HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-01-20 - Orange Coast Pilot•
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, J ANUARY 20, 1976
YOL. "• MO.•• I lt!CT10HS, • ~AOIS
•
Hospi
DfS.tef ano Case
·No Kin Appear
At HB Hearing
BJ A RTHUa R. VINSEL Ot .. .,... pt.....,.
MoarniJla me~bers of the im-
mediate f amlly who must testily
stayed away today when Arthur
R. DiStefano appeared in court tor preliminary hearing on
ehar1es resulting from a violent
.feud in which Huntington Beach
police shot and killed his younger
brother.
Pris~ner Dies
In Trenton .
Jail Uprising
TRENTON, N .J . (UPI) -
Authorities foiled an escape at-
tempt and regained control of
wing 17 at Trenton State Prison
today after. an 11-hour dis-
turbance. An inmate who tried to
shoot his way out of the walled
fort.ress and flee in a waiting van
·was killed.
Three prison guards were
wounded and pnother priioner
was shot during a five-minute
JUn battle at the maximum
security prison that touched off
an 11-hour disturbance. One of.
the wounded guards was hit by a
homemade born b. The prison
houses 890 inmates.
After ordering l~ inmates in
three tiers to strip naked and.
leave their cells, authorities
began tearing apart the cells in a
search for weapons believed
amuggled into the prison for tM
escape attempt.
One .25-cali ber pistol was
thrown from a tier by an inmate
during the uprising, a prison
1pokesmap said.
A prison official 'said the dead
inmate, John Clark, 30, of
Newark, N.J ., who was serving a
llf e sentence for the killing of a
policeman in 1973, bad tried
twice before to break out of the
prison. ·
In his lateit attempt last year,
Clark dug a tuanel uodetneatb
tbe priaon bo•pit.al, but his
puaageway was disc!overed and
be was cauaht.
State police said they learned dUJ'lni the dtlturt>ance that a vari
was patked near the prison in a
retidendal pelgbbp'bOOd. They
<&eePal80N, P.,..U)
F~Ta~Useey
WASHINGTON (AP) -Prell·
'cleilt Ford wtll name chief federal
midlator W.J~ 'tlHr'Y Jr. to be
teeretary of lab«, a Job for
wtlldl Jte haa watttil nearly three
• ~. •c~rena1 to Whlt~ouae
IOU?cel.
Defense attorney Sal Eppolito
8Dd prosecuting Deputy District
Attorney Melivin Jensen agreed
on a continuance until Feb. 19
and Judge Samuel B. Taylor
quickly gran~d it.
The Central Orange County
Judicial District Court jurist
questioned Eppolito about the
lengthy 29-day delay when
DiStef ano, 35, has the right to a
speedy trial.
"Naturally, the family is still
in a state of mourning," Eppolito
explained.
Arthur DiStefano, of 6232
Chinook Lane. Westminster. is
free on $5,000 bail following his
Jan. 7 arrest and faces two counts
of assault with a deadly weapon.
He was arrested at the
DiStefano family's Ocean View
Mushroom Growers Inc, 18196
Golden West St., after a two-hour
confrontation in which Nicholas
DiStefano, 23, was slain by police
shotgun blasts as be fled the
farmhouse where gunshots had
been reported. ·
So fat, authorities had not ex-
plained wh y the you nger
DiStefano ran from the house and
toward police, refusing com -
mands to halt ana resulting in
their openihg fire on him.
Nicholas , second youngest
among Mr. and Mrs. Victor
DiStefano's four children and re·
portedly intended to take over
the lucrative family mushroom
empire which has flourished for 25 years, had reportedl_y defended
the household against his armed
eldest brother.
Arthur was banned from the
funeral that drew some 700
persons and a 11.S·ce.r procession
to the ceme~1'ut a~
with bis wife and 'her f anu.,y in
~today. -iw
(See FEUD, Page .U>
Nixon Name
Off Freeway
SA,CRAMENTO <UPI)
-A Senate committA!e has
decided to remove fonner
President Nixon's name
from a 3~·mlle-lona
Southern C alitornia
freeway.
The leg11l1tloo (SCR.67)
• bY Sen. Nate Holdetli <D· CW~tr City), woulc:J de·
@plfte the str.etch ol..road a t.be Marina D~ Rey Freeway, the name thet
c:urrentlY appear1 on the "
· roachlps.
The measure was ap·
~(JV~d Jlonday by the
F'ln,Qce Committee on a
· 10.0 vote with no debate
·-~u 1ent to the noor.
' • '• • m 10
. ~ :I
-" E--~~ilU Shuns Br~ther's
Dearing in HB Shooting ~
.. I
• ... •
ds Elective Surgery
D e a t h Site Combed
-Oitlly Pilot staff !'Mt• PO!IC~ EXAMINE SCENE OF EXECUTION MURDER IN IRVINE ORANGE GROVE .
Santa Fe Springs Man Found Riddled With Bullets Near Santa Ana Freeway
Lawmen in Irvine
Seek Death Motive
By DOUGLAS FlUTISCRE Of ttM DI llJ ,.I lot SUH
Irvine police continued today
to probe for clues that would lead
to the slayer of a Santa Fe Spr-
ings man whose bullet-riddled
bOdy was found in an Irvine
orange grove Monday. ·
~ ~ad man w89. identified
as Eulogio Ramos Valenz~ela,
42, of Santa Fe Springs.
Valenzuela, whose occupation re-
mained unknown today, left a
widow, Zoila, and six children,
according to Irvine Defective
steve Nash.
Nash described the victim of
the execution-style slaying as
"average Joe Cltizen," With no
police record and no.record of a!-
fillatlon with any of the· gangs
that prowl the southeast Los.
Angeles County area.
Valenzuela's body was dis·
covered by an Irvine woman who
was jogging through an:ranie
1rove along the Sant Ana
Freeway eat of Culver · ve •i
10:30 Monday morning.
Police said the man had been
shot several ti(Des in the back
wttb a small caliber gun. Nash
refUHd to elaborate, contending
that the inform a ti on may lead to
the euspects.
"We have a number of leads
we are working on," Nash said.
V1leuuela wu shot ln the
orqe fr'OV• and left lYU:\I I ace
dowa next to a tree for mQrt than
a d~ before bis body wu fowad
'
by the jogger, police said.
He was slain at a spot more
than 100 yards from the nearest
residence.
Coroner's deputies refused to
add any details to the shooting.
Nash ·said, "I stayed up all
night trx1ng to figure out a
.~ ... ''(See BODY, Page~)
Gay Officer
Loses Round
NORFOLK, Va. (UPl)-Ens:
Vernon Berg, an admitted
homosexual, waa denied a delay
at the beginning of a be~g on
whether. he will be discharged
from the Navy because of sexual
preference!f.
Berg, son of a Navy chaplain
and a 1974 Naval Ac~emy
graduate, souah t.he delay from
a fbe-member panel to give him
time to eatn access to witnesses
and documents he u.id were
needed to pro~c his sexual pre-
ference bas not affected his abili·
ty to perform dutJes as an officer.
C1pt. Wendell K. Smith er Lanllu AFB, actin& as Bert's
defense counsel, Hid the g•ern·
ment denied requests to have ll
men urvlna on the cnd.Ue fto(k. now ln the Medi n,
testlfy on Ber&'• beh . rg
served on the Little Rock.
,,
Pot N o t Only
Cont raband;
Pair Arr ested
The youths protested, "We
have less than an ounce," when
Patrol Officer Steve Shulman,
detecting the smell of marijuana,
_asked them what was in their van
parked outside the Jaws dance
spot in Costa Mes a .
But the officer said he found
more than marijuana in the van,
parked at 2285 Newport Blvd.
Monday night.
In addition to a plastic baggie
containing what looked like
marijuana, Shulman reported he
found a medicine bottle contain-
ing a white pawdery substance, a
loaded .22-caliber pi'stol and a bil-
ly club.
The result was that the two
men, Georee Daniel Stockert, 22,
and James Lindsay Childers, 19,
both of Colorado, were cited for
possession of marijuana and ar-
r.es ted and charged with
possession of dangerous drugs
possession of a billy club and
possession \of a concealed
weapon.
10 Found in Mine·
NEW DELHI, India (UPI) -
Officials have recovered 10
bodies from the fiooded Chasnala
C.OaJ Mine, but ruleC! out the
possibility of findln1 any s ur-
vivors amone the 375 miners en-
tombed three weeka aao under
millloM of 1allons of water ln·
dian newspapers reported t'Oday.
Layoffs
F oll ow
Boycot t
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ofl!M O.lly ,.il«SUfl
Huntington lntercommunity
Hospital in Huntington Beach
became the first casualty of the
medi cal slo wdown as
anesthesiologists and surgeons
there have eliminated elective
surgery.
Hospital Admin istrator
Richard Grundy s aid the boycott
has r·esulted in the layoffs of nbout
55 staff members as the hospital's
census dipped to 53 patients on
Monday. The hospital's average
census is about 90 patients, Grun-
dy said.
But, Grundy noted, the sur-
geons aod anesthesiologists are
still performing emergency sur-
gery.
··we are doing business as usual
in the emergency room. We're not
turning anyone away, .. he said.
Grundy said he does not an-
ticipate any further staff layoffs
since the hospital is running with
a skeleton crew now.
"In fact, our census is up slight·
ly with medical and obstetrics,''
he said.
Grundy said he does not an-
ticipate any substantial change io
the situation until after Jan. 28.
the date most local physicians ·
have to pay their malpractice in-
surance premiums.
•'Realistic ally, I would say that
at the very best it would be Feb. 2
before we get back to normal, if
then." Grundy added.
Huntington Intercommunity to-
day was alone among Orange
Coast hospitals as other local in-
stitutions reported business as
<See HOSPITAL. Page.\2)
Coast
Weather
Fair, warm and dry
weather through Wednes-
day, according to the
weather service with highs
at the beaches 74 rising to
M inland. Overnight lows
42to48.
I NSIDE T ODAY
Still trying to a.i.tmblt your
Christmcu whotchomocollit
that came with AnMftion
dirtc1i0fl.I? For pe>ssil>UI .a.s-
u~. ''' Pagt Bl.
l •d ex
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""''"'" •1 ~ .. ............. aJ WNW..._ M --~ 12
,, DAILY P1LOT s Tuelday, Januery to, 1118
U.S. ~ights Ahead
Congress Cool to F ~rd Speech
I
I
f
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Coneressional rea"tion to Presi-
dent Ford's State of the Union ad-
drt"SI shows there will be some
battles when the Dem~ratic ma-
jority in the House and Senate
&('ts on his Republi('an program
in a presidential election year.
Republicans generally ap-
plauded the speech, but most
Democrats dismissed it as elec-
lion-year rhetoric signaling a
retreat into th e past.
Congressional conservallvea
responded favorably while GOP
liberals tempered their praise.
Sen. Barry Goldwater, (R-
Ariz. >.said, "Ir this country is to
be saved from disaster, it will re-
quire presidents with the courage
and foresight of Mr. Foret His
strong "t:fforts to reduce the over-
Prof Accused
Secretary Alleges Beating
STANFORD (AP) -A Stanford University
secretary has filed an $50,000 damage suit against her
boss, a professor of psychiatry. alleging he went into
a fit of anger and beat her up in her office.
Barbara tfonegger, a Stanford graduate student
and secretary, filed suit in Santa Clara County
Superior Court alleging that Dr. Karl Pribram on Oct.
29 "went into a fit of anger'·' and struck her in the face
and about the head, smashing the frames of her
glasses against her temple and the bridge of her nose.
Pri_bra~ had n~ coi:nmen~ on the alle~ations .
Un1 vers1ty police investigated the incident and
filed a report with the district attorney, who did not
press charges.
The secretary, meanwhile, has been given a tem-
porary job in another department.
Hoag Struggle ·
Mesan Faces More
Charges in Rapes
,,-
Newport Reach police said to-
day they will fil e additional rape
and robbery charges against a
Costa Mesa man already in
custody on charges of assault
with intent to commit rape.
Del Sam Amburgey said he
arrested Geral Rutz Granados,
29, of 1~ E Wilson St. Sunday
night after pohce allege he at-
tempted to rape a nurse at Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
The investigator said the nurse
was ass aulted in the hos pital's
parking structure as she walked
found at the man's Wilson Street
home.
Ambur gey said he believes
Granados is also the suspect in
the rape and robbery of a woman
which took place in the same
parking structure last March.
The 44 -year-old Anaheim
woman was walking to her car
after visiting a patient at the
hospital when she was accosted
by a knife-wielding suspect.
Amburgey said the suspect
forced the woman into her car,
raped her then robbed her.
• to her car after her shift was
over As she struggled with her
assailant, some other nurses who
were also leaving the hospital
chased the suspect off.
Granados remains jailed in
Newport Beach pending the (ii.
ing of additional charges.
Amburgey said a hos pital
security guard got the license
plate number as the suspect
drove away.
He alleged the license was
traced to Granados' car which h~
Woman Raped
In Huntington
After 'Light'
A Huntington Beach woman
told police she was raped early
today by a man who stopped her
ouuide her Commodore Circle
apartment to ask for a light.
The woman, who omcers said
was in her 20s, was parking her
car about 2: 15 a.m .. when a man
accosted her. asking for a light
for his ci2arette, police reported.
She gave him a light. then he al-
legedly grabbed her. dragged her
into his dark-colored van and
raped her, police said.
(){ficers today were investigat-
ing addlttonal details of the inci-
dent. They described the
woman's attacker as between 20
and 30 years old. six feet, two in-
ches tall, with dark. curly hair.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
'"' Of~ (O.\I O•lly Pl!~ ..... h .. 111111 1
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V•llf'y •nd l •V._,,... .. e<l\f'9vt" (M \t A " '"Ht r~tOMI f>dtlk>n f\ p~llihf'd S.t"'O.tY' fff•tt \~1•1
d"" ,,,_ P'ln< IJ>el pvbl"hl"Q Pl•nl •' •I Ult
v.n1 S.y !>lrHl, c;.,i. Mt.a, C.thlotn•d 'ln.6
Robert N. Weed
Pt•••Otnl •Ml Pvl>ll-
• Jack R. Curley
Lab Worker
Tortured
For 'Speed'
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla .
(UPI) -A Virginia man and
four F1 oridians were arrested in
the bizarre abduction and tortur-
ing of a young laboratory techni-
cian in an attempt to force him to
aid in the manufacture of the
drug known as "speed," police
said.
Held by Daytona Beach police
were Charles J ackson Carlton,
23. Marion, Va.; and Elaine Page
Sannicandio, 23, Walter Lee
Wolf, 23, Maxwell Gregorio
Napolitano. 26, and Amy Jo
Forkosh . 19, all of the Daytona
Beat'h area.
They were held in the Friday
night abduction of Thomas Led-
don, 23.
Miss Sannicandio and Wolf
were charged with manufactur-
ing a ('Ontrolled substance
Carlton, Napolitano and Miss
Forkosh were charged with false
imprisonment and aggravated
assault.
Police Chief Robert H. Palmer
said three men went to the Led-
don home and forced Leddon to
a('company them to a house In
suburban Port Orange, where he
was beaten. tortured a nd
chloroformed in an effort to force
him to help manufacture
methamphetamine (speed) in a
well-eqwiped laboratory in the
building.
Leddon said he was taken to
several other locations in the
area until he finally escaped
from a house in suburban Holly
Hill Monday morning.
burdening power of the federal
aovernment should be applauded
by every taxpaying American."
But Rep. John BrademBJ, (D-ru.). found the profrarn "about u
forward-lookin g as the one
~rge III had for theColon.ies200
years ago.··
Assistant Senate Democratic
leader Robert C. Byrd said:
"Ford's rhetoric is Reaganish. It
fails to be realistic."
And House Majority Leader
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. predicted
HIGHLIGHTS OF FORD'S
ANNUAL ADDRESS, A4
the Democrats "will not stand for
the status quo or cutbacks in pro-
grams that help the people."
Spt>aker Carl Albert. hoarse
from flu and daubing at his nose
with a tissue, said Ford's speech
"was a typical Republican State
of the Union message in an elec-
tion year ... not really anything
new."
Senate Republican Leader
Hugh Scott praised Ford's pro-
iifsal to create jobs; for suggest-
ing a plan to promote investment
in stocks and for proposing a con-
solidation of grant programs.
~Sen . Hubert Humphrey, CD·
Minn.), said he thought the Presi-
dent's speech was "upbeat" but
failed to offer a substantive pro-
gram.
Rep. Al Ullman, -CD-Ore.),
chairman of the tax-writing Ways
and Means Committee, called
Ford's proposals ''fragmentary''
and said, "We need something
long range to meet the inflation
threat and long range to meet the
Social Security problem."
Sen. Jacob Javits. (R-N.Y.),
called Ford's address "nonsensA-
tional and centrist,·· and said: '•A
lot of it I liked. Some of it I didn't
like. I thought the recommenda-
tions on revenue sharing and re-
gulatory reform and the in -
telligence community were good.
I thought his references to un-
employment and the methods of
treating it were inadequate."
Sen. John McClellan, CD-Ark.),
chairman of the Appropriations
Committee, was not happy about
the recommendation for increas·
ing Social Security taxes.
"I think people think their taxes
are as high as they can be right
now," McClellan said.
Sen. William Proxmire. co.
Wis.), chairman of the Senate
Banking Committ1e. said he
hoped Congress would stick to the
President's proposed $394 billion
budget but doubted it. In other
areas, the program amounted to
"too much of a stand -pat opera-
tion,·· he said.
House Republican Leader John
Rhodes said he did not feel Ford's
proposed tax cut, with a nominal
price tag of $10 billion, was infla-
tionary. He said there was a feel-
ing in Congress "that it is time to
tum back some of his dollars to
the American taxpayer."
College Dean
Arrested on
Vice Charge
SACRAMENTO (AP) -John
W. Christian, academic dean at
Pat'ific Union College, faces a
Feb. 2 court appearance on a
charge of soliciting a woman un·
dercover agent for an act of pro-
stitution.
The Sacrament o Police
Departme nt said Christian, 40,
was arrested Friday afternoon
and released without bail an hour
and 15 minutes later after pro-
mising to appear in Municipal
Court o n the misdemeanor
charge
(){ficers said Chnsllan was ar-
rested at 5th and T streets in the
so-called "Stroll" area where
prostitutes congregate in
downtown Sacramento a few
blocks from the Capitol.
Pot Plane Crash
HOUSTON <UPI> -A plane
('arryin g an estimated 1,000
pounds of Mexican marijuana
tried to make an emergency
la nding on a s hopping center
parking lo~ and crashed early to-
day. The pilot, apparently un-
hurt, disappeared, police said.
..
Youngest Transplant
Three-month-old Alexander Kelly wails his
discontent after r eceiving two kidneys from
an infa nt donor which were flown to
Brooklyn by Navy jet from Virginia. Doc·
tors said the six-pound patient was one of
the smallest and youngest people ever to re-
ceive a transpla nt.
.
4 Suspects. Taken
In Florid8 Terror
BARTOW, Fla <UPI) -A
state police task force today an-
nounced the arrest of two men. a
woman and a j uvenile as sus-
pects in more than a dozen raids
by mas ked terrorists who
tortured, murdered, raped and
robbed their victims.
Commissioner William
Troels trup of the Florida
Department of Criminal Law En-
forcement said a ll four were
char&ed with buying, receiving
and concealing stolen property.
He said one recovered weapon
had been linked to one of the
homicides involved in the raids.
At least two women were
U .. IT ........
Ua1'nC0ttrt
Manson cultist Sandra Good
leaves the federal building
in Sacramento after being
told by Federal Judge
Thomas MacBrlde that he
would rule Thursday on her
demand that he disqualify
himself from hearing her
death threat case. Story,
Page AS.
hurled from bridges, one was
raped, drain cleaner was poured
into the eyes of another, and one
elderly worn a n was hurled
against a refrigerator.
Troelstrup identified the three
adults as Daniel Morris·Thomas,
'27, of Bartow. his wife Lattie Mfe
Thomas, 25, and Lee Ot s
· ·Martin, 19, also of Bartow. The
juvenile was identified as a 16-
year-old.
Thomas also was charged with
illegal possession of a firearm.
On hand with Troelstrup to an-
nounce the arrests of what
authorities believe to be the
persons who have terrorized Cen-
tral F1orida for several months
were seven sheriffs from the
area involved.
Further details were to be re·
vealed at news conference with
the law enforcem ent officials.
The Florida Department of
Criminal Law Enforcement
formed a task force in December
to try to trap the bandits.
The sadistic gunmen wearing
ski mas ks w e r e believed
responsible· for more t han a
dozen cases of murder, torture,
rape and robbery over a seven-
county area.
"They just get their kicks ter-
rorizin g people," said J eff
Monge, head of the Orlando
Bureau of the F1orida Depart-
ment of Criminal Law Enforce-
ment.
"The only thing we have been
able to determine about their
pattern is the fact that the motive
for these attacks is not monetary
gain ... Monge said earlier. "The
stuff they take isn't worth. that much money "
From Pflfle ti J
PRISON .••
said they planned to search the
van for weapons after obtaining a
warrant.
Prison officials believed the in-
mates had at least three hand
guns and a homemade bomb.
The weapons could have been
smuggled into the maximum
security wing during visits by
friends and relatives, according
to police.
State police sajd they believed
several inmates were involved in
the breakout because other shots
were fired by inmates after Clark
was killed. Hewasshotftvetimes,
aspokesman said.
At 7 a.m. news briefing on the
front steps of the prison, lnstltu-
ti on s a nd Aaenctes Com-
missioner Ann Klein and other
officials said there were no in-
juries other than those wounded
in the shootout and no major
damage during the incident.
"It was just a break-out at-
tempt,'' a slate Police official
said .
F ..... ·rageAI
HOSPITAL ..
usual.
Spokesmen for Costa Mesa
Memorial, Pacifica, Mission
Community, San Clemente and
South Coast Community all said
their surgery schedules and pa-
tient census were about normcy.
At Hoag Memorial, in Newport
Beach, the spokesman said the
census and surgery schedule in-
creased activity over Monday.
Linda Mottin said the Hoag
staff is running a three-day check
of the cen s us. and surgery
schedule in a n attempt to
measure what effect, if any, the
s lowd.own is havj.ng on the
· hospital.
FromtPGfleAJ
FEUD •••
His father and youngest
brother Victor, were not in court.
. although they will be witnessses
in the cue against Arthur.
"I only have two children
now," the Distefano p'atriarch
has told acquaintances since the
death of Nicholas and the arrest
of Arthur.
The beefy, bearded defendant
appeared briefly before Judge
Taylor to say he understood he
had a right to start his pre-
liminary hearing but agreed with
the continuance asked by his al·
torney.
· Fr.-Page AJ
BODY •..
motive for the shooting. 1
couldn't come up with anything."
The dead man still had his
wallet, apparently ruling out rob-
bery as a motive, Nash said.
He added that the man did not
appear to have a record of the
kind of connections that would in·
dicate a drug-related slaying.
Con Escapes
From Prison
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A
New Mexico man servtne an
eight-year prison term for ban)c
robbery and extortion escaped
from· the Terminal Island
Federal Penitentiary Monday.
Prilon officials said John War·
ren Nichols, 32, apparenUy bid in
the back or a delivery truck
which left Terminal Island at
about 2 p.m. for the Camp
Pendleton Marine Bue.
Police said Nichols was pro-
bably armed and should be con-
sidered dangerous.
An FBI spokesman 11ld a
tuard at the M&rine Bue noticed
Nicholas la the truck as it pulled
onto the bue. Nichols reportedly
bu a brother 1tatloned at Camp
Pendleton. ·
'1k • l'rH lcMnl •ncl c,.,,.,.,, MentOlf
Thomas Keevll
l!dltor
ThOmas A. Murpt)lne
MentQll>Q E dllO<'
Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall
"'~, ..... _,,.,, ... (~
Council Seeks
Dart (;un Ban
Hinshaw Tesi~ony COncluded
•
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A Cl·
ty Council committff has voted
to ask the Legislature to clu1lfy
the Tuer electronic dart gun as
anilleaal weapon.
The state, county and federal
affairs committee voted Monday
to ban the sfiock device f ollowina
testimony by police offlclala and
the weapon's manufacturer.
The taaer reaembl ea a
nasbllaht and •hootl two dart·
tipped wires which conduct a
11.1001 electric current that can
par-11H tM vlcttm.
By TOM BAllLEY • oe .. o.t"" ... ...,.
A Iona and often heated cross
examlnatlon of ConO"ellman An-
.drew Hin.shaw ended Me>nQy in
Oranae County Superior Court
when Aaalatant Distrtc:t Attorney
Mtcbael Caplul announced be
had no further questions for the
former county useaor.
Hinahaw, $3, breathed an audl·
ble stsh of relief and slumped
back on the witness stand u pn>-
aecutor Caplul told Judie
Robert P. Kneeland that be WU
throtl1h with the ftnal defenN
wttnees.
Hinshaw now faces cleanup
quaUona from h11 two defense
lawyen and possible further
minor queatlon1 from Capiul
before Judao Kneeland orders
the ftnal.rbaH ol tbe bribery
trtal-lln araumenta a.od Jury lnltrucUont.
Llwyera for both l1del •treed that tt la po11lble the luae wW 10 to the Jury later thJs week.
Capl11l wm Uk the jury to find
Hlnlh.aw pllty on thrff ftlOf\Y
eot.tnta of bribery, all three acts
'all•ledl1 eommttted whll• t.be
Newport Beach Republican was
serving u county U1esaor.
It is alleged that Hlnlbaw ac-
. cepted free 1tent0 equipment
from the Tandy COt'pOt'atlon an4
an addJttonal '1,500 C&IQJ>alp
contrtbuUon from TuctJ VI
President Jam ea Buxta\ In
tum for uaetlmeat fa'YCll"I ~at .
aneaedly 1avect the Garden
Grove firm man1 tboalanda ot. doJlan.
It ls fwther allqed that the
40th DlatrJct. representative
soUclted a bribe from a laW>'• d~ an ...... meat llppea1a •
•
hearlnf aff eettna Beckman Insttumenta of Fullerton. .. .
Jllftabaw bu admltt«l receiv
inl two stereo aete without pay inl for them and bu concedet
tbat Buxton save him $1.500 lr
ca.m~p contribuU.,. ·
But be bM flnial1 dlnie4 fn>m
u.i wlt.aiiM ltU4 tlMi*. a.. ev•
lq,.wd to Bfftma•a l•WJ• dur1q '.tJle..:~ata --.~,uw
the fti1il lb0814: bu; ~-wartb daeata at aHlnaJ:law~
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LOS ANOBLES CUPI) -It
wu • f amillar •crtpt wtth • twill; the CJA v1. anot.bet 1ov-emmeat a1ene1 over 1 bush-huatt J)roJeet. For a chqt, the
CIA wu not proteetin( secrets
but demucltn1 that 1t he publicly
and offtdally ldtdtitled wtth one ol tt119Cret e>peratlons.
Ancl for a ehan1e, the in· te1U1ence a1ency won. ·
A f edtral Judie fUled Monday
that the Glornar ~plorer the
•.PY 1ht1> that recovered S>art of a
1 •
~-·~Ian IUhialtiie, ral· •
!Y belon11 to a the CIA, not
Howard Hughes.
The rulint m., have Unfirjed
a determlAtl atteni;t by VDe
Angeles County Tax Aisestor
Phillip Watson to collect a $7.5 million tax bill from Jf,Uahd u
Ute »Umarte4 ow11er ol t.bi IDblti~ mllllon-~oUar •hip. ·
U .S •• District Co<t J~~= Manutl Beal sat~ after re claasitlfd CIA doeWIMIDtl .ub-
Battin See
F alselg lmp..Uened
Tu.day. Januwy to, 1t7e
Ownership
emment representative" and a
aovernmenl·hlred cnw.
Ttie three men who served u eaptatnt of Jb• •hip tubmltt~
IWom atfidhit1 that no Summa
employe had ever so much as $et
foot on the ship. The captains
swore they operated at all Umes
under the direction of a 'federal
offtctal. ·
"The contract. bore out the 1ot·
emtn,nt ar~ument that the CIA
had paid 1tu1hea to etrve u a
cover for the operation. pubUcly
carrying the Glomar Explorer u an undersea mlninf l'Mearch
lhlp. Under the tettbl, U.. CIA
!treed to relmburte Summa
Corp. ror any eipenses necetaary
to maintain the masquerade, In·
eluding td payment.I.
The ship recovered a •-foot
aectton of a Soviet aub that tank
in 1988 about no lnll• north or
Hawaii. Word of the oe>er•tton
leaked in 1974.
...
OAtLV PILOT Ai,::
Battle'
WI~ ti.. •blp '• true nature ,. vealed, the federaJ ~t
pubUclf claimed ~ to preven Watson from ·eo1tktli:ia
the tu ltsessmeot, at.nee the CIA
would have to pa1 the bill. 'Re
'usllce O.,artment arl\Md that • a loo•I •o~ernment bas ft(l
tuthorltyto•tax federal property. ·
The county counsel'• office
aald it bad not been decided
wbethetto appeal therullna.
Political RecordS
II Names & 1S \'7@ (l1] [(.
®@[(\'(/~@@ Coulltian Paid Targets
On List?
I '
Tilt colamn appean
dally except
Saturdays and Mondays.
ot a problem:> Tl11n write Pot
Dunn. Pal u·ilt cut rPd tape. get tile
anawer! and ac-
tion you need to
so/vf lneqwtlea In
government and
busiritu . Mall
your qURstlona to
Pat Dunn 'At n }'uur Servlct.
Orange Coaat
Daily Pilot. P.O
\
For Jail T~e
DENVER (AP) -A legislative
committee voted Monday to pay
an Orange, Calif., man, Kennet.h
F . Lee, $15,000 for compensation
because be was falsely im·
prisoned in the Colorado State
Penitentiary for three years.
Vote on the measure was 10.0,
and the bill wlll now move to the
HOUie Appropriations Commit-
tee for consideration.
The Colorado Supreme Court
overturned Lee's conviction in an
auto theft case In 1958, ruling, in
effect, that no crime had
teebnically taken place.
By GARY GRANVIUE
Of ttle O.llr f'll« SUH
Indicted County Supervisor
Robert Battin's attorney con-
tinued Monday to press for re-
cords covering alleted lnvestiga.
tlons of Oranae County elected
officeholders when he filed a mo-
tion for dlacovery in &aperlor
Court.
Hur IS6fJ. Costa
Mesa. CA 92626 l nc/udt your
ttltpl1ont num bt-r. Mickey's
Friends
Convene
For years after the dec~lon,
however, Lee's prison record
followed him, and kept him from
steady employment, be said.
In httt motion, lawyer Matthew
·~"·''~'··~-. Kurillch asked for notes, record·
Sid ... ,.
DEAR PAT: My son bought a
pdir of Humanic Ski Boots from
Ski Mart in Newport Beach two
years ago. When he bought the
boot•, they had foam and a liner
allowing for inside adjustment
when bla feet grew larger Now
he needs an adjustment and bas
been told that no liners are
available, This doesn't seem
ri1ht and he doesn't know what
to do.
L.S., Newport Be~ch
Sid Mart'• 1pokesman said
tbat Ramule has 1ooe out ot
balne11. Althn1h yqu .UJ not
be able to obtain a boot liner from
tbe maallfadarer, your son's
booU cu be fitted wtth another
brand of liner at any sportlnl
goodl ttore that carrtee skJ np
plle9. a.ee• tk ..
DEAR PAT· Please tell me the
most convenient source for ob
taining some parts needed for an
Electro-0-Matic food slicer,
manufactured by Rival
D .L , Huntm,ton Beach
Dtd you look ht the Yellow
Pages! The answer f1 right
tbere. You can get parts and
service at CaUfornla Electric
Service Jne., 1175 Brtdol, Saftta
Ana -the aatborJud factory
service representative for Rival.
Many small appliance manufac·
turers l11t parts and repair
IOllrce. aader &belr own names
In the Yellow Pa1ea• "Electric
Appliances-Small-Repairing
& Pana" li•tt•••· !le ave to verify U.at the firm yoa cboote ls
aa autlaorbed repair tource
before arran1la1 for 1er\rlee.
A !S clled~ed tblt one oat for you. 'G~PerlH
DEAR PAT: What happena to
the old renewal "arace" period
with ·the Department of Motor
Vehicles' new registration
system, and what about the JO
percent penalty period?
L. Y., San Clemente
Tbe reaew•l ''traee"
period a o tonier exl1&1,
''paee" period no longer ealata,
aecordJ.111 tO die DMV. Vader the
new 111tem. peaaltlet tor late re·
ll•tutlo•t wel1ht and Uceaae
fees wlll De 1ta11danllled at 50
nt.
M·I·C .. See ya real soon ..
It waan 't really 800n but the
Mouseketeers donhed-·their ears
once aaain last weekend ln a reu-
nion at Disneyland. brln1in1
their f amities and 1reeting
children whose parents probably
grew up with Annette, Cubby,
Sharon and Tommy
K-E ·Y .. Why? &cause we
llkeyou
Mousekete-r Roy Williams
was back at hie easel for Satur-
day and Sunday's festivities and
joined the Mouseketeera and
their families in a parade down
Main Street
Old film clips ol the Mickey
Mouse Club television aeries
were shown in the Fantasyland
Theater and Mouseketeers
signed autographs
Probably the most famous club
member, Annette Funicello, was
unable to attend the reunion.
Most of the Mouseketeers, In-
cluding Annette, still live In the
Los Angeles area and most went
on to pursue ahow business careers
Annette lives tn theSan Fernan-
do Valley with her husband, agent
Jack OUardl, and their three
children After her sUnt with the
Mouseketeers she went on to star
in a series of i.Beacb" pictures
andrecor4.edseveralalbums
Also keeping their show bua1-
nes s careers were Bob bf
Burgess and Cubby O'Brien
Burgen is a regular on the
Lawrence Welt show
O'Brien, 1porting a beard, still
play1 the drum• and la ~ re~ar
on the Carol Burnett ahow. He
also tours with the <;afpenters singing duo and performs Ire·
quently in Las Vegas nJabt clubs.
He is married and has a 5-year·
old daughter.
Sharon Baird, who ts divorced,
is· itlll pla~in«i anitnals on
children 'I televlston shows. She
has exchanged ber Mouseketeer
ears for other animal coR\lmes,
appearing in suchebowl as 1'PUff
'n' Stuff" and ''The New f.o<>
Revue.••
Lee, 42, operates a camera
shop in Orange. But on a trip to
Colorado last summer he dis-
CUlsed the possibility of restitu-
tion with a representative of the
governor'• office, and with a
leplator, Rep. Wellin~ Webb
<D-Denver).
Monday, .a legislative aide to
Gov. Richard Lamm, Wally
Stealey, told the committee that
the Colorado Claims Com-
mission did not have Jurisdiction
to act, but the legislature did. .
·Jn 1940, Stealey said, the
legislature provided compenu-
tlon to a man who was falsely im·
priaoned for murder. '-·
The committee was told that
since bis release from the
Colorado prison, Lee bad been in
scrapes with the law, including
involvement in an auto theft case
lnKansu.
He bad a Juvenile r«e>rd prior to hi• eonvfetlon, legislator!
were told.
False imprisonment and com-
pensation ls the issue. Webb em-·
phasized.
Woman Hurt
In Electric
Cart Accident
A 84·1••r·old Hunt1n1t~n Beach woman was trapped m-
side her tiny tbree·wheelecl elec-
tric cat Monda)' after lostni con-
trol of the Yebicle While tryinJ to
balanc-e a j uat-repalred
televlttan 1,et on the seat
PoUee said Velma cathertne
Martin, M, of 2810 11orida St.,
Apt. C, lost control of her car at
17th Street and Adams Avenue at
lp.m. ·
Qfficers reported her
television, which she had just
picked up from a repair shop,
started to slip off the seat seat,
she 1rabbed for It, lost control or
tbe ~ar and It flipped. ·
She wa1 reported ln 1ood con·
ditlotl at Pacifica Hospital
with ba~k injuries. Police said
she was trapped inside the car 15
minutea while· reacue units
worked to free her.
Police 1aid she was not cited.
ea.u, ...............
FRE!DOM STOP-crowd packs San Juan Capistrano's
Verdugo Street in anticipation of Monday's opening of
the Freedom Train. Some persons found themselves
waiting in line as long as four hours to view treasures or
America's past. Musical entertainment was provided to
make the long wait more bearable.
Dardy Soul
Vict im Finiaha Train Tour
Orange County Sheriff's of·
ficers took their emergen~y
medical aid unit to San Juan
Capistrano at high speed Monday
when they learned that an ~lder
ly viewer Of the F'rt!edom Train
was having a heart attack.
They looked for the vtttlm tn.
vain when they reached the
tourist attraction. But they were
assured by people waiting in line
that the Leisure World resident
was still having her heart attack
but bad refused to leave the line.
Deputies uid they found the
victim inside the attraction ob-
* * *
viously ill and short of breath but
· det«rmtned to remain on the con· veyor bell.
They fed.her oxygen and ad·
ministered medfcal treatment
while she continued to tour the
train on the moving belt.
"She seemed much better
when she finally left the train,··
deputies said. "She told ua that
no heart attack was going to
make her miss seeing the Freedom Train."
Deputies said the victim 8.!ked
them to insure th.at she not be
identified.
* * *
7,000 Demanding
Ticket Money Back
JFK's ·Photo to Stay
SAN DIEtO (AP> -The
Freedom Train bas chu,eg~ off
to San Juan Capia\rano, leavm,
behind tbotJsands of ticket
holders who want their money
back.
Breslauer said Monday that re·
funds would be made. But he
didn't know when or how.
••we can't make any refunds
now because there are no funds
to give," he said. ''1llere will be
refunds, bbt we don't lr:noft how
1bey will be bandied. ..
I
Catholic Sclwol Say• It Won't 'Spark Sin'
BURIJNOTON Iowa (AP) -
'The presenee of hls plctllre isn't
rotng to make people go and
sin.'' says a member ol me Bu.rt. inlton Catholic SCbool Board of.a
campaign to remove .lobn r.
,Kennedy's portrait from a school
llibrary.
The board, under prea.an to
pull down the portrait in Ill.ht of reJ>ortt of the late pNSJdtmf'1 ex·
tramarltal llf e, voted un-
arlimoualy Monday Dilht .. ainlt
the idea.·
•·1 don't fHl we hue 11111 rtaht
to judge," said Mn; RolNrt
Brueck, the board'• ~ce presi-
det and a mother of nine.
••nte poor man h9I bem SOM
almoet 13 ye an and be c•~ft eftll
dllend hlm1elt. Aod hoW do we
lm:nr tbat aomebodJ IA\ ma.t-int a Jot ot mone1 comlnl µp with
aJ.lthls?" ~1n·1-~· Da•e .-u-.-.......... .
ool tflat prtmarltal Mx b tin·
~ •• turn rtcla ..-oand
)
and have the picture ol the Man
hangin1 in the library where all
the young people can see it."
Jermilon's request came after
Judith Campbell Exner, a 41·
rear-old San Dieao woman,
claimed she had a "close,
personal relationship" with Ken·
nedy during his years In the
White House. • Jenniton is president ol the
school's Home and School As· IOCtatton and bu three eblldren
In 1cbool. He said be wu afraid
tUt tome of the 215 ~who
looked at tbt plctutt ~ the na-
tion'• fltlt C~thoUc or.tclent woalcl£nthlnt of hl.t 8 llft.
Bat · · a st .room •· 11 etow«, e 12~ board.
1'0ted unanlmou1ly to keep the
portrait where lt is.
What would lt prove if the pie·
tUN were removed?
. .......... aaid Mrs. Bnaec:lr. ·~ Dli can't understand all .,a=:." Ford'• partralt aJao
..... la Uae ~raey, but fonnw
t'reildent Nixon'• doea not. ·
"l bate.to opo a oaof WCll"IDlt . .
·but where ts Nlxon 's picture and
why was it removed?''' uked
board member AlllelaMams.
Prilleipal Dave Walter replied
that, duri~f the Watergate dis-
clQl.ures, students would put tape
on the face of Nixon's portrait, or
turn lt up1ld• down or toward the
wall.
Walter 1alcl he and tbe
Ubrartan •&reed to P'Jt the Nixon
picture in 1torage.
Tbe Rev. Donald Redmond,
another board membc, 11id al·
lesatiom ot Keftlled1'1 tnlacon-
duc:t hadn't.been pn:Md. And be
allo *1'"1ed that wbltevtt tht
former president in., haw._
lt hadn't nece11arily eaus;f
anyone to ain. •
Daa Rlp_»lt, 18, a HOti'e Dame
ltudlnt, 1laowtc1 up with a peU.
tloa beMbi• the •llDilurel ol 320 penw who wanted KemedJ ..
ptcture left where it la .
He a~alecl to tbe board "and
went h the bllhUJbt.s ol Kennedy'• lfe to abow the lnte-
IJ'tty of the prnlde~ .. said Mn .
Brueck ... Danny bad reeearched
--IM~h&w•l~:·· .. . • I
Of fieialt tfri' th4' Btd!ntenn,ial
dltplit. saJftt 111ore ~ 68, 700 pertotii vUI eel tlie a&Ui dUriJ11
its five-day stay in San Dl~go, the
only place so far where the
Freedom Train was sold out in
advance.
BUt a total df 18,800 tickets were lold for the ev_.u and many ot the mote than 1~ who never got aboard the train are demand·
inl their lllODI)' bl Cit.
8"etaJ ot tHost! P\lf . up all
hope bf ltef&g tbt ublblt after w1liUlll more than tout boun In
lint under IO·dtlrM winter heat.
• Alllttant Ctt1 Mana«er Martlt
Hotel Fire
Injurea Four
LOI ANGELES (AP) -
Damar• from • fire tll i
dOWUIOWlt r~lill hotel that
iW\iltid in ~r inJuriel to fdW'
»eGDle u ttUmatecl at •.ooo, a lint-department 1pot.mm1.,..
1 ..,.,.•lion officer 801 Baiid
UhltM MQfthy ni1btblU.Nrt·
ed • · th• to9.ttb ftoOr-ot th Pietwltt Hotel.
A meet.ln1 is scheduled Wed·
Maday between city olflcials and managers ol the Freedom Train
to try to resolve the pl'Oblem.
inc•. reports and other records
related to possible district at·
torney inve1tigations of county
political figures.
Included among those named
as possible targets were M·
semblymen Robert Badham <R·
Newport Beach), Robert Burke
CR-Huntington Beach), Paul
Carpenter CD -Cypress) and
Richard Robinson (D-Sattta
Ana).
A1so cited in the Kurilich mo-
tion were state Senators Dennis
Carpenter CR-Newport Beach)
and James Whetmore (ft.
Anaheim>.
Kurilich also listed District Al·
torney Cecil Hicks, Sheriff.
Bradley Gates, and Supervisors
Ralph Diedrich, Ralph Clark and
Laurence Schmit.
It is Kurilich 's contention that
a review of political investi1a·
tions undertaken by the District
Attorney's Office will help prove
bis argument that Battin is the
subject of selective prosecution.
Battin l.s' charged in a county
Grand Jury indictment handed
down last July with seven felony
charees related to allegations
that in 1974 he campaigned for
lieutenant governor at least
partially at talQ).l')'er expense.
In the Santa Ana supervisor's
pre-trial hearing, which entered
its thlrd week Monday, Kurilich
is attempting to convince Judge
Kenneth Lae that hls client la a
member of a political class that
has been singled out fot'"in-
vestigation and prosecuU~
Generally, that class Is
described as elected officials
supported by Dr. Louis Cella and
Richard O'Neill.
In contrast to that class,
Kurillcb ia insisting that political
fi1urea s upported by the
Republican oriented Llncoln
Club have not been subject to
prosecution and that complaints
against some hne been ipored.
Deputy Dist: Atty. Jack Ryan
told Judie Lae Monday that be
needed more time to answer the
38·point Kurillch motion far dis·
covery.
Ryan said he received the
bulky motion late Friday and had
not had time to respond to each
'request.
, Earlier in the bearing, the pro-
secutor objected to district at·
tomey invesU1ators beinl asked
to name political fiSW-tbey
have investigated since 1968.
Judge Lae upheld tho.5e objec-
tions and said that under no
ctrcwmtances would be allow
the names of those cleared
through invest11atlon1 to be
madf public in bis cO\IJ'tlpom. on Kut'Uicb's written motion
for discovery, the judge ap·
pl"O\'ed Ryan's request for added
Ume and uid be •ill decide the
Issue Wednesday morning.
Abo delayed unlU then wu the
Judge's rulln1 on a defense mo-
tion calling for the Grand JUI')' to
be more specific on a grand theft
charge included ln tbe il1dlct·
ment.
Before then, Judge Lae ~ be wlll Nt~d testimony incl
In Grand Ju17 transcript.I UltKt
• tbe basis for Battin's indict-ment.
'l1le judge noted that KurlUcb'• Obfeetlon to. wbat the defeme It·
lGrM)' termed the indictmMt~a ""'* wordl.Dt •boUI bne been li'Jade Wiler, p........, ... Sep. I
....... wben a =bear-I IQ •• ~beclalecl C6 eellid 9t Kurllieh •a •
· 1 •
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j '· .
TAB TWISTERS DEPT.-
With memory fresh on what hap-
pened to me in the last·minute
Christmas shopping crisis, I
finally did som ething early the
other day. I ordered my 1976 auto
lirense tabs. This resulted in real
surpme.
Our good California Depart·
ment of Motor Vehicles, alias the
OMV, had already sent me the
pre-registration forms J was in-
strueted that all J had to do was
mail them back to the OMV of-
fire in San Clement~ and my
hcense tabs would be forwarded
forthwith. .
Clearly. I was suspicious right
away. "Nothing the OMV does
rould possibly be this simple." I
gmmbled, turning the registra-
tion cards over in my bands.
AH, MY MEMORIES of going
down to the DM V to get license
tabs are most vivid. There you were. standirl_8 in thls loni line
that serpentined out of the OMV
offict> clear down the block to the
quirkie taco stand.
. You finally get half-way up the
line near the five-a nd-dime store.
Abruptly. this D M V bureacratic
functionary co m es quick·
stepping down the line, shouting
at his hapless patrons:
· Anybody in this line with a
last name s tarting with Z to Sand
having license plates lettered
MLR to MLA -then you are in
the Wrong Line. Repeat-Wrong
Line.
"You must be in the other lfoe.
That line is the one that ends
down there in the next block at
Hamburger Heaven."
ABRUPTLY, YOU ARE re·
duced to a quivering glob oJ
flesh. You cannot remember
what the letters are on your
license plate. You are even un-
certain if you are a Z through S.
Frozen by fear and dismay, you
just continue shufffing up in the
same line.
Some hours I ater. you reach
the clerk at the window.
"Good evening," you say,
smiling at her weakly.
She s a ys nothing whilst
snatching your aulo registration
papers from your clutched ,
sweaty fi st.
"Are your papers in order,"
she demands in her best Euro-
pean border guard voice.
You mumble, nodding your
head up and down eyes
downcast. trying io look humble.
"AHA!"1.HE R VOICE cackles
in glee. "l' do not see your Anti-
S mog Cleanlin ess Forever
Inspection Form BZA·32 with -·
your papers. Give it to me."
Frantically. you turn your
pockets wroQg-side out searching
for the vanished Form BZA-32.
"It seems to be gone, .. you sob.
"Maybe I dropped it down by the
taco stand."
"I am very sorry," she snaps.
"You will have to move to the
other line and obtain a BZA-32.
That line ends down there two
blocks at the Suicide Prevention
Clinic."
SO IT WAS, with all these
memories, I went ahead and
gambled. mailing my registra-
tion forms and check to the OMV
in San Clemente . My licens~ tabs
came back by return mail. My
papers were in order.
Now, lots of folks are com·
plaining about the new registra-
tion, the fact they didn't get new
Red, White and Blue license
plates and the confusion over two
stickers. This is all trivia.
Just remember how things
were in the rotten old days. ·
Syri8n Troops
Seize Lebanori
BEJRUT, Lebanon <UPI) -
Palestinian and Moslem forces
lecLby thousands ot Palestlnian
regular troops from Syria seized
most of the Lebanese cOWltryside
today in '\ sudden sweep that
brought an urgent appeal by
Lebanon ror U.N. or U.S In·
tervention to prevent an interna·
tional "disaster."
Advancing behind armored
columns and backed by artillery,
the joint force estimated at more
than 20,000 men captured all or
the Akkar region in the north.
most or the Bekaa Valley in the
east and the Christian towns of
Damour and Jiyyeh along the
southern coast, about 25 miles
from Beirut.
HE LICOPTE RS evacuated
thousands of refugess Crom
Christian communities in the
path of the advance. Beirut itself,
already burning from civil strife,
was torn by bitter new fighting.
The force was Jed by a n
estim ated 4,000 P alestinian
Liberation Army soldiers -part
of a force or about 7,000 PLA re-
gular troops reported to have
crossed the frontier from their
normal stations inside Syria. It
also included about 15,000
Moslem l e ft ist troops and
Palestinian forces who had been
battling Christian forces in the
nine-m onth -old civil war in
Lebanon.
