In- tercontinental ballistic missiles Louis F. Helllg, vlce presi- dent •nd gener•I m.n999r of Ford Aeroap•ce & Com· munlcatlona Corpor•tlon'a Aeronutrontc Olvlaion Louia F. Heilig, vice president and eeneral manager. ~aid the divislon will enter 1977 "'ilh "by far the greatest backlog or orders the divis ion has ever had." He said the 1978 sales backlog had exceeded all prior years and he pre- dict! further growth In 1977. "We are investing ln new business expenses and rn facilities and equip· ment at rates of SO to 100 percent over jlal a few years ago." Aeronutronlc Division's work· force includes a high percentage of engineers and scientislc;. Among tu personnel. about 46 percent have degrees. with 16 percent holding ad· vanced degrees a nd doctoral~. The division is one ol three ln- volvj!d in the aerospace and com- u1unlcallon5 business areas. The other two divisions are the Engineer- ing Services Division, Willow Grove, Pa. and the Western Development Laboratories Dlvisjon, Palo Alto, ca. . . • DAil V PaOT '\3 The "Pave Tack'" la an airborne target ac~ulsftlon, laser deslgn•tor and weapon deflvery 1yatem under full- scale engineer!~ development for the U.S. Air Force by Ford Aerosp•ce & Communications Corporation'• Aeronutronlc Division In Newport Beach The start of so~thing ·big ... The Biggar Anniversary Sale THE GREAT SALE WITH THE GREAT NAMES! • DREXEL • CENTURY • BAKER • HENREDON • HERITAGE • And Many, Many More! All FROM REG UlAll STOCK' ' o I --- SAVINGS to 1I 3 OFF! C ONTEMPORARY • COUNTRY MEDITERRANEAN • ITAllAN • EN G USH FRENC H ' I J Aft \r.1~ m,·,thond•~~ t\ tnL.••t't f1t)rn Our-tt .. ,u~or \for k CJ J ,ncl ,f '"" cvcr,,.,,,.1 trorf\ t t1r(• < tlt'(I ,,. \ to I ·d v1sJ ,nl P•"<~•\ 11(11 t;.•J ,-oc.·rr,. danuiCJ '~•.ttt'I O •d f1¥tf\ ..... (l(Jt1\ f t "'4f ,,. U\ '"t•ll 0 \ '-'Pt ol\tery birrJcJ•nC) 0' .J (O'µt"t•"'q Featured collections for this sale include: UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE BEDROOM 81g9or\ own Cu\tom shops -selected model• of solos, loveseou ond choirs. Hc nr!.'don En tire ltno of solo•. love\eo h ond chott s. W ood mork·Entiro line o f cha"' Cfon1c Leather-Entire line o f lcothor sofas, loveHiots ond choirs. Wide solcclion o f sleeper sofas ond rccl1nt'rs. DINING ROOM Cnoircrofl Dro>eel Froncesco Dre11et 81shopsgote D1.tCie C hevron Dixie Du Ba rry' Hen rod on Heritage Sketchbook Herita ge Camea II He nredo n Catalina Herita ge Maracay Heritage W indward Folio XI Ore•el Accolode, OreKel Vonessa. Dre><ol Bishopsgate. p nuccl Francesco, .. Orexel C ortfna.' Oreicel Delr a y, Honredon CotaJino,tt Herj lpge Ca me o II, Heritage M o racoy, Henredon Louis XV., Honr~don St. Mo ritz, Herita g e Ve ne tia n OCCASIONAL TABLES Drexel Bishopsgote, Oreicol Fronccu co. Brondt Ambassador. Heritage Ca me o II, Heritogo Mo ro c oy, He ritoge Clouic Court , Hcnredo n Cachet, Henrodo n Bellville CARPETS BEDDING LAMPS SANTA ANA • 1110 N, MAIN ST. (714) 547-1621 Also In Pasadena and Pomona Biggor'' Own Budget Accounh • BanlcAmericord • Moster Chorge . 14 DAILY PILOT * Microdata Geared to Small Firms Mkrodata Corporation designs, manufactures and sells minicom· puters and peripherals. The com· pany UI located at the intersection of MacArthur and Red Hill in Irvine. The firm is geared ,to the small business computer systems marftet and has become a full-service small mainframe supplier of computer systems and systems components. Mlcrodata president. Donald W. Fuller displays a eotnpUter terminal Complex Adds Three Industrial Space Needs Grows The Irvine Industrial Complex bas recently completed COMtructioo on three industrial buildings tA>taling mare than 200,000 square feet md valued at $3.4 million, according to Brian D. Hogg, UC vice president of sales and marketing. Hogg also announced lhe sale of another UC built inventory building at 11422 Murphy Avenue, Irvine, to Cecil Shirar, Newport Beach, for $475,000. Located within minutes or the Newport and San Diego Freeways, the 25,675 square .foot building bas three truck loadfnfdocks, air condi· .Uoned offices, extensive landscap· ing and parting for 50 vehicle!, Hogg said. 'The largest of the three industrial buildings offers 101,400 square feet with 1,880 square feet ol office space and fronts on the Newport Freeway at 2525 Pullman Avenue, Santa Ana, in the Irvine Industrial Complex. The building is rail·served, bas dock·h~gb loading, and h¥ easy freeway access, Hogg said. A 40,100-square foot industrial building is sited on a comer location at 2500 Main Street. Irvine, and f~atures extensive landscaping alon«i with dock·high loading, rail service and close freeway access, Hogg said. "The combined strength of our software and hardware capability makes us extremely competitive for the full spectrum cl the $16 billion small business computer market ex· peeled by 1980," said a company representative. During 1976, Microdata expanded it.s distribution base and now has 30 end·uaer dealers nationwide and six lntematioaal dealers. Smith Serves the World A rail-served 64,500 square root in- ventory building on White Road between Jamboree Road and ~acArthur includes all IIC building features plus it can be easily divided for dual tenancy. ''The construction of these three major industriaJ buildings at ooe time reflects both the IIC's con- fidence in the ecaoomy and the at· tractiveness and •itality ol the busi· ness community in the Irvine area," Hoeg said. "The llC'sspeculativede- veloper program is one of the most successful in the natiQO and we foresee marketptace acceptance or this proeram continuing in the future." Tbe company continued to expand manufacturing capabilities and has a total plant space in excess ol 3IO,OOO square feet. Facilities in Irvine and Santa Ana occupy W,OOOsquarefeet. and a Puerto Rlco and Barbados plantemploy'6,000squarefeet. A product Introduced in 1976 was the Reality. It is a family of generalized data baff management systems and bas a virtual memory capability and can support up to 32 indepe.ndent usen. Smith International, Inc. produces oil field tools and equipment ued throughout the world. The corporate headquarters are located at 4343 Von Karman 1Jl Newport Beach. A division of the company, Smith Tool, is located ln Irvine. Smith International has eight divisions and 85 percent of its oil rig products are produced in the United States. 11te firm employs 1,600 persons in Orange County and a total ol 5,500 .thfouabout the world. Robert Hildenbrand, director of THE GIFT OF LIFE OSTA MESA MEMORIAL HOSPITA 301 Victoria Street • Costa Mesa. Catlfonlia 92127·· Tefephone 642·2734 Emergency Department Open 24 Hourt Emergency Physician Ott Duty Day and Night hat lie._., Mllillisbltlr -lni• knit, IU., CMef If Stitt Jean Jensen, R.N., Nursing Director corporate financial communica-tions. says there are over 1,800 oil rip in uae in the United States to- day. Most of these operations use im· plement.s manufactured by Smith International. He anticipates no increase In footage drilled in l!117 as compared tO the amount drilled in 1976, but adds the work done in the coming year will be oC a "much more dif. ficult type." "There will be more exploration, =: .. ~rilling and more off·shore "At the "present, the IIC has in ex, cess ol 500,000 square feet of rea.dy· fD.<>ccupy induslriaJ buildings (rang· lng from 4,000 to over 100,000 square feet) under construction, available, or in the design stage," Hogg said. GOOD AS GOLD ANDA ~~~gj~. LOT MORE .-=r--·PRACTICAL When you buy a home. you're not spending your shelter dollars. you're inves//ng them. And !his is one Investment you can use 24 hours a day ... one in· vestment you can share with your tamily all the while it's growing in value ... providing security ... saving you money. Your REAL TOR• can help you find the home that best suits you, your ramify and your finances. He'll show you how to put your money to work 1n a pracli· cal way Talk to a REALTOR• soon. And start saving. <IOI l'O«T" l<rwrolf IOUUV4IO, Ml!Wl'OltT UAOI, CA.Ul'OIHIA POIT ornc.a IOX ms • Nrw1'0ll UAGll. ·~~,,.., TtlDMC>Nf (7141 W..1611 Accrtditad by The Joint Commission on AccrediUttio" of Hospitals a...1... ........ .-... .;.. ... ~--------..;..----.;..;.;..;..;.~ ... ..;.;.;.;.;.;;.;. ..... ,_.l-.::::::::::::=:===================*"----------------------.. ~-~·q.<1~ Airport Complex Adds New Space "Its been a good year. We've just completed Phases nine and 10, which adds 154,000 square feet of office and warehouse space -bringing the total pro- ject to 875,000 square feet, Hid Kirk Elliott of the Airport Industrial Complex. He is a partner in the firm which serves as an inle· gral Part of the Irvine Industrial Complex, ranked as the largest, single industrial park in tbe United States. AIC is geared to fill the needs of light industries and firms requiring warehouse space. December 30, 1976 DAILY PILOT 15 Airport Industrial Complex la loeated In th• hub of the lrvlne Industrial Complex '· The new construction is already 45 percent OC· cupied and Elliott predicts a 55·6S percent occupancy byyear·end. -;::====================================================================================i Phases 9 and 10. feature all brick fronts aod sides, air-conditioning, carpeting, drapes and tinted glass. Throughout the whole park, there is an emphasis on lush landscaping, creating a campus atmosphere. During 1977, AIC will add Phase 11 -increasing the size of the com- plex by 194,000 square feet. The park has been in existence for seven years and according to Elliott, the older units are 90.93 percent occupied. The firm's offices are located al 18102 Skypark Circle So .. Irvine. For information call: 540·2499. Records Eyed by Rosan, Inc. J ose Rosan, Sr., president o( Rosan, Inc., projects 1977 as a re- cord-setting sales 'year for the com- cess," he said. The firm, located at 2901 West Coast Highway in Newport Beach, wall celebrate its 30th anniversary of 1ncorporat1on in 1977, and lS plan- ning on introducing some "in- nO\ alive" new products 1\1ffhanacal and fluid connectors, sold tn the m1h t ary and commcrc1al <urnaft markets. are lhe rompany's m.iJor prorlucts lln'A 1·\ ('r. a n<''A propane gas leak d('ll'<.'lor. sold to the recreatJOnal '1•h1rl1• fu•ld , ,., proJc<.'led to produce cro..,s dol I Jrs 1 n the low seven figures Ill \l ~ l'::lr rhroul!h th<• yt'ars, over 7S United St.1tf'-. anct 230 foreign patents have lwt•n 1<,SUl'd to the firm. MMt or the patents \Hrc issued for products de. s1i:ne<f by Rosan. In fo"ebruar y or 1976, the Patent La w Association or Los Angeles, awarded Rosan the coveted ''Inven- tory of Distinction Award." 'Machine' Dream: True The People Ma chine is a dream come true for its owner Jim Fischer. The personnel service, loeated at 17731 Irvine Blvd. In Tustin, opened its doors lo 1973. In 1974, the firm ac- quired a local temporary help service called Key·Temp. The People Machine 11peclalizes in providing temporary and perma· nent clerical, industrial, technical, accounting, management and data processing personnel. There is no fee to persons seeking employ men&~ Let Us Be Your Banker Palge v s""'"''" 1'1t•,1t l1 •11t ( .,,,.,,I \l'C"llfll'•. Off11 I'/ Ir\ l'i"'V lo become Involved with a BoriJ b.mk. Th\'t l' dt l' lut~ ol them. The 1Jl'a is to find c.1 goocJ b,111k thttt's i11l'1Jll't1d in yo11. /\nd thilt'~ llm kind of b,1nl< \\c·vc ~en since the day we OfX!nl!d We're loc;i l people. v.orking hr1rd to make our bank wo1k for other local reoplc. T ogcthcr. \\'C 'II g1>t thingc; dune for you. Think of us as ).'Our personal financi,11 advisers. because th.:it's cx;ictly v...h.:il we are. Bring us your lin;incial pwblcms. We'll come up with creative solutions /\~k us questions. We'll give you answers th.:it make sense. You lake a personal interest in your financial C1ff t1ir.;. and so do we. We can al'io m;1l<c banl<ing casil!r and faster for you becouse we take a short. direct path in everything we do. No cumbersome corporate superstructure. no complex communications. no undue delays. Banking service should be ckw. simple.and convenient. With us. ii is Let us be your banker. We want to be in\.'olvcd 1n thing" that are lmpomnt to you. 0 cmZENS BANK OF COSTA MESA I hi I ><>ml fl,,kt>r • I 7111 11711 42fKI • r-t.oml'l.'r II >IC (3,1•11.111'.} I lour.. Mnnd,1~• ThuNd.1y-1) 111 fi • Fri<J,,y-<)In (i • S11h11d,1y-'>In I , 14, pA14. y "1-0T * • I _°ee!"lb£ 39. 1974 . Moore ·Acquires Mesa's ABC Lumber Business Jim Moore, a 20-year member of Orange County's business communi- ty, has acquired ABC Lumber in Costa Mesa. · "The 'new' ABC will be dedicated to service, quality and pro- fessionalism. The emphasis will be on personal service to a wide variety of customers, including wholesale, retail, commercial and industrial accounts and homeowners," said Moore. The entire premises are currently undergoing extensive renovation. The result of the project, to be com· pleted early in 1977, will be a com· plet e f acility for builders or homeowners to acquire all materials and information necessary to com- plete any project. The firm will remain at its loca- tion at 140 E. 17th Street in Costa Mesa. Moore and his associate, Paul Setzer, owner of Master Tilers, Inc., will offer turnkey contracting M>rviccs for kitchen and bathroom remodeling. The acquisition of ABC Lumber Corporation represents another step m the caree r of Moore, wbo, unW mid-1975, was an executive al the Mission Viejo Company. Prior to his association with Missioo Viejo, he headed his own firm in conjunction with architects Hawkins, Lindsey 31ld Associates, A.I.A. He was awarded the Gold Nugget Award al the Pacific Coast Builders Confer ence and received another plaudit at the NaUonal Conference ln 1966. He ls an orricer, director and chief technical advisor to Manufactured Systems, Inc. of Los Angeles and a former officer and board mem ber of the Newport Harbor Community Youth Center. He ls a member of the Home Builders Council. Jim Moore of ABC Lumber design pleza . " Did you know Newport Beach has: 2464 WATERFRONT HOMES 1776 WATERFRONT HOMES on the bay. channels, canal 1132 WATERFRONT HOMES with private docks . 688 Oceanfr6n t Hom<>s But only l WATERFRONT HOMES Real Estate Int lytJ..-\ tn<O,.,'" ttNt·ll1n'I'\ r~to"'"'•ufl\ft •"d f'M>mt\ WAlf 11trAONT MOM ES'' • PN'tnl»r oft""" Jriil•\11111>',.,t H•ttJOt (O'\f \ ~'• 8o•td or R~.tllO'\ 1n111r ""'"'YI df·,,ff-td t•h••~ bu1 not quranl••d WATERFRONT HOMES ;:,;~ REAL ESTATE CB ~ 631-1400 .. 2633 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach Brunswick Corpor•tfon recently opened lt• Defense Ofvlalon In Costa Meea Sport to Space Brunswick Hits New Orbit Br unswick is a na me usually lbougbl to be synonymous wilh sporting equipment -but the new Costa Mesa facility is not making bowtiJtg balls, golf clubs or outboard motors. Brunswick Corporation's Defense Division, 3333 Harbor Blvd , is in the aerospace business. The firm recenUy helped NASA develop the Boom System for the Vik· ing Mars Lander Spacecraft. But that's not all, the prime business or Ole defense division is the develop- . menll>ftadical weapons, evolved out ol a new aerodynamic concept called t.be higb speed glider. . "The use of a special wing <'X tension system and a technique or energy management enables airborne weapons to be launched and precisely guided to targets m iles away, at the same time protecting the launching aircraft," said a com pany spokesman. The high speed glider concept bas al so been applied to electronic warfare vehicles which can carry electronic countermeasure payloads lnlO enemy defenses or simulate at· tacking aircraft, according to the source. T\le defense division is ..Jso pro- ducing aerial targets for air-to-air gunnery practice. Other items in produc tion are Athena launch vehicles and the Laross console, an optical scoring system for remote scoring or weapons drops. The firm reccnUy was awarded a $1.3 million contract by the Navy for these systems. The facility employs more than 440 persons. Small businesses don't need a bank. They need a banker. That's what yoo §et at California Canadian Bank. We're small enough to take a personal interest in your business. Yet we're backed by one of the worlds largest banks. So we have the resources and experience to help with all your financial needs. Oon't put up with an impersonal bank. Get yourself a banker as well as a bank. In Newport Beach. call George Anderson at 752-6042 Or stop by at 4699 Jamboree Road In Orange. call Jim Frizzel at 558-3741 . Or see him at 501 South Main Street CALIFORNIA CANADIAN BANK ~rOIC -11"1"7'1",'•r fFl t'llr.4'1'~ 't l I i'f:T!'h I ol 1,..,., •"ll), .·.1 .. ,; Service Promotes Expansion Travel Adventures opened Its lrvine office in February of this year. By September, the travel agc;:1~Y h:id er own so large il moved from a 168-Squa re f0<1t vr~iC(' t!' SI new 1,560 square foot facility in Newpvrt Beach. . To what d ocs the firm attribute its :.uccess? "Personal se rvice," says owner Char yne Shirek. "All of the mem· bers of our staff have traveled ex- tensively, and we offer free Ucke t delivery service.'' Travel Adventure is located just a stone's throw from Orange County Au·port at 4533 MacArthur Blvd "A person could call an airline and receive his tickets for the s ame pnce, but travel agencies have more detailed informat1011. We have access to all the airlines and many limes have lour mlorma- tion that could s ave the customer money,·' s he s aid, Travel Adventures is looking forward to expanding its tour and group business in 1977. The firm even arranges trips to intriguing places like Red China. Digital Notes Unusual Vear Western Digital o( Newport Beach l'Xpenenced an unusual year. The corporation filed a Chapter 11 with the Federal Bankruptcy Court on October 29, and is presently •·an the process of reorganization to com e out or bankruptcy." said Ken H;.rlan. manager ol applications engineering But 1t wasn't a lol<&lly b1td year Thi.' company introduced thref' new products: an integrated circuit control and formating for a noppy dJsc <computer peripheral device), a single.chip, micro-controller (for us p m inMruments and vending ma<.'hmes ) and a m1cr<>-proceasor, four <'hip set (for use In '!mall husi nes!I machines). Western Oigatal reduced its workforce from 600 to 160 employea, but has maintained its 250 employe assembly force in Malaysia UCI Land Was Gift Through a gift of 1,000 acres from the Irvine Company and an ad· ditional purchase of 510 acres by the UC Regents, the Irvine campus of the University of California was Of· ficlally located In 1980 and dedicated In 1964 by President l.yndon B. Johnson . Th ttnrtMrf!'lmr ~ttvcd in October 1965. ' beoember 30; 1G76 * DAlLV P1lOT 17 European Ventures Acclaimed Linear Instruments Corp. Achieves Goals In 1976, Linear Instruments Corp achieved all sales goals and con· tinued its international expans ion through marketing ventures in Europe according to rn ark clin~ manager Jim Gafn.:r. "We introduced a new series of strip chart recorc¥,rs (devices used i.."1 !aboratory work) in mid-1976. We have received overwhelming at:r<'p· lance from customers in all areas of the world market," he s aid. Linear In s truments , 17 282. Eastman Ave. jn Irvine, has grown from a s mall, local company to an international firm employing mor e than 100 persons. Gainer says new product develop· ment has continued on miniature re· corders . It is anticipated that the commercial release of the units will make a 1'sign!ficant conlr\\>ulion to fiscal '77 goals ." Linear ls project. ing a 2S percent increase over fiscal '76. Ne w sales and service facilities will be opened in the eastern United States in 1977. The firm was founded just six years ago by Frank Thomas, corporate president and Ron Ross. vice president-director of research and development. Fantastic Clearance Sales NOW at all Westminster Mall Stores Hours Mon Fr1 IO;im 91l"' •S.il 106pm •Sun 125 pm Westminster Mall Robinson 's, Buffums. Sears , May Co .. and 166 other fine stores. • '9 .... ...__.,.. ........ ·-............. ._ -· --· . . . . . .,,, 1jJ DAILY P,ILOT Auto Dealership Plans Ex pans ion Ward Lee, president of the Orange County Motor Car DeaJers Associa- tion, has announced the expansion of his Santa Ana -blJscd American Motors facility The fi rm, Ward S. Lee AM C, established in 1953, has traditionally specialized in sales and service of American Motors products. The ex· pans ion plans will introduce a ncct and lease organization offering all m akes und m odels of cars and trucks . The new operation will be headed by Matt Matthews and conducted at a second location, to be announced. Specialist J Ends First Year in OC Expand~q ..§ales fe~i!itles have -··-nc~~Ss i ta le d ex pans ion of the service departments as well. Industrial Pip<.'ftllers is 3 general construction com pany speciiJlizmg in the erection of boilers and produc- tion machine ry. The firm opened iLc; doors for busi- ness in January o( 1976, and has completed seve ral projects, includ- ing a blending plant 111 Santa Ana. Amon!:! its other services arc: fabncation and erection of welded p1 p1ng, s crewed piping, PVC, fibt.•rgl:iss and copper piping, iron and structural steel. concrete foun- dations and masonry v. alls Industria l Pipe f1 tters a lso does factory and oil field maintenance. The company is located at 1720 Garry Street in Santa Ana It has a bonding capacity of one half million dolla rs and owns its own equipment. Ward lee ''I like doing business with the Johnsons'' r I It ,\ ~ ' r ~ ;\j .J r' f 'd," B., l o1 CJ" f I '' ft f J' t l'\~("d "j r " I ,. t11•1 r <lf'1 rn1 , 111 111em I,, u er ;"() YCJ<~ & v.t;u 011 l Olli 11 ,; .1c cc .P Tt1e1r price,., ,l•v.ays lair It. 1ne11 ser ~·ce ,., out<.1.1n<J 110 l 1uc;1 r1urc.1 ,1-;cd a new l1IOf1JrCt1 lrom ()1c;. tor n·y v. le & iraded In her Mercedes. ~ , t.J'\ J l nco•111 Dick Johnson say~ W1111 lhc <.I '" o.Pr noN wo have 77·5 con1111q 1n atmost cJ.1.11 we ~oulcJ Ii"" 10 e .rrn<J ,111 111 .. 11,11· 1 ln '"' ~ou 10 comu "' .1·ic1 lo • n.rr Olli new 7 f's • wholhcr 11 •, purch:i!.i11g or leasing I 1h1nk you too will enjoy 001ng bu~•nf'I"; v-. 111 11<; ~t lnhnsrin & <;011 Johnson & Son I ·....dbl_ --i::v:r-'"'''·'; '\1l ACUAY (APlll Design Plaza Travel located In Newport Center's Design Plaza, In Newport Beach, Design Plaza Travel boasts 50 year• of accumulated travel ex- pertise. The staff, from left: Marty Lenahan, Ray Lenahan and Bet· ty longridge {Improves Fuel Economy {Extends Point & Plug Ufe /Capacitive Dischan)e • Hip 111....., """'°" Syst-• {State Apr'vd Mox Device • Rh V oltint9CJtt1 • ~---------------~-----------------1 I I I Mall CoupcNi For C1 .. ttfe hlfo To: t Air ~ ProMh, Ille. I 950 M. M•. Or-.p, CA. 9266 7 I I I t:~·······················~·-············································J • w •• fl ' ----~-----------~---~------------ ft DAILY Pll.QT 1J Air California Celebrates GoOd 12 Months 'New Warm Look' Sparks Passenger Record This year was a good one for Air California, the Orange County based intra-stale airline, with significant highlights in most areas or opera· ti on. Passengers carried for the period averaged almost 20 percent higher than 1975, with nearly two million customers . using the carrier 's services during the year. The airline fli es between nine ma- jor airports throughout the state. Thcrt• wt>re no new cities added to its route syst em during 1!176, but st•rvit'l' was addl•d bet ween San Diego and Ontario early in th£• year . Ai r California passengers will notice sever al significant ;.idvances in the area of customer service, among them arc televised flight in· fo rmation in San J ose and Orange Count y, a new computerized ticket· ing systt•m a nd fine wines and beers added to the flight menus. Ticket counters throughout the system have been rece ntly re- modeled lo portray a "new, warm total California look," said a com· pany spokesman. nial program in London, sponsored by Pan Am. scheduling eCficlencies. Employment grew to approx· lmately 800 from 700 at the end of 19'TS, with the majority of new posl· lions added in Orange County. According lo the spokesman, the During 1976, Air Califomia was honored lo have its flight attendant uniforms chosen as the most attrac· tive and functional . of the Uni led States airlines at a special Blccnten- {transportation J The airline operates a fleet of Boe- ing 737's and Lockheed Electra Sun- jets and serves San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose, Sacramento, Lake Tahoe, Ontario, Palm Springs and Orange County-Disneyland. airline is continuing to make im· provcments in noise abatement pro· cedures, maintenance control and ATTENTION CHIEF EXECUTIVES AND FINANCIAL OFFICERS . IRVINE SAVINGS · CASH MANAGEMENT PROGRAM .. helps Martin Aviation earn an extra $8,000 per year! / M.1111n A\1l.111c1n wai; f11undecl In 1921 right here In 01<1ngl! Counry D1\ k I <1tllil111e and his p ill Iner took 11\ •'r five• vcil1 '> d!JO Thl!y ilt e now the largest Piper dl.',1lcr 1n C.1lif11rn1r1. Mtd nperilte the largest flight ..,, """' 111 1'1v >t<1 t1? Tlwv c'llso hilve the largest f11gh1 t h.1rt('1 hu.,im'"' in tlw Weste rn United Stntes. An1.1t.l·r Orang!! C11unl\ '>llCtesc; srory 1n 1he making. and \\I' ilre proud to be,, p.111 of 11. • ~The success of our bu~iness 11 partially depe ndent upon the effectlv" management of our cash. We wlll earn an extra SS,000 to 110,000 over the next twelve months by u~lng the Irvine Savings Ca5h Management Progum. f vf'ry responsible business· man should Investigate this program. It Is simple ••• " ••• u, ...... ~ {l& Mt11t ln 'J\vli.ltlon R It hi!rd B. f ontalnc, Prec;lde,nt Irvine Savings' Ca~h Mana.gement Program allows you to earn Interest on funds normillly lyi ng idle in your checking account. Gi ve us five minutes and we'll tell you how much extra money your company can earn this year by using one of our Quick Draw accounts. Place a call to Paul Gulso. V ice President at (7 14) 752-6456 [very day you wait will be cost· Ing you money. riiim;i;i;;;iiiiii;i;;i;;iiil He ad O!f ice 18552 MacArthur Blvd. (at Michelson) Irvine 92715 Telephone (714) 752-6456 Acrou from the Oro11gc County A irport" II '. 20 DAIL YPl~OT December 30. Hl76 'America 's Busiest' Golden West Hustles All Year Golden West Airlines, Inc., with more than 160 daily round-trip flights, is America·s busiest com· muter carrier The firm's general oflices are m Newport each, but Los Angeles ln· ternational Airport is cons idered its home base Decause the company maintains its ground support system there. ··our group or highly skilled pro· fesslonals carry on a constant in- spection and m aintenance program to insure that all equipment is in top oocrating condition," said a com · pany spokesman. { hospitality } Newporfer Offers Resort Concept Come drive The commuter airline handles nearly I,600 people daily, or, more than 37 ,000 passengers per month. The reservation system is unique ~ay_s the s pakes man and provides ·emc1ent and rellableserv1cc." Due to joint-fare agreements with many major U.S. airlines, the Golden West portion of the ticket may be substantially reduced, or, may evt>n be t r·ee The airline ab o transports both large and s mcill freight, and, m most cases, g ua rantees same day de The Newporte r Jnn was the first commercial s tructure er ected upon the sprawling Irvine lfU)ds Since its construcUon in 1962, and its purchase by the 0~1 E. Webb Corporation in 1969, the Newporter offers a total resort concept for the vacationer and businessman alike . Each of the 325 rooms and suites has a private balcon)• or terrace with a view of the harbor, pools, golf· course or the John Wayne Tennis Club. Four villa suites feature living rooms with fire places, three bedrooms, three baths and a private- walled swimming pooJ with patio .. Fourteen meeting and banquet rooms are available to accom- modate groups from 10to1,000. Nine workshops can be scheduled simultaneou~ly with two large meet· .. the Mercedes-Benz 4SOSEL. For you ... for your passengerS ... it's a world unto itself. I I' , , • :\' lj , I , I "i • I I II •ti I 11• 1•1 ;I •it tr: 1! t 1 j.i1 II I I • t_"l f!r• f1ttd I I I I' I I " l\• '"lh·t,I I~ Seethe Mercedes-Benz at Mission Viejo lmpotts 831 174 0 A11lhl'r11cd Dt•.:ik r 4 95 1700 • ;!147111 \l.iruut•nk Pk1,1\ • livery service to most parts or tbe country. Since its inception in 1968, the firm has continued to grow and now has routes connecting Santa Barbara to Santa Ana. and connecting Oighl-; to Palmdale, Lancaster, Moj a ve, Jnyokern and Trona. During sum me r months, flights to Cat alina Island are available. In 1977. Golden West plans to add two new aircraft to its Heel Manufac tured b y the Shorts Brothers .. the wide-bodied planl's of- fer full s ix-foot four headroom. and will carry 33 persons. ing rooms for general sc~swus and banquets. The Marine Restaurant. Frc>nch Bistro, Cafe de la Paix and the Wine Cellar are all located within lhl' lnu complex. J ames L. Villers was appointed general manager in 1976, cind says he realizes the importance or qu:ility and is cons tantly seeking ways to improve the resort hotel. • ··.sy offering a quality product, we are able to bring gro ups into Newp0rt Beach that will enjoy and utilize the services and fal'ilities thb; area and its businessci; offe1 "At the same time. the NcwportN Jnn and its staff work to promote a close partnership wilh the local com· munily. ••By working together, we can all enhance the economy of our area," Villers said. Missi o n B eechcraf t 's B ill Gremp Beech craft Enjoys Trend During 1976, then• was an incn-<1~ ing trend low ard the use of pri \:ill· aircraft for business purposes. al' cord in~ to M 1ss1011 Betthcrart at Orange County Airport. "Business is becoming more and more competitive, and as that hap pens lime bcl·omcs a key factor ," s ajd Bill G rem p, vice president. "It's becoming increasingly d1f ficult to li ve with airline schedules There are over 12,000 airports in the country, but only 600 ar& served by th'e regular airlines.·· Mission Beechcraft cxperienn od more than a five perecent s ales growth in 1976, and Gremp predicts a 12 to 13 percent increase in 1977. 11ree Bar*s ti one Your commercial bank. Your International bank. Your personal bank • Members of our staff are especially trained to handle your commercial bankrng In international banking, our worldwide affiliations, our years ot experience, and our reputation In International trade provides expertise not easily found elsewhere + (1le Sumitomo C/Jank.gf Galiforq/a 3420 Bristol Street Costa Mesa (714) 549-9181 A Calirornia chartered bank dedicated to serve you Member FDIC { hospitality J Face-lift Renews Airporter The Airporter Inn underwent an extensive" "face-lift" in 1976. The hotel, localed across from Orange County Airport al 18700 MacArthur Blvd. in Irvine, was re· modeled and redecorated. The Airporter has added two ex- ecutive meeting rooms that will ac- commodate "about 20 people." The Mediterranean Dining Room is now larger, and there is a new restaurant called The Cafe Con- tinental featuring gourmet cuisine. Dancers will be pleased to bear that the Cabaret Cocktail Lounge now fratures an expanded dance fl oor , as we ll as new carpets, drapes and wallpaper. Newport BE'ach residents Mr. and Mrs. Richard E . Duffy are the owners of the Airporte r. The couple also o wn Duffy 's Bac k Ba y Resta urant and the Jolly Roger Restaurant in Anaheim. The hotel also has its own 24-hour coffee s hop, beauty and barber shops, ladies' boutique, liquor store. car re>nta l agen cy and 24 ·hour limous ine scr v1cl' to and from Orange County Airport. Banqut'I fa c11ltics ar!.' •1vailable for group:-. 1 an.: mg in -.1zc· frorn,10.lo Im Busi ness Gets Holiday Help ·1 ht' 11 .:.1!.1y Inn, :11:11 Rriqol Stn •t•l 111 I 'o t J ~h·sa 1s 1n tht' huM m•ss of lJking car<' uf hus1n'"'S \nm 11wnT1I cu,tomer-. S<t) s Jn nkt"t"JIE'r Etl Fa~ C<'tl, arc11unt for the ma1oritv 11( th<' Inn's d1rntrlr, sr. k r<'p1n1• thf' husm€'s~ community cont••nl 1-; 1h mnin c1~cern Tht' 1.1.~ room motor fJcill ty fratur1•<, \hr Jnck<'V Club Ilc-staurant and 1.ounr•c with hvE' r nlrrta111mu1t Mnnd av lhr(lu~h Snturdnv. a'> wl'll as mf'rtin~ :inrl banqurt faciltt1cs that .1rrr>mm11d all• up to2!"1"1 persons. Th•· l111lidJy Inn is locatt'<i just a short dt!>t a nee from S<iuth Coast Pbza and Orang(.' County Airport, makin1< 1t a convenient place for travelers. l Donations Improve UCI Private s upport to UC Irvine from foundations, corporations, or- ganizations and individuals totals more than $8 4 million since 1963. The gill.I support student aid pro- grams, library collections, cultural pro1ram1, special facilities and equlpment and other needs that are vital to a total university environ- .• ~1>6( ~. 1976 D~ll Yls1L01' 2t Resort Atmosphere Plaza Hotel Becomes Hub of Coast "Because of its luxurious accom- modations. Cine restaurants and meeting room facilities, the South Coast Plaia Uotel has become the social and business gathering place of the South Coast area," said a hotel representative. Although the hotel was conceived to cater lo business travelers at- tracted to the expanding Orange County industrial and business cen· tera, it also offers a res ort at- l'D05phere_for vacationing families. The lobby reatures a sunken lounge and bas a 20-foot high cascad- i n r waterfall s urrounded bv landscaping. leading up to an open air game deck.· On the game deck, hotel guests may spend lime sunbathing or tak- ing a dip in the pool. The Cabana Bar provides poolside lunch and beverage service . The game deck also features a badminton court, p<iddle tennis courts and a putting green. Four ii- Juminated tennis courts are acijacent to the hotel al ground level. A play area for children is nearby. . The hotel offers 14,SOO square feet oC meeting room and banquet facilities for corporate, business and society meetings. The rooms will ac- commodate from 10to1,000 peM10ns. Three r esl aurnnts are located within the complex: Alfredo's pro- vides Italian cuisine and deeor. the Orange Grove Cale Cor family dining and the Blue Parrot .nightclub. COSTA MESA PARAMEDICS ADD NEW DIMENSION TO 24 HR. EMERGENCY MEDICAL CARE SINCE 1975 ... A VITAL ADDITION TO COSTA MESA'S COMMUNITY SERVICES, THE PARAMEDICS PROVI'DE EMERGENCY MEDICAL CA RE, 'ROUND THE CLOCK. ON THE SCENE WHEREVER· WHENEVER A MEDICAL DEVELOPS CRISIS ment but are not s ufficiently ~,..,..., .......... _,_!Wlllillll...t ......... PHONE 549. I I I I 22 DAILY PILOT { real estate } Good Year Due, Says President "1976 has been an oulslan<Jlng year, but we expect 1977 to hold con· sistent with the market -or go higher," says John V aJentine, presi- dent of Valley Realty, with cor- porate h eadqu a rte r s at 18952 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine. He predicts interest rates in the coming year will be as good, or bet· ter, than 1976. "We are still in the midst of s highly inflationary market. There is more demand than product, and therefore, there is a substantial pro- fit to be made in real estate," ~ays VaJenllnc. He warns potential investors lo "be cautious," but adds real estate is "still the best hedge against infla· tion ." Valley Realty handles all lypes ol real estate transactions. Other of- fices are in Newport Beach, Irvine. EJ Toro and Mission Viejo. The firm's employees undergo a rigorous training program, in addi- Uon to possessing state licenses says Valentine. He says the company motto is, "people serving people." Valley Realty is a division of Berg Enterprises. For mCW"e information, call 752-7300. December 30, 1976 Homes Lottery Hopeful participants In the Irvine Company's Woodbridge lottery anxiously wait to see H their names are selected to purchase • home. Waterfront Homes:'Rewarding' "After almost two years in real estate in Newport Beach, our en- thusiasm for, and eajoyment of, the business we are in, and the many new friends we have made has been the most rewarding experience of our lives," said Gil Foerster. He is the co-founder, with his wife Pat, of Waterfront Homes. The firm is located across from Mariners Mile Square, adjacent to the Ancient Mariner Restaurant. Waterfront shows homes by both boat and car, and lists rentals, as well as homes for sale. Jn two years, the sales force has risen from three to 13 persons. WE MANUFACTURE ••• ROCK BITS BUST. HOLE BITS HOLE OPENERS CUTI'ERS, RAISE BORE AND *BIG HOLE' ASSEMBLIES FOR THE PETROLEUM AND MIMING INDUSTRIES. Uniqu~ Eyes Best Year In 1976, $30 million worth of reaJ estate was sold in Newport Beach, C-Osta Mesa and Irvine by Unique Homes. Inc. The firm employs em ploys 30 full lime sales people and is located at 2443 E . Coast Hwy. in Corona del Mar. This was the best year in sales for Unique since its inception in 1970. Eleven of its employees qualified for the Million Dollar Sales Club of the Newl>ort Ha"rbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors. Jn addition, the fi rm won the California Association of Realtors Award for excellence in office in· terior design. The interior decor was also featured in the national publica- tion. Real Es tate Today. Jim Wood, president of Unique Homes, said, "It was an exciting time in an exciting area. The quality of our sales staff and the outstanding caliber of homes we were privileged to market, made 1976 a landmark year." · Students Lead UCI Can:tpus Tours Student-led tours of the UCI campus are available for prospec- tive students and their parents Mon· day through Friday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The guided tours may be ar- ranged by contacting the UCI Office of Relations with Schools and Colleges at 833·5832. We have 1400 employees In Irvine in a completely air conclfffoned facl&ty at 17871 Von Kannan Avenue. Come and Sff us when you're conslderinCJ a career with a leading company. ·-· SMrrHTOOL Division of Smith International, Inc. ' Relocation of Fluor Corporation's more than 4,300 employea added to the real estate boom In Orange County 'Super Year' December 30, 1~76 * DAIL V ~l\.OT 25 December 30, 1978 * DAILY PILOT 23 Newport's Quail Expects Repeat of Good Business "We quadrupled sales in 1976 from five to 20 million, and we expect to double or quadruple sales in 1977," said Don Berman, president of Quail Properties. According· to Berman, the firm with offices at 1400 Quail Place in Newport Beach, is expanding in other areas also. The firm is doubl· ing the size of its offices and opening a n ew facility in Orange this January. Two new m em be rs have joined the rapidly growing family according to Berman. Quail Property Manage- ment Corporation will handle ren- tals of houses, condominiums, apart- ments, offices and shopping centers. Quail Property Development Corporation will function as a real estate development company. The firm now has a total of 46 re- altors and is expanding into the areas or equity processing and con- dominium conversion. 