Regular Lebanese army troops
fell back and r egrouped in an-
Philippine Sea
tkipation of an attack on Zahle, a
Christian city of 60,~ pc>~ula
tion. 2S ..mile.s e.ait oLBelrut
Diplomatic sources said there
had been no contact between the
PLA and the Lebanese army and
that the PLA was acting more as
a backup force.
NO RELIABLE casualty
figures were available but police
estimated .that as many as 350
persons bad been killed and 750
wounded over the past 48 hours.
An estim ated 9,500 persons had
been killed and 20,000 wounded in
nine months of civil war in
Lebanon.
Lebanese Interior Minister
Camille Chamoun, who evacuat-
ed his . coastal residence of
Saadat as leftists launched a
fierce ass ault on the town from
land and sea. appealed for the
immediate intervention or the
U.N. Security Council to avert
what he said was the danger or
another Middle East war.
The Interior Minister had said
earlier that the Palestinian
troops crossing from Lebanon
had been joined by Syrian army
forces outfitted with tanks and
heavy guns, but official sources
in Israel, which has said it could
not remain "indifferent" to a
Syrian invasion of Lebanon, dis-
puted Chamoun 's claim.
'"It looks like Chamoun is giv-
ing out doomsday pronounce-
!'11ents .... and what he's saying
is not true, from all our indica-
tions," one Israeli source said.
Sunken Freighter
Survivors Hunted
. ~OKYO (UPI) -U.S. Air Force planes fanned out across the
Philippii:ie Sea today, searching thousands or square miles of ocean
foi: survivors or the Norwegian freighter Berge Istra, the larges t
ship ever lost at sea.
The only two men known to have escaped the giant 224,000·ton
?re carrier were aboard a Japanese fishing boat heading for Angaur
m the Pal~u Islands, some 600 miles west of the Philippines.
T~e two drif~ed aboard a life raft for 20 days before the tuna boat
Hachiho Maru picked them up Sunday, adrift in the Philippine Sea
470 miles north of New Guinea.
U.S. Warn• Agaln•t lnter.,entlon
COPENHAGEN. Denmark <UPU-SecretaryofState Henry A.
Kissinger said today the United States has warned "all outside
parties" against intervening In strife.torn Lebanon and declared the
United States would oppose such intervention.
( J
In a stopover on his way to
· , Moscow, Ki ssinger told a JN S ff 0 RT · news confe rence "the United
States would oppose any un·
ilateral act which could ex-
pand the conflict." He also carried an advance warning to Kremlin
leaders that Soviet intervention in Angola could damage U.S.-Soviet
relations.
Britai11, leelaad .Sign Tncee
BRUSS.ELS, ~elgium <Ui:'I) -Britain and Iceland have agreed
to a truce in the ir long-runrung "cod war," ending the imminent
threat of a break in diplomatic relations between the two countries.
British Foreign Minister James Callaghan announced late Mon-
day night that Britain was withdrawing immediately its warships
and air force jets -from within Iceland's 200-mile territorial sea in ex·
· change for Icelandic promises to 'Stop cutting the nets of British
trawlers fishing in the area.
Porillflal R~olt Leadn-A rrnted
LISBON, Portugal <AP) -Maj. Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho the
former head of internal security, was arrested today as one of the
key plotters in last November's unsuccessful military revolt.
Portugal's armed forces leaders officially implicated the Com-
munist party in the revolt.
Carvalho, a Car leftist not form ally a ligned with the Communist
pa~y. was stripped of his command and demoted from general to
ma1or after forces loyal to the government of Premier Jose Pinheiro
de Azevedo put down the 48·hour revolt.
Rain ·Covers Midsection
Northern New Englaml Below Freezing
.or
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Paul Robeson, 78. former
football player, singer and
actor, was in critical condi·
lion at Pres byterian
Hospital in Philadelphia
Monday with severe
cerebral vascular disorder.
~attle Rages
On 3 Fronts
In Angola War
JOHANNESB URG, South
Africa (AP) -The Marxis t
Popular Movement -(MPLA)
-and pro-Western National
Union -(UNITA) -were locked
in battle on three fronts in what
could be the decisive confronta-
tion in Angola's civil war, the
Johannesburg Star reported to-
day.
The news paper ~aid UNITA,
s trengthen e d by several
thousand white troops believed to
be South Africans, was blunting
strong southward thrusts by the
Cuban-led M PLA forces Motiday.
UNITA, in alliance with the Na-
tional Front -FNLA -has been
battling the MPLA for control or
the oil· and mineral-rich former
Portuguese colony, providing a
backdrop for involvement by the
superpowers.
Reliable sources in Zambia re·
ported Monday that moderate
African s tates were holding
secret talks to end the fighting by
withdrawal of all foreign troops
and establishment of a coalition
government. They said the coali·
lion would merge the UNITA and
MPLA but exclude the FNLA.
The MP LA attacks were
around Cela, near Santa Comba
in the west. and toward the key
railroad town of Luso in central
An~ola .
SSTaN
• Increase ~,
Proposed
WASHINGTON (UPI> -
Highlights of President Ford's
State of the Unlon message Mon·
d~ht:
The economy -"Last January
most things were rapidly getting
worse. This January m08t things
are slowly but surely getting bet·
ter . : . my first objective Is to
have sound economlo growth
without inflation."
Truces -"By holding down the
growth in federal spending, we
can afford additional tax cuts
and return to the people who pay
taxes more decision-making
power over their Ii ves. • · ..
WELFARE -"Including
my health care reforms, I pro-
pose to cons olidate some 59
separate fed~ral programs and
provide flexible federal dollar
grants to help states, cities and
local agencies in such important
areas as education, child nutri-
tion and social services ... • •
·~1 must ... recommend a
three-tenths or one per cent in
crease in both e mployer and
employe social security taxes ef·
fective Jan. l, 1977."
DEFENS& -''Our military
for;ces are capable and ready ;
our military power is without
equal. And I intend to keep it that
way." His forthcoming defense
budget will show "an essential
increase over last year."
Housing -"I will ask for addi·
tional housing assistance for
500,000 families. These programs
will expa nd h ousing op-
J)Ortunities, s pur construction
and help to house moderate and
low income families." •
ENERGY -"Last month I
signe<t a compromise national
energy bill which enacts a part of
my comprehensive energy in-
dependence program ... I again
urge the Congress to moxe ahead
immediately on the relltainder of
my energy proposals to make
America invulnerable to the
foreign oil cartel."
Crim e -He proposed con·
struction of four new federal
penal facilities; an increase in
thC"..number or U.S. marshals; ad-
ditional federal agents to help
local authorities crack down on
handguns, and additional steps
against traffic in hard drugs.
LONDON (UPI) -Her
Jona t>lont¥ _~a]r dish vcled
and. accot41.n1 to a fellow
puseflier, looktni "very
ill," actress Rita .Hayworth
had to be assisted off ajum. bo Jt'lllner oo arrlvalJrom
Los Angele$ today.
Newe cam~ramen photo-
graphed -her-being helped
down the back steps ot tho
ptane 30 minutes after it
landed at ~eathrow In·
ternational Airport. Two
uniformed air line
employes supported her at
eacbside. ~"
Ont" report quoted a
French woman passenger
that ''thel"e was a bit of
s houting going on ·and
whether she was drunk or
not we do not know, but she
looked very ill."
Carter Wins
Iowa Caucus
Delegate Bid
United Press International
, Jimmy Carter. who won a solid
victory in Iowa Democr atic pre-
cinct caucuses Monday night,
said today he was gratified
because it may influence voters
in other states to back his bid for
the presidency.
Carter. a former Georgia gov·
ernor. indicated his performance
in the first test of candidate
strength for the 1976 presidential
primaries was even better than
he had hoped.
·'To come in t wo-t0-0ne ahead
of the next nearest candidate was
a very gratifying victory,"
Carter said.
Incomplete results early today
showed Carter with about a third
or th e d e-
legate. sup -
port, with
another third
of the caucus
participants
uncommitted.
Carter was
followed by
Sen .. Bir~h
Bayh of fn.
d i a n a , a uuu
latecomer in the crowded race
with 13.3 percent. Former Sen:
Fred Harris of Oklahoma was
third with 10. l percent, followed
by Arizona Rep. Morris Udall
with 5.9 percen' and R. Sargent
Shriver with 3.4 percent.
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"you pllln to r9g~ for COUJMs other than Counes by Newap.,. please d•egard this
form and register for all ctuses at the ooti.g..
IWlshtof\avemy
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2 ......
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DAILY PILOT
·. . . . .
. •
. . ·
. .
Fluc;.ridation Bill -
Dum,ed by Senate.
ACR~MINTO (UPI) -Thf lenatt l'lnanot Commltt ... on 1
&·'1 voto, baa ,dtfoattd oontrov•r•lal 1•1l1l1llon recaulrtnc ell Calltort'I• qommunttl• to nuortutt thtlr water 1uppltt1,
. Ch•trman ~"thon1 OrMltnlOR,-tO·t.M An1tl9'>~ the-author of lh• blll (8Ra1 l), .. id f\\Jlf nuortdatod drtnktns water would out tho numbor Qf 4tntal cavtu11 b1 to to to "roont Ind fave Calltornians '-P to tM>O mllllon a year In d1ntJ1\ .. Ula at a OOlt o! only about 15
oont• por po non each year.
· ·t·~~~~P.~n~)\J;1n'kt:,0:~~~ ~:c\Th':rr :\~:r,~:.f~~~r::~i:! t:,
eubll" will on tho ll1uo, Loi An11lt1 votol'll l11t May roJ•ottd a nuortdo rtf trtl\dum b)' 1 •·t.o•'4 ptrcent mar1ln, \
•tlre111eni lltto• .. tlft-ed
Sl\CRl\M!~TO <AP> -Employe3 could11't be foraed to retire betor~ age TO under le1islallon Introduced by state Sen. George
Deukmejlan, CR-Long Beach).
( )
lntroduced Monday, the
S l l bill would cove r employes of a e . private enterprise and state
_ and local governmental agen-
cies . Deukmej ian said it
would halt lhe forced retirement at age 65 of employes who still have
the ability and desire to keep working.
Haat1pltrey Out In Stace
SACRAMENTO (AP> -U,I. Sen. Hubert HumJ>hrey ha•
formalJY taken hlt Mlllt out of 9on1ldtrittion for 011ltornl1's
O,mooratio pre1ldentlal primary,
lforetary of Stat• Mar~h Fon1 lu said Mond•y •h• rtotlvtd 11 ~et thret•ttnttn~e lfttey frOm t~t lflJlnel0\8 senator Wt\leh satd. l" part: 111 am not 1 oandidalt ftJP Prnldent of the Unltld ltates, nor
do I pres ently intend to become a candidate for tpat office."
.... IN81~PnetW
WS ANGILEI <UPI ) -lyrnbionese Liber~Uon Arm'I
member JoJeph Remlro WllS stripPf(t of hll richt to aot JS hi1 pwn
attome)' bec~u11 ht tgnortd the Judge'a ordtrt to oltan UP hi• language.
Remiro used vulgar language in his testimony and statements.
E"a~Ull l'o•"d fl•llCll
LOS ANOEL&8 (*'P) -An Oklahoma evangelist has Deen
found guilty of conspiring to trl'nsport stolen vehicles across state
lines
Arlie 11 Bud '' Chomborl, 4:t, was found guilty by a rtdoral oo"rt
jury llfter two houra of <tciliberation.
The fVan,u~li•t itnd liQngwritPr, whu hH brouant tent revival
rneeUngs ot Ms Clor1ous Church. Inc., to Southern California often,
testified that he thought the ears ar,d truc ks were 1m1 iJnd did not know they were lilolel'\.
LOS ANQJL_,~ (AP > -Ai
dootan and Jtatt ropr0Hnt1Uvt1
huddled on ways to solve the
malpractice crisis, a move to
'Pl•ad tho phy•iel1rw' •'"down
w11 launcht4 amona 1on1ral praaoUUooen.
Negotiat\ons hav• r"umtd in
Lo& Anaelli utweon DeP&il¥ ,Storetary or Health and Wolrarf
Robert Onalada and m1dlc1l r1pr8tientaUvt1 . GnalMJa and hh1
aidoi IPlll lnto \WO GrO\&Jll, .. did
the dGOtora. to di•cuss for th"
nnt time a$ :se parate entities lht
two prlft'\P areas of dispute.
THEY AllE ~ doctor·fundtd
iNur•oo• pool o~rated l>Y tho •tatt and a social service
mtdloal program proposed by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.
-Meanwbllc, doct.ors in their
20th day or a prott1t •••lntt
1Jtyrookttlng m a lpractloo ln·
11urancci rates called ror • strike
b'; unoral practitlon1rs on
'lneqtdt alJle'
Hearst Attorneys
Try to Nix Doctor
Herman Sillas, director of
state Department of Motor
Vehicles, says motorists re·
newin g their r egistrations
this year face inequities.
bi.it said situation is inevita·
ble because of the new st ag-
gered licensinc 1yst@m.
SAN FRANC ISCO IAP> Cit·
in g ''n ewly di scove red
evidence," Patricia Hearst's al·
torneys have secured a hearing
Wednesday on efforts to block
furth er t·xam1nation by a
psyc hiatrist the news paper
heiress accused of harassing her
to hysteria.
U.S. District Court Judge
Good Says Judge
Fears Reprisals
~
SAQR,4.MIM'l'O (UPU -MantOP oulti1t fandra Good has de
manded a judge di1e1uali(y hlmttlf from. he r death threat case
because she contends he is prejudlced and fears "reprisals from
me."
Miss Good. 31 , accused U.S. District Court J udge Thomas J Mac
Rriclt of Dr~jud•ing her case bec•u•f h" 1t"tQooed her former
roommate. would-be presidential assassin Lynette Fromme, to hf e
in prison.
DURIJlllG A pretrial hearing Monday, J.b~Rride. Inadvertently
called Miss Good "Miss Fromme.'' Sho immediate\)' a~ked that the
reference to MIH Fromme be rertect@d In the r ecord as "rurther
tvideoot of prijudice."
"I 'm sorry, I misspoke," the judge replied. .
Mtc!lrid~ po,tpc:med ruling o" the dl•quallficatlon motion until Tuursd._y ilO<l said he may ask anothor Judge to rule on the matter.
Oliver J , Carter gr anted th• new
hearing after receivi ng •ealed
motions duri ng a 11 i hour con-
ference MondJy with attorney:;
for both sides.
DEFENSE ATTORNEY Al
Johnson said the new evidence
concerned the enmination by
Or. Harry. Kozol of Do11ton. Ile
would not elaborate.
The attorney said Miss Hearst
would attend Wedn"'ditY'I heitr·
ing, but he would not rovcHtl
whether s he wQuld to.Ufy.
Last week , the :U -yoar.old
newspaper heire~s testified dur
mg a two·d·ay llearing lhal Ko1ol
bulli ed her to toarli JIU\, 7 with uc
cusing questions -an aeruaallon
Kozol flatly denied. Judge Carter
then ordered Miss Hearst to un
dergo furt her e xamination by
Kozol or face . court unctlon11
'4;h~ch could include barr1n1
testimony fr o m d or e n1e
~ychiatrist~
· JOH~SON SAID Mh1s llciar11t
had not been reeuminod by
Kozol i ince the rulina.
He s aid he dldn 't think the cur
ront lrgal gyrnna11tics would d..,.
lay Miss Hearst 's triDI Mond•y on
bank robber y char1e11 slemmin11
from the April 1974 Hiberniit Bank
robbery here .
.
IWLVl'ILOT Af
Thurs day and Friday l o
''dramatiio'' tht •lowdown.
Provision.t wlJl be made to ban·
dle 1mer1•ncles in the tw0<4,y
1trtke, aaid Dr. Laynard
Hollom•'!r chairman of the ctn· traJ Loe ·An1el11 Area Commit
tee of Phyalcia ns .
Bn,u RE FLECl'ING G 327
percent ln1urance rate increase
have betn rn 1lfod by the
Traveler•' ln1urallce Companies
of Hartford, Conn.. to nearly
10.000 Southern California doc
tors, and thoy fall due at the er.d
of the month. Holloman uid the
two-day strike will emphasize
the ur1ency of that deadline.
He s ald that if doctors cannot
afford to pay the premiums, in
sorqe c11ea \AP to l30,000, tO.>
will h~ 10 without malprut·
tict coverage or slop pr&lcticing
Holpital• ln the Loi Angele::.
area reported a •light e ilSing of
the caseload over the weekend
due t o patienti routinely going bome. but county Health Service
Director Listop A. Withorill said
he's not ready to call it "a signifi
cant long -r ange trend al thb
-ttmo. We'll just havo to wait and .. ., ...
Birch, Beea
Hit New Snag
FELTON CU Pl l Sex educ a
tlon cour101 in tho Siu\ Loren&o
Vall~y Uniriod Ol1trict hilh
schooli h1vo bet"' clropped artor
an tn1tructor toli:l 1tudont1 ho d~·
rorated his Chri1tm111 tree with
contractptive1,
''Tho poraon who tlluaht tt
11hould nfvrr h&1vc 1ald that he
decorated his Christmas tree
with contracopllvH." one of·
ficial old Mondoy.
Superintcmdont DOf'lald Rhodes
and San Lor enzo Valloy Hl1h
Principal Ken Halley s11id they
httd rec1ivcid many complainh;
from porenta obout the 1ix·day
prosram by tho plannod pu·
enthood or Santa Crui County.
from our Gal's Crun\ry ... Jones New'l~ Outlandu',
Norman Todd> John Meyer tk.
Ourf1fth great SALE
starts Thurs.Ja.n.22
SUJXr SJ:l(Ct!' fi~ aummu'7b
~iee.
bloust-9
el eek~
skirt,s
\
'
. ..
'
from our mt-ns dre.ea s~1on ...
first. t u"M epwal
K lidl.ti
14llboU. l.it:.9
CNr 1>pet"L ~, . • Qrtat. Ml&Ctton cf
r ~ lhe.Uaros, t.~. 1811 arci iWTlfT'IU~
1nc.lu:ie5
l::as1C !bur
hlr.la.rti ~ school • &.n!'f'q
t.o •12~
rn:w•709
""Jl rnmdNI>s !!h1..U,1Tum
1}1ft., 'ili...!_U, (.Nl<jnWn
ardsummer
coots
• rcg.\.ot4&,rDtN•27•
mslcf\enndsand~clG.
up t.o 75Xoff
blauera ... flannels,
twee.de. etc.
up to 50" off
I
44 fashiOn island, newport center 844-5070
, .
~·
.. • ..._ -
8 OAJL Y PILOT
;. ' Tuesday, Januery 20, 1979
1'HE FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Keane
\
'
"I have the q\ieen. The one I need is her hus ·
bond."
In T ,orranee
Tests Study
Pill/Or Men
. T~RRANCE <U PI> -Harbor General Hospital
ts looking for volunteers to take part in a research
e>ffort that a scientist hopes will lead eventually to a
birth control pill for men.
The idea is to use the male hormone,
tE'sto_sterone enanthate. It is known that injections
~f this com~ound can suppress formation of sperm
ma male wit hout producmg side effects or affect-
ing virility or sexuality. '
The s!udv will de·
termine theamountofthe (MEDICINE) horm one required to sup-
press sperm production ~
with the aim of develop-
ing a monthly m1ection. Dr. Ronald Swerdloff, head
of t~e research and UCLA associate professor of
medicin e. said he hopes the study results will en-
courage the pharmaceutical industry to develop a
safe and effective oral contraceptive agent for men.
"TRADITIONALLY, men have viewed this as
a women's r espohsibility," he said. "But I think
there will be a general acceptance of it when it's
available.··
The National Institute of Child Health and
Human Development of the U.S. Department of
Health and Welfare has awarded a three-year study
contract to Swerdlofrs team for the research.
Testosterone enanth-ate has been available for
years as a replacement treatment for patients defi-
c~ei:tt. in m ale hor~ones. Swerdloff said it acts by in·
h1b1tmg the s ecretion of the two pituitary hormones
rE"C)uired for s perm production.
"It 's a_ hormone that is essentially the s a?ne as
the _hormone normaJly present. It's respons ible for
maleness," he s aid.
THE VOLU~TEERS will be d ivided into two
groups. One group will receive injections weekly for
four months. The other will get injections every
other week for four months. Then, each member of
both groups will receive an injection every three or
four weeks for six months.
Swerdloff said he anticipated no problem in get-
ting the 45 volunteers between the ages of 21 and 39
needed for the study. "But we can't be sure yet.
This is a new concept.
"We are looklijg for general good health," he
said. "but particularly for men who are interested
in the importance of the project."
Neighbors Hire~
Own Police:man
SAN DIEGO (AP) -
Residents of the Kens-
ington district are chip·
ping in $10 a month for
th ei r own private
patrolman.
"We think it will be a
tre mendous det errent
a g ains t c ri m e ," says
Ted Lundy, a r etired Air
Forre <'olonel who or-
ganized the.plan.
Kensington is one of
San Diego·s oldest and
m o r e a fflu e nt
.I neighborhoods, a cluster
of 100 homes overlooking
Mission Valley.
Gra ced by wide
boule va rds, towering
palms a nd ornamental
street lamps, Kensington
has little if any violent
crime. but has been
plagued by burglars in
recent years.
San Diego police U .
Robert Williams says
there have been "a heck
or a lot of burglaries in
the Kensington area in
the last six months" but
police cannot assign ex·
tra men there.
"We only have a cer-
tain number of men and
we're hit hard all over,''
Williams said.
So this week, an armed
guard from Rodgers
Security Systems began
walking a one-mile beat
covering five blocks.
Lease the
Fiat 131 wagon for
an unbelievable
'123°5 a month.
PUt '300,00 dcMn. and PW'Of'IV 1123.06 a month
on a 38 '"°""' ooen end ...... l'hlt ii 1 Hl'llled
time offw IO ... YI r1ght l/l#fl'f.
C..p cost $5389.50 Reeidu.t '2411.21
Dlo. res. t2953.23 (tfO. dlcnciation $82.04)
Advance peyments $231 .43-tu a lie.
~ 1(131AF24010790) Factcwy 9QUpmtnl
. MisslOOVlejo Imports
S.. .... ,,...._.,ti A•flr"f Pwkw.,. M1115-Y11fe
131·1740 .. 491-1700
Carryin' On With You All
RALEIGH. N.C. (UPl)-Dld you know 1omt·
one .. otnnina like a Jackua eattn• brtan"' hu
really been .. cau,ht lo the act. sort ol like a auck·
egg dog. when you·re caught nat·footed, or red·
handed?" I
II not, then Roy Wilder's book ... You An Spoken
Here," may be "•ho nuff" wbat you need for "car·
ryin' on'' in the South.
THE SMALL PAPD&\atisdesipated by It.I
author as "dialect and quaint 1ayln'1 in. terpeted so
sho nuff Yankees from other foreign parts cu
parley vous in corn pooe CQUDlr)'. • •
C&rollna'1 outer banks where "the coJdest time atnce the •Cri11te Wript' come to shore" rcieans the
eOlcleit time since Ju. u. 1886. when people
atilvend ln the ocean apray watching the grounded
acbooner "Criule Wright" oa Schackleford banks.
It al.lo doeumentl ·~like "Roebuckers"
(false teelb), .. doodly squat' (lnlilfference), "high
Ma Georala pine•· (iotoxlcated), or "right smack
dab" (a certain polnt). /
WlJdeF, a fl-year-olcl ex-newapapeJ"maa, press
agent, public relations man, and sometime politi-
cian, is a "good ole boy" from Sprins Hope. N.C .•
who "took a notlon" to put the collection of verse
together after .. splitting the quilt" wtth the ad·
vertlsing business last winter.
The book Includes a .. whole mess" of transla· tJons a.ncl denvaUons for tbOle who don't kf\OW 'A'
from 'biard' " about southern talk. Wilder is plan·
rdn.Lan ~aJlded, "•~· brand new" printl!!i_ ot Ole wort UtTs sprlq wtUcli may lielii bard oaCI(
form. . /
The idea originated as a promotional pamphlet
for touristf visiting North Carolina -"comers and
goers" -bot wound up encompasstne a "whole kit
Md caboodle" of sayings throughout the South.
THE Zt·PAGE illustrated book includes collo-
quialisms used in specific areas such as North
Let's face it. There's a lot we haven't
told you about banking.
Ar}d it's probably costmg you In tim e
you've wasted. And in money you've lost.
THE MINI-BOOK does not approach a serious
study of the laneuage. But the preface says resident fOlklore experts and college professors maintain
many of the colloquialisms are derived from the
speech of "Britain of centuries ago, of Chaucer and
ol Elizabeth the virgin Queen.·•
The sayings were colleeted from Wilder's
penonal "running rue," other writers and colum-
nists. politicians.
What are we going ~o tell you?
A lot.
True, some of the things you should
know aren't exactly flattering to the
banking business. But you have a right to
know about them. Because they aff•!Ct you
UnfortunatPly. that right to know has been
. .Jn .. '·: r l :. ~·· j b:/ a. lot of banks.
Here's a sneak preview of some of thr-
questions we'll be answer ing dw-mg the
next year.
1. Is a bank the best place to sav~ money?
Maybe not. You'll find that most
savings & Joans pay higher
mterest on savtn.gs. Do you
know how much more?
'1:' r"' ·J~ ~ ·n ~.:.· ·~ :" • : ~-~ 1· :,.o J 01 that. t.h• y don't car~. ~:.'e can't say
.... ~! ~· :,· ..... 11 .
.. · ~·~·: ,. c,.. ""',r1 tu~ .• :_::a r, ... u_:.: ~"u.\, ar enu
t.o • hu b1C. f'1j', tcrious b·1!1Jr ~and laid a
...... facts 0:1 the line, you·rc in for a
P" ".sont surpr1.-e
StartL'1g t od1y. Uruted C..illforrua Bank
ts going to do Jlllit that
Do you know why';>
Are ban.ks safer
than sa.Vl.I1gs & loans?
Is yow-money insured by
toe Federal Government
no matter where you
save"
Wha.t are the advantages
of saving at a bank? Are
they worth the price of
earrung less interest?
What can a bank do
tor you that a savings
& loan can"t<::>
2. Are some banks better to save at
U~T ......
DIXIE UNOO EXPLAINED IN NEW DIALECT BOOK
Author Thumbs Through "You AH Spoken Here"
a
3. Are you losing money by keedf ng It
in a savi.ngs account? •
It's possible.
While most banks are now p~ymg 5%
interest on passbook saVi.ngs, you could be
earn.mg more at the same bank in another
type of savings t>lan. What are those plans?
How much money do you need'? How 'long
do you have to invest it? What happens
If you have t o take your money out
early"? Why. even or: th~se h.ighcr-
i rterest savings p'ans. t;:; t.here a
lurut on how much banks and \I]!;~;~ savmgs & loans can p:ty? Are
ti\ere any plans that h:wc .!:!Q)im.Jts?
Most people do. Do you know the
tr icks that can help you sa•Je? Did you
know that mo&t banks have vray"u to
make saving easier? ·
How much should you be ~avmg based
on ymu' lncomc·7> Why is it a g·Jod ide'.1
to ~ave?
than others? 5. What are your chances of getting credit
Fcir the next year. we're going to tell
you the facts about banklng. Even the ones
you wouldn"t expect to hear from a ba nk.
We're going to do it rlght here in the
n ewspaper. In &.ds like this one. So you
ca.n find out what we've got to say Wlthout
being OW' customer. And without even
coming to OW' bank.
We're going to surprise you. Perhaps
sh ock you. A.:Cld hopefully. help you.
Why are we doing itf .
To getyoW'busmess. We'd be dishonest
tf we said anything else.
But there ai;e a lot of other reasons.
toO. We're doing it for the student who JUBt
bought a car a.nd paid more interest than
he should have. For the grandfather who
1Sn't earrung enough on his S8Vings. For
t.he woman who wants a loan and doesn't
know her rights.
In other words: we're doing it for you.
For the thousa.nds of men and women who
a.re intimidated a.nd confused by banks.
And who a.re losing money, and patience,
beca.use of it
from a bank? You bet your life they are. Even if they
advertise the same interest rates. If you know what banks look for, you
Did you know that there are at least can almost figure it out for yourself. What
50 different ways that banks Ca.n figure ca.n h w't yow' chances? What can help?
interest? How can those ways affect the What lfyou've never had credit before?
amolU1t of interest you earn? Do you know What 1s a credit rating? What does it:'
how to spot a good interest plan when you say about you? Who has access to it?
see one? ,-------.-..
, ..
How else d.O ba.nli;.s vary their
savings plans? When do they
char ge service fees? Do some
charge more than others? What
should ·1ou watch out for when
you're choosing a bank for saving?
They can be expeiiMve.
That"s for sure. Are th ey
...... .-.ii ... worth it? How much ,
interest are y ou really 1
paying? 'fVhy are the
interest rq.tes so high?
When~uld you use · a credit o ? When
shouldn't y ·?,
What h ppens when
you buy fa ty merchan-
dise with ~ credit card?
Did you kr)ow t.here's a.
new law designed to pro-
tect your f ights? What is
the law? What does it.
mean to you?
(
I
I
I
SACRAMENTO CUPI>
'lbe State Parks and ltecreaUon Department Au purchased a '88-acre
parcel at i;orro Bay
State Park San Lu£s
Obispo Coun y \o protect
the Morro Bay estuary =from po1slble en·
ental damaie.
11le def.artment nld tUlJll'~e , kQifS u"tbe
'
Baptista eeta,e, was .
pun:bued f ~4$480,000 "--I .J v.-, r......-trom Small Wiaderness·1 .....,.. n .. oa
PrtMrves, Inc., and is
located 'lei the aoutlle~tera section of
tbepark.
It said tbe acqulsltion
also will reduce dl.s-
turbance to ndll\ng sites
'of a number or.are at blue
_ herons within the park.
Francoise Giroud,
Fr ance's Secretary
of State for the Con-
di ti on of Wome n,
says 37 p er cent of
French women older
than 18 would rather
be men.
7. Do women have '\
trouble getting credit?
Yes At least they have in the past.
HappUy, there's some nevi legislation
designed to protect the rights.of women m
regard to credit. What is the legislation?
How can it help you?
What. is..the attitude of banks toward
single women? What happens to you.r
creclit. rating when you get a divorce'?
Can yo\I get. credit m yolll' own n3-m~
l1 _vou'1·e ma1-r1ed'..I Why ib it a good idea'?
8. Is it smart to borrow money from a bank?
Your tath~r·probab!y toldyou it.
VJasn't. But sometimes, it's the smartest.
t.hmg you can do. When should you
..
Tuwtg . Januuy ~. 1976
. I
DAii. y Pll.OT A 7 I . ' By Phil lnte rlandi 'Too Jtlueh Calce'
Men Nix Bordello Job -.
SAN FRANCISOO (UPI) -One -piece of cake la cooct, but three pieces of cake'r It could make you
want to throw up.
That pretty well summed up the reactJons of seven men pc>lled by a newspaper on whether they
would work ln a male bordello.
FJVE SAID NO. There wu one y~ and one un·
decided. .. ' ~s Sandoval, a psychology student, was
agalJl&Ube-idea. --"Like anything, too much and you lose In-
terest,,. be said. "One piece of cake is good. Two
pieces and you 're full. 1br~ and you 're ready to
throw up.''
"No, r wouldn't do that type of work:' said
Fred Sturm, a sales representative ~ed in the
Sunday San Francisco Cllronlcle's l•question man"
column.
''THERE IS MORE to life than that -although
that's a lot of Ure," Sturm said. "I think men who
would 1et into that type of work would go into it !or
the s ame reasons that women have.•'
.. i;'. ---e.·
Wh~t. r.appe~ if you can't pay
:1our house payment" Your car
P'1~rm,,nt? 't/h'it should you do9
\\Tha:. shouldn't you do'! Wtll your
b1n.k help ~/au"'
10. When should you start
planning for the future?
Nms No m~HtPr h'ow young yon ar,.
VThnl't d•) ~ < u ... t ... -i.1-:.) '/'That. c1.n yow·
h1 n": dn to );ml r>'"
W1rnt 15 u·ustY 'N"h.o needs one? Wr:
;;. eds i ·.::u:·1 How do ·,·ou •.vrit.e one?
Most. brl.nI:S no·v ha·:.::: plans th·1t ·1~10·:;
you to 5"'t up :/otu· 0·1:~ ret1: -rnent p:.1r-. :
::o·i'r~ 501.l·tomplo.Yed Do::oc kno· ..... v:hd.t
those plan3 ir~·' Do vn11 zno·:: then' ad··1n
t..:.i.ges whe;. 1· corr. tr.1 .tncomr~ tax?
.. . · ..
Tony Conte, a salesman, a1ao hact a negative re ·
actlon.
''I don't consider that work. There are other
thinp that would have m«e sustaining interest and
be more challen1fni. Perhaps that might be
physically challengtna, but not psychically.
. "I also wonder if there would be a market for a
malt bordello. I suspect there•ouldn't be."
PETER BURT, a furniture maker , said he
--wouldn't1¥ork, in-such a-place~use-1 ~elf
employed and I'll only work tha\ way. I wouldn't
work for anyone else. I prefer woodworking.''
Fred Dobbs, an exbibii installer, liked the idea.
He thought it would be a~ to make $0me ''lasting
friendl."
But, "I wouldn't like it better than the job I
have now. I love my job. A male bordello wouldn't
be my first choice." ·
Vernon Lombardi, a bus driver, was undecided.
"I never g.ave it much thought." he said.
"Could be~ I like women. l don't mind being a sex
object."
13. What can you do when
your bank·goofs?
t:re·_ a lot you C..in do if you
know where to ::;tait 1tTho do :;o·.l ... ~e if
t' H'I'l!'s o.n erro:· 0:1 '/Olli' e o.:•?:::t:r.t? If
yc1ur bank m·1r:•·.:. Jr. !:1CO: n::c:. .... ~f"TlCt;
ch ...1.rge•;> It yo 1 .. • t.:;~·:::-:..d dm:.-:-. ~or crt.dlt
·:ou think yo · .• -·~: • · v.r;,. : . ::o you ~u: :l
·::hen no one.,. \;\·E 1 i.:r:Pd t? Cdfl_::>o:·:.
:. our PfOblem·
'
QUEENIE
"Run!"
In 17 States
Crime Victims
Get Some Aid
United Press International
Wheelchair-bound Kevin Finneman of Buffalo,
Minn., was shot a nd paralyzed by a gunman robbing a
record shop. The state of Minnesota awarded Fin
neman $10,000to help pay hls medical bills.
A' 75-year-o ld Ne w
Jersey woman got
$10,000. Her eyes were
gouged out by a burglar
who wanted to m ake
sure she could not iden-
tify him.
Minnesota and New
Jersey are among 17
st ates that now have
laws providing com·
pensation for victims of
crime -r a nging from
payments up lo $5,000 in
Nevada to $45,000 for
survivors o f pe rsons
slain in Maryland.
victed criminals to make
restitution to victims ru.
part of their sentences -
sometimes in the fo rm oC
monthly payments.
A Chic ago attorney
Luis Kutner, recom·
mends that crime vie
tims file civil suiti-
against the s tate to re
cover damages under a
system of "crime torts ..
"MAYBE THE vie
tims are en titled to a
greater share of money
NINE MORE states bein g s p~nt on our
have legis lation p'ending c r i m in a I j u st i cl'
and the U.S. House is system," Carl Jahnke,
considering a bill to pro· c h air m an o f N cw
vide feder al funding for Jersey's Violent Crime~
the programs. Compensation Board.
States wifb s uch laws said.
i nc 1 u de : Al ask a ; "A criminal gets a free
California ; Delaware; ride to jail but a victim
H aw a i i ; I 1 l i n 0 i s ; even has to pay for an am
Louisiana: Maryland: bulance. And it really
Ma ssachusetts: Min doesn't help the victim 1f
nesota: Nevada. New J~l.~~tacker is thrown 1n
J ersey: N e w York ;
North Dakota ; Ohio; The big problem 1~
Tennessee; Texas and money .
. .
1·ow? Whe n shouJdn"t. you? What kinds of
loans do most banks make'?~ r--..-~n
V{hat should you say when you go
imo a bank and.apply for a. loan? What.
will t.hey ask you? What. should you
J
Washington. The Mis· Twelve s tates with
sour i legislature las t laws operate under com
week approved legisla· pensation boards, and
tion to create a crime most .or th~ boards .are
compensationprogram .. laggrng in settling:
I
I
I
bl'tng with ·you?
Considering how interest rates vaf',
it might. be worth your while to shop
around for a loan. How do you go about it?
How can you get a
lower lnt.erest. rate
from a bank?
9. What should you do when you get into
financial trouble?
Of course, the best thing 1S to a.void it
in the f1rat place. Do you know h ow? What
a.re the danger signs? What ca.n you do
a.bout them?
. _,
11. What don't you know about your
checking account?
Probably a. lot.. Hovr long does it take
a check to clear? What should you do.'if
your check bounces? What 1s overdraft.
protection? Vlho neec:ts i't?
Do you know hov1 to flll out a ch~k
so it can't be altered easily? What do all
those nwnbers on your chec~ mean?
ihhen should you stop payment OR a
check? How much does it'cost? .
Do you have the checkmg account
that's right for you.? What else 1s availab1e9
. 12. How can you save on bank
service charges?
Most banks now offer all kinds of
seI'Vlces m one package for a simple charge
of two or three dollars a mbnth. How do
you quahf.y'? What do you get<:> What are
t.l)e advantages? What are the disadvan~es?
How else oan you save<:> Do you qualify
for a. free checking account.? A free safe
deposit box?
\
'
•·
~
: .
\
i 14. What else don't you know about banks?
Banks offer a wealth of services that.
a lot of pcdple either don't k..'"tow about or
don't widersta.nd. When do you nee~ a
cashier's. cheek? Whe.t is a mon~y order?
Who ne~ a. sa.f.e deposit box? What 5hould
you keep m it?
How can you barL<. by m:uJ? can you
t.ransfr·r money from saVlngs to checkine;
over th• phone?
Who a r1:: all those people m the bank?
Who do you see to get a loan? Tu set up
a trust'? '
What els•3 can banks do for you? What
investments can they help you make? How
much oi yow· 11.nancial life will a bank
hand!P !(Jr ::ou''
ObV10U5ly. explaining banking is no
easy tasi< Hut we figure it's worth it.
At'tt.r 'lll, you're going to learn a lot.
~that. mformat.ion can make life sim·
pler for you IL'll probably save you some
time. Mayb1 cvrn some money.
When that happens, you're going to
r~roember the bank that ma.de it all
possible. Us.
UNITED ·
CALIFORNIA
BANK~ ..... I Q t~
' l
\_
•
..
The money is intended claims. Ma!lY. program::
to help cover uninsured a r e surviving O!ll.>
medical bi lls, los t wages because m ost v1ct1m~
and other expenses ip-are una~are the pro
curred by crime victims gra~s e.xi,st.
lo n g n egl ec t e d by Ilhno1s tw?·year-olcl
society. program, which works
Most state officialssay thr?ugh a court of
m ore reform s are claims: was n e.arl)
needed before victims ti60<?·~ 10 deb~ untLl lht•
can get the help they re· Il!Jno1 ~ leg 1slatu.n ally need rescued 1t last week with
· another $750,000 ap
IN NEW York City.
po li ce and citizens
groups raised nearly a
half million dollars for
th e six orphaned
children of Frank J.
.W a l ker, a Good
Sam a r itan who was
killed last year while
coming to the aid of a
police 9fficer. The city's
Good S"amaritan law pro-
vides only $7 ,000 a year.
Even in states where
there are no laws, the
rights of citizens lo live
in a safe society are be-
ing recognized.
In Oregon, where there
is no com pensation law,
judges a re orde ring con·
We cover the
waterfrC?nt
in the
propriation. State of
fi cials say the latest
funding will last only un
til April.
THE CALIF ORNIA
legislature this y~ar in
creased funding in its
10-year-old program to
$3.25 million, to be dis
tributed in maximum
awards of $23,500. Tht•
money is expected to go
to 6.500 victims. fivt> •
times the number two
years ago.
A Justice Department
spokesman s aid th(•
White House favors th<'
proposed law only for
federal crimes, becausP
of its cost .
But Moylan said a
federal program would
cost about $55 million
''not that much money
compared wit h expen
ditures in other areas ,.
"
t
••
'DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
.Juvenile Alternatives
1· • · Attor a yoar'1 study of the county's justice syatem
t • ror~un; people. the Oranse County Juvenile Juatlce
' u Committee hu endorsed a 31·polnt program
,., that 1 bound to stlr aome coutroveray.
;-Most controvcnJal of the commlttoe'1 recom-
. .. mendations iM one calllrll for a 1radual r duction in
, Oronae c.i>unt,y Juvenile Hall's c~~olt)'.
1 When rccommend!n1 a phaae·out of 215 beds al
, , •~the hall. tho committee omphaslzod that it was mere·
ly settinc a goal for budgetary action, not advocatina
un unrcahstk reduction in available detention bed1.
' I
l • t .
Correctly. committee members snld alternatives
to continomont in a secure f ~cillty must be
estoblleJhcd, teated· and proved before the proposed
phuse-out beglns.
The study com.mittcc also recommended placine
a moratorium on construction of new juv enile deten-
tion facilities. another recommendation that is cer-
tain to attract controversy.
But the committee's recommendation did re-
cognize some of the county's older j uvenile faeilities
might need replacini and should not be included in
the moratorium.
Wbilo calling for a reduction in juvenil~ hall beds
the committee ·s year-long project acknowledged the
r continued need to detain certain kinds of juvenile of·
· fenders in institutionB.
Among sovcn propQS~d criteria for detention
were cases involving the safety of others as well as
the minors' own safety.
In light of a continuing rise in juvenile crime and
a new.found emphasis on violence, som e ~ements of
society are demanding that youths who commit
violent crimes be kept off the street.
How that goal will be reconciled with the recom-
mendations calling for H reduction in juvenile hall
btdl 1lon1 with a new coftltruction moratorium cer·
talnlY ou1ht to be 1ubjeot to lntel\1lve publlo debate ln
the next Cew montha.
The Medical Dilemma
Wtth th• doctorr 1lowdown MW Mini f~di by alma1t half the hospltalt In Southern Callfornla, lt111 at
le11t aomewhat encourasin1 to learn that two
aeparate commlttoet, made up of representatives of
hoepttala, doclo1"3 o.nd 8tato 1ovornment are mfftiJ\I
daily to try to !ind a solution to U\e malpractice ori1l1.
Tbt need for LU"lfncy it obvious. Patient• await ..
ing elective s urgery autter both mental and physical
d.i1t.resa. Hospit11l employe•. laid off by thouaanda,
have trouble tlnding other jobs becau1e of th@lr •P·
panntly temporary unemployment 1tatu1, whlon
costs the taxpayers plenty.
The doctors are torn between passing huge in·
surance costs on to their patients or practicing
without insurance.
In a period when California is at best short of doc-
tors, hundreds are dropping or curtailing their prac·
tices, or considering leaving the state. One company
that helps relocate doctors reports a sixfold increase
in inquiries about overseas positions.
Clearly everyone involved in the c ritlf-doctors.
lawyer~. insurance firms a nd the state it .. lf-ia &oing ·
to have to give a little. Perhaps quite a lot.
The malpractice mess already is 1lvtrw a stron1
boost to proponents of national health 1nsunnee.1'bat
would end the discussion in a hurry, they maintain.
And if it can't be cleared up soon, that just m ay be
where we're unhappily headed -in a "better than
nothing" national mood of frustration .
..
MA(.HfSMO
Making (J.S. EmlJroees Dictatorship
•
' • . History
Dear
Gloomy
Gus Dumping D~mocracy m Chile
For TV
( · ... , ). ART HOPPE
':
''Colliaion Cours~." a two.hour
television play. did a fine job
, the other night of explalnini why
t Mr. Truman fired General
I MacArthur. And it certainly lt helps us well·lnformed voters to
know what our leaders were up to
25years1ater.
E .G. Marshall played Mr.
Truman and Henry Fonda, of all
people.
played
G~neral
MacArthur.
This m ade ...
liberal• sore.
'That's not
fair." s aid
one angrily.
"How ran you
hatEI Henry
Fonda?"
As the yeara roll by we may
' leiam of many otheT famous flr-
inas such as : "Fore!'', the story
o( how Mr. Eisenhower firtd an
86 at Burning Tree; "Upstairs,
Downstairs In the White Houae,"
with Mr. Kennedy firing up
··~ " ·cou ntleu admirers : "True
Grit," in which Mr. Johnson !ireli
up Vietnam : a nd "The Best
Thln1• in UCe Are Free." which
t>xplains how Mr. Nixon fired
himself.
THIS BRINGS t11. 25 yeara
herree1 to Mr. Ford. played by
E.G. Marahall. and Mr. Ktss-
inger. played by Henry Fonda,
who, if he can play General
MacArthur. can play anyone.
Thia will be very dramatic
becaute Mr. Ford didn't fire a
mtre aeneral. He went all the
way to the top and fired a
Secretary of Defense. That was
Mr. Schlea ineer , played by
Ronald R eaga n , who ia
The m alpractice insurance
i.ncr('ase must be r e·
inedied, but in the interim
must the patient pay the
~holo bit? They pHs It on
to us, but where do we pan
It? Haven 't noticed our
doctors' standard of living
chanetne. but ours sure
h88 ! B.J.G.
spoMored by General Eleetric.
As you know, Mr. Ford .is a
treat admirer of Mr. Truman. So
thia will be a climactic confronta ....
lion )>!tween two strong-willed
men, Mr. Schlesinger and Mr.
Kia1ln1er. The Issue, of course, is
who ill violaUnt dire9 orders and
thereby mucking U:p American
forelan policy.
Slowly the tension mounts. At
la11t we r each the final scene , a
confrontation i n the Oval Office
between Mr. Ford and Mr. Kiss-
inger. "I.ook here, Henry. . . "
beeina Mr. Ford. frowning.
"AN APOLOGY won't help,
J erry. Your direct disobedience
of my orders is wreckinft my
foreign policy. Didn't I te )'OU
not to aay to Mao Tse-tung that
you couldn · t recognize him
be~ause they all look aUke to
you?"
"It aeemed funny at the time,
Mr. Kl11in1er."
"I mlcht have overlooked your
tellin1 thoae African am ·
ba11adors what you thought you
saw In the woodpile in An&:o\;l.
But now you 've been playlnc
with that red button again, How
am I cotn e to explain to
Brezhnev what bappe"~d to
Minsk?"
''Maybe he won't mias It, Mr.
Secretary."
''Sorry, Jerry. I have no choice
but to relieve you of your duties."
WAfKINOTON -Tho
Penta1on'• top man tn Latin
Ameriea. Otn. Donnie MoAuUfft,
turn\'d up lll Santla10 a few week~ ago. tt e callod· \IPOn
Chile's mllitar)' dictator. Gen.
Augusto Plnocho t. who
welcomed him enthUJlutically.
The Pentagon representative
told Plnot>het how · 'sert.'no und
tr•nquil"
Chile had
become under
military rule.
The U .S .
armed force».
pledged
M<'Auliffe,
"will contlrrnt>
to do evtr·
ythin~ po SI i ·
ble to help.the
Chilun armed forces."
B ack ln WaJh ln1ton,
meanwhile, a ntrot N11Uonal ln-
telligeMe E1tlmate rePorted
that the mtlltary junta ha•
clampt>d tight. authoritarian ccm.
trots upon political life in Chtle
and predicted that the junta
·would revamp the democratic
11ystem.
ALIKADV, Marxist parties
have been outlawed, and other
petrtiea havo been Jll•oed In in·
voluntar)' receu. On November
16,' we du~ribed how the
dlctatorahip haa even Ht out to
dntroy the modorato Chri1Uan
Democratic party,
The graphic d et1th1 were
smuggled to us by some of' the
m os t re1pet'ted Chrlapan
DemocrJtic leadon J" C~lle.
This crackdown on thci de ·
morratic partie1 iP Chile, we re·
ported, was known am°"g the
general• a11 the •0Parliguay1n
Solution." bee a use it had boen
aucceufully impo1ed on
Paraei1ay b)" Dictptor Alfredo
StrooHner.
Chile'• Ambauador Manuel
Trucco fired off on 11\ITY lotter
to us and circulated copies on
~~CK ANDERSON]
Capitol Hill. H e denied as
"ab11olutely false'' thitt the
military rul~ra 1teok to imJX>i e
the · Paraguayan Solution" upon
Chile
"The Chilean government 111
not inter"11ted i11 4\ny pc>litical
it)'litt>m th11t differs frOl'l" that in·
dkat<·d in Its 'J)eclaration of
Prinelple:i. • ·· de<'lared th(1
trnc>ulent Trurro. He cited an
~rtit'I\' by tht> Rrilish esiu1yisl.
Robt-rt M Olili.
APPARENTLV, the
Jmb"'ssador didn't read far
. t>nough. For in the article, Moss
rt-count~d an intorvlew with
· Pirtator Pinochet. "Otner at
Pinochet told mo." wrote Mon,
"that he ti-d come to &ee Chile'a
futurt polltkal 1y1tem "' " 'neo·
democrary, · whkh would appear
to m e a n a 1 y 1 t..e m o r
representative governmef1t
WITHOUT POLITICAL
PARTIES.''
The junta. for example. mldo
a great show of e1tabli1htng a
special commission to write a
new democratic c6n1tltutlon.