1'. Jac~bs Says Thanks, All "Its been a super year. We'd like lo thank all or our customers for dis- playing confidence in Jacobs Real- ty," says John Jacobs, president. The farm is located at 2919 Newport Blvd. in Newport Beach and specializes in r esidential and in- come property. Jacobs Realty also handles other types or real estate transactions. A New Neighbor Just Rolled Into Town. "Its about time people realized re- al estate is no longer just an invest- ment, but a growth industry," says Jacobs. Serving the area since 1973, Jacobs and six associates are look- ing forward to another exceptional business year Growth Finds Home at Cole "Thjs has been an exceptional year. We have expanded our sales staff and are looking forward to ad- ditional growth in im," says Jean Cole. She is the owner of Cole of Newport Realtors located at 251S E. Coast Highway. Corona del Mar. The firm handles all types of real estate transactions, including re- sidential and investment properties. Ms. Cole says her firm is In the "heartland of the best in real estate,•· and adds the demand is greater than the supply. For information regardinc proper· ty in the coastal area, call 67S-SS11. Realty Plans Another Move Bay and Beach Realty hu been growing since 1949. The firm opened Its first offlce at LSth and Balboa Blvd, and after four years moved to a larger office where it IOOO expanded Into five branch of. fices. Still growing. the five branches wtte combined into ooe major office on Coast Hicbway ln Ne~port Beach. But the real estate firm soon outgrew lts new facility. Q.Jr oe<ospoce systems have just gone to M:::lrs The Orunswick Corporot1on Is on intemo1lonol. multl-corporo1e monufacturer. We're diversified in consumer recreotlon. profeulonal medical and technical defense products. But you'll recognize us best by one of our eorliest successes. The monu· focture of bowling equipment. We still make lots of sports supplies. In fact we construct and monoge entire reeteotlon centers, along with MacGregor golf clubs. MerOJry outboord motOls, outomo1ed scortng machines and of covr~. we still make the best bowling boll In the game. -. ·.: •. . . . ... Out lately, and especially here In Casto Meso, we're into space. The Brunswick Defense Division wos chosen by NASA to design and deliver the Boom System for the Viking Mars Lander Spocecroft. The complex technology behind the Boom System Is also opporent 1n our nre Protection Systems, Target and ~ange lns1rumencotior'I and other sophisticated elements created for our Notional ~ense. The Orunswick Defense Division is hoppy to hove moved to Orange DEFENSE OIVICilO N .· . . . . . . .. but -we've been on the boll since 1845. County. Now we hove access to the fine technical talent tho1 hos come to Southern Colifornlo from all over the world. Please let this serve os on Invita- tion to all who ore skilled In oerospoce technology. You ore welcome to coll, come In. meet our management ond talk with Judy Mortin. our Personnel l\ep. She'll tell you about our current pro- jects and how they could become port of your future. Personnel l\epresentotlve Judy Mortin (714) ~46·60JO On January 1, 1m, Bay and Beach Realty will move again, this time In-to larger offices on the main floor of the Ore at.. Wes tern Savings & Loan B1UldiA&iANewpon.cent.er.-•·••~r••~•~~ ...... ---.,-~-.. -.-r-.-.-.-•• -.-.-.-,-.-.• -,-.-.-.-•• -.-.-,~~-.-.-•• -.-.-.-.-•• -.-.-.-~-,.~.-.-.-.-•• -.-.-.--~--------~~~.-. ...... ,..._.......,.,.....,,_.-.,~ •• 1 • • .. 24 OA\i:v P\LOT •• Mariners Eyes Fast Growth Rate Ahead Mariners Savings and Loan As· sociation anticipates a favorable economic outlook and forecasts a continued fast rate of growth. Beverly Hills, West Hollywood and Seal Beach.' Application bas ~n made for a seventh branch in the Woodbridge development in Irvine. in savings now and loan volume as a result of branch expansion. In the past two and a half years, savings deposits have risen from $50 million to more than $100 million. Management predicts that deposits will rise to $150 million by the end of 1976. The increase coincides with Mariners branch expansion from one office in 1973 to the present six offices. "We are enjoying a period of wt· precedented savings now, resulting from an excellent economic environ· ment,'' said Raphael Chaikin, presi· dent. "The percentage spread between the cost of our savings and the in· come from our loan portfolio h as in· creased dramatically over the past few years." . Sln.ce its beginning in 1953, the firm bas invested almost one· quarter billion dollars ln all types or con•truction and existing real estate. Jn Orange County alone, Mariners real estate loan volume since July 1975 has exceeded $10 million per month. The firm now has offices In Newport Be ach, Laguna Beach . He anticipates a continued growth Mariners Savings and Loan As· sociation is a wholly-owned sub- sidiary of Mariners Financial Corporation, a public company based in Newport Beach. Thanks to our bright engineers, we may have just cut our datacom chip sales in half. Details They Said You'd Like ASTRO had to talk with computers. So they gave it a bus· oriented architecture. They fixed it so 32 ASTRO's could be addressed on bus and gave it a simplified interrupt and priority structure. So the pro· ccssor wouldn't be slowed down. ASTRO w;,s double buffered. And to top it off, ASTRO liiiii••------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil can operate at 1 Mega· They Madt> a Universal Interface Chip. twrt7.. !30th modes have selectable 5-8 Now We're Selling One Chip bit chdracters. Asynchronous mode Instead of Two. ,1tluws I. I 1/2. or 2·stop bit selection. J\ f'rypnE' 1ho11qh1 our MOS 'LSI l here arc eight selectable clock rates, l J l\h I . 'A t•re (jf f\1! Th<"n 011r E'nrJ1nee1 s with up lo 4 % distortion allowance tllouqht 1t would be nic<> 11 we al~o c.1me with 32X clock. Of ·course. all inputs out with tv.o synchronou-. :-,•,ynchronous ,rnd outputs are TTL compatible. It's d"" 1c<'s One 1SAT) w;is a transmitter: <'II <lone using n·channel technology th<· othN (SAR),~ recf'iver ,rnd c.umes in a 40·p1n package. f3ut pPoplE' k<-rt tellina them two r h•pc; wPrc too much trouble There• h.-id Actually, It Was All Rather Cunning. t<J be an easier. more flexible way. Wt> To tell the truth. we are well aware said it couldn't be that difficult to get of the fact lhat not everyone will use c ()mpulcrs and terminals to talk to each <1n ASTRO to replace a UART. SAR. or other. They SDtt.l 1t was. · SAT. Sometimes, they are all you'll So at great expense our brilliant crew need. And we recognize that ASTRO produced an Asynchronous/ will take away business from the Synchronous Transmitter/Receiver competition. and cleverly named 1t ASTRO (UCl671). But that's how the high cost of Of course. while they were at it. they technical leadership pays off. The threw 1n a few m ore previously expen· denser the chip, the more problems s1ve goo?ies. They ~ave it full duplex you can help solve. capab1l1ties so nothing had to wait Th S rt c 'th h Mer spending all this time to create e ma ompany WI t e it. they gave it IBM b1synch compatibility Dense Chips. §5 and trnnsparcnt mode capability so WEB TERN DIGITAL you wouldn't see it anyway. C ORPO ll JJ T'ION ; Distributed and stocked by DIPLOMAT EllCTRONICS 1n the following areas: Minneapolis. Minn. DiplomaV'Electro-Com Corp. 3816 Chandler Drive TL'lerhone: 612 788-8601 St. Louis, Missouri Diplomat/SL Louis. Inc-_ 2725 Mercantile Drive Telephone: 314 645 8550 Woodbury, N.Y. D;plomdt Electronics Corp. 303 Crossways Park Dnve Tdephone: 516 921·9!73 Clearwater. Florida D1plomal/Southland. Inc. 1771 N. Hercules Avenue Telephone: 813 443·4514 Dayton, Ohio D1plomal/Northland. Inc 2452 Stanley Avenue Telephone: 800 762-2407 513 228-1080 Farmington. Michigan Diplomat/Northland.. Inc. 32708 W. Eight Mile Road TelephoRe: 313 477·3200 Salt Lake City. Utah Diplomat/Salt Lake City 2280 S. Main Street Telephone: 801 48&7227 For more details, con· tact the distributor or representative in your area. or write Westeyn Digital, 3128 Red Hill Ave .. Newport Beach. CA 92663, or call (714) 557.3550 TWX 910· 595-1139. " ....... , __ _ Mariner•. Saving• and Loan Preeldent Raphal Chalkln looks forward to another year or economic prosperity { __ · _i_i_n_a_n_c_e __ ] Santiago Bank Covers Ground Santiago Bank offers both real estate and small business loans. The main office is located at S35 E. Fir st Street in Tustin, a nd the Newport Beach branch is at 2122 Campus Dr. "Time and time again we talk to customers who want to purchase a new home but their equity is still tied up in their old home," said J ames R. Murtland, director of marketing. "Wh at is needed, in these cases, is short term financing, referred to as a 'swing loan.' Santiago Bank has been an Or ange County leader in the field ofinterim financing," he said. The bank h as been actively in- volved assisting real estate brokers. buyers and sellers throughout the county. Santiago Bank has been making Sm all Business Administration loans in amounts ranging from $00.000 to $388,000 upon approval or credit. Borrowers may talce five tu 10 years to repay. The Joans arc guar:intcl'd up to 00 percent by the federal government Team Goes For Reco rd Anderson & Anderson. Inc. is thr outgrowth of the insurancf' org:miza· tion rounded in 1954 by Donald n . An- derson. Six years ago, Robert M An- derson, a chartered property and casualty underwriter, joined his father's brokerage. . He has spearhe¥ed the agency's penetration into broad areas of com· mercial insurance, oriented toward professional, industrial and busi· ness cuente1e. Under his leadership, said a com· pany spokesman, agency growth - in terms or area served, number of clients and dollar volume of business -bas surpassed even the explosive growth or Orange County. Business written has quadrupled in the last four years. The agency'• philosophy is that re· putaUon brings as much bu.siness as ao ata s&csmen. · Additionally. Anderson & An- derson maintains its own claims de· J>VtRJMh ~1,1.-0 .... • r ",,, .. , James lynch heeds lrvlne Ne- tlonalBank Bank Eyes Needs of Big Firm Cali form a 's rirsl automated bank ing fa cility, located within a customer 's corporate office com· pl ex, has been establis hed by California Canadian Bank. According lo president Robert A McKerroll, the bank has received approval from the California State Banking Dc•parlment to open the automated te lle r brant•h office within the nt.>w lrvme location of the Fluor Corpor ation. Planning for this new concept in banking began some time ago, as 1'1uor offi cials studied the impact of relocation on their employes. It was determined that payroll and banking services woukl be one way to assist their personnel A series o( m eetings held by senior officers of Cahfom.ia Canadian and Fluor resulted m an employe survey to deter mine inte rest an an automatic payroll deposit plan combined with on·s1te automated teller machmes The results were favorable and led to the establishment of a new pro gram called Fluor Automated Oepos1t Sy:.tem < f"ADS I Under FADS. the fluor emplt'>y<.'~ w11l c•ach have a ch<'<'kmg account opcnt•d for them at the b.mk's new oU.ce at J a m boree Hd and Campus Ur In tht> Irvine lndw1trinl Complex. The e mployes'bi-weekly net pay will be automatu•ally credited tu their acC'ounts and they receivt an advicl' of deposit alone with their regular earnings statement C.ish can be obtained from two Docutel Total Tf'llcr machines local ed at the Fluor facili t y T he m achin es can perform eleven separate functions and provide a complete banking service It is e'i><-cted that the Southern Calirorn1a Division o f Fluor Engineers and Constructors, Inc . will m o ve approximately 4,300 employes into its new 1 2 million square-foot complex hy year-end. with anolhl'r 1,200 lo follow Ultimate personnel capacity is 8.500 and Cahfornrn Canadian Rank will install additional banking machines a~ ret1u1red The bank 1s one of th<' state's oldest hnanclal ansUwtlort$. ~ • ' DAIL~ ~J~qr 25 Irvine BGnk Plans tO Branch Out Year's Assets of $25 Million Spark Growth Alter a year in which total assets jumped to approximately $25 million. Irvine NationaJ Bank is planning branch offices in Irvine and the Newport Beach-Costa Mesa vicinity. The latter branch will be operative in 1977. Both offices have been approved by the U S. Comptroller of Currency. The new asset figure represents a S9 million-plus gain over 1975 figures. Opened nearly three and one-half years ago in the heart or the Irvine lnduslriaJ Complex, Irvine National has enjoyed steady growth, with special emphasis being placed on commercial banking activities, ac cording to James Lynch, president. Last year, the bank occupied a new three-story headquarters build· ing at 2171 Campus Dr., across from Orange County Airport in Douglas Plaza. Success of Irvine National's er torts, Lync h noted, 1.s Indicated by the recent five percent stock dividend on outstanding shares. The bank issued 12,SOO addltionaJ shares, distributed among shareholders of record Sept. IS, 1976 in proportion to holdings. "Our continuing growth and pro. fitability will provide a n even stronger position for Irvine National within the financial community and opportunity for extended banking services, both institutionally and geographically,'· Lynch sajd. ROS(N PRECISION PRODUCTS A Highly Re Hable Gear Box From Sikorsky With A 111ghly Rell•ble StudFrom • Rosan .. · IJ StkO<aky specifleel Roi.An fatl81'4)<S lor theit UTT...S gear box, including the studs tNlt fasten the bo• to lhe engine drlYe shalt. When rutening rohabillty 11 a must -call on the o~perls 1n the lastencr flold ,.,,, "'° , .. )••· . ,.,,,., A Highly Reliable Hydraulic System By Lockheed ........ " C•lifornla With Highly Reliable Adapters From l~~~!~1n·p~~"' Jio•,/ntJOUaCUlp(f'fSfOf••hyOf~ r~ com~tt uM~ on the S lA Smi(ft CP'loff\ "Yd' Iv!~ de5'Q~'I ot '"'' 1~ e 1 s..-s .. uni. vF-11, I II B<le<nv UITA'i. •r>O 8',ff A.AH ,..,_,. atto IPK•'fofH1 "°""'•" DOH eOIPtC!'t • 1 One ..-. ~., '..quHect .u tuh1"Q •St.Mnbty •M Otl&Uemtlty 2 Tf'le •dlptt!' r• tockf'<J in pt•ce by lh~ ~o,Jn lo<;o rino 3 A orwbit.-WKf ., th• OOH me41'\S ltifO fMll,804' A Rugged Reliable Engine From General Electr· c OE Enolnee,. IJ>Kllied Ro.•n Rlno locked Slude for UM In their T700 .,,glne They aflO picked Ille RF 9500 Mr let Hydrau11c Port ln11r1. The T700 ,, v .. d In both IM lJTT AS' MCI 'AAH' Army program• bocau11 It demon- slr3101 better rellab1llty, main· IAlnftbthly Ind SU1'11VftDlllly ltlan soy olher lo Ila cla11. Wl\en rugged rellabrllly 11 o roquuomonl, call on tho o•Pe•ll •n lhe la11cnor f1e101 -Wllf-llWY • -T tlM:M, CAU•. -· tn•J ....au. CJUI ._,., • f'Wll 11•-un ..,...._. ..... ....,. ... ,,,.,,..~ ...... Rosan, Inc. has designed and manufacturE!d over 10,000 different precision products In the past 30 years for the aerospace, industrial, A. V. and medical markets, x :N" CJ . • NCWPOllT MAC~. CA4.lf01\f11A • tHN Ntwl'OllT 9£AC'1 ('UI 64'-6533 ' LOS ANOELCS. ('IJ) U ... 1tt , . - J 26 DAILY PILOT { ___ sh_o_Pi_P_•_·n_g __ ) Family's Dream Goes On South Coast Plaza and Town Center has come a long way since . its inception in 1967. The sprawling complex, which in- cludes South Coast Plaza, South Coast Village and the South Coast Plaza Hotel and Financial Center was the drcamchild of the pioneer Segerstrom family of Orange County. . The family's phil01SOphy, said a spokesman, is: "JC the beans aren't good enough -don't ship them." This is why, said the spokesman, the South Coast Plaza projects h<Jve been carefully developed and have been so successful. The mall and village stores OC· cupy 200 acres and feature 175 specialty stores, six major depart· ment stores, five movie theaters and 23 dining spots. t:onstruction is undet-way at the mall, of a 80,000 square foot 1. Magnin's store aod an additional 30,000 square fe et of mall stores scheduled for completion in August 1977. A recent announcement was made by Bruce Nordstrom, that a new Nordstrom's Department Store will be opened in March 1978. The specialty clothing store will be tri- l cv c I and will occupy 120,000 square reel. (;o truction costs will be in excess of million. Adctitional parking structures are being built nt the mall. They are a part of third phase construction and will be completed somcUme in 1977. The new South Coast Repertory Theatre is being bu11l adjacent to the Plaza Hotel and is scheduled for completion in approximately 18 months. Gene Robens, general manager, said, "We like to think of South Coast Plaza and Town Center as the downtown of Orange County. No other Cacility in the county provides such a unique experience." A cascading waterfall brings this family a moment of eofftude at South CoHt Plaza In Costa Mesa HUNTINGTON INTERCOMMUNITY HOSPITAL another year of dynamic growth in meetfng the health care needs of the community. J '-"'9'>•,.. .,.. • ..,. o'foc. e...~ -nl lo INt '-t>olol o11 ... • 1.,11 ,..,. ol -cloc.ol 'l'K-olld '""""' ....,_, TM,,_ °"'"''"9 .. ~ 0e '°'""'"' -utecl 111 _., 11111. Hun.tin9ton .lntercommunity Hospital 17772 leach llYcl., H...tinqt-.leach. CA.9%647 1714 14 ·1473 .. Sunlight, flowers and cobblestone walks combine to make South Coast VIiiage In Costa Meaa a coz·y place to shop. The vlllage features specialty shops, restaurants and outdoor concesalona ~ CALIFORNIA roR EX Pr R r A~S I ST ANCE WITH YOU R BANKI NG NEEDS CALL US Fl RST ! MCMDtrl rmc -COMMERCIAL LOANS -ACCOUNTS RECEIVAB:.E FINANCING ~NTERNATIONAL BANKING -EQUIPMENT LEASING 4X>NSTRUCTION LOANS -CORPORATE TRUST SERVICES CALIFORNIA FIRST BANK is the states 8th largest banlung S'f'lem with 21 ollicH rn Orange County over 100 olfice<J throughout Cafilornla. We have assets over S2 b1t11on and are part of a S'26 blthon global banking network -OeeemP.r 30, 1.916 DAI Y,P OT 27 Shop Center Gains Fashion Island Adds Stores Fashion Island in Newport Beach experienced a 20·50 percent increase in sales during 1976, said a center spokesperson. The vpen -utr malf will add a Bullock's Wilshire and 25 new mall stores during 1977, resulting in an additional 120,000 square feet of shopping area. According to the spokesperson, another large department store is More of Same Due for Mall Westminster Mall isn't expecting tremendous growth in the comin g year, partly bccaus~ of success in 1976. "We plan to continue our leasing efforts, and expect to be 100 percent lcasC'd by the end of 1977," said Janice Olson, assistant manager. "We're 90 percent leased right • now, and we're in the process or sell· ing four acres of adjacent com- mercial property.'' Westminster Mall totals 420,000 square feet and contains 171 stores -four of which are major depart- ment stores. Eight new mall shops are slated to open in 1977. also scheduled to open and will be announced soon. The Ccni.cr now has a total of 87 stores, including six major depart- ment stores. Fashion Island is predicting saJes of $72 million in 1977, and $00 million in 1978, said the spokesperson. "We feel we are finally over the economic slump of 1974." Chandler's Finishes New 'First' Chandler 's. 1514 North Main in Santa Ana, just completed another first in Orange County. The Drexel Heritage Fine Furniture Gall ery, featuring over 51 e nvironmental settings, took Chandler's staff or decorators over one year lo complete . The establi~hment of the gallery ~aid a Chandler spokesperson was just another in the list of innovations by Orange County's oldest furniture store. The Cirm attributes its success to selection or fine qu ality furniture a nd accessor l es, design and manufacture or custom draperies and personal service. ''A QUARTER CENTURY OF CARING.'' HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPIT Al PRESBYTERIAN 301 NEWPORT BOULEVARD, NEWPORT BEACH • • - 28 DAIL 'f PILOT * r --~·· -<::f??i I Ml•t'• rendering 11 of J . H. Bigger'• first store which opened In 1926 J.H. Biggar Mark Year's Celebration "We've just completed a year-long anniversary," said Dick Biggar of J . H. Biggar Furniture. The family-owned company has been serving Southern Californians for half a century. The Orange Coun· ty store is located at 1110 N. Main Street in Santa Ana. The firm's other locations are in Pasadena and Pomona. Dick Biggar thinks 1977 will be a good year ror business, "not a boom rear -but we're optimistic .. , The family's first store opened in Pasadena in 1926. December 30, 1976 Sumitomo Bank Grows With Area The Sumitomo Bank of California is a siait'.: ~~~~ :!"" bas been an ac tive participant in California's i111:1n- cial Community since 1953. Today, it is one of the larger banks in the stale with 22 branch offices. The Costa Mesa office is located on the first floor of the South Coast Plaza and Town Center and is under the direction of Takaaki Ono, \'ice president and manager. Sumitomo offers a generous range of banking ser vices, including loans and high-interest savings accounts. It was the first bank in the state to in- troduce the "instant money" cash dispenser and the first lo install computer services linking all branches. Because of its knowledge or the ever-changing internation" market, Sumitomo feels it has 00)£1 better able to serve local and foreign based businesses. The bank is experienced in handl- ing foreign currency financing and is arfiliated with The Sumitomo Bank Ltd., Japan -which is among the world's largest banks. Ninety percent or Sumitomo's employees are Calfornians, and according to a bank spokesman, many have become deeply involved in community affairs. The bank also provides meeting facilities for both civic and com- munity groups, and donates "com· munity gifts" such as groves of Kwansan cherry trees. c_Airporter G/nn Wotel 11'700 MacA IP.\'l:\E, \ \l.IFORNIA ( n:u:PH f'OUKTY AIRPORT BOULEVARD RT BEA\H AREA) !l!?GG:l 71 I ) 833-!?770 t·ny • 225 ROOMS • COMPlETE BANQUET FACILITIES • EXECUTIVE ROOM SUITS • ROOM SERVICE 7 AM-10PM • BARBER ANO BEAUTY SHOPS • SHOPPfNG ARCADE • SAUNA FACILITIES • 25 HOCJR FREE AIRPORT LIMOUSINE .. WILLIAM FLEETWOOD Irvine Saving• PrHldent New President Werner Escher. executive with South CoHt Plau l1 the new president of Coata M••• Chamber ot Commerce New S&L 'Born' to Serve City Irvine Savings and Loan Associa· Lion was "born" in 1976. L~?ted at 18552 Mac Arthur Blvd ln Irvine, the firm ~:-:~ for busi· ness in June and according to the firm's presi d ent, William F1eetwood, it has achieved "record shattering growth." "We are satisfying a great need in this community for a responsive, locally-owned and managed savings and loan. We are able to respond quickly to customers' needs because our decision makers are right here in our local .head office -not in downtown Los Angeles," he said. NOW! 2 FINE LOeATIONS TO SERVE YOUR REAL EST ATE NEEDS! OCEANFRONT or INLAND WE KNOW LAGUNA PROPERTY OUI PERSOMAUZED SERVICE GUARAHTHS YOUR SATISFACTIOM P tnonal Hr¥ice Re11aWe Obiectfve Genuine Responsible Expft'ftnCect Successful S atitfled customen GUARAMTHD SATISFACTION CURTIS BRADLEY REALTY 25260 La Pa Rd. LOCJMM Hll1 .... __ -· -.5U..t••• ~-' I ...... ,. ••• .................... , •• • • •;I '-·: : .. ,;.,_., _ _,.,.__,.,_~_'flf_,.,.,.,,. ... ___....._._. ...... ~ ................. _.... ................ ___ ......._._, ____ _ Paige Simpson Organizers Watch Mesa Bank Grow Citizens Bank of Costa Mesa was organized and opened in 1972, al the corner of Ha rbor Blvd. and Baker Street, for the pr incipal purpose of serving the citizens of Costa Mesa. The 40 organizing founders, all local r esid e nts, and lhe 357 shareholders, have watched their original in vestm ent ol $1,250,000 rise to assets of more than $2.S million. "Citizens Bank has dedicated itself to assisting local residents and businesses. Funds that are deposited with Citizens remain right here in Orange County and are employed to help finance new cars, home re· modeling and for a variety of other business and personal purposes," said a bank offi cial. The bank predicts another "ex· citing " year in 1971, for high home building levels . increased personal incom e, gr owing retail s ales, population growth and additional employme nt On Thursday , February 3, the Dally Piiot special promotion magazine Orange County Uvlng . w lll tocut on Romance - Orange County. Tlmed to allow ~ertiter• to Mnd gift Idea arrow• ttraJght to the heart• of lovet.t of .. -ee•. th• tpeclal edition la a pet1ect match lor the alert merchan· dltef. Romance Orange County will focut on gift ld•H tanging from diamond• to night• on the town, from nowert and candy to din- ner by candlelight. Be sure your advertl•lng V•t.ntJne la c.,rled to 90,000 Orenge Coat' homes. Call 842-4321 todar to reHrve tpece. Oeadffn• It Jan. 24. Look for Romance Orang• County In the DAILY PILOT Deeernber30. 1976 * DAILY PILOT_ ..29 First Bank logs N9arly 100 Years California First Bank bas been in opentioo in California tor almost 100 years and currently bas assets of over S2 billion. It now ranks as the eighth largest bank in California and 50th Jn the United States. "One of our major goals is ex pansion in Ora nge C.otuity," said John Toal, Sr. vice president and re gional adm inistrator. The bank now bas 104 statewide of fices, 21 located in Orange County, Including the Los Angeles·Orange County Reg ional Headqua rters located in Santa Ana. "We idenWy Orange County as a lucrative marketing area wbJcb of· rers significant growth potential for manutacturtng, wholesale and retail businesses," said Toal. "In the Irvine Industrial Complex we plan to break ground shortly on our second permanent banking of fice there ." The bank has banking origins dat· ing back to the 1880's, first enterin~ the Orange County area in 1963 as Bank of Tokyo. ln 1967. Southern California First National Bank also expanded into this market area primarily through the· acquisition of several local in· dependents. lo October 1975, these two inst.itu- Uons merged under the new name ~ California Firs t Banlc. "To the Orange Count.)' business community we offer expertise in ac- counts receivable lending, int erna- tional banking, equipment leasini. construction lending, secured and unsecured commercial loans and trust Set'vices, as well as a complete range or consumer services," said Toal. YOUR COMPANY NEEDS A CORPORATE AIRCRAFT ... CALL MISSIOM IHCHCRAFT SHVIHG THI Irvine Industrial ·Compl ex with Corporate Aircraft. The full line of Beechcraft single and multi engine. Complete facilities Parts, service and avionics. Beechcraft the best rec;ognized dealer in corpo rate aircraft sold. Stop by and see the full line of Beechcraft on display. , BEECHCRAFT BONANZA A:!J'>. BONANZA V3SB BONANZA F33A THE PERFORMANCE LEADERS - SPEED. LOAD, SERVICE. RESALE-. SATISFACTION THE BEECHCRAFT KING JET PROP LINE OUTSELLS ALL OTHER MAKES COMBINED RIB.S MM.tfl')n h et.her,ft otfllW• h11t MntC8 lllftftt ( • •rtn ....... "' llO er 10011'° AV OM ond ... "'*'""'' •I~ I~ i:~ ... ~ I0 6-W tf* .._ ,.tl""C1.,, w ""*'~ .. ~CMf·tn<:ftd ''"" '..ffl'# BEECHCRAFT SUPER KING NA SBYICI M•telOn .. -.~ ol*1 co...Pf•• .,.,m..,,onc:e G" ell -.cr1t1 8-IOul l'l1119ar tlQll wtth 1119 -Ill --leol eQUl-nl '"'"" -ol "'°'°"fNY """*' f.clory -.. ~ ... run MIM!On -l'letafl of> feotOfY !WI• O"tlfibufor ""'" ,__, ••llllOllily "' '""'"--"' "" ... ~·~ ,,,._., .. ,. -................ ~ •et•fl OOWft t•rne 18741 N. Airport Way• O range County Airport Santa Ana, California 92707 714--640.2720 t M"':; "'• e 1;Jo:c :u * • o AP ;; s:oo:oe co• s;u'h J . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . .. -. -. . . . . . . . --.. -..... , _ _..,,-~ .. -,, ... -' .... ~ ... --·· ........ , . ·~""""' .... -......... .._,_ .. _...._..,.._.. .... __ -. 30 OAIL Y Pit.OT Oecem~r 30, 1976 Saddleback Valley Growth Continues ·Apac·e By WILLIAM SClffiEIBER Of ti.. O•llY Pilot s .. tt It used to be the bed of an immense prehistoric inland s ea, where thousands of marine creatures Lived and died, leaving behind some of the world's richest fossil deposits when the water receded. Now the Saddleback Valley is teeming with a higher form of life - man. His afrinily for the south part or Orange County has turned il into one of the fastest growing areas in lhe entire country. Year 1976 in the valley proved to be one or accelerated growth, as con· slruction projects containing as many as 10,000 new homes got under way or cleared finaJ hurdles at the county government level. Growth was also the center of sometimes biller controversy, particularly over proposals to con· struct homes and schools in areas beneath a disputed high.noise buffer zone around El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. POLITICAL MECCA On the political scene, lhe valley proved to be a mecca for politicians ranging from the national to the local level. A hard·campnigning President Gerald Ford made a visit to Mission Viejo and Leisure World and stayed overnight in Laguna Hills, causing a flurry of excitement unmatched in rei:ent years. . Close on bis heels was his primary election foe, formef' Gov. Ronald Reagan. who also made a stop in Leisure World. There were cam· paign appearances by Senator-elect S. I. Hayakawa, Congressman-elect Robert Badham and rus opponents and Supervisor Tom Riley, who had to face the voters for the first Ume in June. MACFAILS Voters also had the chance to in- stall the valley's second municipal advisory council (MAC) in El Toro and Lake Forest but the ballot measure was resoundingly defeated, leaving Mission Viejo with lbe only such council in the county. The valley's other semi·poUlical arm , the Saddl e bac k Area Coordinating Council, undertook a massive self-improvement program following the MAC election defeat in an effort to better represent the in· terest of the valley's residents. NEW CAMPUS After years or pondering the move, Saddleback College trustees in Mis· sion Viejo decided to open a small satellite campus in Irvine, to serve the northern part of the district starting in the fall or 1977. The year ahead promises to be one of major decision for county govent• menl in terms of the kind of growth that will be permitted on the remain· ing undeveloped land in the valley, particularly in northeast El Toro and Laguna Hills. In the case of the latter, the primary focal point will likely prove to be plans by the fledgling Aliso Vie· jo Company Can offshoot or the Mis· sion Viejo Company) for construe· lion of industrial parks and as many as 10,000 new homes on 6,700 acres of the old Moulton Ranch. The company acquired the proper- ty several m onths ago for $1S million, thus erasing the last vestiges of a ranch once owned by one of the county's pioneer giants - Lewis F. Moulton . What direction the county's plan· rung for the valley will take is di[. ficull to predict , particularly since there is a new face on the Board of Supervisors. But it is inevitable lbnt noise from El Toro's jets will play a major role. Coming into the new year wlit be two new members of the Mission Viejo MAC, who were appointed to the council in the fall after the re· signations or two founding council members . The Saddleback Valley Unified School district, which had a difficult time this year resolving its problems with employes and their unions, also faces an uncertain 1977. Two of the five seats on the board or trustees are up for eleetion and there is feeling in some quarters that the incumbents may have a fight on their hands to win re·election. San Juan Shifts Gears, . . Heads for New Goal By LAURIE KASPER Of 111e 0.11, ~ ... sun The New Year in San Juan Ca pis tr ano may be a yearol fruition. It may be a time when the work of past years is implemented and the emphasis or city leaders shifts a bit. This year, city officials say, they should be able lo concentrate less on the legal instruments needed lo achieve their goals and more on pro· viding the concrete things people de· sire in the city. Ever since a citizens' committee revised the city's goals in 1973, the Ci· ty Council and its staff have been creating the tools needed to imple· ment their new objectives. The city's revised general plan, a buildin1 moratorium, land use management code and multi-year budget have each been aatep toward these 1oals. • But this month's city council ap· prov al of a growth management pro· gram was considered a giant step forward. Once just a sleepy little mission town, San Juan in recent years has evolved into the fastest growing city in the county. The growth manage. ment program, however, will limit development to 400 units n year. "We're trying to preserve as much as possible the principal charac- teristics of this area which has made it a desirable place to live," ex· plained Mayor Douglas Nash. As a result, explained City Manager James Mocalis, much of the CSeeSAN JUAN,Page40) REALTORS m REALTOR't THE VOICE FOR HUNTINGTON BEAOf -FOUNTAIN VALLEY PROPERTY OWNERS. WE'RE CONCERNED WHERE YOU'RE CONCERNED! Gl ~ Gff u l\f ~ ngtpit. GJleCU!l1. BOARD OF AIAlTOAI, INC . t 7U I OIACH BOUl.l!VAFIO, SV•TI J 847-eo93 <f OlUlti\) 1t,<'Vi\l lc~ • MULTIPLE LISTING HRVICf, INC. ~30.1 976 * DAN.. Y PU.or 3.1. From Page 1 DEVELOPMENT. • • groups get some of what they want, be said, crowded and polluted condi- tions are actually being created. "What we need Is one-banded politicians, not politicians," the CEEED director said. He preditted that the problems won't be solved until the people af- fected the most begin speaking up. That, he said, won't be until it re- aches a crisis stage. "Unfortunately, that is the only time when decisions can be made, when crisis is reached," he said. He believes such facilities as new FromPage2 BAY. • • A maJor part of the project will be construction of a 2,000-square·foot nature center which will function both as an educational and a public viewing facility. At present, fish and game officials favor a l 25 acre site along the eastern side of the bay near the mouth of Big Canyon. There would be parking for 70 cars and 15 buses at the center where of- ficial! expect to draw 500,000 visitors a year. Jt would be separated from the mainland by a channel to pro- vide better security. Visitors would enter the center via a short boardwalk from the parking area. Ralph Young, fish and game in- formation officer, hopes the edut'a- tional stance of the nature center will h~lp increase awareness and respect for the unJque atta. At present, use of the bay is rather informal. It's a good place to jog, bicycle or sit back with a SundAly picnic and enjoy the birda. But there are potential problems surrounding tbe project. It bu not yet been determined what effett additional traffic will have on narrow Back Bay Drive, whi ch will rundion as one ot the J1ain actess roads to the proposed center. And the fate of lhe proposed Upper Bay Sewer line ls sWI undecided. It's a difrkult double-bind situation. The SS00,000, two mile ~er line proposed by Oranee County Sanita- tion District is needed to replace one that threatens lo ovtrllow into the wildlife retuce II raWall exceeda the winter aver-a1e (14 lncbea). The cut lroo Jine would run from th<' Newport Dones along Back Bay Drive to Big Canyon and along the south aide of tbe can yon to Jamboree . Road. Fearil\a environmental damage, the Fribleh or Newport Bay opposed the plan untll sanitation officials agreed to 12 conditions In November to insure minimal en\'tronmental impat't to the Upper Bay Wildlife J)relt'ne. However, t'Ven with the support.of the Friends, the South Coast Jte:cjooal Zone Conservation Com· mission has repeatedly denied a con- stTuclion pumil. The proje(l will be delayed until al least next sprtn1, alter the winter rains. Allotber source o( t'Ontroversy coocn-niog tlle Upper BQ)' ls the pro- poset extenilon of University Drive across a serment at bay land. The proposal met hQstllc react.ions from a variety ol torces and the project Is currenUy dormant. if nol dead. WbUe tbe Upper Bay ls seemingly inundated with real or potentiaJ pre>- blems, the concern over the area Is p posttlve of its Importance to m roads are needed. He said the solu· tioa lo these problems lies ln plan- ning witb orderly Crowth to assure that the best development is possi- ble. In this effort, be said, both sides will have lo give in on some issues. But Mrs. Grindle objects tbal county supervisors are allowing de- velopment to spread out too much and skip over other land which could be built on. By allowing this urban sprawl to continue, she said, govemment of- ficials are not looking al the pro- blems <!ownstream and are causing taxes to rise. Such things as air quality and the ability of society lo pay for the necessary services and facilities to accommodate people who come along with development are not be- ing t'dnsldered, she said. Studies have shown that it is less C<JeUy lo leave tbe outer land in an area vacant, she said. Sbe cited the residential develop- ment which bas been approved along El Toro Road, north of the San Diego Freeway, as an example. As building moves further and further out., she aaid, every mile will cost a taree sum of money for highways, police, schools and libraries. But land nearer to existing facilities could have been developed. Mn. Grindle objected that de- velopers and others processing pro- jects through the approval process are paid to do that job. .. The citizens are at a terrible dis· advantage because they are making a living elsewhere" and are reliant on their elected and appointed of- ficiala, sbe said. NOW THERE ARE t • THREE OUTST AMDIMG COLLEGES SERVING THE COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT I. Coastline Community ~ollege •.••...••••••• 963-0824 2. Golden West College .••••••••••••••••• 893-6581 /82 3. Orange Coast College .•••••••.•......•• 556-5735 /36 AND THESE OFFER • I OOO's of fascinaffncJ courses -lust look through their class schedules. • television c~ for credit -nine selections for spring '77 • • fast compuferhed rec)istration and/or enroHment by mail. • 120 complete vocational programs • .....-getlc: students for cooperative educaffonal •rc:wKJernenfs. SCHOOL BEGINS FEB. 7 - ___ J . -3:2 DAILY PILOT December 30, t 976 From page one FR EEWAYS ... stretc!'I of 1.3 miles. Cost of the pro- ject is $8.9 million, according to CalTrans spokesman Dick Stevens. The cost is high, Stevens ex- plained, because the route includes a bndge over the San Diego Creek. The proJect is expected to be com- pleted in January. The second project is construction of the Corona del Mar Freeway from the San Diego Freeway to the Route SS interchange. From page 3 NEWPORT. • • Jamboree Road where workers from Newport Center come and go on their way to the freeways . A two-road expressway system along Bristol Street, planned to be put out to bid in 1977, is contemplat- ed by CalTrans and city officials see it as a partial solution to that traffic problem. The 1.1 mile link, whJ ch includes a bridge at Bear Street, will cost $7 .3 million. CalTrans of(icials expect that project to be completed by early March. Beach traffic typical of Orange Coast shores. One of the major projects the city will b<' working on in 1977 in the com- puterized lraUic model which City Manager Bob Wynn says will be r e· ady by July or August. City councilmen invested $55,000 in the model which will be used to analyze not only existing problems and their solutions, but the impact from future development of uny kind. From page 3 A three-level interchange between the Corona de! Mar Freeway and Route ss. plus the continuation of the Corona del Mar route to Red Hill Avenue is the third CalTrans pro-ject. That Sl3 7 million job is expected to be completed in January also. From there, plans call for a fron- tage road, extending from the Corona del Mar Freeway near Red Hill to the realigned MacArthur Boulevard. Stevens said Ca!Trans "could ad· vertise as early as spring for the $5 lltillion coniract." That stretch would include two frontage roads on either side of the excavation along Bristol Street. Each road will have three lanes to carry traHic t o MacArthur Boulevard. OCTD. • • operate and complement one another. Also during 1977, Clark said, direc- tors will study rais ing fares, purchasing form er Pacific· Electric right-of-way for future rapid Lransit uses and disengaging OCTD ac· counting and purchasing from Orange County government. Hollinden s aid he hopes to see OCTD become more aware of operating costs, lo try and loy.>er them or at least hold them constant despite inflation. And he said he hopes OCTD's force of bl.IS drivers and employes can take a leadership role In increasing district productivity. Hollinden said that federal of- ficials, the source of much OCTD re· venue, are placing more and more emphasis on costs. lie fears some fundin g sources could dwindle if YOUR COMMON NEIGHBORS DOING lW~©@rMJ~@~ THINGS Fo1cl Arro\race & Communications Cor por.11 1011 's Aeronutron1c 011, 1mm J 1 NPWpo1 t Beach 1s 200 i1C1('5 (If l.i11d Wrth ''"IJHlC'('I ong l.cbor a101 ·c~. 11•sea1ch f<Jc1l1t1e~. nrecr\1011 man11 I ,ccturinq a•''"~ .:ind M1m1111strJt1ve offices. Bui 11 '\ more than thot It's reonlo·. Thr>y'1e vour neighbors .. wo1 1<.1n9 on advanced technology programs to hi-Ip solve the nrohlems of today and tumo1row. They're thl! fleOple who developed a small in frared sensor which rs hclµinq the r orcst Service in 24·hour surveillance to aid in fire rrotec11on, and is al\O being used to monitor critical components in the Alaska oil p1pel1ne throuqh airh<>rne Inspection ••• Tht>V'1e the people working on advanced de fense systems to help ensure the cont1nu1ng frt>edom of FrPe World nations. They're your common n~19hbors ••• doing UNCOMMON things. , --Ford Aerospace & Communications Corporation Aeronutronic Division OCTD can't prove it spends each dollar as productively as possible. Alone the Orange Coast in 1977. OCTD officials expect: -To bui Id a S2. l 7 million transportation center behind the Huntington Center mall. -To work with Laguna Beach of. ficials on improvements al the Laguna Beach Depot. -To study building a transporta- tion center adjacent to Laguna lulls Mall. The area currenlJy has a park· and-ride service with 230 buses daily carrying about J ,000 passengers. -To buy two acres at. Newport Beach's Fashion Island fo1· a future transportation center. ~And to study d eveloping a permanent park-and-ride facility at Crown Valley Parkway aod the San Diego Freeway. MODEL IS KEY Wynn said that the modd is going to be one of the key tools used in gauging the Impact of the remaining Irvine Company <levetopment on uie city's traffic system. ' But the city is not going to be ex- clus ively concerned with traffic. One of the city council's major project's in 1977 will be the open space and park bond election set for March8. Councilmen have formed a blue ribbon committee of civic leaders to push the $7. l million bond issue which is aimed at buying pieces of land which are under the threat of cJ~velopmenl. Jn all. the money will buy 150 acres in 15 different locations. In addition, 10 percent of the funds will go toward improvements in existing parks. YOUR WISHES CAN COMB TIU.I! Buying or selling real property tokes "KnowHow.'' It's not a job for the inexperienced. A fXOfessional understands the many legal and financial complexities which may arise in ony transfer of real property. Expert advice is available to you. Look for the Realtor emblem. It· s your assurance of pro f essionof know how in real estate matters. We're os close os your phone. -.. December 30. 197« DAILY PILOT 33 T77 in SCin. Clemente a 'Working' Year By JACK CHAJIPELL Of 1"-D•lly f'lloUU.11 The year 1977 will bring b<)th re- adily visible changl'S in the ap· pearance of San Clemente as well as inter nal improvements designed to make city . government function mor e smoothly and efficiently. That's the assessm ent of City Ma n ag<'r G€.'r a ld Weeks , San Clemente '~ chief administrative of· ficer. Weeks !>aid the city will be further along with Ul·quis1tlon of property for n new county branch library, that signifi cant advancement will be made with pur chase of propert y in From Page 4 COSTA MESA Cannariatu, sa1<l l111s year 's gr:rnt of $508,000 was put. to good us~ m the community . The funds allowed the city to con· tinue its project for senior citizens, the handicapped a nd low incom e families. Besides the low-cost housing pro- gram, the agency is using the federal grant lo acquire and develop downtown ar<'a sites for recreational center s for senior citizens and childre n. Funds arc also being used for con· tinuaUon or the housing r ehabilita· tion program, which consists of gr ants or low-Inter est lo ans lo qualified low.income Costa Mesans whowanl to upgrade their homes. E ME RGENCY HOUSING Continu ation or the e mergency housing ser vice, which provides shelter t o persons referred from churches a nd other ch ar ily or- ganizations, also rt-ccived funding this year. Costa Mesa is making progress toward public purchase of lowlands areas in the wei.tern portion of the city. And Sorsabal says he hasn't dis- counted the possibility that the city someday m ay have Its own m annB ·ws StJJI our goal, but we h;Jve to re- sol ve m:iny conflicts," Sors abal 'laid. NO MOR E 1'1ARJNAS? Jh' uld the coastal commission 'IJS said ther<' will be no more rt1annus along Soulhn11 Cul1fornia's ~oastllnc. but lhC' CllH'S or Costa MMu and N<'wJ)(lrt Bcuch favor the 1dt1:t The city Is olc;o lookl.n& Into the purcho~e of 35 :iC'rM In wMt Cost;; Ml'Sa for Oll<'n 11p~H'<' "If 11 l>c•part mcnl of Interior grant com1·" throu1th. It ml.iht be possible to n :laan the-npe n spat e in the ca· nyon~ a r<'a, · · SM:rnblll sald. The c·aty council nuthori zed the <'i· ty to '1€.'<'k $450,000 in Land a nd Water C'o11!<Cn <•tum ~·und Prouram m11ncy'i for tht• c ~II\) onl4 ,irC'.l 111 w1·~t ('o~ta M1...,a ''1li.' pl\r('c•I woull1 hccome o~n ~lla<'c land und would not be de· \'t-'lopcd or molntmncd to a grcaL dt'gr<'t' durinft that period. Acqu isition of thnt land would hr· inJ{ the Wt'sts id <' up lo pur in 1l~ ratio of purkland Completion or th1' far!>t phase of the S.560,000 TcWin klc lhll project 1:1 ex- pet'ted nf'xt )'f':lr, with a Juke'. bicy cle and foot trnil~ to ~ instolled on the huJlc• d irt m ound 011 J\rlinl(lon i\V('nU(' the city's J"ed evelopment project and continuing improvements will be made in the city's woe-plagued sewer syst em. MORE RECREATION Addition ally, the city's recr eation offerings will expa nd on a self- susl aining b asis offering citizens classes and opportunities. The city's $365,000 Bonito Canyon Park, as a bicentennial project, will have ex· panded use for r ecreation. Major im provements arc due to be made in the city 's sewage collection , treatment a nd disposal system , som e improve the quality or treat· ment, some designed to prevent the sewage spUls which occurred seven llmes lhi& year . A n ew $1 m illion sewer Line should be in operation thereby relieving an overloaded m ain and pump syst em responsible for the spills. REDE VELOPMENT DUE The city's rede velopment project aims al completing acquisition or major portions of the oceanfront land in the bowl area near the pier making the property · available for renovation and landscaping. A <'On· sultant is expected to complete a plan for the a rea at m idyear The library s ite acquisition is ex- pected to be nearing completion. GOOD NEWS FOR .. The city Js looking al eight lots near the present community center. Once acquired by the city, the county will fund <'Ons truction or a new, and needed, library, weeks said. While the int ernal cha nges in m unicipal gover nment won't be as visible as the physical changes In the town's a ppear ance, Weeks s aid they should provide the citizens with Im· proved service. Major ch anges are expected in the personnel a rea with the clty formal· ly updating job categories ond salaries. '77 • • • • • • FROM YOUR ·w ATER DISTRICT -LOWWA.TERRATES- COSTA MESA FOUNT A.IN VALLEY IN A RECENT SURVEY conducted by the DAILY PILOT, out of 11 neighboring communities surveyed, the COSTA MESA COUNTY WATER DISTRICT was listed as second lowest in terms of related cost to the homeowner. -llG IMPROVEMEMTS .;._ NEW WATER MAINS Over i o.000 feet ol new waler mains installed last year NEW FIRE HYDRANTS 128 MW firo hydrants lor a lotal of 2.550 NEW WATER METERS· 976 new meters. for a total ot 18.600 1n the D1slrlr.I NEW WA TEA WELL Now a total ot 3 well.4 operating. more plal'lnP.d NEW HEADQUARTERS M<><e centralized, more elf1clent. rower cost costa mesa mrtY W.-. llltrdi ··: we're llU' W8' prq• -MOTill!S- THIS DISTRICT operates on water revenue only YOU PAY NO TAXES TO THE COSTA MESA COUNTY WA TEA OISTRICTI And with a No. 2 flre Insurance rilling, one of the best tatings In the Stale. YOU PAV LOWER FIRE INSURANCE PREMIUMS. COSTA MESA COUNTY WATFR 01sTr.1c T I. S No ').lOO Costll Mt•&ll, C1.1llfom111 1111>16 l•l.,phor(' 71'1 S'.1C. '..210 .. - .. . .. 34 DAILY PILOT Decembe< 30. 1911 ~.....::.:~.;...:...:.=.;:;..;._~~~~~~~~----~~--~~~~~~--~~~~~~ ......... ~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--:=-~--.:.,.. H.untingtOn's Belt Tightening at an End Surplus in 1976 May Lead to Cuts in· Future City Tax Rates By ROBERT BA.BK.Ell Of tM D~lly ~SUH What a difference a year has made for the city of Huntington Beach. Last year at this time, the city was in the midst. or painful financial stress and there was a great deal of bell-tightening lo make ends meet. David Rowlands, who was lhe city adll'linistrator at the time, ordered cutbacks throughout all depart• menls, and the word went out lo all to hold the line. At the lime, Rowlands said it was a miracle that the cily made it through the year because or soaring cosL<> and ever increasing demands on revenues. The financial picture has taken a dramatic turn for the better in 1976. New c ity adminis trator Bud Belsito said the city has experienced something akin to a "boom year." "I have high hopes of entering lhe new year\\ ilh a healthy surplus," he said. "If lhe tr<.'nd continues. C think the city will be in a pos1t1on to ofCcr a substantial tax cut lo residents in 1977." he said Belsito said the city is experienc- ing its greatest year in history for building permits. Building Direct.or John Behrensi said if the present rate continues, valuation of building permits will be $135-140 million. Belsito also pointed out that the Weist>r Company division of No~~s f"'9 lJC). 't I"• tv~ +'ll If\• 9'•.tW I • I j• ,,. f ~.,,cw-.-~•. c.1....-.c ~ ..... CO--""~~ 'llfllil t , •• ttw .-.1 '61t r' An"" A th " ,.....,u • ti.a , oe<:••• n. l.W'\I Industries is being developed in the city. The firm, which manufactures re· sidenlial and commercial door hardware, is expected lo employ up to 3,000 residents when fully com- pleted in two lo three years. In addition, Belsito said that Hunt- ington Beach residents arc buying al a record pace, particularly ln build· ing supplies and automobiles and auto supplies. Economic Oe\'<.'lopmcnl Officer Bill Back said that if the momentum continues, the s tate would be return· ing to the city $1 million more in SJles taxes than in 1976. Federal money also broiling ln. A city otricial said that the ex- h.'nsion of the :eneral revenue shar· ing program will guarantee the city about $800,000 for the fir::.t half of the fiscal year. Figures for tbc second half of the fi scal year have not been de- termined. The city also will get S2 4 million in Comptehensive and Trruning Act <CET A> runds for the fiscal year as well as $1.2 million in Housing and Community Development funds. In addition to those imposing figures, the city was the beneficiary or a 23 perc<.'nt in crease in assessed \aluation this year. receiving $750,000 more th<in the previous year . Another bright spot in the city's financial outlook, according lo ,, yOlJ "1·• "'''*'. hU'I "• ,.., 'M'ft. NI# OVW' nt» "~ '°" noc ltl• •8 ~ '"-.. , ~ l20i -1 ~ -J10o o!f~ -_..."'l _ • ••• ae "'•O• -""tlO•m•f'IC• 6 •• f' .. ,0 ••• ,, ..,.,,_IJ'•CA On.Ip c-t(t Mott Modent IMW DMMr FACTORY JJITHOIHU:D SALES, ll.ASIHG & SERVICE Good Selec1ion of EKo4"1enl lrade-IM available 1977 BMW Belsito, 1.s that salary negotiations have been reached for all but a handful of city employes. Despite the unexpected bonanzas, Belaito said the majority or lhe city COWlcil ( elt it couJdn 'l cutthe proper· ty tax this year. "CouncU members felt they were just coming out of a serious financial situation and they wanted to get on solid footing." he said. Belsito said one of the city's most urgent needs was to take care of capital needs that had been neglect· ed during times ol the financial crunch. "We want lo build up funds so that there won 'l be one big expenditure al the time things start breaking down," he said. He said fire engines, public works trucks and inspection vch1ch.•s arc equipment that need to be provided for. Belsito, 42, who was made perma· nenl city administrator last July, wasn't the only new face in city of- ficialdom. Richard Harlow has been <.'lcvatl'<l from planning director to assistant city administrator and Edward Selich was moved up to acting plan- ning direct.or. Three new city council members took office in April. They are Mayor Pro Tern Ron Pal· Linson, Ron Shenkman and Richard Siebert. They replaced Don Shipley, Henry Duke and Jerry Matney who cbo5e not lo l'un for reelection. Belsito said that the three newcomers have bro ught a fresh outlook to the city "which bas been great.' 'They have been bringing up concerns that needed to be explored,'' he said. Belsito said he hopes that 1977 will l>ring some form of redevelopment to the downtown area. The revamp plan became a highly emotional is· sue during the latter part of the year and virtually dominated city affairs. "It appears that consideration w:l!ln 't taken into the extent of 6p· position lo the plan,'' Belsito said. "I hope we can go \\-i lb redevelop · ment on a limitc.'<1 scale and that something can be worked out with ils critics." he added. ''I don't think it's dead and I feel that it should be reconstituted lo reflect the concerns or citizens and alleviate their objections," Belsito said. Belsito said another issue facing the city in the n<.'w y<.'ar is what to do with the 1,603 acres of the Bolsa Chica marshl ands that lie on the western border of the city. , He said he hoped to see it annexed by lhecity. "We are providing services for the area, and I wouJd like to see re· venues coming lo the city to finance a master plan for the area. He said he is optimistic that the area can be m~ster planned for its most desirable uses. Our offices save your energy. Newrort Center can save you personal energy, save your employees· energy and save on your energy bills, too. Conservation-conscious construction helps. So do business community efforts such a.5 Project Independence, which encourages car pooling, use of public transportntion and conservation of utilities. Executives and staff alike can find outstanding homes in Irvine Villages. Recreation abounds. And since Newport Center and the villages and the recreation arc part of an 83,000· acre master plan.getting around is easier. And nicer. Saving mental and physical energy for everybody. And making fo r happier employees. With a lot more energy, For /rosing liifomrotfon, rontart 1•n11r bro/..l'r or Donald E. Moe. dl1tttor of commrrciol morJ.e1i11g. 17tl" l n·lnr Company, 6/U f\'rwpnrt Ce1111"1 Drfrr, N<wport BNch, <:a. 9l6fJJ. (714) 64~·3011. NE"Wl»ORT ~j CENTER by 1HE IRVINE CD\'1PNI/'( December ~. 1976 * DAILY PILOT 35 Planning, Design Brighten Irvine's View Uy lllLARYkAYE Of l~t D•tly PtlOf Si.ft Irvine May-0r Dave Sills looks back on 1976 as being a year of pro- gress for the young city. And, he .thinks tm will be even better The mayor cited planning and growth management surveys deal- ing with economics, urban design, housing preference and others that are helping city offi cials figure out how to best deal with the city's fUlu a c. • Sills pointed out that the dialog in· itiated with the plaintiffs in the fair housing lawsuit against Irvine and The l rvine Company is significant. Nothing has been settled yet in the suit, but al least the two s ides arc talking and the city and Irvine Com- pany have extended an out-of-court settlement offer. Sills said. Jumping all the way back to the beginning of his term as mayor, Sills commented that he was pleased with the "good, clealt campaigns" waged by candidates in the March city council election . Sills. took offi ce after that election along with Bill Vardoulis and Mary Ann Gaido. Sills aJso boasted that the city finished m the black and even bad a surplus in the budget of $50,000. He noted that the city also lowered the general tax rate to 31.S-cents, the second lowest rate in Orange County (behind Yorba Llnda). According to the mayor. the com- pletion of the new interim civic center on Jam boree Boulevard was also an important fe ature of the past year. He said t.hf' new city hall will ena. ble more efflcient work by city staff members a nd said that t.axpayers will benefit because the building was built as an industrial building, not a typical city ha ll . "When tim e comes to sell the building and m ove into permanent qua rte rs, we can easily sell the buildmg and make a profit.'' said Sills Another plus for lhe city is its "low profile" police department. accord· ing to the m ayor. ''I get tons of compliments about the police department in Irvine. I must be the o nly mayor who gets more compliments than criticism about the police," he said. Looking forward, Silla predicted that the same planning and growth control f'mphasis will be carried forward during l977. "It's not likely that any future city council will.overturn the city's cm pbasls on planning. It's tradition here and I think the citiuns would be up in arm" If the council decided io dlaregard such past pollcles," said Sills He said he belie ves the growth management approach is valuable for Irvine and that the city's con· lJouous planninii k~ Irvine from being like ''some of the ur ba n messes we ~l'e tlsewherc." Chemists Cite Dan'gers Damctge to the rart.h's protec· live atmospheric ozone layer by fluorocarbons commonly used in many aerosol spray containers and refrigeration unlt.s was fint predict· ·«1 by two UC Irvine chemists, Dr. F . Sherwood R.owland and Dr. Mario J , Molina. / But be said he understands why it Is difficult for the Irvine Company to market such commercial products, since Ir vine's population is relative- ly sm all and spread out. But Sil hi sars he Uunks it shouldn't be a m atter o real concern, s mt>e he does not believe the new owner will have much of an impact on the c\ty of lrvine. Sills predicted that the coming year would yield a budget surplus even larger than this year's $50,000 surplus. . . '•And I thin)< we can hold the line on the t ax rate, if not lower it," Sills added. • ''The city council and city com- missions are very independent and I don't think things will change in Irvine jus t because the Irvine Com- pany is owned by someone else," he said. The mayor also noted tha t people in Irvine are generally "jittery" about who will buy ttie lrvtn~ Com· .,.u1y, "l think it wo uld be a re al mistake for the new owne r to come in here ;llld try to ch ange things around, and I think the new owner, whoever it ii', When you Irvine national Tll illlJBmi bank ~11 Irvine Nalion:il, you get a !>nlllc "-ilh your money. At The IN Bw1k smilc'i arc cont.1giou ... and everybody has them. The'} mpt-0ms include a ''arm, friendly reeling that's in keeping with the imaginative, progressive way e we do hanking. Come b:ink with us. Catch a '>mile Tnke ii home. Pase; it on. lrvine ·llalional Bank Acro'ls MacAnhur Boulevard (rom Orange Counry Alrporr at 2 171 C:i mpus Drive, Irvine. ://. ("11 4) 833-3700 Hours· Mon -Thur<i. I 0 11 m 10 5 p.m., Fri to 6 p.m. Motor Banking. daily 9 a.m. to S:30 p.m., Friday to 6 p.m. ) I \ J wilJ r ealize that," S1Usscnton. Another thing to watch for in 1977 is a citywide eucalyptus tree policy, Sllls said. "Euc alyptus trees have great qualities other trees don't have - such a s being able to thrive in smoggy areas. The trees may be messy, but they're the only trees we've got and I think we should keep them," s aid Sills. "I think more people want the big, old trees than the 'loUypop' trees we plant here that won't be big even after we're all gone," the mayor .added. Mtmbtr r 0.1.C. - • 38 DAIL V PILOT Decelftbet30, 1976 Fountain Valley FaCing Pivotal Year 81 BAY ESTBADA : OfhO•llyNecJ~ Ar. Fountain Valley moves into adulthood ln 1977, city officials see 1976 as a pivotal year in the city's change from residential to industrial growth. The young, bedroom community or Fountain Valley will celebrate its 20th year of incorporation in 1977. Gooe are the years of adolesence. But on the horizon are about seven years of light industrial develop- ment primarily in the city's eastern section. About 3,200 acres in Fountain Valley have or soon will have hous- ing units on them. Only 187 residen- tial acres remain to be improved, city planners said. With the adoption or the city's re- development pl:ins in 1976, officials hope to see Fountain Valley's in· dustrial growth potential fully re· alized by 1983. "It may have taken us twice that long without redevelopment," said Mayor Al Hollinden. "Now, our only residential de· velopment will be on corners and in smaller parcels. Our commercial growth will be relative lo our popula· lion growth," the mayor added. The city has developed about 200 acres of its 343 commercial acreage. A separate city center com- mercial redevelopment plan was adopted along with its industrial coWlterpart. The city center plan encompasses the land near the intersection of Brookhurs t Street and Slater Avenue. The Area extends as far north along Brook burst 's east side to La Alameda Avenue and down Slater to the area around the Civic center. The city center plan also includes a parcel on the northeast side of Brookhurst Street and Talbert . Avenue. This site has been eyed for a possible hotel location be<:ause of its location adjacent to the San Diego Freeway, a city planner said. The industrial redevelopment plan en compa sses an a r ea bounded by the Santa Ana River, Warner Avenue, Euclid Street, Talbert Avenue, Ward Street a: m HLIS and Ellis Avenue. Most of the project area is current- ly under agricultural use. The southern section ol the redevelop- ment project, intersection by the San Diego Freeway, is already partially developed. The mayor said he expects Fouo- t a in Valley's once plentiful agricultural land to be<:ome a thing of the past within five years if mosl new industrial development occurs on schedule. Along with redevelopment, o~ ficials point to the 22-cent city lax rate cut as one of Fountain Valley's 1976 highlights. City Manager James Neal said the city tax rate now stands at $1.21 per $100 assessed valuation. WARNER SLATI:R TALBERT City officials believe the develop· mcnt of recrcallon.U facilities in Fountain Valley bavepeaked. "It may be one of our toughest jobs to provide enough space for the many youth sports programs in our community," said llollinden. AJthough facility expansion may not occur , the variety and innovation in recreation programs in the city will continue as before. the mayor added. Als". the mayor said, :m increase In t'ornmoroiol r oc:rcotlunal facilities can be expected. Thls may come in the form of new tennis and raquetball facilities, he said. "But you never know what will be popular tomorrow." the mayor said. 11We have a higher proportion of recreational facilities than any other city in Orange County," said Hollinden. "This is due to the type of residents we have and the fact that we are In the center ol things from a transportation viewif>int." he said. As far as administrative changes in the city, officials forecast few if any. City councilmen will elect a new mayor among themselves when llollinden's term expires in March. Hollinden . a'n Orange County Transit District director. said one in- novation may be in store for Foun- tain Valley residents sometime in rnid-1977. The city center plan is designed to spark commercial development and provide a recognizable downtown area, Fountain Valley officials said. Map shows Fountain Valley's proposed new City Center (upper left) and lndu1trJ11I Area (rtght) In an effort to facilitate more or- derly lrafric now through the city. a sychronized speed limit may be established along Brookhurst Street by July, Hollinden said. FLY .FREE! FREE & REDUCED joint fares are available from all Golden West Airline's Cities to and from Los Angeles, to most major U.S. Cities. The next time you fly AIR CANADA, AMERICAN, CO NTI NENTAL, DELTA , EASTERN, HUGHES AIR WEST, NATIONAL, NORTHWEST, TEXAS INTERNATIONAL, TRANS • WORLD AIRLINES, UNITED, ANO WESTERN AIRLINES be sure to ask about our joint fares. Don't fight the crowded freeways anymore ... FLY the FREE WAYS of Golden West Airlines. -· JACOBS REAL JY 2919 Newport llvd. ConMr of 30tll St. Newport Beach• 675-6670 Wishes To Thank The Many Friends That Have Displayed Full Confidence In Us Throughout The Year. -AMD - To The HewcOmers, Welcome We are looking forward to serving your Real Estate needs in the future. Thanks in advance for calling us. Real Estate Sales ProfeulOftal Wffll YOUR Real &tah Mffd Alway1 Rnt hi Mind :i.. J December 30. 1976 Clly of Irvine p.,,, '" O t:IAH Coastal Area Mmo 11111 DAIL V PILOT 37 r- 1 --·""'-.J e,eac."---~ L119una r _, The Irvine Company has received county zoning approval for coastal area development. The plans cell• for development of the area with a predicted population of 50,000. Three-fourth• of lend wm be open to the pubtlc for recreational use, Including the beaches and lovely old sycamores In Moro Canyon. Irvine Advancing Green Shows Parks Effort O.lt~ .. ,._.""°lolly G .. ,,_ Ltlcll t Laguna Beach Works Move Toward Ending The fifth year of cityhood brought change and added responsibility lo the new town of Irvine. ' City Manager Bill Woollctt and As- sistant City Manager Paul Brady conclude Irvine is definitely moving forward -at a rapid rate. One of the first significant changes came in March. when three new peo· pie were seated on the Irvine City Council. creating a new majority that helped inject freshness into cit y affairs. The last change of 1976 came just this month, when the entire city staff moved from I rvinE.' Town Center into By J AC'K C'llAPPF.1.1. Beachlleights . n ew quarters o n Jamboree 011 ... DA•1• ...... siatt Theal !>aid it 1s cxl)('Clcd interim Boulevard. M aJOr Lai.:un.1 Reac·h proJccts, safE.'ty improvements will be made It's a temporary facility, but is ex- 01w. two :ind t•\'l'n threl') c•ar!. an the on Laguna Canyon Road. peeled to house city employes until a mJk1nt.t ou~hl 111 Ix' culminated in The city will dedicate its new oermanent citv hall is built -at 1977 Human Affairs /Recreation Depart· tcastfive years into the future. The r('sult \\ill bt' :.1.in1f1Ninl v1:. ment facility i;hortly uncr th<' first of One look at the new green areas in ual Jnd funl'11onal 1mµrc1\C•mcnts in the year. ExpandC'd service!> will be town shows what was done in 1976 the c.-om mu111l). C.:1ty Managl•r /\I avaiJabll· to senior cit11.cns with the city's parks' program. Thl•al !.u1d in .m 1nh'rv1cw Four new parks were developed - Tht.•al !.;11d hl' l'Xl>c.'<'h lh1· c·1ty'<; A t t Harvard Athletic, University Com· financial 1>0-.1twn to n·m.un stron~ n ea ers munity, Iloeptner and Culverdale dl·sp1tc maJor t·11mm1tml·11b to the Wilderness Parks . $35 m1ll1on Ali ... 11 ~ ,tlt>r M:rnagcment Set Record Work was begun at the massive Ag<'ncy Sy ... 11•m . ,1 n •i.:icm.11 '-t"Wagl• Heritage Park site on Wa lnut trc.•<ttm<'nl 1•11111, of "h11•h Lai:una Al the end of their first JO years Avenue, which will offer a wide ar· Jk;ich 1s •• m1•m1>1•r of inter<·ollegiale alhJ<'t•c compcti ray offacilities. Thl· m o't r1•,111th c1 pparcnl lion lust vear, the UC Irvine An It was also the year when the city changt'S Wiii hl• Ill lht' .1rca nf public tcalers accomphshro what no other council and school board agreed lo works college or university ever had done fund and build an athletic stadium al A w1dt.•n 1n~. realignment and before -win more national ch am the new Irvine High School. Teams landscaping program for Coast pionships 031 than the numh<'r of from Irvine and University High Hlghway a' 11 pass('S through the years they had bc<'n in cx1st(•nce Schools will now be able to play downto'4 n area ouabt to be un-home games and Irvine residents derway and the rity alms to continue A t t ? y 8 t may use the stadium at other times, toil:. streN tr('(' plantin~ pro~rams n ea er . OU e under a city-school district agree- Thc Park M ermrud proi:ram for Tht> UC Irvin<' Anteutcr takes its ment. providing low cos t housin~ to senior pl ace alongside• the Arka nsas An added boon for Irvine residents citizens will be through its fc>asib1lity Razorback Hog, the Nebraska this year w as the addition or stud1<'s and Thc•al s;.i1d lhc C'ity will Cornhusker, the Tt.•xas Chnst1;.in paramedic service. Under contract have a n idea whl•th(•r it can go ahead Horned Frog, the Florida Gator, the with the Orange County Fire Depart· ornot North Carolina Tar lkcl and the ment, par amedics responded to The CrcM'l'r\t Ray Point park de· Minnesota Golctcn Coph<'r as one of 1,397 calls through November and \'clopment ought to l~ undl'rway as America's more unusual collegiate transported 900 patients lo nearby w•ll ··t~~~~~~nilnlc ____ ~-·--- The rrvine Police department Un· dcrwent changes, too. An animal services dt.>parlmcnl was added, taking on the responsibility of animal control services within Irvine. The city had previously con- tracted with the county _for the service. Police began a crime prevention program, hiring three public safety aides who conduct burglary preven- tion inspections, vacation house checks, assist in rape prevention seminars and provide an overall preventative approach to crime in Irvine. City hall generally underwent a transformation, with the regular lineup being s haken up. The city manager reassigned many among city personnel. Among lhe major changes, a city building department was added and is scheduled to go in- to effect early·next year. Other notables during 1976 in· eluded: A Senior Cili:r.ens Advisory Committee was established. An Arts Committee was established, to help plan the new theater in University Town Center. The Irvine Harvest Festival was bigger than the year before despite rainy weather. -A bicycle bridge over the rallroad tracks at Yale Avenue was built. The city worked with the Irvine Company to bring about lhe begin- nings of the massive Irvine Auto Center. Sour notes of the year were heard, too. ThE.'r e was the ''battle o( berm," in which the city lowered and then r aised the dirt mound surrounding the adventure playground. Then, the wooden fence o n the berm was moved from site to site. Residents' 38 DAILY PILOT * December 30. 1978 South Coast Repertory Reginald Rook and Sharon Crabtree In South Coast Repertory'• production of "A Mldaurnmer Night'• Dream" QUAIL PLACE P ROPERTIES, Inc. INVESTMENTS ~ EXC11"NGES .JRESIOENflAI. S"LES RESIDENTIAL AND INVESTMENT SALES • TAX DEFERRED EXCHANGES • RELOCATIONS •INVESTMENTS Af)artment Units Business Opportunities Industrial Bldgs. & Paru Mobile Home Sites & Parks Shopping Centers Office & Medical Bldgs. Bondable l and •HOMES Waterfront l&Jand View Family & Kids Starter Fixer-upper Condominiums •LOCATION .. Centrally Located in the Orange Industrial and Office Complex. •llll TOL County, Newport-Irvine PIOPHTY MANAGEMENT A full staff t o do resident and off-site management o f houses. apartments and c ommerc i al property. ) t--------------~----------------1 1'°° QUAIL STREET• NEWPORT BEACH, CALI FORNIA 92660 TELEPHONE (714) 752-1920 Eyeing New Site South Coast Repertory will move from its 200-seat theatre on Newport Blvd. to a new 450-seat facility in the South Coast T own Center in Costa Mesa: Orange County's professional resi- d e nt th e a tre compa ny wi l l make the transition sometime in early 1978. Tbe-Pl.QYJt will be known as the "Fourth step:~ ~ --. been operating out its present Third Step Theatre since 1967. Prior to that, the actors performed in a 75-seat house amid the canneries of Newport Beach. The First Step consisted of a dozen young actors operating out of a van. Today, 11 years after its founding, South Coast Repertory is the fifth largest professional resident theatre in the State of California with an an- nual budget of $350,000. Jt bas presented over 100 plays and has twice received the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Achievement. The new theatre will be located on a one-acre site adjacent to the South Coast Plaza Hotel. It will eventually have 600-seats. The property was a gift to the com- pany by South Coast Plaza, a Segerstrom Family Partnership. Plans call for the construction or a 20,000 square foot facility on the site and initially the complex wiJI in· cl~de parking facilities, a set con· struclion area, rehearsal space,· classrooms for the Adult and Young People's Acting Conservatory and administrali ve offices. The theatre's Board of Trustees has been developing plans for a -1ar2ec lhe.alrP fnr u ... ,. ....... ~ .....JJ president steward Woodard. "We are delighted with the new locallon and Its close proximity to the San Diego freeway." He said the move will make it possible to "bring professional theatre to more inland county resi- dents, as well as to those on the South Coast.·· David Em mes and Martin Benson, South Coast Repertory's founders and artistic directors, say the ex· panded facility will enable the com· pany to realize a number of long range 1oals that up to now bad to be set aside because ol space limita-tions. "We will be in a position to attract more performers ol international caliber, ihcreue our ability to pro- vide audiences with exciting new properties and consider more technically challen1ing produc· tiona," said Emm~. OE. D.11!\ Su11jcl scMce from nC'-11by Ornnge County Airport. Pack<ig<? tours and economy f 1r1s for families ilnd !lroup<;, too So cilll t\.lr California first. If there's an easier way to gl't vou there. we'll be the first to tell 11ou. c;.,11 Ellsy lnlormiltion 1n Orllnge County. 1714) 7!:J2 Jt)(J(). Do1111e~. I:'\':) 'l~·i J :u. L.iguna (7141 '1'16 (,(KlO, l.o, 1\ngcl~s. (~I.II 027 G H1l , "·•" Uemente, (71·1) ll'IU <.t~~l. H!ver>ide San l\11•1JrJ;"" f7J.1))'12!j(/l(~) ur ~""' locdl 11,1vd .-igei.t. AIR. CALIFORNIA We're easy to cake. December 30, 1976 *~ DAILY PILOT 39 Year of Change, Mo~e for Newport Art Museum Change was the keyword for the Newport Harbor Art Museum this year. Not only did the museum hlre a new director, but it broke gl"OWld tor construction of a new f~.:ility. Harvey L . West, a former dire<:tor of lhe Was}tlngton State University Art Museum, was hired to take the helm of Newport's 15-year-old museum. He said museum personnel and art lovers are ecstatic about the move from c ramped quarters on the Balboa Peninsula -to the spacious, two-acre site in Newport Center. The move is 11cheduled to take place in April. "We feel this is an enormous addi· From Pag e 37 IRVINE ... complaint:. changed alm05t daily Then came the bicycle inotocro:.s mishap The city wound up • elocat ing the m otocross course 1n a vark in Woodbridge because residents who lived next to the first :.1le com- plamed lhey were never told 1t was being built and that It was too close tot.heir homes . Now . tbe city ls embroiled In anothtt possible relocation. Jtesi· dents who live next to the skateboard run in University Community Park have been asking that the course be put elsewhere, because they are be· ing plagued by noise and vandalism -even before the park was official· ly open. Capistrano Growth Largest In O.C. San Juan Capistrano, once a slttpy hlllc m1ss1on town, Is the fastrst growing city in Orange Coun· ly. according lo recent U.S. Bureau 0( Census figures. As of January l, 1976, the home of the swallows led the county with an 18.2 perct'nt popuJation increase since 1974. The city of Vllla Park was second with a growth of 17.3 percent, followed by the city or Irvine with a 15.9 percent population growth in lfo ·cars. Uon to the community and a major cultural development. We hope the new facility will cause more people to become involved with tbe museum's programs," said West. The 21,000-square-foot bulldlng will be located on a bluff, adjacent to the future home of a Newport Beach city library building, on San Clemente Road in Newport Center. It will contain five galleries, a sculpture garden, special projects area, bookstore and kitchen. Park- ing on the two acre site will accom- modate almost 100 vehicles. Museum personnel will move into the new facility In April and will spend the summer months prepar- Ing for the first exhibit and finalizing operational phases. The museum is slllled to open Sep- tember 16 (or a special "Museum Week" which will include a series or educational programs, events, lec- tures, films and guided tours for special groups in the area. David Park Ret.r~pedive is an exhibit scheduled ror showing Sep· tember 16 through November 13 and a special installalion by Tony Delap will be featured through Oc- tober 30. West said the business community has stepped forward to help reduce the cost or the $1.5 million structure. Tbe Irvine Company donated the ETHICS Jim F1schr r's PEOPLE MACHINE A New 01mens1on In Personnel Services land and the architectural firm of Langdon and Wilson donated its services. Construction is being done at cost by the Don Koll Company and Am· cord, Inc. has given cement. · "In terms of building materials and donations, we still need addi- tional support," be said. "We are presenUy very involved in a drive to increase museum mem- bership, and any other kind or materials or donations. We are hop- ing to have a very broad-based and vigorous membershlp group." The museum organization was founded in 1961 by a small group or citizens. R E L I A B I L I T y -QUALITY - TEMPORARY PERSO NNEL TECHNICAL CLERICAL INDUSTRIAL Q u A •.