Wh at h as happned to tho
Constitutional Comm111lon? The
whole conce p·t h as b e on
abandoned a nd Pinochet has
declar~ there will be no new
constitution.
In it~ pl~ce, the jWlta will pro·
elaiin three "constitutional
acts,'' which effectively aboliah
democracy. Thoae WM rttah•t it re
jailed, terrorized, torturQd, ex·
iled and stripped of their pro·
pert)'. .
The dlrtator shlp ii moving
against Jn)' p0litieal, rtli1iou11 or
intellectual aroup thit mi1ht be
able to oppo!JO the rtnochet "ov~
ernment. Thero h11s bee n
systematic repre11ton of labor
unlon1, DOlltlcal partle•, u"·
iveraity groups and now l'\ tin lhr
C'at hohc Church
THF. f'llRISTIA:"J Democral1('
Party, as the musl powerflil,
most popular reformist purty in
Chile, has beco me a major
target. The Christian Oemocrala1
are antl-communi:i1t : all they
want 1:1 demoC'rfl<.'j 1n Chile
Clearly. the Junta dot'~ not
lJnf ort un ate ly. .'\men cans
have a heavy inves tment in
Chile's discrt>dited dictatorship.
We rt>ported in March, 1~72, th.at
the Central lntelligencC' Agency
had plotted to underminC' the con-
stitutional government of Marx·
ist Presidl'nt Salvador Allende.
This has ngw been confirmed
in ugly delail by the Senate In·
telliaence Committee. which re·
veal~ that ex·President Richard
Nixon personJllY ordered the
CIA campaien agaimil Allende.
THUS the United Statei helped
to overthrow democracy in Chile
and ntablish a repreuivo
dictatorship in it*3 place. The
United Nations has charged that
the junta, for example, op,rateli
·torture C'enters" 1n <'1l1lr A tJ\l
report hs ts J l centerti where · •t
allegeit pri11oners are questioned
'by mt'thodit amount1nf.! t11
torturo ...
YC't tho U.S. government rn
credibly has ('ont1nued to
embra ce the Chilean
di<'tatorhhlp neclaren the SC'nalt:
...eomm1tteo·
CIA collaborators hC'lP<'d to
preparC' ··an initial overall
economic plan which has served
as the basis for the junt~·s most
Important l'Conom le dec111ions ··
The CIA has also a!>s1sted
the )Untct · in ga1ninl! a more
positive lmai:e both al home and
abrof'~·" Two CIA collaborators
helped the junta prept1re a
"White Rook'" jui>tifying the
overthrow of Allende.
f'inally, the CIA has
establis hed a wo rkini: re·
lationshlp with the junta's secun
ty and intelligence forres But m
fairness. "the CJA made it clear
to the Chileanl' itt the outset that
no CIA :rnpport would be pro
v1ded for use in internal political
repreasion."
Power to Parents
Wh at mak~s It so difficult these
days for parents. to live in
harmony with their chil<,i? Why
do so many parents feel guil~y
and inadequate about their role
in t}le family? Helen DeRosis.
M.O., a well-known psy<'hiatri&t
who haa been couniiielin• parents
for 15 yurs, has developed an
ea1ty-to,u~e method for dealing
with such problern1 and cover~ it
in Parent Power /Child Power
<McGraw-Hill Paperb&lcks,
$3,SO),
Subtitled A New Methqd ror
P1rentln' Without Oullt.t this
book deseribesi Dr. DtKOtl•'
belief that guilt t1 tho crucial foctor whtch mu1l be dealt wlth
[THE BOOKMAN J
•
in order to estabiish good parent-
C'hild relations ~ and that guilt
tan only be diminished by un
derstanding its ca us('
Equality Does N~t Create Freedom ·
JN THF. author·, three-step
method, the emphasis is on pro-
blem prevC'ntlon as well as pro·
blem·solving, an essential and
unique approach. Dr. DeRosis
sees the parent as the primary
preventive agent in establishing
• child·s mental health. She notes
that ironi(.'all)' enough, parent-
ing. the t aak ror which most peo·
plt are the lt••t prepared. is the
m°'t tmportant tatk that most
people will face-in a llfelime.
With thl& in mind, J>r. DeRosis
•tt-mpt1 to ddUNUO parents in
th• oommon·un .. ways of
ohlldrtartn6l, and to help them to
realise the ''l>Ow@r" th'y h.-ve in
dullng with their cihlldren and to
cihannel thl1 power t" con
atrucitlve way1.
~ 1 t . .
I i
WASHI NG TON ........ Tlme
Ma,azine's Man of the year la 12
women. The ma1aline isn't Im·
plytn1 it takes 12 of them to equal
one of ua, althou1h pick1nf a
doien -one for each month -
doa brinf back the IOftll bro1d1
on the calendar• In the barrack•
and machine 1hopi.
No, 12 were chosen to alsn!fy
that "1975 was not IO much the
Year of the
Woman as the
Y •a r o f
Women"; the
choice o f
t h e ~ ~
P.•rtlcular 12
•1ymboliud
the new con·
.clou1ne11 of
w o m • n
pnerally." If
Tlm• doa know whst ''t!Wnew
CC111Ciou.lnn1 of woa.111 11, lt .-r• from that llat to bl DOWA .. _.,... __ , other and nothlnf men
thaD U.. wtah to be equal.
Hill tb• namM are nm·tvtr, I.at• Jloblntod typa, Wbiob » to •AY that th• doGn ot the
inerttocracy have ~ nun1 ope to ,_, ladin, lllld tl\at hen·
Cllortll JOU ma1 upinto any Job
I
•
with a practical hope of •ottin1
lt. Now you need bl~h no more
than the men if you chose to be a
hack con1re11ior\,al politician ,
apple·kl11ln1 the leade~hlp for
favort like T exas's Barbara
Jordan whott picture sits in the
center of the cover.
Nothinl 1reater is expected of
women than from men, and any
woman wbo expects more of
Nrlelf fall• Into the old, irn·
pr1tanlnl trap. "It is a sexist no-
tio& attJilbutlns superior virtue,,
to womri," 1ay1 the magazine,
which thee 1oes on, in nearly
prideful context, to quote JUI
Conw1y, Utt J ackie Robinson
Prtfldellt ol llnitb College, say-
hll, • .,,...... are lots of inhumane
wom•ln IMworld.''
IT W0'1LD be sexist as wen as
idiotic to lmpute s uperior virtue
to tht fem ale chromosomes, but
it would M bUnd to refuse to see
thal w..iem women have been
tralntd for many centuries to be
the rtpotltortes and lnslatent
prac:tlUontn of qualities usually
rqarded a• vlrluOW1. It mi1ht
Nrvt ua Mtter to ask how mep m\Pt be taqht the s ame virtuet
tllan to felfeitale women for
dlindo9'nt lbtm.
( VON ~?F~~~~ J
Timt i• conttnt in itl OMI)' to
see gender-related cllJUnotlOM
that are not phys iological vanish.
The cover 1tory rtadl I~• an
editorial endor11mtnt for \IS•
WOlftt1111 raovemtat. How .. .,.
It th~t thlt coa•'"li&h9. rtpt. W'ini pubUoaUoa ahould·bt over,
joyed at the triumph ot what we
I have been told is a radical
manifestation.
The wome n's ,novement of the
last 10 years ha1n't followed the
configurations of ot.her aoctal
movements. It is a movement
with many heroines and no
martyrs, a movement among its
own constituency of wide but
very flaccid 1upport.
This wasn't the cue in the 19th
and early 20th centuries. Then
the reaction by men and male·
owned llutJtution1 was flerce.
The powerful felt threatened:
this time the major lnterestt ln
aovemment and corporate llf e
made quick and h•PPY ac~m
modaUon at the policy lnel. A.<J
lnd.l~duala, many mal• have
·-·-.
srumptd, frumPtd, CNlt.td and
been uneenerout, but ittldom 01't inthe..Q~n.
THI MOIT lenaotou. opposl·
tion, by l)oth mon and wom•-n, to
the f tmlni1t 1ur1e of the lNt de·
cade seems to be,lmplanted tn
the lower·middle class. Some of
the reason is job competition. IC
there aren 't enough jobs to go
around. lower-middle class peo·
pie of both sexes pref er they go to
the man, the husband, the
breadwinner. Yes, that's male
chauvinism, but other values are
involved. They concern f amU,
and the garden of 1)r'I(~
which are cultivated inund •
rich family life.
This ls n o t wh1\ Tlmt
magazine ls about. Cnfrv~lYt
though it la. the f amllY l•n't _.
()f the inatltutions thaf organiza.
tions like Time are especially in·
terested in conaervlng. The f aml·
ly can be an impediment to the
successful admlnlstraUon of the
corporate aodety as this snippet
from the cover atory Ulu.tratea.
"For one woman Navy cnai1n
married to an Army captain, the
choice ls cle•r . If he la
tranaf erred to a landJocked base,
•he will 1tay witb the NavY In
Washinjfton. Sa11 ahe : 'I Joined
the N-vy ~fort I marrled him. Md that Is m y loyalty,"'
It 11 the loyalt1 &hat permJt1
Timo magazine to thl~ft,te ale tmplQYt• •rouncS, u may dictate. from Toltdo to lln to
Los Angeles. The modem, mass
organ ization cann•t havo
employes who put famil)', ee>rn-
muru.·ty, regional loy-.lty <>r even
work ahead of the organization.
PEOPLE who want to do good
jobs have no large place in gov-tmm"'' or blg b41iness. The uteful ,.,..,..powtr unit un•
derstandl U••t she/lte/it is Mt
paid to t\lrn f\ll fine work, b\lt to b~ part Of IA prot•H· 'Mle
' mqa11M rettm tu. one of Ute f"'°'1 Utat tiq llMlted women's
promotion up lnto the higher
ranb has been wom<-n's perfec·
tionllt approach to tbeir work.
Maybe the Yeei-of Women will
mark the end of the egalitarian
CWTen&. that began at the end or
the 18th centut')'. Is there anyone
else Jett to make equal? And now,
having done that. we may un·
derstand that making equal
doesn't alwa)"I make free.
JO.ANN DJLORENZO
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PllOT
Rohert N Wttd. Publ11~
Thomas r .. m1. £dl10f'
Barbara Kr~lbtch .
Ed1tonaJ Page Editor
The editorial page of lh.t O.liy
Pilot s eeks to inform and
1Um11l11te rHdtrf tr)''"'•"'
Oft tJll-Pl! clfVtf'lf' eOf1Mn °" I°' l.ntt, .. t b)' ~ l · cd c "' i ts •114 far10aj\is , y
prov "'I ror,un rcw tea · vl<'W• iln ti~ pretiorttlng i!I
nt•wspaper's opinions Md ideas
on current topics. The editorial
opinions or the Daily Pilot ap~ar
only 1n the editorial ('Olumn al the
top or the paae Op1n1ons t'X·
pressed bv the columrusts nnd
<'Ortoonl"ts and ltlt<'r writers art
tbrlr own und "° endol'llemtnl or
their views by the Dully Pilut
should be Inferred.
Tuesday,Jan.20,1976
,
'
Mo• f)ites Ba • ID .
The pbyilcal an4 mental abuse endured by a
)lrilclDer' 1pendm, aJ.mmt two years without trlal ln
a Kalcu Jail may be matched oa.ty by tbe anautsb . ot a mother wOITJinl about tbe fat. ol ber tm-
., JJri,lcmed daUCbter. ·
Mn. Charles E. HarrlJon ot Santa Ada told her
story recently to a Conc:resstona1 committee l~·
tna lnto the mlttreatment of Americans imprisoned
ln Mexico and the poatble complicity of American
oftldall in torturing 8CCUMd fellow Americana.
IN RU OWN WOllDS, this ts tho story Mrs.
JtanUon told Con~man Barry Goldwater Jr.'& committee: . I
M_y nam~ Mrs...(barles E. Hmison. __
I appreciate tht. opportunity to testify in behalf
ol American cltisens both here in the United States Ind in Mexico.
I pray that what I have to say will enlighten the
\lnintorm.ed and. more clearly bring_into t~ the
tenible lajustice11 that over 500 American <citizens
incarcerated 1n Mexico are attempting to live with.
My daughter, Karen Elaine Harrison bas been
imprisoned at Los Reyes Women's Prison in Mex-
ico City for more than 21 months without trial. The
Mexican court recorm clearly show that Karen had
absolutely n~ narcotics on her person or in her
It is not o simple task for o patient to
reach and maintain "lean weight'' forllfe. First the
patient must hove on honest desire to cure his
problem ... then occept professional guidance
·from trained Medical Doctors.
llndora's unique 10-week treatment
and training program will teach patients how to
reach opG-mointain their "lean weighr for life.
A safe ctnd proctlcol pion, with proper nutritional
d iet. ond contlnuql emotional support. New
audio ond sub-liminal visual aids ore used to
motivate the patient. The entire program 1s under
the strict supervision of Medical Doctors. special·
ists in Boriotric Medicine.
lindoro Oin1cs ore owned and odm1rnstered by
Medical Dootors that restrict their ptoellce lo 8onotr1C$
All Olnlc Pefsonne4 ore Hcensed by the Stole of Cahlom10.
Coll for Information
Monday thru Friday 8 AM. to 6 P. M.
Lindora~
MEDICAL CLINIC
NEWPORT BEACH
645-3740
COSTA MESA
557"'1893
Pace ProtesS1000I Mesa Verde
Bldg Professional Bldg
Son Bemordlno • E. Long Beach • Mtssion Hills
Hawthorne • Orange • Newport Beach
Garden Gfove • long leach • Posodeno
lo Habra ·Woodland Hills • Shermon oaks
tHest Covino • Fullerton • Riverside • Santo Monico
Costa Mesa • Pomona • Cerritos • Hollywood .,
. \
personal belonatn,., Jet she bu t»eeD IUb~ed to
intolerable prison conditlom. Durtnc tbe year ot Karen's incarceration 1be wu requlNd sleep
with a club ln order to protect herMlf at nl&bt from
roaming bandl of lmpriaaned Mexican lesbians.
There were riots, her face and e1• were burned
when sprayed with mace. 1belr drillkinl water wu
stored in trash cans; one bucket a day allowed for
drlnldn&, wub.ln1 and bathlJll. Jn JWle of 1974
Karen attempted to take her own life. Sbe 1Ut both
of her wrists and tbe insides 'ot both elbows with a razor blade.
ALTHOUGH OONDm ONS -have improved,
-e.¥ell now.the..y.b.ave no bot water., and.OGJy intumlt·
tent electricity. With no hot water and no way to
heat water everythinc has to be washed in cold
water, and with sanitary conditions as they are and
the man)i communicable diseases· at Los Reyes;
such u tuberculosis, hepatitis and venereal dis·
ease this is a very serious problem.
There la no ball, there is now way to fet ptoper
dental care or any eye examination or eye etuses.
around a few tlmea. Tbla gPnt is Arthur Sedlllo, · Badie) #1M4. J 1aw bis fW1 crectenUals. l took note
and made sure thal they' were Aroerican cl'eden-
Uall became J wanted to see an American face at
that time. Tbil aieot adVised .us ip· coooer•\e fully
with tbe Mexican Si!! as they wt.re u Hl1ous u could be people for rfdea ln
the country o~ th~ me the river. You '11
never see eacb other 8'A1n-U you cooperate Mr.
N-we'll pu.t )'Our wtfe ~ tbe next plane to Los
Anielea."· · ' · ~I the past 21 months my husband and I .
hm been threatened and extorted ~Y an un·
aerupuloua Mexican attorn~y artd an Arnertcan at·
-torney. Wttlne-1pent ~er.-.~ a~Ung-.t~
secure Justi~e and treedom fdr eur daughter. We
bave made six trips to MexiC9 City carrying bun·
dred.s of pounds of food. blanketS. efGthlng, med.lea·
Boy, 12,
Admits
lion, vitamln.s and allol&er~es for, ..... .-••.
The Mexltan prison sysU!ID fllrniib.es DPthln
things must be purchiiMd evep such a bare n.ece•li
ty as toilet paper.
I
IN OCTOBER OP 19'$,_ wrote to each
United Sbttes ..atoa _,,a.m, our proble.-.,,... ..
requesting auls~iOI' 1111 ,Amerkan citl1U11.1r9D
prisoned 1n J.texico. Seoaton Tunney, Ke
Schweiker, Hart, Buckley, EaCJeton, Steve •
Mathias Moss and CranMon forwarded our 1
along with their requests far farther lnfonnatlcitO
the Department of State. .*-
We u American citizens must be asaured t
therewiH be-tio-ffD~~rt
and that proper and immediate steps be takeo·to
mitigate the situation these imprisoned Americlns
face. Thank you.
'Site ., .. la • •t•te •I .. eek, lier 1.-ee .,.. ..,.ue. ....,
......___ s 1te ._. ..... we 'Problem'
......... Mr ......... ... Mr obtain the best price and the lowest lease rates I t t t• M d.' ROME (AP) -Doc· ~-~ _ ~~e-~ _ _ . tors say a 12·year-old .......---...~~ boy risks drinking Lour daughter, an American citizen, lives with ~mself to death .in fight-
day after day, month after month, yet she bas mg loneliness with what Italians ca11 the "poor
people's drug" -wine. not been fowid guilty of anything.
Alter learning of our daughter's arrest my
husband and I flew to Mexico City to see her. She
was in a state of shock, her face was swollen· and
bruised. She had trouble opening her mouth,' and
her front teeth were chi}>ped. She related to us bow
she was forced to sign a confession written in
Spanish while being subjected to physical and men-
tal maltreatment for many hours at the Mexico City
airport.
WE TELEPHONED the United States Em-
bassy and they told us to come over immediately
and not to bring the U.S. attorney who accompanied
us to Mexico. We complied and went alone. Before
we could lodge a complaint regarding Karen's
physical and mental condition we were taken up·
stairs to the office of United States DEA Agent
Arthur Sedillo. Mr. Sedillo told us be had been at the
airport. He explained that he had pointed out Karen
and her traveling companion to the Mexican
authorities. He further explained that he would get
Karen released from Mexico to appear before a
federal grand jury in the United States if she would
be willing to testify. Additionally, be told us not to
tell our U.S. attorney of his offer until he bad
checked this attorney out. Furtbe~. be advised
us to pay a Mexican attorney, Jorge Aviles, but as
little as possible.
The following day, my husband relayed to Mr.
Sedillo Karen's wish to be helpful in any way that
she could, but she didn't know what help she could
be.
We spoke to Mr. Sedilfo several times on the
telephone after returning home. Each time he
claimed to still be working for Karen's release. In
one of the latter telephone calls, Mr. Sedillo stat·
ed that Karen would have to be sentenced first in
Mexico before the United States would obtain her
release. Mr. Sedillo was transferred to another
country some time ago.
ON JUNE 3RD 1975 Karen made a sworn
statement to the State Department, witnessed and
notarized by the United States Embassy. I quote.
"Later on after we s till refused to talk, an
American agent came and he did witness Jim being
shocked and I believe be saw me being slapped
Doctors at nearby
Froain one examined
Giancarlo Viglianti, a
sad·f aced boy, when his
case came to light
through a letter be wrote
at Christmas to "Jesus
Baby" -Santa Claus to
many Italians.
Doctors said wine had ·
badly deteriorated the
boy's liver and
threatened to kill him.
being too young and
weak to stand alcohol.
Viglianti, one of nine
children in a poor family
in the mountain village
Tecchiena wrote in bis
letter:
"Dear Jesus Baby, you
can see everything, also
the way I live. Therefore
this little letter is to ask
you to forgive me for a
thing I am doing now too
often. I get drunk and re-
turn home late at night.
"It is a bad thing, I
know. But I feel very
lonely and as if I had no
parents. They do not
care for me and drinking
wine is the only thing
that helps me forget
everything.·'
Nabers Cadillac
2600 Harbor Blvd., Cosla Mesa 540-9100
QUALITY INSURANCE
at reasonable prices!
AUTO
MA"IB OY'm ZS ....... . 598.
-.UcmRJ I ••..••.... 5144.
SltllU NU.TIMI
~ ................ 5167.
OYa ..
INDUSTRIAL
STORE KEEPERS
FACTORIES
APARTMENTS
CONTRACTORS
HOME
OWNER
us.ooo ....•..... 570.
sso.ooo ... .-.... 5 165.
....... letlillg .... S.+I. -Jl ......
conr y. ... _.. pr.a ..... I) ,.,...
fwtoo mlda. .
YACHTS
SMAllBOAT
LARGE BOAT DISCOUNTs
EXTENDED CRUISING
TO MEXICAN WATBtS
COMMERCIAL BOATS
BOB PALEY MORTHo.c-546-3205
& ASSOC, INC. soutHoc-642-6500
'l'Z76
Don't e~osit unlil
you see the percent
of our interest .. .. . \~ ... ' .. .. . .
Extra percentage p:>ints are valuable
ammunitkm in yullr revolt against
inflation. Don't lose them by depos-
iting your snVings at the first ta1·get
of opportunity.
. . .....
*Ndweorn7~% 8ho0611" % on~yletdol • o
by c«npoUnelng daly.
$ rooo minimum ller.tnce. 6 ~ m/111""""
f ~'•' utgul1t0on1 Qefm.t w1lhdt3"•1 ''°"'
Ctlflift<lt.o ftecGVntl btfOf• rNifUrrt-._ tMJ1 f~l'O
•• J ""'•"'"1~ •"4<let1on "'fnlt<ett H"""O• Hold out for the highest intet'l'st
the law allows, on~ variety .of
insul'ed accounts. t.crest will b<> Ill
paid day-in to clay t, compotmded
t.laily. Whnt's mot-e ou'll receive
inte1'Pst f1~m tht> finit of th~ liionth on .
savings det>OSited by the tenth, when
• >
tlon 't squander more than 20 free
sen·icesrither: including social
security dit't'('t deposit, travelers
checks, sale deposit. boxes,• note col-
lection, • and checking accounts.••
Before you do something ha.sty,
remember what that poor fellow
Wl'Ote in his almanac a while back :
"A penny saved at Republic
Federal can be much more than a
penny earned."
held toqu•mr··;EPUBLIC Fll'L ~=~:=~~-It
A apecW biccntenn'-1 price on i.11 pllont
of Dewan •Wbffe Label· Oi8COYa' the rich
tuteof uncompomW..,quallty u )'OU eel·
... 200 ,..... ol lndependence wtth 130
)'fM'I of tradition.
lllNOEO *<;OTClf WHISKY • MI P'flOOt • CSCHEN\.EY IMPOflf$ CO . N Y. It Y.
•
M'ld '°"" tuOCl•tlon
FCIW......_lllOf ... Cow.ey
SANTA ANA 17th St. West of Newport Freeway (714) 5'1-5286
ANAHEIM 202 Anaheim Plau, 500 N. Euclid St. (714) 956-8290
LAGUNA NaGUEL30232 Crown Valley Parkway (714) 49S-0850
WESTMINITIR 13' WeatmlhstePMall/Bolaa & San Diego Fwy. (714)894-5347
..... OMce:ALTADeNA tt ... N Ultt Alie (213) 711+1291 11111 .... 11 ~ leollDIM: ALTADENA •ANAHEIM • A~OIA • 8UA9AHK
Cl.AREMONT • HACtEHOA HEIGHTS • LAGUNA NIGua, • LOS A~£1.ES
PASADENA• PICO RIVERA• SANTA ANA • WESYMIN$'ttA .. ................. __ ..,_ ........ -··--lt0::i
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $40,000 -
\°
' •
•
\
I
1
_Tbnight'~
TV Highlighu
t)je~ •, .. a :oo~'Phantom Of th• · Newon ~ ta the deraftltd
'1 muak lover In thla lla venlon ot the tier· . rwclasate wlthSuaanna Foeter.
' . CBS e 8180 -Popi. The prttmlere
tl>isode of a new comed1 Hrln feat\&rln1
lhetv Bllaondo u a Puerto Rican
.
7loO Flightl Sthidded Nftld UncenlJil&ty
·~mJt ... <UPJ) oancde il.i1Ul... AJlfD TllS_'POM Autbaittt ill Jftw York aDd WUl take ,,d and~ WHD-'•' tO Jlfn lttffY, •llfell ~:JR.; WtioJd ldll bi able
Ulhet tn I ff °'E~ .ftttbtl at nnd• the td ~t on ]ta ..,. oii _WheeW tM dcllleal'd4' meeta
ijtetd"OfsmutdJ btlleacH#llfA1t41tthb ~ J't'•atriJS~ldlettadaHI. •'"8dbtMburn at ~trouble. • BriU•h·I ~ etror't to bUtld the 100.aeat One SS'r beutna tM eolon al Brtttaa ~ap M't Wat la11a~ id d 'jean ••o to ehallen1•
will take off from Loodonoo a three-boW', U·8'lnute ~•ti• of tlse I~ b:Y tl,S. JWI . ltrriff to the clMb to 9abrelD ID tbt Nniall GUif. Anotbtt ID the United Statet wa1 tta speclfic goal. Initial pi'.od•·
1---~.___..,...i....,_ in Ne• ·varlt City \Tho holds
down three pa.rt·time Jobi to raise h18 two
youtaf boys. CRevlewM>
Uvel)' of Atr Fr ante #ID leave Pirtl cm a 1ett11· tton wu llmJted to U. --· "llbur run to'R10 t>.-1m11n> vt..o• , -ftmt•-11 ••~•sd-ddo..lnJh'U1iq_and=--ftMCt that th• real qppoett!on to eoneonte eom•
)
ltCET .a 8:00 -The Adams
Chronicles. The opening serment of a ~part series dramatlziq 150 years of
history throqh the event.I in th• llv~ ot the Adams family. CH!orge Grizzard
pla71 Jobn Adams in thia episode <Review.Ba> ~·
. CBS II 10:00 Gypsy in My Soul. ~1ey MacLaine headlines this musical
vanety special which pUts th~ spotlight
on ~e members of the chorus. Lucille
Ball is a guest star.
TV DAILY LOG
Tuesday
Evening
JANUARY 20
.. !!ltEi~ .::.. .. ,.,_,..,
.... u ....... <9CQ .. , ... . 0..., "Tiie Dwfs Won''
l.Jale .... ""'
Cl) ... ,.... l:JOI!.~ "":. ..
: Didrte ClllfllJ
• AMrlw! °""°""'' w.,111 ......
7:GO 911 (I) .....
~~Dtltn r:lX':::' Co ,...._
I LM loKy
Tiit fll f!Ja! ...... ...., .,... .... • ...._r..., 1:119 .... T-. tlill Ql(l)9fDKtllr•"'
LM--..Strle
W..Wtf s.wMI ..... .. .......,, I: ...., ....
Ir. "'-= Tiit .....
w..i ....
.... • @'Cl) (j) .... Tiilll
• Dlddy W1llialls" No ,._
\ llflt infolmtiorl MUllll ...
• It our prm tlme.
ll'f lfld Will switch rip
OllS plot to rtCOUP $15,
from a fnand.
D NEW TIME FOR * STARSKY 6 HUTCH fJSllr'llr l Hddl "lllMI" A
cop.k!IJinc Sltcncbt -petlal IS
I liltlll II I llllfwly llOase !Of U·
--IMds bslJ lld Hutdl .. I wild dim. C&i1 8ltl ....,..
Tiit .... Olla = '::' M-. QMidea AUn. Llw7ef" A 13-1 .... *-tlZln& 150,..,." IJlls.
kllJ ltnlllll *'.-ts II Ille Iha
of tow lt'*'tions .. Allerica'• Adams lamily. 61011t Crimrd
ltm. (9 (j)) (I)$ Th I u U u ··rro.. Ollt "' Ille Dl!Wss" .. an UoQIP ii 80rtally wounded by
holdvp 111en, T lf'IY recall$ tfle ,.
...... Ile shartd witl! the ~lat
••'s blind dlllgllltr. Resdleduled
from Jut week.
• Malcll c..dJ
t:JO • @m CIJ Ole D1J It A llllf "JUiie s Btsi '"'nd" llo pl1CflM Clllt111t inforlllltion millble flOlll CIS at our Pf1ll lime.
elBQelv ....
f) SHIRLEY MaclAJNE * II tutst Lucille Ball win capture the
R ht'°"' soul CJl Cl> CBID lflllr .. llllla.i{af ~ tlln •
t111s 1111ta1. cmedlt a1111 n.aoc
..,., c.leill1t!q tlle lllatncll .......................
MllUIM of people ill aU wafts of lilt. lucille Ball !_tltSts.
OQJ@QiWh• hnatlf
"8vs Statlo!I'' (R) Joa f"«ratef Mil
lllS !lands full ......... ol ,.. :··r. ...... ...... la ::::.Tusc n.-..
,,
PARENT8 HELP SON INTO OAR
Trauma of ()per1tlon "eoalled In Artlde
Sad Moment
Kennedys ~l Cried
NEW YORK (UPI ) -Sen. Edward Kennedy
and his wife had to break the news to their 12-year.
old son Teddy, that he had cancer in his leg and
would have to lose it.'
An article in Good Housekeeping sAid that on
Nov. 16, 1973 Kennedy and his wire spoke to Teddy
alone after breakfast.
"l'M AFRAID YOUR leg baa a kind of cancer
inside it,'· the elder Kennedy said.
"Cancer, dad -does ~ mean tm 'olng to
die?'• his son answered.
"Ob, oo, Teddy," both parents cried and, after
calming the boy, Kennedy told hh son, "Ted·
dy. . . they 're going to have to take off yOUr le1-"
"My le1, dad?" be answered.
"Yes Teddy. It's the only way."
Wlll!!N TEDDY AWOKE from .rte operation be
bad already been fitted with a temporl\tY
aluminum peg leg. His father and a doctor
speclalinng in physical therapy helped him stand
·up.
As tte took his first faltering steps, bis father
said, "Come on, son, JOU can do it."
"It hurts dad," Teddy said.
"I know, Teddy -Just a few more steps," hia
father anJWered .
The following March after many sesslom Ted·
dy was sldlng tbe slopes at Vall, Colo., wltb a
specially fitted ski.
• creas111g O O(Il~m110,.t ~
D Mttit: (C} CZllf) ._ llM •
feUn" <mus> '49 -~---• 1111 L~Ol'f era-The number of women ~< ":, .·~;~_~t ..... a.. ... > ;;, .: ~· alco I 11 rap .. 'ling on the number of men tdn .,,, .,,.._, ......, ,.... with dd!lkta• PrO ~cording to a new study. It ~ blam~ botb •omaa·tpaai_:ation and the traditional ·~~~~m"""' D•rs LM=._StJl.t . wife._.errole.
0 1111111 $ ....,.: (C} (Zlw) ' 111..tr ,,....., FIJioll Cftms <R> Ten 19-.tt ago, tbl,.. frustrated at having to ..,....._.,tilt.,,_... <w> ·u-lO:JCI fl>""" port sa)'I, tlMre waa d8e suppress their own ambi· I"~~ Susa11111 fost•. ll:OO 'CD(f)~ .. 't', ~ female ate•bolic for tions and desires to fit in =.... Qi@@--every tl1bt male with the desires and
.._ Tiit .... ,_ alcoholics whlle there is needs of the family and
.,... (C} (Zllf> -n......,. · MSMMs no:w one female problem husband, the report
< > '61 -MtllonJ Qvt11•. Calida r:: llait... MtcJ ...._ drinker for ••'11 three says, adding that other ..,.__ cv.!:':. male alcobobtt4 women drink to spite
f!I Toni&frt Emmy-winner : ~ Medlll ltllfllt ~mong the,.--cit· husbands who do not * "Upstairs Downstain" ())> ,,.. " cu 1, 111" ed m the reJ>Ort jltr Kelp-spend enough time with
13 all-new episodes u:JO a-. :S Liiia .,... <C> ing Hand, a 11 .. ing the family.
Mobil Oil Corporation (dn) •74 _Ka How· voluntary ag..r •eat· !.:!:!,• T1lellre: ....., ard, Ga11 L.ochood. Tim O'Comior. ing with addiotllil. b the ANOTHER point made
"TM BttstJy Hult" O@@@) m ..._., c.rm current stress • .,.uali-is that it is now easier for fl)~ Jon.ttllln Wintm cUHts. -fl 111J lJlle ._.. (I)....,..: (C) "DllNI ,.._... (td· ty between tt\•••· women to buy liquor.
1:JI B lffl /Tl PIOUCR£ -.a A Ii) '65 -Bany Sllli'm. 1 y t-• .. a.-. such as at supermarkets.
.. 11.liOu~ COIMdr -!.a-.W:: ,! 9 CIJ> Cll A1C ..,...., "I'm IT IA YI ....,..u.un Hetping Hand said its
-....., u """' ---"',..,""'" 00 "" ~·ur,.. ......... E:" are based on widowlc' In .... Yotl, W0!\1111 at Solmntn .urs. . to ent.lf What pr.vs..a. k. h 1 t
tllr11 Pll'l·lilM Jobs In orcltl to ~ :,:.• -n. CtlM ...,... were mall,, .. ~. 11111 en see ing e p a
llba his IWI JOlllll sons. Anthony a) '$3° Rock Hudson, Pipe advocattl • freer a{. adds, '~~:,.:e.:~Srts:: Wtim':::.:: ·n~~'t... r =:1n%::~:nb::: :r:to=~~ 0:e~e~~=
.... "follllt t11i UIW' hit I. · . ,.,. & ,.. eompanfec! or alone artftking Quietly at home ::..m llokb llMI ".:'~ i!°' ~ 12:11 =·=-~ {Ht) But it a 1 s o c it es during the day, who have "-.. .w 11 tilt c:1mr.-. • · domestic stress , not 50 far become ap-(J).., ftllll --.. 11 -• ~. r114 ........ .-,eelallt what It aa-is ........... ....... i • b ,. ~·u•
1...,...... MelJlr. ~.•••W 4*•> t • isolation Ind •10ne 1boek aspect of
..... c.-, 11::J1tO;.::::,d:(i-tt-lllllliwt. depression experienced the situation is tbat 2.6
Tiit ...._ r...., (I) Ill*: -n. ...... '-" by those ''trapped by percent of the women
ttt•@Cll(J)rA•r• A.,. i\1'Sl -a.. nn.,, s.t ~hlldren." Women often (alcoholics) are under
.,-,..,_1ro11111tt11e-11111e t~~. drink~becaute they an the aie of 19 and that a
fl.@,u! · ,... ._ 1;JO Cil MeN: -.. ........,. F"L-! -•:an' aied between 20 and 29," ~ ., ._Sf'..~ ,,. .,. «a~:-.,:-~ c.. '-'TITUJ .,., t be report 1 a y: .
J0rR l'UCRTI are far troui tb• mOlltf· not from .mvtronmentalists but from tbe U .s. Hm· mbtni North Atll.Dilt routta tbe tnaUdan of the ..... , .J:i l ....... ....._ .... -.....
AnlJCJ.fl'rencll .tu°'litlt'COUftted on to tttO¥er th• ::;;-.:;:r.~~:;;;:=:t:;p;.==
pl"(tj*t·• ~billion~. --fclr·• eom•te 111--aid.,."'"" airlines took.an
"" Uncertain o\I r J'Out• and far•. Brlt!Ah of· UMpro.ttetwlthoUt8"WBmmtbelp.
nclm •~they m'-tJ Mlhh reallae an• m1Won ~ ~ at eo .• feet, tntt• above nbeontc fit ot ault~t a $50 in1Jtlcm lou on lhe c!U!ftftt SST Jetlinerti tbe '90 mlillmi-..rJet tuee at 1.M mil•
P• °'fru..s. envttotimentallaa, batW.o1 tbC" Con· pet bout -Jillt ~., tWke the Oeed ot soldld, or 800
CQide16 ffiW'lderlni ~ and expected poUtttlon, m.p.b. fMtet tban a .a rffle bullet .
hffUheir way the 5'r wW tle\fer land lD the. Untted TIU! 'l'JllJMDSA al lta four enames dwint ~bn regular aimeretll rugbta. 'tlMdt ,,_. taktoff attlt landlnl ls the Concorde's most
bt at least a pattial .tctoey ldOk ~. pabllclzed enemy.
rtthlh Airwa11 and Air .France 'fant to dart British Aircraft ~ .. llld Aerospatiale, tbe
this aprtni making fout fllMbta a day from ~tiJ'Ope French builder, sat tbet.r tJ$T ts little louder than
to ffew Yott'• Xertnedf Airport -moet lh'Ofttable su~nic1 and iu f9W' dayliabt fiiahtl at JFK
of all lnternatiopal routes -and two a day to acarcel; Would be noticed amid 1,000 other nights a
Wasbin1ton'1 Dullff Altport. day. At Dulles, they say, there virtually would be no
impaet.
AFTER YEAllS ot arpment and ~~tet· wiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiii•il atiurdbht, tbe Concordf battle hit a "d this I
fnonth as TranspQrtatfon Secreur7 WIOt•m Add • bedroom &. bath Otteman Jt. beard dltM! bOtld of SS'!' sogpbtt add U
crlticism. He promlled a rullill by f'eb. 4. s4290 ~ ~ ~ ... -=:,::.:-...::: Close obseners bet Coleman wtll Jtanl a six-=;~~~
month or one-fear trial at Dtllles, a fedfrallY Gwnfd
airport, but disapprove fUfbta to JFK. tt.Yt ye. priced u•Mlw I~ A
Such a compromise might avoid retaliation ...._ht tht llll'teet t66 hl .. 1 against American airlines or aerospace exports r • ..__.._..,_tllftflf~·.;......_ .. ;\A";....eor
which the French and Brltilb aove~ments have =~~::=..,-:,:~.f11t.oti:t.:1~ blnted could tollow outriibt rejection. ,,_....,....,...,. • .._-;:::;_:
Envlranmentollall <Wld IWI seel a court In· -CIOllSTIIUGYICJll aJ. -~ Jimetlon. The Senate cOUld pus a bill alteata1 .,. _. IAlln • ,,. •
pTOYed b1 the HOUie for a alx-month ban ob COD· W\JULUllO ~NT!R 11 ~l~~p~,~~~~~~~~"~·-~---~~~~~~~D~~~~~~~~~~n~.~.n~1~~L
Marines'
Hair Rule
Upheld
WASIDNGTON (UPI)
-The Supreme COUrt
hu let stand a lrier
court toling that the
military duties of Marine
reservists justify hair
length restrictions.
The Justices turned
down witbout comment
~eals b1 several
nls, Arts., area ad·
i ve reservists who
argued they were dis-
criminated against
becauee women Mari.Del
can wear lon1er hair
than men and can wear
wi1s.
TRI: HIOR court cur-
rently baa under adftle.
ment the flrd halt J._b
case it has ever accepted
by oral argument and
written opinion. Argu-
ments have been beard
in that case, a challenge to hair length codes or
police officers, and an
opinion is expected by
spring.
In the Marine case, the
9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals ruled that the
Marine Corps bad ra-
tional reasons for requir·
~ its reservists to wear
atiort hair and not wear
wigs.
Circuit Judge Eugene
A. Wright said the
military bas •'a rtgbt to
govern its affairs
without untoward in·
tervention or the
judiciary."
THE RESERVISTS
said they spent 95 per-
cent or their time in
clVilian life and were
Marines only one
weekend a month and
two weeks during the IWDma
The Marine Corps de-
fended its hair length re-
platlons on grounds re-
servists should look like
regular Marines during
exercises and that long
hair or wigs could cause
impaired vision and
make wearing an effec:·
ttve gas mask more dif.
ftwlt.
Let an expert do your tax this year.
All you need to do to make an appointment to have your per-
sonal Federal and Californlj Tax returns prepared in private,
at no charge, Is deposit $5,000 In a Los Angeles Federal
Savings Passbook ($10.000 an e higher interest rate Invest-
ment Certifitate).
If your savings are now In a commercial bank or another in-
stitution. Los Angeles Federal Savings will make your tax
appointment now and handle all the details of transfer.
Make your appointment eaily The sooner you file, the faster
your refund can be mailed
Again an 1976, safe deposit ooxes, checking accounts (at a
cooperating statewide commercial bank), Travelers Checks
and Money Orders nead the list of over 20 of the most wanted
services offered without charge to Los Angeles Federal
Savers
EXAMPLES OF ANNUAL INTEREST RATES
ON INSUAEO SAVINGS:
5.25% 6.50% 7.75%
CfrtlflcltH of Dtlldllt Investment Certificates
ti.GOO, l "" rlett $1,000, 6-10 years yield
5.39% 6. 72% 8.06%
=.==;"=~..., 1•~· ~.,..,... farther 14.4 perce.nt are
~ ...., --.. ....... (4U) '51 -,.. ...... JlllLPl1f0 Ht.114 sug-
• " ........, •....,. ...-. • 1M1ett. J4ooh Tlµe/ te1t1 tr.at hue bands Coast Grad -.:r,.,-r .. ~!I.! 19 •4,~u-· "T ....... '!' -"'d --clo •ll :r; .-, -~ .,.._. mare to Pamela J . Davies,
.., ,.:..:::--. • --~.:::... • .. .,,,,;.. lift depr•11ton and re-daughter of James w.
LO.J A~GELES FtDtRAL
SAVINGS
Savings insured to
140,000
_,DI-...,_ ..,.15_r,........., ,.,O C'L--...,.. .. L ltn• pratur•, perhape Davies of Newport i • TU&•....,,. br talliftl o•tr the Blach, was among u,. dtlldnft for an nening IOO students traduated
at even • cl'1 dtatlrig the ftom the University fl Weekcmd. ~get Sound during ttMI 1he report ..Umates Tacoma, Wuh., school'• ~ate tJo,000 '!.~·mid-year commence• a1co119Uca ~ B~tun. ment.
UFE INSURANCE TOH&LP PAY
BURIAL EXPENSE
$500 to $5000*
EVERYONE ACCEPTED
BETWEEN AGES.46-87 •a.;a••••
. .
You've seen that renowned painting
. called 11Amertcan Gothic" wherein a severe
!'W'al man with an upright pitchfork in his
band ~tanda next to his 1enUy sad-looking
.._. __ wife. Seems_t.o _sl'ln]2Ql~~ survival through
ard farm work, doesn't 1t? But w a e owa-
painter Grant Wood' dldn*t know when be
posed his sister and her dentist friend for that
picture was that the building in the back·
ll'OWld.Aciu.ally wasJl.houseof illreput.e~
SUPERMAN
Q. "How old is Superman?"
A. Just 43. His creators, Joseph Schuater
and Jerry Siegel, both were 19 when they
dreamed him up. After five years of pounding
on doors, they finally got "Detective Comics"
to print him in 1938. That outfit trademarked
and copyrighted young Superman and Upped
Schuster and Siegel $15 a
·week to turn out tbe strip.
Eventually. those two
artists were replaced with
other cartoonists. And
Superman flourished to
make multimillionaires
out ot some ·excellent pro-
moters. Schuster and Sie-
gel went .. -their s~parate
ways, each broke. They
filed a batch of lawsuits to
try to get something out of their creation for
themselve~ but always lost. A different com-
pany called Warner Communications, Inc .•
now owns the rights to Superman. Having
given up the legal route, Schuster and Diegel
·last year simply asked that firm t-0 pay them a
little money on the grounds it was morally
right to '10 so. The firm agreed. Superman's
·creators finally henceforth each will receive a
$20,000 annuity. They're both 61 years old, and
they can use it.
Addres.s mail to L.M. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1560,
Costa Me$a , 92626.
Deaths ElsewMre
Planner
. Tri·al
Df!layed
SANTA ANA -
F\dlerton Planning Com-
ml11ioner Leroy Rose
was 1ranted a two-
month delay Monday of
his Oranae County _$uperlor. Court trial on
criminal char1ea re-
turned by the Grand
Jury.
Presidlnr Judge
Claude M. Owens set.
March 22 as Ule date
Rose, 48, will be tried on
charges of attempted
grand theft, soliciting a
bribe and a1reein1 to ac-
cept a bribe. He is free
·on his promise to appear.
Rose was indicted and
arrested after tbe Grand
Jury probed allegations
that he demanded $40,000
in bribes from Fullerton
dev1eloper William
Bruhears. in return for
favorable commission
action on a 226-unit
townhouse project pro-
posed by Brashears,
Rose. a n Anaheim
architect, was the chief
fund raiser in the 1972
campaign of Orange
County Supervisor Ralp})
Diedrich. He has pleaded
innocent to the charges.
Countian
Sentenced
In Slaying
SANTA ANA -A
woman booked on
ORANGE COUNTY
Restaurant
Files Suit
On Police
SANTA ANA -
Operators of the Pad·
dock Restaurant in Los
Alamitos sued the city
and five of its police of-
ficers Monday for $2
million and accused the
defendants of trying to
drive the Paddock out of
business.
Claiming losses of
$260,000 in the last five
years because of alleged
harrassment and in-
timidation of restaurant
employees and
customers, the Orange
County Superior Court
action further charges
that the defendants have
unlawfully attempted to
have the facility's liquor
licenae suspended.
_,
Tueec:r91, Januery 20, 1978
Transit Funds Rescued
Mave to Slash County Request Squelched
By WJLUAM SCHREIBER Of-.0.11, ...........
SANTA ANA -OranaeCounty
Transit Dhttrlct COCl'D) otflcials
mana1ed to avert a virtual total
cutoff of federal transit planning
money Monday. according to
OCTD Board Chairman Ralph
Clark .
Clark -and DJatrlct General.
Manaser Edward Loritz met for
more than •n hour in Los Angeles
with Dee Jacobs, re1ional direc-
tor of the federal Urban Mass
Transit Administration.
At iasue was an apparent de·
cision by UMT A to slash OCTD's
request for $660,000 in plannint
and study funds to only S7 ,000 tor
the coming fiscal year.
LORITZ TOLD district direc-
tors earlier Monday that UMT A wu planning to redistribute the
bulk 'of the money to amall
municipal transit lines such as
the Long Beach Transit
Authority.
Transit planners said the
Therapy Talk Set
BUENA PARK -"Therapy
Techniques" wlll be the topic of
an experimental workshop Fri·
day by the Mental Health As-
sociation of Orange County.
Reservations for the program
from 9 a .m . lo 12:30 p.m. in
Buena Park may be made by
calling the a ssociation office,
547-7559.
massive cut in UMTA fund.int
would cripple the dl1trict'1 short·
ranse plaMing effort, which i1
aimed primarily at expandfna
busservte •
some problems In our •hOrt·
1
•
range plannina, .. Clarluald. •
Clark said he 11 .. most di.lap
pointed" by UMTA'• app&NO I
decision to ienore therecommen •
dations of the Southerr : An tJMTA 1pokesman contact·
ed in the San Franelaco reatonaJ
_office aald Monday that h1I a1en·
cy 11 concerned that OCTD and
other tarse transit agenciet are
spendtna too much4>.D pa~rwork
and not enough on tanitble pro-
California Association of Govem· J ments <SCAG). · 1
SCAG'S TRANSIT commitfee
jects. · .
o( which Clark is~ member.~rn-~
ported OCTD 's bid for tht
$660,000 in UMTA planninl
money.
Clark said he and Loritz• In
formed the UMT A official Mdn
day tbat the transit dl.Jtri<.'l, in-'f
f ect. acts as a central agent J)>r
CLARK DISAGREED, saying
the UMTA official he and Loritz
talked to Monday was only con-
cerned that smaller transit agen-
cies are being ignored.
The OCTD chief said it now ap-
peart UMTA may restore S-Ome
of the money but not all of it -
possibly a total of $400,000.
"That will certainly be better
than tlOthtng though it Will cau.se
· all county cities and county aqv-
emment.
"We told him that if UMTA
preferred, we'd turn loose all~
cities individually to make thilr
own applications for plann:lllf
funds," Clark said. .J
I • • t • • f I
J / ~~~~~~rw.!l~!v~~pp~~~~~
held for Newport Beach ~esident Memorial Hospital since 1972. ~
Alfred H. Beazley who died Jan. He leaves his wile, Dorothy,
12attbeage6f67. the family home and thre
. Mr. Beazley was a member of children, Linda Beazley, E4-
a pioneer Ora~ge County citrus mond Beazley and Robett
ranching f am1ly. Most of Mr. Beazley
Beazley's business and civic in-·
terests were in the F\lllerton-The family suggesto memorial
Placentia area. contributions to Hoag Memorial
In recent years he lived in Hos pital's ·Department of
Ne~rt Beach and haa been an Nuclear Medicine.
. CARMEL VALLEY
CAP> -Dan Thornton,
64, a cattle rancher who
became a two-term gov-
ernor of Colorado, died
at his home Monday of
an ~pparent heart at-
tack.
Wednesday' for R .... i-A murder charges after,,. .:oi.µ.::u she pumped six bullets
army Lt. Col. Margaret into her male companion
M. Thornton, 70, one of while they drove in the
the original officers of Buena Park area pleaded
the Worn an 's Army guilty Monday to re-·
Corps. ~he died Friday duc ed charges of
at Letterman Army· manslaUibter.
NEW YORK CAP) -
Pianist Jan August, 71 ,
whose renditions of
"Malaguena." "Mia-
irlou" and "Babalu"
S-Old millions of records,
died Saturday.
OAKLAND <U Pl)
Barbara N. ~mstrong,
trr, believed to have been
the first woman law pr~
fessor in the United
States, died Sunday.