••...••••••....•.......•...••••......•........•...•••.... TEMPORARY KEY PUNCH OPE.RA TORS COMPUTER OPERATORS PROGRAMMERS ·······•·•······•·········································· -PERMANENT PERSONNEL - tECHNICAL CLERICAL INDUSTRIAL DATA PROCESSING ···························~--·~·~···················~··· ANAHEIM THE PEOPLE TUSTIN s34.os11 MACHINE 544.9392 A Pf.KSONNEL SERVICE All Costs Paid by Client Companies 1717 So. Stale College, Suile 280, Anaheim, CA 92803 17731 lrvlne Blvd .• Suite 113, Tuslln, CA 92680 SERVICE L I T y • • • • '. ~ :_ 40 C1AILV Pllor ' ": Decembe1 30. t978 \ ·, From Pa9e 30. . •• SAN JU.AN j SHIFTS 'GEARS ~~. city s!af('s effort has been directed toward "insurance activities" ... the kinds of things which will insure that the city isn't strangled by growth. Getting lhis d one has over· shadowed and sublimated other things, he said. But with this task completed. he predicted, "1977 will be a year when fruition occurs." Since the plans and progra ms have been conceived as "living kinds or documents," changes will be needed, he said. Still, he s aid, the growth management program is expected to be a solid, rational, objective and l<'&al uuidc to the future. With these plans, he said, Ute city council will be revising its five year budget to de te rmine how much money will be C<1ming in and what capiLal projects w 111 be funded. Planning a civic CC'ntcr complt:x. parks syste ms, equl''>lrian trail:-. and recr<'ational f acilities . . the amenities or "nice" thing'> p<·ople want 1n the city also v. 111 mov(.' ahead tn1977 Mocahssaid AhhQugh l\1 ayor Nash c11ns1dcrs the grov.lh management '~'t1·rn the most signlricant accomplishment of the year, he also noted that this year h as seen the completion or El Camino Real Park and the beginning of Rest StopPark. · With th~ h e lp or San Juan Beautiful, 200 trees were planted throughout the city, he recalled. Bike trails have been huill along the fl ood channel or marked on slre<>ts. And, the recreation program has been fully established and 1s "go ing strong now,'· he sajd, Two issues or this year. howcv<'r, will continue into the Nt•w Year Although voters r ejecl<'d an agnculturat prcservauon 1111:a;:iu. c in March, Nash said they will con- tinue to seek ways of achieving their goal lie abo predacl<'d the imµll•men ta· lion or a prl'Cbl' plan for lh<· Lns HIO'> area. the downtown s<'tlllm con sidcrf'd to havt' lhl' mo:.l h1:.turical signific·anCl' In lh1sold('1l)' Chang<'" 111 occur, th1· mayor .,aid But . he :.aid, 1t "111 happl'n 10 the con te'\t of :1n overall plan which will r<' lain the <'ha raclcr of the c11,· for both pn•.,c•11I and fut urc· r<'.,id('nts UCI School Aids Businessmen tlnlvn\lty F.xtf'n"ion and the CCI C~radrrJll' Srh1111I of Admina .. tratwn in co1111.-r:itwn v.,1th thr l 'CI Jn· dustnal ""'"<'1.1t1•s offPr a "Pl'<'tul program of 111 ... tructum j.!l'Jr•'<l to aid Orangr ( '11111\l) l''<(•r ull\ t''> The UC Irvine• E\l'Ctlll\ ,. J•r11gr..irn i... nnc•nt- 1-d t.) kl') 1•x1•1·ut I\(''> Ill hu:.lrlf'SS, gmf'rnmC'nl an<l 111<lu..,lry \\ho v.·ant to build on th1·ar :Hlm1111~lrJtl\1' 1•x pt'f'l('n('(' l 'ta 1 i II ng the ('XIII r11'1\('I' and knov. ll·ug<.• of a cro..,., '>t•t·t1on or nataonally knov. n man:.igt·mrnl 1•x pert:., th<.' pro~ram analyzt''> fort<''> of chang<' whk h ar1• a nN·t•s.,;iry part of lh<' avl.'ragl' 1·x1·c11l1vc•:. daily operation • 3131 BRISTOL ST., COSTA MESA featuring I MEETING FACILITIES Be 1 bonquer soles meetings ex convenlion. the Holiday Ion ol Co~to Mesa rs equ pped to serve yo11r every need. Our unique C• >Ml.>1not1on of od1us1able rieering rooms .:on accommodate from I 0 lo 2SO Foocl & cod to;ls served in elf".><)Ont st yle. COMFORTABLE ROOMS One hundred and fifty-two well appointed rooms fa< your corrlf ort ond o mnv10n1 location for your out of town gue~ts. RESTAURANT & LOUNGE HOME OF COST A MESAS ONLY INTIMATE DINNER rHEATE~ CALL: (714) 55 7 ~3000 • ..... , . ··-·.6s: . :..,-,., . ,_ Tracks of progress along the Orange Coast COSTA MESA CHAM BER OF COMMERCE I •.••. HUB Of THE HARBOR . . . •• SERVES THE COMMUNITY BY pro\/1d1ng 11nd maintaining a slrong un1l1ed 1101i:e tor the pre5ervat1on of the ba'>1C concepts ol O•J' ''"l rntcrpnso system Advancing b11.,1ni>5c;, civic rind economic growth ul '''c CQmmun1ty by coooorattng with all interests 1n a oos111on to rncrf'n~r production and d1<;tnb11t1on of more goods atld c;ror111CP'i and by crealrng more employment locally, by a»s1<;t1ng wilh problems that may confront local comp,l(ltl''i rtnd insl1l11t10n'i which provide ->•ibstanltal pmploym~nt and payrolls hy conserv1nq and 1ncreao;111q comrn1m11y rec;ourc('o; OTHER SERVICES . ti COST.+. MES.+. .UU. M.V Urawing of updated ario revised map completed I I CL.+.SSIFfED TILE,HC>t* DIUCTORY New format includes ap.1r1mont directory and theater & restaurc1nl guldr 11 CIVIC DIRlCTORY C' ib'l & organ11111ono, t>83 W 19th St Costa Mesa. CA 92627 (7 14) 646-0536 41 !HOUSTRIAL OIRfCTOtlY Complete Feb ·Mar 71 51 HOW TO START .4 IU5'MfSS 1;$ool.,1c1 THE VOICE OF BU SINESS IN COSTA M~SA ,, "' ~30.\971 * Labor ~ackers Expecting Carter Favors B1&0BEaT A.!JOB&IN ....._.._,.___.... W ABIDNGTON (AP> -Orianbed Jabor spent 1t7f helping et~t a Democratic president and hopes to reap a return In legislation and economic policy that will pUt ita peo- ple back to work. Meanwhile, the United Auto Worken be1an the march toward a four-day work week, a move likely to be followed by unloos in some .key in· dustrlea next year. lnftatloa worries eased as the cost of 1976contractaettlements moderat· Car Firms Call '76 a Good Year DETROIT CAP) -The year of the big turnaround. That, veteran analyata predict, la bow 1976 will be remembered in the annals o( the auto industry. Durln1 the year of America'• Bicentennial, the naUon's largest manufacturine 1roup staaed -with unexpected IU•to -a recovery from its worst downturn in four decades to one of lt.a best performances on re· cord. After two yeara of slow tales, high unemployment, idle assembly plant& and drooping profits, lhe industry stormed back. Sales rebounded lo near-boom levels, joblessness slowly receded, ca r lines hummed once again and profits reached new t'.eight.c. "It was nice to hear laughter in lhe halls again," noted one company of- ficial of the m ood wilhm corporate headqua rters . · Peoph• who were sure they werl! going to be laid orr stopped wa1tingfor lhca'Cctofall · ..,-t' v.a" mul·h in lht.• mdustr} to -be fi'JT>in .1 ho u t (\.1r ..... 11•s, .... hll'h rc11 lo an 11 H'ar lo" in 1975. r<I!'<' 17 pen•c.·nt Lo about HI rnlllion. lht• third h1ghe~t lutal 1n rndustn :-.1,tory Trurk "ale~ v. c•rc up 28 t)('rcent to J re<"ord 3 2 n11 I h m 1 urn ts Gl•ON J I :\1 11trn' prof1tc; 1n thP hrst n1111• month' of 1!17fi ro~t· thtec fuld rrum 197:'> 10 I ft'CClfU $2 l lililtull Chosltr "t11rh l~t a rt't'ord tJl2 m1lho111n Hl7 ) ,rnd I 'r75. bouttC'C'll lwr·k with lllllt' m onth c•arnm1·-. or ~ll mill WI\, 1\1111 l' lh.111 lh fll C'\'H1U~ rull yc•;ar rc·ronl lmptirh. whH h ha!) 'i<•tll'<l :1 11· {'(1rd 19 pt•rt'l.'lll of tlw t ' S m11rkt'l in 1975 al t Ill' C''C 1wn .... or ~mall clorm·,l H' model!>, ft•ll h.11·k lo .1 mon· nnrrt1JI 15 pt•rrcnt 'hart· The )"t'ar olso produr<·d a nurnhc r olinduslr\ '>1•n(·hmark"t Thl' la~t l' S built rom 1 rllhll• rolled off an .:issembly 1101• ttw l~nil ed Auto Workers won new contracts putting them on the road toward the four-day work week GM rntroduced a new lineup of smaJJer full-size cars f« 1m -up to a foot shorter and 1,000 pounds lighter than their pr~ decestiors. Volkswagen announced it wouJd build a U.S. car assembly plant, and Volvo said it would bait conatruction of one. The year also came with its share o( problems. A 28-day national slrlke by the \JAW a1llnst Ford Motor Co. cost the edtrom thepreviousyear'alevel, and analyat.t predicted &be trend will con· tinuc in tm. a heavy bc&alninl year with m-1orcontuctacovertninearly ft.e mllllon workersduetoexpire. With unemployment clln&inc atub· bornly at recession tneh, jobs re· malned labor's No. 1 priority, both at the bargaining table and in 'the legislative agenda. Union leaders, blaming the na- tion's economic woes on.eight years of Republican rule, returned to the Democratic fold for the fint time In many years. Not a siqle m• iJltemationaJ union endorsed President Ford and many that had never endorsed a can- didate declared for Jimmy Carter. E ven the traditionally Republican building tradea unions got behind Carter after Ford vetoed a bill he originally promised to sign that would have expanded picketing riahts for construction workers. After silting out the 1972 elections, the AFL-CIO mounted the biggest, most expensive political campaign in lu history. The giant labor federation turned out 120,000 campaign volun· lffTS and mailed to members 75 million pieces of literature backinl the Democratic Ucket. " 1'lte union c•W• were exultant about the s uccess ol their vote effort on Etec:Uon Day. an effort for which Carter personally thanked AFL-CIO President George Meany and other labor leaders In telephone caUs while still waiting for the final electoral votes that wou Id put him over the top. Post-election polls showed that voters from union backgrounds voted for Carter by a 61-38 margin, an il- lustration of the power of organized labor. We make the most advanced business computer systerT1s in the world. One of them. Reality' . is the most efficient hne of data base. management systems you can get from anybody M ybody. Md n·s the only system in the world that understands English· . The same English you 're reading right now It's no accident that we make the best computer systems for the small business market. Md the easiest to use. We clo n on purpose. We do it by designing and builcJing 011 ·the major parts for our own systems. M d a lot of the parts for other people's systems. It's ma do us one of tho bstcst growing marn 1f acturcrs in the computer 1ndL is try /\ncJ one of the stablest. We hove dedicated ourselves to tl10 ordurlj g1owth or bu.s1ncss-yot ir~1 and ours ff you're 1n bu:i1- ness you sl1ciuld kno:1 cibout ou1~ P~ COU';r'~ II I r .r ll 111 con if 1111c1 • M1u0<.lc1lc t n1o<lns ~A 1sincss. 1M.i; 1~ 1 ~N' 'vu1.1. rio 0v, 1'J501.1rvciie. CA9211J.rc11: 11&40-s13o. TWX 910-s9511u4. Microdata ~~~~~':?'1'--Pf'._...:cicf_u_c_· __ .....,~~----------~-----..__. • - .. 2 DAILY PILOT * December 30, 1976 --.. ..----,' .. , ' ' , ', ' \ ,' .. ,. I I , .. I I I .. \ I -... . ,' .... ,. , -----'.... 411 \ ---\ \ TRAVEL ADVENTUReS A COMPLETE TRAVEL SERVICE • TICKmMG & RESERV A TIOMS CRUISES • TOURS • HOTEL RESORTS• RAIL • DELIVERY: SERVICE NO SERVICE CHARGE MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED 4533 MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach. CA. 9 2660 Phone 7 I 4 /5 5 7 -1 0 I 0 Years come and go but the scene remains the 111me along ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=====~~-~~~o_r_an_g_e ~Co~~~beaches AIRPORT INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX Located in the heart of the Irvine Industrial Complex, 1/4 mile north of the Orange Countv Airport with easv access to the Newport and San Diego Freeways. Space available from 600 square feet to 12,000 square feet. Campus like atmosphere. Expansion capabilities made easily within the complex. We can build to suit w ithin the unit to meet your specifications. All units come standard with reception and one off ice, private restroom, ample parking, 10 by 10 ft. rear door access. Convenient location, leasing office located at the corner of Sky Prk South and Main Street, 500 yards west of the Food Park, 18102 Sky Park South, Irvine, California. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: contact Kirk Elliott or Suzanne Maytum at (714) 540-2499 • f ---------------- 30 YEARS IN COSTA MESA NOW UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP SPECIALIZING IM SERVICE TAILORED TO THE MEEDS OF HOMEOWNERS CONTRACTORS COMMERCIAL & INDUSTRIAL USERS HARDWARE PLUMllMG IUILDIMG MATERIALS ELECTRICAL PAINT & SUNDRIES 140 E. 17th, Costa MHa -.. .. :£ I :; 646-3261 • Air West First OC . Airline Hughes Airwest holds a unique position in the annals of Orange County air transportation. It was the first major airline to operate regularly out of Orange County Airport in Santa Ana. The big event occurred on JuJy 15, 195~. The county's population then was a mere 216,000 and a few hundred or them came out to gawk as a red and white DC·l made its maiden landing from Los Angeles. The "Gooney Bird" was on its in· augural scheduled run lbat extended on to San Diego, EJ Centro, Yuma and Phoenix. ll was quite a distance in those days. The airline was Bonanza Air Lines, a predecessor of Hughes Airwest, which then employed three at Orange County Alrport:- Twenty-five years later lbings have changed. Orange County's population bas soared more than 700 percent to where it now exceeds 1.7 million. And the Gooney Bird has changed its leathers. Now sleek jets land and take oil from Orange County Airport. Fifteen years after that f1111t his· t.oric fll&ht, Bonanza introduced jets t.oOranie County. Today, Hughes Alrwest has in· creased the number ol employea in Oran1e County to 60 and oper ates nonstop flights to Las Vegas, Los An,eJee and Salt Lake City. ~pproprialely. u the airline •P- proacbes fts silver jubilee ol service in Orange County oo Monday (Jan. 1), this cooperative approach t.o Im- proved air transportation is coolinu· lng. On Jan. IS, the airline is introduc· ing its second daily nonstop night to Salt Lake City. It is the result ol eliminatine an lnterm«ll.te st.op at Las Vecas on an existin& fiidit t.o the Utah capitaJ. Thus, daily frequen· cies llnkin1 Oranee Ccunty Airport and Salt Lake City will not be in· cnased. It is a reflection ol the importao« or tmprned service between bur1eoning Oran1e County and ma· }or ciUes throughout the West -in this case Salt Lake City. The airline today also operates direct (lights between Orange Coun· ty and such cities as Portland, Reno, SeatUe, Spokane, Tucson and Twin .FaJJs. It also offers convenient round·trip conne.ctions from Santa Ana to Calgary and Edmonton in Canada; Guadalajara, La Paz, MauUan and Puerto Vallarta ln western Mnlco; and many other cities. Thia year, more than ~28.000 puaeogers boarded the aJrllne's Sundance jets at Orange County Airport, or about J4 percent more than lo 1975. A nearly equal amount ol travelers flew Hughes Airwtst in· to Santa Ana this year -many lured by Disneyland, Knott's Berry Fann and other popular Orance County vacation attractions. The airline contributes ita ahare to • Orange County's economy. In 1976, it paid about $259,000 in fees, rentals and other services to various acen· ~i~-~ about 12 ~moPt than December 30. 1978 .... TO OUR WOMEN IN BUSINESS COMING Sunday January 23, 1977 in the Dally Pilot A TRIBUTE TO THE ORANGE COAST'S SUCCESSFUL WOMEN BUSINESS PROFESSIONALS · Out Salute to BualneM end Profeaelonal Women la an exceptional opportunity to Introduce a new or longtime aasocJate to the people of ttM Orange Coaat, or to honor awards or achievements. Don't mlH being part of thlt 1pecl1I advertising opportunhy. Deedllne for reserving apace Is Jan. 19. Call today! DAIL V PILOT 43 ----- . . DAILY PILOT 642-5678 --·-------- 44 DAILY PIL01' ...--December 30, 1976 Orange County's Center ••• For shopping ... the finest in food ... even a good night's sleep. -~= ~~ ·=;~. ::=h~-· --. ·-·:::-4-~·· . _ .. ----· 1-l •I I ~. Within walking distance of the South Coast and the enclosed shops and restaurants of Plaza Hotel there are over 225 different South Coast Plaza. At South Coast Village, places to see, to shop in and ~o browse in an open air environment, 70 stores and thtough. You can spend an entire day ·. . • places to dine are complemented by a num- and nighf. Our "hospitality center" includes her of convenient movie houses for your the South Coast's first truly elegant and after-shopping entertainment. In the near fu- versatile hostelry with its spacious tennis ture, the doors of the South Coast Repertory courts and fine din~ng accommodatio~s, Theatre open for even greater enjoyment. ~ SOUTH COAST PLAZA & TOWN .CENTER ' if J~ ·, r 1. Huntington Beach Fountain VBIIey EDITION •·t~r11oon ,,,.-< N. Y. St0<-ks I I' ..... OL. 69, NO. 365, 3 SECTIONS, 70 PAGES ORA NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1976 ~ TEN CENT. Redevelopnient Costs At $100,000 than $100,000 h as been nt on the Huntington Beach edevelopm~nt plan in 1976, ac- rding lo a report filed by Act Planning Director Edward lich. Selich said that $52,519.81 has n spent directly on redevelop- ent expenses out of a beginrung rating budget of $89,500 an ousing and Commu n ity Development funds. ~~Illegal WASHI NGTON (AP> A eral appeals court has ruled t fint-class postage ralt·~ wen• reased illeitally m 197<1 when were raas<'d from Scents to 10 ls. But the t i S Court of 1\pf><'al' no artaon to roll back th<' rak. ch has !li1ncc ~en ancrl'asro to 23-cent.s . The 58JT1<' method used 3!'> tht> Mils for the 1974 ancreas<' w;is ~ to l!UppOrt th.-IMest rate• bite. The National l\<11soc1at1on of Greeting Card Pubhshcr.i. wh1<'h CbaJJenged the 1974 increase, IS alee> contesting the jump to 13 ants in a separate case pending ~re the appeals court. •· 'lbe court ruled that the in-ue to 10 cents was not legal ause users or first-class maH mOTe than their share o( tal costs under the plan . • The Postal Rate Commission Wied the 1974 increase on the OOunds that raising first-clas.." iates would not discourage use or hmalls as much as raismg rates for the other three cla-.ses of mail. the appeals court snid. The Jaw re quires each c I ass or postal service to bear its own cost, thecourtsrud Slaying ·a1 Slated am Gene Cam~ has ordered to face trial Feb. 111 aa1e County Superior Court womurder chargds filed after allecedly ahot and killed bJs raqed wife and her ex- and Nov. 4 in Huntington ach. · oludae James H. Walsworth set trial date for Campbell, 48, Wat lr\dlcled by the Grand on two murder counta and .. UM aUeeed J>C)IHISlon or a arm bY u ex-felon. 'J'hedef en- 11 beld in county Jail wltb ball '900.000. In addition, another $50,457 111 costs have been chalked up by Cl· • ty staff employes who put in 4,03:1 hour s of work on the proJect. Selich said today that he now expects it may taRe nine mort• months befo(e a redevelopment plan can be adopted. He !>cud if that is the case, another $85,000 may be required. He said $22,000 would be needed for agency operating ex llWESTMENT NEIS 1 SEWER SAN DIEGO (AP) -Twenty city employes worked three weeks to put together applica- tions stacked six feet high in appl~lng for $.f3 million in federal public works projects. The whole effort may havP cosl $200,000 and resulted in a $1.6·milllon project. a spokesman said today. "'All we got was a sewer line," be complained. "Of course. that's better than nolhln1 which is what I un der1t1nd Las Vegas and Phoenix received." penscs. $30,500 for rontmuing de· vartment exp('ndatures; $23,000 for consultation with Urban Pro- 9JCCts Inc. and $10,000 for legal . . services. Selich's report showed that the redevelopment agency exceeded its budget for printing and ad- \<ert1sing in 1976 A total of $5,609 was spent on advertising while $5,000 was budgeted and SJ,294 46 went to printing costs when $500 was budgeted. Selich said that funds in the two categories were used to pro- duce three newsletters for the Project Area Committee, and three other newsletters and two certified Jen e rs to property owners in the downtown area giv- ing legal notice lo the publJc hearings. lo addition, a booklet entitled Carter Cites 'Financial Interests' • PLAIN S, Ga . (AP) - President-elect Carter says he is not ready to annoWtce what he will do with hls extensive finan- cial interests while in the White House. But he J]romises to abKte by the s~e restrictions he plans to place on top appointees. Carter commented on his financial holdings and on a con- ruct-of-interests code Wednesday shortly before he returned to his home here after holding pre- maugural Cabinet meetings. Aides said the code of ethics for :ill those Carter names to high positions would be made public late today or Friday. For three days, the President elect held marathon meetings with prospective Cabinet m cm· bers and other key advisers on St. Simons Island, a secluded re· sort off the Georgia coast. The economy and the direction the new administration will take after the Jan. 20 inauguration (See MONEY, Page A2) ' Dry Tree Poses Hazard Fire Officials Suggest Early Disposal Even ar the hectic holiday season hasn't drained your spirit, chances a re the family Christmas tree has just about had it. To minlmlZe fire hazards, coun- ty fll'e oflic1al1 suuest early dis· posal of used trees. O\rtdoor burn· ing is illegal and oltictab warn again s t burning trees in fireplaces due to the highly com- bustible nature of dried pine needJes. , There is alsothedangerofbum- ing embers drifting through t.he ~mney and landing on roofa or adjacenthom~. City guidelines for the pickup ot used tr,ett include: NEWPORT B EACH: Treu may be placed on street with re- gular trash LOr£c trtce must be cut into f our·loot 1edlons. There wlll be no (New Year.. 0.,) pickup. ($8\urday). • SAN CLEMENTE: Saturday pickups will be made Monday. Large trees must be cut into rour· footsecUons. F 0 V NT A I N VA IJL E Y : Regular pickup. Trees should be cutintoamallseclions~ l SEAL BEACH: Regular pickup. No more than four-foot sections. HUNTINGTON BEACH : Regular pickup. Fireofftcl~ are asking rmdenU to cut and place ~ serments tn a closed con- t'.ttntr .I IBVlNE: Recular pt ck up. 1'rffs may also be taken to a mulcblnc machine operat.lnt at the city yard Jlt Bryan and Yale . J Avenues. Tberelsnocbar1• LAGUNA BE ACH : Regular pickup. Residents should cut und bundle large trees. COSTA ME SA: R ~tlar pickup. Large trees mustbe cut into four-foot sections to assure pickup. ' SAN J tJAN CAPISTRANO: Regular pickup. Trees must be cut and bundled. DANA POINT: R egular pickup. Trees must be cut and bundled. DANA POINT : Regular pickup. Trees must be cut and bundled. ELTORO ANDSADDLEBACK VALLEY: Re~aq~idrup. Trees must be cul andbundled . D•llY PllOt Sloll Piiot<> SWIMS STRAITS Lynne Cox Troops f;nd ~ Mao Widour . \ Disturbance HONG KONG CAP> -Chinese· troops have put an end to "great chaos" s pread by supporters of the p\Jrged widow •Of Mao Tse- tung in the city of Ba<Xling, aboul 100 miles southwest of Peking,· according to official and foreign news rep<>rts from China. The reports, wWch spoke of bombings and armed raids by the rebels, did not make clear when the antig.ovemmenl dis- turbances occurred. A Dec. 20 issue of Peking's People's Daily newspaper ob- tained here said the armed bands in Baooing had been "threaten-• ing the security of Peking so thal they could us urp the party· power" and W\!re suppressed by army troops. A Hopeh provincial radio re- port quoted by the London Daily Telegraph today said it took a · "concerted effort" by the army • to restore order after a long period of "confusion" in the city, the provincial capital. The Sydney (Australia) Mom- ang Herald's China correspon- dent also reported the Baoding • disturbance~. The Telegr aph's Peking cor- respondent, Nigel Wade, noted that foreign travelers reported as early as last spring that radical opponents of the Jlopch provin-· cial leaders hip in Baociing had broken into an armory, blown up factori es a nd committed murder, rape and robbery. (See CHINA, Page A2) Or:~:J , Coasl . -.......... - Weather Mostly cloudy with 80 percent chaoce or rain Fri- day. Highs nea~ 60, lows in low :>Os. INSIDE TODA\:' ls..u1 are 1haking, long-' ltantti1lg ipeciol re'4t~ ~ween U.S. ond • eauOjtO. ~cond of three ortidts CJJ>- peara on A 7. ., ·• A2 DAIL v PILOT H/F O•U~ Pl"" llAff l'llPI• RITES CONDUCTED Joe Demetrakos Rites Held For Local Grid Star Memorial services for former EdJsoo High (fl untmgton Beach I and Golden Wes t College football standout Joe Demetrakos we re held today at Calvary Chapel in Santa Ana. Mr. Demetrakos, 21, died in an automobile accident Friday 10 Fresno while en route to Oregon to visit relatives. A sister, Denise, was critically injured in the crash and is confmed to a Fresno hospital with a s evere concussion. a broken neck and a possible crushed vertebrae. Mr. Demetrakos played foot· ball at Edison in 1971 and '72, graduating in 1973. A running back. he played two years at Golden West. before transferring to Cal Poly <San Luis Obispo>. He was a member or the Cal Poly JV team this past season. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Demetrakos of Costa Mesa, and two sisters, Denise Demetrakos and Debra Anderson. The fam ily h as s uggested m emorial donations in Mr De m e trakos ' name to the Calva r y Chape l, 3300 South Fairview. Santa Ana. F ront Page A J SPILLS ... He was charged with violating U.S. ant1pollut1on laws by dis- c bargin g petroleum into a waterway and failing to im· media tely notify authorities of the discharge. He later was freed on bail. After Vhsmas· arrest, US. At· Ly. David Ma rs ton said. "!l's lugh llme we take decisive acllon to put these fly.by·night foreign operators on notice that they ha\'e to meet higher standards." Marston said the charges, both misde meanors, carry a max- imum ~nalty of two years in pnson aod a fine or $12,500. In New York. the captain of the tanker Argo Merchant said in federal court that h.ts ship was bemg navigated with out-Of-date sea.current charts wben it ran aground this month and cracked o~n off Nantucket ls land. That grounding led to a huge bpill. 7 6 m1lhon gallons, now :.lowly breaking up and drin1n~ away from land 1.11 the North Atlant1<• Olficaals 1n Connecticut said m06t of the 2.000 gallons spilled into the Thames R.tver by the Oswego Peace on f'nday had been contained by booms, but the remainder had coated rocks and waterfowl downstream. T hey :-.aid the cleanup should be com· plcte by the end of llus week. Art League to Meet The Huntington Beach Art League will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Edison Community Center. 21377 Magnolia St. ORANQE COAST ,.,, DAILY PILOT Thf> l')r~ CH 't OaUy PHot "'"'-".'" '' '~· no~OW· N~tllf\ Pr11't t'0Vbf1""""'b'r lhrn..fll"IQI'" (Nt f f'\,P}l1•.l\•"'1(omD•l\'f ""°"''llf•M~f,fW<t'\ .. •,. rMDh ·f\•<t "-"~"'''' lf\fOYQf\ "'•"•~ ltw '""''" ,.....,,.. ~wtwt &fKh, Hwntlf'ill'tO" ,_,. .._ ll'o..-. t•;" 'YAll•f •rwt1\• \.lfflltN(lt V•ll•'I' tNt \A}tt"'f"it#l'(frrl ~tt.('A.\f 4 \l~r·"""'~l•..,t ,,,..,, J Nb11•t.-a ~h1fl't4W~ ANI \.~'•' t•""' ,.,,._..,._., ,_,,ftit1U.1'W) ~t.,"tl I\ .. 1 J)) ~H tf•f •,trHt C t• Mt>\ .. CelU•rM,..,,,,. ll-rtN-Pf~10tnt •f'WJ P"°'1\Nif' , .. _. ~. Y•<ePft~~··•...,0.-•I~ '" ..... , ...... Cd1tor y.,._, .... _ ,.,......,,,,.cw1er c;i.a.-....... __ ...... Ao>! ................ e-. ._ .. "'- ""'"°'-~''"'' .. H11ntfntllo1'1 .. Kfl Office ""r .. 6(~ ...... -. Mollll119 ·-·" l'.0 llo•,,., tlMI otflc•• l,.....,,.11 ... ~ .... 0-.....si-1 (11,I• M·f!'-• t.JO Wf\t .. ~ ~tn'lif1 ~ltNr\ v .. 11 .. ,. H)01' .. , • ., A"41d Al ~·ft 01•00 frMW•Y T•l•phone {114)&Q.q21 Cl1111t1tld Ad.,el'tlllng 142-5171 ~rO"l ltofl~ Ora"" ( &\l<tly ~II .. 140-1220 '°""''"'1 1'11 o ...... c.e." """''<11•"'1 ~ ...-, ND Mw'\ \tOf .. \.. tHu\fr4H'""'-H ltftl4f mett•r or edvfrth•"''"'' Mtf 1f\ """' M ,..,fUfV<•d ••U~•vt ,,,.ti•I Hrmlu ...... ueyrto,,...,....r, ~1r.:.~~~".:::!~1·~~-~· < ~~~:. ~·:. -l~IV! &y .... 11 \• '° IMftlNy, fllllll•IPJ --•-u I0_1,, Thursday. Oec1mber30. 1978 3 Killed, 2 Injured In Wreck Three persons were killed and t wo others critically injur ed Wednesday in a headoo collision of two lightweight pickup trucks on Ortega Highway. A coroner's report identified t.bo&e killed in the headon col· lision about 11 miles east of San Juan Capistrano as: -Bellilda Diane Cordero, 24, of 26712 Avenue Shonto, Mission Viejo.. -Greg Thomas Trulls, 16, of 9882Teresa Ave., Anaheim. ......James Cruse, 17, of 1221 E. Walnut St., Lompoc. Two critic a lly injure d teenagers now in Mission ~om· munity Hospital have been aden· tified as Thomas Cr-me. 17, of the Lompoc address, and Samuel Robert Koutroulis, 16, or Quebec, Canada. According to a California Highway Patrol spokesman, the two Cruse boys, brothers of Mrs. Cordero were passengers ;n the pickup 'truck she was driving eastbound on Ortega Highway at 9:45a.m. Koutroulis was a passenger 10 the westbound pickup driven by TruUs. About a mite west of San Juan Hot Springs, the Trulis vehicle apparently crossed ove r the center line and collided headon with Mrs. Cordero's eastbound pickup. the CHP spokesman said. Caus e of the triple fatal acci· dent is still under investigation. Thief Steals Plwtographs Seven original mounted photo- graphs valued at a total of $5,600 by their owner have been stolen in the burglary or a Huntington Beach man's apartment, pohce said today. Victim Robert HeLc;dorf, of6401 Warner Ave., called police to the Warner West Apartments Wed· nesday but there were few clues to the pictures' disappearance. Investigators said the ofCicer's report had been dictated but not completely processed, so the sub· ject matter of the pictures was unavailable today. Htn1tington Man's CB Gear Taken A Huntington Be ach man called police Wednesday to re· port theft of $1 ,000 worth of CB radio equipment from h.is car. wluch was parked at tus home at the lime. Frank Lo Verde, of 17131 Oak St .• theorized whoever his bad buddies are they are most cer· tainly amateur juvenile thieves . They took no precautions with · gloves and left a wide sel ection or good fingerprints all over the dashboard, which police are now checking. Baseball Leagues Open Registration Signups for the F ountain Valley Youth BasebaJl League will be held next month. Registration is scheduled from 10 a.m. · 4 p.m. Jan. 8. 15, 22 and 29 at the Fountain Valley Recrea. lion Center al Brookhurst Street and Heil Avenue. Leagues will be offered in the 5pring and summer for boys 6-8; 9-10; lJ-14 ; 15-16andl7·20. Further information can be ob. tained by calling SS4-0<IS7. Pages Blank Woman, 106, Dies Alorw HAYWARD (AP) -The pages were blank in lbe book entitled .. Friends Who Called.. at the funeral parlor where services were held for 100.year old Mary Robb. "She must have outlived everyone by nt least 20 years or so,'· said an employe of the con v aJescent home where Miss Robb died on Christmas Day. Records kept by the home showed s he had "no re- latives and no friends." She spent he r last years mostly in chairs or in bed and was uncommunicative. The public administrator assumed responsibility for her when she was declared incompetent several years ago. Little was known about Miss Robb; who was born on Nov. 14, 1810, in Sacramento. Her Social Security me indicated she never held a job, and there was no re- cord of a marriage. Robert Moore, manager of the funeral home that handled the services, said he placed a notice in local newspapers in case friends wanted to attend the service Wednesday. Nobody showed up, so George Miller, a funer al home employe, read a Bible passage and said a prayer. I Marine Sentenced In KKK Incident CAMP PENDLETON (AP> - A Marine corporal has been de· moted to private and sentenced to three months hard labor after pleading guilty to pummeling another Marine with his fists in an attack by blacks on six whites in a barracks. "I'm glad I didn't get a BCD (bad conduct discharge). I was worried about that," said Cpl. E.F. Henry. 20, one of 13 black Marines accused in the incident. One was granted immunity in ex· change for testimony. Henry pleaded guilty Wednes· day to conspiracy and assault charges, telling a special court- martial that he and the other blacks thought they were attack· ing a group of Ku Klux Klanmem· be rs. lie was the first lo face trial in the case. The Marine Corps is ex- pected to announce next week whether the other 11 will be tried. He nry's atto rney , Capt. Stephen F. Biegenzahn, told re- porters he considered the penalty "an appropriate sentence." He had told the jury that his cUent re- Florist Wins Yule Contest Sweepstakes winner in the Huntington Beach Christmas de· coralion contest is the American Beauty Florist at 17851 Beach Blvd. alfaed the presence of the KKK did not justify the assault. The black Marines were charged with aggravated assa ult and conspiracy after they al· legedly beat the whites with clubs and stabbed the m w i th screwdrivers. Five of the victims were hospitalized for periods of at least two days. One man is still in the hospital. Henry, of Ivanhoe, N.C., said be used only h is closed fist. Prosecutors accepted his plea or guilty to reduced charges or sim- ple assault and conspiracy. Henry said be and the other blacks bad a "little mis un- derstanding" about which room the Klansmen were in. He told the judge the incident began when he and the other blacks "agreed to go ove r and jam (beat up) the Ku Klux Klan." F,....Page.4J MONEY ••• w~ high on lhe ag~a. Cart~r told a Dec. 20 news con ference he already approved the code ol et.blcs aad that pte14 secretary Jody Powell would make it available tor publication. For r easons ne ver fully ex- plained, release of the document was delayed. Carter said Wednesday that aJI his appointees have agreed to meet the terms or the code, and said: "It will require the complete divestiture of any ftnancial rela tlonships that might create a con. ruct of interests, and a complete revelation of all other economic holdings, including net worth statements." And the President-elect added. "I 'll conform with the same restrictions I've placed on the Cabinet members." Carter reported during bis campaign that bis net worth at the end of 1975 was $811,982.09. Although Carter's partnership in the family ~anut business does not have direct financial de- alings with the government, it benefits from some agricultural subsidies. ·Carter had an afternoon ap- pointment today to confer with former Gov. Kenneth Curtis of Maine, who reportedly is in line to become chairman of the Democratic National Committee s ucce eding Rober t Strauss. Carter and Curtis have known each other since both were gov- ernors. Bloodmobile PJans Huntington Visit A Red Cross bloodmobile will visit the St. Bonaventure Catholic Church, 16400 Spr· ingdale St.. Huntington Beach, Jan. lOfrom 3-7:30p.m. Persons between 17 and 65 wishing to m ake donations may call the Red Cross at 835-5381 for appointments. A parental release form, which may be obtained from the Red Cross, is required for 17.year-old donors. Contest ch a irman Louise J enkins said other winners are Mr. and Mrs. Jack Newman, 9382 C loudhaven Drive. bes t Christmas theme ; Edith I. Baldwlo, 6241 Warner Ave .. best mobile home display and Mr. and Mrs. O.W. Rider, 1026 13th St., best indoor tree. LQUALITY TELEVISION O.Mtr Pl'-! Swtt -· .lunlor Ml•• Huntin gton Be ach High School senior Christine Fuller , 17. has been selected as the city's Junior Miss She'll ~o to stutcwide com- petition in Santa Rosa next month. Front Page Al CHINA •.. The Baodang disclosures were the latest in a £eries ol reports or disturbances directed against the regime of Chairman Huu Kuo-feng and said to have ~n fomented by radical followers of Mao's widow, Chiang Ching, and her associates in the "Gang of Four." The disorders are believed to have been most widespread in late summer and fall. The Sydney Morning Herald's Yvonne Pres ton wrote in a dis· patch f rom P e king today, "Reports reaching Peking say that armed groups supporting the ousted 'Gang of Four' and op- posing Hua robbed banks, raided ammunition factories, grain stores and s hops, hijacked military vehicles and blew up factories in the city." Other winners include Mr. and Mrs. L.C. Burke, 6161 Rook Cir· cle ... bl centennial Chri6tmas; Mandie Motors , 424 Main St., best commercial display and Robert A. Bonillas, lTill Collie Lane, best children's fantasy. W THE BOWL GAMES & PARADES IN GREAT COLOR The contest was sponsored by the women's division of the chamber of commerce. Food Co-op Meets The West Ol'an~e County Food Conference will be held Jan. 8 to discuas formation or a food- club/co op. The meeting, sponsored by the Peace and F reedom Party, begins at 7: 30 p. m. at 19081 Kipahulu Lane , Huntington Beach. For more mformation call 963·1236. dLLftE?~1r_N HEW 8'77 IOO% SOLID STdTE (INIOMA(OlOI II 23,, CONSOLE COLOR TV diagonal T,..Mtl•al ..,,.. IALTIMOH•HllUE Handsc.ne Trans11tonal styled full base console. Casters. Beaut1tully ltn1shed 1n simulated Ant1Que Oak with tho look o l line d1slress1ng AFC F~ ' ELECTRONIC VIDEO GUARD TUNING SYSTEM No moving parts to wear out and no contact ooints to corrode in the tuners Designed to be the most dependable. most sens11tve tunmg system m Zenith history. t;>il Firm Buying ·Irvine Mazda Site CALL FOR PRICING 13'' Versatile, Compact 0t•C.ON•~ Color TV VALUE PAC KED TABLE MODELS ~nwCHROMAC':!~~~ _ . · 19 Small Price f ()IA(,QN~I. The Occidental Petroleum Company is purchasing the long. vacant Mazda Motors building in Irvine. sources confirmed Wed- nesday. Bruce Brusseau, president of Newport Na lion al Company. verified that the sale is in pro- gress and that escrow is expected to close shortly alter the first or January. Alt.bough Brusseau confirmed reports or the sale, dficials at both companies involved declined to offer anything but "no com· ment" when asked about the deal Wednesday. The Muda bJillding is located justofftheSan Diego Freeway, tit Von Karman Avenue and Main Street. Brosseau. who served as broker for Muda Motors, declined to re. veal the purchase price, but said the petroleum company is buying the four-story bulldlng, the entire parcel and the furnishings within the buildlnc. Kuda Motors ori,U,ally was ufl:int St mlWon fort.be iee.eoo squar e root structure, plus $736,000 for the fu rnishings. According lo Brusseau, a sub- sidiary or the parent Occidental Petroleum Company will taJce oc- cupancy sometime during the finstquarterof 1977. "Then, they expect to build oul on the rest of the property." the brokers aid. When the rotary engine auto company originally built lhe building, company officials e_x· peeled to con struct lwln warehouaea at the rear of the pro- perty. Bruneau said the aubsldary company that wiU occupy the site is considered light industry. thereby utisfying the city's re-- qulrement.8. When conalruction began on the Maida building several years a10, the auto company was at the peak oflls sales drive with its new rotary engine. However. after sales began to ,., the llrm decided aeainst mov· Ina lnto the glua·walled buildlnJ. Officlah al.to decided qalnlt cooat.rucUD• the two warebomes. ..,,.. MALllU HIJIOC The LUCERNE H1940 Our rnosf cornpac1 oortablP. with 1 00~ Sohd·Stato Chassis with Power Sentry B r 111 1an 1 1 1 0 Chromacotor ln·Lme Picture Tube Decorator Compact TV W1l h C olor Sentry, The Auto· mst1c Picture Con- 1 r ol Sys tem. New 100 ° Chromacotor Picture Tube wtlh FFL TM In-Linc Electron Gun. EVG Electronic Tun1n9 System. 