Mrs. Armstrong taught
law and economics at the
University of
California's Bo alt Hall at
Berkeley for 38 years. re·
tiring in 1957.
SAN FRANCISCO
(U PI ) -Funeral
services will be held
,Beotia Notl~e•
Center. Or a n g e C o u n t y
GRAND PRAIRIE,
Tex. (AP) -Mn. Robin
Bryant McMahon, 50, a
1onner raOJo, stage and
motion picture actress,
died Sunday in an Arl-
ineton, Tex., hospital. On
radio, she performed on
the First Nigbter and
Little Orphan Annie pro-
grams and was one of the
actresses who played Betty in the Jack
Armstrong series. ., __
MUNICH, West
Germany (A P > -
Son1writer Friedrich
Hollaender, 79, who
wrote "Fallinl' in Love
Again .. for Marlene
Dietrich in "The Blue
Angel," died Sunday.
Death Notlee.
Superior Court Judge
Kenneth Williams sen-
tenced Carolyn Tameria
Davis, 34, of Buena
Park, to one to 15 years
in state prison and can-
celed her scheduled trial
when she offered the re-
vised plea after ne1otia-
tions.
Mrs. Davis admitted
that she shot and killed
Richard Gene Pollock,
30, also of Buena Park,
as the 1;>air qu•rreled in Pollock scar lut Labor
Day weekend. . __..----
Talk Set
On Cancer
MULL 91".ncktllld. S.nll<H )Wre lleldet l0:30
· The next lecture of the
prof esaional education
series sponsored by the
Orange County Unit of
the American Cancer
Society will be held
tonisht at St. Joseph
Hospital, Orange.
EDITH MYERS MULL, l~V-l'Hi· AM TllHClll'f, J-f'f 20, tt7' .t 111111
d9nt of Orenge County, PHMd ewrr BrHdway (11apel wllll Dr. Oeof'99 JMuary 17, 197• In Newport &eedl, ca. ~ offlclallnt. Interment, P9clllc
Mn. -.Wll Is survl¥td by lier IOfl, Ntl(ron View Mtrnorlaf Pant, ~ 8Hdl,
of ea111oa, c a .• daUllhler, v1ro1n1a ca .... , eroactway Mol'tuarydl~
Ortis of S... Juan Capl$trano and•-MU•PMIY
QfandlilaUOflters, Mrs. Judy M9rtln of EARL JAMES MU•PHEY, btlOltoed
The aeries, starting at
7 p.m.1 ls open to all
boepttal nursing person-
nel free of charget
Ml•lon Vlelo and Carol'fTI ShMU Of ~Of Vera M. Mllf'Pfley; flltll9r of
Pasadena, Ca , tour or••I· Doris Wiiiiams, Pat Martlle, hrl orandclllldren. Mn Mull wn PASI· Murplley, Jr., Paul Murplley and
dtftl of Zoftta lnlernallonal dlKlng tlw Wlayne M!lrphe)'.i MWn l'"allClcNl4rM.
tlfN of ti. lnttrnallonal Conwnllon In Memortal Mf"Yl«s 12:JO Tllunllrt at
Nwnlda, ea. Arranoemems tl'f Tiie Th• community Cllllf(tl Conor-.
NlpCU111Soclatywlthburlalet1... tlonel, 611 He41otrlfl9 St., c:.or-c1e1 ,jijiii;;;.;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •o•••TS Mar. Ca. Fo,..u l••n Mortuary,•
MA•Y f'LO•ENCE R08EltTS, at9 C'fpnta,C..dlre<ton. '2. of Costa Mesa, C.. Date of deettl e~OMA" .-.uarv 11, 1'7•. ~rYIC" Wiii bl Mid AMEL IOLOMAH, SA., mldent OI by
lit Church ol Oitlst, 217 w. WlllDll. UD I!. 1tltl StrHt, COSta Mesa, Co. Date
ceua Mau, ca. on Wadnudev, oldMUIJanuery19,1'7'.Mr.8Gtdrnlrt Reyn
Januery 21 at 10:00 AM. Friends Mio -• rHldant of 0!"•1191 Colll'ICY since
wllfl INY call •t ... ek Famll'I' Colonlal ltlt, -rUd In ,.., •U.te .... ....,... Sheffer f'llNr .. Home In WHtmlMler, Co. RHI l•tate end o.c. M<Kenii. Alal ftom-Twetdavtot:OOPM. Esl•I•. ntllrlno In 19'4. He l1MWYlwd .._ ___ ..
ASHLlY by hit wit., lillen A. lloldf"IWI; -I
MONROE F. ASHLEY, '"lde!lt of ton, 011Y Boldman of Cotta Me.._ Co.; -----():Illa Mtsa, Co. Data OI dffth Jal'luery lour 9randclllldten end t*-,,_...,
16 1'76. Survived by hl1 wife, Helen oranoc1111c1ren. Gnveslde ""'"" wlll IW.rt; twe Mnl, Robert and Diiie, tie lleld et 10:00 AM Oft Wldl9....,,'
bl>lll of Coate Mesa; one deughler, Jalluery 21 at Pa,lllc View Mtmol'latl
l!Mrtha Alhl•'I' of sen Oleoc>; one ,.'11.Hewporl IH<ll,C:... I "l••••lf' ..t..., .. ..,
lnUwt', Lloyd C. Alhley et Tt ... ; -WYNN• , .............. ......
OUALO DAVID WYNNE,,..._,,., ~Wt. _,. ......
BAL TZ·8E,.OE,.ON
FUNERAL HOME
Ciorona del Mar 873-9480
Cotta Meu &46-2424
8ELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway
Cotta Meta
&42·9160
McCORMICK
MORTUARY
Laguna Beach
~~15
San Juan Cet>l1trano
495-17'7$
., .. ..,cerd1tt.startto111 c•.oateof•1 ~ .... '" _ _. ........... Ith Jalluery 11, tt7l. ~Untlll'lld f1¥ NS -'fe --_. wife, C..-ol Wynne; OM ton, 09Yl4 .... ~ .t ........
Wynne. Services wlll IHI llelf •I _. ••• w__.1ey 01Urd1, Senf• Ana, CL onr Ii; 0 .........
WIHIMtday al 11 :00 AM. llllMmlnt, "' Felrt1ant1 Memorial Peril. latU· Have you ever done a ~ <:Mona ... Mer MDf1uery, ra.or ror 1omeone who
di~ ITl.INO d l d n ' t e v en •• y ,.
IDNA 0. ETLING, mldefti.. . "Tbankt"T Sayln•. the
Mna, ca. 0.1• of ,..ttl ,,__.,.,,, rltbt th.int ... •word ol
1t16.~-s.-,i-11USMftll, tratltude or &ralae. 1111111., C:O.ta ~; ... '°"· owr1es1.u.-.. t • ....,. rt1111t of Minion V .. Jo, ca.; two _ ..... • • • a e r.., ••
dtu9flttr1, Oof'tlttly Ovtt of ,.,,.. Me, ttme should be a soal of ca. 9lld Joan RtllnttlKll of ...... AM; CYer)'ODe. '
-~.Harold Lant of Oiula VI• It'• very '61rtcult to ::;.-;.:=idr~ ~": ~ ;:::-: 'llMP our moutb1 abut
Wr1a1T11wMe,,1o:OOAM,1t..JMC111 Whee 1'e are tempted to
c.111o11c Cl\11rc1t wlttl Inter~ • mue a cuttlnf, unkind 0.00 SNl!Mnt Otmettr'f, Miii!!.,__ "•"' ea. a.11 1te•w•, Nmartr. It*• too euy to
.incton. make eomeone tbt butt
MIMORY J~~~~~N. ,...... ~ a Joke, to ridicule, or
SM1aA1M.Lc..oettotdMt11Jenuery to voice a eeatbing ., m.. _.., ... '¥ ..,. ........,, camment at a "temptlnf
~A...,.flfeetteMtN1 •-. moment''. Dl¥14t It. 0-C•n.,... ~ w. ~ .,., ... d ~1. ,~_...,.,.. ....... ..,.ie.•1n-" .. erever ea ,.
tt""9flt 111 GfHfl¥11te. Ttut. a.ll '~• .. ~tally lf t .,.....,..,.....y,-.1fi......... IOlllt dlltaJAt loeatlon,·
...WAil ~ ftnt call •bould be TM10oo111a N. NOWAK,,........., to •· we ean reline -.. ,...,_..., ca. Det1t "' ... "' .--.... ,_ ,,, m.. ...,..,._..., ... ..., _......,,. fll u.e eounueu 4hl.a11a
.,.. M---. ._ .. ...._ H111s. Oat mu1t be bandied
ca.; ti• lllrwftlWI. Wllllefll ...... " c•PtlJ 11\cl provide ~ .... .....,...QNM,JIM• I.A"*" ............. Mena... r.poaaibWty.
IAt'l'Y flf Mlult"-1 ll"-• L.ellre, p w·•-..... _t ........ ,.. ~ H l/C!>FFee T'lwt"Met 1:00 p ...... .,_...., w " =· c.~ ~/Z'~': motlTU~IY *"'-'~ wHH j 976 &OUlli COAST
JANIT W. waHt1 ~ of 'f'OfNAY o...... .. ,_,, ea. 0ete " ..... l..M1.NA llfACH JlllW~ tt, tttt. lltnlllff _., t-. .......a •aa C--.~Ml.wtf•"-• 114 _...1.,.-....,..,_._,~....,...tt Wf<l.EMENT'E
~ CltY • .._ v--. ..,,,._ •11 l*'"J .. .,..TH lit,_. .. 1t.• AM ,..,_.,h.f-,clftc N '-"'
w.w °""'' ,,_,,_., --e.: CAMNO ttEN.. ~ ~..-. Newtwt '*"' Cl, '"2.()l(X) flloK ... 11¥ Pac .. k View M6ttllier.,
..
HOW THE FIRST LETTER IN YOU
WILL MAKE YOU HEALTHIER AND HAPPIER
The "Y': Meet you at the "Y." It's more than just a
young man's organization. The YMCA today is
serving all members of the family, all elements of
the community, rich 'Or poor, male or female, black,
brown, red, yellow or white. And all ages. It is truly
relevent to today'; society, providing physical fitness
programs, pools and gyms, physical therapy equip-
ment, "Squ~sh courts and handball courts. And
through its Indian Guide program, lt is bringing
families closer together, making opportunities for
Dad to know Son, and boy to know father. The new
Orange Coast YMCA here in Newport Beach ls
one of the mos' modem of the Y plants. It needs
help, irt volunteets, in counsellors, in endowments.
If you would like to know more about Its exciting
new programs, or the many ways you can help, call. •
I
ORANGE COAST YMCA
Leighton "Tony" FTench, President
JtmL d Boom. Ex&cutlve Director
2300 university Drive
Newport Beacft. ~ltfomle 92660
A United Way Member Agency Telephon4r. 642·9990
e ln a series of public service advertisements sponsored by Avco Ananctal SerVlces, NeWport ~ ~
(
Gets Busba11d's Pape rs
Mrs. Robert Finch, right. gets a qualify.
mg petition for her husband's senatorial
t·a mpaign from Shirley Deaton of the elec·
t1on. div~s ion of the Orange County
Registrar of Voters. Mrs. Finch got the
papC'rs in Santa Ana Monday when her
husband, who is seeking the Republican
nomination for the U.S. Senate, became
fog-bound in Sacramento. With Mrs. Finch.
is Lois Lundberg of LaHabra , stat e
chairman of volunteers for the Finch for
United States Senate Committee.
SC Weighing
Road System
Alte rnatives
A decision by the San Clemente
City Council on whether to sup·
port a road system for low or
high density g rowth 1n south
Orange County is expected to be
made Weancsday.
The council deferred a decison
this week so that more public in-
put could be received on the
Southea s t Orange Count y
Circulation Study CSJo:OCCS >. a
rontroverswl study that outlines
four <ill_e~natiVl' road systems to
meet fut:ure urban development.
The first :tltcrn:it1ve calls for a
road sv,tem that would serve an
ultimate south county population
of 900.000 I l would be based
dround a "transportation cor·
ndor" extl.'ndmg from San Joa-
qwn H1Jls Road in Irvine to
Avery Parkway and the San
Oiego Freeway in Mission VieJo
Transportation corridor ap-
pears lo be a synonym for
"freew ay.·· altn.ough county
planners stress that such a cor-
ridor also could include rapid
transit fac1hties ... ..,
Th e sec:ond a nd third
alternatives call for high density
development that would lift the
south county population to one
milhon to I 25 million persons. It
calls for two transportation cor·
ridors one along the coast and
one along th<' ml and foothills.
The fourth alternative -the
so -called ''low ~rowt h "
alternative -envisions 700,000
persons in the south county a rea.
It do('S not include a transporta·
lion corndor. but would permit
new, arterial roadways
Mayor Anthony DlGiovanni
urged San Clem('nteans wtth opi-
nions on the study to address the
council at Wednesday's 7:30 p.m .
meeting at City HalL
Valley S hows
Antique Cars
A R1centenn1al Carniv a l
('('lehralinJ? some 76 years of im·
provement of an American con·
t ribution to mobility -the
automobile is now open in
F'ountam Valley
Six antique and classic cars
are featured a t the Withers and
Pr1mm Goodyear Tire and Rub·
bt'r Company dealership at 16142
Harbor Rlvd .. in a free show for
the pubhc. conhnumg through
Saturda~
In Mission Hills
San Juan Council
Mulls Plan Change
San Juan Capistrano city coun-
cil men ha ve ag reed to in ·
itiat(' an amendment to thl' city's
General Plan which will include
consideration of chang<':. "" the
157 acres east of the existinJ.( Mis·
sion Hills Ranch subdiv1s19n
However. Councilman Douglas
2'/ash voted and aq~ued against
the request from '.\11ss1on l ltll::;
Ranch. Inc.
The developer 1s askin~ that
the land use labels be change<l to
Valley Sees
Enrollmenl
Increases
.>
Student enrollment in the
Fountain Valley School D~ri.ct,
which has been declining the past
two years, may swing up next
fall.
Assistant Superintendent Jack
Mahnken told the school board
recently that preliminary
enrollment projections s ho w
about J 1,518 s\udents in Sep·
te mber compared with 11,386
when school opened this fall.
Enrollment. which varies by
up to 100 students throughout the
year, now is 11,344 . Mahnken
said.
He attributed the climb next
fall to 846 new housing units ex-
pected to be sold by fall -
quicker than earlier ha( been
predicted. ~
He told trustees that WfthObt.
the new homes enrollment wou1d
drop by 216 students, but the new
construction should add 389 by
Setpember.
By the middle of the next
school year, Mahnken continued,
enrollment s hould hit 11,789
then should "table" and begin to
drop again. ·
Mahnken said the enrollment
projections would be updated in
March and in May based on how
far construction has proceeded
and based upon a new city.
sponsored census.
• Peak enrollment m the Foun-
tain Valley district was 11,866 at
the end of the J 972· 73 school year.
Mahnken said. Peak enrollment
last year was 11,680 in the eighth
month of school
allow for development of 27'1 un
its on the property. Just last
month, the council changed the
plan to allow only 180 units on the
property rather than the380 units
developer~ had previously re·
quested.
"An immediate petition for
another amendmt?nt is un -
j us tified." Nash ::.aid. "How
much of our public resources are
we going to devote to this pro-
ject?"
Rut Councilman John Sweeney
favored reconsideration of plan-
ning in the area. F\arther con-
sideration of the problem of Mis·
sion Hills Ori ve. the only road in·
to the property which
neighborin~ residents say would
be uns afe if it is used to get to a
developroent, there. is needed,
he said.
j\lt.llough the density requested
by developei:::. is "excessive," he
,added,., that approved by the
council previously may be too
low.
Sweeney and Mayor James
Weathers favored including it in
tbe amendment while Nash op-
posed the m ove. Councilman
Yvon Heckscher abstained from
voting since he had come in after
the discussion.
Pete Wilson
Chamber Guest .
San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson
· will be the guest speaker at the
Wednesday installation banquet
of the Ne.wport Harbor Chamber
of Commerce.
James Parker, a Newport
Beach attorney, will be installed
as the 1976 president following
the two year term of outgoing
president William D. Lusk.
Installing officer will be Don
Mcinnis, mayor of Newport
Beach and Dan Rogers, chamber
executive direcwr will serve as
master of cerem<\nies.
Wilson bas been active in
pursuing controlled develtpmenl
and in recruiting non pollu~ng in·
dustry for his city.
The banquet will begin with a
social hour at 6 :30 p.m. and din·
ner at 7:30 p.m . Reservations
may be made for the $15 per
person dinner at the chamber of-
fice, 675-9500.
Lake Bid Western Feted
Aviation Group EIR Due
By Disney To Host Salute
Cadillac
Leasing
We lee~ al~ o~
many Cod1I~ O!> we
~II Tr-.eres o real.on
co II u!> ot::x:>ut our low
RENO, Nev. <AP) -
The U.S. Forest Service
is leaving its options
open o n Walt Disney
Product ions' proposed
Mt. Independence Lake
resort.
The American Aviation Historical Society will ~alute ~ years of progress for Western Airlines
Saturday at the South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa
Mesa.
Dustin W. Carter, A.A.H.S. president an
nounced that Ted Homan, retired Western flight
captain and a pilot when Western flew the his tory
making open cockpit Douglas M-2 biplane, will be
thdHturedspeaker.
~ror~ rOdoy
Nabers
Cddillac
2600 Horba Blvd •
~Q Mesa ~9100
The agency onJy brier-
ly mentions the proposed
resort in its draft en·
vironmental statement
on the Truckee-Little
Rivers planning unit.
The draft statement
a.ays Disney and Sierr~
Pacifi~ Power Co will
have lo prepare their
own environmental im·
pact statement under
f~eral J1w.
The American Aviation Historical Society's re·
rognltion is on the society's 20lh anniversary and
will be attended by members and guests. aviation
pionttr and airline pttSC>Mel .
A mm will be 1hown by Captain Homan
descnbing the r~storatlon of a maUplane in which
he will make a commemorative ntght In April.
Writer Robert Serl.ing, author or •"The Pretidcnt's Pla~ is Mltsln~" will also addreH the meetin1.
Guest.I and the publlc are tn~ted. Cost ii $'9.50,
whlcb snclud dinner. The meet.In& begim at 7:30
9.m.
,
$50 ltlillfon
Phone Firm's
Machines I
Not Idle I
OC Plans Set
P:ic1f1e Telephone has announced plans to spend
~ million for new construction and equipment in
Orange County durina 1976.
General manager E .W. Dey said the largestsingle
project in the proposed program will be the installa·
tion of switching equip· . .
ment in a building at4302 Mesa with 110,000, and
Ford Road in Corona dcf\Trange:--with 99,000.
Mar at a coi:;t of $J.7 Other large exchanges
million. include Fullerton
Other key projects will (83,000) and Garden
include completion of Grove (79,000).
million-dollar additions Pacific has 6,000
to company buildings in e mployes at 70 company
Fullerton (143 E . work locations in the
Amerige ), Santa Ana county.
(507 N . Rus h ) and
Anaheim (217 N .
Lemon)
GROUND I S
scheduled to be broken
during 1976 tor a new
central office in Yorba
I..inda. Dey added.
The general manager
pointed out that of the $.50
million program, nearly
half is destined for out·
side cable projects
throughout the county.
with some $18 million go-
ing "out of sight." Qr Wl·
derground.
Dey s aid that as of
Jan. l, there were
1,126,000 telephones
served by Pacific in the
rounty. an increase of
70,000over last year.
Santa Ana remains the
largest exchange. with
377 ,000 phones. Dey said
<The exch..ange also in·
eludes cus tom~rs in
Tustin, Irvine and Mis·
sion Viejo.>
ANAH E IM i s t he
s econd largest ex ·
change, with 20'1,,000
phones, followed by
Newport Beach-Costa
DEY OUTLINE D
other key projects being
undertaken to meet con-
tinuing growth, witb
1976-related costs :
-Buena Park .
Completion of a building
addition at 7701 Artesia
Blvd .. $443,000.
-Orapge: §tart of a
building add.Uion at 2.525
N. Orange-Olive Road,
$300,000.
-. San Clemente.
Building .addition at 401
Calle de Jos Molinos,
$'l35,000.
3 Banks
Drop Rate
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP > Bank of
America. the world's
largest commercial
bank, Bank of California.
and Wells Fargo Bank
announced they have
reduced their prime
lending rates by one·
quarter point from 7 per·
rent.to 63/.i percent.
FINANCE
Evaporate
Device
Costs $11
WASHINGTON <AP>
-New regulations de·
signed to cut back the
emission of evaporated
gasoline from cars and
trucks wou1d add about
$11 to the price of a vehi·
cle, the Environmental
Pro1ection A~ncy says.
The agency pro~ed
new. tougher standards
for gasoline evaporation
-a m ajor contributor to
s mog ..
"Jn most cases.'' said
the EPA, "only minor
modifications to present
evaporative control
systems -such as gas
raps that seal better, im·
proved vapor s torage
canisters a nd employ-
ment of canister purge
valves -will be needed
to meet the sta ndards ...
E vapo rati on of
gasoline releases more
hydrocarbon emissions
than is released on an
average day in the ex-
haust gas which comes
out of auto or truck
tailpipes, said the EPA.
The agency said the
auto industry will have
little trouble meeting the
new standards.
Over The Counter
NASO UstiftC)s
.MUTUAL FUNDS
-Report
WASHlNG1'0N <UPI)
-Manufacturers In·
creased their use or idle
machinery in' the rourth
quarter for a firm indlc~·
tion that the economic
recovt'Ty was ·gaining
momentunrat the end of
1975 , the Federal
Reserve aoard said.
Other economic re
ports were not. so rosy
The Commerce Depart·
ment said growth in
personal income slowed
down, and housing starts
deelined for both
December and the entire
12 months of recession
struck 1975.
T H E FEDERAL
Reserve said manufac·
turers increased their
use of machinery from
68.9 percent in the third
quarter to 70.8 percent in
the third. It was the
second straight quarter
ly r ise after seven
qtfartf.rs-of declines.
The Central Bank is-
sued its survey on the
eve of the government's
report on the Gross Na-
tional Product, which ad·
ministration officials
s aid would s how real
growth of 6.5 percent in
the final quarter.
Heal <.iNP rose more
than 1 J percent in the
third quarter after hold
ing steady in the second.
when the 197'1-75 re-
cession officially ended.
GROWTH I N personal
income was estimated at
a 7.9 percent annual rate
that barely kept pace
with the 6 to 7 percent in·
flation rate by year's
end.
20\'. ,, ••
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I s DAILY PILOT
. Tue1day's
Aft~ooo Prices 'NEW YORK STOCK .EXCHANGE . .
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Medicare CQst
Up for Elderly
BySYLVlA PORTER ...wu~ 11 •1 :141t+1111 l 'Sli J JI m~! ~ If ttota are an eld~ and/or disabled American cove-red
'" .. II -" !..;,,, 10 • n 11~-"" by M~core, you pay mor& out-of·PoCket ror your
n 1 ·~ ;:-1 health care 1n 1976 than in an,y year since the program was ~-. ff -: ~ ~ Ig 11 -;-~ WJUD. Dom .AO .. to 1=+ "' -so cents more a month, starting this July for the d<><:·
.s.a u i. ...w. u.-:~1-H•bllf i nwranu nAJt.of.JUdicarc; pftlll •• ., "~ ... -
5'.WIMlll ' .. )Ill u • "' . l . Swnttmo.J!> 6 ,,. ''"'• .-. -$12 more on yourboapital b1l s to cover an mcrease in t::ri~ ~ i• J ·T.:-~ the Medtcare hos pital deductible; t:.~J.-1.: ~ 1: 11~_.~ -A 13 percent increase in your co payments toward t he ~:."r10 : 1~ ~!.,: cost ot your hospital stays of more than 60 days and pobl-Swtllk,...~ >; ,J .:~: = hospital s tays o! snore i= 1;: • ~ 1~ i::-; t: than 21 days in skilled
SYltl'Oll 0on l ~~' + '4 nuning homes. Money's
Worth
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Wllflt Ptp J 10 il ~ .... WllllN .-a• I ,.,.._ ~
WHY TRIS NEW
pinch on you. of all
groups of citizens ?
Because of the relen·
'tless upsurge in medical care costs. Since price restraints
were lifted in May 1974 physicians' rees and hospital costs
have been spiraling upward at about twice the rate of the
overall Consumer Price Index; costs of the Medicare pro-
gram have rar outnm earlier estimates. The deductibles
and co-payme nts that Medicare beneficiaries must pay out
of their own pockets, or through premiums for privately
purchased supplementary insurance, have soared propor-
tionately. ,
When Medicare was started in July 1966, the premium
rate !or the voluntary doctor blll insurance was set at $3 a
month '7 and this, with the matching $3 to be paid out of
federal r evenues ·for each elderly person enrolled, was
figured to cover the costs of the program in the first year .
Thereafter, rates were to be reviewed each year and r aised
if necessary. By July 1974, the monthly premium rate had
more than doubled to $6.70.
THEN CAME A RESPJTE for Medicare be nefi ciaries
-but only because Congress made an error in drafting
amendments to the Social Security law intended to limit
future increases inJhe Medicare premium rate to the percen·
tage by which Social Security cash benefits bad been r aised
in a previous 12-monthperiod
The drafters messed up the description or which 12-
. month period, however, The result was the premium could
not be raised last July, even though cash benefits under
Social Security had been hiked 11 percent in 1974. And there
was the chance that the premium rate would be froie n for
another year -in the face of an additional 8 percent in-
crease in Social Security benefits in 1975.
But in the final hours before adjournment last m onth ,
Congress acted to correct the drafting error -permitting
the premium rate to rise by 50 cents next July to $7.20.
This increase will come on top or a r ise of 13 percent in
the amount of the Medicare hospital deductible. Jr you, a
Medicare beneficiary, are admitted to this hospital this
year, you will be responsible for the fi rst $104 or your
hospit al bills , up from $92 last year. Your deductible
<roughly the average cost of one day's hospitaliution) was
$Whack in 1966.
WHEN THE AMOUNT of the hospital deductible goes
up, so do the co· payments by the same percentage as the de-
ductible increase. For instance, you'll pay $26 per day for
the 61st to 90th day of hospitaliiation, up from $23.
For each of the 60 "lifetime r eserve" days you use after
you have exhausted your initi al 90 days of hospitalization.
your co-payment will be $52, up from $46. As for nursing
homes, the co-payment for the 21st to lOOth d ay of confine-
ment is now $13, an increase of $1 .50 over 1975.
So far, White House efforts to control t he costs of
Medicare -such as attempts to limit p hysician fee in-
creases -have served mainly to shift costs to the elderly
and disabled .
PRESIDENT F-ORD nevertheless will call for more
''cost sharing" when he delivers his budget for the next fis-
cal year Wednesday, will propose -as he did last year, a nd
as President Nixon did before him ~ that Medicare dedUC·
tibles and co·payment.s be raised still further for those with
short or average length ~pital stays
This propos al, the President will argue, would "save"
more than $1.3 billion a year in the Medicare budget.
And from where would these savings come? From the
pockets of the elderly and/or disabled. Make you (eel good.,
50-aere Site
New Construction
Center in Irvine
Construction Center. an env1ronmentally-protected In-
d ustrial de velopment for s uc h uses a s c ons true·
tion storage y3rds, recycling plants, veh1c~e st.orage,
landscagint contractors and other related uses !s beu:ig d~
veloped by the Ir vine Industrial Complex (llC) in lrvme, it
was announced by Brian D. Hogg, UC vice president of
sales and m a rke ting.
TRE SO -ACRE develop
ment is loc ated in the Irvine
Industrial Complex, at the in-
tersection of J a mboree and
Barranca Roads.
Construction Center will be
the first development of its
type In the Southern
California are a according to
Hogg. Sites will be offered for
sale with terms and financing
ilVailable.
Improved lots will be de-
Burroughs
Revenues
A Record
veloped and offered in incre-Burroughs Corp., a com·
ments or one-acre or more. puter mainframe producer.
many with drtve·tht ough con-has reported record earninas
figurations. Heavy landscap· and revenue for the year and Ing will screen the interior or fourth quarter or 197S .
the development from nearby . The company, employing
r o ads , ff o i g state d . more than s.soo people in
Landscaping, fencing a!"d California lb.rough production
screenlne are lnch.Sed wtth facilities in Mission Viejo,
each lot. P asadena, City or 11'dustry.
=.i8'H1 ~o: s rt ::-.: ~ Wit Pee Ind I! J1 J-.-~ ~----~----.._-,-
Wiii ..... IO ' 14'11 + " '·l (l'dal ao,. Cl'O ~ ... 1.• ,, ..... \It :..-w ·-
Westlake Villaee. Santa
Rarbara, Carlsbad Md San
Dfego plus 41 marketing of.
fices. reported net earnings
last ye ar climbed 2S J)et"CeJ'\t.
to $164,409,000 or $4.14 a share
rrom Sl31,9S2.000 or $3.38 a
a.hare in 1974 as worldWide re-
venue ltdvanced 11 percent to u,102.1os,ooo rrom
$1,532,Q&.OOO •
wnaun ft•.. 1 s1v. ... =-~II .~ j, 1.J ~: ~ =~ i'C lg ff ::-~ ~ Wlttho 1Vt 11 " It -1 WUCJO (: 1.;JO1J V U\lo + ~ V."9ftb Ut I 2 llV.-~ Wlllhtwt .Oje> IS 7 ~ • "' ~.IO>O 744 .... l>li• ~ =~· 1S U~~ I '·.'°.. 120 '1~ • I WoOclt 25 ~! 6 • \\ 40 II IS IM• Ye 'Modi ,, 14\o't-\\ ~.,, r10 tilt.•"' -.r1"1ut • n• u--.~ a 16 !M-1"' Wll9I llfUOJ t> ~ .. I.I\
if 1110 S7 ·~ ...,.. ~,.,, 2t " '1S ~+. ~vt.• 1 "\.'>•1 90 41 tl~ W\'IW ~ • t \;, "ca .. • »ll'J • ~ Yt-
• 404 I +-.... ic.N1t Qr 114 ltlO • + " -.r n tit 2v.-"' >are •~n 101 """• "' t 2'1 11 • ... y._, \~fl ts ~-....
ell .a 10 11 S .... • \t Yll[llllotOr ... 6 j ~ ,,. .. '° s 1>49 u -... ~··'° 14"-" .OM I SJ SI\ ••• ... ,1 20 -\ti 0-1.4" U II ,.___ It .• ll 11 .. -1 .. =:arm, i; 2t .:: ::: ~Jr lit ~· .. wt~•11u:w. • 1100 tt. • •.. net.» 11 'It 1* ...
Rental and ltt'fice revenua
In t97S WU up 11 pettent rrom
lht' pnwioos year whit out-
r1iht •ale of aystema and pro.
duct.a •bowed a e percet
lain.
r • •. • • • • O •
AJ4 DAILY PILOT Tuesday. January~. 1978
,.
GENTI..EMAN'S AGR.EEMLNT T HI: DARBARJAN
ANO THE GEISHA
TJlE FLlM·FLAM MAN LAURA THE THREE FACES OF EVE
JANF.FYRE PLANl~T OF T HE APES THE AGONY AND THE ECSTASY THEGRAPESOFWRATI-1
H USTLER rt U: LEFT H AND OF GOD OUR MAN FLINT HOW TO MARRY
A MILLIONAIRE
BUS· STOP
.Now on ~ur DC-10's to Chicago, Deiwer and Houston,
see specially condensed movies at no extra cost.
Starting Fe bruary 2nd o n our wid e D C-10 sc reen we're
sh o\ving D o ubk Fea ture Film s in every cabin. The film s fe a-
tured above arc just so n1c o f ma ny.
Al o ng \Vi th o ur speciall y condensed fea tures we're also
hi ghli ghting the world o f spo rts, nl'WS and hun1 an interest of
cb c 30's, 40's and SO 's with classic newsreels. And w e're sho wing
cartoons that will kee p you laug h ing.
. Newsreels, cartoons and Double Feature Films, you'll find
they add up to the finest entertainment package in the air today.
To reserve yourself a se at for the only Double Fea-
ture Films in the air and our cxcJ usivc Coach Pub on most
domes tic DC-10's (excluding Hawaii through service), ca ll your
travel agent, our partner in getting things done, -0r Continental
Airlines at the numbers listed bclo\v.
/ TO CHICAGO: 1H10 AM·. 11 111 A~:f: I lollywooJ /Burbank), 11:40 AM.:f:. 12:00 NOONt, 12:20 PM (Ontario). 3:00 PMt. 6:00 PMt. 11:30 PMt, 12:45 AM•:f:.
TO DENVER: H:30 AM•. 9:15 AM:I:, 10:15 AM (O ntario), 11 :40 AM•, 2:00 PM, 5:05 PM·, 12:45 AM•.
TO HOUSTON: 6:25 AM:j:, 7.00 AM:j:, '>:30 AMt. 12:20 PM:j:, 12:25 PM:j:. 2:15 PMt. 3:51 PM:j:, 7:00 PMt. 7:45 PM;j:, 12:05 AM:f:, 1:00 AMt.
•DC· JO w11houc Pub tnC-10 wich Pub (All fl ights arc non-stop unless ind1ca tcJ with :f: for J1rccd
We really move our tail fu~ you.
CONTINENTAL AIRLINE
The Proud Bird with the Golden Tail.
Los Angckl -772-6000; Beverl y Halls and Sao F~nando Vallcy-986-1000: Burbank. Glendale and Pau<kna-246-7181 ; Long Dcach -537-4400; Onrario and Pomona-983-366-4; Onngc C0unry-.5J7·ll14:
Rivmidc and San Demardino Toll Frc~ at (800) 222-21\10: S:in Gabriel Valley-579-4210; Sanu Monica and South Bay-646-2230. , . . ..
,
(
f '
•
l •
Where Does
~P-a-Ff
Into Wh.at?
By.JOOLSON oe-.,.o.i1y ...... ....,
At long laet. Your gizmo from
Arabia bas come in the mail and
you're eager to put it together
and use it. But alas , the instruc-
tions ar e all in Arabic, and you speak English.
You're a businessman who
want s to crack the
whatchimacalllt market in Peru1 but you don't.speak Qutthua ana
can't write a proposal.
No reason to despair, though. A
quick a call to the UCI language
lab will provide translators in
both Arabic and Quechua, a
Peruvian Indian language, or 21
more languages.
Now in its fourth year, the
translator service grew out of
numerous requests for help with
different kinds of language pro-
blems.
It is strictly a referral service,
according to Jam es Davis, direc-
tor of the laneuage lab. "We try
to keep the system simple."
Names of translators are filed
in a three -ring binder ,
alphabetically by language .
Whet a request is received, three
namQ are given so there will be
a choice of translators. ·
The fees are left to the
translator and customer, accord-
ing to Davis, and l)O follow-up re-~rds are ke~ about what the go-mg rates are.
QUESTIONNAIRES
The book ls updated each
January by Wion Stegmeir, the
lab's secretary, who created the
system. She sends out question-
naires to every department on
the campus then files informa-
tion sheets for those who wish to
participate.•
In addition to the ~ual Spanish
and German, the languages cur-
rently available are Arabic,
Armenian, Chinese (Mandarin
and Taiwan es e ),
Czechoslovakian, Dutch, French,
Hebrew, Hindi, Italian, Japanese
and Korean.
Also, Latvian, Persian: Polish,
Portuguese , Rumanian ,
Quechua, Russian and Swedish.
In the past. the book has in·
eluded Afrikaans, Swahili,
Gaelic, Egyptian Hieroglyphics,
Icelandic and Tagalog.
Mrs. Stegmeir also has had
calls for trans lators of
Elizabethan English, and so-
meone even wanted a person who
could speak Esperanto, the "un·
iversal language.''
Calls for translators come
from businesses , police, doctors
in hospital emergency rooms and
university professors, Mrs.
Stegmeir said.
PHYSICS PROJECT
One local firm needed someone
to type a German manuscript,
for example, and another had to
have a complex project i n
physics translated.
When these kinds of calls come
in, Mrs. Stegmeir tries to match
the work with the translator's
capabilities .
"We try to find out how
technical the job is," she said.
"Sometimes people will want a
native s peaker."
One or the more unusual jobs
was assigned to Kaori Wilson, a
na\ive of Japa n who taught.
Japanese for three years at UCL
She was asked last fall to
translate the Lion Country
Sa!ari 's .taped guided tour into
Japanese, then have a recording
made.
Ms. Wilson had to hire one of
her students to make the tape,
however, since Lion Country
wanted a male voice. "That
wasn't fair-the woman's lib
thing;" she laughed.
Her preference is to translate
in the humanities, since she is not
well-versed in science and math.
Bertha Marston, a native of
Switzerland can work in either
German, French or Hebrew, re-
calls one especially interesting
and difficult assignment.
She was hired to translate legal
documents having to do with the
construction of a nuclear plant in Europe.
Most of her work is for busi-
nesses, she said, and few people
bring letters or other kinds or
personal things:
Mrs. Marston charges $6 per
hour, but admitted that she
sometimes drops the price "for
good conscience.''
Though there is little contact
with the translators, other than
telephone conversations, and lit-
tle opportunity to hear the
languages being spoken, Mrs.
Stegmeir enjoys her job of
coordinator.
She studied Spanish in college,
but does not speak a language
fluently herself, and is reluctant
to accept any of the credit for the
referral service. ·
"It started because we would
get the telephone calls," she ex·
plained.
Anyone wishing the services of
a translator, or to sign up as a re-
source, may call the language
labat833-6344. --
L
Chances
are Geoff
Noonan of
Newport
-Beach is
glad he
found Garo -
.Nishimura
at the UC/
language
laboratory
to help
translate
·directions
for that
. imported
fuel
injector.
BEA ANDERSON, E~itor
Tuesday, January 20, 1976 81
\Okay If Heads Turn--For Good Looks
By ALLISON l)EERR
ot111eo.11rf't1.t...,
The reason many retarded peo-
ple are not accepted in the com-
munity is that they LOOK re-
tarded.
· Dr. Robert Shushan believes
they don't have to.
Executive director of the Los
Angeles Exceptional Children's
Foundation, Shusban described
his project, the result of his doc-
toral dissertation, to staff at
Fairview State Hospital.
I )
J
The premise is simple. With a
little time and effort the retarded
person can look as normal as the
next person.
Too often, dress, facial ex·
pression and hairstyle tab them
as "different." The key, Shusban
said, is to do for the retarded
person what the "normal" person
does (or himself: take advantage
of dress and cosmetic techniques
to minlJllize deficits.
His slides illustrated his point
superbly.
'People get
a clue from . appearance
and then
look for
other clues
to confirm
their first
thought that
there is
something
wrong,' says
Dr. Robert
Shush an.
..
Why s hould a 35-year-old
woman wear a child's hairstyle,
such as pigtails? Who wouldn't
notice someone with a utilitarian
haircut or a crewcut?
How many "normal" men over
16 wear black, high-top tennis
shoes? \
Shush an 's point is that clothes
for the retarded should Cit well ,
be color-coordinated, age-
appropriate and be suitable for
the place worn.
A key point brought out by bis
slides was the drastic improve-
ment that came with a change in
expression.
He suggests that drama stu-
dents be brought in to work on
facial expressions. l"The re-
tarded simply do nae h~ve the
range that others have for a
variety of reasons .
"But all of those in my study
are enthusiastic about practicing
with a mirror when they see bow
good they can look."
Using makeup, wigs and
eyeglasses, Shushan made some
remarkable transformations. He
did not, be emphasized, choose
simple problems to work with.
STUDY PROMPTED
His study was prompted by
comments made by his children.
With nothing other than ap-
pearance to eo on, each had
asked U certain people seen ln
public places were retarded.
"They weren't psycbologis~
They were judging on looks
~one. That started me thlnk-i.Qi .••
Jf we want~ youngsters
accepted in i ntegrated
classrooms and youth and adult.a
accepted ln the communit,J, tbe7
must look ~'normal."
ProfeQlonalf wbo work dally
with the retarded ~ aeceDt1na
of "dlff erenc:es" and look ln~
atea~1 at the penon'1 in.nor
qualt~et, he said.
"But in the community, people
get a clue from appearance and
then look for other clues to con-
fll'tD their first thought that there
is something wrong."
To test the results or his
transformations, he compiled
two photo albums, containing
pictures of "normal" people,
normal-appe aring retarded
persons and those who looked re-
tarded. '
One album contained ''before"
pictures and one "after " pic-
tures. He found 70 percent of the
non· Downs Syndrome subjects
passed for normal in the "after"
photos, and 50 percent of the
Downs s ubjects appeared
normal to observers. .
a>sMETIC CHANGES
Just as a full handlebar
mustache can bide a bairlip or a
bushy beard a "multitude of
ch.in.st a modem hairstyle, ap-
propnate clothJng and attention
to groomin• can aid the retarded
person in community accep-
tability, be said.
Another startling graphic
showed improvement through
posture and body image.
One young woman was
transformed, in image, from a
giggly 12-year-old strl to the at·
tractive woman of 28 she really
wu, Just by a c:hanae of posture.
A wi• and a pair of sunglasses,
added to a hl•h·necked shirt
c:hanaed a youne man from so-
meone who looked different
enough to tum beads, to one who
would tum beads because or bis Cood loolts.
.. We have to look f« tbe poten-
tial In each penon. lmtitutionaJ
halr1tylea and clothes binder
mon than anythinf. Six montl\S
,.1pent ln transl ormlna a person
thia way la well worth the Ume."
'We have to look for the
potential in every person.
Six months spent in transforming
a person this way is well
worth the time. '
On&On&On
A chance to relive the tiring Thirties' craze, the dance
marathon, is set for Saturday. Jan. 31, from 9 a.m. to 9 p. m.
in Lincoln Mlddle$chool's auditorium. Corona del Mar.
The event, open to those ages 12to18 only, is sponSOl'ed by
the Newport Beach Bicentennial Commit~~ and will fund a
campground for youngsten at Fairview State Hospital.
At $6 per couple, including insurance, students will dance
for 12 hours with a five-minute rest period at the end of each
hour of dancing.
Tbirty·minute lunch and dinner breaks will allow Ume to
rest weary feet. A stren\IOQS elimination dance la set for
each hour and the last ball·hou.r will really test dancers' en-
durance.
Judging will be on showmanship and sportsmanship and .
first orize is SSO cash. Particioants must bave written
parental permission before the contest begins.
IJve mu.sic will be provided mornini and evenini and re-
cords will be played dwiq the afternoon. An area will be
set aside for social dancers.
Buddy Schwimmer. CalUorala state rock dandq cbam·
pion will teach JltterW,, Olarleston and tut"tey tNt at 1
p.m . and modem rock dances such u tho Hustle ucl the.
Bump at 1:30 p.m.
Stµdent.s may obtain entry appllcattoaaattl&elrscbool.a.·
'
r ,.
I
r
..
DAILY PILOT • Tuesday. January 20 1978 ..
LesSon · :, Learned Early ~
/·/· .... ·-~
•
( DEAR ANN LANDERS: t'm • 3'-year-.old
mother of four children. The letter slped "You
Let Us Down tn Riverside" hit close to home. I
feel the need to say somethlnJ.
I, too. was raised ln a family wh re the pis
were watched like hawks. We dld all tbe
housework anti had to honor a curfew. But the
boys got ~way with murder. They never bad to
pick up arter themstives (we girls did to. They
cam e and went as they pleased. I didn't un·
derstand it then and I don't understand lt now.
•
1111 advice la to llaq ha ti.ere and ktt1p quiet.
(Nobody'• U1tentas.> GO to a counselor yourself
ancl '"' IOme •roa•dtal oa bow to cope w ltb Uie !ftOiltloa. At lea1& you'll llave1omeone to talk lo.
A MOST EXOTING TRIP ... TO SELECT
FURNISHINGS FOR YOUR HOME OR OFFta
Our designers arrange ll•neratY. M(X)(ting you thru
Factory & Whalesale Showrooms in LA a teadlng
design centers. Purchasing arranged, or shOP only.
""for~~ ... ~· .... su.
'-•d• I 'a .,..&, u l·JOOJ
DISIGM PA OU, Cwwll .. a
D~IGN FRCTO~~
Atf.. .............. cUltclri""'alwfc-Axtw.t
J.ntlhn-Aow & w•
..
b
Today my brothers are in their 30s. and they
still behave like t eenagers. No sense of
respon1ibility -no concern for others. Natunlly
they are unhaiwy and their lives are messed up.
My sis1ers an.di l..haYe .£OOd rn_~_,__w_~ are
raising our children as equals. Boys and girls
alike share the work, honor curfews, do dishes,
and hoµsehold c hores. They know .what
responsibility is. To rear male children as if they
were privileged c haracters is a.dirty trick. They
pay for it later. -PORTLAND
DEAR ANN LANDERS: lt 's easy to fall In
love, but how· do you fall Otrr ot love? I'm 14 years old, 10 pf ease don't teU me I'm too young to
know what.. rove .la. I am absolutely nuts about
thil cuy. I drearn about Jimmy night and day. No matter what I'm dolns, tboulhts of him are at
the back of my mind. I would rather have
eomeUlinf k-afic.happen tA> a member~
f amlly than to him. I know I could Ii ve without
them but I couldn't aoonlivinl without J imm y. --------------------
MR. AND MRS. MUC,KENTHALER .
Golden Year
Celebrated
Early Oranj!e County settlers Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Albert Muckenthaler Sr. of Fullerton
celebratl'd their golden wedding anniversary
during a brunch in Los Coyotes Country Club,
Ruena Park
The festivities were hosted by their six sons
and thr ee daughter:;. and attended by lhe
couple's 33 grandchildren.
Muckenthaler was a busines$man in
Ana heim for manv years :rnd maintained
severaJ citrus ranches throughout the county
Both are {!raduates of ,\nahe1m High School
He was active in the K.m{!hts of Columbus and
played on sev<.•ral local baseball teams.
DEAR PORT: Parents who love their
c hildren prove lt by. exercl1lng dladpllne.
Chlldren want firm guidelines. It makes them
feel secure. Males need them as mucb as
females. Thanks for the llvtng testimony.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please, PLEASE,
print this in the paper. Situation: One messed·UP
19-year -old daughter -mouths off to her mother
constantly. father upholds the monster. At 16,
daughter s lept outside in tent against mother's
wishes -with father's blessing. Boyfriend
stopped by one night and father caught them in
the act
Father and daughter presently acting like
newlyweds. Mother is treated as though she had
lost her mental faculties. Whenever mother ex·
presses an opinion on this kinky relationship she.
is tolrl to·' move elsewhere."
Any suggestion on how to straighten this mess
out? TRYINGTOBEOBJECTIVE
DEAR TRYING: The biggest loser ln this
troika will be your 19-year-old daughter. She ls
the victim of a loony father. Your family could
certainly use some cou.nseling, but from your
description, two out of three wouldn't go.
Varied
The problem is be likes me only as a friend.
It's Ju.st awful being ln love with someone who
iln't ln Jove with you. I'd give anything to change
thlnp, but I can't. You'll probably say this is just
puppy love and it will pass, but you are wrong. I
will bold this letter for eight months before m ail·
inglt. -IN LOVE FOREVER
DEAR ANN: Here I am -eight months
later and more in love with Jimmy than ever. I
already have two notebooks filled with my
thou1t\ta about him. I 'm 1S now and he still treats
me like a "pal." Please help me. -STILL I N
THE CLOUDS
DEAR STILL: I wouldn't call this puppy
love. I'd eall lt aa obsession. Talk to your
IUldance eounselor at school before you wig out
completely. You need more help than I can give
yeu,boney.
Gemini
announces
Our 1 ~ Annual
Be Fronk
fabric. 2.0Z to 50't. off WEDNESDAY, Feb . 18): Exp a nd
JANUARY 21 horizons. Keep mind
ByS\'DNEYOMARR open to fresh concepts. thru J cJnua rv
ARIES (March 21 · PISCES (Feb. 19 -· .1
Aprll 19): You can reach March 20): Highligh t Rlrkvew Center
undentanding with re-versatility ; realize you 5317 " t Or ve. lativ-by stat1'ng case vnive~• Lll 1 .,., are more attractive than -r.,, C 1 f Cl '"'arly, h onestly. .l-' vine, 4 ' · Coast ·Agendas ., might be imagined. ~5.z.-3041
TAURUS (April 20 • ---------------------------May 20) : tr you com·
ASSISTA:'IICE LEAGUE : The Laguna Beach
group is offering its building to the Early In-
tervention Program for six weekly meetings
beginning Wednesday, Jan. 28. from 9 a.m. to
noon.
The program. which ac;sists mentally, han-
dicappt>d children, is funded by the non-profit
foundation.
YOUTH EXCHANGE SERVICE: Host
families are needed for exchange students who
are com ing to the South Coast for the remainder
of the school year.
For information write the Youth Exchange
Service, Box 4020, San Clemente, 92672 or call
·192·7907.
JUSJOR WOMEN'S CLUB: A Monte Carlo
night to benefit the newly formed Girls Club of
Fountain Valley-Huntington Beach will be from 8
p m. to I a.m. Saturday, Jan. 24, in the Fountain
Valley Community Center.