100•. Soltd·State Chassis. Power Sentry. Choose handsome simulated Pecan or simulated Solid-State Tuning System Ebony color cabinet. Walnul cabinet. OPlM N10AY 'T1U. l P..M. l·'ull f 'nc·ro'11 M nrrnnr ic•s 1•1.,_~ Our 1•c•rsonul tlt11• \.-nr Gunrn111c••• 011f·.'rc•r!I1•rud11c•1 Mc• ."ic•ll: 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa "-~·,,..,.­io~w ..... ~.Jr. Phone 642-8882 Store Hours Daily 9-8 Sat. 9-5:30 ~ ... H.._. ArM "-• lt16 THISI EUCTIOHIC PltOFISSIONALS. SHVICI YOUI l!QUIPM9'T . .. D.-11" ..., .. Famous Ze nith quality! Farnous ~~~ de p e nclabilit y ! Irvine ED ITI ON . . VOL. 69, NO. 365, 3 SECTIONS, 70 PAGES Today's ClosinJ! · N. \'. SCot•ks I TEN CENTS~ Price Secret i ' . 1 Occidental to ~uy , Irvine Mazda Site.1 ~ 3 LONG-VACANT MAZDA BUILDING REPORTEDLY SOLD TO OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM Auto Maker Mum on Sale Price, But Whole Faclllty and Grounds Were on Brock !Heir's Aid ~Kidnap Charged One or John Scuddt>r'.., ac· cused kidnapcr~ continuc•d to 1n sist Wednesday Lhal lhl' l.aur.1 Scudder food heir was <i "'1llan~ participant in his own k1dn<1pin~ last August. According to 44 year-old William D. Wesi:.on's ll'sllmony. the potato c·h1p-peanut buttt-r heir was to ret:c1ve Sl.2.'i,000 ur the $250.000 r;.nsom But Wesson. a former Cornn,1 del Mar bank man a~N. <1d ·ued he could give no plaus1 i>le reason for S(•udder allegedly abandoning the kidnap plot HI ~tream and claiming to h<· a 1 legiUmate kidnap v1ct1m I ~~tiered and bleeding, thl' 1 1 64-year·old 8albo:1 Island man fought his way to fr('(.'(fom <1S the motor homt• an which he •w as imprisonl•d 90 m1nult"' rave led on a Fountain Valley rough fare The next day. Wesi.on and hi-. lirother·in-law. R1ck1 DJl1• Sellers, 21. were arrei.l<'<I and charged with ktdnapmg W esson 1ns1slcd 1n h1., testimony 1n Judgt.' H1chard Beacom '!. court room that th1 • f ood heir helpNI plan ilnd curry oot the bunglt"d kidnap ploy anri was never in any real danger As a matter of fact. Wc~-.on Jaid. he, Sellers and !X·11dder planned to p1cn1c in l"eathcrly Park while waiting for Mr., Valllrie Scudd<•r to mll1•1•1 th•• ansom m onl'y lnstead. We~ ... on ,;1111 lw ;ind lie rs _sp_ent th{' 111@t_,-.h1 vco ng Jn ldyllwlld "'h1le apparently mg to r1gu r1• out what went wrong with their S250,000 scheme With a touch o( pml1• m ht., voice. W(•sson 1k:.1·r1twd th1· <:laboratf' plann111~ th.11 w(•nt tn lo the k1dn;ir1 pint "Total reall'lm that.., v.h.11 , we we're .1ftl'r tot.ii r1 Jl"rn iWesson "Jld ,,, h1· d1 .. 1 ""''<! th1· m ratC'<t 1·.111.-r • lroi11e Ope11s Oun Building 1Depart,me11l The City of I rv1ne "'111 be~tn operating its own bu1ld1ng d1· partment beginning Monday. l'I ty aldes said today 2-day Stand-off Barricaded Man Kills Wife, Self LOS ANG EU:s <AP) A San Quentin pt1 ru l ce and h1 '> t'Slrangcd w1tl' died today tn a blaze of gunftrt' after a nearly 40-hour stand orr with ::.hcnrrs deputies . Lafayette Pruitt, 3.5, had held his wife. Marcella. ho~tage tn their Willowbrook apartment since Tuesday evening. Pruitt was dead at thl' ~cene and hi!> wire d1c:d at Martin Lutht'r Kmg l lo~p1tal :.hort.ly af terwards or a gunshot wound i.n the head. Sheriff's deputies said they had hoped Pruitt would tire Jfter the prolonged siege and surrender, 1974 Postal Hike of 2 c Said Illegal WA SllfNGTON <AP> J\ federal appeal!. <·ourt has ruled lhatr1rst class poi.I agt> rntt's were ancreas<.'d 11legally lJl 1!174 when they wcrt' raised rrom8t·cnts to Ill cents But the U S Court of Appeals took no action to roll back the rate, wtuch has smce been increased to l3 cents The same m£>thod used as the basis for the 197-\ 1ncrt•aM' was U9ed to s upport the latc-~t rale hike The ~at1onal Assoc1at10n of Greettng Card Publishers, which challenited the 1974 mcreaSt'. 1s d.lso conteslln~ the 1ump to 13 rents 1n a separatt• case fX'nding heforethe appeal!. court Th<' Postal Hate Comm1s~1on 1usltf1E'd the 1974 mcrease on the .rrouncJs that ra1!.mg first class rate-; would not d1scoura~e use or the mat ls as much ac; rai!>tn~ rates • for the' other t hre<.' classl's nf mat I. the appeals court '>aid Tht• law re· quires earh rlas.'I of postal ~crv1ce to bear its own co~t. lhe court said. . The comm1ss111n r<'<'ommcnds rate mcreac;r!. to tht' l 1 S Postal Serv1CC' Comm1ss1on attorn1•v'> f'<ln tended thcr" "'as nothmg an thr dec1s1on lo stop thr comm1'><;ton from setting rates based <mother methods. They said no der1smn has been made on whl'lher to ap peal the court ·s rultn~ to thP t r S Supreme Court but this morning investigators said they heard two shoL<> m the bedroom where the JUSt·paroled convict had locked himself m with hts wife. The shots were followed by sounds or S<'Ufning and runninJ:. then three more shots, orflcers said . Several shots came close lo the deputies, who fired about 10 rounds into the area where Pruitt was holed up The deputies then firt.'<.I tear gas and stormed the barricaded area. During the long hours of lhe siege Wednesday, ofhccrs re· fused to give Pruitt ask(.'{f for food and water. The plumbing in Pruitt's apartment had been turned orr by deputies. He originally held his four children hostage, as well, but re· leased them Tuesday night. Pruitt did allow members of the sheriff's special "hostage team" into the apartment but not into the bedroom where he and his wife were locked up together Pruitt was released JUSt 12 days ago from San Quentin. where he had bl'en serving time for a similar slCJndoff 1nc11lcnt two years ago • Inmates Kill OCManin State Prison TRACY <AP) A 27·year·old inmate from Orange County was stabbed to death today in a cor· ndor of Deuel Vocational lnslitu· lion, a prison spokesman said. Steve McDonald, who had been at Deuel only since Dec. 7, was on h.ts way to his JOb at lhe pnson when he was attacked by several other inmates and stabbed nine times, said prison sPokebman Bob Walraven. He died shortlv afterward at a prison hospital. - Walraven said two other in- mates are in c ustody 111 the stab· bmg and guards have recov<'red two sharpened metal rods from the scene. He said the motive ror the attack was n 'l known McDonald was sentenced to one year to hfc tn pnson for second-degree robbery io 1973 and paroled in l975. Walraven said. He was returned to pnson for parole violation in October and transl erred to Deuel Oec 7. The Ocl'ldt!ntal Petroleum Company 1s purchasing the long· \'acant Mazda Motors buildmg in Irvine, !>ources confirmed Wed· ncsday Bruce Brusst'au, president of Newport National Company, verified that the saJc is in pro· gress and that escrow 1s expected to dose !>hortly artcr the first of Januarv Although Brus:.eau confirmed reports of the sale. officials al both companies involved declined lo offer anything but "no com ment" when asked about the deal Wednesday The Mazda building is localed Just off the San D1e~o 1-'reeway, at Von Karman Avenue and Main Street Brusst'au, who served as brokN for Mazda Motor'>. declined to re· veal the purchase pnce, but said the pt'lroleum <'ompany 1s buying the four·~lory bu1ld1ng, the entire parcel and t he furnishings within the build mg Mazda Motors on gmally was :u.king $9 million for the 166.600 i.quarc foot s tructure, plus $736,000 for the furnishings. According to Brusseau, a sub· sid1ary of the parent Occidental Petroleum Company will take OC· cupancy sometime during the first quarter of 1977 "Then, they expect to bu1ld out on the rC'st of the property," the School Board Hopefuls Beat Fite Deadline By mid morning today, six candidates had filed nomination papers in the Irvine Unified School Dis trict and four others had taken out papers but had not yet returned them. Two new persons have taken out papers, including: Robert Q. Shupe. or 3812 Beavt'r St . an attorney Eugene Simms. 4922 Barkwood Ave . an education ad· ministrcttor The other two who have not yet returned their papers are Oorothea "Dottle" Blame and Thomas r Wilson. The six definite candidates in· elude Fred Gahm, Robert. Gray, f''rank Hurd (incumbent>, Kathy Larkin. Ron Lunceford and Louis Zejda. The two s eats up for election in March are the ones held by Hurd and Charles Boulanger, who will not seek re-election. The deadltne for filing nomina· hon papers was 5 p m. t.oday Fake Money Ring Cracked SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Federal agents say they have cracked a counterfeiting ring that was printing and passing $100 bills in the San Francisco Peninsula area during the Christmas shopping season. Eight persons were arrested and about $100,000 in counterfeit SIOO bi Its were confiscated, Secret Service agent Dick Cameron re· ported Wednesday. Developers. contractors and homeowners wishing to obtain building or. grading per mits 11hould come to city hall begin ning Monday, instt'ad of Jiioing to the Orange County llulld1ng l>epartment. Dry ·Tree Poses Hazard The city's Ru1ld1ng Depart m enl will operate from 8 am to 4\:30 p.m . at Irvine city hall. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. During the first five years of cityhood. Irvine <'ontracted with .Oranae County for its buildin~ 4e}>artmenl services. '£mployes have now ~n hired b)' the city to staff a building de· ment and the contract w11 h e county will no longer be in er ed. . U8ders Released . MADRID (AP) -Santiaao .Carrillo, secretary-g~oeral of Spaln'a outlawed Communist ~»arty, and seven other party · I.ad-. were released on bail from prison today. Their arrest ' elabt days AJO drew w'ldc cont JlaonetJon from European lei and touched off vtoltnt pro- .MIU at homo. • ·. Fire Officials Suggest Early Disposal Even if the ht'ctic holiday season hasn •t dra ined your spirit. chances are the Cam Uy Christmas tree has just about had it. To minimize l ice hazards, coun- ty fire officials suggest early dis· posal or used tr~s. Out.door burn· Ing is illegal and official!'! warn against burning trees in fireplaces due to the highly rom- busltble nature o ( dried pine needles. There Is also the danger of bum · Ing embers drifting th.rough the chimney and landing on roofs of adjacent homes . City guidelines for the pickup of WI,~ trees include: NEWPORT BEACH: Trees may be placed on street wit.h re- guJar trash. Large trtts must be cut lnlo four.root sections. Then! will be no <New Year's Day) p(dcup (Saturday I SAN CLEMENTE: Saturday pickups will be made Monday Large trees musl be cut mto four· foot sections. "" F 0 U N°T A I N VAL J~ E l' ; Regular pickup. Trees should be cut into small sections SEAi, BEAC H : R egular pickup. No more than four.fool sections. t HUNTINGTON BEACH : Regular pickup. tire officials are asking resident.a to cut and plac~ ~ fegments in • closed con· lainer. l&V1NE: Reiular pickup. Trett may al&o tie \.Meri to a mulching machlne ~aUag at f the city yard at Bryan and Yale Avenues There is no charge LAGUNA B E ACH: Regular pickup. Residents should cut and bundle large trees COSTA ME SA~ 1Regular pickup Large trees must be cut into four.foot sections to assure pickup. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO: Regular pickup. Trees must be cut and bundled. D~NA POINT : R egular pickUp. Trees must be cul and bundled. ELTOROANDSAODLEBACK VAl...LEY : Re1ular pickup. Trees must be cut and bundled.. broker said. When the rotary engine auto company originally built the building, <'Ompaoy official!\ ex peeled to construct t~1n warehouses at the rt•ar of the pru perty. Brusseau said the subsidury company that will o~cupy lhc silt• 1s considered Ii ght industry. thereby satisfying the city's re t I O•tly PU<Jt Sl•lf PNllo S~lMS STRAfTS Lynne Cox Los Alamitos Girl Swirm Icy Straits SANTIAGO, C hile (A P ) Lynne Cox of Los Alamit<>.'l - has become the first person ever to swim the icy Straits of Magellan, Chilean newspapers rePorted today. Chilean national radio report· ed that the 19·year-old UC Santa Barbara student from Oran«e County swam the strruts Wedncs· day in one hour. two minutes Temperature in the waters were rePorted al44.6degrees. lt was not certain whi ch course she took in the stra1L<;. which range from lwo·and·a- half to four miles m width. The s traits separate Tierra del Fuego Island from the southern· most tip or South Amenca. The Chilean news agency Orbe said the crossing was made at a point called Prime ra Angosturo, north or the city or Punta Arehas. Orbe said a Chilean navy launch was provided as a sup. port vessel. Miss Cox has previous ly made channel swims to Santa Catalina Island and has crossed the English Channel Woodbridge Requests Top Plan Agenda An agenda loaded with re· quests reearding Woodbridge will be heard Tuesday by the Irvine Planning Commission. Commissioners, who will meet at 7:30 p.m . in the new city councli chambers, 17200 Jam- boree Blvd., will hear requests concerning the first and second phases or the new village. The final project to be con- structed in the first, northwest quadrant will come before the commission Akins Development Company 1s seekjng ap6;>val to build 68 cont:lominiums'\\ a site bounded by West Yale Loop, Yale AvC'nu e, Irvine Center Drive and Culver Drive. The comm1ss1on will also deal with approval requests for the second phase. or the northeast quadrant. bounded by Irvine Center Drive, Barranca Road, Jeffrey Road and North Lake . The Irvine Company is hoping to build 1,942 residential unit.s at tha,t site, including attached and detached condominiums and also apartment units. Also, a commercial center, in· eluding the tirsl m ovie theater in lrvln.c, ia being proposed by the Irvine Company. quirements. 'I When construction began on the\ Maida building several year!_! ago, the auto company was at the, peak of its sales drive with its new rotary engine However, after sales began tO" Jag the firm decided against mov-, ing i.nto the "lass·walled building,~ OHicials also decided against constructing the lwowarehous~s .. ,19 Rain Threa~( ToParade· 1 • OnHoliday?, "' Rain returned to Orunge Coun- ty today after a seven Wel•k" absence, bringing the possibility of a rare occurence rall\ on New Year's Day Light showers fell th.roughout the county and th~ Nations~ Weather Service predicts an 80 ptrcent chance of occasional ~howers through the weekend. Rose Parade officials are hop· ing to escape the first New Year·s Day rain since 1955. I The weather front dropped light snow at the 5,000-foot level. but the storm is expected to pass quickly and probably won't bring sufficient· snow to · o~ ?f ·many Southern California ski resorts. ~ Dense clouds will bring cooler" weather to Orange County this weekend. High temperatu~ along the coast arc expected to reach about 60 with lows in the upl per40stomid50s. I Today's ram is the first cracl< in a high-pressure system ovct' the Weste rn s tates that h as blocked approa ching storm · systems for almost lwo months Although the weather front i~ not expected to bring substanti¥ rainfall, a National Weathet' Service s pokesman s aid thi's opening in the pressure ridge should pave the way for heavier winter rains Progress '77 Spotlights OCEcoJWmy Continued rapid growth and tn• dustrial diversification make Orange County a bright spot in the nation during 1976. Today's Daily Pilot brings an armchair look at the successes of 1976 and the predictions for 1977 made by area firms and units o( government. PROGRESS '77 is a 44·page magazine prepared to bring you up to date on the state' or the Orange Coast economy and the outlook for the coming year. It's a special edition you'll' want to share with friends and associates. Look for PROGRESS '77 in tooay'11 Daily Pilot Or~::~,:•sl : \\'eather Mostly cloudy with 80 percent chance or rain Fri· day. Righs near 60, lows in lowSOs. INSIDE 'TODA\' I luue1t .ore $hoking I01lfl ldanding ~dol r~lotiolulnp ~tween U.S •. end Caooda Sttcmd oj three . art~le1t. op.. peoraon A.7. • i Index AI V-'9Nltt flt a-.•m .. o It Gtl-• Al O••lfl• .. U ~· ., er.._., IU OMltl N .. luo Al lltlll*111 ..... ... ·-1""'-"' .,. " N-. Alt.IJ -..c... 9.f ..... ~..., ., -• .42 DAIL V PILOT 3 Killed, 2 Injured fu Wreck Three persons were killed and lwo others critically Injured Wednesday in a headon collision of two lightweight pickup trucks on Ortega Highway. A coroner's report identified those killed in the headon col- lision about 11 miles cast of San Juan Capistrano as: -Belinda Diane Cordero, 24, or 26712 Avenue Shonto, Mission Viejo. -{;reg Thomas Trulis, 16, or 9882Teresa Ave., Anaheim. -James Cruse, 17, of 1221 E. Walnut St .. Lompoc. Two critically injured teenagers now in Mission Com- munity Hospital have been iden- tified as Thomas Cru.se, 17, of the Lompoc address, and Samuel Robert Koutrouhs. 16, of Quebec, Canada. According to a California Highway Patrol spokesman, the two Cruse boys, brothers of Mrs. Cordero, were passengers in the pickup truck she was driving eastbound on Ortega Highway at 9:45a.m. Koutroulis was a passenger ln lhe westbound pickup driven by TtuLis. About 31 mile w est of San Juan Hot Springs, the Trulis vehicle apparently crossed over the center line and collided headon with Mrs. Cordero's eastbound pickup, the CHP spokesman said. Cause of the triple fatal acci- dent is still under investigation. China Troops End Uprising Near Peking HONG KONG (AP) -Chinese troops have put an end to "great chaos" spread by supporters or the purged widow of Mao Tse- tung in the city or Baocling, about 100 miles southwest ol Peking, according to official and foreign news reports from China. The r eports. which spoke of bombings and armed raids by the rebels, did not make. clear when the antigovernment dis- turbances occurred. A Dec. 20 1ssue of Peking's People's Daily newspaper ob- tained here said the armed bands in Baoding had been "threaten· ing the security of Peking so that they could usurp the party power" and were suppressed by army troops. A Hopeh provincial radio re- port quoted by the London Daily Telegraph today said it took a "concerted effort" by the army to restore order after a long period of "confusion" in the city, the provincial capital. The Sydney (Australia) Mom- m~ Herald 's China correspon· dent also reported the Baodmg disturban{'es. The TeleJ(raph's Peking cor· respondent. Ni#(el Wade, not<.'<I that foreign travelers reported as t.'arly as last spring that radical opponents or the Hopeh provin· 1·1al leadership m BaOOing had broken into an armory, blown up factories a nd committed murder. rape and robbery. The Baoding d1scl06ures were the latest In a series of reports of disturbances rhrl'rled again!!t the regime of Chairman Hua Kuo-feng and s aid t.o have been fomented by radical followers of Mao·~ widow. Chiang Ching. and her associates m the ''Gang of Four " Labor Unrest TEL AVIV, Israel CAP) -A wave of labor unr~t was expe<:t ed today after Pnme Ministn Yitzhak Rabin'~ weakened gov- ernment failed to block legisla· lion that would require arbitrn lion In some strikes. DAILY PILOT t.,._f't,11,..,_C+"" t D•hf1H(\t ,.,,..,..,.,.,,_,,,fW'li1 "'""°" ,,_. Nf'w\ Jltrt '" IN~il~ h';' ""°'.,_.-"I r t I f• ohh "'"'"I (l'lrnO.f"lf' .-o.-tr O• •M+·~· tt 1'Hr1 l'I I "'11• J l•lf '"''"••j+1 I''"" I t1 I' • .. M 1 If MJ ·•I ff•t"' H I'·'· •J( l f\. t I\ f ''"' 1-t·"I 'Y·I ~ .. , tt';'11'\f \Hl·l!rh! fl >l•l•y Iot t I ~uift.t" 1 I\ """"'" t"'•'' A ''"'i'• un "'" •• • 1 t· ~ t\ l'vf°th\ ... d \th••04tf\ 4tftO ~Nfl('\ ,,. (VUYIC\•• , .. ,~·· "''"? "' '"' " ,, UQ 'A' ·• "•f \IH t (.O\I• Mot\• (4t1tor~••1'h .... rlN .... PCot\fOlftl .t:"O ~•""'9 JM-ill(....., II Kt Ptttl<!f~l •"'Jc;.,.,., .. Ml- ,,...,. .. , tCttltll l-f·I ,, ,....,~,. ,....,,...,_. .... ,,.,.,"'40 ~· ..... 0-.r~tN L"' ltlc ...... I' ,..,. A • l.,nt M-4'1\•Q•""J t ·t t w 011101 t->\tl M• ' lM Wf\1 &A'f \1,.-.1 lAq~ ...... f\ tl .. tjte,.,.....,-t\t1..-1 Hf.ll'IU"qot&n ft11:ttf\ lltH ""~f'l 8ou1•v.rd ~itt>•r Iii "'"'lltv )UOt ._,. P., RNl.1 fl\-" OlfOO ''MW.ty Tetepllon• (7'4) .. f.-4321 C11t1llted 4dYUtlalng f47·5f71 S..Odlo°"ck ll.il1Y-C)Ol(e &tl.-310 t ,.$f"lt \141\ (l•f'nlllfll•• 49$·0*30 :;_::'1~ :!:!. o:,:7?;, c~:.;',,~;~~~·~.,~:'Zt "''°'""'" "' •ftvtrti\I"'"""' "'"'•in MtY .,,. '' "'"ftVt.•'1 •'tftovt •l>tot ••• •ff'"1tu••,, et fl'l)f"flQ;oif~WMf ~fttfll~ ~It\\ eo-.t IQf attfl 41t (..,t. ,_,. (.•ltf9Pl\ia •1.1•\t ... l1t .... r•rrttf U )0 "'6'W\HU • ., flln41t \f ti) ~l"IY, fftHlttn Cit .t1Ntwrw\\•l •,,..,_u\ly lll'Wlr ..... IO KLAN MEMBERS RETURNED TO PENDLETON BY MARINES From Left, Dennis Campbell, Charles Smith, Ronnie Harper Marine Sentenced; Guilty in Assault Al'Wl..-1e MARINE FOUND GUILTY Cpl. E. F. Henry, 20 Outside Paper Draws Blast FromA.CLU SAN DIEGO (AP) -Thi' American Civil Liberties Union demanded "a full invesllgation" today into a newspaper circulal· ed at Camp Pendleton describing black Marines as criminals. The newspaper, a weekly publication called The Spotlight, was in view of witnesses entenng and leaving a hearing room while a pretrial investigation was tak· ing place Wednesday for one or l3 blacks charged with attacking whites, the ACLU newswoman said. A headline said, "Negro Marines Brutally Attack Whites but Press Reverses the Blame." A story blamed blacks for crime in neighboring Oceanside. "It appears that this is a Jc. liberate official or other effort to sabotage the black Marines' cases and additionally certain of- ficials appeared to be coun· tenancing this effort," said Mark Rosenbaum, an ACLU ~taff e1l· tomey. "This incident appears to be one small part of an effort by the military to cover up the racist situation on the base and to scapegoat 13 black Marines." R o s e n b a u m s a 1 d \ h t' newspaper is published in Washington , D C. lie did not identify the organtzat1on that pubhshesit. CAMP PENDLETON CAP> - A Marine corporal has been de· moted to private and sentenced to three months hard labor alter pleading guilty lo pummeling another Marine with his fists in an attack by blacks on six whites in a barracks. "I'm glad I didn't gel a BCD (bad conduct discharge). r was worried a bout that." said Cpl. E.F. Henry, 20, one of 13 black Marines accused in the incident. One was granted immunity in ex- change for testimony. Henry pleaded guilty Wednes- day to conspiracy and assault charges. telLing a special court- martial that he and the other blacks thought they were attack· ing a group or Ku Klux Klan mem· be rs Ile was the first to race trial in the case. The Marine Corps is ex- pected to announce next week whether the other 11 will be tried. Henry 's attorney, Capt. Stephen F. Biegenzahn, told re· porters he considered the penalty "an appropriate sentence." He had told the JUry that his client!'~· alized the presence of the KKK did not justify the assault. The black Marines were char ged with aggravated assault and conspir acy after they al- legedly beat the whites with clubs a nd stabbed them w ith screwdrivers. F'ive of the victims were hospitalized for periods of at least two days. One man is still in the hospital. Henry, of£ van hoe. N.C., said he used only his closed fist. Prosecutors accepted his plea or guilty to reduced charges of sim- ple assault and conspiracy. Henry said he and the other blacks had a "little misun- derstanding" about which room the Klansmen were in. lie told the judge the incident began when he and the other blacks "agr eed to go over and jam (beat up> the Ku Klux Klan.·· They set out for another barracks and chose the particular room because "we heard a lot or noise; U1cre was a party going on," Henry said. When the whiles answered the knock at the door, "we all rushed in," Henry said. Henry said he doesn't mind serving time in confinement because ''at least l 'm still in the Marine Corps.'· In addition to the demotion and the sentence, his pay was cut by $150 a month for four months. Biegenzahn said he introduced <'Videncc about the Klan to show "it did exist; it was at Camp Pendleton." Ile said it was "the kmd of thing that would stir a younf? black man, especially one from North Carolina, to rage." Carter to Weigh Financial Interests PLAINS, Ga . (AP> President-eleet Carter says he 1s oot ready to annoWlce what he will do with his extensive finan- cial interests while in the White House. But he promises to abide by the same restrictions he plans t-0 place on top appointees. Carter commented on his financial holdings and on a con- ruct-0f-interests code Wednesday shortly before he returned lo his home here after holding pre- inaugural Cabinet meetings. Aides said the code of ethics for all those Carter names to high positions would be made public late today or Friday. For three days, the President. elect held marathon meetings with prospective Cabinet mem- bers and other key advisers on St. Simons Island. a secluded re sort o(f the Georgia coast. The economy and the dJrecllon the new admlnlstraUon will take after the Jan. 20 inaug\lratJon were high on the agenda. Carter told a Dec. 20 news con· (erence he already approved the code of ethics and that press secretary Jody Powell would make It available tor publication. For reasons never Cully ex· plained, release ot the document waadelayed. Carter said Wedne_,day that all hla •PbOlntets have aweod to meet the terms of the code, and said: · "It wlU require the compl<'le divestiture or any financial rela- tionships that might create a con· flict of interests, and a complete revelation of all other ~conomic holdings, including net worth statemenL'I." And the President-elect added. ''1'11 conform with the ~amc restrictions I've placed on the Cabinet members." Carter reported during his campaien that his net worth at the end of 197S was S81 l,982.09. Although Carter's partnership ln the family peanut business does not have direct financial de· allngs with the government, it benefits from some agricultural subsidies. In advance of an an- nouncement of Carter's plans for his personal holdings it was not clear whether the President- elect sees a potential conflict here or. if so, how he plans to deal with it. Carter had an afternoon ap· polntment today to confer with former Gov. Kenneth Curtis of Maine, who rep0rtedly is in line to become chairman of the Democratlt' NaUonal Committee succeeding Robert Strauss. Carter aod CurtJs have known each ot.ber lince both were 1ov· crnor.. Sidewalks Studied In Irvine The Irvine City Council has or de red a study to help deterrrune 1f sidewalks should be built next to streets within the Jrvine In· dustrial Complex. City staf( mem hers are exp,ct· ed to make recommendations Jan.25. The subject arose at Tuesday'!! city council meeting when the council was asked to release the developers of the new city hall building from constructing • sidewalk a long Jamboree Boulevard in front ol the new structure. The council was asked to accept a $1 ,191 refund from the de· velopers. Shaw and Talbott. anrl scrap the plans for the sidewalk. However, instead of granting the release, council members held off the decision and said they wanted further study on whether or not sidewalks are needed next to industrial complex streets. City staff members had sug- gested that no sidewalk be bwlt, since there are few already within the complex and the new pedestrian pathway on Jamboree Road would lead nowhere But several council members said they wanted to sec 1f the city's policy on sidewalks within the complex should be changed GWI Permits Chiers Work SAN FRANCISCO IAP) -The city attorney has advised Poltce Chief Charles Gain that he is not bound by a ban on handgun sales that the Board or Permit Appeals wantstoimposeinSan Francisco. In a four-page letter, Thomas M. O'Connor advised Gain to "ex- ercise your discretion" on each application. Pages Blank Wo~ 106, Dies Alone HAYWARD (AP> The pc.igc~ were blank in the book entitled "Friends Who Called" at the luneraJ pa1 lor where servic~ were held for 106-yCl:lr·old Mary Robb. "She must have oullivoo everyone by at least 20 yl!ars or so," said an employe of the convalescent home where Miss Robb diedonChrtstmas Day. Records kept by the home showed s he had •'no re· latives and no friends." She spent her last years mostly in chairs or in bed and was uncommunicative. The pubLic administrator assumed responsibility for her when she was declared incompetent several years ago. Little was known about Miss Robb, who was born on Nov. 14, 1870, in Sacramento. Her Social Security file indicated she never held a job, and there was no re· cord of a marriage. Robert Moore, manager of the funeral home that handled the services, said he placed a notice in local newspapers in case friends wanted to attend the se~ce Wednesday. Nobody showed up, so George Miller, a funeral home employe, read a Bible passage and said a prayer. Another Liberian Tanker Aground From AP Dispatches Tug boats were taking fuel off a Liberian tanker whic h r an aground on the southern coast or Puerto Rico in hopes of refloating the vessel. a spokesman for the Commonwealth Oil Refining Co. -CORCO -said. There was no immediate danger of an oil spill from the 735-foot Daph~e which hit soft cor- al Tuesda}'._t(light near the en- trance of {he Guayannilla Bay, authorities said Wednesday. The tanker carries 400,000 bar- rels of light crude oil. .. A part of the crude will be taken orr the tanker, and then an attempt will be made to renoat it,"theCORCOspokesmansaid The crude was bought from Algeria to be processed at the CORCO refinery. Coast Guard personnel were 1n ~QUALITY TELEVISION Guayanilla to keep an eye on tug boats taking fuel off the vessel. the U.S. Coast Guard said. In other oil sptll cases: -Pledging to put "fly-by-night foreign operators on notice," a federal attorney obtained the &r· rest of the captain of a Llberian· registered tanker that spilled 133,500 gallons of oil into the Delaware River. -A New York investigation continued into why a second Liberian tanker unleashed one or history's worst 011 spills off Nan- tucket Island. -The spill from a third Liberian tanker was being cleaned up in Connecticut. Vas1Lios Vlismas, a Greek na- tional, was t aken into custody by U.S. marshals Wednes day aboard the tanker Olympic Games. 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L Thurad1r December 30 1978 1/N DAILY PllOT A 13 Dour Diets Additives List Grows By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Have you looked recenUy at the food you and yOGr children areeatmic7 One ot the great sp<>rtJS or our limes has to be reading the ln&redient labels on food packa~cs Cuullon Is necessary. Th• food may not mtikc you sick, but flndln&: out what's in it rni&ht General Foods (GF>. one of our largest food processors, hM been concerned t'nuugh about lhls ba&ard lo use some of It.a many adverhsrng dollars to explain why we have to eat such substances as propylene glycol monostearate GF s answer • Propylene glycol monostearatc lS a food additive that enables certain foods Lo mix together " To help make the case for add1t1ves in food, G F has even pro Money Tree duced a booklet, Focus on Jo"ood l\dd1tives "whlfh you can get by wnting to Peggy Kohl .11 lhe company s head quarters In While Plcuns, N Y 10625 GF EXPLAINS THERE THAT ALL \ls additives ba\lc some positive errecls on food and are perfectly sate to In· gest Still, you might wonder 1f you bought the product Orange Plus, which GJo" advertises as tasting more like fresh orange Juice than the JWCe made from frozen concen trate (which G F also sells under the Birds Eye label), and read that 1t contains the followmg • Water sugar. syrup, conccntre1ted ornngc Juice, corn syrup orange pulp, c1tnc acid, tnpotassium phosphate, cot tonseed oil. modified food starch, sodium carbox· ymethlycelluose potassium citrate, ascorbic acid, tncalc1um phosphate, natural and artihcual flavors, magnesium oxide, xanthan gum artif11"al color, copper, gluconate, macln, punthotheruc acid, vitamin A palm1tate. thiamine hydrochlonde, vitamlll JA-6, folic acid, nboflavm, BHA " It sounds a little hkc the mad sc1enl1sl working in tbc laboratory. right? nus produft has more ~ugar and syrup m 1t than orange 1u1ce But to make 1t taste like fresh orange Juice theres orange pulp And to make sure you recognize It, G F throws m some artlf1cial color READING TIJE BACK OF A CEREAL box these days is like being m a drugstore There arc so many vitamins in the package that you wonder 1( there s room left. for the cereal One of the best labels I have Se<?n 1s the one that appear~ on Jeno s pi zza rolls Look at all the good1e:> you are gelling when you eat this tiny roll · Ennfhed flour, tomato puree water pepperoni (pork and beef, salt water spices, dextrose mustard flour, s ugar, lactic acid starter culture, oleorcsm or papnka sodium ascorbate garlic powder, sodium nitrate, BJIA, BHT and c1tnc acid added to help protect flavor). vegetable 011 onions, celery pasteunzed processed American cheese modified food starch, red and green bell peppers, low moisture part skim moiarella cheese textured vegetable protein C~oy flour and caramel colonng >. salt, egg yolk sohds sugar, isolated soy protein. cheese whey soy flour blend <sodium hydroxide added to standanze actdity ), yeast spice dextrose, parmesan cheese, vegetable gum. leavenin~ Romano cheese <made from cow's milk ). monosod1um glutamate papnka, dried whey, sodium stearoyl I laflylale calcium sulfate, zanthan gum, de hydrated parsley garhc powder calcium propionate " Whew ' Now that is some p17.7.a roll It has more water and tomato puree than meat, and the meat itself 1s a clever combma11on of many things. in cluding good old sodium rutnte It has gum to hold 1t all together -and there seven a pmch of caramel colonng somewhere in ther<> Youcouldn tmakethatmyourk1lchcn Stocks Regain Some Of Earlier Losses NEW YORK CAP>-The stock market bounced back near the 1 000 level of the Dow Jones industnal average to day regammg some of the ground 1t lost on Wednesday The Dow Jones average or 30 mdustnal stocks, off S 15 pomts m Wednesday ssess1on, ga1ned4 l6to999 09 .t;to••k11 IH 'l'h_. .t;potllght NEW VORIC tAPI !>•I" 'pm rt'"• .w'4 niltl ( ~n~ Of U\f fl tftf'n """"' *' tlw Ntw "to'~ Sh>'\: £a:c.M~ •\\""\ =~~=~•on•ll., .ti rnnr,~~~ 'j, • 1 • ~~r~ Ptl ~~~ = ~ ~ : :: lntTotTtl )IS 200 3A "'• ' L.evHI frnlt ?11 900 • •, ,._ CitAUP« lH 900 fJ • • ~. Sony Corp 114 600 • • T•••to II>< 11>4 "lO 71 I \ C:-•ISI <;o 16' am fl , •, NON\I Ulll ISl JOO 10"• >II TttatO l>tl I \O 100 lb ~ • \> 5.,.,,. GO 141 )(JO 11 , • "' p.., Am 14S 600 • • 5ovltwrn Co 14'1 «JI IA • NL l"d u 1 lOO 10'"' • >, 1Jp11 and DomH• NEW VORIC 1111>1 ,,,. •otlowlno 11<1 ~' 1hft N~w Vm.._ !.tock Ewt h.-in<Jif" \10<.kl •Ml -.,artAn1\ lh411T h1t11t Q1'.>ntt UO the mott I nd ctawn t~ .. m~t l\alif'O Of\ Oltf(t-nt of t hlnilti ''"911rdll~\\ of volUl'IW lor Tl\urMl•Y u:: ~r'!'~' ;~'!!~.;~~:';:~ O'"•ttnc.• bt'ttw,.•n tt\• Pf'•V•OV' cla.1~ Pflr• •nd TOtMV \ 4 (Im prtctt UP\ I·~·. ,c"?, UoP<ll!J I 1 '-UO /}I t J ,. tip )I I 1"-"' UO 1' I • I • 110 " 1 I Utt t• I I"' '• UO 1) S ! . ·~ ~~ :~ ~ I\ • 1'-UP '1 "' ,.uo ., '"" \o UP 1• l • " Un I 1 1 • Uf't 1 l 1-. '> Uo I I )t~, • '"° Up 71 l7 l V. UI' I 6 '8 ~ 1 lip 1 A nv, '• uo 1 • )O'" t 11, Up 1 t DOWNI 1 ·w.. '~. 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Oii H I , ()II ) 4 •• Oii J ) • Oft J l NEW VORI" IAP! ~I~\ • p"' .,., • ¥'fJ hfl't (!\•not" ot th~ t"n '"°'' ~t ~ AmtttH An \toe' £•<"•"0« 1\1.un tr.Olnq n•tl..,,•tlY •I mor~ 111.tn \1 O..mp Ho ~14 'iOO l'• • ·~ ~~~~1 $j';P fl' ~ ~ ,L : .: l.,Mw\ Tll wt i I :JOO l\o • ... lflll 8"""°' 0 tOO ,... • " Hou<>OIM 41 ICll <16 , I HOOv C.orp l i to0 , • • '> -·n ().I Jl ~ 19'• • ~ M QI\ (.orp l l 0 ''' • • Imo C.room ll 000 S • • '• M ft1tl .~f O(•f.;~ f)fd NEW 'l'ORi< IAPI p'""' Anv•nt flt\ .~ M4 'f ~r.I DKllnr\ <)I /'4 l.HlcM _.i 416 W1 rot•• ·-~ 1t)1 "~ Nt# ltlb l\IQM 114 1:1' N-It)~ IOW\ 1 I WHAT /IM(l( 010 Nl-W VORK IA.Pl Prttv AdY4,H'•\ .{r•'f 0-:A ONl11\0\ 161 '111 U"tl'l<t"'Jf'<I l\O ll6 TOCal '"' #\ ID&' It))\ PMw tth f'liQ1'\ .,,} M ,,. ... 1th_1_0_ .. _, _______ , ____ •;_ Syrnbob )I • ,~ .. to•.,, u • ._ • 11 'I • ""'. \, ,,., .. l\ ,, ...... "'". ~ A J 4 DAILY PILOT Thursday December 30, 1978 Tonight's TV Highlights KNBC GJ 7:30 America: The Young Experience presents Part One of .. The Sellin ' of J amic," drama of a slave family torn apart by a slave auction. KCET @ 8 :00 -Mas terpiece Theater presents Part Two of "The Five Red Herrings," meticulous mystery by Dorothy L . Sayers. KCET ~$ 9:00 -Two dramas by Alexis Deveau concern, "The Tapestry" and ''Cir cles," depict the pressures on black women to settle for hf e as it is. TV DAILY LOG THURSDAY _ ( EVENING 6:00 0 0 8 10 ( 17 3 ) News 0 23) & ( ?11 8 ) ID News 0 26 St1r frek I e Gomet Pyte O Gunsmote 0> Partrtdae fam1lr W Adam·l2 ID Electnc Companr m Dramatic Se11ei 139 Dinah! W llttlt Rasuls -6:30-0 D1n1h' t, ,,.4.I•~ w1 lu1!r • .. ,,. (Min 11 I I lr1 I H ,j f.-o•I'• hr/., Or !luu6rd II 0110 111.11 ~ 1v41111,n lland 6 Andr C11lhth 10 Mert CriUm Sito• m hm•lr All111 ( 11 J ) Gunsmo~e ID loom 7:00 0 0 23 6 m m llr•n O li11s Ctub 6 Mr Three Solis 8 To Tell the Truth O Concentration m t love lucy W The FBI ED Cartoons 126 Andy C11lhth ID The MacNeil lrhrei Report ( 29 a 8on1nu W Addams f1m1ly -7:30- 0 Ame11<1 The Younc Ctpenrncr ··rn• """"' nl ldnll• ,, .. ,, t r11r· tldt'lt d1dn1.1 nt 1 I iv• 10"111; tColn apdrt hr • '''''' •ur 111111 •lnri 1111•11 ~llPrnpl In reunol" 1nlr1 • l,1011ly 111111 O Bowline for Dollars 1 6 lhe Odd Couplt U 1'111 Gone Show te undid C1mer1 0 Tiit Johr's Wrld 110 21 & lihlch ~me (D Tht Br1dy Bllnch ( 17 3 ) lhe Wilburn 8rolhtts W Today's CoolitnC •16 lioc•n's Htfon ID Cll•nntl 21 r on11ht E!J ,.IKt Is Ro&ht Jt C,n rtnw On Sfrtl(' w null r.ordon 8 :0 0 0 DRAMATIC ENCORE' • 2hr WALTONS SHOW' 0 ( 11 J I ~ Int W•hOllS ~ ' . .., j fl I 0 n & ID ~•n o,1i, ind Company 1 , '" ,~, t O Mom c f]hrl ··Tn1t Man hom Rio" .in • l "'"I' ll1I P• ·1.,nrJ 1 "' , ,. p 11 ,_. 1 6 Mot11t C (211r) "l 1ttlt Mur dtts" I• t i ' , t 0 ( 19 e ) lt Wtl<Olllt 9ttlt loHtt •• , II ,, ' • , .. , .. , , I 0 liloo•t C llhr) 'Stt1Nd lltt S,,1kt1 t '. I I I I J ' • v.. •v • 10 lnui I C (D ll-t S2~ 000 """' d Q) ,.,,,., 1111\0ll f1.) ~mu111 lolO'f e " Woolf c (l~tl • 1"°1« "'''"' hcttrt lolni 1n 1"'11 flytnc _,ch1nn t 1.