MOVEMENT EDUCATION: The Orange
Coast YMCA will hold body awareness classes
beginning Monday, J an. 26 . The five-week.
session will meet from 9:30-10: 15 a.m. on Mon·
dav~ and Wednesdays, or 9:30-10:15 a .m. on
Ttiesdays and Thursdays for children 21h-5.
HADA SAH LUNCHEON: Mrs. Leo R.
prehend needs of others,
your own requirements
will be fulfilled.
. GEMiNI (May 21 •·
June 20>: Direct action is
favored . Applies to
personal and pro·
fessional areas.
-CANCER (June 21 ·
July 22): Highlig ht
specific plans, details -
be frank, honest in ap-
praisal of concepts -
and proper1Y.
For A Care<>r ••• NOT JUST A JOB
BE A. "WOMAN IN WHITE"
8'.cnm~ a .\frdirrrl ur /'1'11111/ .IJ11llnn t in 4 nr i mnntlu.
DAY & EYE.
Cl.ASSES
STAIT
FEB. 9
FEB. 16
~~
NEW ClASSfS STARTING MONTHl Y. PlAC£.
MFNT ASSISTANCE. MfDICAl ASSISTING
PROGRAM APPROVED IY AMA/AAMA ACCR£.
DITED MEMBER NAnS. VETERANS IENfflTS
AVAllAIU.
P AYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE
623 W. 17th, SANTA ANA 541·4461
........
RIVIERA CLt:B: A tea hononng new mem·
bers w11J be m the horn(' of Mrs. Gilbert Hodges.
Corona de! '.\'tar from 2-4 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 22.
Rurson of Memphis. the national mother-of-the·
~ear. will speak on Youth Aliyah at the Newport
Reach chapter's luncheon at 11 a.m. Monday,
Jan. 26
The meeting will be at the Versailles
Clubhouse, :'<Jewport Beach.
LEO (July 23 • Aug.
22): Friend could be ag·
gressive in pressing for a
decbion. ~===:::=::=::==::=::=::=::::=::==::=::=::=::=:::::::==::::==::::=::::=::~ VDlOO (Aug. 23 ·Sept.
22): Empba s~s on
values. payments, col-
lections, ability to pro-
tect assets.
ART AUCTION: Art works will be featured
at an auction Saturday, Jan. 24, to raise Cunds for
the Edison High School band and drill team
which have been mv1led to perform at the Bicen-
tennial celebration m Hawaii in April.
The auction will be m the Costa Mesa Coun-
try Club, beginning at s· 30.
ATTITUDE WORKSHOP: Psychosynthesis:
A Way of Growth and Simpli fying L ife, a
workshop offered by the Cal State Fullerton Qf.
fice of Continuing Education will be from 9 a .m.
to4:30 pm. Saturday, Jan 24 , in the VIP room of
Commons 11 on campus.
Information 1s available by railing the office
at 870·2611. Advance registration 1s required.
Betrothed
Mr. and Mrs Sheldon
P essin of Laguna Niguel
have announced the
engage m ent of their
daughter, Nancy Lynn
Pessin and Dr. Markley
Stevens Sutton of Napa.
Miss Pessin attended
P asadena High School ,
and received he r BA and
teaching credential at
the U nive r s it y o f
Califor nia, Rivers ide
where she graduated Phi
.Reta Kappa.
Her fiance. son of the
William K. Suttons.
graduated from hi gh
school in Sunny mead, re-
ceived his BA at UCLA
and his .MA and PhD at
UCR . Nancy Pessin The betrothed arC'
planning a Valcnllm"-; ~apa where Dr. Sutton 1s
Day wedding in LaJ?una a practicing psychologist
Beach and will live m at the state hospital.
.
SUS S HINE NURSERY SCHOOL: Dr.
Sydney Adler. a prominent neurological
pediatncian noted for his work with hyperactive
children. will speak at the school at 7 p.m . Tues-
day, Jan. 27.
SCRIPPS COLLEGE ALUMNAE: The
Orange Coast chapter is holding a seminar pro-
gram called Bicentennial Perspectives begin-
ning at 7:30 p.m . Wednesday, J an. 28 in the home
of Mrs. Littie Hicks, Laguna Beach. A slide lee·
ture. Centennial Celebrations 1876and'1976, will
be shown.
Other lectures, including readings from
American authors, will be held at the Sequoia
Wine Cellars. Newport Beach on Thursdays,
Feb. 5, 12, a nd 26.
Series registration is $16. Individual lectures
are $1 . For information call Shirley Birtcher,
831-9128 or Ahx Perkin.~. fl.4~8715.
UBRA {Sept. 23 • Oct.
22): Define meanings -.
refine techniques. Take
initiative. -
. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-
Nov. 21): Power play
could be in offing -get
facts, figures organized.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov ..
22-Dec. 21): Finish what
you start -leave no
loose ends. You're due
for more recognition.
CAPRIC6RN (Dec. 22·
Jan. 19): What was
moribund comes to life.
There is a general re-
vi val of spirit.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20
Tennis Club
Membership
$15.00 a MOnth
Everything Goes
at
Anything Goes
Limited Memberships available for a one time
Registration Fee of $15.00. Located at the
18 m111ton dollar South Coast Plaza Hotel.
Call 540.2500, Ext. 1300
South Coast Plaza
Hotel Tennis Club
-,..........
aaort,
CndM•ear
ASporuwear
•
(
Starts Tuesday, January 20, 197 6
40%-60% OFF
320 Marine Ave.
Balboa Island
87>7860
272 N. Canyon Or.
PlfmSonngs
326-8129
r ,
at the South Coast Plaza Hotel
• .,
I
Th~ Original Electric Bed for h Horne ............
AN EXCEPTIONAL BEO DESIGNED
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NOW SEVEN SLEEPER LOUNGE STORES
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. ALSO
IMCIMO •LO ... llACN • PASANM.A • PAl.M DHllT •LA JOMA• LA ....
'
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I
IOOMER by WM. F. Brown and Mel CaslOll
~
'1Ck1~1:!1 f
•JC R1r,m 1 'Akl~i~l
'!k~t
Yf.S. ~IZIC. ANO AL~£AOY
!'M 50RRY L OID.
FUNKY WIMKERBEAN
NANCY
1 THINK
I'LL GO TO
·-THE MOVIES
"THE.SE BIRD FEEDERS ARE
REALLY NICE ....
HM···THERE'S A
VERY CUTE BOY
SITTING TWO ROWS
BEHIND ME
PLEASE.
REMOVE .
YOUR HAT
•
i
1.1 ~·l ··1
PEANUTS
TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZ~E
ACROSS
1 Packaging
S Container
10 Yeam
14 Russian rivet
15 Gymkhana
'47 Gonsume
49 Earth
scructure
Vesterdey's Pullie Solved:
study: Abbr. ~+.;,+.;-~ ~~+:,+;+.;+:~
50 Bad: Preli•
51 Beginning
53 fat: Fr.
55 Pay dirt
by Tom K. Ryan
by Tom Batiuk
Bui I f\JEVER KNOW IF I
SHOUL..D !..EAVE A 11P OR
NOT/
by Dale Hale
by &nie Bushmiller
,.,,.,r-111.,,,. ........ ..
contestant
16 Transaction
17 Somework
absences:
2words
56 Passageways
61 Motorur: A.:+:.~~ JUDGE PARKER
19 Can. Prov.
20 Ciu:ulated
21 N.Y.Gian1
great
12 Singer ····
Caml)ben
23 Artificial
watercourse
25 ·-Grande:
Colorado
rivef
26 Obi
JO Chinese
pagoda
31 HumaR
beings
34 Colorado
palt
36 Kind of lool(
J8 Chinese
dynasty
39 Actually:
• Swords
,.
17
42 Sp0rtscaster
·-Allen
'43 lCHd in
feudal law
'4 Gift bearer
'45 8oy'.s name
2 J •
lnfCHmal
62 Cherry
cordial
64 Place 10 tie
up ships
65 "Therebv
hangs •.... •• 10 Slowly 37 Zones
66 Les Etats Music 40 Can
.. .; The 11 Transparent 41 Tedious
U.S.A. material work
67 Football 12 Ammositv 46 Auto playen~ 13 Fen/01 accessories
68 Actress 18 Showed the 48 Pesters
Gwyn, et al way 51 Harangue
69 Commotion 24 Take a small 52 Muscular
DOWN bite spum
1 Tooth edge 25 Shoals 53 Open the
2 Cantate solo 26 Sutures mouth wide
3 Plant 27 8•1ance 54 Wreclt
pouche$ sheet item 55 Arabian Sea
4 e .P.0.E. 28 Oeadloelt.ed gUlf
members 29 G1rment 57 Close s ...... card edge 58 Floor
6 Estuary 31 Affirmative covering.
7 JudiJe . .... .•• vote Informal
•.•..• ;Army 32 Milk· 59 Geraint's
vrP Prefra wife
8 Comb 33 lnne1;Anat. • 60 Passable
projections 35 Merchandis-63 Any
9 Formerly tng events whatever
MISS PEACH
. DOOLEY'S WORLD
0 0 l'
DR. SMOCK
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
CLASS
DISMISSED ...
HOL.D fT,
ANIMAL CRACKERS
P~ UTTLE FELLOW .. THE VAPOl{5
AAE P~08A8L '1'
CONTA610U5
by Harold Le Doux
by Mell
Tuesday. Januarr 20. 1976 DAIL V PILOT 'fi
by Rodger Bradfield
by Gus Arriola
A fAGNJF IC,E:AJT
T!t.DPHY -' HUNTEl<S
WIT# A
7001JI FCJf<..
HOOT, srew.
by Ferd Johnson
'{ou BETTER STOP
l<EEPIN' Mg ,AFTEI< SCHOOL.,
Mils. Ul.E~Y, OR PEOPL.E
Wlt.l. ST.ART To TALK . ~ ,..--\re 0~\~)l'f ~:....;.__---,~ 9
by Rodger Bollen
Wµt.) DO I:
ALWA.Ys<SEr lfiE~StCKIE5" (
"The lhing I hate about appliances " no mailer when you bu~·
them. a week later out come 1hc 1mprovec.I one~.·•
DENNIS THE MENACE
••
1
. 84 DAI\. Y PILOT TU!!d!y. Januwy 20. 1919
' Olympics Steelers at Destiny's \
..
INNSBRUCK, Austria (AP) -Wben the 1976 Winter Olympics
Vt)lage welcomes its first
aillletlc residents this week,
guards' orders will read.
·'Stringent security and separate
the sexes."
·This means no one will get into
tHt village without showing
police a special Olympics ac·
creditation pass with photo. And
once inside, the athletes from
v~rious nations will be forbidden
NEW YORK CAP> -Only once
or twice in a aeneraUon does any
team so dominate a sport that lt1'
legacy and accomplishments are
remembered and repeated by the
generations that follow. ,
The Pittsburgh Steelers could
be the next one, joinlna the Green
Bay Packers of a decade aao, the
Boston Celtics of the 1960s, the
New York Yankees of the 'SOs
and '60s.
They are at destiny's d~rstep,
perhaps one or two Supe'r Bowl
victories removed from the stuff
of wbi~h legends are made.
from visiting each other's ···~~l\l; quarters. •
Also, the 300 or so female com·
petitors will be strictly segregat·
ed from the approximately 1,100
sportsmen in a sepaQtte fen~·
in apartment biock of~ village,
a\lthOrities s aid.
"The· International Olympic
Committee wanted it that way."
Gam es spokesman B er ti
Neumann said this week. "We're
not prudes, but in view of the
stresses of competition this is a
correct decision."
Surrounded by a six.foot high
cyclone fence with built·in elec·
tronic alarms and s warming
with Austrian soldiers to ward off
intruders, the newly built com·
pl ex of 11 ·story a pa.rt men ts re·
::.embles a high·rise fortress on
the edge of Innsbruck.
Starting with the Japanese
team scheduled to arrive today,
the village will provide sleeping,
eating and recreation facilities
for som e 1,400 athletes and 600
team officials from 38 nations
before a nd dunng the Feb. 4-15
Games
The opportunity comes to few,
and that perhaps is what coach
Chuck Noll had ln mind Tuesday
morning In Miami.
"This is not a plateau,'' he
said. "'We don't view it that way.
It's not Uke climbing a mountain
and looking for a safe spot. It's
more like walking a tight rope. If
you look down, you get dizzy. And
if you waver, the fall is very
fast."
Now it ·s up to the Steelers, to
either move to unbroken ground
·-a third straight Super Bowl ti·
Ue -or to 'waver and fall. They
have the tools to keep eolng.
Amon g the Steelers' 22
starters, only two, linebacker
Andy Russell and center Ray
Mansfield, are over 29 years old.
Both are S4 and near retirement,
but the club has depth.
The aficionados of the sport
say the key to greatn~ss is de·
fense. The Steelers have it, and
there ls no reason to believe their
ttf)it will do anything but get bet·
ter. Here's why :
On the r ront line. L.C.
Greenwood and Joe Greene are
UPI Tei-.lloto
~ightmare memories of the
Arab guerrilla massacre of
Israeli a thletes in the 1972
Munich Olympics Village and the
terron st attack on oil ministers
m Vienna last month prompted
Austrian Olympic hosts to throw
up an unprecedented wall of
THOUSANDS OF FANS TURNED OUT TO WELCOME STEELERS HOME MONDAY.
security around the teams. The
Olympic Village, three miles
from downtown Innsbruck, is the
focus of security precautions.
"To protect the Olympic
Village. we are using the most
exceptional security measures
possible." local Olympic official
Karl Heinz Klee s aid. "Entry to
the village will be governed by
the same conditions as passenger
controls in a closely guarded in-
ternational airport." ·
The largest men's teams, in-
cluding the U.S contingent of ap-
proximately 120 which starts ar-
riving Jan 27. have their own
::;eparate 11 ·floor section in the
a p a rtment co mplex. The
Western teams have two build·
ings and the Communist East
Europeans have another.
"Women 's teams will be
bunched together. although each
nation .eels seoarate floors of
three and four -r oom apart·
ments, said Walter Gasser, a
local businessman who is work-
ing with the organizers.
The two.bedroom apartments
are furnished spartanly, with
bunk beds, wall lockers and writ·
mg tables loaned by the Austrian
milita ry . Many are to be
eouipped with color television
sets for viewing the 110 hours of
:?a mes coverage by Austrian
television.
Pittsburgh Ptayers Rode In Buses Because of the Cold Weather.
Ex-Buckeyes Grid Star
Tries tO Start New Life
TROY, Ohio CAP) -Bob
Ferguson calmly puffed on a
pipe, a tweed golf cap perched on
his head. The former Ohio State
University football All ·
American~ casual, healthy ap·
pearance \lid his turmoil of re-
cent years.
He's back in this western Ohio
city of 18,000, the scene of his
high school exploits, trying to
avoid the notoriety that accom·
panies national sports heroes.
Especially. troubled ones.
In fact , Ferguson envies his
fellow townsmen. Most of them
a.re unknown , unrecognized
beyond the Miami County line.
"I've always felt that being an
unknown is better than being
somebody with a name. Thal
way you don 't have to be
bothered with hassles like re-
porters and people in
restaurants," he said.
"Besides. just because you're
famous does n't mean )ou're not
going to make out all right.
"I've never walked around
sticking my chest out and saymg,
Tm Bob Ferguson, the great
football player from Ohio State
You're supposed to respect me.· I
think that's why the people of
Troy like me. the way 1 carry
myself a~ an everyday person."
They proved it when 400
showed up for a benefit dinner in
December. More than $10,400 I was raised for Ferguson's ex-
tensive hospital bills.
At his zenith. Ferguson was
one of the nation's very best col -
lege football players. In fact. he
finished second to the late Ernie
Davis of Syracuse in the 1961
Heis man Trophy balloting. A
240-pounder, he ranks as one of
Woody Hayes ' gre ates t
fullbacks.
ctraw play. At Ohio Stale, we
\\<ant<'d him to get across the line
of ~cnmmage We never ran the
draw play. Hell . wh y wait for the
hall?" said Hayes.
Ferguson was ~!eared of the
:?a mbling and narcotic charges.
Thereaftt'r. he vanished · in
Washmgton. D.C. Only his illness
hereditar y high blood pressure
brought him lo the surface
when he was hos pitalized.
.. l didn 'l use any assumed
name in Washington like the
papers said. If I'd had an as-
sumed name when I checked in
at the hospital. nobody would
have known it was me, would
they? .. he asked.
He lapsed into a coma for two
weeks upon entering the hospital
last fall . He was near death but
refuses lo discuss his illness.
Players to Boycott?
Since those glorious college
days, he has flunked pro football
tryouts, he's held a variety of
jobs, wAs arrested on gambling
and narcotics charges in Colum -
bus, left his wife and four
children four years ago and sur·
vived a near-fatal illness in
Washington D.C.
Ferguson twice has vis ited
with his wife and four children.
· Mv wife and I haven't talked
abc}ut getting back together, if
that's what you're wondering,"
he said.
First he wa nts to whip his
blood pressure problem. Then he
talks about finding a job and set·
tling down in his old city. Pro Bawl May Not Be Played
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Stars
Clf professional football meet to·
day to lay out game plans that
may or may not include a boycott
of the National Football League
Pro Bowl scheduled Monday
night in the Superdome.
The tmmediate issue is the
players· pension plan, part of the
funding for which has come from
Pro Bowl proceeds in the past.
~o payments were made to the
pension plan last year, and none
are expected this year, since the
:"iFL Players Association has
been operating without a con-
tract with the league for two
years.
"We have taken the position
that we are not going to con-
tribute until we have an agree:
ment and know what the rules
are that we are operating un·
der," said Sargent Karch, head
of the NFL Management COuncil.
The Management Council ls the
bargaining agent for NFL
own~rs .
"There is no le1al obligation
for us to m ake a contribution un-
til we have an agreement."
The players are scheduled to
meet with Ed Garvey, executive
director of the NFLPA. and the
union's two top officers, Kermit
Alexander and Tom Keating, this
afternoon.
If the players decide to
boycott the game, it will be tl)e
second time a professional all·
star game was cancelled here.
The 1965 American Football
League All-star game was
scheduled to be played in Tulane
Stadium, but some of the players
said they were s ubjected to
racial discrimination by taxi
drivers and opera tors or some
night spots.
The came was moved to
Houston.
Harvey said he will make no
recommendations to the ~ NFL
stars at today'• meeting.
"We don't bave a position on
the game." b~ said. "We have a
lot of thins• to talk about. We'll
talk things over and see what the
players decide.··
Now he's on the road back, re-
covering at the Troy home of his
sister and brotber·in·law, Salle
and Ken Thorpe.
"That's all behind me now. I
don't even go into that. It's the
future that counts, not the past,"
he said.
While Ferguson avoids the
past, bis coach did not when
speaking at the benefit dinner.
Hayes blamed Ferguson 's
downfall on his professional
coach <Buddy Parker) and
quarterback (Bobby Layne).
"They expected him to run the
Cage Ratings
The T09 T-11ty teems In TN ~lllled Press
(011999 bHk•lb•ll poll Wiii\ ••ton reCOf'dl
~ Surodoy end total Points.
I. llldlOM 14-0
2. Morylllftd lJ•I
l. Mol"ltUlll• 11·,
•.Nevil.YI lM
l.No.Coro. 12·2
•.UCLA 1).2
7. ll\lte9rl 1 a.o
t. W0$1\ftgtn 14-1 t .$t.JCIM., ,,.,
. tt. TtM. U-1
1,UI
1,033
952
'" S'2
576
S"l
516 .sos
Jen
u . N.C..r.St. 1i-2 m
12.Albme 11-2 2S2 ta. CA 5t. 11-4 201 10Vllf'w lf.J , ...
1l. Not.Dome 9-3 ,.,
16.0lcnnll 1).2 160
17. MIClllOOll 1 H 106
11. Mlssou. 1).2 N
It. W TH.St 12·1 4S
20 Vo. Tedi. 12-2 II
Travel Agent Denies Swindle·
YOUNGSTOWN. Ohio (AP> -
A travel ••ent 's attome)" denied
today any swindle In the case of
(C>otball lam who •tined lq> f« a
Super Bowl tour package but tot
ao tickets, also den1tni
thousands off en.1 were alfected.
Carmo Polley, 1.:utnli.nt U>e o~rator ol Iat.ernaUonal
Tnvel Bureau of Yoanptown, lam• Pantelit, 1ald b1I client
ln Lat Ve1• completJni ar·
nn1emen(j rot tM nnat half of
the t0ur pack•••.
Policy said Pan tells told him
only about 250 fans Called to re-
ceive ticket.a.• He 1ald Pant.ells ·
blamed a fall-down by an wW.ten· Ufied Wnt Coast travel aiency
that was aupposed to have put up
the Super Bowl tickets.
He also 1-ald that Pantella wu
succealuJ lb aecurini ' number ot ticket.I at the lut mlnute alter
the breakdown but that he wun't
able to get H many u were
needed.
MeanwbilP in Plttaburib and
1n Fort Lauderdale, F1a., local
and federal authorities said that
perhapt 3,000 to 5,000 persons
may have spent up to $1.S mllllon
on tours oraanized by Super
Tours International, a sublldlary
of International Travel.
U.S. Pottal Service lill~ors •
and the FBI wtrt lnvestJr•llnl
the cue in PiU1burth, alon1
with the consumer fraud dlvtsion
ol the Alle1heay County district
attomey•1 otnce.
Pantells denied any fraud.
"There's not a rat race here,''
said Ferguson of Troy. "The
word was out over town that I
wasn 't to be bothered. I wasn't.
This is a town where people will
let you alone.•·
. •
29, Ernie Holmes is 27 and
Dwiaht White ls 2e. BacklAJ) steve
Steve~ s, who could pro· bably rt fo'f' any other team, ls
25 an proven. And rookie end
John Banaszak performed well
this season .
Should Russell retire, he will
llkely be replaced by three-year~
veteran Loren Toews, 25, re·
garded as a future star. And he
would join Jack Ham. 27, and
Jack Lambert, 23, in a trlo that
would probably still be recarded
as the leacue's best llnebacldng
group.
The Steeiers secondary may be
the club'• younaest, most ex
perlenced and beat unit.
Defenslve Player of the Year Mel ·
Blount 11 27. He ts Joined by J . T.
'lbomu, 24 ; Mike Waper. 26,
and Olen Edwards, 28. When
they need rellff, there Ls second-
year man Donnie Shell -the ter·
ror of Pitt1burgtl'1 special teams ,
-and . top draft choicf Dave
Brown.
Not counting Ruasell, lhe
avera1e age of the defense is less
than 27. And lt ls very ex-
perienced.
Sport.II in Brief
Police Arrest
. .
Cards' Metcalf
ST . LOUIS -When
airline security officers ques-
tioned Terry Metcalf about a
package of firecrackers in bis
luggage, the St. Louis Cardinals
running back said he asked in
jest· "Ob, I'm going to bldw up
an airplane with these
firecrackers?"
The remark at Lambert St.
Louis International Airport.
however. brought nothing but
trouble Monday for the 24·year·
old Metcalf as he was about to
board a Delta Airlines flight to
New Orleans.
Metcalf was arrested by
airport security police, taken in
handcuffs to St. Louis County and
questione d b y the Federal
Bureau of Investigation and local
authorities.
Metcalf was later released
pending further disposition of his
case. An FBI spokesman said in-
formation would be turned over
to the U.S. attorney's office for a
decision on whether to seek
federal prosecution.
Metcalf boa rded a later night
for New Orleans where he will
play in next week's Pro Bowl
game.
Trojan• Pia"
TEMPE, Ariz. -Winless in its
first four Pacific-8 basketball
starts, the University of Southern
California will try its luck in a
nonconference game tonight
again"$t Arizona State's Sun
Devils. It's on radio (KABC. 740) '" at 6:30.
The Sun J)evils are the defend-
ing Weste~ Athletic Conference
champions and are 9·3 this
season. The Trojans hav~ an 11·5
mark.
After tonight.'s same, USC is
off until Jan. 31 when it faces
UCLA at Pauley Pavilion.
Title to N .. t .. e
ATLANTA -Uie Nastase, the
.Jekyll and Hyde of the WCT ten·
nis circuit. switched from hi!J
temper tantrums of an earlier
match to a perfect gentleman
Monday night after c~uring the
Phoenix Cup tennis tournament
title.
Nastase. the 29-year-ofd tem·
peramental Romanian. had
threatened not to play in the final
in a dispute with an umpire. He
changed his mind and went out
and overpowered Wl8eeded Jeff
Borowiak 6-2, 6·4 to take the
$17,000 first prize.
lndfataa rrt .... plU
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -Top·
ranked Indiana, led by All·
Nnertcan Scott May·s ~ pomts,
survived a frantic Purdue rally
Monday night and beat the
Boilermakers, 71·67, in a
showdown for the Bi'g Ten
basketball lead.
AMeBreesn
INDIANAPOLIS
Arthur Ashe, playing like he
QWnS 'the World Championship
Tennis tow-, scored his second
consecutive triumph of the year
Tuesday night 6-2, 6·7, 6-4 over
Vitas Gerulailis.
In the doubles final, Stan Smith
~d San Clemente's Bob Lutz
combined for an easy 6-2, 6-4 vie·
tory over Tom Gorman and
Gerul aitis.
Blee fteJa Rke
HOUSTON -North Carolina
University athletic director
Homer Rice was named Rice's
third head football coach \n six
years today.
He replaces Al Conover who re-
signed to go into private business.
Rice compiled an 8-10-1 record
during two seasons as coach at
Cincinnati, his only experience
as a head coach. He left Rice in
1968 to become athletic director
of the Tar Heels.
Water-' Fatlter Ill
MIAMI -The Associated
Press incorrectly reported Mon-
day that the father of Dallas safe-
ty Cliff Harris suffered a heart
attack during the Cowboys' 2i.t7
loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers in
Super Bowl X.
It was the father of Cowboys'
safety Charlie Waters who suf.
fered the heart attack while
watchin' his son play in Sun-
day's game.
A spokeswoman for Jackson
Memorial Hospital said Marshall
Waters. 70, of Dallas, was resting
comfortably. "but his condition
is still serious."
Giant• Dda"ed
. TORONTO -A court hearing
that should decide whether the
San Francisco Giants can move
to Toronto has been postponed
because lawyers for the National
League were busy elsewhere.
Dave Cashen, a spokesman for
the Canadian group trying to buy
the Giants, said Monday the
lawyers were busy with a court
hearing in Kansas City over
baseball's reserve clause.
l...UaEdfled
. AUCKLAND, New Zealand -
New Zealand split the final two
singles matches and edged India
3·2 today to gain the Davis Cup
Eastern Zone tennis finals.
With the series tied 2·2, Onny
Parun of India won the deciding
singles match 6·1, 9·7, 64, defeat-
ing India's Anand Amritraj.
India had tied the match 2-2
when ViJay Amritraj beat Brian
Fairlie of New Zealand 6·3, 10·8,
6-1.
Collelt Selected
MORGANTOWN, W . Va.
Praising predecessor Bobby
Bowden while looking towards
the future, Frank Clgnetti was
named the new head football
coach at West Virginla Universi·
tyMonday.
'llle 37·year-old Indiana, Pa.,
State University 1raduate has
beerl WVU's offensive
coord.ln a tor.
·1ccc· llosts .
PtoTourney
Irvine Coast Country Club wtll
be the scene of the Little Crotby
pro·am PGA •olf tournament
Friday and Saturday with 70 pros
and 10 amateurs competin1 in
the $10,000 event.
'nlis ls a 11teltite event for pros
who fall to quality for the annual
Btq Cn>eby Clambake at Pebble
Beach. BUly Ziobro bl \be dllfendlng
cbamplon 1fllile Pat Fltlllmons, .a; later wcm th. L<ie A.Qel ~.•-.!IJIJl!IM . 9P!n, ftnilhed bt a ab·••Y tfo for • iieCiDd tiere a 7ear qo.
Ziobro 01•d rounds or
11-t7-1•ton by fourltrok11. ,
The public II invt~ to vl~
the action With a tz dally _,_
mtilkin Char,.. Pl'OCMdl co to ,
Hog Memorial Hosptta.l.
I
I .
l
o .
I
UAILY .. tLOT #$
· Soiith Coast t
Teams :Play
[ ' Minion Viejo IDp's Dlabloe
have a chance (o cut the dle for
th• South Cq•tt L~af'Jc but,~·
RelJlftJ oo depth rather than
ate considered the favorites in and 'reel cOlnt (distance speed, coach Lou RJley'a crew lequ.atamplona. UC Jl"rine nol.,ted aecoiid fo ~tape swim actloa-.nd free>. will have seven retum!ni seniors Knkl ts a 1ttong contender ball race t0n11ht ;_a tliey travel to
the c9nfines of the Laguna Beach
High Arttst..
Hunt b« Beach coutcf..'1•e Tot junlon art Kevin totudtheCbargera. withatlmeof56.2inlhebu.tterf· Cal State CNortbrldfo) ln the
IOllle trouble in the Em-Robertson (butterfl1) and Mite Sam Jones, a CU" qualifier and ly, at well as competinl In t.be NCAA Divi.llop JI lwinunil\I ri,.
A victory fof ~~acb Pat
Roberta' Dlabmw()\lld gi.i'ethem ·
a sweep or the first round and only
El Toro,· lf it can 1~ past host
Dana Htm wUl be ~ one
came of iit11lon VleJo, ranked
lotll U1 Oranae CO\ldly dtcles. All
otbert would be at ••t three sames behind Jht Diabloe, who ~nowU-2rortb~campaign.
Tipoff la at 1 for each of the
three circuit games-the otber
duel at SJn Clemente where
IAque .as the Dail.y Pilot Vellekamp (distance tree and tq. Edl.aon's most valu bJe swim-freeltyle 1prints. ~m:l.ei.a'W:~~~ z~,
takes a capeule look at tbearea'a dlvtdualmedley). mer lut year wlll see •&ooddeal Add1n• strenath to the Barons pr et' ed" to r IP•'' f hat
·University Invades.. .
swtm powers.' · 1'I _._...,. of aetlon. · · corp a are re1 u rnlnf aenlor .._ Here'• a rundown on each or •,-..... M f 1 R It e y (freestyle, breutstrokers Ron .Lade, Mike ..-.ormance. .... .. -:.i • thearea'afourH~tlngt.onBeach Marina Hiah's.1Wim team bacbtroke), Gary Gib9on (but-Brltmll11andMlkeP,Kelly. Coach Hank Vell---....p ~'
School Dl1trlct outfits. ph11 -=oach To9per Horatll appears terfly) and Mark Crou (di.stance Junlbt returned include RJclC hne some fine swlm1nera CID bi&
Newport Harbor: eoncemed about bow his team .freestyle> all figure td add Aldrlcb <thacksttoke), Jim PU1l roster, but be dotstt'i ~ to .,..,._.,. B•r••• wlll tare in the coming season strength to the Chargers. <cmtatt~• lreestl~Je) and. Greg r:~~ ~~.!~e ~~~ ,,,, .-. afttr the graduation of six In addition, Glen Undenstadt HoU•md (200,500free). andCbicoState. .._,.......,..
Bec•uae of depth ·1n the seniors. (free and fly), Rick Howe B fref*tyles, Newport Harbor But one bright spot It senior (br eutttroke) and Mike Tornde •Ct,..a .. •e.11 TopplJtt the list ct lettermen
awlmmlni coach Bill Je:well John Golonka who qdallfied for (sfrlnts) are expected to con· The HUtJtingtdff ~ H~b ate senior Boyd Philpot and fllUN!t h{s Sailors could batUe lut y'ar's CIF final.a. Oolonka tr bute to Edieon's overall swtm team, strenCtH 111. e ~oftloreOary n~t ..
Mission Viejo's 6·5 Ste•e
Sawyer fs averaging 15.2 points
~]>et samt;, but will get a stern test
tonight at Laguna Beach where
coach Ell &urlingbam's Artists
boa.it 8-S Ben Bacon a tough de-
fensive player and the bther half
of a one-two punch (\tith Dusty
Dvorak> that has led Laguna to a
pair of leaiue vidorieit.
tor 1eeond place in the. CIF 4·A wt1l compete in the 100 and ·200 strength. return of last yi!lr's t t. bUIDt U Uiel ~ na
awimminlfinals th.it spring. freelt)'le events as well as the Rifey also has a wealth quallfltrs Keith Johnson and · tlanal eham1» on and reeord HeconcedeatbetiU~toMisslon bac!kstroke •nd individual of eoocf Juniors comlng up from Scott WeJr, appears to hne tbe boldeJ; in the 1,850 free •hik
Viejo but talks highly of a Sailors ~ey Cl: 48) • the frosh-soph team, as well as manpower to finish strong in the Flfueroa eaptured both the 10
· team that h• says ''baa a pretty R.pturnine senior Alan Alosio several outstanding sophomores Empire League race. and 200 baeltatroke tiUes in th·
good class Of seniors and juniors. pdlted a competitive time of 1:10 in J~ff Allison and Randy But defending champion NCAA meetlutleasan. -
We ltave 'xcellent freestyle in Ute 100 breuuttoke. Roberts. Foothill still seems to be the Other letterm~n lnclode senio
strength Ind depth." Up from the ftosb-sopb team ' e• l'-11-:. team to beat. . Tim Qtdnn; backstroter Jaso1
Amon1 those freesty1-a are ar~ junior Brian Stone and -• ~., Weir, a member of pie ~ Wheaton, a junior~ and 88nio ·
Jofm Dobrott, Jeff DeMott and sop'hbmore Bryan Masnuason. Fountain Valley Jilgh's swim :Yanity basketball team, flhisbed butterflier Guy Antley.
.Jefr Steveti!. St«mt wUl compete in the 100 team should~ a tp~b ~abd.ldate lt1 the top ten in the 50 (21.9) and Vellekamp has fivt freshmen
1 Dobrott was fourth and ftfth in Ir• (52.6) and Magnusson will in the SunHl League race, tha100 (48.8Hreestylee\'~b. that also figure to scorepoinU.
lastyear'sCIFfinals,swimming S1ffmthebreaautroke. bolstered by the return or All-Johnson , also a sprint Tom Bordeh, from RlYenlde. El Toro's a1;ressiv~ defense
figure$ to If andle D~ Hills,
altholfah coach Art Jenkins'
hosts upset San Clement~ Friday
behind the double figute scoring
of Henry Mikiewicz and David
Reeve.
the 200-!ree in 1 :45."3 and tfte !00 Freshman Jerry Winfrey is et· Ameri'cans Mlk4! Kelly, Bill s_pedall~t. posted· 22.2 in the 50 will swim the Individual mtciley .•
in 4:43.6. DeMott was seventh in pected t!o see action· as a Babashoff, Andy Miller artd lndff.atttthe lOOfree. n achard ·Chacon from Cbsta
the CIF finals of the 100 free backstrollet. Steve Krikl. Addltfg ~ore strength ls re-nJ • di t (48.39) and Stevens won the 100 8tone,MagnussonandWintrey Thefourteameduplastyearto turning letterman senior Oat; Mesa Hl8h, 1.s a 5 anct
free or the CIF trosh-aopb cham· all figure heavily in Horack's re-give FV opponents area} threat Yeo, who will coinpete ln th~ 100 freestyler and will al.lo compete
pionabip In a record 48.95. bUlUting plans for the Vikings. in the relay (~~ 15,53> as well as ' 119, 500 free and 200 IM. in the lndo.
University and San Clemente,
both atrugiling with 1-3 records,
will be trying to get back intd the
race for at least • playoffs berth.
University's ace is 6-6 sophomore
Ro&er Poirier, while San
Clemente's No. 1 weapon is
guard Tim Dunham.
The talent doesn't stop there. Ed~--postinggoodinaividualtimes. Jutllor Jim Keefe will see ac· Scott B ecker, from San
Among the returning seniors are .. Kelly, returning for his junior lion in the 100 back (59.8) and the Marino• will swim the !bdlvid"!a · GeOrte Newland (1 :03.72 in 100 The Edison High swim team, year, was the league champion in 3>0 Iii medlf)' and breutltro1le while
breast), K eith Robinson althouibloadedwithfln~talent, the so freestyle and the 100 &ml~rGlennThomas(100fi1, PeteFischlerfromSmJoeei
(breaststroke and butterfly), does ndt l.Ppht to ha\te the back.stroke with times of 21.69 500 free> and juniors Bill Tay)or also a breaststroker.
·Frank Anderson (backstroke ltrengtb to overtake perennial and53.72reSJ>ectively. (200, 500) and Phil Bau.sdan And Rob Don-ldson, •1
and free>, Bob Iverson (di.stance Sunset League champion Babathdff (4 :38.~. 500 free> (breaststroke> add still more gradaate of Esperama Inell in
free), Gre1 Fults (assortment ot Newport Harbor. and Miller, who ~ted a 1:59.2 in pw1cb to the Oilers attack. Placentia, ts afreestyler.
SoeeerAee Corona
Vangu_ards Led Ranked
By Clwlokian Second
•
By HOWARD L. HANDY •
OftlleDlllf ftli.t Staff
For a college
fre s hm an, Haig
Choloklan or Southetn
California College ot
Costa Mesa has been
around.
He was. born and
played high school soc-
cer in Amman, Jordan,
went to England for his
senior year ot high
school and moved to
Australia with his family
in1989.
At 2' he is perbap. the
oldest freabnHib at !OCat
active tq sports
participaUon. But this
doeln 't bother him.
"He's the 01ost com:
plete all-round pla1er we
have ever had at t.h.18
school," soccer coach
Ken Miller says. "He's
definite1y of All·
American caliber.
"After we pJared San
Diego State, theu coach
raved about his lbility
and UCLA is still in-
terested in him.''
"I don't know If I
would ·be Interested in
UCLA," Cholokian says.
"I like it right here. The
other students are all
friendly az;id you get
more individual atten-
tion than al a larger
school, Here you have to
· study before you can do
anything else."
Soccer is the matn
game Jn bll native
Jordan where he played
on the Terrasancta Hilh
School team.
HAIG CHOLOKIAN
years old and I've been
playing soccer for 33
years. Don't tell me how
to referee and I won't tell
you how to play.•
''He chucked about
three players in that one
game.''
In high school he also
played basketball and ta-
ble tennis but at SoCal,
he just watches the cage
sport. At 5-8~ and 145
pounds, he is hardly the
typical basketball player
for thi1 country.
Table tennis II lnotber
The undefeate d
Corona del Mar High Sea
Kings, 15·0, have moved
from No. 3 to No. 2 in the
CIF 4-A basketball poll.
Marina's improving
Vikings , 14·3, remained
sixth and Estancia's
Eagles. 12-1, jumped
from 10th to ninth in the
4·A rankings.
Mission Vtejo's
· Diabtos, unbE!aten ln
South Coast League ac·
lion, moved into the top
10 for the first time, be-
lni rated No. 10 in the
2·A poll. Mission Viejo
has an 11·2 season re·
cord.
Tandy Gillis' Sea
Kings are onJy one of
seven unbeaten buket·
ball teams in CIF. Long
Beach Poly, 17-0, ls No. 1
in the4·A. ...
..... llc9llllf. lllecMd
I. L8 Pol., 111 .. I a.c.-e .. MlruM1
3. SM! Gor9QnlO Cl4-0I 4. Allhlmt>re 111-0I
s. S.nt• BertNlr• (14·21
6.Mariu 114-11
7. ICet•ll• 114-21
I. Vwtlum Del (t~) t.ltllMCla111rU
10.~(lt-4)
~
100 ,.
uo
131
1~
11J ,.
S2 ,.
It
matter. He is the reig!l-1.lAMlradil cu-ot•
ing campus champion. 2.c.m.w111e 11+21
, ..
1$1
1SS
1IO
IOS
94
92 .,,
A business administra-,.,..ll'lllM n>-11
4. VldorVelley CIJ•!J tion major, he plans on s. Petm S9rlll9' 110. o
fithrmishing his schooling in .~:~~~.~~~> ee years. ..._,,... c1Mt
Outside of sports, his t.Ly_..11..,>
favorite putime is easy '°·Gerrt l1MI
to tab.
7S
l1
190
171 ,,,
1W
121
Drive it.
rouil lillc it.
Courier owners talk about the way
it drives. The way II economizes.
And the WtJy It's built. Ford test
englMers really put this little
Import through th e wringer be foro
they OK'd it lo tarry the Ford
name. irs one tough truck.
It's Gdifomia's kind of wheels.
f t
Rootn for JM)(}.
Payload or people. you can really
pile it on-Courier's rated for a
total of 1,400 pounds. The rugged
box is all-welded steel. a gehtrous
74.5 inches long. Box covers with
windows arc available.
"In Enaland, I really
learned to play the
1ame " be admits. "You
can't lust 1et the ball and
dribble like you could at
home. If you don't play
hard there. they'll chop
your leas off. That's
much the way they play
here in college soccer.''
"My favorite thing is
traveling," be uys. "l
bave. been to Texas,
Oklahoma and Florida
and this summer 1 plan
on driving about the
country alter summer
achool. ••
~ GoodneM ~ under the hood.
Are there other things
about the Amertcan col-
lege game that are di!·
At Mill*'• hlllstence,
be probablJ •Ul take a
soccer ball along to get
in some workouts along
the way.
ferent? MD. Oil T Jnhl "You dill have to ' era lJ e avoid the other team's a ---
players b•eaute !bey .
play hF.d here too, • be
1a1f. ' Bid the unlimited aubstitlrtfon ttile is dif.
ferent. You 1et Lota ol
r est but it ta a dJsadvan·
tage for a team with no
Orange Coµnty's of·
ficial baskftball poll
hat been stilt.en this
week with the OUst4r Of
No. 2 Mater Del •nd No. s Huntington Beacb
following their losses
give Wednesday night at
Ettancia High where the
No. 8 Eagles, beaten only
mce in 13 sta.JU, meet
Mo. 5 Villa Park. Esta.D-
ela, once ranked thtrd,
nleets ill first toqh
oballenge in Century
JMgueplay.
subs." -
Has be bad any embar·
rasstng moments or un·
usual situaUons in any
aameshere?
''One thing that
humiliates me are the re-
feree problems. We bad
one get to the field f« a
iaJDe and say, 'I'm 38
MD in Action
Mater Del Hl1b'1
Monarchs wUl be trJl¥ to rebound from Frldai'•
AnJelUI Leape baskflt•
ball ..,.. '° ... A.DtbODJ tGIUiht Wilen they bcilt
the Wurlort of PlUI X,
wbo are led by 6-6 Douc Colllna and 6-1 Lorenzo
Romar.
Tipoffllat7:30 tonilht.
==·St. An~
Cypress motd tJrto the
No. 8 slot Witb tta ;;fa
over Huntindld aladl
and MiSIJoft -VliJO, U~
is No.IO.
Unbntm Corona ctcl
Mar remalnt Mo. l.
Somethin1 n1v.res to
OilenPlay
Wednesday
* * *·
Huntington Beach
Hllh •s Oilen host
Katella Hl&b WednesWur ift Empire League TOP It
1. CdM (15'0)
2. hllettoo 02·3)
3. Jlartoa O•·S>
4. llatella (14•1)
S. Villa Park (1~-3) e. r.ttancta (12·1)
'1. El Dorado (11-4)
8. Cypress (M)
9. Brea (12-4)
JO. M. Viejo (11·2)
" _,r-.
60 basketball play; not
51 =01\ al re~ed m 48 81'• Dilly Pilot.
36 Tiie Oilers (1·1> are
%1 Ued. with CyptUI and
26• Kennedy for 1econd
21 place a 1ame beh.lftd
12 Kateha. Wednesday
8 nlfllt'1 1ame la
e scbedulecUot 1 o'ctoe .
~,
You get quick action with Courier's
1800-ec. overhead-cam engine
and standard 4-speed stick. And
there's good news on the gas
gauge, too: EPA estimatn are
25 mpg highway. 19 mpg city. Rootn for you.
Yo11r rtlileage may vary, of course,
dts>*nding on your truck's condi-
tion, optional equipmentl and how
ind where rou 'drive.
-. h It's room with a vlew, ln!Ofatfld for Courier shown has custom dress-ups added by its ow et. quiet, handsomely furnisl'led. The
· seat has thick foam padding under
the 9mart blsC:ult-pattetn uphofttety.
•
Comier:'lbuglt down undei
Give Coutter a good going undor
and you'll know why It foels to IOfld
on the road and off • The frame
has box-section rails with 7 (count ·em. 7) cr0911118mbers •Up front,
ther&'I Independent 10tpenslon
with bl~ coll 1prl11gs and stabil izer
bar • In back, long 8·teaf springs
• Blakes feature dual cylinders at
each Wheel, 2 Instead of 1, for sure
stops • The 4-cylinder owittiild
cam engine has 5 main bearings for
rigidity and strength. Couti't'I
known as the gutSy little ln1p0tt.
This IS whet• 11 gets Its guts.
Behind the hing~ seat back is a
handy storaga space.
Getilow mnt Dealtt Pl ..
Ford courlet Dealers !!now ~}O
~ep ptices down. They're UMO to
telling a lot of dlffetetrt fthfclts
~th a low margin on •ach. Md
tHey've got Couriers for immediate
dellvety. Stop In to check ttfe
ltnlflc deal you can get rig~t nowt •
FORD COURIER
fQllD .... ~
·SEE YOUR LOClL FORD COURIER DbLEi
•
fi DAIL V flLOT Tunctay, Janllary 20. 1918
Golf Sununaries
For Area Women
Kathy Wilbur w ns lni,'ton ~achCf Country
selected as 101ler of the Club recently.
year for the women's Jn the.> first night. Cuba
('lub at if ead o wl a rk Curl was the winner w1th
Country Club a t the an-28'--:i . Joan Stegm~tn was
nual awards program second at 29 while Polly
held re<"ently . • Bro wning and G iuny
Harvey Ann Woolrott Lambt.>rt finished third
was tabbed as the most at 30.
improved golfer and Edie Nannes captured
Corinne Richard.son won the second flig ht wi th
the most chip-ins plaque. 251 .. 2. Other winn('rs in-
Montbly trophy win eluded Terry Camillo at
ner.s for the year in· 26'':.!, Mabel Christianson
duded Winnie Wittiams at 2812 and June Fitt('n
in A flight ; Kitty Mullens a t 29L2.
in R night: Fra n Creager Irene Pare was the
in C ffight : and a t ie in D third flight victor Wllh
night to be dete rmined. 28. followed bv Arletta
='l ewly installed of. Olerich at 28 1:: ·and Alire
ficers include Jean Hight Acklin at 29.
as president: Do r is Ann Roth w on t he
Colye r as secretary. fourth flight with 27 1 ~
R o s a l i e B a r k e r . and Dolly Secord was
trea s ur er : Fr e d a second with 281 :i
Sil".erm an. handic~p El .~iguel
eha1rman : alon g with Members of the El
Rosemary Erickson and Niguel Country Club
Cuba Curl as tournament women's golf group sup.
chairmen. plied their own prizes in
In a low net tourna· a holidav tournament re·
ment. Diana Hooper. had rently with every player
a ~ to capture A flig~t. assured of a gift.
Wmn.1e W1l11 ~ms WQn 10 It was a make it. h<1ke ~ flig ht. wit~ 66 a/ld it or grow it event with WlK~tthh65y .Wilbur m C night net scores used to de
termine winners. Four players tied for In A flight. Wilma
first place in D f}jght at Crt>ighton was the win·
73 including Ro Barker. ner with 75. Chris Pape
Dons Colyer. Florence finisht>t\ second at 77
Eichhorn a nd Shirley with Ann Teel, Elaine
Stt>bbmgs. Ha<.'hten and Ronnie
SelU!lfll
It was a mutt and jeff
tournament f or the
women ·~ club at Hunt-
~lair tied at 79.
Pat Francis won R
night with 75. followed
by Barbara Hodges (77)
and a tie between
Baseball Outlook
Pirates Have
Pitching Depth
With o nly three let-
termen r e turn ing.
Orange Coast College ap-
pears to be in for another
long baseball season.
But P i rates· coach
Rarry Wallace doesn't
think so.
.. lt looks like we'll have
a muc h better year than
we've had in the past
three seasons." s ays
Wallace, whose team
won only fi\'e of 33 gamC's
in 1975 .
His optimis m 1s based
o n the fart t hat the
Pirates. despite being m
experienced, have depth
.. Our pitching will pro·
bably be our st r ength.
We have 12 pitchers on
our 29-man roster this
season. Last year we on·
ly had three pitchers. We
don 't have anyone that
can throw the ball past
the hitters continually,
but we do have som e peo·
pie that I thmk will beef.
fecllve," says Wallace.
w ill do the catching.
Macy sat out last year.
Steve Hines, a t ransfer
from Arizona Western,
w i ll probably play
shortstop or second base.
Hines· father. Ben, is the
bas eball coach at
La Verne College.
Firs t base will be
manned by fres hman
Dave Ronquillo with his
brother Joe a t third.
Both are from E stancia
High.
Ed R ivera, a n out-
fielder from Los A m i gos.
also will see a lot of ac-
twn.
"With only three re-
turning lettermen, inex·
perience will ki ll us,"
says Wallace. "But we
"111 have a pretty good
defensive team and we'll
be above average with
the bat. ..
OCC opens the season ·
Friday. Feb. 6, Vlsiling
Saddle back.
Or•,... Coast Bue IN II Sc,...lt Fr• Fitb • -.1 S.ddlel>atk Tun . Ftb 10 -.t Cyor~ss Fro , Ftb ll~ypre\S lllOme) Tue\ , Feb 17 -Gol<ltn Wesl
Margeret Koch, Dottie
Ntdo and Ginny Bordwell
.ll 79
Lee Ginder was the C
fhl!ht winner with 75, r 0 11 0 w e d b y A-m I e
o ·Mara (76> und a tie ut
77 betwc.>en Eil een
Bradswell a nd Dottie
Hvartwk.
In D flight. Mt1t1die
Weidman was tht• winner
with 76. followed hy Kay
!'.trl'hesney ( 77 l. Manon
Cook (80) and Betty
Halladay (81).
'.'lew handicaps \\ere
use-ct in a better ball of
foursome event with the
winning foursome 20·
under par 75.
On the winning team
were Doris llandsrhuh.
Robbie Rardsley. Lee
Ginder and Dorothy
Lttvy with 55.
Four teams lied at 59
i n c ludin S! Ginny
Bordwell, Heather Kay,
M argaret Koc h and
Marv Williams on one.
On 3°nother were Loraine
fmpey, Jea n Carnck,
Peg llerten and Eleanor
R~lrrett .
Mid!!e Whill'. Lois
Jack so n, Be c k y
('hen:lult and Jlc>le n
Fmdlev were on a thJrd
team ~\·1th Manon Aus·
ness. Edith Wray. Kay
MrChesney and Peg
Fairfield on the foul'th
squad
Big Canr1on
Two teams lied for
first pl are in a t" o low
ball~ of foursome com ·
pt>tition at Big Canyon
Country Club.
On one wfre G abby
Railey. Donna Smith.
Ednl\ · Mr Huj!h a nd Sue
DeMille. On the other al
124 were Beverly lloJ)(',
Jani<' Higgin, f:J eanor
Holstein and Eleanor
Rose.
Finishing next in A
flig ht at 1 27 were
Knthleen M eyer,
Margnret Duffy, J anel
Hoote n a nd J ayne
Bo and.
A team composed of
Cate Si mpson, Duffy
Wh itlow, Doris Rou.sey
and Ann SlikC'r won by
six strokes in B flight
with a 122 .
Tied at 130 were Lu
Hughes, Helen Starling.
Carmen P C'rrv and
Mi ckey Renwick with
Julia Ferguson, Ra rbara
Dixoni Jenn Field and
Ann Merritt
Basketball
lncllan11 71. Purdue 67 Ma rque lit 81. X•vler IOhiol 48 M1nneW>la'6. WlsconslnlM Northwestern 9'1, Iowa 92 IOTI Ohio St M . lllino151>3 Orel Rober1s t01.MacMurrav72 Soulhc.troliftf'4, St l.ou1)42 TCU 103, Rice 17 Mon1•n• ••. H•rC11n·Slmmons 17 Wyom.n9 77, 0.nver 73 Alablma M, MISSIUIPP• 41 Aull on ~ey 1' E Ktn1uc ~y SCI
Ouu 79, VlfQtn1a Tech 71 <Aorgla 17, FloriCla 1' Louisville S.. Woehl!• SI 52 Tt,,,.t\Sff ll. Auburn 11 • ll1r91n.• IO, Wiiham & Merv 60 St. 8oN,...fttUrt, IOI, OeP•ul 12
~~ A~ .. f:.~ RaAl~tos
. CJ.Dg
SWING CLUBHEAD STRAl(iHT 0
BACK FROM BALL Results
At tho start of the batk1wh:1a.
I think it Is very important for
the clubhead to move directly
back from the ball (Illustration
1 1 ). Now1 here's a good rule
to follow: Sw1 na your clubheed
straight back along the tareet
line until it passes your rlaht
foot.
By initiating youl' swing 1n
this manner. you will automat·
really extend your left arm to
the fullest. It rs this extension
that gives you the wide swing
arc and forces the big back
muscles into play. Such a take·
away also causes a full shoulder
turn; one on a suff1c1ently up-
right plane. The end result rs
more d 1stance and straighter
shots.
I
0
I
I
If you pu sh the clubhead
outside the target hne during
your takeaway (illustration i 2).
or 11 you pull 1t around inside
the line too quickly ( illustra·
t1on 13), you will not achieve
the desired results. Your swing
will move out of the pn:>per
plane from the start.
"""·-""'-
Men's Golf
SACC· Seniors
In Tourney
......... , a.., T\'9Cll , ... ..,.., uca -400 .,., .... J.,.... elds.o.lmlfll. PllrwSltOO.
Fl.wtyk4tlft
(MylfJ) uo uo 2.11) .. lcl0ulnc1 (~rl >.JO uo
MeldtlleGteOt CTrMtwa> ).81> Tlme -20.9)
AIJO ra" -Dedcly Swlnts. OtllOlft E'l'rt, FeatellHPrl, Go Mhs e!lsl•,
How'• Trl11, Prltiy Joy. H•PP'I' C.t kratclled -Litt•• "•venet, l'lckl• 51111, O'Roelsme, Maryvltw l"erm Girt $1 aJCAC'TA .. ,._, l'Mlla & , .. .... QlllatCy,.-14$11.41
MCDND •ACIE -350 'l'arft. 2 yte~
ol05. IMl-..S. Purw •1too. ,.._Johll
CCMdoal NlaH Eey CAO.Ir) .-utll Alk• (H•rt) Tlme -11.2'
s.oo uo uo ).00 ,~ uo
Allo ra" -ucly Bug's G•I, Big M
M'(rN Go, Moon Slake, F0<eslgt11 ,,,., •etta, Miss a...du<<I, FUMY FVM'I
F~ Scratclleel -Fl"' Aftnt, Sooner Go
TMl•D •ACE -110 yenb. 3 ~
olds &.111>. Cl•lmlftll Pwrse U100. Rckla N' 8rlgllt <cneoerl 24.00 uo s 60
Mr. Acltquatt CAdtlrl 7.IO 3.IO SayAPny., ISMIU) 1111
nme-0 .93 Aho r.., -FlHtler~. w1,,,.1e t...ou,
Grade, l.11 Aml90 No Kr at< lies
P'OUltTH ltACIE -440 yercls. 3 YHr otCIS. Allow•oc•. PursUJSOO. l!lellaTU (Hartl Kips Soft (Cltrlss. I
Due It Now (WlrCll Tlme -?2.16
4.40 2.10 HO
J.20 ?.~
J.00
Also ran -Haft k's Po9e, Gollk•ro<ket Scr•tcllecl -t'me l.ucllv 2
"'"H ""Cl -3SO varCls. J '/ff'
olCI$ & 119. Cleimlr19. Purse~. JusllkePa (Hartl t.40 4.20 3 40 Myrt's Cllert,11t CC.rdoH I 4.00 3 Q(I Sky of OlamOl\CI (Aclelrl 4 OC. Tlme -11.07 Also ren -Copy .-19hl, Sna91• Pl.ru. Uncle Jimmy, Toe> Tonto Bars. Aomen O.vll, Oulck Gre.n, Pe$ ApolloJey No s<ralC lltS
~IXTM .-ACE -JSO yords l .,e•o otCIS & ~. Cl•imlnv. Purs. ~1800. HaNI Plckltcl (Hert) 13.60 S 20 3 6C Aocll.lft Sff IClerlsse I 3 IO 1 6C Rocket Tlftlt ICtuger > t .X
Tlme -17.91 Also"" -Go Sllenllv. K1no O The Road, Three Oii's McCut, Town Ouc:on, Fly Ber Too, Rhythm Duster. TommyOHn Scratclltd-'Mr. Top Tu, Tiny Bart
First round matches in
the annua l se niors
tournament at Santa Ana
Countrv Club must be
c·ompleted by S~turday.
and under handicaps
from all over thP U.S. A
field of 144 players will
s tart the wee k -lon g
event. SS l!XACTA -.Meftd Picked & ~ 1toc111"s.a· .-i.s1oe.so Competition is in three
fli ghts with the Ponce de
lR<>n Flight encompass-
ing golfers 50·59. The
Renaissance Flight is for
60·69 age golfers .and the
Old Crows flight is for
those 70 and over.
Huston Kier is the de·
fenrung champion in the
Ponce de Leon fli ght:
Tom Pekin is th e
Renaissance defender ;
and Bill Foote the Old
Crows and overall rham-
pion.
Mf•non '11ejo
El NI~ SEVENTH ltAC£ -400 yarm 3
Th , l b t E l ..,.., olds & ~. c1asslfi•C1 all-ance. e men s c u a Purse$7.000. -
Niguel Country Club· SmoothK111.,
b b II f IBroollsl 3.60 3 20 } OC Staged a etter a 0 Mickeys Sun Flower .
foursome event recently. 1Banksl 1uo ., oo
Firs t place went to ~~,::~;c::_msure> uo
Norm Blondin, Bill Also tan -Miss Pep Straw. . S •.11 d Sllvertown, Miss Bhjf" Pacific, Three Beasley, Vic pru1 an Lit, &udCly FH Off, or. Twlenaus. Bo
Bill Weidner with 57 . 0iec1e
In second place with 58 Noicratc11ts
were B ill Brown , Dick EIGHTH .-AcE -•OOv••Cls JvMr
Billings. Wade Hampton OICIS & ~. C1aiml1>9. Purse u100. Run 81otlt>y Aun and John Levy. Third m .. w~> s.20 u 1 260
Place went to Ron Miller, Hustllft&ull CBrooksl s.eo 4 flt Pait.o's Ber 1t•a111 12t Dave Graf, Phil Altbaum Tlrne -20.11.
d H H'lk ith59 Ahoran-Hy8ound,wt.._1..ec1. an arry I e W · 1<1n;v•"ta. Tut'l'sR1tb.Ko••.s1y1iSh In a better ball of Meft,Snte11A11ack.
Gale Kimmel used a partners event, Mr. and Sc••tcMct -Nlle FliQllt. Soloman'~
five wood to cover the Mrs. Vic Campbell were Wt>;~XACTA 10.r ... •toMrt R"" a
177-yard third hole at the winners with 59 , .. H11111111 a.,. • .-ioeo.oe
Mission Viejo Country followect by Mr. and Mrs. N1HTM ucE -400 .,ar0s. 3 .,...,.
Club recently to score a Jack MrNerney at 60; oi0s &~.c1a1m1ng.Pursesuoo.
hole·in·one. Bill Bordwell and Maude f..°!~~oy 29 . .o 7•40 4.eo
H ead pro R oger Weidman at 61 ; and Mr. 0o1111a0o 1c1er1sw> 3.~ 2.<10
Belanger is currently and Mrs. Fred Ginder at Sc=~~ 0o <Ward> 2·40
planning r or th e . 62. Allld·,.n -Oue>e'$ NI""·.~
Southe:n California PGA Mlle Sq-re ~~F~1~~~"~~Y" 0 •emon0.
rhamp1onshipS to be held Scratched -S.oo Troublt, Ver·
at MV July 12·16 a~d for Jimmy Caspio, Jr., ~x~:~~YA:;~0~=:,dt
the Tran s Nat 10n a I fired a 78 to capture low o..tta••'*·°'
Women 's tournament g r oss hon ors for the _...,._,."<• ... 4,ut
which will be s taged in j unior m e n's e ll.Cb a t
Augus t, beginning on the Fountain V a lley Mile
.
Santa Anita
Race Entries
...,. w•o .. a•DAY
flUUt~t '1•J9"'M.
S1 Diiiy ~ --..... II.Mitt. U •..a.• M , 1ttl & tUI a.c.t. ..... ,••<•-•ti""'''"' Fllllft & _.., • YMr otdt & uo. Oel..,.111.
ll'W'M tlOflO. (l•IMl"'I ptlu llo,o:IO ' s.-T'-WO~"'' Ao,.tller'f' -1..A.C MA..
a,_elfMt.O.W ($111-rl Mtvlmltnto <Hawley I GUeftt.n.wnef'a IPlncey l
0.1-uai (Mof•t.tl
Olorlli.ct (Callll)el)
<II.ti la HoftW' (Howenll
A·W.Comoenlon IOllv•r•O C:.1...-y (L.oMr)
Hof'lo Det• (0 1•«1 NawtoMln <Gt•Pltdt•> Ully Llll'I' <Lamberti MDl"ftlllt 0.~M' ("OMllH)
AIMallelMt .
111 IU
ti• "~ 11S 1H
Ill 114
116 114 ,,.
11s
Pempas~ <Munotl 11J
A:DfMm ~· (011~arttl . IM ~8afOft'sb.lrftOW~Mlr,.
HCIDND •ACI -• furlonQs. >YMr
Ole& Oelmlft9. Purw Jtooo Ctalmlng prk• W ,000 -U0,000. c.pjtal O le of PeftllrameClly. PedltyWalll ITorol Wlnmor54)1rtt IMenel TNllflre fOllnrttl
Sundltt'ence ISlliNMr I SJr"-r (Nog.,.11 0.1\dyC."9• (Plr•dvl Noel's Baoel (Hawley)
117
111
117
117
121
117
11t
THI ltD ltACIE -4Yt lurlClllC)S. 3
~., OICI ma lOtft tlllles britcl In c.tht. Oelmlng. Purw $4.900 Clalmlngpriet
'30.000 -su.ooo. Sl•rr• Oewn Tra ... 1
Ollb. Wa1lllkl Cuti. (Go4'telttl OlvlM 11.,nlc• !Moralul 9"cll1Ma CAou'*SI ver-c. (Hawley) Cyllerftl<I (V alOez I
112
111 111
111 111 111
117
117
111
"'""" ••<• -0... ft\lle •• YMf" °"8 & 1111. (141iml.fll, Pvrw 19DQl. oe1m1111pr!<•s12,~s 10,000. It•"' and Oerl"O IS.-mHtrl 117 I T~ ... (ROMlt61 11, l(l11Q5terll (Plnuy) ' 1 .. HI,., "9wtf' <LAtmbtn I "' IM\lceroo IVtr~rl) 111 F.eM Ciel Ill IS.llenl 117 A1Nric.llS<out IGtm~t) 111
Oletof ~ (Oeftllltl) 111 TNltUp (lil'l6NI 116 SllMl'V•llff (H•wley) .,I,
SMALL
BUSINESS
LOAMS
S 50,000-S 400,000
5-15 Years , .
GOVT. GUARANTEm
Steve Grief &
Auoclates
OUHGE couHn
OFflCE
835-3117
Mr.A.-.W
MGU~Y
MUTUAi. Of NEW YORK
Ufe llt...-c•. H _.,.
pro•ktHby
...... crfH••Y"-
Haya Royal 8 . (Pierce) Pourt•lts hi• (Mena I Ro'(ll Marrl~ ITorol Sur Princess !ShOem•l\.ttl GayT•rrnlo (Plocay) Felr Pool CH•rrl1) Propeller (N011U41 I
111 i------------
117 ·~ ..... .--...~-...-.... ~ ...... 117
f'OU.-TH ltACl, -' lwrlongs.. l yeer old maiden colts & t,11tlcllngs. c1a11"ing. Pun•~'°°· Clelmlng prlc• UO,OOIH IS,000. Mar ot Saft Olego, Spero Giolmtft <Toro> 111
113 118
118 111
111
118
111
111
111
llJ
118
Soler Aul., (Gonalez) RHt 8oloro fV•lenzue111 'Ntstern 8'991 I Hawley I Eve's l.asl Turn (Skinner I
'Nlftd 'N Woods IHemllton) lu>Y (Pir.<ayl Aadlcel 1..o.,. (Mentl Olwppeerlr19 Act (Aowlul Black Me)esly IV•IOtzl
My Rao l(ftl9111 1Ar990ft) ' Salin Prince (Oliveres)
~l"H ltACE -Wt milts on tur1. 4 ..,.., okh & up. Alloweft<H. Purse
$12,000 Youft9 Al Heart Club. Gr•"4m Hea~v (Alvarez>
Flrsl~Cll ILembenl 113
113
114 114
1U
Prfnce M1sly <Leona rel l
MvlW<lft 1"-m•ICerl Sllven °'Glau <H•wleyl A-The Scotsman IPlucel Gu.llftf IOllvare1 l OtYOled Effort IMefta) Teri\ UnSloned (Cenol Bleck Waler (Go4'zelez)
JIAllmus (Valdtzl Min' Arel !Plncayl AIM£11gllll• Prince HerolCI (Are90n I Oovt''s Factor fC..ceras> MatchlMS Ottcls (V•IO.z) A·S-Clllsh Able I Harris)
A. S.ron Sttble Owned Eftlry.
114 114
117
108
112
114
113
112
113
.113
lt3
SIXTH •ACE -• furl0t>91. Fillies .. mares. 4 yeer olCIS & WP. OalmlnQ.
FOROS.CHRYSURS
GEJIEUL IOTORS-AMC
-FOREIU CARS
& TRUCKS
lllEDIATE awvur
lllJST IODELS
OPEN&
.CLOSED LEASES
THEODORE
ROBINS LEASING CO.
2096 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
642.0010 540-821
Pu r Se S I 0, 00 0. Cle I m I n 11 Pr l ct :. ;iiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii-: '2S,OOO.UO.OOO. Pe11erens.. II MlldamGo IMena l
0.<11 Folly (Hewley) n.. l..ecly Streaker (GOl>Lelez I Looi! AIM (l.amcer1J My E_,.lyft fValClez I Ult< 8ouQuet (Lopez) Tlf T1f (Cemptsl
118
'14 IU
117
111 114
114
SEVUtTH "•c• -• fut1oft9s, 4 yeer okis & \IO. AllOWences.. PlwH sn.ooo. v.,. Mar Fem1s.
Aue Oe Alvotl (Lamberl l DHctrtes fMenel FlyAmtrlc.., (C-l FuMancllu IV•IO!tz) Oormllon II f VelaSQ\Ml) Vlklnv's $9r le I Toro) KlftQAI CPll'IC•Yl
~rSc>ark (Hawle'Y)
114 llS
109
11•
11S llS 111
120
EIGHTH ltACE -I t/16 miles. 4
~·r olCI llllles. Slakes. Purse Sl0.000 eCICled. Grou U2,4SO. To winner
$It, UO, '•cone! "4>00. third ~soo. tourtll mso, lllth $1 so. El Encll'O 'ttlles. Miu FrtllC•K• (Mellfl Fatc1Mllft9 Glfl OU.fin>
8olcl 8eby IT oro I Field Glrl (l.opez )
Just A Kick 1$'-meker) Miu TOl!yo f Plnc•vl Kalle's Proof CR•m•~zl
121 llS
11S
llS m
"' 11S
that yours may not!
1 COM•LCTI OIANGI
COUNTY COVHAGE
ll1ducll1,: Let-'-"·
S.. Cl ...... Mkal .. Vlel-t.
Dnor.lllt,••ffn~
'4tocll ..... efLA.-
2 MONTH TO MONTH
HNTAL IASIS
second. Square .
The Trans NationaJ is Jn. net action, Keith Kisserberth was the a match play event for victor with a 56 with
Wrestling Results 3 NO DIPOSIT l~UillD
ON APPlOYID! CllDrT
4 ONLY .17.10 ~El MONTH
TOTAL COST
women golfers with 6 Scott Cameron a nd Bob
Orlowski tied at 57 in the
,,. ·-·Dau Mint • Hiiis) 4. ~ INeWOUry P•r11l. Wl'fttllllelllVllltltMI 1.0-1, l<tpplen (Newbury P•t11.I 2. TNm scorl"ll: 1. Simi Valley IW)J Smith (Sama An•) 3. Weith COrange
ltt11li111"9cl ,....,
5 NEW COMPACT UNIT
5111 11 'I• i 4 • 'ii I
The top pitchers. all
freshmen, fig ure to be
rig ht handers Mark
Chri s tman <Cos ta
Mesa>. Mark F ranklin
(Corona d e! Mar> and
Frank L itt l e (Min·
nesota ). along with lefty
Alan Gibson <Edison ).
(ho""' I Tl'lurs . Fitb 19-at El C.m•no Fri, Fet> 20-S.O<lleback lhome) Tue-. . Fet> 24-1 Golden We~I
nmnerup spot.
lrrine Coa•t Nadadores Shine
2. Newbury Partt UIV. l. 0.N Hiiis Glen)'· Sl•ller (Simi Valley I. 120Yt 4. Sellte Ana 110 S. Tuslln.,'i'J6.. 147-l. Vege (S.nte Aftal 2. O.llcb Edlson7"i'J. (0r9"9f GIMI 3. O'Donnell COatw a...._lttlJlll' Hiiis) 4. 8elllft9hlere (Newbury 97-1. Mercer CSA Valley) 2. °""'"' P9r1tl. ,
6 VOICE MlSSAGl PAGDS
AUO AH AVAILAILI 7 FULL FHJ MAINTINANCI
Ron Boile, from
Anaheim. will also be
used as a pitcher. when
he's not playing the out -
field .
The returnin ~ let ·
termen include center
fielder Dan Spain a nd in
fi elders Don Tryon and
Don Averill. Spain and
Tryon were starters last
season while Averill saw
part-time duty. ·
Ed Macy from Edison
UCI Swimming
UC lrvhlt <•> 0 1 I l"t"'8rdi,.
Meclt.., rf'l•v 7 VCI IFi.,...,,...., FoS<hl.,, Antley Pl'lllp0I ) J 4S 8
1,000 free 2 8owm•n Il l 10 ?•, 1 aw.con II I 10 2S 2001rM-l. PTl1lp0t (I)' '"0 501"9-I Fl9Ufl'Oe Ill 21 8
100 tr"-3 OonelClton 111 n S
F" • ~I>. 21-P• le>ma r OlO""' I Tu~, Marcll'2-I Cel State (l.81 Fr• , March S-Cal Stalit (LBl lhomel • Thur\, Marci'\ II-San Olego1111oa•
!hOrrw I
'><it • March tl-1 Fullerton•, noon
Tun • March 16-S•nla An••
(home I , Tnurs. March 18-1 Cerr11~· Sal . March 20-MI. San A11ton10• Chomel
T ~s . Marr h 23 _, GronmoM •. Sat , March 21-at San 01e90
Me•a·. noon Tue\, Mtrch 30-Fullerlon•
(home) Thurs., •orll 1-1 Seftta Ana' Sal , April )~errltos• lhoml!l,
noon Tues. Aprll 6-• Ml.~ A1'tonlo•. Tuu., AP"' 20-Grossmont• Cllomel
S..t.. Aprol 24-San Oieoo Mrse"
(ho,..... I, noon Tues . Apro121~u11enon• lhomf') Thurs , Apt1I 29-Saftle Ana• ,_,
s.1 .. Mey •-tcerr11~·. noon Tu"\ May •-Ml. Sen ML01110•
lhomel Thurs ,May6-tGrat.moftt"
S.I. May IS-<:onferitnce all-SIM
C)ame • • May 20-11-Southef"ft C.I pl•Yolts
Mav 27 29-Stal• pleyofls All 9arn.s begin al 2 JO, ""leu
otherwise lnO•<•ltd. ·~notes South Coast ~·
SAN FRANCISCO-
Rrian Goodell, Shirley
Rabashoff and up·and-
roming J esse Vassallo
led the Southern Pacific
all-stars to their first vir·
tory in six meets against
the Pacific all-st ars Sun·
dny in SPAAU s wim :lf·
tion.
The Southern Pacific
crew captured the meet
with a 286·226 m ar gin,
led by Goodell's wins in
the 200 a nd 500 free.
Rabashoffs victories in
the 100 a nd 500 free and
Vassano·s triumph in the
500 free
Vassallo. a fres hman
at Mission VieJo HiJ?h
School via Puerto Rico.
Pro Scores
won the 13-14 500-yard
free in the sparkling
time of 1 :40.5.
Firsts and second:;
from the Mission Viejo
Nadadores:
WOMIEN 1S-ll IOOlrtt-1. Shirley Babeshott S2 J2
DI-OunltV'f' SA 2. •
~lrH-1 V•ltrle l•t l:Sl 4. 1oo lrtt-1. ~irtev Bab.uholf 4;SS 0
2.
100 lly-1. Becky M<C.ferty 2.0S..4
2. v.1 ... i. ue 2:os.s.
U·I•
200 beck-I. Cl•lldla Noekes' It.I 2 200 lly-1. Nicole K"""' 7:07 O 2. All<it Brown 2:08 2. BOYS 1S.11 200 lree-1 Bria" GooOell 1·.o S 2 C.Sey c.onwne 1 44 S
SOO frtt-1. llriffl Goodell 4.31 4 2 C..sev Conwrw4.l7.l SOfr"-2 MlktKtlly222 200beck -I JimC.,ter I S.O.
700 lndivlClual mtdlity-1. Jim C..rter I S7.2
1>14
?GO 1ncllv1Clual medley-I. Jes• Vassallo7·00 I. 200ba<k-2. SI•"' Barnlcoat ,.07,t.
jOI) lr"-1 JHW V•Uallo 4:.0.S. 200 •k-1. Fl~roa llt? IW, >
9orden (I)
2
•
14' ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiijiiijili~jiijiiii~iijjiijiii~iiiiiil SOOlree-1. ""flpol (114 51 •I
200brtH1-J Fl\Cllllt< II I 1 111
Fr•eS l'l'I• ••l•Y 1 VCI
Hat1-I .. , .. e ... 11 Aueclati... Hous\oll llS. WaJhl"9ton'6
(Oofwlehon, 8owmafl. lle<ller, Tlc;ihtl
J ,.
Nabers
Cadillac
it
South Coast
headquarters
for Seville
2$00 Harbol' 8Jwd.
Costa Mna 540.g100
I
Two holes-in-one were
srored at Irvine Coast
Country Club over the
holiday season .
Bob H art m a n or
Newport Reach fired a n
ace on the 148-yard 13th
hole, using a six-iron.
Dorothy Bowen con-
nected on the 137-yard
17th.hole.
(Edisot1I J. Cinco 11..8 Poly) 4. WNtt IS.-1. Wercl (l.8 Poly) 2. Blum (Elllno<""t) . (He.Wry Perk l :t. Hoplllns (0r""9f 10)-1. Arrtolt (O•ne Hiiis) 2. Glen) 4. R•y (Daft• Hiiis). Garo ISJml Velleyl 3. Malloy ISA · "1-1. Swee11ey (Edison) 2. Bonsall valley) 4. Gomtll (0raft9t Glen I. <Sent• Anal J Cook 1oren119 Glet1I 4. 114-1. Marsll•ll (Simi V•lttyl 2. Battersby 10.IWI Hiii~). Bomlncllof ISaftle Mal J. Taltl'Pl!ta tn-1. Kelley ISlml V•llevl 2. 11~ Cl.II Poly) 4. Thomas (SA Valley). (,,.._nh (Oen• Hills) 3. SchollelCI 122-1. G<'uner IECllS<>nl 2. Hwrls !Newbury Park ) 4. Castro (SA (Dena Hiiis) 3. VoO•I (Simi V•ll~y) 4. Velley). V•IMzuele !SA Valley). IU -1 Culp (Senta Anal 2 129-1. Porter ""(Simi valley) 2. Ounltlloody Cl.8 Poly I>. Ctlllclefl <San ~lftl <N•wtiury Partt ) J. C.rr CO.NI Clementel4.Covent (NewtwrvParil l, Hiiis) 4. Hintz (Tutlln). Hwl-1. Munclen (Simi Velleyl ?.
13S-I. 8oranltft (Tustlftl ,, Porter McKenzie (Newbury Parll I 3. Estrada (Simi V•lleyl 3. S.ndtrson 10.N CTustlnH.AreM (S.ftteAnal.
Daily Sunjet service from
n~arby Orange County Airport.
Package tours and economy
fares for f am iii es and
groups, too. So call Air
Callfornia first. If
there's an easier way
to get you there, we'll
be the firat to tell you.
ORANGE COUNTY
RA0107ELEPHONE
SERVICE •~r
(714183~1305
.. SO. SANTA ,,, $AMT& IN&
ll"lllft L•901N ... di, MIUIM Viti•. OaN ,tl~I. sait Ci.-le. ha J .. a Call!Jtrue. II T-eel ... ....
49'-UU
Coll Easy Information In
Orange County, (714) 752-1000;
Downey. (213} 924-3313:
AIR
CALIFORNIA
We·re easy to take. Laguna, (714) 496-6000;
Los Ange/cs, (213) 627·5401.
C.TDl.ISNAJ
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I 117
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117 ,,,
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NTH
ns
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Tue'Kl8y January 20. 1978 DAILY PILOl 87
1· ~Champ Sellsqn,' 'Millionaire' Open
A colleae tind a community theater Join forces
th.is week to mount a play which won all fhe awarda
in aiaht on Broodw ay. while another local theater la
revivina a comedy about life among the upper
dus.
Openlna Thursday night is'the prhe·wlnnlng
.· drama :'That Champlol'\lhip Seuon, '' a comblrwd
production of Golden West College and the lrvlne
Community The.ater. On Friday the lights go up on
"The Happiei;t Millionaire'' at the Costa Meaa Clvta Playhouse.
. • ...
\
' ..
i
• • • . • • •• . . • . . ..
• • I t
' ' . ' , ,
I I I
GOLDEN WEST'S MAIN theater is the scene of
"Championship· Season," Jason Miller's powerful
drama of four ex-high school basketball players and
their coach on the 20th anniversary of the~ 1tate
championship victory. The play is recommended
for mature audiences because of the expjic't frank·
ness of its dialogue.
Jack Byron portrays the coach, with Onofre
Gutierrez. Clark Burson, Alan Levy and Randy
Keene cast as the old teammates ln the tense con-
frontation. Tom Titus directs the show, which plays
Thursday through Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at S
o'clock for two weekends. Reservations 892-7711,
extension 545.
--~---------•• * * * * JACK NICHOLSON'S PERFECT TRIUMPH!",, . ·. y' :. : : I
11
"3 DAYS OF THE COHDOR .. IRI
..CHIHATOWM" IRI
"'DlllTT MARY, CIAIY LAUV"'
.. VAHISHIHG POIKr
"GOME IH 60 Sl!COMDS .. INI
.. HUSTLr
"THE GAMILER" UU
The Lile and nmes of
~If Li~
.. IGI' ,, ...... 1 Color Dy 0,, use •• '•
Tht Tru, 1tory ol a man ulltd
In tht wlldtrntH and how ht
'"'"' 14 1urvlvt
HELD OVER!
2nd SMASH WEEK
co.FFATURE ~r AU OR•vE INS "MA. SUPER INVISIBLE" DIAN JONll
IUEIU. l'ARK 8u ... ,.,,.
Ml$A Colla Meu ,
CYMS8 TWIN C~us
WHTBROOll CIN,MA •1
(ieroenG10.e
1\JSTIN SOUARE '"'"" LOS M. Toa n LOftG lloch
~ANGE MAU 0t1,,,,_
OllAHGE 01111\1£ •N Orenqo
CINEMA M1UIOlt V>ltjO
C1NEi.tA wE61 t I w .. ,,,,,.,,.,
61Mtlt
Mll·IU2 a2e.1eeo
~~· &H·lfi96
~· .. HIW4f 39 ORIVl IN w .. 1 ... 1ntl0t
P\.ITl CITY CiNl Ell 011n91
•ti.SI
637.o:s40
ue.iou
&:JO.e990
"H41J S~HI
63•.a112
s,..w ..... wt-Mo ......... "'"4
SEE OIRlCTORIES OR CALL THlATRC roR SliOWTIMlS ~ ........................... ... :; . • :: •, :: .. :· .. ... • .. •.
' HOW FAR DOES '
A GIRL HAVE 'IQ~NGLI
. HER TINGLE??
SEE THE UNCUT 1.. UNCENSORED
ORIGINAL 35 1M PRINTS!
Intermission
Tom Titus
AT COSTA MESA, ''The Happieat Millionairtt"
ta the atory of the eccentric Anthony J . Orexel-
Rlddle frorn the biography by hi• dllu&hter,
Cord.tUa. Joe Bell and Lindi\ Butnam pliLY these
roles in the local production, with Brad Estrin and
Stan Wlasick portraying the Biddle son11.
CompleUha the cast are Geoffrey Constant,
Earlene Holliday, Mike Wilaon. Su11ie Scott, Donn~
Adam, Ron Claffey and Luii Mello. Pall Tambelllni
1-directin1 the comedy, which aoes on staie at 8: 30
Frldaya anc.11 Saturdays for three weekends at the
Community Center auditorium on the Orange Coun·
ty Fairgrounds. Reservations "6·5391. ·
ROUNDING OUT AN exceptionally heavy
weekend on coast a I staees are: .
-"The Petrified Forest," opening tonight for
three weeks at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 606
I.aguna Canyon R oad, Lagufra Beach .
Performance• Tuesdays through Saturdays un\il
Feb. 7. Reservations494-0743. I
-"Gypsy" at both Sebastian's West Dinner
Playhouse and the Westminster Community
Theater, opening Friday at Westminster for four
weekends of Frid~ and Saturday performances in
the theater, 7272 Maple Ave. Reservations 893-8626.
Continuing Tuesday through Sunday at Sebastian's,
I 4 So H11bo1 • An1~11111 U~ I Ill I ,.UI_,
"Tit£ BLACKBllD"
l4U'f 8:41 '4T/MM-h ll.Sot0..4'
'100STO C081UIN"
DAIU 6:4 .. 1 t:lO V.T/\~l ..... :41-18:11
. · CINEMALAND · '
1414 h llUitl hl-11111 &J) 1601
1111 •o• .. , "HG DAY AFTERNOON"
DAILY l i00.10:11
U.T~l:lM~l l:ll
"OIOWNING POOL" .... ' .... "'' /1.,.....,, ... , ..
I
''Sl1JRY OF O" (Xl
t:4M.JO.lt:U
lAT /S--l:JO.J:ll
,, ...... , .. ,J .. lf!JS
A "R.ISH •OIDOH ..
VT '"CHHILIADERS" uu
... ILLll POier
'?llMI CUT* llJ
COMYIMUOUI .. ON IZISO
UT. TMIU JAM. 4
+. • t
'"THI ASTIOLOCIM"
"RISH GOIDOH" tlJ
'"THI C:HIULIADIRS"
"\.In DO rT AaAIN''
"'90C ~······ '"IULLll POIC:I"
"STU W DOGS" Ill
''MUIDO OM THE
ORIENT UPIHS" (PC)
Sll0-7:11
"THE PARALLAX
VIEW" (R)
2: 101-10:10
'1KE
ASTIOLOHR"
(I)
l :JM:I M :OO.
7r4M~O
'11llEI FOIC(" (W} ''°"""JO +mUIN TO MACON
~oum UN£" •ao.1111
IUASI CALL'°'
SHOWTIMH AliiO
C:O-HATUU
f'LITT CITT
CIHTH
U4-UU
UA SOUTH
COAST
U0.0194
& lolm lo'!
TANJ:EY J\YBRICK
I.VAN o ·N!4L • MARISA
BEA!N&ON
WINNER 001..0EN
()LOBE AWARD
NOMINATIONS FOR
H ST PICTURE and
HST DIRICTOA
EDWARDS CINEMA ~AHOl•f40A.ail\
COSTAMfSA 10·)101
MOH"'" I• ii IAT/SUN, 1 »J ..... JD
I"
The
MH1trpl9Ct ol
Love end
SubmlHlon Thet
Stunned France
PWS THE S£C0"0 MOST FAMOUS _ _._. .. __ ADMLI Fl~ Of OU~ TIME ...
'11lllR FOICt"
1:01
''lftUIN TO MACON
COUNTY LIME"
The ~II In Ml11 Jones
ONL y . PUllVCAT • 878-llMI
ORAHGE 709 E. llibOI Blvd. Ntwpof1 Btac1' COUNTY OPIN DAILY AT 12 MOON SHOWING!
&1IJ.t140
'THI
4STIOLOGU" IRI
6Jft.7110.t1JO
•
140 Avenldu Pico. San Clemente. R~i.ervatlon11
492-9950.
-"How the Other Hair li0vcs. •· tntcrtn11 Its
second of five weekends lit lhl? lhmtin~ton Reuch
Playhouse, 2110 MCttn St .. Uut\tlllJilOtl Bet\<'h
Performance:. 1··ridays und Sulurtl1.t)'ll ut 8, 30
thrOUib f<~e-b. 14. Reservation1t&&2 5421.
-"TH£ NATIONAi, Heltllh, '' <'ontinusng ul
South Coast Repertory. 1827 Newport Hlvd .. Costu
Mesa. every night but Monday bl 8 o'do<'k wlth Sun
day matinees ;1l 3. Reservation~ H46 IJtiJ.
-"You Know l Can't Hear You Whl'll the
Water's Running" <to be reviewed in Fm.l.iy s rol
umn>, heacllng into the second of !uur wt't1ktind11 11t
the San Clemen l e Community The atf'r. 202 A ven1da
Cabrtllo. Performances Thurstlay through Satur·
day until Feb. 7 at 8:30. Reservutwns ,t!J:.!-0-165,
CAl.J.UOt\RD -The Huntington Beach
Playhous~ will hold audit10ns fur the dra ma "The
Little Foxes" at noon Sunday in thl· playhouse . 2110
Main St., Huntington Reach ... Alex Koba b direct·
inll the play. whkh requires six m~n and four
women, including a mature !.>lack l·ouple ...
Tina to Star
HOLLYWOOD <UPI >
-Tina Aumont,
daughter o f M ~1rir1
Montez and J ean-Pierre
Aum ont, will costur with
Donald Sutherland in
"Casanova."
..
~., ·~·'· t+ '. ,, .. , o. .... ..,,, ,., .. ,
a.oo 8 11 10:10
• •'it.i.11• ,,,,., -~•h•:..ll•tiH• 'tl
"HOTHiUAH YOU-
5'AU A DIMlir' MltHT\ Y 1:4'
"WOY AL HI SH" IP•I
Ml•KTI.• •:U
WAL HR MA rfllAU
OEOPOf l'lUA"I!!
RlrHARD llENJAMIN WINNER S GOLDEN
GLOBE NOMINATIONS
1nclvd1"'0
e.11 P1ctur• An 04' k '••"P•1i1y
edwards BRISTOL CINEMA
.~·Ill
li*1 llD!I llHJll; All·~ • R
SPECTACULAR !
edwa1ds UDfCINEM.\-1
flllWPOll ll¥U /o 1 f-' lll •l P4tW,on •tAc 11 ., l 1 1>0 .
_,., tletollf a •An l!Wt~WH
l•-l llAYIOf-~• ot .._,,.. ..a NICMOUOH • i'aYi~1HY ___ .._ __ .. _,•_.; CtlNATOYm 1111
--·~j:')
... ;.r;if)
•
--....... .. ,.l
PLU i •tDN,Y
•tlL COSOY ' PO!TIUI
t.lf'S II It 8G"l8
.~. ·K 3
• ··. OAVSOF ·)
•THE.CONDOR •
ROBEIH RliOFORO
FAYE DUNAWAY
1-----cfNEMA CENTER M,_101 '"' ..... ,.\(OU• "°'tU
II.th UlOfUHUa t l t·41'1 ,
SPECT A CU.LARI
THRILLING!
OIFFERENl!
l'\.UI
D1ANA AOSS
AND llLL Y 011 Wll.LIA"11
"MAHOGANY'' rl'tl WOl!lt.N I 'tfllY WOlllAW
.. AllU TO It -Al40
hlllY lllAN •Atn•
fO """'
~ ... f .... I ...
"K'l~lll.U • ™''~ THI AJTIOlOGCI 111 PLU~ e
14.AUCNml "°"" •• , ...... -...
Al ,A(llOO
DOG DAY Aml~OON 111
,AUl NIW"""M
DIOWN INO ~l ""
''*" 01nn-Nn Ull & NIU Of OltUL Y UAMS ,_,
Ml. IU'll INVtUIU • .. , _, , ..... ........ __....~
lUCIT \ADY• UCI wmt TMI OIVIL !ti ........ .,....
...ctACllLM e MllWND
1M1UTIOLOOCI111
PLUS •
IOOIAC IUlUI t'1
NICIO -AM•A CAHO~
A CO~Oltl
YO IOY ti. •AUO
41.MOMAU •A&• nM
5 .. fCIAL DIClNTllO<IAL
ICllUNIMG
MONO,U & TUUDAY
fHEIE Sl A rt• 'IG)
gHOWI AT 6 40 • t 4' • 10·0
,,
' . .J The Llfe •nd nmea Of
GRIZZD'
ADAMS<o>
'"• tNt ... ~ °" • "'" fllt.4
lft ttw .. .,.,,.. .. •f"O ttoo. ...
..
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for .1 1 •
off•< t' ·n
role
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1mp:H'1 11r
t•nl<'rt•d
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•
m1nistr.1t 11)1\ 1
genl·r.it u1~ 1r • f •
t>st ro)?<>n rl ri 1
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T H F,, TJ P. I <; • Jl •
c;cnb<'d for rn••r 11
<1n ct post ntt•
lh<'rnp~, thf' I H.
~<'lltng 11f 11 k r '
t•o11nt1ri• for :ihn
m 1 I l ir n :" .ii ( s 1 '
yl' 1r 111• 'f v.I :'It
por r fl, • n U\d m ill. 1
mm> 1•1.
. '\ Dt• • r Doc•t11r" h I
ter 't" t to < \ < I"\ ph\ 1
r13n 1n th<' , • untry I.it •
l:il't y1•.1r •n o\\•'r l \\3i
m I~ It• ;trf llq' t 1 (' (' ,111 f'
parts of 1t r. n I l• 1
terprrted t r 1 mm11. •
the n -<k of lht' 1 l)('H·
hon b<'t~· l n "~'r • no;
and r:mcrr 11( t hl' 111
and th~ lt.'tll'f t
i~ 1rr('!!!:po11 thlr ·
fo'DA s111d.
TO COUNTl'RA<T it.
the agrnt>y s.1111, 1t \1.1 I
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1 he {
tr:> tra
d ' ror the.
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t
Udall Backs. Foreign Oil
Criticizes Crash Program to Go Domestic
WASHINGTON CAP> Rep. Morris K. Udall of
:\nzona believes the µnitectStates should buy and
u l' all the foreign 011 it can instead of embarking on
a c·rash program to shift to domestic sources in the
n<lme of energy independence.
Reversing the energy course advocated by the
:\dmirustralion. Udall's plan would be' to increase
i.nports· and save U.S. 011 for as long as possible .
figures, imports are running at a~ut 6.6 m1lhon
barrels a day. Thus. on an annual bas1s, the imports
cost dose to $32 billion.
For the
Record
MISSION COM~UNIT'r H~l"tTAL
Nt.,.mMr 10, 1'7'
Mr •no Mr1 0tnn11 McCltntoo. uoun. Hill\, Qlrl
HoYe1t1berll. 1t7S
Mr tncl Mrs. Sttpllen Chit, Mission
VleJo.glrl
Mr. encl Mrs J1mes Hanntmenn, Jr.
Mission 'Joe Jo, boy
HoV11mberU.1t1s
llDAU. Al.SO SAYS THAT IF his Democratic
t'"CSidential campaign succeeds, the goal of his
,utministration would be to cul the number of job·
-'lt·~s Americans by more than half, to no more than __,,--~-four million, within a year.
Udall said if elected he would pursue policies
designed to guar antee full employment a com-
mon theme among the Democratic candidates -
and would provide "some leadership on the adjust·
ments we're going to have to make'' as energy
becom.es scarcer a nd more costly.
But in the interview, as in tlis published position
papers, he avoided dollar-by.dollar specifics about
the cost and revenues involved in the proposals.
UDALL SAID HE FAVORS prompt action on
legislation that would require the federll govern-
ment to spend whatever is necessary to guarantee a
Mr and Mrs. Fred LIHnll. Mission Vitt
Jo.boy
Novtmbtr Jt, 1'7S
Mr and Mrs v1rnon Tomlfnton, Mil
slon Vie Jo, bov
Otcernlltr 1. tt7S
Mr tnd M rs. How1rd Jepps,on, Mtulon
Vtt)O,Qlrl
December 2, 1t11
.· ~,
'• __)
The candidate and his advisers estimate the
potential cost at about $11 billio'o. They have no
l-Jit'l'1fic formula to finance it, althohgh Udall says it
NUld be offset b} cuts m the defense budget and by
l .1x-ra1sing m easures m the name of reform.
These would include increases in the capital
t 3ins tax and in the minimum tax on wealthy
c .lt:".l'ns. hut l 'dall did not say exactly how mu1h he
1 ropose:, to raise w1thsuch measures
Their fate 1n
Congress would be( J
1r1e:>tionable anyhow.. ·' f,' u ·'°' I' II.)' ,tt;/,"i In the energy field, . .
till' Arizona congressman
1 roposes thal the Uruted
~talt'~ use its market power to require competitive
l 1ddmg by foreign producers who seek to sell their
t w< ~ts here. Udall's proposal, similar to a plan
~ ,•11nl-1rt•d by Sen. Philip Hart (D·Mich.), envisions
~· !:>> ·'t'm m which the government, instead of the oil
l omp ~inies. would deal with exporters. The
purchase bids would be sealed and if the theory
\Hlrkcd exporting nations might undercut each
1 • 'il'r·s price:. to gain a share of the American
m~1rket
"WE BUY SO!UETIDNG LIKE 40 percent of
!ht' 011 that's exported m the world, and if we sud·
11•·:ily said· 'We're going to make you bid against
l','<'h other for the rights,' I think we could divide
thl' cartel and probably get some reduction in price,
l•r 3t least head off the next increase," Udall said in
•tn mtervte\\.
l 'dall said that at current consumption rates,
mo!:>t of the world ·s 011 and gas is going to be used up
1n the next 25 years. He said the United States
:-!lvuld s peed its search for alternative power
:-011rces. and for more effective ways to use its coal.
"As long as we can handle the balance of pay·
mt oit~. and the balance of payments has been look-
,..,~ nretty good. we may be better off using up and
liu~ :ng up their oil. and saving ours, rather than to
''art a rrash program that would disrupt the
l'cnnomy," he said.
The balance of paym ents the difference
hl'lwt'l'n what America buys abroad and what it ex·
ports -is expected to show a surplus or about $2
r•1lhon for the past year. Udall did nQt say what
:t·\ t'i of increased imports he would consider ac·
rt':Hable
BUT A~Y SIG~Jfl('A~ INCREASE in oil im·
ports would quick I~ put the balance of payments in·
to 1'1t> red The United States now imports about 38
pl'rci>nt of the oil 11 consume-. Consumption totals
.1hout I 7 milhnn h.arrels ,1 da)
·\ccording to Federal Eneqn Aumin1~trati0n
11 ed ·f t1k, Blu e Blood·
job for every able· bodied American. ·
He endorsed a bill sponsored by Rep. Augustus
Hawkins (0-CaliC. > and Sen. Hubert H. Hum phrey
<D-Minn.), and based his forecast of the cost on
their figures.
Those estimates assume a need to provide five
million jobs within 18 months, to bring the un·
. employment rate down to about 3 percent.
They estlmate'the cost per job at up to $10,000 a
year, but say that would be offset by a dechne in un·
employment and welfare expenses, and by an m
crease in federal revenues stirred by higher
employme nt and increased economic activity.
UDALL ESTIMATES THE ANNUAL NET cost
therefore would be about $11 bjllion. He said that
could be offset by defense spending cuts, tax re
visions and, if necessary, an increased deficit. The
candidate and his advisers said they could not
estimate how much the defi cit might go up because
of uncertainties about the economy,
The jobs would be generated by slepped·UP con·
struction of government financed or aided projects,
or be provided in public service employment on
governm ent payrolls.
Udall contends that the cost eventually would
be more than ialanced by increased revenues pro·
duced by the n w jobs and an ac·
companyin g e onom1c revival.
He advocates cuts in de-
fense spending for conventional
weapons, a sharp reduction in
the number of tactical nuclear
weapons deployed abroad and
substantial cuts in the $23 million
earmarked In the Pentagon
budget for conventional forces
assigned to primary or backup
roles in Asia. UDALL
UDALL'S ACCOUNT OF IDS DEFENSE views
does not include dollar figures on Pentagon budget
cuts.
His other projected revenue scource for the
jobs program would be tax revisions, and he says
tax reform would be one of nis top priorities
He said at least S20 billion a year escapes
"through tax loopholes."
While he proposed a series of tax changes, he
avoided item izing what they wo~ld raise -or cost.
(Editor's note: This tS the third ma sene.s of articles
that will appear from time to time m the Daily Ptlot on
~ratrc pre!idential candWates J
TV P r e mieres Airing
Men Ask
Help Too
B y JAY SHARBUTT
'.'JEW YORK <A P ) -Two new pro·
grams are premiering on TV tonight.
One 1s .. Popi, .. a CBS situation com-
l·cty. The other 1s public television's
· The Adams Chronicles," a red· ink
~eries about a blue-blood family.
The latter show. wh.i::h ran $1.5
million over its original $3.9-milhon
product10n budget because of delays
blamed on a writers· strike and scnpt
rC'V!s:ons. is quite an ambitious pro-
Jl'Ct. <Channel 28, 9 p.m.)
IT DRA)tATIZES TllE Jives of four
"cnerations of the historic Adams
1am ilv of Massarhusetts and the
fam1ly"s contributions to the nation,
from pre-Revolutionary War times to
.1round 1900.