~ 'lr..i m """''"'H ,.,.,," C) future f1llft l!) l•Pl~M UftfU'C' r1oer1"1 -8 10- D ( 2t 8 ) W~al's H1ppn1n1 Whrn (onr\t '''' In h<11d ltnma "" nmlh., lh.11 II•\ I ••n ••r•llr~ h9m .ctwl<\f bv IAl~on~ h" lath•r onto JOIOf to th• p11n1 •NI l1;r hom hr m11ta,enly lhon'' h• " horn' Ir•• !101 c.n.,., CD Crtss·l'lits 9:00 Cl !"fl (6 G) lut Stltert Ono in Uflt (haOtrr fi Sim O.lmon \lfHe\·,lullv ~•ltnd~ l'vt lot Brin~ rn 11 t11•I 111• 1>1lh 1•ri•I '1)•.,IOn'I and Donny D~mon drlivortnf hr\ cl~\~ v1l•nd1cto1v add"'' olrilds 11>1 Am'llCI In lVO•d onwOIV!m•nl 1n thr .,alhtnn& f'atohr •1r D ( 2t 1t l U lluntyMllltt(Rl Barney s dtt~ttrves fact a lbw Yu1 s Eve ol 1umPfr\ drunks po<~ 'poclitt5 and a span1sh 'Pta•1n1 t11>«t1nt moth,, about to eowe but~ Of Morit: "TM Sltn4er Th1ud" (di•) '66-Stdno PothN a> Ttnntsstt Ernie ford, * PttP Fountain And Al H11rt loin Mm Ton11ht 81 Me,., 'nll111 Sl!ow I Ill Yita\ftlaft 49 Jvdo s.lkode11 &> VISIONS "Tapestry" * and "Circles" "'Vlslt111 "The hputry" and t11de5• Two dramas by Ale .. s O..Ye1u1concern the tnormoos prtt •.or~s O'l blac' womfn tQ ~Ifie '°' ltle IS 11 15 • lhe laptslrv locusts ~n a •oman aboul lo take her law '(hool e.am5 and slar5 Glorra Jones Schult/ C11cl~s" rs about a y~ung r111 who fantas11es about being • dancr1 -9:30- u ( ~1 ((') Qt1 Tiit Tony ll1nd1ll Show Judg• lian~lon os oltered a tll(rah•• pos1hon w11h his old law fum and 16etS the decrsoon of 11vh~the1 01 nol to stay on lhe bench ED Women's Goll 10:00 O ( 17J f3) (8 811n1br Jones 1'1adlord Oollman eu~I> u a play l•oy ,, .ithlelr who plot\ a dollocult \l million doll~r diamond he1s1 that onvolY'd an tdrlrtr burRlaty to obla•n 11 tn' ol lhf \Pturily )Ylltm guard•nf lh" I irtune on ,em) 0 n 6 ID Grbbrnllt Air". "' n \\'allt A young he•r .. h•J 1: n$ bhnd I\ taukM lo see lole ra a ,.,.,.. .,,,~,, O 0 News 6 Ba«llanat O ( 2t e ) 39 Slrttts of Su francl\Co 0,ad or Ahve (R) \\h•n J ~'''"'"R lalh.r 011.,1 U m•lhon lrx lh• w•p•!t 111 lh• rape murdrr ••f ho\ d.tu0M•t tt • 11re•I rum into a "" lur atl "h•n ntaoly eve••one Im, tu tOtl~'I ED Grtet1n1s f 1om Germany ~ Cunsmoke ED [I BrM Amado -10:30-m mm flews ffi Black Pmpe<lrte on tht Hews 1 1 :00 0 0 8 m 39 News Cl 23 6 10 ID News 0 ( 29 e ) ~ love Ameroc1n Style $ Sf1 Hunt O tetebnty Revue Q) ~l'f Hartman, Mary H1rtm1n W USC Bnhtball H11h1ttes. ( 11 3 ) St11111p Ult Stan ID lrloM • '"Walt? of the T 0<H dol'$ ·• -11:30- 0 ( 17 l ) I CBS ute Mo.~: ~k o n 6 10 £> lollnny C¥10n 6 flit rn Club 0 ( 29 • I lt Stteets ot Sin franctt<o Dan A11c11st m11t., 16 Tht 100 Club ED Ne in Movot 12:00 O ~· ot Grtl4Kl\o 0 Movie "A Woman ot the IOW!l~ w•\/ JI 1;1,• l••<O• Albtrl "'''" (D Movie "Yo~ Belone to Mt" '' "'" 11 ISMbdr• JI'""''• lJt.1· Bu• nan~n -12:30- lil Atl N1cht Show: "O,S S. 117- 0.Ublt Aetnt,A "Tiit Amannr Trani t111tnt Man," "House of fur" ID liloo1t C "Tltf SIJwt" wl~• ' , hr"' It qu,. ~"' • 1:00 0 1J 6 10 TOlllO!row €) T~t Pll Cl11b 2:00 0 ~ Ooul>Nlt1h11e "Operi- tio11 0.usttt .. "111111 of (tt•ts" m AM "'P' s. "'load "ClorT ... "TM 81.a An•cM" -3:05- 0 '-•it C "0111 M for Murdu" rt a> 4 11.1 1\11llan1 r.~ , ~•"1 OA'fTIME MOVIES OlCEMBCR ll a.1ow, IOf ,our tOnVenrenct, are tht _., .• "'°"ies. 10 00 O ''lncudruy Blo11de" I lr~I 'H Bttly Hulton. Barry lor 1em1~ Chai I•\ Ru rates, Ar tur~ dr Cmdovl "Up the llrm " I• om! oH 1·.,~ton fosl~r. Tony MA1hn Phylh•, Brno~' ,. e I "W1t•rWorldo llllolh11 Goose" lcoml 61 M1rR1ttl Ruthrrlnrd 11 ·00 o "rly1nc luthl111ech" (ad•) !II John Wayn,. Robtrt ~••n 12·00 m "It Should Happen to You" (com) ~ -ludy lfolldav l;ic• l,mmon Ptltr la.,ford, Moehul D Shu 2 oo o e -nw a.w Wonit11" (dra) ~'I Jeff Mouow Merry A"dtrs llm Rost lrr~h Mtl;.111$, Cuonn W1lhams 3 00 to c "wpe" Cdra) 71- Chn tnphtr C•n12• Avt1y Srhrttbfl M111lyn Ma \on W1tlr1m Windom Hunr1 Hall Gkma Grahame no o 1e, ""'• Voy1ie "' tht Yn" (ad;) '73 -0rsi Atn11 Jr • Mike (vans, Bt.,rly G11land. Skip Homrier. Della R""· KOCE Television (50) ·-... ·-·---··-... - for the tv sportsman The Odyasey 300 la tor peo- ple who like action on TV - action where they can par- ticipate. ft turna your TV Into an excit ing electronic playground. 3 position switch for novice. Intermediate or expert play. Olgltal scoring, action sound, automatic serve. It's great! Hooks up to any TV. &9•11 AC't;I btn apeclal pun:haael Ody111y 200 P11y tennl1, hockey or 1ma1h right on your TV 1creef), Feature• on-screen 1cor1no. action aound, ball rebound, vertlcel and horizontal player action, speed control, 2/4 player twitch. Mike your TV more than something Juet to alt and watch. Hooks up to any TV. 39111 ACU Cl bn D D little chain saw ••• mighty results The Remington Limb 'n Trim electric weighs only 4 'Ir lbs .• has w. hp engine and cuts trees up to 16 In. thick. Truly remarkable. 251s Wide angle door viewer lets you see who's there before you open the door. Adjusts to flt 1 'I. in. to 2 In. wide doors. By Kwlkset. Reg. 2.56 1aa I \ make quick work of cutting Jobs Remember how cutting wood meant get- ting out the old crosscut saw and pumping away 'tll your muscles tired and your hands blistered? Well, ache and blister no more, friend -you can cut through the big logs with the greatest of ease with a VIiiage Blacksmith 10 Inch electric chain saw. #9110 grid fllppln' food artist Hamilton Beach's Lltte Mac Is the next best thing to having your own short order cook. Cooks hamburgers, grllls sandwiches. #2108. Reg. 18.95 15aa a slmpla pin secures the door Here's added protection for slldlng patio doors -can be used to secure sliding windows. too. Eaay Installation; comes complete with hanger. Reg. 85• 59° ground It for safety's sake Eliminate the hauard of electric shock with this simple, Inexpen- sive U-ground adaptor. For 125 volt use; with 3 In. ground lead. Reg. 39• 17° By "'1'/s6 survlval device • In case of fire The early warning Kwlkset smoke and fire detector sounds an alarm to warn you of a poten- tial disaster. Easlly Installed, battery operated. 2aaa ~· ~~// If". ~/" high powered care far rour hair oil, man ... It's time to look good what a bargain on this 1tyll1t make waves with super curl Over 1000 watte of blown heet make quick work of drying and styling your hair. It comes with 1ttachments and It's a cinch to uae. #H0- 7. Reg. 22.95 1511 D Max for men wJll do It tor your hair -mike It look greet. the way your stylist doea. 650 watta, 2 temp. Mttlnga and etyllng attach- mente. #HD9. Reg. 2U5 1411 It's the Giiiette Max hair dryer/styler with 500 wans of power and comes with attach mente to assure terrific reaulls. Easy to use. #HD-4. Reg. 7.99 511 Giiiette's Olaf-A-Curt does a better Job becauH It haa adJuatable heat control and mol1turl2ing steam to lock In the curl. #SW·2. Reg. 18.94 1411 Conveniently Locotefl ... Easy To Reach ' 2666 HARBOR · Bl VD. IN COSTA MESA PHONE 546-7080 HOURS: WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 • SATURDAY A~D SUNDAY 9 to 6 f7 ... Laguna /South Coas t l:OIT I ON ' f t :\fternouQ " , , ... -./" • r ~. \'. S •u(·ks ......... \. V OL. 69, NO. 365, 3 SECTIONS, 70 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 30 1976 TEN CE I SC Employes' Pay 'Among Lowest' . By P HILIP ROSMARIN Ol llW 0,11, ~114'1 S\<111 Salaries paid San Clement\' 1·1 ty einployes are among the lowest in the county. according to a League of California Cities comparison But the same s urvey s how.!. that, among the 15 sample' c1t1cs. fringe benefits for San Clemenll' employes are among the best. can reach the top of his salary range faster than his or her cnwi· lerpart in any of the other cities. Five bargaining groups representing San Ctemente's 171 workers are ~ngaged in contract talks for pay hikes that Wlll be retroactive to July 1. The pre1idents of all fi ve groups say~ey want to bring ci- ty salaries up to at least average for the county. Talks were postpoll<'d last July at the city's, Insistence that an in- dependent JOb c lassillcation and ••salary comparison study be car ried out. The study m easurl'<.I San Clemente wages against those o f seven other Orange County cities. Oceanside an San Diego County, and three pnvate corporations. The city cons ultant made re- commendations for a new salary sched11le whu:h is being kept .!tl'Cret from lht> pubbc dunng negotiations. Sources at city hall. however. have said that the recommended salaries ar e too low to begin to• meet employ~ demands. Negotiator Ivan Morriss, who represents the city, has reported· ly made no offers yet. instead asking for the associat1ons to restate their bargaining pos1- tions. The Len$(ue of Catielll study compared sa laries in Sun Clemente. Laguna Reach. Costa Mesa. Fountain Valley, Hunt· ington Beach, Irvine, Newport Beach. San Juan Capistrano. Brea, Cypress. La llabra, the County of Orange, Placentia. Seal Beach and Tustin Cities compareft by the consul tant for San Clemente were Laguna Beach, Huntington Beach , Ne wport Beach, Seal Beach. Brea, Oceans ide. Tustin l and Cypress . The league ~tudy s howed that San Cle mente employes. as · whole. make about $50 a month less than the average pay .jor comparable positions in (he othe ~ti~. ~ But becalJSk! wdrk t"ol\tra tSff LOWEST,Pagel\Z) \. . Pap~r·~jJ .-~ !And, a S•n ~lemcntc employ' 1 ACLU Blasts Off-base I tOn Ortega H i ghway 3 Die, 2 Hurt i In OC Collision ) ' Th••• pmons we•• killed "'' two others critically inj ured ~ Wednesday in a headon collision r or two lightweight pickup trucks on Ortega Highway. I A coroner 's report ad enllfled those killed in the headon col- lision about 11 miles east of San I Juan Capistrano as Traffic Stoppe r I -Belinda Diane Cordero, 24 . of 26712 Avenue Shonto, M1ss1on Viejo. -Greg Thomas Trulis, 16, of 9882Teresa Ave .. Anaheim. -J ames Cruse, 17, of 1221 E. Walnut St., Lompoc. Two critically injured teenagers now in Mission Com- munity Hospital have been iden- tified as Thomas Cruse, 17, of the Lompoc address, and Samuel Robert Koulroulis, 16, of Quebec:, Canada. Traffic on the southbound San Diego Freeway at Junipc ro Serra Road in northern San Juan Capistrano was backed up for ulmost two hours earl} today when the cab of a double truck and trailer rig owned by Oda Nursery of Westminster blew a tire, causing the rear unit to flip on its side across three lanes. The' C alifornia Highway Patrol called a SigAlert and diverted traffic until the mess was c leaned up. One occupant of the truck cab s ustained minor cuts, but there were no other injuries in the 7:30 a .m mishap, CHP officers said. 0411> ,..IOI !.!Aft -· SWIMS STRAITS Lynne Cox Los Alami tos Girl Swi~ cy.Straits SANTI AGO. Chile (A P l Lynne Cox of L-0s Alamitos has become th1• f1r~t p~rson lever to &w1m the 11·y Straits of Magellan. C'halenn nrwspapt:'r" 1 report rd tod J' I ChiJean natwnal rad111 n•1w1rt ed that the HI Hur 11111 I c· Sn11l.1 18.llrbar.i ... 111rl1·nt from Oran..:•• 1Count) .!.\\ .1111 tl11· ... tr,111' Wl'<tr11•, ,day an ont· h11111 '"" n11n11lf"i Temper.1tun• 1n th1· "J''" "''rr' r~ported at 44 b !11·,Kn •(". It was nnl ('f'rtdlll "h1d1 course ~hP look in thr 'tr ail~, which range from two ancl a half to four miles m width The straits separate Tierra del Fuego rsland from the southern most lap of South Amenca. The Chile an n(.'wi, agency Orbe said the cross ing was made at a point rMll<'<i Pnmrr;1 Angosluro. north of the city of Punta Arenas Orbe said a Chil1•a11 n:ivy launch w;1.!t providNI a!i a sup port vcssrl Miss C'ox •ha' prrvinu~I' made chnnn<•I -.wam.!t to Sant;• Catalana l!!land Jnrl hJ~ r roS.!tNI the Englis h Ch.rnncl Guests Spot SC Car Fire t.. The John Penner family of San 1Yemmte bad guests (or dinner edMlday and il was a ,uest nodced •P•rks flying outside klt.chen window. By the time the Penners and u ran outdoors. lhe family's o m pact car was ablaze. remen summoned, to the blaze al 209 Ave. La Cue!lta were ublc osave only lhe •mgine Fireme n estimated the dama,e at about Sl,500 They said Penner had been converting the car to a dune buggy and hud installed some expemive equip ment In tbe ~assenger compart- mut, which was compJetel~ deitroytd. ~· Tbe flre •u atarted by a bat. ~~abort, llrem~n saJd. Another Liberian Aceording to a California Highway Patrol spokesman. the two Cruse boys, brothers of Mrs. Cordero. were passengers In the pickup truc k she was driving eastbound on Ortega Highway al 9 45a m Tanker Aground Koutrouhs was a passenger 111 the westbound pickup dnven hy Tn.ahs About a mile west of San Ju1m llot Sprtn~s. the Trulas veh1clt• apparently c rossed ovc·r the center line and collided headon with Mrs. Cordero's eastbound pickup, the CH P spokesman ~aid. Cause of lhe triple fatal acci dent is still under investigation. 1974 Pos tal Hike of 2 c Said Illegal WASHINGTON CArl A federal appeals court has rult-d that h rst class PQSlage rates were increased 1llegally m 1974 when they were ra ased from 8 cents to 1Q cents. • But the U.S. Court of Appeals look no action to roll back the rate, which has since been increased to 13cents. The same method used as the basis for the 1974 increase was used to support the latest rate hike. The National Association of Greeting Card Publishers, which challenged the 1974 increase, as also contesting the Jump to 13 cents m a separate <'&Se pcndln~ before the appeals court • The court ruled that lhc in <'rease to 10 cents was nbt legal because users of fi rsl·class marl bore more than their share of postal costs under the plan. f'rom AP Dlspa<che~ Tug boats were taking fut•I orr a Liberian t a nker which ran aground on the southern coast or Puerto Rico an hopes of r<:floaling lhe vessel. a ~pokesman for the Commonwealth Oil Refining Co- CORCO said. There was no immediate danger of an oil spill from the 735-foot Daphne which hit son COr· al T\Jesday night near the en- trance of the Guayannilla Bay, authorities said Wednesday. The tanker carries 400,000 bar- rels of light crude oil. "A part of the crude wilJ be taken off the tanker, and then an attempt will be made to refloat at,"theCORCOspokesmansaid. The crude was bought from Algeria to bc proeesse<I al the CORCOrehncry Coas t Guard personnel werC' in Guayanilla to keep an <'YC' on tug boals taking fuel off the \e:-.:-.el. • thC'U S CoastGuardsa1d In othcro1l spill cases Pledging to put "Oy·by-nigh! foreign operators on notice," a fede ral attorney obtru.ned the ar - rest or the captain or a Llberian- registered tanker that s pilled 133,500 gallons of oil into '._the Delaware Rive r. -A New York investigation continued into why a second Liberian tanker unleashed one of history's worst oil s pills off Nan- tucket Island. The s pill from a third Liberian tanker was hc1n g cleaned up In Connecticut Vasilios Vlls mas, a Greek na lional, was taken into custody by US. mars hals Wednes d ay aboard the tanker Olyf11pi c Games, docked by the BP, Inc., refinery at Marcus Hook. 15 miles south of Philadelphia. He was charged with violating U.S. antipollution laws by dis- charging petroleum into a waterway and failing to am mediately notify authorities or the discharge. lie later was freed on bail After Vhsmas· arrest. U.S. At ty David Mars ton said, "It's lugh time we take decisive action <See SPILLS, Page A2 1 Final Rites S/,ate dfor Mrs. Taylor Memorial services will be held al 11 a.m . Friday at St. Mary's Espiscopal Church in Laguna Becach for Roberta Best Taylor, who died Monday at South Coast Community Hospital. She was 72., Mrs. Tayaor , of 1860 Glenneyre St . was a long-time resident or the Art Colony. Sh e was classified advertising manager for 30 years for the old Laguna Beach Post newspaper and later t he combined News.Post. Her husband, Jack, wrote a column for the paper. The Rev. Baird Coffin or St. Mary 's will officiate at the services. Mrs. Taylor is suMved by her husband. She was bom in Dallas, Tex .. on March 14, 1904. The Taylors operated a restaurant in Laguna before get. ting into the newspaper business. Mrs. Taylor retired from lhe News-Post in 1972 because of ill health. The fa mily h<lS s uagested tribul..es in the form of donations to South Coast Community Hospital for the Roberta B. Taylor fund to support radiology research. Sheffer Mortuary in Laguna Beach is handling an'angement.s. The Postal Rate Commission justified the 1974 increase on the ground& lhat raising first-class rates would not discourage use or the mails as much as raising rates for the other three classes o( mall, tbe appeals court said. The law re- quires each clats of~ service to bear it.a own cost, the l'OUl't said. 'Ibe commission recommends rate tncreases to the U.S. Postal Service. Fli111ftam Mail C"lemente Teller TakeJ Commission attorneys con-A short change artist sue:. tended there was nothing in the cessfully OimOamrocd tellers at decision to stop the commission two San Clemente savings and from setting rates based on other loans Wedne1day before they methods. They said no decision ~aught on and provided police has been made on wl'lelher to ap with a description of the su.s- peal the court's rullrla to Ule U.S. pect. SupremeCourt. San Clemente police said Moet mail -cards and letters Fa.heem Zalmoh, 2', was ar. -&a Hntfirst~class. Second-class rested on 1u11plclon of buralary matl covert ne•spape .. 1 and ronowtn1 the two incidents. maiumea, th.lrd-clara II for ad-A teller at Allltate Savlqs vertilJUaC drculara Md fourth-and Loan, tll S. El Camino clwllforpactaies. __ Ra.I, •aid• !1an ln a•bclge su.Jt J asked her about 1 :JO p.m . for change for a SU)() bill. When she gave hlm rive $20 bills, he showed her four $20 bills and one $1 bill. She took the $1 bill and gave hlm $20 befor~ she realized she'd been hood'1finked. A man rltting the ume dtacrlpUon used the sa~e de· ~a.a •t Santa Barbara Sav- in 1• 'lftd Lo!3n, SlO N. ~I Camino Rul. u mlnutet later, police said: Rain Threat To Pageant Of Roses? Rain returned to Orange Coun- ty today after a seven week absence, bringing the possibility of a rare occurence -ram on New Year's Day. Light showers fell throughotit the county and the National Weather Service predicts an 80 percent chance of occasional showers through the weekend. Rose Parade officials are hop- ing to escape the first New Year's Day rain since 195.5. The weather front dropped light snow at the 5,000.foot level. but lhe storm is expected to pass quickly and probably won't bring s ufficient snow to open many Southern California ski resorts. Dense clouds will bring cooler weather to Orange County this weekend High temperatures along the coast are expected to reach about 60 with lows in the up. per40stomid50s. Today's r ain is the first crack in a high-pressure system over the Western states that has blocke d approaching st orm systems for almost two months. Although the weather front is not expected to bring substantial rainfall, a National Weather Service spokesman said this opening in the pressure ridge should pave the way for heavier winter rains. Progress '77 Tel/,s Future Of EcoJWmy Continued rapid growth and tn· dustrlal diversification make Orange County a bright spot in the nation during 1976. Today's Daily Pilot brings an armchair look at the su~es of :976 and the prcdlcti~ for 1977 nade by area firms andJlkiits or ~overnment. · ~- PROGRESS '77 is a 44-page magazine prepared to bring you up to date on lhe state of the Orange Coast economy and lhe ouUoolc for the coming year. ll 's a special edition you'll want to shnl:'e with friends and associates. Look for PROGRESS '77 in today's Daily Pilot. Carter Mom Okay AMERICUS. Ga. (AP) - LllUan Carter, 78, mother of Pr11ldent-elect Carter, may be ~Jeued from the Amertcus- Swnter County ttospital In a few d.ayt, boepital ofOc:ialsaay. ·-------= -'-·-----------~~----' ., ... ~ f J I . • ;i .... ~ 'Criniid&l' Charge j j Alleged .... .. . \ SAN DIEGO (AP> · The American Civil Liberties Union demanded "a full investigation" today into a newspaper circulat· ed at Camp Pendlet~describing black Marines as criminals. The ne wspape r, a weekly publication called The Spotlight,: was in view or witnesses entering; and leaving a hearing room while, a pretria l investigation was tak-· ing place Wednesday for one of l~ blacks charged with attackin whites, the ACLU news woman said. A headline s aid, ''Negr Marines Brutally Attack Whites. but Press Reverses the Blame." A story blamed blacks for crime: in neighboring OceansJde. "It appears that ,frus is a dc-1 liberate official or other effort to sabotage the black Marin~ cases and additionally certain or: ficials appeared to be coun.t tenancing this effort." said Marki Rosenbaum, an ACLU staff at.1 1 tomey. "This incident appears to be one small part of an effort by the. military to cover up the racrst situation o n the base and to scape-goat 13 black Mannes " l R O'S e n b a um s a 1 d I h 1: n e ws pape r as publis hed an Washington. D.C. Jlc did not identify' the organization that publishes it. There was no immediate com• ment by Camp Pendleton spokesmen. , The first or the 13 men to be tried has been sentenced to,threo months' imprisonment and re• duced from corporal to private after pleading guilty Wednesday <See P APER, Page A2) Cyclist S u ccu m b s To Yule Inj uries David McDonald, 21, of 149 W. Pahzada. San Clemente, died early today in Mission Communi· ty Hospital from injuries su!• fered in a m otorcycle accident Christmas Day. According to the Orange Coun· ty coroner's report, McDonald received his fatal injuries when the motorcycle he was 'driving was struck by an auto in San Juan Capistrano. , The Christmas Day accident occurred on Camino Capistran(> near Avcnu(' Vararo, accordin'g to the coroner Or :n~ .. :·~• 1 We athe r Mos'tly cloudy with 80 • percent chance or rain Fti. day. Highs near 60, lows In lowSOs. .. .. I NSIDE T OD" Y 1111.111 ar~ •hoking tong. standJng ~cfol relat~ betw.een U.S. and CorJdl:lo. Second of three arlac'4-s ~ pear"mA7 - ONLY PILOT L/SC Thurtday. December 30. 11176 APWl ....... lo KLAN MEMBERS REl\JRNED TO PENDLETON BY MARINES From Left, Campbell, Charles Smith, Ronnie Harper Marine Sentenced; Guilty in Assault CA MP PENDLETON CAP) 1 1 A Marine corporal has been de rnoted to private and sentenced lo 1.hree months hard labor after •pleading guilty to pummelini: j·another Manne with his fast!. in an l attack by blacks on six whiles in a 1 barracks. I "I'm glad I didn't get ll RCD : (bad conduct discharge> l was f worried a bout lhut." s:ud Cpl. ' 1-! 1 ! I t ' l APWl.......,o MARINE FOUND GUILTY Cpl. E. F. Henry, 20 E'ro• Page A J PAPER ••• I to assault. Cpl. E.F Henry, 20. also will forfeit $150 in pay monthly for four month.-, Rosenbaum and Wilham G Smath. a military nghts attorney. issued a joint s tatement tn which they demanded an mveshgataon of the newspaper by the Marine Corps. Arter interv1cw1ng officers escorting black prisoner!, the two 1 lawyers said "no official made an attempt to remove the paper which was in clear view ot and re· ad by passersby and prospective witnesses." ! Rosenbaum is defending one of the 13 black Marines who were I chaqied with conspiracy and a.s · saulllng a half-dozen whales whom thl!v rl!porl<'<lly su.o;pected n{ b4!tnjt m em ber!t or the Ku Klux KJan . E.F. Henry. 20. one or 13 black Marines accused in the inridcnt. One was granted immunity an ex change for tcsli mony Henry pleaded gwlty Wt-dnt•s day to cons piracy and assault charges. telling a special court martial that he and the other blacks thought they were attack ing a group of Ku Klux KJan mem· be rs. He was the fi rst to race trial in the case. The Marlne Corps is ex· peeled to announce next week whether the other 11 will be tried. Henry's attorney. Capt. Stephen F. Biegenzahn, told re· porters he considered the penalty "an appropriate sentence." He had told the jury that hit client re· alized the presence o( the KKK did not justify the assault. The black Marines we r e charged with aggravated assault and conspiracy after they al· legedly beat the whites with clubs a nd s t a bb ed them with screwdrivers. Five or Lhe vict1ml. were hospitalized for periods of al least two days. One man as still an the hospital. Henry. oflvanhoe. NC . srud he used only his clos e d f ist Prosecutors accepted his plea or guilty to reduced c harges of sim· pie assault and conspiracy. Henry said he and the other blacks had a "little misun· derstanding" about which room the Klansmen were in. He told the judge the incident began when he and the other blacks "agreed lo go over and Jam (beat up l the Ku Klux Klan." They set out for another barracks and chose the particuJar room because ··we heard a lot of noise. there was a party going on," Henry said. When the whites answered the knock at the door, "we all rushed m, ··Henry said Henry said he doesn't mind serving time in confinement because "at least I'm still in the Marine Corps." In addition to the demotion and the sentence, his pay was cut by $1SO a month for four months. Biegeouhn said he introduced evidence about the Klan to show "U did exist; it was at Camp Pendleton." He said it was "the kind of thing that would stir a young black man. especially one from North Carolina, to r age." At the sentencing hearing. the defense called Pfc. Denrus L Campbell Jr., an admitted KKK member. Campbell, who srud he was third-ranked of about 20 Klansmen at Camp Pendleton. tesWied that about five of thP members lived near lhe Mannes who were attacked. Fro..r~A J LOWEST ••• bave already nplrcd an all of I.be clttea except Btea since the League aLudy was compiled earlier lhil year, lbe d.lffereoce la even lar1er. For example. San Clerneote firemen did their own salary comparison study -using the same c1t1 e s a s the San Clemente report -and got more recent figures which show they arc al rock bottom on the wage scale. A r egular San Clemente fireman at the top of his range makes $1,177 a month. A Hunt- ington Beach fireman makes $1.356 a month, a Laguna Beach fireman gets $1,301 and a Newport Beach fi reman $1,316. T he same firemen's study compared the pay of policemen It showed that a San Clemente of ficer's basic monthly paycheck O( $1,267 at the top or his range IS larger only than an Oceanside policeman's . Among the nine cities covered by the city 's and the firemen's stud1es, the average top pay for a fireman i s $1 ,278 ; for a policeman $1,390. The league study showed top pay and ave rage pay for all cities s ampled for a number of other JOb classifications. Among them (with the San Clemente cmployc's monthly pay lis ted first and the averngc in parentheses) are: Clerk ty pis t , S696 ($751 J. Janitor. $785 < $824 ): sewer plant operator, $1,026 <$1.056 ); and steno-c lerk. $767 ($829). All figures are for the top of the pay range. The League of Cities study showed some ameliorating fac- tors to balance the low basic pay, which for every job classification showed San Clemente employes to be lhe lowest or second-lowest pajd. For example, a San Clemente worker reaches the top of his pay range after three years' work. Only the City of Placentia offers a comparably fast rise to the top. Fringe benefits are better than average in San Clemente, ac- cording to the league survey. For examplr, a San Clemente fireman as paid $1 SR an hour an supplemental wage~. which an. dud<' city conlrabut1ons to social secunty. workers compensation, retirement, medical plan. un- iform allowance , holiday and vacation pay. The aver age fireman's fri nge benefit pay among the cities sur- veyed was $1.56 an hour. China Troops End Uprising Near Peking · HONG KONG CAP) -Chinese troops have put an end to "great chaos" spread by supporters of the purged widow of Mao Tse- tWlg in the cit y of Baodiog, about 100 miles southwest o( Peking, according to official and foreign news reports fro m China. The reports, which spoke or bombings and armed raids by the rebels, did not make clear when the antigovemment dis - turbances occurred. A Dec. 20 issue of Peking's People 's Daily newspaper ob- tained here said the armed bands in Baodlng had been "threaten- ing the security of Peking so that they cou ld usurp the party power" and were suppressed by army troops. The Sydney CAustralia) Mom ing Herald's China correspon- dent also reported lhe Baodmg disturbances. Thr Ma ran<' Corpe; later a n nounced ~ last or 16 purported Klansmen had been found an ct room near whcr<' the sax wh1teo; were clubbed Of those whale Manne11. a dozen have slnce been transferred to other bases to· 'de· fuse the situation," a spokesman said. Yule Tree Poses Blockade Planned LOS ANGELES -An anti· whaling orgaoiullon plans to blockade a Russian tradlng ship wnen 1t tr1es to dock inSacramen· l<l lo pick up s upplies early next month. ORANGE COAST r•,. ,.,, lf'll~ tr. t 0 14 h ,,.,ttf W'll"'w•~u·n.,c .... , t•""ftf""Hf w~. p,., I ~f(Mt\Nfn hy ,...f)lo .. "O" f "'If okl ~·""1'0rtlO 1'1y .... ""'' 1•••f1 f1CW'\\., I'''°'"·"'',, ~.,~ 1¥ '"''""''It\ I t1'1h t • ( I 1 ""'-I ...... , •• , H•fft. ... .,,.,,,.,,"' ·---' ,.. • •fl\ t • JI\ 'J.-11. 1' f•Wl'tlf, .,.ddlf!f\.1• • VI b t , .. ~ I• 1-.Mtt _,fl\ \o\l'ff\C:...\I 4 \•"0'• •tfJt lt>Wi-11 ',.., ~ r"'bfu.twd \•lvtcMn ..o ~ .. .,"' ,,... !~,"' :.,...~,~~ .. ':!.t.~,·.:~,~,;:.,.:.,, w • fl1o., __ ,, .. _ °"M••fllt •nd P\IN1~ J10•.C.to't "'"'"""ldt"''""~--~ ~···-~ .. .... ,_, ..... _ ... M•-•"'l"'"" °""'"" l... .. .......... """ An1,,.,.., ..,.,~,,.r_ . .ourw" Leauna 8 Hctl Offtw f"MGl'°""•Yl't1',.,..• -111,.. .. -... "0 ...... t:O.\) Oftk:H '°''' ....,.,... 110 Will\t .... \,,..., k1.,..l1"'4'~ .. •01 tll1\0.\of"P\~wte«t Mddlt:NO V•H•y )\10' lA P•1 Ito Kl •' ~"' 011100 F,..,,.,,_~., Telephone (714)642-4321 C1enlfled Ad¥ertltl119 642·5'78 legune Beech All Oep.,tmen1t Telephont 494-94416 f f01""1 \4t" ''"~"'• 495-0t30 ~:'~ !!'!. o;,:~:-;~ c~;!,,~::,~1~1;;:1 m•tft,. er .. .,.,.,..,,.,.,,"" ~"''•'" "''" l)t , •• , .... v,•fY •it._ ... , , .. , .•• n••MIHltft •• ,_.,._,.°"""'_· 5"•"11 <lou "''' .. M id II Cltl• Mtu. C.lll&f"lo, '"''"'011•" t• tO•rlt• U M I :t:.'l~•z, ::..:.:..~ _,,,.,,; "'"""' \ Hazard of Fires Even if the hectic holiday season has n 'l drained your spirit, chances are the family Christmas tree has just about had ll. To minimize fire hazards, coun· ty fire officials s uggest early dis posal of used trees. Outdoor burn- ing is illegal a nd officials warn agai n st burning trees in fireplaces due to the highJy com- bustible nature or dried pine needles. There is alsoLbedangerofbum· ing embers drilling through the chimney and landing on roofs of adjacent homes. City guidelines for the pickup or used trees include: NEWPORT BE ACH: Tree~ may be placed on street with re- cuJar trash. Large trees must be cut into four.foot sections. There will be no <New Year's Day) pickup <Saturday). SAN CLEM ENTE: Saturday pickups will be made Monday. Large trees m ust be cut into four· footseclions. F O UN TAI N V AL LEY : Regular pickup. Trees should be cut into am all sections. SEAL B E ACH: Retular pickup. No ~ore than fOW'-foot. lediou. H UNTI NG T ON BEACH : Regular pickup. Fire officials arc asking residents to cut and place tree segments in a closed con- tainer. IRVINE: Regular pickup. Trees may also be taken to a mulching machine operating at the city yard at Bryan and Yale Avenues.Thcrelsnocharge LAGUNA BE ACH: Regular pickup. Residents should cul and bundle large trees. COSTA M ESA : Regul ar pickup. Large trees must be cul into four.fool sectloos to aaaure pickup. SAN J UAN CAPISTltANO: Regular pickup. Trees must be cut and bundled. DANA P O I NT: R eg ular pickup. Trees must be cut and bundled. DAN A P O I NT: Regular pickup. Trees must be cut and bundled. ELTO&OANDSAODLEBACK VALLEY: Regul:~lcklv>· Trees mu1tbocutandb ed. O.lly Pit.I Slttt PMl9 LONG-VACANT MAZDA BUILDING REPORTEDLY SOLD TO OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM Auto Maker Mum on Sale Price, But Whole Facility and Grounds Were on Block Oil · Firm Buying Irvine Mazda Site The Occad cnlal Petroleum Company is purchas ing the long· vacant Mazda Motors building an lrvme, sources confirmed Wed- nesday Brucl' HruSS l'aU. president or Newport National Company venfied that the sale as an pro gress and that escrow is expected to close shortly arter the first or J anuarv. Although Brusseau confirmed reports or the sale. omcials at both companies involveddecUned to orfer anything but "no com· ment" when asked about the dcaJ Wednesday. The Mazda building is located just off the San Diego Freeway, at Von Karman Avenue and Main Street. Brusseau, who served as broker for Mazda Motors. declined to re· veal the purchase pnce, but said the petroleum company is buying the four-story buildmg, the entire parcel and the furnishings within the building Mazda Motors onginally was asking S9 million for thr 166.600 squar e fool s tructure, plul> $736,000 for the furnishings According to Brusseau, a sub- sidiary of the parent Occidental Petroleum Company will lake()(• cupant'y sometime dunng lht.· farsl quarter of 1977 "Then, they expect to build out on the r<'St of the property," the broker said. When the rotary engine auto company originally buall the building, company officials ex· peeled to construct twin warehouses at the rear of the pro- perty. Brusseau s aid the subsidary company that will occupy the site is considered light industry , thereby satisfying the city's r e· quirements. When construction began on the Mazda building several years ago, the auto company was al the peak of its sales drive with its ne w rotary engine. However. after sales began to lag the firm decided against mov mg into the glass -walled building Officials also decided against construrting the t wowarchousc~. ~QUALITY TELEVISION SPILLS ... to put these Oy by-nighl foreign operators on notice that they have to meet higher standards.'' Marston said the charges, both misd~meanors, carry a max. 1mum penalty or two years in pra!>on and a Cane of $12,500. fn New York. the captain orthe tanker Argo Merchant said in federal court that his ship was being navigated with out -of-date sea-current charts when it ran ai:round this month and cracked open oH Nantucket Island. Thal grounding led ,to a huge s pill, 7.6 million gallons, now slowly breaking up arid drifting away from land m the North Atlantic. Omcials in Conne<:ticut said most of the 2,000 gallons spilled into the Thames River by the Oswego Peace on Friday had been contained by booms. but the remamder had coated rocks and waterfowl downstream . They said the cleanup should be com- plete by lhe end of this week. GET THE BOWL GAMES & PARADES IN GREAT COLOR ~LL nE'?'NlrN MEW 1t11 KJ'O% 5ouD STlllTE --~~·~····- (ll~ll lOMJ\({OllOI Il 23,, CO NS OLE COLOR T V diagonal Treitslt'-'_, The IALTIMOtlfoHJlJU Handsome Transitional styled full baso console. Casten Beauhlully lm1shed ln simulated Antique Oak with the look of fine distressin g AFC. CALL FOR PRICING 13" Ver so1ile, Compact t>•>-'"•N•• Color TV n. M4LllU HIJIOC Our most compact POrtable with t 00% Solld·Slate Chassis with Power Sentry Brilllant 110 Chromacolor ln·Llne Picture Tube. Solid-State Tuning System. 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ArM ...... ltH THISE EUCTIONIC rttOFIHIOMALS. SERVICE YOUR EqUIPMENT "Al" Fornous Zenith quality! Famous ~~.:J depc>nclabilit,v! 7 • .... orange --~OBst EDITION ~ ·s _c1 .. a~~11g" • Stock.4' Contest Fizzles Amburgey Won't RUn Rain on Their Parade? E.5tancia High School band banner car- riers had to cut the school's name in half to get down high school corridors today when rain chased the band off Costa Mesa streets. The award-winning high school band is pr.aclicin_g for Saturday's Rose • Parade in Pasadena. Estancia's band was selected to march an the prestigious parade in mid-November, and band mem- bers are putting on the finis hing touches for their performance New Year's Day - hopefully in Pasadena sunshine. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Titree Killed, Mesa Lewd Conduct Two Injured /,4 ___ :In Accident 6/u-rests . lncre_ase . r ( Costa Mesa police said today the missing." sa1d Vice and Three persons were killed anil they have arrested . 35 _men. for Narcotics Sgt. Gary L. Webster. ~ twu others critically injured , lewd_ conduct or 101tenng m _a He said a number of such cues J. Wec1De9cla.y in a beadon collision pubhc restroom so far this have g<?ne unreported because . ~two llghtwei~ht pickup trucks month. the victim is too embarrassed to 1 on Ortega Highway. Vice and n<!rcotics officers at-ca.~1 poli~e. . , . l A coroner's report identified lnbute the high number or ar-The increase 1sn t Just a case tho9e killed in the headon col rests to what they caJI an an-of us going out after more lision about 11 miles east of San crease in such activities. Pollce homosexuals In the city," he ex- . Juan Capistrano as said the} have increased sur-plafoed. In fact. he said, between -Belinda Diane Cordero, 24. of veillance of men's rooms follow-20 and 25 percent of the suspects 126712 Avenue Shonto. Mis~1on mg a case earlier lhts month in his detail arrests are marned Viejo which a 14-year-old boy was "straights,·· many who have -<ireg Thomas TruJls, t6. or homosexually raped by an adult children 9882 Teresa Ave . Anaheim in a publu· restroom "Many of those we arrested are -James Cruse. t7, uf 1221 E. "That suspect 1s still amonj! teachers. and we've, arrested Walnut St . Lompoc construction workers, truck • Two critically Injured drivers. doctors and even a teenagers now in Mission Com-Chr•slmag clergym_an, "Webstersaid. muaity Hospital have been 1den· 1 c He said arrests take place m tified as Thomas Cruse. 17, of I.he restrooms at bowling alleys, Lompoc address. and Samuel Gift Weapon shopping centers and public Robert Koutroulis. JG. of Quebec parks. Canada ' "What we are trying to aJ. According to a California Mis. haps Told leviate is having a citizen, and 1 ghway Patrol spokesman, the particularly a child, walk in and l'wo Cruse boys, brothers o( Mrs be subjected to this kind of ac-~f(;ordero. were passenger.; 1n the A youth with a pellet gun shot tivity in a public restroom," he )>lckup truck she wa-. dnv111g and paralyzed a farruly cat in said. eastbound on Ortegu Highway at Costa Mesa Wednesday, in one of Webster said that in his con- ~.-45 a m a serws of illegal shootings m the tacts with the organized gay Koutroulioi; ..... 