.\fter an advance peep at tonight's
... how, the first or 13 produced by
WNET here, I"d say we may be facing
the dawn of a new era in American
public TV -namely, a first-rate
dr3matic effort not made by the BBC.
(TV R EVI E W J
mitted to the practice of law, ap-
proaches a prominent Boston bar·
rister. J eremiah Gridley, in hope of
sponsors hip.
Gridley, played to an irascible T by
John Housem a n, isn't impressed that
the lad studied at Harvard, which he
calls "that citadel of riot and dissioa-
tion." But he finds Adams worthy of
help.
AFTER THAT, IT'S on to Adams'
initial failure as a lawyer , his
romance with Abigail Smith, and his
early work with Boston patriots dis·
puling England's quaint custom of
taxation without representation.
Capital News St'rvire
DAV JS Th e
Women's Resource and
Research Center at
Davis has expanded its
programm ing to include
men.
Apparently, men find ·
in g themselves with
liberated women hav<'
been going to the center
for counseling, officials
said.
PUBUC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSI NESS
NAME STATE ME NT
ll'f lollowlno person' ere doing busl·
neun
WE!iTERN LIFE S"FETY
!iY!il EM!., 001 Tremont L.,~. CMona
dtl Mllr, Calllornle 92'H
W.llen lnduUrtes. • Clllfomle cor·
Pllf•tlon, 007 Trtmon1 Lane, C.0.-ona
dllMer, Callfornl•9262S
Tiiis buSlntU IS conductt<I l)y .. CO<·
poretlon
WELLEN INDU!iTRIES
urry A Woplltn, PrtS•dMt
This stetement was hied with the
County Clerk of Oreno• County on
Jenuery 11. "1• FSt"2
Mr <Ind Mrs Jouph Otl•n•v. Minion
Vtefo, boy
Ot<trnller 3, 1t7S
Mr and Mr st O.inotl Thorlwall, Ml\.\IO<!
Vlt10,9or1
Otctmber 4, tt1S
Mr and Mrs J•mes C.•noll, Mission
VoeJo. gorl
December S, 1t7S
Mr end Mrs Jann Stew•rt. El Toro,
gtrl
Mr and M rs Rontld Younoman.
LeQUna Beach bo-r
Mr •nd Mrs Ro«wr1 Y urlngton, Mli.-son Vte10. Dov
Oturnller 6, 1t7S
Mr and Mrs Roger Antnony. Mluoon
VU!jO. girl
&.cemller I 1t1S
Mr and Mrs Mtcha•I Wy\tr1Ch. s.,
JU<ln C1pls1r1no, oorl
Ot<tmbtr 10. 1t7S
Mr end Mn Davod R•ttr•Y. Mission
V1e10.b0y
Dtctmller 12. lt1S
Mr and Mrs. David Frencn, Mission
Voe10,0J1rl
Mr. ar>d Mrs. Rus~ell Hun I, Et Toro,
boy
O.ctmbtr U . 1'7S
Mr end Mrs. Cllllord Kenyon, Ml~•on
v 1e10 boy
Mr. and Mrs. Robert 11.andervort, S.tn ~
Juan C.apostreno, boy
O.tmbtr 14, 1t7 S
Mr and Mrs Gerald Jendreas, Mluoon Voe)o,bov
Mr and Mrs. Moon Noh, Loguna
NtQuel.boy
O.ctmller 1S, lt7S
Mr and Mrs. Slevtn Davis, M1u1on
V1tjO,Q"I
Oeumbtr 1', 1t7S
Mr end Mrs Joupn Anl,.ony Ml\Soon
V1e10. girl
• O.etmbtr 11, 1915
Mr and Mrs Jemes Morsch, San Ju.n Qp1s1rano, boy
Mr. ano Mrs l(enneth l oon, MISSIOn
VH'JO. boy
O.umber "· lt1S
Mr ano Mrs. P•ul Ma\bu•n. Mt~\1on v eJo, qorl
Mr and Mrs Da1e Clouto•r, Dan• Pooni boy
December 20. 197S
Mr and Mrs Dam Novutn. El Toro
oorl
Ouemller 24, 1975
Mr and Mrs Van Ot Woll. El Toro. boy
Mr and Mrs Donald Powers. lrvl,,.., gorl
0.ctmtltr U , 1t7S
Mr an<! Mrs Henry Moak, Mission Ille
lo boy
Mr And Mrs. John Fo\ter, Mo\slon \/of!· Jo.boy
O.ctmbtr 21, 1t7S I
Mr and Mrs. Steven Herner1M1, El
TO<O, gorl
DtcemlMr >0, 1'7S
rilr and Mr\. Fran~ 8retn41r, MoHton 1oe10. boy
PURI.IC ~OTJC'E
... ICTtTIOUS BUSI HESS
NAME STATEMENT
Th .. 10110 .. ,no ~rs,on os doing ~o
~Mi
$AM L MORSE CO. UH
Plaunto• Ave • Coste M•s.t, CA 92627
S.muel Lew . Mo•w. 102 Scnoll
PloUI N.,#bort Bte<h CA
nus bu!o,lr>C!\\ 1\ tondU<ted llV an 1n•
d1Y1du•I
Sotm L Morsp
Tl11s st1tem.nt was lolC!O w.lt> '""
County Cl•rk ol Or1nge County on
January s. 1976
FS1i.t
Publl<t>eo OranQ4!' Co<1s1 Oe•'Y r><to•
Jan 13. 70 l1 ond 1-tb 1 1976 11 1•
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT l~ follow1n1 pe1wns are ooono bust
ness.u
ICI MSTOllE, noo Soull't Yale
Street. !ianta Ana, C•ltforn1a 9?1CW
Klm$1ock, Inc 2'00 !ioutl'o Ytlop
!.tree!, Santa An1. CAhfornla 927<W
TPlls busonts• IS conducted l>y •
Corporatl""
KIM!iTOCK INC
This stttem,.nt w•s filed w.th thf
County Cluto. o• OrenQI! Coonty on
O@cemoer n, 1911 FM*l
PUl>llSllKI Orange! Coa" D111v P,IQI
Dote. 30, 107S and Jin 6, 13. 20, 197•
4'1ll·1S
PUBJ.I(' ~OTJC'E
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Tiie loltow1n9 f>t'r\On is dO"'O buSt
nessas.
Vl !iU"L COlhORTS ln E lMh
SI. Cost11 ~esa CA 91611
R~s Oyp Doxon 111 117 E 1Mh !it
Costa Mtu CA 9'2627
Tilts bu\on&ss os conductC!d l>y an In·
dlvoduai
Ross Oyf Do~on 111
Thh -.1atement wes 111~ with tlle
County Clerk of Oranoe County on
J•nu1rv 8, 1976
FS12a
Pubio\lltO Orange Coest Oally Piiot,
Jan ll. 20, 21 and F~b J, 1976 14 11>
PtJRLJC ~OTICE
The show ends with his reluctant
agreement in 1770 to defend British
soldiers accused of taking part in the
famous "Boston Massacr e," when
they fired on an angry mob assailing a
British sentinel. Publl"'9<1 Ortnoe Coul ~11., Pttot, -----------
Jen. 20, 27. end Fel> J, 10. 1976 llS.76
THE ACTI NG OF THE supporting
The s how studies the life of young
~lohn Adams, his courtship of Abigail
Smith and their marriage in 1764, and
th<' start of his rise to prominence in
American history from humble
ongins as a struggling lawyer and
former in Braintree, Mass.
SUPEllllOR COURT
OF CAlfFOlh~l.A,
COUNTY OF TULARE
CASE NUMBER
f'ICTITIOUS iuSINIESS 11414
players is uniformly good. the cos-__ P_U_B_L_1_c_N_o_11_c_E __
tumes seem quite authentic and the
camera W01'k, indoors and out, is
classy indeed. So watch the show. It's
a good start for the series.
NAM• STATEMENT SUMMONS IMARRIAOI!)
Tiie followlno person Is 00i119 buso· In ti! th• m11rrl11oe ol ~t.11-r nnsn MAX INE LOUISE WATICIN!i 11nd
MACY REALTY, 1871 Conejo RtSPQndent JOHNLEEWATICIN!i ~nr.'Fullerton.CA'1'33 NOTICIE: Yt11 llave been ..... Tiit
LVl.fi \''flll:'lG
GF:ORGE GRIZZARD seems a
mite old to be playing young Adams -
the actor was 47 when the show was
taped -but he still turns in a fine
performance. as does Katherine
Walker, cast as his strong.minded
\; tf P .
The premise of cits· "Popi" serie~
isn't too novel. It's about a Puerto
Rican widower with twb young sons.
It replaces "Joe and Sons," which
concerned an Italian·American
widower with two young sons. (Chan-
nel 2, 8:30 p .m .)
Geofve Mntl, 1'71 Coneio unt, CMl't mt'( 41t<lde -.al111t y.., ... .,_,.
Fullerton. Oii '2633 -•"I llffrd •nlen you ~
ll ,I ,In llllJi~l('t
l I r•·t l hat
t !le SO\ 1rt
1. 111timatC'
. ~·t•ret•y pap
k" it ;di the
11 It for our
,my
the
'C th ll Ir , 0\1·
t <101. •1 I It.I\ c
uld s.:ive
mcndr>U~
,,
The show opens in 1758 when
Adams, only concerned with being ad·
Bath Embarrassing
RIRMINGHAM, England
(UPI) -Housewife Jane Dixon
really took a late night bath
berause she could not gel to
!>leep. Then it became an old
story with the same old twist -
it took six men to get her out .
Mrs. Dixon, 23, soak~and
steamed and wriggled her toes
in the bath and then thought she
would get back to bed.
THAT WAS WHEN she found
her big toe was stuck ln the cold
water tap. "
Mrs. Dixon wr\agled and
tugged and the water iol colder
and colder. Nothing happened
Al 1:30 a.rn . two policemen
and four firemen answered an
emergency call for help fnd
,,
crammed into the bathroom to
grapple with the big toe. Mrs.
Dixon wrapped hersetr in a
blanket to stave off the blushes
and the cold.
More tugging and heaving.
A.gain nothing happened.
THE FIRE STATION officer.
Jim Hobbis spotted a shampoo
bottle on the shelf and had a
brainwave. He squirted the
greasy liquid around the toe and
gave a gentle tua. Out came the
toe.
"lt't so1Uly," said Mrs. Dixon
afterward. "I was lying back
and wi.i1Ung my toes around
when it Just seemed to happen.
''Now I'm seriously thinking
of putting in a shower instead."
This builneu Is condU<I~ by an In· Wltltln » days. Read tllt l11femwtlen
dlvlduet Mttw. •
0.Qr9t Menl A Vt SOI Us'" ........ mMCIMe. E
This stalement was fll~ with the trtlMIMl,_,.ckddlrctt1treUd.d11-
County Clerk of Orenge County on Dtc. dleftcle • me!IM It.,. Ud tftpot!d<i *""
tro ••din. LH •• l11tor~.,.
F'1010 s/9W. Publl~ Or•noe Coast 011.y F}lot. I. To tl'M Rtspondtnt ISM footnote• I
31, 197S
Jlfl •. 13. 20, 11. 1ta l'J 1• a The petitioner hu filed a petition
conctrnl"9 vour rnarriaoe. Yoo m.1v
PUBLIC NOTICE
.. ICTITIOUI 8USINESS
NAM• STATUHHT ne fo41owlno person Is 001119 bu\I·
Mn IS:
JENSEl'I & CO .. 040 ClmpU~
Drift, Newport Center, CA. 91660
Jemn Vincent JtnMn, Ho. 10 R~
Mllrwll It, NtWllOf'I &et< II, CA 9?660
Tiiis l>uslM~• 11 conouctt<t by en ln-
dlvtdutl.
fllt e -men rts.oonse within :IOdtys ol
Ille date tl\<lt this summons is ser...clon
you
b II you lall to lltt a writttn
rttpOnM ~lthln such time. your ~autt
INiy bteftter~ ond tM court P'AY enter
• Judgment cont1ln1no lnlCinttl11t or
other onlers concerning division of pro.
~rty, 'l)Ouwl "-'1¥>0rt, child custOdV,
child support, tllorney•s IMS, COii'!,
tnd such ottitr rtlltf as may bt or anted
by ow coort, wrilch could result In Ille
QlrnlSllment of weoes. tt•lng of money
or pnioperty, orot!l•r rellef. J-• v. Jenlitn
Thls 1tet.mtnt w11 11100 wltPI t~
Count., Cl.,11 of Ort11ge Count., on
Jen..ery t•, 1'76.
C. H .,.u Wid to ... II Ult 8'Yict ef
Ml tftol'Aty 111 tlllt m•ttff, .,.., t1lwld
... PnMnplly ,. tlltt y-written
F'Stm ,.......,lft11y,mey~flltd•ll"'f,
Or ,. __ t 0.1 Ott.t<IJlft , •• 1976. PWllSMd 4111911 -.-r ly ~IOI, • JAY C. 8" YLESS. Clffll Jlfl.10, 27, end f'•l>.J, 10, 197• ~7' By J11M 1Ctnl, Deputy
ISEALI
• Thi ,.'-IM tlld o1her ,,..-mlltld
--...,._~.,.....,----,.----1""*"' must tit 1., writing end In t!Wo f'ICTITIOUStUllN•K form prutrlbtd by tllt C11llloMl11
PUBLIC NOTICE
NAM• STAT•MIEHT Rvlet of Court They 1n111t bt Iii.cl In n. tollowlno person Is dol119 bull· tflls court #1111 the prQPtr llllllO ,_ ano
NH tS proof Of ~tee of t COOY ol H<ll Of
AMERICAN TOURIST 8URlAU. 1191lllOl'ltr TI-. Umt wlltn • •-
2'lOS HellMly. s.ttte Mt, (A ts o..nec1 Mrvff 011 t perty """ verv Rk NN LH Siii.,._, l.iU Vlt lb ~lllO 1111 the methOd of Mf'Vkop,
llM,MIHkNIVlt lO,CA'2WS f'OI" tUl'llPlt, ... CCP 4UO tlW'OUQrl
Tlllt llull""s It ~8'11duc1ec1 b¥ tn lrt-•IS• dM Clutt MUR~8UTT,Q.IV•NOaR.
IUcherdL.Sllltllf LONO&alCHMONO
This s1•1tmerot WH llltd wOll '"' '91Wt9'CitflltrStreet
I County Cler• of Orenoe Cwntv °" Vlull•. Ctlllenll• tU77 ~ryl. tf7' T~' (*11U-t1U f'JI., • ....,..,.:,..tit.oner
l'\lellltfltcl ~~ Co.tit r•IJ Piiot, Pullllllltd onn" C:O.•t Delly ll'ltot, JM. ta.10. 21MCIFtb,3, m ~,, JM. 20, 27, •lld ir1b. ll, 10, ,.,. DA-1'
..
~.
Jr•
,,
IOo
IQrl
16'1
ro.
n,
,._
'°"
on
re>,
on
n•
on
on
n
0
,,
I-
t
0
l
"
1
•
l
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTl'JIOUi au St NIU
N.AMa tTATSM•NT 'ICTIT°IOUStUSINUS
TM follOWlllO Ptt'\OI' I• dOlno IMI• N4MI! STATIMINT
S.14U STATIM•NTO,AhMOONMINT
........ . n. IOlto'tlflno '""'son' •r• doing 11U11 SPIC & SPAN l AUNDRY i ORY "-"•'
Of'UHOfl
l'ICTITIOUI •u111111u NAMJ
CLEANING HltVICI. t613 Hewpott "90UNTIFUL HAllV~ST ... S121
Bl\!Od • Ntwp0t1 8H<h, CA .,..., Bta<ll 8111'11., eua,.. Perl!. GAfllvrni•
The IOllOwlflO !*Win lltt -·'Id flle ~Of tht flctlllou\ 1>us1neu -M EDIC AL INSUllAH CE
PltOCESSINO COMlfllANV at 14ol0 SC
Statt Collett lhd • Anaheim. CalllOfnla.
Jol'ln Allel. t111 Blally No. c;, *JO
Wtdenf.r-ow. CA '2'41 Owls.co SC*l•llY ,.,OCllKU. Inc: .. • This butlntu Is conouc1tc1byan1n Calltornfa cofpor•llon, ml lta<h
OIYlcMal 81vct. BueM Pilrll, C.lllornl1'°'20
Jotlft Akel Thi• business Is ~IM by • cor Thia statt,..nt wat llltd Wllh the DOration
TN fl<lll!Ollt lkl.i~a l'tme rtfttrtd
toabow was filed In County on 1 ""
EltNEST A l'ENNER. 1440 SC Slat•
0M1'91 Blvct , Anaheim, Ca•lto<f'll•
Thi\ business wu <ondu<ted by 11111n
dlvlca.81
"County (lerll ot Orange County oo OOlllSCOSPECIALTY
J-rve, ,.,.. PRODUCTS, INC
,SlJ'N K•••n Hunte Pu1:1111htd Ortflge Coal! O•lly Piiot, ITS Secretary
J.,11ery U, 20. 27, and February J, 197' Tllit slal•menf WH lllao wilft \N 11.,. County Cterll of OraflQe"' County on ------------:.:: Otctmbtr 22, lt7S.
EllN!ST I\ FENNER
n.i, st1tament was filed with IM
County Clerk of Oran11t Counly on O.cembtr 31, ttlS. PUBLIC NOTICE .. ,... . Published Orange Coast O.lly Piiot .-ll•l Otc '°· l91S and Jen. 6, IJ, to .. m• PubllMwtd Ortngt C:O.st Dally Piiot, .. ICTITIOUS •USIHllU -, .. ,, Januarv '· IJ, 20, 21, 1'76 2116 NAM• STATIMENT ~•
Tiit followlno persons are'dolng bust 1-------------PUBLIC NOTICF. nena•· PUBLIC NOTICE
ART POTPQuRRI, 979 Sanckas11r --~-=-=-0:----------l'ICTITIOUS aUSIN«$S Or., Cof'ona Oii Mar, CA. 'n61S l"ICTITIOUS BUSINl!SS HAMii STATllMl!HT
SllarOll Jun 1(1119, '19 ~Hiit HAMii STATEMENT Tiie foll0wl"9 person I• dol"" but!· Of., Cof'ona dtt Mar, CA 91'H TM f0110w1ng person Is OOlnQ busl ness as: • ..,. Jerry A. Klno, 97t S.nocasll• Or hess a Coronadtl Mar,CA.9'1'1~ ' s UNIQUE FLOOR FASHION, 1:1112 Thi ACME MAT CO., 1•13 Plactnlla, Garden Grove Blvd , Suitt J, <MrOM s t>uslneu Is conduc1t0 by a Cost• ~roe. CA. 9'1617 Gro,.., CA n...a
9f<Wrat IMlrtneri hlp &lg HOusa Who,.sale Co Inc., a H•rlond Wl lll•m Se>ur, 2100 N
Sl\aron Jean Klno C4il1tomla corpoo11on. 161l PIKentla, area Blvd , Fullerton, CA '2W
Thlt stttement was llltd wit" ltw Costa Mllsa, CA. 9'16?7 This buslnen Is conou<ted by an 1n Countv Cieri< of Ounoe County on Tiits t>us•~s is conduC11td by a cor dlvlduat
Janwry I, 197L ooratlon H Wllllam Spear
FJ12t1 B19 House Who Ina le Co . Inc a This 5tattment was fifed with tht PutMl\ha<I Orange Coa\I D•tly Puot H L 0Un1<11n Pres1o..n1 -.mty Ct•rl< ol Or•nge C_..\'f on J..,...,., 13, 20, 21, and Ftbru•ry l. 191• This st•tement wes ft led ••II\ '"" January I, 197'
ll 16 County Cieri< of Orange Count1 on l"St•
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTJTIOUS 8USINESS
NAMl STATEMENT
The fOllowlnQ person' •rt dolllQ bult neuas
STORE SERVICES CO
Hffi Sky P•rk Circle, 8ull0.MQ 37,
Suitt G, lrvlnt, C4illlornl• 9'1114
()pi Newpor'I Auto Supply, In<, a
C.llfornla corpo<allon, 1'102 Wt\t Goa~ HlQl'lw•y. Newport Buch, C.lllom1•
""° This buslne's Is conducle<J by a c~
POratlon.
OPSNl!:WPORT
AVTOSUPPLY. INC
This statement w.u filed wl\tl the Covnty Clerk of Oranot County on
December 21, 191S
l"sotlO Put>ll~ Oranoe Coot Dally P1101.
Dec JO, 1t1S and Jan •. 13. 20. WI&
491l-7S
P UBLIC ~OTICF.
S·l"6
SU .. ElttOR COURT 01" THE STA.Tl! 01' CALIFORNIA FOtl
ntE COUNTY 01' ORANGE Ne A-MUI
NOTICE 01' HEAltlNOOI' PETITION
l"Olt "ltOaATI! 01" WILL ANO FOR
LETTl!ltS TESTAMl!NTAltY ANO
AUTHOllllATIOPI TO ADMINISTER UNOElt THE INOl!PEHOENT AO.
MINISTRATION 01" ESTATES ACT.
E\lalt o4 HELEN A SCHROEDER,
DltceaMCI
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal
GEORGE R SCHROEDER 11.>s ltle<!
het-eln a petlUol\ tor Prot>el• ol Wiii and
I~ lnu•nceol L•tters Testatnfn4ery to
the petition.• and Au1,,on1a11on lo Ad minister 111\CHr 1111' lndtpen<lenl Ad·
m4llistr1Uon of Ellatts Act ret~•nu to
wlllCh IJ l!'Wldt for furlhtr Od•ltculars,
and ttwil Int 11rrw •nd pl•ce ot n.anno
trw same "'' been "I tor Ftbro&ry J. ,,,., at 10 00 a m , In tht couflroom o4
Oepertmenl No 3 ot U•d court. ~700 CIVIC Center Or1Yt Wesl, In the City Of
s.nta Ana, Calllornla.
O.t9d Jan 1•. 1t16
WILLIAM E. St JOHN,
County Cltrl<
R081!11T M. BURK
M.S Wll"'I,.. 81v4., Suflt 72$
81,,.rly Hiiis, CA, .0112
Attorney tor· petlt101ttr
Publl\hed Oran~ Coast D•11y Pfto4,
Jat1 ... ry20,11,27 "" 219 76
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE 01" ~U8LIC HEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tNI • public Merl"'O will ~ ,,eld by tr. City
C.ounul of Ille City ol Co<t• Mtw on Fetlruary 2, "76 •I IPll' hour of • JO
pm., or H WK>n tlWrHfler •s Ille m.1
ter ll'WIY bO hNrd, In IPll' Council Cham
bu\ of Clly H•ll. 11 Fair Ot1W". Cost•
Mesa, on Ille loll<>w•nq 1ttms
REZONE PETIT ION R 7S JO,
Rlch•rd N•lltrl, 2600 H.Hbor Boulev•rO, Co"• MP\a tor permlnlOn
to reione property lo<etro at 4"' Prin-
ceton Orlvo. trom Al to Cl CP A
Neoa tlvt D•c l•r•tlon of
Envlronmfllttl lmp<)ct has be'" filed NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN IMI
e1 said time •no plaa •nv •nO att per\Ol\s Interested may APPt'dr anO ~
,,...rd by tM! City Counc 11 ot the City ol
Cos!• Mou on the alorrmc>n!lonl'd
1tenu.
EILEEN P. PHINNEY
Clly Clerk ol '"' City of Coll• Mesa Publl\hed O,.nQe Coast 0.ltly Pilot,
J....,.ry20, 197• 10S 76
PUBLIC NOTICE
1-141'
Jfltluary I, 1'76. Publlsn.c! Orange Coast Daily Piiot,
1"5U9J Jan ... ry ll, 20. ?7. and Febru•ry J, 197& Pv4>11Vle<I Orange Coast Daily Piiot, 80-16 Jan 13, 20, 21, and Feb J, 191& 81 16
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Tnt followlno person I• d111ng bils1 ,..n•s •
SUPERIOR CARPET SERVICE,
40f> 2h1 St. No. A, Huntlnoton 8eac11, CA
Gtry Anthony Fr•nl!.l1n, 40f> 21st St . No. A, Huntlnoton Bllacn, CA
This busl,,.~s Is conduclf!() by an 1n dlvldu.11.
C.ry //\. Fr1nklin
This statement was ftleO with tilt
County Clerll of Orange County on
J•nwry 8, 1916.
PUBLIC' NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
The fOllowlnQ perj,pns are OOlnQ bus•
MU as,
STANTON PRESS fTeat llOOk
PubllShlnQ), 30S Bowling Green Ori,..,
Costa Mesa, CA '21>26
E~n Zlir, 30S Bowtlno Greon 0..,
Cosla Mea. CA 9'1•26 Ell~ 0. Zl11. 30S BowllnQ Green
Or • Cost• Me\A, CA 9762'
This buslneu 1s conducted by a oeneral p•rtnerShlp
Ectwtn Zllr
Thh statement wts lltlld with lht
County Cltrk of Orange County on FS111S J-ry8, 197• •
Put>l1\he<I O••not Coast Daily 1'1101, FS11'0
Jlll'uary 1l, 20, 21, and February J, 197• Put>ll'1\ed Oran1111 Coast Dalt'( P1101,
71>-76 Jan. 13, 20, 17 ano Feb 3. 1976 1·16
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Pl.'BUC NOTICE PURI.IC NOTICE
s-uu
SUPERIOR COURT OF THE S·1U1
STATE OF CALll"OllNIA FOR SUPElttOll COURTOl"THE
THE COUNTY Ol"OtlANGE STATE O~ CALIF'OltNIA l"OR
No A-16195 ntE COUNTY OF OR/l\NGE NOTICE OF Hl!AAING OF PETITIOff Ho. A·MH1
FOR PR08ATE 01" WILL ANO FOR NOTICI! OF Hl!AltlNG 01" PETITION
LETTERS TESTAMENTARY FOil "lt08ATE OF WILL ANO FOR
Estate ol VIOLA G AUQ.E', LETTERS TESTAMENTARY ANO
Oltce.ase<i /l\UTHOllllATION TO ADMINISTER
NOTICE IS HEA~Y GI VEN ltwll UNOElt THE INDEPENDENT AO-
EAIT 8 M' TERNAN has flltdllere1n MINISTltATIONOFESTATESACT. a oeti11on for Probate Of Wiil lrd for ll-Estaltot ETHEL I RENE I RISH also
suan<e of Letters TestamenlMy ,..... kllOWnaJ ETHEL t IRtSH, Ot<.e.WCS
'9rence to wh1Ch is macte for further NOTICEtSHEREBYGIVENt .... t
partfCulars, ano that the lime an<l(llKe WILLIAM MORLEY I RISH has ltleO
o4 Ple•rino ti... same has t>ten wt f~ herein a petition for Probate o4 Wiit and
r:.bn;Ary 3, t916, at 10 00 a m , In tlW tor I nu.net of Letters Ttsla.......,i.ry to
courtroom of Oeputment No 3 Of Utd ll'lt petitioner and Authorlt•tlon to Acl-
court. at 700 Civic Center Orlve'M!st, 1n mlnlJttr undH the lndtPtnotnt M-
Iile Cltv of Santa Ana, Calilornla ministration of Est•tts Act reletel\Ce to 0.tedJan. i•. 197& wlllch Is m11de for furtl'ler part1cular1,
WILLIAM E. St JOHN, and , .... , the lime and plat I' of r...arlno
County Clerk the \amt has been M!I for February l,
£R1T8. Mc TERNAN • 197,, •t 10.00 a.m., Jn the c.ourtroorn of
1SSOG1tft40-r Ave. Oepertment No. l ol said court, at roo Lo~A"9tles, CA._,, CJ vie Canter Drive West, In 1114! Oty of
A~Yfot: lnproper Santa Ana, C.tltorn1a
Publt\h<!d O<ange Coast Dally Pilot. O.ttd Jan 14, 1'16
Janwry20, 21, 27, 197& 21&-16 WILLIAM E St JOHN,
PUBLIC NOTICE
S-1445
NOTICE TO CREDITOR$
SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
STATE Ol"CAt.ll'ORNIA l"Olt
THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
A.as&:ll
tnttw Matttrof thl' Estate Of HELEN c SICKELS. Otceeseo
Nollte IS hereby 91ven to Cre<l110n
twlVtnQ claims against thl' s.t10 ~~
dtnt to tlfe said claims 1n IP\e off\<o of
the clerk ot tlle al0<e .. 1d cour'I or to pr•wnt ttwm to the unde'1•0ned at tM
office of STEWART. WOODRUFF &
FRAZEE -Attornen et Law -10SS
North Main St -Suite 1020 In lht city
of Sant• Ana. In Or•noe County, wllicll
latter ollice is the place of buSIMSs of
the l.Wldenloo-d in all matters pen.aln lno to said estete Such claims w1lh the
necessary vouchers must I><' flied or
pr•stnted as aforn•ld wrlh1n four
montllS efter tti. llrst publiullonot thl~
~lice.
O.ted Jen 2, 1976
UNITED CALI FORNIA8ANK
Encutor of !Pie wl 11
of said decedent
STEWART, WOOOltUFI", FRAZEE
AttorMy-•l·Uw
10li Nortll Main St.
S..11• 1020
~nUI An•, CA 92701
Pul>li'1>e<I Orange Coast Daily Pilot.
Jan 20, 27, and F~b. 3. 10, 1916 24-76
P U RI.IC' NOTICE
County Cler•
1tOal!1tT 0 . HAltKE R
C10 N erano tlvd
~ltt400
Glendiil•. CA.. t1201
Anot'Mytw: PeUUoMr Publlst>tcl Or1nge <Aast Dally Pilot
J.,,...,.,20.11, H, 197& 211-16
PUBLIC NOTICE
S·144t
SUPEltlOlt COUltTOI" THE
STATE OF CALll"OANIA l'OR
THE COUNTY 0 1' ORANGE Al.SUI
In the Malter ol lhe E\t•le ot E
RUTH HIN KELMAN. Otcuw<I
Nollet IS htrl'by 01vtn to Cr@cM01'
hlvinQ claims aoa1ns1 IPll' s.i1d mu
dl'nt to Ille w1d claims 1n 111(: olltcr ot
IN clen. ol Ille afort\ald court or to puunt ll~m to th~ unoerugntd al llW
ottlce o f RUSTON , NANCE.
M<CORMICK. & DICARO Atl~nrys
at U w USS E. Chapman A>1e . 1n Ille
cl\>f of Fulltrton, 1n Oran~ County,
..,,;cn i<'llltr ofll" )\the Pl&c~ ot bus< ...u ot the un<1ers1one<1 In all ll'Wltttrs
pertaining to said nl•le Such claims
Wllh IM neunar y voucllers must bt
t11eo or p<eHnled .is aforesaid within
tour monltls altwr !tie ltrU publl<.alton
ot \hi• notice
Olltd Jan 2, 1916
HAROLOC ELDER
Executor ol lht wilt
of uld ~cf'<Unl RUSTON, NANCE.
NkCOltMICt< & DICARO
Attonlty~M.aw
NOTICE T 0 Cit E 0 ITOltS Munlc:ipa1 Cour1 of tlMI ZSSSE. O.pnw111 Ave.
l"wlltf10ft, CA Put>11sne<1 Orange Coasl O•tly Piiot
J"'1 6, 13, JO. 11 "76 1!>-76
PUBLIC NOTICE
Ht A·ISMS Safi 81'1\lrdlnt Judkl•I District s..-,-ltr eoun •f the Central Division, Stat• et Calltern1• tor County of s.n aemardlllO,
llMI C.-ly of Ora1191 Sttte o4 ~llternla
In tl'lt Matter Of tht Est•I• of RUTH "' ... ArhlWllHd An. JULIA CHURCHILL, 0.<HW<I $.aft .. n111r4111t, C.lffomla
~IC• Is hereby gfvel'\ to cred•ton PLAINTIFF. ASSOCIATES FINf\M S-14"
,...VtnQ clal~ aoalnll '"'" saio dt<t CIAL SERVICES COMPANY OF NOTICETOCRl!OITOllS Otnl 10 lift salo clalm\ In thoi offl<f Of CALIFORNIA, INC .•• Caflforrua cor .... A..UllS
the <lt'l'ltOfflMI atoresaldcourt~to poratlon. vs DEFENDANTS ~lorClur1o41.,.
prHef\t them to,,,. un<l..,\lgned al tht SIDNEY LOOSCHEN, DOES ONE TO Si.ttaf C.lffo"'la ltr
Office ot EARL OAKLEY •no EDGAR FIVE INCLUSIVE, 1MC-Wef0rall9t
J MELCHIONE, A\lor,,.ysttl uw,611 Cross·Complainti1nt SI ONEY In Ott Matter of tflt Estate of
Soutll OllveSt ., Suitt l218lnlhtC1lyof LOOSCHEN, vs Cross·OtfenOants G E AT R U OE WIN F 1EL0,
Los Angeles. In LOS Anoeles Cou11ty, SHEILA CHRISTE N, CYNTHIAl ~MICAAEL au GERTRUDE W.
wtlkll la1ter office Is Ille pla<e of bus!· OllUSTEN, DOES OH E TO FIVE. McMICHAEL, Oe<HH<I
..SS Of ,,,. undtrslonto In all m.tten INCLUSIVE Notice It 'llt rtby olv•n to tht
-1alnlnQ to said estate. Such <I.alms SU~SON CROSS.COMPLAINT creditors llavlno cialms •o•fnsl -
with Ille necets•ry vouchers mv..t bt Cat• Hu"'Jl!er: C 5MJ4 sold decedent to tlte said ctelms In ttw
llled M prewnltd H nloreu1d Within NOTICE t You !lave """ ~. Tiie offk e of the cl~k of tllt ator.sald court
i-months a!ttr \lie llrst publlutlon -1 mey dt<ldt agalttSt you Wltllout ortoprtsentth•mlolh•unclenion\cl•t
ofthlsnoUca Y11Ur tM1119 11Nr4 UPlltn YOU...,.,..... tht office of CHRISTOPHER L, 0.ttKI Oe cembtr 26. ,,,s Wftlll" JO days. AHd the lnformill!t<\ CAA PENT EA, BEST. e EST. and
Rooert L. Churclllll ... _. KRIEGER, 4100 Oranve Strfft, P. 0.
Executor of th• Wiii AVISOI Usted l\a sldo cleme~. El llo• 11111 In the City ol Al\'erslcte, In
ol salo oecaden\ Trtbvnal pwoe dtelctlr contra Ud. tin Rlw"'Clt County, which latter office Is
l!Altl. OAKLEY P4 •YlllMCI• • IMMO\ Qut Ud. ~ tllt pie« of l>Uslness o4 the unotrsllr'lfd
EOOAA J.MELCHIONE dlfltl'O M 30 di•~. Lea la l11formKlon ln•ll mett«s pertaining to said estate
Attorner-atLo9• ., CJUtS19u.. Suell cla ims with the necessary tt7Seutll01111t$1'9et 1. TO THE DEFENDANT A ct¥fl •OU<l~tJ.mult be fifed or presenttcl M
Sul• 1211 complaint l\As been flied by the plalntlfl eforflild within four months alter the
usA,..._I C:.lltw11fa '901• against Vou. (Set footnote' I llr" publication of tJllJ notice Pub11\1Md Oranoe Coasr O.lly Piiot, a. If you wlSA to Otie1'd this 1.-11. DlttctOecember ;,, 1'7S
Otc. 30, 197' end Jan 6, 13, ZO, 1'76 you must, within :JO Oaysafter thlsSUtn> DALLAS SCOTT HOLMES
•"10-15 mons Is served on you, fl t• With this E•c:utoraf thl will ___________ .;.;.......; 1 court a written ple•<llnQ In ·~ to (If said oectdtn1
PUBLJC NOTICE Ille come>l•lnt. Ill a J'1Stlce.eoun, you CHRISTOPH lit L. CAlt PENTl!R, must fife Wltll IM cour1 • wrtllen ptffd. ESO
SU,.ElllOlt COUltTOI" CALll'OltNIA Ing or causa 1" Ofal PIHdlnQ 10 be en-ATTOltNEYAT LAW
COUNTY Of' ORANGE tt In Ille OOCUt In response to thl' •tsT •EST alldllltlllGElt CASE NUMaERAlSH.J < nt,wllhlnJOdo uflerthhsurn-... Oo .... Stf"Mt
OROClt TO SHOW C/l\USE M!,...,..,onyoul. ~.o .... tm
•
PUBLIC· NOTICE
STATaM~NT o~ ••ANDONMaHT
OflUHO ..
l'ICTIT10US aUSINIUS NAMa
Ttlt foll-1"9 per-\1 ha..., 4'bal>
lb>ecl the V\e ot t.,. ll<IJllOui ~.,."
neme
R E B ENT£RPRISU, 1100 PrlmroM, S..I e .. cll, CA 90140
T ... flctltl~ bu\IMH Mme ref«red
to above was 11 led on Mtr u , 19H 1ntN
County o4 0ranoe. Aoyct E . Bridwell. l700
l'rlnvO\t, Seal Bea<h, Calll 90140
T'lllt !kltlnHs was condu<tao by .,..
lndj"ldlltl Royce E. Brld-11
This statemen1 wH fllao W'llh II•
Co\intv Ciera of Oranoe County on
~ry 15, 1976,
Publl"*! Orange Cout Dally~
Jan. 20.21, and Ftb. s. 10. 197' n11•
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.ICTITIOU5 8USIHESS N~ESTATIMlNT
Tht follow1no persoM ue OOIMQ bu\I
neuas
R E B ENTERPRISES. 1700 Primrose Avenue, Se•I Beach, CA
90740 Rap Enterprises, tnl. a
Calllwnl• corporation, 16HI P•rkslde. OtrrHos, CA. 90101
Tl\ls busfnen Is conducted oy., <Of
oorallon. \
RAP ENTE RPIUSES, INC.
Roye• E l!l•ld..,e•I,
Prttioent
This stallment w•s t1ltKI With t!W
County Clerk of Or •noe Counf\' on January IS, 1'176
1"515.JO
Putlllshed Orange Coast Dally Pllo4
J811 20. 27, and Feb 3, 10, 197• ?»16
PUBLIC ~OTICE
STATEMENT 01' AaAHDOHMENT
OF USE 01"
FICTITIOUS 8USINESS NAME
The follow I nQ persons haw a ban
done<l ltw use of th• llc11t1ou• oo,1rw~•
Ml'fW
THE SEA TERRACE
AP/l\ATMENTS, at 23731 Mariner
Orlv•, Laguna Niguel, Calllornla"2617
The fictitious bu•l!lfls n•me refe<re<l
to above was flltd "' Oraooe Covnty on Febrwry 2. 1973.
Avco Commu"llY Oevel0e>ers. tn< , 16170 WHI Bernardo Drive, S.n Oleoo,
CA 9?021
This busl~s was condu<ttd by •
Californlacorporat1on.
P..,t G. Zimmer, Vice Pre•IOtnt
Secretary & General Counsel
This sllterTMnl wu l11e<1 with t,,..
County Clerk of Or•noe County on
J;inuart 16, 1916
FU10l
f>\lbllsned Oranoe Coast D•1ly Pilot,
J;in 20. 21. and Feb. l, 10 1976 214 16
P UBLIC '.'JOTICE
S·1Sl7
SU,.EfllOlt COURTOI" THE
STATE 01" CALI FOR ... IA FOlt
THE COUNTY OF ORANGE Ho.A-14120
NOTICE OF HEARING OF PETITION
l'Oll PROaATE Ot' WILL ANO FOA
LETTERS TESTAMENTARY
Estate of BEAT E OYER, JR,
O.Cusect NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
JULIA ANN OYER has flltKI rierein e
petition tor Probate 01 Wt II ano t~ Lei
ters Te~tamenlary reference to Which
Is in.de for further parllcular., anO
that the time a"d place of nearing Ille same hu !>ten set lor Feb. 3, 1'76, al 10
a m , '" the courtroom of Department No. 3 of"sald court. at 700 Civic untet
Drive MSI, In the CllV Of ~la A,,.,
C41tlorn1a.
O.ttKI Jjln 16, 1976.
WILLIAM E. St JOHN,
County Cletl<
RICHARD L. McMECHAH
l1171 C.Z,mlno C.piSIBllO
swwuo
San J1Nn C.p;strane, CA. nus
Tel: 17i4) 131-lttl
An-y for. PttilioMr
Publ1~ Orange Coa\I O•tlY Piiot,
Janwry20. 21. 21. tU• 211 16
PUBLIC NOTICE .. ,,.
SU PERIOR COU AT OF
CALIFORNIA
COUNTY Ol'ORANGE
100C:rvl< C:.nter Drive Wnt
s.anta Ana, CA 'lt701
CASE NUMBER
010US6 SUMMONS (MARRIAGE)
In re IP\e marriage ot Peliltont'r
DOLLY CAIRNS SMITH and At-'.oj)On
<Jeni SCOTT CHA RLESSMtTH
NOTICE! You ~ave been sued. TM
court may decide •~f11st you witflOut
your 11t1119 ntard unless you ,.._""
""'tllln JO d•n Aud tt1e lnforma1iofl
llelow. AVISOI Ustt<l t.. sldo dema...s.do El
trlbunalputdectecldlr contra Ud. sl11au-
dl""<I• a mlllOS que Ud 1"8iPGntl•
clentTO tit >O 41;u. Lu la fntorm11<lon
-s1tue.
1. Totlle RHPOn<lent
"·TM petitioner has filed a Pt'llhon <on<l'f'nino your marrtage Vou may
tile• wrlntn rHPOnst Wtthon lO <My\ o!
tr. date !hat this summons is ser.e<1on
you
b ff you fa11 to lil t a wrlttf'M rt"'°"se within such time yourdtfautt
ll'WIY be entere<l anO !Pie court m.y Hlttr
a JudOment conta1n1nq 1n1unct1¥@ or
oC'-r orders concern1n9 01v1s1onot Pf'~
pe<l'f, soousat suPC>O•I, ch•td custOdy
Child SUOOOr'I, •ttorney s fHS. c~ts """ such otrwr re11ef as may be ar•nt..o by
the court, ..,,,CPI could •Mull In 11W
oarnl\/>ment of waoes. taklno ot money
or prooer'ly,orotfler rthel
c. If yow WIS ft 10 Sfflt llM Ad¥fc• an
attontey 111 tftls matter, you slloUld <lo so
prompUy w 11\at your written ,._st,
If afty, may IM lilt<! on time.
0.ll'<!Aug.6..1975
WILLI AME.StJOHN Cl''~ By Ma daline Caton, Deputy
GEORGE A. SULLIVAN
l(ITY BLVD. WEST
SUITEl20
OltANGE, CALI I". tt"8
TEL; (7141U4·1411
ATTORNEY FOR: PETITIONER !SEAL)
Pul>ll\l'led Orange Coan Dally Piiot,
Jan 6, 13, 20, 21 , 1976 ?l-76
PUf'LIC NOTICE
NOTICE 01" TRUSTEE'S SA.LE
T. S. Nt. 2""15
On Fet>rwr) 4 1976, al II :00 A.M..
TITLE INSURANCE ANO T,AUST COMPANY, as dul~ appointfl:I T~tt
under and purwant to Oeeo of Trust r._
coratd July 26. 19n <'IS inst No 13S60,
In -10240, P•Oe 111 of Oftfc1e1 ~oros In IM otllce of tile (.ounly
~oroer of Ora11oe County, C.hfomia
WIU.SELLAT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
HIGMEST•IDOER FOR CASH (Paya
Illa M Ume of M l• In tawf ul mO"'fy o4 IM •o1tcH•Noaol'N .... "' bu vvu~respond,yourdtfautt ,.._._ ,.._ .... __..--.. " .. .. ... ~ 111111 bt terecl upc>n eppflcatlOn of 1t1e .., __ ,.,.,......., u.~.. ~United States) at the soutPI front S;;.~11ap:;:~~tt.of.),~BAO~~C,:~"';,:t otalntl end \his court may ~ • o.':'*~"'::~.~~:' ~11:0~':,;, ~tt,;~.;11~ ~,,':~: 1>1'!':':;
OIANE RENE WIL80URNE, Minon judgment against you for the relief de-• ' , "21·75 WHI Senta Ana eutevard lforrnefly
l)y and thn>uoll t<athlten Ann Nelson, mended In IN complalnt. wflfch could wot Sixth Street I Santa Ana.
their ntlur•I mother. For O\angt o4 result In g.arnlShment of waQK, taking PUBLIC NOTICE C.lllO<'rlle, all rlQflt, title and lnt•~t N of money Of property or othlr relief re-ton,,.yeo to .,,., now held by It under ~ Patrklt Wiibourn• and DI-qunttdlnt.,.complafnt. saldee.dofTrustlntM!propertySitu.t .... ,. Wllbou,.... ha,.. flled • peutlon In ( If_,... wtsll to aftk Iha ffVle>e .. an 1•1441 •~ -I ettenrt ift tllfs "'attar, yov "*"4... NOTIC• TOCltlDITOllS f!d In saov ~ty and Slate dtscrlblld this co11rt lor an ordtr allow ng M promptly 10 tlltt '°"' wrOIN SU~•Rt01' COUltTO~THE ts•
petlll-r to clltnqe their name from --,lfany,"'8ylleflltcl"'ll-. ITAT•O~CALlf'ORNIAl'OR LoC 12 block I sacuon 2 Balboll SNnP•trlOWflbouf'ftaendOf-Rellt ••........--THECOUNTYOl'ORANGll Island IS per map recorded In bOOll 6 Wllbou,.... to Stan Petrick ~Ison and Otttd: May 14• l91S. --31 of mlscell•n..,us maps, rKOfds I I VIVIAN G. JONES, A-Ul47 _.,. Ol-R•neMtllOll.fHottt v• "'· -Clerk, In tht Metter of tht Estet• of o4seldcounty.
fl '• lltrtby Ofdtrtd that •II ...,,~ B Jo Ann Miro ELIZABETH B. HIN ES •ISO ~ M Said sate will bt m•dt, bul ""'"°"' Interested Ill tllt metier aforesaid •P. O:l>UtY • ELIZABETH &RUCE Ht NE\ also covenant or warranty, upren 0r ltn-
""'before thl\ (0Ur1 In Oeptr1ment ISEAL) known .. ILIZABETH e . HINES, plltd, revardlno title, POIHSJlon, or
No. J •I 700 Civic Center Orlw Wint. $ .. lt/l\OUE,MILLIOAN Dt<NMCI. encumbfencM, 10 P•Y Ille remaining
la/lie AM, C.lllornlt, on F•oruary 3, & alSWICIC Notice I• htt'tby given to credltor5 prlncle>al '""'of thl note ts) Ml<Uf'td by1 1t'6, at 11 o'<IOCk a.m , ano than and Atter•~Uw lllvlng clalms against lhe said dKe-sal<I O..ed of Trust, to-wit: U.M se.
11111'• tllOo# UUM, If any thtY have, Wily ...... St •. hltt4tt dtlll to flit u ld cl alms In Ille office of with """"' thereon, u provfOtd I" MlclPttltlolltofcllengeofna-\l•ould ;:. .. l'MnMN,CAtl4ll\ tlW clan of Olla lfo..ulct court or to w ld notelsl, edvanc.s, 11 &nY. undfr
notbeortnttd. Ttl:-.n•t SW"tnttMmtotlleuncltrslontdtiUle IN terms of sald Ot~d of Tr-us\, feH,
It I• h.tnl'ler orw.ct tllal. toCl'f OI AtwMYi.r: OtteMt11tal!IC Office of H/l\llRIS ROBISON -Al· Charves ano upentts Of tr.. TnnlM tlllt---lolhllwceuMllt~ublhf1fdln c:nu-c:.n.&aJne"t lomly at Law _ sso So. Fl_.. St., endafthetrustHruttdbysaldDttdof
Otlty POGt, t ntwtpt~r of Otfttrll Published Ora119t Coatt Otlfy PllOC, ~ta •IO. In tM c.lly of UK AMQtttt, In TNll.
clrculetlon, publllfltd In thl\ '°"".~1 11 J-ryJO, 11,eftd Fel!Naryl, "!t~.· t Loi Anotfe• County. wflld• lattM Office T,.. beneficiary und<Or i.ald DttC1 Of ~~••-It tor lour COllMCv• ve u2·} It IN place 114 IHlslnau of u. un Trll\t Mretofort nt<uted •"4 O.•
-k• PflOf 101111 dey of H id """no L-----.....---------1 4tt'llt* 111 all "'•Utrs p.,-tallllno to livered to tllt vn<1ar11vntc1 • -111en
11 It fll"IMr onMrtct tnat lht County [f]llOUr team s.ld etttta. sucll claims wltll tr.. o.citre•lonof Oefau1uno OtmellCllor
Oartl dl.11 m1u llOll<• 01 lht otet• end telf• you ~tary VOU<lle" must ._. fflad or s.1e. ~ • wtltt.n Notice ot Dtfault
lime of lhh ""''no '° the netur•I 1 presented ., aforuald within tour and Elec11on to S.11. Tiit lllldtn'9wd
fatllff, l.yma" P1u1 Wllboumeal i•-rythlng rrontllt•fttr t.,. first PllllllC41tlonQf 1111~ cauMd said Noll<• of Otfeult ONt l.ytNn "•ul WltDOurnt, S4~ Via •• notice [ledlon to S.CI to IM rtcorotcl In l'-
v.roe, c;ap111r-aeach, c:.11tom1a \YOU want o.tect ,.., t. i.1• county w11tre 111t , .. , prepeny ••
O.ltcl Ot<tmlltr 11, ttlS PAULA HINES, JR loottd ~MUILDl'llZIN to know En<1tlorot tMwllt 0.ttd J ..... ,., •• s, 1'76
JUOOI 04' THI· bo OfMldOt<tOtnt TITLE INSUltANCE ANO SUPl:RIORCOURT 8 UI MA._ltll R0tl$0N TRl.IST COMPANY
WAYNlt.M<O..APIY VOUF telm A..._,_•1•1.aw HUlldTNstM, -ONh ' UUe."'-St. IYCOf\Off A Cort>ln ,.....,. .. 1c11,CAt2... In the W•tlt Authllrtmf.111nttur•
A..,.y..,i lllttllltMr ~"'""""CA Pullfhfl.ct Newpor1 MerbO• N•W\ ~ DMI .,..,,.. DAI LY Pl LOJ PllClllWd 0.-enve Coatl, Dally Piiat. lfllrf\s combined wltll the Orangoi ""'' ~llMd Orenve CH'1 Oallr "' ... ":,· Jt111.•, 1J,20,t7. ttl• UI• bellyPllot,J•n 1i.~.,,, ,.,. .. ,. ,J"""9f'Y•. 1a, 10. ''· ,.,, -
Tu~ay. January 20 1'376 9
Reprieve for Singer
Pot Sentence
Ruled Illegal
FTom Win ~rvlces
The mariju3na possessioQ conviction of folk
singer Chad MltcheU h as been reversed bcc.rn~t' of
unlawfu l search by federal agen ts, court rt.'eord s
s h owed in San Antonio .