1s d Jlil!'l.,<'n~cr 111 c1tyw1thma24hourpenod rommun1ly , "it 1:. my un- :the westbound pwkup dn,cn b\-Police would not speculall' on derstanding that they Cgays) arc Trulls whl'ther or not the shooting:. are very much opposed to this type of About a mile Y,t''t of "ian .Ju.in rrlated to children with new activity, Just as we are." Hot SpnnJ:~ thf' Truh' v .. hu·lt• t'hnstmas guns. but at l<'ast four A spokesman for the Cay Com apparently r r 0,..,('cf o\ l'r th•· mr1dl'nls were reported to pohct• · <See LEWD, Page i\2) c:enter hnc and collided hf'adon Tuesday and Wednesday With Mrs Cordero'<., ea<.,tbound Mary Ann Ph1l11ps. of 258 Cecil By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Ot 1-tM Dally ~lle4- Newport-M esa school Trustee Orville Amburgey said today he won't seek re-election and It ap- peared, only hours before the S p.m. filing deadline. that three or the four school board seats up for spring will be captured in uncon- tested elections. Amburgey becomes the second incumbent trustee lo vacate a seat on the board, joining Thomas C. Casey of Corona del Mar who is stepping down after serving two four-year terms. Today marked the close or fil. ing of candidacy declarations with the Orange County Registrar of Voters. Apparently, N.C Duke O'Brien, a financial manager for McDonnell Douglas in Hunt· ington Beach, will be the only candidate in Area 2 (Northeast Jury Cuts Charge in CM Death An Orange County Supenor Court jury decided Wednesday that Charles Edward Mosteller, 53, committed voluntary manslaughter. not murder last May when he rired four bullel'i into the head of a Costa Mesa woman. The stocky defendant was gripped by frenzied sneezing when the jury decided on the manslaughter conviction rather than the second degree murder verdict sought by the Pro.1ecu· lion. So, as Judge Frank Domenicbini set Jan. 27 as the date he wiU sentence Mosteller, he also ordered a Jail doctor's call for the convicted man. Sneezing fits aside. as the Jurors left the courtroom Mosteller thanked them for their verdict During his three-week trial, lhe jury heard and saw audio and video tapes of his confession to police that he killed Shirley Mae Forman, 44, al her Costa Mesa home. And when he testified. Mosteller said he "must have killed her (Mrs. Forman) because there was no one else around." But his defense centered around diminished capacity, a failure lo realize what he was do- ing because or the effects or a JO.day drinking binge. Mosteller testified that he had drawn money from the bank the day of the killing and had purchased more liquor to con- tinue what for him was a JO.day lost weekend. pickup, the C llP spok<''lman Place, told police her neighbors •aid. saw a youll;l approach her cat and Cause or the triple fatdl l.ICC'I· shoot 1t twice with a pellet gun dent is still under mvest1g<Jtion Wednesday morning 1974Postal She said her cat was paralyzed by a pellet m the spine and was to undergo surgery today. In another incident, a man called to report a boy in a stnped sturt shooting at birds m the Estancia Hills with a pellet rine Wednesday afternoon Showers May Mar Rose Parade Plans I Hike to 1 (Jc Ru/,ed Illegal WASHlNc'TON CAP ) A federal appeals court has ruled that first-class postage rates were increased illegally m 1974 when they were raised from8centsto 10 «nts. But the U.S. Court of Appeals took no action to roll back the rate. wbich has since been increased to l3ceots. The same method used as the basis for the 1974 increase was used to support the latest rate hike. Tbe National Association of IGr..tins Card Publishers, which allenged the 1974 increase, is contesting the jump to 13 enta in a separate case pending ore the appeals court. A resident told police he heard a gunshot near Orange Avenue and Broadway about 10 p.m. Tuesday rught, and another Costa Mesa re s ident reported heanng Shots fired on West 18th Street.al :ibout 2 JOp.m. Wednesday Pilot Doors Cl.ose Early The main oCfices oC the Dally Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, wiU be open unUJ 3 p.m. Friday for classified advertising. Branch offices will be closed Friday and all of- nces ·1ill be closed Satur day, New Year's Day Circulation complaints will· still be taken , however. Rain returned to Orange Coun- ty today after a seven week absence. bringing the possibility or a rare occurrence rain on New Year's Day. Light showers fell throughout the county and the National Weather Service predicts an 80 percent chance of occasional 1howers through the weekend. • Rose Parade officials are hop- ing to escape the first New Year's Day rain since 1955. The weather front dropped light snow at the 5,000.fool level, but the storm is expected to pass quJckly and probably won't bring sufficient snow to open many Southern C,Ufornia ski re.son... Denae clouds will bring cooler weather lo Orange County this weekend. High temperatures along the coast are expected to reach about 60 with lows in the up. per40stomld 50s. Today's rain is the first crack In a high-pressure system over ihe Wes tern states that has 'blocked approaching storm '. systems for almost two montm. AJUiouih t.he weather Crout ls Tbe Postal Rate Commission justified the 1974 increase on the ,rounds that raising first-class rates would not discourage use of tbe malls aa much aa raising rates for the other three cla.ssesotrnail, the appeals court said. The law re . ~eacbclassofposlalaervke to bear its own coat, the court aald.• I The co1nmls1ion recommends ,_. hlChaaea to the U.S. Postal .Service. The Daily Pilot will publish normal New York Stock Exchange reports Friday and a year-end summary for bot.b the New York and American ex· cb.a.nlea on Saturday. not expected to bring substantial rainfall, a National Weather Service apokes"'an uld th.la openlna ln the .Pl"elll1.lte rid.It ebould-pave tb• way (or heavier • o....,._._... .... KEEPING DRY tN llUA Johnny Bowin, e winter ralna. l · ,, # • Costa Mesa) which Amburgey represented for one term. Incumbents Carol Martin or trustee Area 5 (Balboa Island and Peninsula), and Roderick MaeMillian of Area 7 {west Cosla Mesa) will run unopposed in their respective districts. Candidates must reside it, the area they will represent, bul are elected at large. Five Corona del Mar (area 41 residents have declared an inten- tion lo run for the seat Casey will vacate. They are: Regina Von Burger (teacher). )'dargaret R. Carey (teacher), Betty Jo Bailey (homemaker). Cameron M . Smith Jr. (attorney) and Daniel J . Wallace (deputy district at- torney). Amburgey said his dedsion not to run is based on his inability to devote the lime necessary to the (See VOTE, Page A2) Dally 1'11..i S4.fl,..... SWIMS STRAITS Lynne Cox Los Alamitos GirlSwirm Icy Straits SANTIAGO , Chile CAP) Lynne Cox of Los Alamitos - has become the first person ever to swim the icy Straits of Magellan, Chilean newspapers reported today. Chilean national radio report-ed that the 19-year-0ld UC Santa Barbara student from Orange County swam the straits Wednes- day in one heur. two minutes. Temperature in the waters were reported at44.6degrees. It was not certain which course she took in the straits, which range from two-and-a- half to four miles in width. The straits separate Tierra de l Fuego Island from the southern- most lip of South America. The Chilean news agency Orbe said the crossing was made at a point called Primera Angosturo, north of the city of Punta Arenas. Orbe said a Chilean navy launch was provided as a sup- port vessel. Miss Cox has previously made channel swims to Santa Catalina Island and has crossed the English Channel Progress .'77 Spotlighu OCEconomy Continued rapid ~din· dustrial diversifi_c~ti-~make Orange County a bright spot in the nation during 1976. Today's Daily Pilot brings an armchair look at the successes of W76 and the predictions for 1977 made by area firms and units of government. PROGRESS '77 111 a ~-page maguine prepared to bring you up lo date on the state of the Orange Coast economy and the ouUook Cor the coming year. It'• a special edit.ion you'll want to share with friends and auoclales. Look for PROGRESS 'T1 ln today's Dally Pilot. O•lly Plitt SI.ill! ""°t•• STEPPING DOWN l School Trustee Amburgey 1 Barricaded; • Man Kills Wife, S~lf i 4 , • .. , . LOS ANGELES <AP) · A San Quentin parolee and h is estranged wife died tod~ in a blaze of gunfire after a nearly 40-hour stand-off with sheriff's deputies . Lafayette Pruitt, 35, had held his wife, Marcella, hostage irt their Willowbrook apartment since Tuesday evening. Pruitt was dead al the scene and bis wife died al Martin Luther King Hospit~ shortly af· terwards of a gunshot wound ii( the head. Sheriff's deputies said they m.t hoped Pruitt would tire after the prolonged siege and surrenderJ but this morning investigators/ said they heard two shots in the bedroom where the just-paroled convict had locked himself m with his wife. The shots were followed by sounds of scuffling and ruruung, then three more shots, officers . said. Several shots came close to the deputies. who fired about JO rounds into the area where Pruitt was holed up. The deputies then fired tear" gas and stormed the barricaded area. During the long hours of the siege Wednesday, officers re· fused to give Pruitt asked-for' food and water. The plumtiing in' Pruitt's apartment had beer\ turned off by deputies. He originally held his four children hostage, as well, but re· leased them Tuesday night. Pruitt did allow members of the sheriffs special "hostage team" into lh<' apartment but not into the bedroom where he and his wire were locked up together. Pruitt was released just 12 days ago from San Quentin, where he had been !\erving time for a similar standoff incident two years ago. Ferry Disabled SAN FRANCISCO (APl-Tho. $4.3 million ferry Marin was dis· abled when a hydraulic line rup. lured, leaving a s mall oil slick at the mouth or Corte Madera Creek in Marin County. It was the fourth breakdown since t~ foot long ferry went into service Dec.11 Oran¢~ ~oast ""' L: =' ~ Weather Mostly cloudy with 80 percent chance or rain Fri- day. Highs near 60, lows In JowSOs. INSIDE TODA\' luuea ,art shaking long- 8tanding apecial relatwnship between U.S .. and Caooda. Second of three .articles ap- pears on A7 ·-rte=--- AZ DAIL y PILOT c Oalty l'tltlt tutf l'lwto ' RITES CONDUCTED Joe Demetrako1 Rttes Held For Local Grid Star Memorial services for former Edison High <Huntington Beach> and Golden West College football standout Joe Demetrakos were held today at Calvary Chapel in Santa Ana. Mr. Demetrakos, 21, died in an automobile accident Friday in Fresno while en route to Oregon to visit relatives. A sister, Denise, was critically injured in the crash and is confined to a Fresno hospital with a severe concussion, a broken neck and a possible crushed vertebrae. Mr. Demetrakos played foot· ball at Edison in 1971 and '72, graduating in 1973. A running back, he played two years at Golden West, before transferring to Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo). He was a member of the Cal Poly JV team this past season. He is survived by his parents. Mr. and Mrs. James Demetrakos of Costa Mesa, and two sisters, Denise Demetrakos and Debra Anderson. The family has suggested memorial donations in Mr. Demetrakos' name to the Calvary Chapel, 3300 South Fairview, Santa Ana. Ff"O#I Page Al VOTE ••. job and his desire to spend more lime Wlth his fa mily. Amburgey also said he wishes to devote more time to tus Job as communications dtrector for the Cily of Costa Mesa. He threw his support betund O'Brien, who has served on the school distnct 's budget and transportation committees. O'Brien's financial experience will help the district's plan to cut expenses, uid Amburgey. Mesa Visitor Held on Pot An out-of·slate vl!utor lo Costa Mesa spent Wednesday night m Jail after an omcer allegedly found 10 ounfcs of man1uana in the man's automobile Ri chard Earl Frakes. Jr, 27. o< Macomb. Ill , was released on $2SO bail this morning after police reported finding 305 grams o< marijuana seeds, stems and leafy material 1n Frakes car. parked outside the K·Ma.rt de· partment store at 2200 Harbor Blvd. Wednesday al 9 p.m. They said they searched t• car • because 1t was "parked sus· piciously." Police said t~ey also conliscat· ed two pipes wrich aJlegedly COO· tained marijuana residue. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT T,,...Or.,,.. CNU O.t1lr Pt tot .. fttwf'wt" i'<OI"' I).,.....,,~,... •• Pt,,., •~n~1VWd_,...1~0.-~ f"'-t .t Du&H\PWV) Como•t\Y ""flll!OMAl•~t·~\ ittr f'il'>h\1' .. tf Mol'kl4Y f#lt'l)tl;ql't Fr•O..'f '"' {0\f.4 ~ N4i>•M'f fMHft, k\l'\4i#lrqt.,,. """.," JO-#\ t•11'\ VAli•• trWfftt, S..Hl•"4' l \",1tl•'t 11"'1 1 .. ~ .. «llll'SovtrtCHtt ·~~,~~f•ct ,,,,,.. ,, ouDff~ '•fV"'tUf\ etld ~., ,,_., Ot•""·NI CNOO~"IQ ... ,., 1\ et UQ WUI ... ., :.i•m C"1t•M•w.c..11.._ __ ·-... -~ ....... , .... _._ JM•ll (......, Yl<•""'"""l_Cio_ .. ___ ,.__.II_. [door T-•AM ........ .... "''"" l'folot ~........ ..._~"'" ~\\Utitf'l't ~f\•t'Pllt (Olton OfflCH I AIQ'Vf\•A•.0" 1tl&G~fl~.it\fr~tll· ~'f'l~W"'~•"'" ''IP\C'M.Wf\~'"'"•'" ~ttb•fllf. VAll•w l\XU L• P"' Rn*1 •' \;," O••oo "'""'•v Tel•pltone l7t4)142-U21 c11,tfflect Adv1ntetng tu.sen ce..,,.... lftt <><•-'""" """'"'''"" ~ ~y ... Nwt ttert•\, ltt\l\fr.tHfW'I\, fdltOfi•t ,,..,. ... , ., .,..,,,,,,,'"."" ~.,.,,. ,...., ft• r•0t•d\Ktd •ftl\•wt t .. C11t tMrmlnltft et C_.1tllU -. s.. .......... "''""' .... .i C..t• ,... .. , <••If•'~'•· ,u•url•lltft " '""''' u so _,,!My W "'"" ' IO -•My; "'411111y -INl-U.• l>ly. Thursday. December 30, t978 Finan~e• 'r Carter VoWs a Ethical ·Move PLAINS, Ga. (AP) - President·elect Carter says he is not ready to annowice what he will do with bis extensive finan· cial interests while in the White House. But he prom.i.seis to abide by the same restrictions be plans to place on top appointees. Carter commented on his financial holdings and on a con· ruct-of·interests code Wednesday shortly before be returned to his home here after holding pre- inaugural Cabinet meetings. Aides said the code or ethics for all those Carter names to high positions would be made public late today or Friday. For three days, the President· elect held marathon meetings with prospective Cabinet mem· bers and other key advisers on St. Simons Island, a secluded re· sort off the Georgia coast. The economy and the direction the new administration will take after the Jan. 20 inauguration were high on the agenda. Carter told a Dec. 20 news con ference he already approved the code of ethics and that press secretary Jody Powell would make it available for publication. For reasons never fully ex· plained, release of the document was delayed. Carter said Wednesday that all his apoointees have a~reed to meet the terms of the cOde, and said. "lt will require the complete dJvestiture of any financial reJa. Uonahips that might create a con. ruct 91 intereata, and a complete revelaUon of all other economic holdings, including net worth statements." And the President-elect added, ''1'11 conform with the same restrictions l 've placed on the Cabinet members." Carter reported during his campaign that his net worth at the end of 1975 was SBll,982.09. Although Carter's partnership in the family peanut business does not have direct financial de· allnes with the government, it benefits from some agricultural subsidies. In advance of an an· nouncement of Carter's plans for his personal holdings it was not clear whether the President· elect sees a potential conflict here or, if so, how he plans to deaJ with it. Carter had an afternoon ap. pointmenl today to confer with former Gov. Kenneth Curtis of Maine, who reportedly is in line to become c hairman of the Democratic National Committee succeeding Robert Strauss. Carter and Curtis have known each other since both were gov· emors. Marine Sentenced; Guilty in Assault CAMP PENDLETON <AP> - A Marine corporal has been de. moted to private and sentenced to three months hard labor after pleading guilty to pummeling another Marine with his fists in an attack by blacks on six whites in a barracks. ''I'm glad I didn't get a BCD (bad conduct discharge). I was worried about that." said Cpl. E .F . Henry, 20, one of 13 black Marines accused in the incident. Inmates Kill OCManin State Prison TRACY CAP) -A 27·year-old inmate from Orange County was stabbed to death today in a cor· ndor of Deuel Vocational lnstltu· uon, a prison spokesman said. Steve McDonald, who had been at Deuel only since Dec. 7, was on his way to his job at the prison when he was attacked by several other inmates and stabbed nine times. said prison spokesman Bob Walraven. He died shortly afterward at a prison hospital. Walraven said two other In· mates are in custody in the stab- bin& and guar.ds have recovered two sharpened m etal rods from the scene. He said the moUve for the attack wasn't known. McDonald was sentenced to one year to ltfe in prison for second·degree robbery in 1973 and paroled in 1975, Walraven said. He was returned to prison for parole violation in October and transferred to ~I Dec. 7 One was granted immunity in ex· change for tesU mony. Henry pleaded guilty Wednes· day to cons piracy and assault charges. telling a special court· martial that he and the other blacks thought they were attack- ing a group of Ku Klux Klan mem· bers. He was the first to face trial in the case. Th~arine Corps is ex- pected to armounce next week whether the other 11 will be tried. Henry's attorney, Capt. Stephen F. Blegenzahn, told re- porters he considered the penalty "an appropriate sentence." He had told the jury that his client re- alized the presence of the KKK didnotjusli!y the assault. Tbe black Marines were cbar1ed with a11ravated assault and conspiracy after they al· legedJy beat the whites with clubs and sta bbed t h em with screwdrivers. Five of the victims were hospltali zed for peri~ of at least two days . One man is still in the hospital. Mesa to Teach Bridge Course Courses for beginning and in· termediate card·shufflers begin Jan. 10 under the auspices of the Costa Mesa Department of Leisure Services. The bridge courses will 1be taught by certified bridge direc· tors Frank and Lenore McHenry. Signups for the eight·week <'ourse, which costs $15 per person, will be Monday from 6 lo 8 p.m. at the Downtown Com· munity Center. 594 Center St. For further information call 556-SJOO. Yule Tree Poses Hazard of Fires -Even it the hectic holiday sea..'\On hasn't drained your splri t, chances are the family Christmas tree has just about had it. To minimize fire hazards, coun- ty fire ofCicials suggest early dis· posal of used trees. Outdoor bum ing is illegal and officiaJs warn against burning trees in fireplaces due to the highly com· buslible nature of dried pine needles. There is alsothedangerofbum· ing embers drifting throu&h the chimney and landing oo roofs of adjacent homes. City guldellnes fortbepickupoC used trees include: QWPO&T BEACH: Trees may be placed on street with re- gular trash. Large trees must be cut into four·foot sections. There will be no (New Year's Day) pickup <Saturday). SAN CLEMENTE: Saturday pickups will be made Monday. Large trees must be cut into four. footaecUons . FOUNTAIN VALLEY: Recutar pkli:up. Trees should be cut into small HcUons. SEAL BEA.CB: Jhrutar pickup. No more than four·foot sections. HUNTINGTON BEACH : Regular pickup. Fire officials are asking residents to cut and place tree segments in a closed ·con· talner. '1av1NE: Regular pickup. Trees m ay also be laJcen to a mulching machine operating at the clty yard at Bryan and Yale Avenues. Tbereisnocbarge LAGUNA BEACH: Regular pickup. Resident.a abould cut and bundle large trees. COSTA MESA: Regular pickup. Large trees must be cut Into four.foot 11ecUons to assure pickup. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO: Reauiar pkkup. Trees mu.st be cut and bundled. DANA POINT: Reg ular pickup. Trees mu1t be cut and bundled. O.lly l'ilot ''•" -·· LONG-VACANT MAZDA BUILDING REPORTEDLY SOLD TO OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM Auto Maker Mum on S•le Pr1ce, But Whole F•clllty •nd Ground• Were on. Block Froa Page Al LEWD •.• munity Center of Orange County confJ.rmed Webster's comment, adding, "Sexual activity in a public restroom is just not the best place for it." Oil Firm Buying Irvine Mazda Site The spokes man emphasized, however, that his organization 1s opposed to police entrapment and added. "Personally, I think they should have better things to do with their time." Webster said his detail does not place more emphasis on lewd conduct arrests than narcotics or vice offenses. "We'll go after a bookie or a hooker before we'll inv~tigate a lewd conduct or loitering case," he said. "That's because, un. fortunately, the lewd conduct or. fender will a lways be there." Arrests for lewd conduct or loitering in a public restroom carry much more than a $500 bail on the misdemeanor charge, SaJd Webster. •'There's the embarrassment of facing family and friends. and tf convicted, the suspect faces the added punishment or being re· qllired to register as a sex of· fender with the ~late o r California " The Occidental Petroleum Company is purchasing the long· vacant Mazda Motors building in Irvine, sources confirmed Wed· nesday. Bruce Brusseau. president of Newport National Company, verified that the sale is in pro· gress and that escrow is expected to close shortly after the first of January. Although Brusseau confirmed reports of the sale, officials at both companies involved declined to offer anything but "no com· ment" when asked about the deal Wednesday. The Maida building is located just off the San Diego Freeway, al Von Karman Avenue and Main Street. Brusseau, who served as broker for Mazda Motors, declined to re· veal the purchase price. but sa1d the petroleum eompany is buying the four·story building, the entire parcel and the furnishings withm the building. Mazda Motors originally was asking $9 million for the Hi6.600 QUALITY TELEVISION square foot structure, plus $736,000for the furnishings. According to Brusseau, a sub- sidiary of the parent Occident al Petroleum Company will take OC· cupancy sometime during the first quarter of 1977. "Then, they expect to build out on the rest or the property," the broker said. · When the rotary engine auto company originally buUt the building, company officials ex· pected to co nstruct twin warehouses al the rear of the pro- perty. Brusseau said the subsidary company that will occupy the site is considered light industry, thereby satisfying the city's re- quirements. When construction began on the Mazda building several years ago, the auto company was at the peak or its sales drive with its new rotary engine. However. after s ales began \o lag the firm decided against mov· mg into the glass· walled buildini;:. • GET THE BOWL GAMES & PARADES IN GREAT COLOR ·-,.,.-· --·· ·-_ ..... ~,~E?:!'S:o srm (INIOMA(OllOI II 23,, CONSOLE COLOR TV diagonal 1 T~tHIOOt• TM IALTIM01tf•HUZ21 F~ No movinq parts 10 wear out and no contact Handsome Trans111onat styled full base consola. Casterc; Beau11tu1ty lm1shed 1n simulated Antique Oak with the look of lino distressing AFC. ELECTRONIC VIDEO GUARD TUNING SYSTEM po1nt'l 10 corrode in the tuner"J Designed to be \ the most dependable, most sensitive tuning ~ystem 1n Zenith history \ CALL FOR PRICING 13" Versottle. Cornpocl r~A<,fJri~l Color TV n..MAUllJ HlllOC Our most compact portable with t 00% Sohd·State Chassis w11h Power Sentry. B rt ll1ant 110 Chromacotor ln·Line Picture Tube Solid-State Tuning System. Ebony color cabinet. VALUE PACKED TABLE MODELS ,-~trN CHROM.ACOlOlil _ _ ........._, 19" Big Screen, -· 1 Small Price 1 IUAl,,tH-'fAl The LUCERNE I I H1940 J ' Doror.ltur Cumpdt.I 11 I lV wi t h Color Sentry, The Auto-l~iii~s=~~!!!!~J_ ... ?' mat1c Picture Con-II trot System. New 100° Chromacolor Picture Tube with EFL TM ln·Line Electron Gun. EVG Electronic Tuning System. 100% Sohd·State Chassis. Power Sentry. Choose handsome simulated Pecan or almulated Walnut cabinet. OrtH RUDA Y 'TIU l ,.M. f 'ull f 'a••l1Jry M11rrruu i1·.~ 1•11,_~ Our l"••r . ..;•uual 011•• \ c•nr Guorn111f•1• 011 l·.'r•·r~1 l"rod11c·1 M•• .'i••ll! • ·275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa ... _......,, .......... 2 D..,.. W ... .t c;-t• h . Phone 642-8882 Store Hours baily 9-6 Sat. 9-5:30 • THISI ELICTaOMIC NOHSSIOMALS SERYICI YOUR EQUU'MIHT Orange Coast F D ITI O N OL. 69, NO. 365, 3 SECTIONS, 70 PAGES . Contest Fizzles 3 School Seats Unchallenged? By MICHA El PASKEVIC'll O! , ... D•tly Pilot St•fl Newport Mesa :.chool Trui,11•1• Orville Amburgey ~aid today h\.0 won't seek re-election and 1t ap peared, only hours before tht• ', p.m. filing deadl ine, that thn·1· of the four schoo~ board scats up for spring will be captured in uncon tested elections. Amburgey becomes the ..,croncl incumbent trustee to v<.iealc J D•••• P1101 'Sl•fl P"c)to SWIMS STRAITS ' Lynne Cox l !Los A lamitos I ' ICirl Swims lcy Straits I SANTIAGO, Chile t l'i tJu'nne Cox of Lo:> m ,.. ~~s _ becom<> the f1 rs pcr:.1m ever to swim the· H'Y Strait:. nf 'Magellan. l'htlf•;m nt·ws pap<-r.., reported today Chilean n;it10n al r;id1•1 rl'port that th1· l!I 'l':ir ol<l ! ('Sa nt • arbara .,luclt-n t frnrn 1 >r.1n¥• ty :."arn l ht· ..,lra1b \\.1-dnl.'., y m one ho11 r 114" rt1111ut c·, emperature 111 lht• \1..111 r-. "' ~· ported at -44 6 dcgrl't"- ft , was not certain 'l<hH·h urse shr took in th•· ..,trail" bi ch range frorn t \l.o·J nci a al! to rour mllr .. m ""Ith T iii' r a1ts st'p:nati" 1·1 ,.rrd dl'I ego Island from the ... outht'rn ost lip or South Artll'rw.1 The .Chilt>an nt'\I.'> ai.:1·nc' rbe ~aid th1• 1·ro'''"I! 14-,,, ade al a point l',1llt'll f'n m•·r .1 gosturo norlh 11( llw ltl\ nf ta Aren..i' Orbt> .... 1111 .1 1 htl• .111 11.1\' aunch 14>-J' pru\ trl11J .1:-. ,, "JI V(''> ... t·I M I 'Is (' 11 \ h ,1 pr 1·' Ill u ' II ade c·hanrwl "' 1P1 , to S;mt ,1 atahna hl:lfld ;inti h.h 1·r,..., "" e En~li..h • hanr111 MIAMI l\J-:,\l'H Fl;1 \I' SIX d3~ oltl ... trike· h\ t111tf'! ~mploye<; 'Jlrc•;icl to l\1.11 mun · ~tel s toda\ ar11•r r1•rlt·r.tl ed1ators h.lltrd n1·i.:ot 1;1t1nn ... tween thr union anct rPj)reiwn lives or the an•a'<; toun ... t In ustry. Picket hnes appeared in ont of the Shrraton F'our Am bassadors and Duront l'l:irn hotels, both in downtown M111m1 -.eat on the board. J01n1ng Thomas C Casey of Corona del Mar who 1s stepping down after M'rVUl~ two four-year terms. Today marked the close of hi 1n~ of (•andidacy dedaraltOn!. "1th the Ora n ge County Hcg1strar of Voters Apparently, NC Duke U'Bnen. a financial manager ror McDonnell Douglas 1n llunt· mgton Beach. will be the only candidate in A:-ea 2 <Northeast Costa Mesa I which Amburgey represented for one term Incumbe nts Carol Martin of trustee Area 5 I Balboa Island and Peninsula) and Roderick Mac Millian of Arca 7 (west Costa Mesa) will run unopposed in their respective dislncts Candidates must reside in the area they will represent. but are <See VOTE, Page AZI 2-day Stand-off • Barricaded Man Kills Wife, Self LOS ANGELES <AP> t\ San Quentin parolee and h1 'i estranged wife died today in a blaze of gunfire after a nearly 40 hour stand-off with s henfP's dl•pulies Lafayette Pruitt, 35, had held hi:. wife, Marcella, hostage tn their Willowbrook apartment since Tuesday evening. Pruitt was dead al the scene and his wife died at Martin Luther King Hospital shortly af lt•rwards or a gunshot wound '" the head Shenff's deputies said they had hoped Pruitt ~ould lire after the prolonged siege and surrender, but this morning investigators said they heard two shots in the bedroom where the just-paroled C'Onvicl had locked himself in with his wife. The s hots were followed bf '<111nds of s cuming and running, then three more shots, officers srud. Several shots came rlC>.'>e to the deputies. who fired about 10 rounds into the area when• Prwtt was holed up The deputies then fired tear gas and stormed the barncaded area. During the long hours of the siege Wednesday, officers re· fused to give Pruitt asked-for food and water. The plumbing in Pruitt's apartment had been turned off by deputies. He originally held his four children hostage, as well, but re leased them Tuesday night Pruitt did allow member:. of the sheriff's special "hostage team" into the apartment but not into the bedroom where he and hjs wife were locked up together Pruitt was released just 12 days ago from San Quentin, where he had been serving lime for a similar standoff incident two years ago. Scudder Accuser: 'Heir to Get Half' Ont• o f John Scudder·s ac cust•d l.1dn.1pC'rs cont111ued to in "Isl Wt>dn<.':>day that the Laura Scuddl'r food heir was a w1lhng p;1n 1c1pant 10 h1~ own k1dnapin~ l,1..-.t August Acc ording to 44-year -old Wilham 0 Wesson's testimony, lht• potato chip-peanut butter heir was to receive $125.000 cif lht" $25-0,000 ransom Bur Wess on. a former Corona de! Mar bank managC'r, ad m1ttl'd ht·. could give no plaus1 hit• rrason for Studder aJleJ:edly .1handon1oi.: \he kidnap plot in 1974 Postal Hike to 1~ Rided Illegal WASlllNGTO~ <AP J A h~<'ral appeal~ court ha'> rule<I lhat (1r,t clal'.s postage rates were 1ncrcas<'cl tllC'~ally m 1974 when lh1•v.,.. crt· r a 1!.ed from 8 ccnL., to JO c·t·nl:-. But the tl.S. Cnurt of i\pj)('<ils took no action to roll back lht.' rate, which has s ince been increased to 13<'ents. · Th<' same m ethod used as the basis for the 1974 increase was used to support the latest rate htk(' midstream and cla1m1n~ to be a legitimate kidnap v1ct1m Batter ed and bleeding, the 64-year-old Balboa Island man fought his way to freedom as the motor home in which he was imprisoned 90 minutes traveled 011 a Fountain Valley thoroughfare. The next day, Wesson and his brothe r -in-law, Ri cki Dale Sellers. 21. were arrested and charged with kidnaping. Wesson 1ns1sted in his testimony in Judge Richard Beacom 's courtroom that the food heir helped plan and carry out the bungled kidnap ploy and was never in any rNtl dan~cr i\s a matter of fact. Wesson said, he , Sellers and Scudder planned to picni c tn Featherly Park while waiting for Mrs ·Valarie Scudder lo collect th<' ransom money Instead. Wesson sajcl, he and Sellers spent the night shivering in ldyllwild while apparently trying to figure out what went wrong with their $250 ,000 s<.'heme. With a touch of pnde 10 his vn1ce . Wesson descnbed the elaborate planning that wrnt tn· to the kidnap plot "Total realism, th.it's what we were after , tot al realism," Wesson said a s h e di~cu.'lsed the ill fated caper. 'l'od a~ ·s ('los i11f,t j ~.\ .• Sf ot•ks ,, . THURSDAY, DECEMBE R 30, 1976 N TEN CENTS Bridge Becomes Memory One of the last acts of the contractor building the MacArthur Boulevard end of lhe Corona del Mar Freeway was to tt'ar down the old bridge over San Diego Creek. The bridge, built in 1941, was a hazard during hc<1vy rains when creek waters flootkd tl The new MacArthur Boulevard bndgL· won't have that pro ble m . The old one wus knocked down Tuesd:.iy. I i Occidental' s Mazda Site Buy Reported The Occid ental Petroleum Company i5 purc hasing the long. vacant Mazda Motors building in Irvine. sources confirmed Wed· nesday. Bruce Brusseau, president or Newport Naltonal Company, vt>nC1ed that the sale is in pro- gress and that escrow ia ex~ted to close shortly after the first of Januarv. AJtbough Brusseau confirmed reports of the s ale. officials at both companies involved.declined to offer anything but "no com- ment'' when asked about the deal Wednesday The Mazda building is loc&tcd just off the San Diego forttway, at Von Karman Avenue and Main Street Brusseau. who served as broker for Mazda Motors, declined to re- veal the purchase pnce. but said <Stt M AZDA. Page AZ) Progress '77 . Spotlights OCEcorwmy Continued rapid growth and in· dustrial diversification make Orange County a bright spot in the nation dur ing 1976. Today's Dally Pilot brings an armchair look at the s uccesses of 1976 a nd the predictions for 1977 made by area firms and units or government PROGRESS '77 1s a 44-page magazine prepared to bring you up to date on the slate of the Orange Coast economy and the outlook for the comi~ year. It's a special edition you'll want to share with friends and associates. Look for PROGRESS '77 in !<>day's Daily Pilot Carter to Weigh Financial Interests PLAIN S, Ga . (A P ) President-elect Carter s ays he 1s not ready to announce what hl' will do with his extensive finan cial interests while in the White House. But he promises to iibide by the same restrictions he \')lllns lo place on top appointees. Carter commented on his fi.nanciaJ holdings and on a con· met-of-Interests code Wednesday shortly before he r eturned to his home here after holding (1te- ina ugural Cabinet meetings. Aides said the code of ethics for all those Carter names to high positions would be made public late today or Friday. For three days, the President elect held marathon meetings with prospective Cabinet mem bcrs and other key advisers oh St Simons Island, a secluded re- sort orr the Georgia coast. The economy and the d1recllon the new administration will take after the Jan. 20 inauguration were high on the agenda. Carter told a Dec. 2Q news con- f~rence he-already approved the code of ethics and that press secretary Jody Powell would make it available for publication For reasons ·never fully ex plained. release or the document was d elayed Carter said Wednesday that all his appointees have agreed to meet the terms or the code, and said "It will require the complete divestiture of any financial rela honships that might create a con fli ct of inte rests. and a complet•· revelation of all other cconom1l· holdings. including ner worth statements · · And the President-elect added. 'I 'll conform with the samL' restn cttons I've placed on th~ Cabinet m embers." Carter r eported during his campaign that his net worth at the end or 1975 was Rll l.982.09. Although Carter's partnership in the family peanut bu.sines!'> d~s not have direct fmanc1al de alings with the government, 1t benefits from som e agricultural sub&idies. In advance of an an· nouncement of Carter's plans for his personal holding~ 1t was not clea r whether the President elect sees a potential conruct here or, if so, how he plans to de~ With ll. Rose Parade Threatened BySlunoors Rain returned to Orange Coun- ty today after a seven week 1 absence. bringing the possibility I of a rare occurence ram onj N~w Year 's Day. Lig.ht showers fell throughout the county and the National! Weather Service predicts an 80 , percent chance of occasional showers through the weekend Rose Parade officials are hop- ing to escape the first New \'ear's Day ram since 1955 The weather front dropped IJght snow at the 5.000-fool level. but the storm is expected lo pass qui<.'kly and probably won't bring sufficient snow to open many Southern California ski resorts Dense C'louds will bnni: cooler weather to Orange County this weekend High temperatures along the coast arc exp<>cted to reach about 60 with low!> m the up pcr40s to mid 50s Today's ram 1s the first crack in a high-press.ure system over lh<• Western states that hes blocked a pproaching s t orm systems for almost two months I I The National Associaliort of Greellng Card Publishe~. which t'halleni::ed the 1974 increase. IS also contesting the Jump to 13 cents in a sepa rate case pending before the appe a Is court Dry Tree Poses Hazard Although the weather front •~ not expected to bring s ubstantial rainfall, a Nationa l Weather Service spokesman said this opening in the pressure ridge should pave the way for heavier wmter rains \\4•:1th••r Mostly C'loudy with HO percent chance of r;11n 1''n day. Hif'hs near GO. lows in low S<>s. INS IDE T ODA,. l 111.1e1 .ore •hoking long. dondinQ .rpec1ol rtlotion..!htp Ntwe~n U.S .. and Caoodo Second of three article• ap- peari on A 7 Ind~~ The Postal Rate Commission Justified the 1974 increase on the grounds that raising fi rst·clas!I r:ites would not discourage use of lhe mails as much as raising rutcs for the other three classes of mail, the appeals court said. The law re· quires each class of postal service lo bear It.sown cost, lhecourtsald. The commission rerommends rate increases to the U.S. Postal Service. Commission attorneys con· tend~ there was nothing in the decision to s top the commission from setting rates baaed on other methods. They said no decision ii E:: ::, • 1!1! :::1~~nc~u~~ ~~lln~c~~~!0u8~· •• n ,..,...,., ... W\ ~.· Supreme Court. IJ Or•-C..Mf ~ 11 -... ••, Most mail -cards and letters I-~--:: =:~,,,... ~·.! iuentfirsl-class. Secood·class A1•11 ,.....,,,..., Al• mall covers newspapera and Ai•~: ~' •1•~ ma1.il.ncs, third·clus lA for ad· •• ,.. vertl1ln1 circulars and fourth· cJaaa ls for packages. Fire Of/icials Suggest Early Disposal Even if the hectic holida~ season hasn 't dra ined your spirit. chances are the family Chris tmas lrff hasjusl about had it. To minimize Ci re hazards, coun. ty fire officials s uggest early dis· posal of used trees. Outdoor burn- ing is illegal and otnclaJs warn against burning trees in fireplaces due to the highly com· bustible natute or dried pine needles. There Is a lso t he danger of burn· lrtg embes-s drifting through the ~hlmney a.,id landina on roofs of adjacent homes. City guidelinea for the pickup of used trees include: NEWPORT BEACH : Trees may be placed on street with re· ,War lratb. Larae tt'CCll muat bt cut into tou r·fool 1ectiOl'\S, There will be no (New Year's Day) ,. pickup (Saturday), • • SAN CLF.M ENTE: Saturday pickups will be made Monday Large trees must he cut into four foot sections. • F OUN T A I N VAL LEY : Regular pickup. Treesshould be cutintosmallsection.s. ~ SEAL BE ACH : Re1u Jar pickup. No more than four .foot sections. H UNTINGTON B E ACH : Regular pickup. Fireomclitla are a&klnpesldents lo cut and ploct tree aetment~ In 8 closed con· tainer. 1.av1NE: R e11.1lar pickup '])'ea may alao be taken to a malchln1 m•o.llJ.n• operaU..,. at the city yard at Bryan and Yal1• Avenues There 1s nocharg<' LAGUNA BEACH: llkular pickup Residents shoulct'lbt and bundlc largetrees COSTA MESA: Regular pickup. Large trees mu.st be cui into four.foot sections to assure pickup. SAN J UAN CAPISTRANO: Re1Cular pickup. Trees must be cut•nd bundled DANA P O I NT: Regular pkkup Trees must be cut and bundled. ELTOaOANDSAODl.BBACK VALLE Y: Reaular plekup. ~:s must bet c ut and bun4Je<L ' ' Piwt Doors Cwse Early The main· offices of the Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St . Costa Mesa, will be open until 3 p. m . Friday for classified advertising. Branch offices will be closed Friday and all of· fices will be closed Satur· day, New Year 's Day. •t Circulation complaints ; will sti l l be taken, however. ,. T h e Daily Pi.l'l will publish normal ~York Stock Exchange reports Friday and a year-end summary for bolh the New York and American e.x· changes on Saturday. ! I .42 DAILY PILOT N F,.._Pa~A J MAZDA ••• the petroleum company ts buying the four -story bu1ldmg, the ent.are parcel a nd the rurnistungs w1Uun \he bu.Udlng. Mazda Motors originally was asking $9 m 1lhon for the 166.600 square fool s tructure, plus $736,000 for the furnistungs. Accordmg to Brusseau. a sub· sidiary of the parent Occidental Petroleum Company will lake OC· cupancy sometime during the ftrstquarter or 1977. "Then, they expect lo buHd out on the r est of the property." the broker said. When the rot ary engine auto company or iginally built the building, company orriclals ex- pec t ed t o con s truc t twin warehouses at the rear of the pro- perty. Brusseau said the subsidary company that will occupy the site is cons idered Ii ght industry, thereby sa tisfying the city's re- quirements. When construction began on the Mazda build ing several years ago, the auto company was at the peak of its sales drive with its ne w rotary engine . However , after sales began lo lag the fir m jecided against mov· ing into the glass walled building. Offi cials also decided against constructing the two warehouses. Top Yachts Named for Yule Parade Pete Siracusa, chairman of the Ne wport Ha rbor Par ade of LlghL'I, has a nnounced the win· ners of the five-day boat parade which a ttracted more than 100 boats each night. The winner in the category for clubs and organizations is the Argus from the Sea Seoul Base. The Vola re, owned by Ralph Rodheim, was the outstand.ulg en- try in the over 50-foot category. In the 40 to SO-foot category, Holo Jlolo, owned by Charles M. Wickell was the winrung entry and in the JO to 40-foot category. Starbnte. owned by Stan Brand was the wmncr . The Ericson 27 owned by John Zmsmeyer was n•1mcd the win- ning entry m the under JO-foot class. Two residents of Collins Island received a wards for their home decorations. Morris Kirk at No. 2 and Dr. Pa ul Fe rnworth at No. 4 took first and second place in home decoratmg. Siracusa said the pn zes will be awarded at a special meeting of the Ne w port H arbor Area Chamber of Commerce Com- modore ·~ Club ne xt month. NB Lawyer Faces Trial Newport Be dC'h attorney James P atrick Cant1llon has ~n ordered to race t n al March 7 1n Ora n~e County Supenor Court on assault charges riled by PohCf' who s aid he was one or three men who pistol wrupped two youths and s hot one of them. Named with Cant1llon, 49, o( 1418 W Bay Ave . ac; il<'fendanls are his son. Richard llenry Can· talion. 20, or the same address, and Patrick Howard Cannon, 20, of Rcvcrly Jh lls All three are frc<' on $2,500 bail each ~c~po rt Rear h police said they charged the tno Wlth assault with a d eadly weapon la.st Oct 2 followm~ an attack on two l~ Angeles youth~ who c alled at lhc Cantillon hom t' to colle<'t a debt Pohce 11a 1d one of the two young men "as shot 1n the foot Fight Continue8 BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) fo't•ud mg Palei1tinian guer ri lla fa ctions trad ed mor tar and machine gun fire m Beirut today, and fighting between Chrisllans and the Moslem -Palestinian al· Hance continued in southern Lebanon. - ORA NO~ COAST N DAILY PILOT Tflt< ')••"""" C•• 1 Ot11., t'tiet wtl'-wN•tth tom· "'°~I~ Nttw .,.,,\ '' ri1;tii1 ._,1,..••t\.f~'"' ti" '"' ~ l\w~' .. a• mn •"'• ""'°'-•'ti ...,., ... , ... ,. 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MU•••'r (00\l• ... ,_,,, ,.-~·., Good /tludders Keeping busy can be a problem during ~ong vacations from school. but this group of children found a way to break the monotony Wednesday in Corona de l Ma r. They made 1,400 mud pies. From r ight are Scott Larkin, 5: Anton Commagere, 6; Susie Jawor, 6; Patrick Mer- rell. 7: Kerstin Commagere, 8: Chris Matton, 8: Mike McKee, 9; Wendy Jawor , 10 ; Keith Fla nders, 10; Kelly Emmons. 11. and Greg Fillers, 11. Marine Sentenced; Guilty in Assault CAMP PENDLETON <AP) - A Marine corporal has been de- moted to private and sentenced to lhrtt months hard labor after pleading guilty to pummeling another Ma rine with his fists in an attack oy blacks on six whites in a barracks . "l'm glad I didn't get a BCD (bad conduct discharge). I was worried about t hat." said Cpl. E.F . Henry, 20, one of 13 black Marines accused in the incident. One was granted immunity in ex- change for testimony. Henry pleaded guilty Wednes- day lo conspiracy and assault charges, telling a s pecial court- martlal that he and the other blacks thought they were attack- ing a group of Ku Klux Klan me m- bers. He was the first to face trial in the case. The Marine Corps is ex- Frma Page A J VOTE ••. elected at large . Five Corona del Mar (area 4 I residents have declared an inten- tion to run for the seat Casey will vacate. They are : Regina Von Burger (teaoher), Margaret R. Carey (teacher), Betty Jo Balley (homemaker ). Cameron M. Smith Jr. (attorney) and Daniel J . Wallace (deputy district at- torney). Amburgey said his decision not to run is based on his inability lo devote the lime necessary to the job and his desire to spend more time with his family. Amburgey also said he wi11hei1 to devote more time to hts job as communications dire<'tor ror the City of Costa Mesa He threw bis s upport berund O"Brien, who has served on the 11chool district's budget and transportation committees. o· Brien ·s fina ncial experience will help the dis trict's plan to cut expenses. said Amburgey. NH C of C Names '77 Leaders Directors o f the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Com· merce have a pproved aslateofor. ficers for 1977 led by attorney Dennis Harwood who will serve as president. The 'bfficers, who will be in- stalled at the chamber banquet Jan. 19 at the Marriott Hotel, In- clude Rudy Barmon, who will be executive vice president, and three vice preaident.s. Chrla Hop- per, Mike Gering and Gordon West. Mike Christianson hu oeen selected as secretary-treasurer. Harwood will succeed another attorney, J im Parbr, who has served u presdent of the 1,000- member organization for the past year. Harwood was raised In the Ne'llrPOrt Beach area and la a graduate of Newport Harbor Hh~h School. He graduated from Pomona College and the USC School of Law. He has been actlve in the chamber for nearly 10 years and Nll'V-9 l&at year u execut.l" vice pnsldct. peeled lo announce next week whether the othe r 11 will be tried. He n ry's attorney, Cap t. Stephen F. 81egenzahn, told re- porters he considered the penalty ··an appropriate sentence." He had told the jury that his c lient re- alized the presence of the KKK did not justify the assault. The blac k M a r ines we re charged with aggravated assault and conspiracy alter they al· legedly beat the whites with clubs and s t a bb e d t h e m with screwdrivers . Five of lhe victims were hos pitalized for periods of at least two days . One man is still in the hospital. Henry. of Iv anhoe, N.C., said he used o n l y h is closed fis t. Prosecutors accepted his plea of guilty to reduced c harges of sim · pie assault and conspiracy. Henry said he and the other bla cks h ad a "little misun- derstanding'' about which room the Kl ans men we re in. He told the judge the incident began when he and the other blacks "agreed lo go over and Jam (beat up) the Ku Klux Klan." They set out for another barracks and chose the particular room because ·'we heard a lot of noise; there was a party going on." Henry said. * * * Outside Paper Drau:s Blast From ACLU SAN DI E GO <AP> -The American Civil Li berties Union de manded "a full lnvest1gation" today Into a newspaper cir culal· ed at Camp Pendleton describing black Marines a s criminals . The ne ws pa pe r , a week ly publication called The SpoWg ht, was in view or witnesses entering and leaving a he aring room while a pretrial investigation was lak- ing place Wednesday for one of 13 blacks charged with attacking whites, the ACLU newswoman said. A he a<t line said, "Negro Marines Brutally Attack Whites but Press Reverses the Blame." A story blamed blacks for crime in neighborine Oceanside. "Jl a ppears that this is a de- liberate ofriclal or other effort lo sabo tage th e black Marines ' cases and additionally certain of- ficials a ppe ared to be coun- tenancintt this effort," said Mark Rosenbaum, an ACLU staff at- torney. "This incident appears lo be one small part or an effort by the military to cover up the racist slluatlob on the base and lo scapegoat 13 black Marines.•• R os e n bau m sai d t h e newspaper is publish ed in Washington , D.C. He did not adentlly the o rganization that publishes It. There was no immediate com· m e nt by Ca mp Pendleton spokesmen . Tbe tirat or the 13 men to be tried has been sentenced to three mont.ha' Imprisonment and te· duced from corporal lo private after pleading guilty Wednesday lo uaaull. Cpl. E.1''. Kcnry, 20, also wm f orf elt $150 tn pay monthly for fo ur moat.bl. , Ota Ortega Biglateag ~Die, 2 Hurt In OC Collision Three persons were killed and two others critically inj ured Wednesd ay in a headon collision of two lightweight pickup trucks on Ortega Highway. A coroner 's report identified those killed tn the headon col· lision about 11 miles east of San Juan Capistrano as : -BelJJlda Dia ne Cordero. 24. of Troops End Mao Widow Disturbance HONG KONG (AP ) -Chinese troops have PJJt an end to "great chaos" s pread by supporters of the purged widow of Mao Tse- tung in the city of Baoding, about 100 miles southwest of Peking, according to offi cial and foreign news reports from China. The reports, which spoke of bombings and a rmed raids by the rebels, d id not make clear when the antigovemmcnt dis; turbances occurred. A Dec. 20 issue of Peking's People's Daily newspaper ob- tained here said the armed bands in Baoding had been "threaten ing the security of Peking so that they could us urp the par ty power" and were s uppressed by army troops. A Hopeh provincial radio re- port quoted by the London OBJ ly Telegraph today srud it took a "concerted e ffort " by the army to restore o rder after a long period of "confusion" in the city, the provincial capital. The Sydney (Australia) Morn- ing Herald's China correspon- dent also reported the Daoding disturbances. 26712 A venue Sbonto, Miss ion Viejo.' -Greg Thom aa Trulls, 16, of 9882Teresa Ave., Anaheim. -James Cruse, 17, of 1221 E. Walnut St .. Lompoc. Two critic ally i njure d teenage rs now in Mission Com- munity Hospital have beentftlen- Wied as Thomas Cruse. 17, of the Lompoc address, and Samuel Robert Koutroulis, 16, or Quebec, Canada. Accord ing t o a Ca lifornia Highway Patrol s pokesman. the two Cruse boys, brothers of Mrs Cordero, were passengers in the pickup truck s he was driving eastbound on Ortega Highway at 9:45a.m . Koutroulis was a passenger in the westbound pickup driven by Trulis. About a mile west or San Juan Hot Springs, the Trulis vehicle apparently crossed over the center line and collided headon with Mrs . Cordero's eastbound pickup , t he CHP spokesm an said. 1 Cause or the triple fatal acci- dent is still under investi gation Abortion Pay Limit Gone SAC RAMEN T O (AP ) Californi a o ffi cials h ave scrapped a policy under which the state would not pay for Medi-Cal abortions after the 2nth week of pregnancy, a spokesman says. A st at e Health Department s p o k es man , Dr . R a lph Hornberger, said Wednesday the state decided that re<:ent court de- cisions force it to abandon the 20-week lim it. That limit has been abolished as ofDec. l , he s aid . QUALITY TELEVISION 011ly r>ltol Swff ,._. WATCHING THE STORE Acting Librarian Gregory NB Library lmerim Chief Appointed Tim Gregory has been named ac ting libr a r ian in Newport Beach to temporarily replace Dorothea Sheely who retires Fri- day after serving 27 years as the city's head libra rian. Mr s. Sheely, who has worked for the city for 30 years, an- nounced her retire ment last Sep- tember. The interim appointment was anno unced by City Manager Robert Wynn who said re<:ruiting for the library pos t will close in the middle of J a nuary. Mean while, the city 's four branch librar ies will be managed by Gre gor y. He joined the city staff last March. Gregory holds a bachelor's degree in E nglish from UCLA and a m aster's in library science from UC Be r keley. He h as wo rke d previously for the Pasadena Public Library and South Pasadena Public Library systems GET THE BOWL GAMES & PARADES IN GREAT COLOR aunE?'*''a -1t11 ~ ie>°O% Souo STlllTE (INIOMA(OllOI II 23,, CONSOLE COLOR TV diagonal Trwultl011al llw 14LTIMOllE•HjZJJZE F~ No mov1nfJ parts 10 wear out and no contdct oo•nh ro corrod e 1n Iha luners 0CS1gnPd l.J bl' tno most deoonddblP. mQ<;I o;en-;111ve 1un1nq i.v-;tem 1n Zenith tw .. Jory Handsome Tranc;111ona1 styled lull base console Casters Bcaullfully f1n1shed in s1mul11ted Antique Oak with the look ol line d1strass1nq AFC CALL FOR PRICING 13'' Versatile, Compact {)IA(.c>N"L Color TV T1w MAL.llU HI JIOC ELECTRONIC VIDEO GUARD TUNING SYSTEM The LUCERNE H1940 Dllcorator Compact TV wit h Colo r Sentry. Thr Aulo- mal1c P1clure Con trol System. New 100~ Chr om acolor P1c turo Tube with Our most comoac r P<>r1able wt th 100% Sol1d·State Chassis with Power Sentry Brtll1an 1 1 1 0 Chromacolor In-Line Picture Tube. 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The newspaper, a weekly blication called The Spotlight, as in view o( witnesses mtering leaving a hearing room while pretrial inves ligallon was tak place Wednesday for one or 13 • blacks charged with attacking whiles, the ACLU newswoman said <Related Story A2) A headline s aid. "Negro Marines Brutally A\lack Whites but Press Re~rses the Blame " A story blamed blacks for cnme LO neighboring Oceanside. "It appears that this 1s a de· liberate official or other effort to s abotage the black .Marines' cases and additionally certain of- ficials appeared lo be <'OUn · tenancing this effort," said Mark Rosenbaum, an ACLU staff at· •tomey. "This incident appears to be one small part of an effort hy the military to cover up the ruc1st s ituation on the base and to scapegoat 13 black Marines." Ro senbau m sa id the newspaper is publis he'd in Washington, D.C. He did not identiry the organization that publishes it. There was no immediate com• m e nt by Camp Pendleton spokesmen. The first of ,the 13 men lo be tried has been sentenced to three months' imprisonment and re· duced from corporal to private alter pleading guilty Wednesday to assauJt. Cpl. E .F. Henry. 20 • also wltl rorlelt $150 in pay monthly for four months. 4 Rosenbaum and Willia.m C:. Smith, a military rights attorney, issued a joint statement i.n wh1ch • they demanded an investigation ol the newspoper by the Manne Corps. After interviewing oHicer :r; esco~ing black pr~oners, the lwo lawyers said "no orricial made an !Viejo Wolllan Killed • Ill Stondof f E 11ds I l Parolee Shoots t l Mate, Himself I --LOS ANGELES (AP) A San Quentin parolee who held his estranged wife hostage in a I; marathon standoff was killed to-~. da:, and his wife was critically I• wounded in what shenff's de- ~ puties said appeared to be a •' suJcide and attempted murder. 0 .. 1, ,., ... St,tlf "'-• SWIMS STRAITS Lynne Cox Los Alamitos Girl Swims Icy Straits s ANT l AG(). (' h l I\' I A p ' 't.,ynne Cox of Los \larn1to' (has become the f1r'l perc;on 1 ever to swam th<' 1c·' Stra1t!> or Magellan. Chilc.••111 n1•w,~apnc; reported lo<l;h 1 Chilean nat1on,il r,11110 n·1111n 4lCi that the 19 }Cur ol•I l ('Sant.a f Barbara studt•nt £rnrn Oran.:e County swam tlw -.tr .uh ~f-dm•., • day an one hour. ""' manutt·-. Temperatur(' in I ha• "'.a11•r-. w1•t1• r-eportffi ;11 -t4 r. 1tc•.:11·1·-. Jl wa" not n•rt,11n "'h1t·h c:ourse o;hr lr)(1 k 1r1 th• 'tr,11t' which r.rn~e frnm t1.1.o ,1nrl ;1 half to four milt'' in "11lth Thi' &traits separate· T11•1 r ;a 1Jtol F'uego Island from thl· .,,1ut h<·rn most tip of South i\m1•nr ,1 The Chalt••.an n1•w, a.:1•nc y Orbe sa1<1 lht• <'ro"ing was made at a pomt cnllNI l'nmc.•ra Angosluro, north of lh1• r1ty or Punta Arenas . Orbe s aid a ('hil1•an navy Ulunch was prov11l1'fl a!'> a ~u11 port vessel Miss Cox. has prevwusly made channel swim-; to Sant:1 'Catalina Island and ha!> crossed the English Channel · Progress '77 Tel/,s Futu re IOf Ecorwmy Continued rapid growth and ln- d u1trl 1 I diversification make Orange County a bright spot In the nation during 1976. Today's Daily Pilot bnngs an armchair 1ook at the !4uccesses of 1976 and the predi~llons for 1977 made by area firms and units of iovemment. PROGRESS '77 is a «·P?ge m .. azine prepared to bring you \lP to date on the state of the Oran1• Coast economy and the outlook for the coming year. It's a special edition you'JI want to share with friends and 1110Clates. Look ror PROGRF..SS '77 In today's Daily Pilot. ..__ A spokesman for the sheriffs office s aid Lafayette Pruit, 35, apparently s hot his wife and then himself. Deputies said they heard two shots in the upstairs or the Willowbrook home where Pruitt had held his wife, Marcella, as a hostage since Tuesday night. The shots were followed ·by sounds of scuffling and running, then three more shots, officers said. Several shots came close to the deputies, who rircd about 10 rounds into the area where Pruitt was holed up. The de putiei, then fired tear gas and stormed the barricaded area Mrs Pruitt was taken to Marlin Luther King Hospital "1th a bull el "ound an the head and was not expected to live. of- ficers said Durin~ the long hours of the '>1ege Wednesday. officers re- fused to give Prujtt asked-for rood a nd W3ler. The plumbing in Pruitt's apartment had been turned off by deputies lie o ri ~inally held his four children hostage, as well, but re- leased them Tuesday night. Pruitt did allow members or t he sheriff's special "hosta~c team" into the apartment but nol into the bedroom where he and his wife were locked up together. Pruitt was released 1ust L2 days ago from San Quentin. where he had been servmg lime for il s1m1lar ~tandoH incident two yt'ars Jgo Driver Faces T rial Over . Fatal Crash Richard Paul Granillo has been ordered to face tnal March 7 in Oranl{e County Superior Court on manslaughter charges filed after a Mission Viejo man died following a head-on collision hetween two autos ''" the San Diego Freeway. Judge Jam~ H. Walsworth set the trial date and pretrial action Jan. 21 for Granillo. 21, of Bellflower. The defendant is ad· djt1onally accused or .drunken dnving. He is free on his promise to appear for trial. Arresting oUicers sai d Granillo was driving north on the San Di ego Freeway near Newland Street in Huntington Beach Oct. 24 when his car crossed the center divider and plowed into a car driven by Joseph Walter Breakfield alter glancing orr another auto. Breakfield, 48, of 25E82 Aurora Way, Mission Viejo, died ln the wreckage or his car. Granillo suf· fered minor injuries. Strike Spreads MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP> - A six-day-old s trike by hotel employes spread to two more hotels todny after federal mediators halted negotiations between the union and represen· tatives or the aren's touriit in· dustry. Picket lines appeared ln front of the Sheraton Jo'our Am· basaadora and Dupont Plata hotels, both ln downtown Miami. Trof fie Stoppe r Traffic on the southbound San Diego Freeway at Junipero Serra Road in northern San Juan Capistrano was backed up for almost two hours early today when the cab of a double truck and trailer rig owned by Oda Nursery of Westminster blew a tire. causing the rear unit to flip on its side across three lanes. The California Highway Patrol called a SigAlert and diverted traffic until the mess was cleaned up. One occupant of the truck cab s ustained minor cuts, but there were no other injuries in the 7: 30 a. m. mishap, CHP officers said. Chinese Claim ·End To Widow's 'Chaos' HONG KONG CAP> -Chinese troops have put an end to "great chaos" spread by supparters of the purged widow of Mao Tse- tung in the city of Baoding, about 100 miles southwest or Peking, according to official aJ\d foreign news reports from Ch.ina. The reports, which spoke of bombings and armed raids by the rebels, did not make clear when the antigovemment dis- turbances occurred. A Dec. 20 issue of Peking's People's Daily newspaper ob· tained here said the armed bands in ·eaoding had been "threaten- ing the security or Peking so that they could us urp the part y pawer" and were ~uppressed by army troops. A llopeh provincial radi.p re port quoted by the London Daily Telegraph today srud 1l took a "concerted effort" by the army to restore order after a Ion!! -period of "confus ion" in the city the provincial capital. The Sydney c Austral! a ) Mom mg Herald's China corrc!>pon dent also reported the Baodmg disturbances. The Telegraph's Peking t•or respondent. Nigel Wade, noted that foreign travelers reported as early as last spring that radical opponenLo; of the Hopch provin- cial leaders hip in Baodini:! had broken into an armory, blown up factori es and c ommitte d murder, rape and rohbcry .,.WI .. ,._.. FIGHTIN IN CHINA Factions Take Up Arma The Baoding disclosures were the latest in a series of reports of disturbances directed against the regime of Chairman Hua Kuo-feng and said to have been fomented by radical followers of Mao's widow, Chiang Ching, and her associates in Ule ''Gang or Four." Th(' disorders are believed to have been most widespread in late sum mer and fall. Rain Threat To Pageant Of Roses? Rain returned to Orange Coun· ty today after a seven week absence, bringing the possibility of a rare occurence --..rain on New Year's Day .. Ilght showers fell tllrougho6t the county and the National Weather Service predicts an 80 percent chance of occasional showers through the weekend. Rose Parade officials arc hop- ing to escape the first New Year's Day rain since 1955. The weather front dropped light snow at the 5,000-foot level. but the storm is expected to pass quickly and probably won't bring sufficient snow to open many Southern California ski resorts. ~se clouds will bring cooler weath~r to Orange County this weekend. High temperatures along the coast are expected to reach aboUt 60 with lows in the up- per40s to mid 50s. Today's rain is the first crack in a high.pressure system over the Western states thal has blocked approaching s torm systems for almost two months Although the weather front 1s not expected to bring s ubstantial rainfall, a National Weather Service spokes man said this opening in the pressure ridl(c should pave lhe way for heavier winter rains Dry Tree Poses Hazard Fire Officials Suggest Early Disposal Even if the hectic holiday season hasn 't drained your spint, chances are the family Christmas tree has just a bout had 1t. To miniplize fire hazardc;, coun· ty fire offrcials suggest early dis· pout of used trees. Outdoor burn- ing is illegal and officials wam against burning trees in fireplaces due to the highly com- bustible nature or dned pine needles. Thereiaalsothedangerofbum- lng embers drifting through the 1 cblmney and landing on roots of adjacent homes. City guidelines for the pickup of used trees include: SAN CLEMENTE: Saturday pickups will be made Monday, Large trees must be cut into four- foot liections. FOUNTA I N VALLEY: Regular pickup. Trees should be cut into small sectioMl SEAL BEACH : Regular pickup No more than four-foot sections HUNTI NGTON B E l\.CH : Regular pickup. Fire otflcla.Lure asktns residents to cut and place tree '4egments In a cloted con- tainer. l &VINE: Recular pickup. Trees may aJso be takt:n to a mulchilla machino operaeln1 at the city yard at Bryan and Yale Avenues. There is no charge LAGUNA BE ACH: Regular pickup. Residents shou~ut and bundle large trees. COSTA MESA: Regul a r pickup. Large trees mu.c;t be cut into four-fool sectloM to assure pickup. SAN JU AN CAPISTRANO: RecuJar pickup. Trees must be cut and bundled. DANA P O I N T : Regular pickup. Trees must be cut and bundled. ELTO&OAND SADDLEBACK VALLF.Y : Refularpickup. Trees mmt be cut and bundled. •·ter110011 . \.'. Stocks ,• attempt to remove the paper- which was in clear view of and re- ad by passersby.and prospccltV\: witnesses.'' Rosenbaum is defending one or the 13 black Marines who were charged with conspiracy and as· saulting a ha lf-dt>ien whites · whom they reportedly s\ISpcctcd, or being member~ oft.be Ku Klux Klan. Ortega Highway Claiins 3 Three persons were killed and · two others c ritically injured Wednesday In a headon collision of two lightweight pickup trucks on Ortega Highway. A coroner's report. identified those killed in the headon col· lision about 11 miles east of San Juan Capistrano as: -Belinda Diane Cordero, 24, or 26712 Avenue Shonto, Missfon Viejo. -<Jreg Thomas Tnills, 16. of 9882 Teresa Ave., Anaheim. -James Cruse, 17, of 1221 E. Walnut St .. Lompoc. • Two criti cally injured teenagers now in Mission Com· munity Hospital have been iden- tified as Th.omas Crlise, f1, o(the Lompoc address, and Samuel Robert Koutroulis, 16' of Quebec, Canada. According to a Calirorn1a Highway Patrol spokesman. tJIP two Cruse boys, brothers of Mrs ., Cordero, were passengers in tho pickup truck she was drivini:i eastbound on Ortega Highway at 9:4.5a .m. Koutroulis was a passenger 1n the westbound pickup driven by Trulis. About a mile west or San Juan Hot Springs, the TruJis vehicle apparently crossed over the center line and collided hcadon with Mrs. Cordero's eastbound pickup, the CllP spokesmar' said. Cause of the triple fatal acci• dent is still under investigation Cyclist S u ccumbH To Yule l njurie David McDonald, 21, of 149 W. Palizada, San Clemente, died early today in Mission Communi· ty Hospital from injunes sld- fered in a motorcycle accidctit Christmas Day. According to the Orange Coun· ty' coroner's report, McDonald received his fatal injuries wheiit the motorcycle he was driving was struck by an auto in San Juan Capistrano. The Christmas Day accident occurred on Camino Capistrano near Avenue Vacaro, according to the coroner. . Amtrak Stalled GALESBURG, Ill. (AP>-The San Francisco Zephyr Amtrak passenger train from Chicago was stalled in Galesburg todaY,, awaiting a more powerful engine. \\'cat h e r . . Mostly cloudy with 80 percent chance of rain Fri- day. Highs near 60, l~\ltS an lowSOs. I NSl 'D E T ODA \' . luue1 are &hoking lona· 8tanding apecial relation.ihlp betwten U S. and Canada. Second of three ortic~1 ap- peor1 on A7. Index I N£WPORT BEACH: Trees may be placed on street with ro· guJar trtsh. Large trees mu.on be cut into four-fool sections. There will be no (New Year's Day) pickup (Saturda1). • t -----.. • j A% DAILY PILOT SB New Oil Spill Averted From AP Dl1pakbes Tug boata were taking fuel otr a Liberian tanker which ran aground on the southern coast of Puerto Rico in hopes of renoaling the vessel, a spokesman for the Commonwealth Oil Reflnln1 Co. -CORCO.-said. T here w:is no immediate danger of an oil spill from the 735-foot Daphne which h.it soft cor- al Tuesday night near the en· trance of the Guayannilla Bay. authorities said Wednesday. The tanker carries 400,000 bar- re~oflightcrudeoil. "A part of the crude will be taken orr \he tanker, and then an attempt will be made to refloal it," the CORCO spokesman said. The crude was bought from Algeria to be processed at the CORCOrefinery. Coast Guard personnel were in Guayanilla to keep an eye on lug boats taking fuel off the vessel, the U.S. Coast Guard said. In other oil spill cases: -Pledging to put "fly.by·njght foreign operators on notice," a federal attorney obtained the ar- rest or the captain of a Llberian· registered tanker that s pilled 133,500 gallons or oil into the Delaware River. -A New York investigation continued into why a second Liberian tanker unleashed one of history's worst oil spills off Nan- tucket Island. -The s pill from a third Liberian tanker was being cleaned up in Connecticut. Vasilios Vlismas, a Greek na· tional, was taken into custody by U .S . marshals Wednesday aboard the tanker Olympic Games. docked by the BP, Inc .. refinery at Marcus Hook, IS miles south or Philadelphia. He was charged with violating U.S. antipollution laws by djs. char ging petroleum into a water way and failing to im· mediately notify authorities of the discharge. He later was freed on bail. After Vlismas' arrest, U.S. Al· ty. David Marston said, ''ll's high time we take decisive action to put these fly-by-night foreign operators on notice that they have to meet higher standards." Marston said the charges, both misdem eanors , carry a max- Jmum penally of two years in prison and a fine of $12,SOO. In New York. the captain or the tanker Argo Merchant said in federal court that his ship was being navigated with out-0f-date sea-current charts when it ran aground this month and cracked open off Nantucket Island. That grounding led to a huge spill, 7.6 million gallons, now slowly breaking up and drilting away from land m the North AU antic. Officials in CoMecticut said most of the 2,000 gallons spilled into the Thames River by the Oswego Peace on Friday had been contained by booms. but the remainder had coated rocks and waterfowl downstream. They said the cleanup should be com- plete by the end of lhls week. Yellow Cab SaJ,e Backed SAN T>fF.\.O c.t.r1 -Sale o( Yellow Cab operulions in San Diego and Oceanside as approved by the City Council with only banJtrupt<'y court okay holding up the return of 280 taxis to tht- streel.s The Long Beach based Ocean Salt. In<' . owned by Donald R Sworthwood and his Wlfe of San Diego, agreed to pay $839,000 for the company, a s ubsidiary of the bankrupt Wcstgate-Californiu Corp. The newly created Western Slates Transportation, Inc., a wholly owned s ubsidiary of Ocean Salt. would become the parent company or Yellow Cab. OAAHOf COAST \II DAILY PILOT ""'°'~ C.O..•t owv ,.. ... -''"-•"•"""' tw~t..,_,._<11111 ~t",l\OUbO~t'W,,._(,. ~.,,. t ''""' Pv0'111Jril'!U'M) C~O•f'ly ~l.lf ...... ,,ifM)n· ,., .. P\fl\'"'WMi M '""•• '"'"''f'tl\ ,.,In •Y •M f .,~,, MP"" H, .• .,.,,, D•tltff\, t•w"ll•N)tM f\Jo • " • ..,n ...... v ........ ''"'"''· \•ddl•b•• \t411,.,. '"'' t •"tVM"'•"'"""'11'1Cout ,.,~,.,....,. ... ., t ,,. '' °""h~'1 \•tV,""'' WWI '\...,, •'f ,,_ rit "''._., .,.,.,,,""'f'MJ "' ~• 1, •• uo w. ,, f\o ~.,,..., CAt\tA Meu ~10001•~.,_.,._ ·-·-r, hldef\e ~ """'I"'--~ , ..... °'"'? \'k•~·--·-.... "'-•··-· £dlf6f " .................... .. M4"•0"'0l"'* -~ ... l_ •1<-.. ... -~\\hltfll ............. ""' Seddlebec:ll YalleyOMce J\20\ L.• P•1 Ao .. tt,~~, ,..., .. ., OfllcH c.<••"'°"' new.,t 9'y\t.,... MU'ltl'"fl°"•u<• t"tltlHfft......_ l-et""~' 11-.o~s., .. 1 Telepho11• (714)'42-Cl21 CIH -'lled Advertl*'I Ma.M71 ~· ¥•1..,,_0ltlt• &11 .. ,10 e.-s...ci • .,,.. 4tJ..oeJO ('\o.,, .... , "" Ot ..... CCM\I -1 .... ~ c- Df'll'Y Ne l'leW\ \tof'I•\ lllt.l\h.-0"'°"; fi'Oftl)ft•f Miit•' ef •d¥t"IUM1tftl\ h•'tlft flfMy be .,,_,,ft~l.fC•lf wttf\ovt \pttt•t &•'"''"'•" at ,..,,.~ OWft•t. ~r.~~~:, :.•:t\::!!1: .. ~:'4 .. :• ,~~::~ ~':o ft!MHl'fMf 1 •• "'~' t• to f'N>f'ttl\•,; mhu.,, -.i....t-.U IO-~o, ' • .. ..... 1 ....... 1• KLAN MeMBERS RETURNED TO PENDLETON BY MARINES From Left, Dennis Campbell, Charles Smith, Ronnie Harper Marine Sentenced; Guilty in Assault A"Wlr ....... to MARINE FOUND GUILTY Cpl. E . F. Henry, 20 Oxy Buying Long Vacant Mazda Site The Occidental Petroleum Company is purchasing the long. vacant Mazda Motors building m Irvine, sources confirmed Wed· nesday Bruce Brusseau. president of Newport Na lion al Company, verified that the sale 1s in pro- gress and that esC'row 1s expect('<) to cl<>5e shortly after the first of Januarv. Although Brusseau confirmed reports of the sale, officials at both companies invoJved declJ.ned to offer anything but ''no com- ment" when asked about the deal Wednesday. The Mazda building is localed just off the San Diego Freeway, at Von Karman Avenue and Main Street. Brusseau. who served as broker for Mazda Motors, dedined to re· veal the purchase price, but said the petroleum company is buying the four-story building, the entire parcel and the furnishings within the building. Mazda Motors on ginally was aaking S9 milHon for the 166.600 square foot structure, plus $736,000 for the furnishings. According to Brusseau. a sub- sidiary of the pa rent Occidentul Petroleum Company wUI take oc cupancy sometime dunng lht' first quarter of 1977 . "Then. they expeC't to build out on the rest of the property,' tht· broker said. When the rotary engine auto company originally built the building, company officials «'X· peeled to construct twin warehouses al the rear of the pro perty. Brusseau said the subsldary company that will occupy the site is considered light Industry. thereby satisfying the city's re· quirements. When construction began on the Mazda building several years ago, the auto com pany was at the pea k of its sates drive with its new rotary engine. However. after sales began to lag the firm decided again.st mov- ing into the glass-walled bw lding. Officials a lso decided against constructing the two warehouses. CA MP PENDLETON lAP) - A Marine corporal has been de· moted to private and !>entenced lo three months hard labor after pleading ~u11ty to pummeling another Marine with his fists in an attack by blacks on six whites in a barracks . "I'm glad I didn't get a BCD (bad <'Onduct discharge). l was worried about that," said Cpl. E.F . Henry. 20. one of 13 bl<ick Marines accused in the incident. One was granted immunjty 10 ex- change for testimony. Henry pleaded guilty Wednes· dny to conspiracy and assault charges, telling a special court. martial that he and the other blacks thought they were attack· ing a group of Ku KluxKJan mem- bers. He was the fi rst to face trial in the case. The Marine Corps is ex- pected to announce next week whetherthe othe r 11 will be tried. Henry 's attorney, Capt. Stephen F. B1egenzahn, told re· parters he considered the penalty "an appropriate sentence." He had told the jury that h.is client re· alized the presence of the KKK did notJust1fy the assault. Th e black Marines were charged with a~gravated assault and conspiracy after they al· legedly beat the whites wit:h clubs and s tabbed them with screwdrivers. Five of the victims were hos pi tali zed fo r periods of at least two days. One man is still in the hospital Henry,oflvanhoe, N.C.,sajdhe used only his e losed fi s t. Prosecutors accepted his plea of gwlty to redu<'ed charges of s1m· pie assault and consp1racy. Henry said he and the other blacks had a "little misun- derstanding" about which room the Klansmen were 10 He told the Judge the incident began when he and the other blacks "agreed lo go over and jam (beat up) the Ku Klux Klan." They set out for another barracks and chose the particular room because "we heard a lot or noise; there was a party going on," Henry said. When the whiles answered the knock at the door, "we all rushed in," Henry said. Henry said he doesn't mind serving time in confinement because "at least I'm still in the Marine Corps." In addition to the demotion and the sentence, hjs pay was cul by $150 a month for four months. Biegenzahn said he introduced evidence about the K1an to show "it did e"ist ; it was at Camp Pendleton." He said it was "the kmd of thing that wouJd stir a young black m an . especially one from North Carolina, lo rage." Al the sentencing hearing, the defense called Pfc. Dennis L Campbell Jr .• an admitted KKK member. Campbell, who said he was third-ranked of about 20 Klan.smen at Camp Pendleton, testified that about fi ve of the members lived near the Marines who were attacked. Sailor Crushed BAKERSF IELD (AP) -A young Navy man was crushed to death when a tractor ffipped and pinned him beneath a wheel, the Kern County coroner's office said. William Archie Mctlenney, 18, ol San Fernando, was working on hJs mother's vacalion property. at Walker Basin when the tractor apparently stalled on a steep hill. Flimflam Man Clemente Teller Taken A short change artis t s uc- cessfu1ly flimflammed tellers at two San Clemente savings and loan.a Wednesday before they eauaht on and provided police with a description ot the sus- pect. San Clem e nte police said Faheem Zaimah, 24 , was ar- rested on susplclon or bw-11ary following the two lncldenu. A teller al Allstate Savlngti and Loan , 911 S. El Camino R.ul, said a man lo a ~e suit asked her about 1 :~ p.m. for change for a $100 bill. When she gave him five $20 bill&, he showed her four $20 bills and one $!'bill. She took the $1 blll and 1avu him $20 befol"e she realized 1Jhe'd been hoodwinked. A man flttlnt the same description used th • same de· ceptJOf'I at Santa Harbara Sav· i ngt and Loan, 510 N. El Camino Real, 4S minutes later, police aaJd • '74 Hike In Postal Rate Hit WAS HINGTON CA P ) -A federal appeaJs <'OW1. has ruled that first-class postage rates were l11creased 1llegally in 1974 when they were raised from 8centsto10 Ctn ts. But the U.S. Court or Appeals took no action to roll back the rate. which has !iln<'e been increased to 13cents. The same method used as the basis for the 1974 increase was used to support the latest rate hike. The National Association of Grttting Card Publishers. wtuch challenged the 1974 mcrease, 1s also contesting the jutnp to 13 ·cents in a separate case pending before the appea Is court. The Postal Rate Commission Justified the 1974 mcrease on the grounds that r:usmg f1 r.;t-class rates would not d1!>courage use of the mails as much as r:us mg rates for the other three classes of mail, the appeals court said. The law re- quires each class of postal service to bear its own cost. the <'OU rt said The comm1ss1on recommends rate increases to the U.S. Postal Service. Commission attorneys con- tended the re was nothing in the decision to s top the commission from setting rates based on other methods. They said no decision has been made on whether to ap· peal the court's ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court. Most m ail -cards and letters -is sent first-class. Second·class mail covers newspapers and ma1iazines. third·class is for ad- vertising circulars and fourth- class is for packages. India Takes Over NEW DELHI, India (AP) -In· dia took control of virtually aJI of its oil industry today with the formal takeover of the American -owned Caltex Petroleum Corpv Pages Blank Woman, 106, Dies A.lone HAYWARD (AP) -The pages Wt!re blank in the book entitled .. Friends Who Called" at the funeral parlor where ser vices were held !or 106-year·old Mary Robb. "She must have outlived everyone by at lelist 20 years or so,'· said an employc or the convalescent home where Miss Robb died on Christmas Day Records kept by the home showed she had "no rr- latives and no friends." She spent her last years mostly in chairs or in bed and was uncommunicative. The public adminislrator assumed responsibility for her when she was declltrcd incompetent several years ago. Little was known about Miss Hobb, who was born on Nov. 14, 1870, in Sacramento. lier Social Security file indicated she never held a job, a nd there wus no re- cord of a marriage. Robert Moore. manage r of the funeral home that handled the services, said he placed a notice in local newspapers in case friends wanted lo attend the se~vice Wednesday. Nobody showed up, so George Miller, a funeral home employe, read a Bible passage and said a prayer. Carter to Weigh Financial Interests PLAINS. Ga . (A P > - President-elect Carter says he 1s not ready to announce wha~ he will do with his extensive finan- cial interests while in the White House. But he promises to abide by the same restrictions he plans lo place on top appointees. Carter commented on his financial holdings and on a con· flict ·of-interests code Wednesday shortly before he returned to his home here after holding pre· inaugural Cabinet meetings. Aides said the code of ethics for all those Carter names to high positions would be made public late today or Friday. For three days, the President- elcct held m arathon meetings with prospective Cabinet mem- bers and other key advisers on SL. Simons Is land. a secluded re- sort off the Georgia coast. The economy and the direction QUALITY TELEVISION • the new administr ation wdl take after the J an. 20 inauguration were high on the agenda. Carter told a Dec. 20 news con- ference he already approved the <·ode of et~lcs and that press secretary Jody Powell would ma.ke it available for publication. For reasons never fully ex- pl ained, release of the document was delayed. Carter said Wednesday that all his appointees have agreed to meet the terms of the code, and said· .. It wall rt'quire the complete divestiture of any financial rela- tionships that might create a con- ruct of interests. and a complete revelation of all other economic holdings. including ne t worth stateme nts." And the President-elect added, "I'll conform with the same restrictions l 've placed on the Cabinet m embers." 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