Mltc h e ll, a JS.year-o ld N e w Yorker who
fo unded the "Chad Mitche ll Trio" in the 1960s. was
senten cect t o five years in prison by US. D 1s tnc·t
J udge Adrian Spears on Feb. 12. 1975, a fte r a llJr\
convkttid him of cons piracy and possesswn of 400
pounds o f marijuana.
Federal agents said they arreskd M1lt'ht>ll and
seized the marijuana from h1~ pickup trurk in Ck
tober, 1973.
After 22 month~ o( marriage, H e nry Ki!>singP r
says he wouldn't c hange anything about his "ire.
Nancy -ex<"ept m aybe her smoking.
.. Our marriage has made my job more bear;;.
ble and m y life happier," the secretary of Stalt ",."::.
q ut>ted in M <"Call's maJ?attne
KissinJ?er. who "a::. married once before. call<'d
tus wife "a marvelous balance wheel I don't
know if I could take the constant press ure without
h er." •
J a mfs Earl Ray plotted for a )ear to kill Martin
l.uther Xing, Jr. a nd believed that King's dN1th
would h elp Alabama G ov.
George Wallace, according t o a
book to b e publis h ed this fall.
The book was written by
George 1'1c illan. who said h e
talked to e mbers o f Ray's
family and inmates who knew
Ray whe e was at the M issouri
State son .
M c ii I a n , a free-lance
writer, said h is book quotes
members o f Ray's family a s dis-RAY
counting R ay's s tory that he was set up by a man
called "Raoul," whom he met in Montreal.
R ay, who is ser vin g a life sentence after plead
ing guilty to Kmg's asi;assination, has been tr)' in~
to win a new trial.
* A pair of shoes worn b y M a ril)n M o nroe, a
huntin~ bag carried by Clark Gable and a dress
worn by J a n e l'onda brought Sl,000 each a t a
celebrity auction in Hollywood.
They probably could have sold fo r m ore. but
Sl,000 is the legal limit for contributions to a
politic·al campaign . All the purchases were con-
trituttons to the campajgn o f Tom Hayden in h1:> bid
to unseat Sen. John Tunney (D -Calif. >. •
P roducer Jos eph Papp and Gail Merrifie ld, the
great.great-g randdaughter of John Wilkes Booth,
were w ed in a quiet civil cerem ony in New Y ork
The couple were m arried by Appellate Court
Jud ge Samue l J.
Silverman a t P app's
( PE()PLE J ~~~~~wich Villagl' apart·
Papp 1s the produrC'r
of the ~ew York
Shakespeare Festival, which 1s presenting A
C'horu~ Lin<''' at the Shubert and ··HamlL·t • at tltt·
V1\'lan Beaumont
•
M el Brooks and Lily Tomlin are the runnies t
people m America. according lo their fellow coml'·
d1ans.
R rooks and Miss Tomlin
won the funniest man and fun-
niest woman awards in the
second annual comedy awards
s ponsored by the American
Academy o f llumor.
M iss Tomlin also won
awards for the funniest
television s p ecial or the year and
as the funniest night c l ub
pt>rform er. TOMLIN
The s how at the Shubert T heC!ler. hosted by
Alan King, was taped for telecast April 10 ov<'r thl'
ARC' net work.
•
Entertainer Charlie Rich was the star of ,1
5125-a ·rouple benefit concert. but a S-year-old St
Louis g irl wearing heavy l eg braces was thl' main
attraction for t he "Silver F ox."
Tra<"y Rache lle Smith, daughter of )tr. and
Mrs. L e roy Smilb, was the recipient of a rcrl rost>
anct a big kiss from Ric h as the house lights d 1mm<'d
at the Easter Seal Society·s "Behind Closed Doors"
concert in M emphis.
Tracy. vict im of a birth defect known a s spina
bifida or open s pme. is one of Rich ·s bigges t fans.
She says she's "in love" wit h the country sing(•r
who did not accept expense tnoney for his benefit
concert. •
Secretary o f State Gloria Scharre r , Connec-
ticut ·stop vote getter in 1974. said she woul<.1 seek to
unseat Republican Sen. Lowe ll P. W eicker.
M s. Schaffer, adding s h e would have a formal
announcement in the n ear future, said s he filed her
name with t he U.S. Senate as a candidate for the
De mocratic n o mination. H er candidacy had been
rumored for some time.
She admitted Weicker, thought to have great
stren gth amon g D emocratic and independent
voters, would be difficult to d e feat.
t I • *
The Empress of Iran is going into the movi<'-
making business with two Maryland professors
Empress Farah Diba appropriated SI00,000 for a
film to depict a n international s ign langu age, con-
ceived by Dr. L. Earl Griswold and Dr. McCay
Vernon. professors at W estern Maryland College
The Empress d ecided to sponsor the project as
the result o f a meeting Vernon h ad with a n Iranian
welfare official l ast year at a con fer.?nce on the d eaf
in I s r ael
The movie, s lated for filming in Ira n this s pr·
ing, will show actors using the 1,500 mos t common
symbols of sign language. • I . I
Jack Anderson r eports that all the candidates
and near·candidates are-in good h ealth. At lhe col·
umnis t ·s reques t , they turned over the ir m edical rE'·
cords. except for independent Eugene McCarthy
and Democ rats Sargent Shriver and Terry Sanford.
Gov. George Wallace is in "remarkably g6od
shaJ>t>" considering his paralysis, the column said.
Among the n onserious m t'Clical
problems are heart m urmurs of
Sen George McGove rn and
Rep Morris Udall; appart>ntly
cured cancer in Sens Frank
0.urch and Hubert Humphrey·;
Sen. Lloyd Bf'ntsen' foc1ol
twit ch and Sen. Henry Jackson '!!
'ctlronlc nasal stuffiness "
And former Sen. Fr~d
Harris has a "sign ificant wci{lhl
probl~m.··
'
'"' ....... t ~ .......... 1 ... u...,..
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
YQv C... llell 11 f Mod " [ 642 5678 ) 0. .. Coll s.,...._. \radoi H WI h • Wtrl'lf -.S • I t (.;reOI "'1Pf.,.411
i I .. ·~'"" ~~ • ._..., ,.,...... -.. ~ ~Wf'I .::.:· • ..., C' .... '.!TY ... :._;: ~.;.!.~-.. *'"" :--..:=-' ......... ' ... :::" ... r;-~..,..:.! ..... , .....
R~al &tote Houitt For Sakt .••••...•...••..•...•........•.........•......
---------1 G~rol 1002
-. ...•.•................
~RORS: Adver11se,-,, p bl. M 1.
should check tht'ir ads. U IC 0 ice
dolly ond report ~r-Go•cmmcnt
rors Immediately. The Assumable Loans
Y Pl T hull.ibw tu cH•ryum· DAIL LO 0$Wmt's Lo~ 111l1·n·:.l & 1 col ltk•
liability for the first in· 11 I\ I'll !It: a\ ;111.ilJlc 3 &.
corrtd insertion only. 1 l>t•llroucn 11111111·~ .1vai1J
bl1· 'lo 1·,•d\ouquahl)
1• •' I I 'I /\ i< B f·: L L ,
h i· \l.'l UH~
Publisher's "'4otiu; 540-1720
All reul l . .,, ,111· ,11IH·rl 1""''
ITI th1~ rll"l""P·llJl't 1:. 'IUI•
Jt't t lo lhl• Ft dt I .JI }· ;t I
lluu~ini.; A11 ol 1•11 I-!
whl( h makl'" 11 tll,·~;.11 lo
Jlh t:l ll I ,10\ I" ..
ll'll lllt'. l1m1t.1t11111, ur
111,111111111at11111 lr,"t·•I 1111
r.u·t· 1111111 1 l'111•11111, • ,
or n,1111111,11 11111;111 111 au
111l~·nl111n to n •.• k1· .111\
:iul'h fll l ft 1 f.!llt t 1111111 I
lton. or'"" n 111 1n.1lhJ11
nu-. flt•" -.11,11u•r \\I I lh•l
k n11\\o111i.:h <1• 11 pt :1r ~
J d' t' 1 I 1:-.111 i.: I 111 r • • ,t I
t•sldll· \~ h1 L h .s 111 \ tulu
Frr11I Y.h,11 ~llll w;int 111
1>.111; l11lnl U.1ss1hl•d..,
CLASSIF IED
INDEX
ToP~ceYourld,Citt
642-5 678
HOt~rs fOR SAL[
llltn 111th··1 •• ,, I Ge~ral I 002 ,
•······················
JUST LISTED
Ml-.~/\ NOHT ll
Bedruorn, 2 h.lths, I plr
l'11m pl1•lt' t .trp• I 11.i.:
thruotil IJ1 , p1", 111111
Dbll J.:J r < 'm 1 rt•d pa I :11
\II Ill \ t r ~ f Olltl 1 otllh
111111 Hulmi•d toSl1.10U 1 Roy Mc:Cordle
Realtor I 8 I 0 Nf wport
l'usl,1 ~h"·<1 ;,.»! ,-r
OM THE Bj.U FF
View -View • View
$46,SOO
:! lwd111<1111•
(jom1nrl1tt
J;.am1h rov11 i. 1 •nit
t'uslt;m 1 .1r·p1 1111
111 J jJt ll • • •·f I• r
"'allfl.1111•1 t l.r1111i.;I• 111
!:>t·po.11 ,l\1' l,1 111111\ r•" n
Tino 1·111 o• 1 ii p. 111 • • I •
('U~lllrll IJt 11 j..1'<1 I I
j!i..lra~t. I'll It I fl tit I I
ll~l('n1'1', S"'nlfll.ll' ll'"
,tr U U ll d I I 11 • l r ii I • 1
,JaL'U/11 &. :-'hll.r'.1
BYOWMER
18724
MaDlewood Ln ltt'~Th.C:TO'\ IH \('II
011 1•;111• dim 11 t h,q11 I
l.JllL lit·t \\ 1•1·n H• t I t
Bh ll &. \l.ti:1111h.1
'l(.M 1'''1,I
YOUR VEHlCLE
Io \
QUICK SALE
Corrio9e Reolty
6 75-6060
THE
STARTER
$38,750
I! u·.t 11 t 11•1• o,h,1tlt ti
I h .1 I .. I l II I., II.
l 1t\\ 11h111J1'l' dt .ii..:11 II\
>ll'l'hllt'l I Cl\Hli'I ,\ lt,1 I
tl11n1•d rnu.,f -.;11·11111 l'
l'.1 IJ 1;.1;, oJo:r
FOREST OLSON INC
* Cozy Cotta9e *
• • B \' iv 1 >< • 1.-\ :S ... 11 p~.
·'" J\ ;'l.1·in I\ r1•mo<l1 It'd
1 n·H tll·u s:-1·· 0•t1
IEH\I!' IH\IH:
HALPINCHIN
JU:,\J. I ()fl~
fi;.l l~(!I
BEST BUY I~
TURTLEROCK
Sp .. 1 1111 ... I ht·1111 I
11:r1:11ur111·nl h1111w \\ 111'
Ltll• \ LJn1! n1gll;ol•·ll~h1
\ 11• y, • m .111) u n 111 u •
('U~lotn lci..llurt•s. :; ,11•rp
ltn111, and '\\ • rn 1 hr!
phis) 11ur O\\ n 1>0111 I 'rt 01'
Jll~I SI li,l'llMl "lill h II
c-I 11 ti ,. , I ,1 11 II (' .1 I 1
lii:l H~1:1t1
THIMKIMG ABOUT
SELLING?
CALL US!
We're Here To H~lp
540-3666
Rt'al Estate Salt~
GALAXY REAL TY
Prcst1g1ou' ltw.11 •fl
Strong salt•s "Ill pnr1
High c·omm1•.•.1t11i-(',ti I
\'1r Stu.1rl , !IOI l>u\,•f llr.
S ti ti I' I :I() , :'\ 1 \\jll 1 t I
B<•:.it h
645-3111
Class1Clt'cl :i1h ..... 11 h1,::
itern". ~m.111 1t1•m, or an\
ll(•m .ru-.1 rall li4:! ~.,~
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
RESULT"
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For R~!'ult
Service c_all
642-5678
[rl. 122
~!Al fSlAT£
P£NTALS
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BUS'Nm INY£Sl
~·£~! f!NANC[
A~ @l•W~EIUS
PiKSONAlS &
lOST & FOUND
S£RVIC£S
I
£MPlOYM£NT &
PREPUATIOM
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1
·•····················· "~!:.~.~ ....... ~:::!:«!~.~ ....... ~~!.~~-~.: ..... ~~.~-~~........ CALL
• • t OOI ......... I OOJ GttMrot I 00J Cl"1•r• I OOZ
~~:!!.~~~~ ........ !~~~.~~.~~ ....... ~!~.~-~~ ....... ~!!~~~ .......
CH.er.. IOOJ.G"'"" IOOZ 16oe .... Mlla 1007 Cott•Mno 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
',7. aa1c11 ., ijrl 2b.a, pool, jacuu.1. •
"" hdwa Clrt, frplC', ver)' ••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cotta1t. S.lboa ~s.ooo clean. By_own•r._n» 9G07' • DuplH Ntwport '87 .~
\\ I·~ I I '\ N
TAYLOR . CO.
llEt\l.l'OHS ..,till''' l ~HU
0 SU'Elt IUUTY" -S 191,500
Drumatk view or bay & city ll~ht8 from
mosl rms or lrus ex<'llmg lge 4 BR
home Beuul pool, nlce panl 'd omce off
i:ur over 50 kilt-hon cabinets
l608 GALAXY DR Wed/Thurs l·S
J I I I S• Juq..t" Hil• lood
MIWftO•T CINT8~ N.I. 644-4910
N..Wm\..\.. Associne. • REAL ESTATE
fNVESTMINTS
CALL 494·8994
VIEW -POOL -c 0 M M E I\ c I A L
PRIV •TE 11: Ji. rHlll BUILDING center of
"' ~~ •• l.1gun1t. Sullable for $96,500 restaurant, bank, atore untta. Appro• '-ac ..... Beautiful 4 bdrm. home in one of Ample puklnt. Great
Corono del Mar's exclusive areas. upo1ure to maln artery
Vacant & ready to move into. Open tor t r affic . Lona term
your inspection Tues & Wed. 1·5 L.ltASJt.
THI UL TIMA Tl "COWU'I HOMI ..
~Pl•• &lbc.ui St~.ooo uldo •Br. Iba. trp1c ,'
Duplex Newp't 1113,400 11 1ar, Cncd yd. Nm·
Triplex Newp'UlJt,000 quiet ncilhbrtad. $11.~
Manhell RJty 8T5·'80Q by o~. 6'2·6399
c., ........... h 1011 v•y 1034 ···•·········•·•······· ..................... . For Sal• by owner. Noar JAClll 0 new !pael1h Duplex on • Pall• a du . B•low Would envy your btn 4
mark•t. PrtntlP•I• only b d r m ho m • 1 >' o u r 4~la7 superior n.l•hoorhood
where your chlldrJm <K
COf'OIMI .. M• 1012 lhru 8th> have a ahort &
•••••••••••••• • ••••••• • 1af11 wialk to thelr school.
1002 4107 COltn.AND 10 UNIT OFFJCF. • G~ral I 002 G~al CAMIO Hl4Ml.AHOS A P A R T M E N T
••••• •••••••••••••••••• •••••••• ... ••••••••••••• • BUILDING. Prime loca·
Spacious and graci<>Wl, yet loaded with
UvablUty. In perfect condition in1lde
the 2 bdrm home, outaide around the
pool, in the small greenhouae or
throu1hput the garase and workahop.
This property reflects exqul1lte taste
and th6rough attention to detail. In the
Westcliff area at SUl>,500 ...
Duple•. Prico reduced to
'79,IOO. Coron~ del M11r.
For sale by own~r. lf.x.
cellent cond. See owner
at UO~ Larklipur, CdM
or call 64M3Z6.
Al you t nJoy your
prlvttc)', you will b~
aecurt In knowing you
have an outatanding rn
vestment.
$49,900
DO YOUR lX!CUTIVE ESTATE BA y & BEACH REAL TY ~:'v!':::~,!!~kin~ifv:~:
OWIJ THiii.JG 2·STOIY 4 10
" " rOOL + BEACH OUR 26th YIAI 675.JOOO ment. $2lS,OOO.
Uflllil()UI: liV.4!1:1
• A EAL TORSll! 876·8000
18109 San Antonio St
By ownor. Gall tor itppl
642·8584 or 968·531& ()pen House S11l/Sun 1 s <ll1 lh1~ '1 .1t·rl' lut \\.-llh .a
\'Ii/\ ., 1\1 h\Jll\t' 11)0111 1111
.111~ I h111~ Jl\k.11111 $4.! !]~l'I
H:IH 171 ll
10-.:0. I. lfl)JH, J• :-,
H fo: \I. n
fo'onnal 1.nw1l till• l'lllr~ M 0 N E Y Id A I< I NG ~:tq:..int li\1111ot 1110111 "1111 MOTELS -San Dleao
floot tu 1'l•il111i.: 1111·111.Hl' Getteral I OOJ IGeMrel I 002 area 34 unit.a · + a br. G~_.
Bunqul'l ,1tc·cl lurmutl••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ownen apt. Prim~ condl· GtMr•I 1002 .........--1002
I I I •------------------Uon Pool . Gro11ln1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 lnini: room '' l' 11t1ut!llt '
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona dtl Mar
:-.t•l \t'tl 110111 huJ.:l' i.:arch•;11 LIDO ISLE $UO,OOO. "AIAMDOMIO" 4 IDIM
D L HOUSE \ 11·w k1trtw11 Eno• rnoui. . • · SAN CLEMENTE llAC:H •ITRUT HOUS! OP •LASS
ASSUME 71 iQo LOAM IJm11~ room tt\ l·rllHll.' Like new! Lido Soud 4 BR., 4 ba 1· anctpop motel 1reat 'rr!~ Formal entry Into huge
•Dll.UXI
DU,LIX•
Excellent I BR, 2 Ba.
ground noor owner• unit
w/2 prlv patios & lux·
uriou11 m111ter aulte.
1/2 Mlle
To Beach
$37.500 1111111.11•111,11\• I 'IOI\ l>IJJrl..lini: """' ~ j.llll/11 Owner. Custom bayfront. Lawn, patio, UonllumuSlM.000. s s3 ~.o:o I d living room , dlnin1
huenc· 1111 tt l'l' l1111·d ,.trt•,•t & lui.h lt·t r.iH'' "'V'!;'1 j;.&cuzzi ; pier & float. $325,000 l~~':e ~~~~q~il ~:le~: 0~ room. with slldln1 gta11111 Great opportunity Three
ye11r1 old and full of
warmth a, love. Entry lo
bJg enlertainors II ving
room, dining room area
1erved by an all modern
chef1 kitchen with coun·
try wood cabinet.II, con
vertible den. Lots.or <'X
tril5, BKR. call 842·8354.
J lkll11111111:. 111rludin)l "1 ·111 ., tu 111 •1'''\1 . -1 LAGUNA SMALL SHOP h 8 , c pc H door to. patio, family .._111~ '"1 n1.1-.1c,. 'ull" .! m."tl·• 'u111• i\ r11l1 l'dt Walerironl Lido Nord. 6 BR. or 4 BR. & center. Prime locatlOf\. ~n~/.:J.~e o~th"e 11ivery. room which opens lo cov·
,LUS
2 BR Rental w /larae
paUodeck. . ~ 11.1 1 11111., • h 1 1.i r ,. n... · X1nt t o II ered /faUo wilh JIH fire lull h,cllh l'Jll\lh 1l111 l,11.1rt.•1 ... II.di 111001 2BR a pl On s andybeach.$285,000 cons1'dreeruTmo"s owroT0RrAWID"' aan I or lhe beach and 111.: 11H1111 l 11111ph·t l' "'1th I .,. the pound in M pacific! pit. uge ma~ter sulto Inuit llh !lo cl1,h\\ t~h1•1 ""''li IJ11111\ I "l'l l';1t11n1 UP. $165,000. Wind In,, ... "I kw" y ' with private wall or glaH
IOTH
with wood burning
fireplaces, vaulted wood
beam cellln11 and super
So.·o f ·Hwy location.
$115,000. Ice. Call
MM211
' • · 1110111 11111 r\ I•:/. tl·rms • .. .. " J kl · l t' 1111-:hh u1•i.!1.11h·d \\1th , . ARTS AND CRAFTS secluded cnlry ! Comm. overoo n101nva epa io
Ill'" •·lllll'h d1-.q1l''· & l.ill.Hd7!Qll p ool u nd sl"uming pluabeaullfulmanlc:ured center. Prime Laguna "" " d Be fl t t p.11111 '"'1!11· "' u11t "Ill'" J'1cuz11' '. 'Owner has left .roun &. rs o see
[ ~ ~ location. 3.000 rt chumin11 •'-1-d h C II l1·r.111n" til1· Ill ~II• hl·11 & l!~~·!;'tl bu.tiding. Plu1 1800 fl con· irnd is begaln& for itn of-ulJD ream ome. a
hath::. _l .. 111:• lll\l'l l·d :t <·, t emporary home. fer ! T11ke advantaiie or ~"7~7;, .. ,!fUNr<'J8rN1((•
1-i.11111 'lfo •111.1111) 1111.: ~fl» _ ----4·-·!!!~ 1002 LEASE. thi1 gourmet kitchen und
1111111111 11.1:.:. .di \•,l.1111• GeMral 1002 G-.rel 11weepina muster bdrm! TARllLL
::-1:1.:1011 t'all HI:! J~;i;, •• ... ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••ART GALLERY -Bost Are you beach people? · · £ ST [ 2 STORY °FAMIL Y location on Gallery Row. Call 84HI010. "# I I" Collfontl•"
~: [~ l!~~~i'!i~·~'~ A SID TRl-l.IYEL/rOOL POOL-S26,9501 HijhJY profltablo. Owner Di'fN •119 ·1"1uN1ouN1C1 0 ..._. THE BLUFF ____ ,,,._.__ TOWtJHOUSE II u n t 1 n at on Be 11 l' h Two :;tory bargain ! Just will •ell and lease -back CHARMING CdM "
" 1'.ic1l1t S11nd) 1'11111 $".16,!}50 Cull pnce! Lar&e with xlnt return to In· ---------1 Vltw. View. View t'Ol.O~IAI. ST'il.1'. 2 ll11n1ti by Deunc hvingroom VERYlitrge veator.S175,000. MEWLISTIMCi By Owner .lmrna c . 5..,.,,SOO h1•dr111 "1th b11l'k Brotheri. Thts IO\el) J f 1 d Sea Wind Condo. Npl. custom built family ,.
MESA
WOODS
111'1 t '. I I h •' n n l' " I .. -t-.·d11111m :! fl.1th '411h
hU).!l fJllllh 11111111 .11111 .1
ll'ntrJI .lln11r11 \ourt
(AK Jll·cl 1111 ol ljlllt'I I llf
el~ ~J< a "hurt "';ilk I rum
l h1· lh'\I. I 11 \ p.H" I' 11t•t•1I
ni.:ht ..at ~'1~11•111 """ ,,
• 1 .i '"Ul11.1hl1• 111,111
l \I L -,,)(, .!tot.11
«=SELECT
I PROPERTIES
llfl•tillll''' l111t11.1l dining. bt>drm, J bJlh homl· of amifi ming room com· RESTAURANT -BAR -Beach . 2 Bdrms .• 2 home. 1 Blk to Ocean. 2 bedrooms, 2 balhl>
IJ1g1· h1•drm:o. hltn:,. ll'r!> tomfort 10 li\ln~ bo' right & spactousHl1h profit bus iness bath s, up1r adu d Beamed ceiling , lge Condominium .
11Jt111 c'I. 1•1 'l'i.lr~ new L' 1 d llled kitchen i.tep-m pan-1ro11ing approx hair BALBOA ISLAND car~ela, draperies ·, brick rrplc, 38r. 3ba + ""repluc .. , r .. mlly room.
I I , .-orma 1n1ni: room try ! Wrought ir.on million. r• ......
'1111H· 1•lJl1on nl·.ir Lar~c family rm w wet st airway lo long size MINI VIEW wu er/dryer. Never d~n . Appoint only tile entry. Custom
'hupping .inti hu, line:, bJr uverlookb pool and bedrooms Scduded FLUFF·P'OLO LAUN lived in. Spacious & airy 873-9082 carpeting and drupes .
Onl) IO' dn"n terralcd )'Jrd Compl mai.terw built·m\amly DRY. Exrellent Laguna GrcatSpanllhDuglex comerunit.S57.~ -05-,-.-M-.-.. ----1-02-4-Decorator'• w11lp11per
$39.$00 IJnds< pd lront Jnd n:ar Hedwood frnC'ed patio bu.siness $12,000. 5 3 bedroom". ri· c k 673·3663 642·m3 Eve1 throughout. Separate
'iii' \V k h d " ••••••••••••••••••••••• laundry roo m . Two r"! 11Newporl11. or :, op 1111 )tordgl' O\<erlooking wrought iron PRIME LAGUNA COM· r1 replace. ankle deep cri,.~ t•abinc b In 0\Cri.u:ed 2 enclObt"d supe r ·pool. MERCI AL -lOOxlOO 8 ha g carpe t 1 n g . Mesa Verde enclosed patios. one 64o·tHSll l'ar ~Jra~c lllol'ka. lo Enclo:sed .iarage + extra Comer With with 2 tn· Cuthedral beamed cell-4 Bdrm•. + Fam. Room custom bricked. 2 car
on·an (>f ft·n·d Jt s73.500 p11rkin11 Take .id,·an· come Wiils 1152,000. ing. 20 root prillo balcony. Owner Anxious garage, electric door
ANYTIME ~ tai:i:'·tallnow752·1700. Owner will help finance ·---------1 Top locution, beaullrul opener, swimming pool l 'Pl-'.HB "'''" ~· ""'•'H "' 1 EIGHT MODERN CALL!J62.778K . around the corner ~ , !~ I APARTMENT UNITS · ----------1 home! 81'1 rooms in Jacuzzl&Sauna. 0 l\I f"' S 1ilJ•i11•1J1 frontlng on ocean front ~ K€Y ASSUMI 1•1. ~OAM :W:~ ~~~o;~t:~~~o~a~~ BY OWNER
Hewporl ShorH Nu.'!!'M~·,~~~:.11e1 fi£n A park. $425.000 ""= P.E:Ah TOP.SM '11~2~~Wi~~~IA ~~~~=l :~~e~l.a~~~~r;~: 18724
t·:q•1•p11 .. nJl hu~' 5 549-8655 ~SITATE Pre1t1&e approach. Cozy dining r oom, dream Ma~ewoodL11
• • JUST LISTED !! llc•dro"rn!> '°"-den IJrJ::t! AND MISS ~arlor . Rustic brick kitchen. Xtra big maater HUNT NG1'0N BEACll
f I . 1 . lt•fH'l'U} Jrd ull on lot and MESA VERDE POOL l h f I I O .11 1 1t1 1111d )11•:0..1 \ 1•rd1· ... ·If 1 Sll7 c"'l' ---------this model home. 2 story, ear re P ace · suite. ran11e trees. fruit Off Ellis, down Chapd
•.i 111 1 · ,,,.., ·1111 iu~t ""' Gourmets kitche n • •nn9"-" BKR II ~ ,.> i11 tip l11p i·11n1 .! PETE BARRETT SI 0 ,500 4 bedroomi.. 2 bathi., . treeJ&. -· ....,, ' ca Lane between lieu ch
llH 11.1 """''' ... lll\11 t I CoshtoL " SIZIDLOT family room, two muster Formal dine, family M0·1120. Blvd.&Magnohu
·1 .! HH 'h.e • 1·11t.1b 1111 -REALTY-3 lk'd h 00 h Woodsy selling for a 4 swte11. new carpets thru· aru. Fast pouau1on 968.4293 I\"' L• ll<M>' I roum om~ wit bt!d room Mesa Verde out, H & F pool. prestige poulble. Owner vtiry TAlllU. Balboa law p .. op 6~2-5200 675·4060 1 paymenl::i of S:W4 per PaC'csl'ltcr ho m e with lliiilliiiiliiimlllliiii .... ~illfliij• llunt1nuton u~a"h lo•·a-anxious for this rare Rare 2 Dr li" au t v , ' · ~ month Ai.,ume t'llA ,.,. 1-K" " " b · c ' Realtor5 10 •n Ul'l'P 71,, 1.,0 l.iil the gra{·1ous appoint· o c E A N F R o iu T lion. Tuke advanta~e. 1tru1n. all 546·2313. Secluded. 3''.l yr old, cul " ' d h ., .. ~ 51 L'tl \I Ot'tl• 111 II• II\ IU"J' HI'· I' .... I ., .. Calif-I•" d ·•ac .... 6,500. 58l-230b • 675-7060 • GI MO DOWN Grcatfori.lJrterhomeor ments }OU eserve sue LUXURY HOM E o n naaume •'~,. 1 oan · [ " • tt "'" .,.
-n.1.'81rn:u "'" "'"" WAm~asvURF ;::~7;~; ~~4.::~,::; ~~·~f;:i~~~l~~=~~ t~r~::~~;~is:~.: ~~ ~~t,:~~~;;.,:::' -••H~IUl:r--'°-"•M-4•L•D-,M-IM-G-i-0w-n •. -------
l'n1 l'd <ti ~"' 1•rnm1:nt ---------•! 1nter1or laundry area. [~~ I I --=•• .. 11111
•· Beautiful large pool & LOQKI
CUSSIFllED
HOURS
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DEADLINES
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should rhc·c•k lh1·11 ·"'' da1lv II '''\1<1rl 1•rr nr'
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CLASS.,.ID
M4~&00HH
p 0 llo• lliflO
Coat1 Mn• ...
.1pprJ.,,al i'r1ml· n· 1-;nJo> the large lot PRESTIGIOUS Home _fill.,j!f,·.L! . JJ family room-central •
1dl•nt1al bl'.ilh ca lm os t '•acre ), Temple Hiils. Near town :i~ii:~ MesaVerde,nearcoun· Executive homl!. 5
"''1)lhhu1h11od !•:leg.met· College Pork f lagi.tone fir eplace, and beach. Oversize lot try club. 3 Spac1ou1 bedroom, huge living
"1th·• rnntsnc·nt.sl .it POOLHOME formal d1n1ng room .beautifully landscaped. bedrooms, 2 bath and room with bri ck
1 l·n1 ·1 ilcll t·ntn ~tJtl'I; Beauuful 3 bed rm, 2 ba Country living in the city 180 degree breathtakl.n& rOOL & JACUIII romptetely appointed fireplace, nicely derorat
l1,1ng r1111111 "'th cornt.>rhome Compl"'ith loronly$65.900 ocean v i ew 3 lar1e Complement this Mesa ---_ kitchen. Outstanding ed. neitr new carpels.
l11tpfJ1't' !'uh t:.11c ldrge f.imily r oom, 546·4141 bedrooms . Spacious Verde 4br onquietcul· •THESEARE • noorplan.Ourexclus1ve greatbackyard.Closeto
)lour mt• f k 11 1 h ,. 11 family room. hvin1 room de·aac nt>xt to luah green· ~t;ERIOUS SELLE HS •l $71,600. Call S.0·1151 everything. Assumable 1'111mal d1n1• (:rJl·111u;, tireplat'l', o\ersiz~d dining room. Two paUOI belt area Huge FR ror loan or lease option
l;1m1h toom ~Ith erJl'kl kit<·hen und very private and two great view enterlaintn)I. C an be PLEASE CALL OUR $64,000
111g 11;,·plJn'. t·orn111.1ml 11001 area Va(•unl. ready dec k s All this for purcheased subj. lo ex· OFFICE ~~"J•-r;,..~•r~S':ll'-•~-H-
tor your lnbPl'tt1on Just 0 Nmo MUST I V t'OR DETAILS 1·---------1 l .P~~~~. '; . '10\'..f3 lll'1 \ h'\\ of i:rnunch ll!.tc<I llurrv ~I l'rll.'l'd Sl.2.S,000. w r.R lil n1 I\ Joun 646·7711 . ·-·:..-""r.t= -·-llu~t· maq,., n·tn•at on ly $5 J ,OUU Cal l SELL. OpenE;ve11. iJ
'i S1·llud(•d t'l11ldren &· f>-16.588-0 L U X U R I 0 U S 1111
RUl'Sl ;,ullc;, Owner CONDOMINIUM In old lr;_in;,ferrPd . Anxious~ I ·
Colleae l1a rk. 3hr, 2ba.
pool. "9.500. Owner will
consider lo down .
548·8204.
Call!Jtl:l IKMI v llage. Near tojlln, Try Condo beach. Two 11paciou1 : ~ _
. ' :· . bedrooms, 2~ baths. • 4714 CORTLAND DR [~'If~~·!~ ti~ Convers1'o'n Separate _dining room. EX!CUTIVI CUSTOM Choice Cameo Highlands Mesa Verde 4 BR. 3 ba, I ' Dream kitchen Great •·bedroom home or 3 & f/H & O/R. Choice cor. ' j EMGLISHESTATE II uNITS racing rahulous View. Very pnvale. THIS ISTATIOMTHEHILL den with private beaeh. $67.~.0wpt540·4484
I ---S44,950 Hack Bay Estuary See WON'T WAIT $86,000. Pre~tl11e area Stalely In beautiful cond1l1on·
BLUFFS CONDO 2 STORY-VIEW the i.un come up fr?m OCEANSIDE VILLA _ ~~~=~~n~2~~~~1l~ren~~fh readyforquick move·in. OWHIRDISrERATE
I pgradod Im "'"'""• Wondong roadway l•ad• :~~~ ,~r,•rim'"" F 0
' th L•1una. Charmine •unken conmsaloon pot. OP~-_=LY 15 5 ~lf~2000M0~ol q PIJn on "'uJc· i:n·cn to set'ludccl driveway house and guest house. Kitchen or tommorow ~ "
ht.It. katunn~ 3 bur ml> . Jm1d~t lo'4ennJ! pines & 400ll7"-e FOR AU Very Large lot. Ste1>1 lo 11erves elegant formal Whal 1t buy' Don'l miss
2 , b.i . unui.uJI ton eucJI) plu!> trccl> Spiral C.M. ___ MW private Beach. Owner ban q u e t r 0 0 m . It! Bbitndoned 2 story.
q·r~11011 pit \I> 1th lq11l ing i.tJtrcai.e leuda to ~ . • ..... finance. S106,000 Enormous family room Beautiful hea ted pool. 5
'-l1l leasl•hold }ou """ 1>rnatl! 2nd stMy el\ • . . OCEANFRONT _ 1.4 with wet bar. Gigantic Huae bedrooms with
the land' ~l.!ISO lrci nce! La\lbh hvine acres s pectacular view "music.game" room • 701 ROCKFORD RO. maulve master suite.
C. F. Colesworthv
Reoftors 640-0010
HEAVEN
WITH VIEW
When }Oii !Ice this one.
\1111 \\Ill think you hullt'
tl1t·d /lit .:une lo heaven
Tht> ~• ru nge. !!Oft Ii ght
o.1r•1un<.l the entry. the ui.l'
ul l.1tl1n·, the ~or~1:ous
~ ,1 r d l' n s w i l h
)l 1 N·nhuu!ie. g 1 VC'S an
l'lhen•al I eel mg Lo this
ll.1rhor Vie"' l11lltt llomc
II ,.. ;..,;llll fl w11IP lot. ha~
I Ulf. 'J h,1 1md1 rm .:!
lrpl<''> lihr.ir) & mut·h
m111 l· Nov. onl) 5167.400
COM,.ANY
HE \I.TOI!~
\\l'<'I-. l~._H
673-4400
BAYFROMT
l,EASI·: WITll Ol'TION
\. ut Jnt. bt·aul 'ly de
rnratt:d 2fHl, 2bu Condo
w fantast1r vu from
b.1leony & l•v rm
$.'12.'i mv or $AA,OOO
JACOIS REltLTY
675-6670
laadad on the IA Y l.;~11h llJllJn llll' t!nlry.
t'xqul:olt•ly rurn11ih1'li.
t ri level. watrrfronl
hon'l1• 4Ull, fitm rm It
dl'n Room for pier &
11111> S?X:1 uoo fee
I Yr warranty 1n1•
Call 675-7225
,., ••I .. • •••I• ' ••' I ••t
\ \I J .I ·:\·
UE.\1:1 '\
• or.,., ',." 111·111•.1 <s r;<>
•.
room O\ er looks sur· property. 6 rental unJt.s. +hobby or dark room Cameo Jhghlands ca· Immediate possession round1n~ :.irca• Euro Tr emend o u 1 with d o uble s 1nk11, nyon and ocean view 4. +++.Assume low In·
Pi:'<Jn i;ourml·l kitchen i CORO MA DEL MAR development potential. cabineta, etc Separate bedroom or 3 & den. teresl loan or new VA
Dining enterta1nmenl 1uVESTM ..... T 1375,000. childrens wing + much L·A·R·G·E covered patio with no down. Call today
Sweeping masll'r bdrm " "'" to much to mention here. 646·7171. retreat ' Sepurutti mom· rROrl!ITY LAGUNA CH ARM 3 Call lo see now. •:.•.""lS. on canyon side. Room for °""' 1110 · 11s w11rosrN.r1• bedroom home Clirf """ -pool at the front. Private in 111" quarters or ''Uelll Multiple unit in the heart . . · Ol'IN "' ". ,, ~ 1u'1 m ., ,,,, 1 • be h 1 fl d" · " Drive with lar•e lot " ac . n necon 1t1on. or m<.11d room with bath! or Corona del Mar Just a " I
workshop! Thi!> hilltop block from the .beach. qu~lified !or 2 addition1tl e· 1t~·111~1~ COLI OP MIWrORT
cslalc c·an lw yours for One of the most unusual Wills. $l06,000. " ,l~ ·; RIALTORS
S4500 total clown or take properties on l he ....... Nll,.. .. P" _ I 2615 E. Co111t Hwy.
uver ex11>lln~ loan ut $215 market. On an R3. over· ·~~~lil~i[iitiJ~ 675·5111 pc1 month i''or quick &lzed lot. Haa an excep.
a ppl lo lil'c . Call tlonally good income.
!!47·0010 and we belie ve il can be
{ '''"' J• I ,, I )1/'• ,, improved. We're excited
about this listing. Call us
and let us give you more 1~1man11 information . Call .. iMiiillilMliiil•ili~MI
673-IWO 0-l~•''·V · \IP•''h•••.t LAGUNA
[ ® 1~11\I ~ ;~I~~s~~·:-:i The fastest draw 1n the
West a Daily Pilot
Class1f1ed Ad Phone
642·~78 ---colla~e. furn ished.
G ........ I 002 G....,.., I 002 Northend. Adults.
644-7270
SJ0,000 DOWM
.... BUYS THIS LARGE UI COLONIAL HOME ln DOVER
SHORES for the big family that
likes to entertain. 7 Bedrooms, 6
batM, family room. large billiard room with wet bar. Muter suite
has HIS AND HER baths + a steam
bath. Gym. Private 1tudy.
IHI
... 111tt
11¥1 .. ••oc .. If
$450. mo. yr .• unfurn.
spacious 3 br. 2 b1.
apartment. View. (So.
Lagunl.l
SllOO. mo. unrurnl•hed a
• bedroom home. frt1hly
Ndecorated, with view
aad maintained awimmln• pool.
GLEN MAR BEAUTY
Sharp s bedroom home
Ideally localed on a quiet
culdesac street. Conve.
nlent to shopping &
1chool1, and only 2 miles
to ocean. New carpel.II.
Auume FllA loan.
$49,000
640-6161
IUILDIRS
You may be Interested in
checking out th1$ new
Uating in Coala Mesa for
which tho city lndlcatet
you could 11et ionln1 for
u many as 26 units. Two
exl1tina bldgs currently
on property from which
you could have Int.trim
incotne. 64f·7711 ..
~
Walkm 1; I Ct!
Httul I i.; ta h:
maonab /Irvine
raalty
MICH A l'AIULOUS VllWr
Newly listed 4 bedroom, family
room home in Corona del Mar
w/spectacular view of Newport
Harbor. So much. apecial charm It
lots of room ror eaay t•mUr living.
$137,500 & you own the land Jeanne
Newman 642·8235. {R87)
$24,000.
2·bedroom Ranch·house
with 2·car earaae and
large yard for your dog.
Costa Mesa'• best buy:
CALL FOR DETAILS
540·3666
GD
A "House·sold" name
-RealEstau
byMrl/AY
BEST SELLER'
.. by the sea! lnspirini? !
Captivating! Totally Up-
1raded: Model-perfcct 1n
every way. 4 Bdrm. An
excellent value. Burry
before it '11 1old out
968·4456
"A·l·C"
A Beautiful Condo! Alt
young invest.or or newly
weds; Sharp & lncx·
pensive, cloae to ocean.
leas per month than r ent
Call quick, 968·4456
lncludes l yr. Warranty
Park Street, Hunt. Bch. 2
Biles from Civic Center.
Hi1h Sehl. 3 BR. Den. 2
Frplc's. Od cond. 50x l50
lot. $68.000. By owner
842·9970a(t. 5:30pm.
M lsffcGl•H
9'MIWood
111-2 Story
Natural toned wood ex·
terior. heavy shake roof
Galley kitchen has latesl
custom fixtures. Open
ramily rm, roa r i n g
fireplace . W..nd1n g
staircase! All rms arc oveni~. I Raths. 3 Car
1ar., 14x38 patio. Ju1t 1 •,
years. '63,000. Ukr
982·~11
Bike to leach
Unbelievable, 3
bedroom, 2 bath11, huge
added 2h18 ram rm
W/»ep bar. a Cozy
flreplaeea " bllne 2000 &q.n.. of h.ixurioua livmg. AD this tor only s,H,9:)0.
llurrv Of1 0\1 one ! I
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~-~~•~••••••• HcMtMs kl" We Howet For W. . ·JHo..Mt For S. IMAMM ~ 2000 HouHJ ~l•d -.f.;;.uoad~..;;•.r..;Y·..;;J..;;•...;.n.;;.u•;;;ry""-"20--.. 1.-9...;.78..;;... ______ ...:;~:..:....;..:.::..:..-=:;..,=...:. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Hts lktl• leoc.la I 040 a.a,.-.. och I 048 Newport leech I 0'9 N9wpwt ...... I 0'9 CoroM del M• 3222 Hom" U•f•M.a.d • ..._.. U.fwMIMd ••••••• , •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ~UNITS ············•·········· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , ••
•OCEANFRONT• , , BI a n l"'IMJ 324• .......... ach 326' Mwwport .. odt 37,t
Rare al $199 500 By ~ la,. ~ .._.STSIDE l, 2 'h 81 l 'b e w ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••!.•.r••• • · la.A Spy11lau rr I om". . WK UP Ila oar It
owon-.152-llTI/4»9-C.38C. ~nscfacu House plus two units Panormamle oce.an BEA\JT. S:an J oaquin Bluffs Condos lease• Bach COior TV maid
COMDOMIU'UM r id&al ror Income: or vlc:w. ~# e. AvaU. im· TwnJ;im L:.ra~ 2 Ur, 2', rrom$390tossa5 St'rv. pool. THE 'ttr.:sA
UvluG""'t owner O('('Upancy Two med $&() mo 644 9229 Ba. 2 i.ly. Vlt w of atolf Agent &44·1133 41S N Newport BJ NB "" Ba u Ill bdrm. 2 bath house 3 ---course " lako USO 6'6-sMl • AT IT$ IEST! fl I bdrm. 2 bath umt wtth 3 BR, 2 ba. dplx. Older S47·70'4 Npl. Hl1. 3-BR 1-ba, dbl CH~k THESE • ';/ UIW••• 1undcck only .c yeur old, cMdren. nopeUI $375. * RR .... f ""LS • flar. $300 mo. lease. 466 Dix h1rn duplc:x; 2 Br • RJ IE• .1. plus 2 bdrin, 2 biath unit. Aient 640-7000 U"'I ,_ We:,tm1nster A\' 613 3599 lower unit oo Sn11bor~ ~~ Spacious family bayfront. Pier & slip The3bdrm 2bathiscon UNIVERSITY PARK w/1tar Winter/ 1Summcr
EXC USIVES for large boat.• BR, 4~ ba~ dining rm. vcrt1bl'" mt~ n mother-in· Costo Mesa 3224 4 BR .;:Eo;t;~~~CE sm Sm c...... 3276 Aie_nt_640-_s_1t1_·1 ___ _
HURRY!!
3 Bdrms .. 2 baUUJ. Xlnt & fam. rm. 50 Ft. lot~!..._~OO Nord hew umt. Spendable with ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR 2 H ...,.,.,1., .... c ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wanter 1628 W. Ocean.
location, lose to shop. IUDUCID.,FOlt A\;t~I $375.000 20'kdown. Exceptional 3 br. 2 ba, 3BR'2S::· ...,.,., s:;'25 SUPlltOCEAMVIEW rront l Hr Sl90 .
_______ ... _, p1ng&.beuch $SU,s0o I I jQuaH ~ xlnlloc. $375 mo. Refs re· TUHTLE ROCK ON GOLF COURSE. l!br Studio $155, UUI t'reo.
A RARE GEM 61.C ocean view. Lge. 1 LIDO R~ .._LTY PlaciP <I'd 540 t542, 546·9460 'J'EHRACI!: twnh.se.$295.4!12 7210. Sue 003·488S -----·
Set · rd bdr lth !l;A 4 Bit 4 Bu l'ool $1000 Witaker , &t2 R8M. 1 or 2 Br, adull.s, no pets. m green ga ens that m., w m•my extra!i 3177 YI Udo ML Prap1rrti-Hu ck Buy Condo. •Br, 'DEE.RFIE' " S •··-$170/$190. 1A2l E. l&h SL. reOect the tendi:r loving incl. ele vator. $it7,500 " • • • 673-7100 7Sl•l920 . 3ba. new cpls, drps, ..,.., an_. N Hts 646-l80l
care or its proud owners. 1•00 ®All Sf NtW'°4l MACH pumt $425 mo. 492-2196 2 BR, 2~ Ba '350 Capl tr 327B -·--· ------
A smaller home in u neat 2 Bdrms, 2 balhli, Beaut. 3 BR. 2 Ba, SQ $4ZS ••••••• ~ •• c:'!~•••••••••• $175. 1 Br. l/15 Lo 6/15. 118
neighborhood. 3 Bd's, 2 garden setting. Close lo "-wport leoch. I 069 a Ano I 080 R.E. SALES FOR LEASE 3BR 2 BA. WALNUT UA RE 36th St. Few yds. to bch.
ba & u pe rfect pool-everything. $52,500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• START THE lrg. fncd. yurd. $425/mo 3 HR. 2 Ha $325 3 Bd. 2 ba, crpls, drps, Utll pd. 1 adull or C049fe, J acu zz i . Ca 11 0 o b 631 ·1830 2 llH 2 Ua $325 fenced yd .. dbl garage, no peL<J
Dickenson Agt for an ap-Large 1-bdrm. on ground EXECUTIVE1S ' FORM.AL BEAUTY NEW YEAR n~ t f 1 3 uR 2 b c 'cR£t-:NTHEB _ve_ry clean. S3l5. 586'5478· OCEAN.f'RONT O'eluxe 2
pointmenl lo see lhis Cloor. with patio area. A rare find in a custom RIGHT! ucau 1 u 0 ' • a on· 2 BR. 1 Ba .$340 s..to Ano 3280 Br 2 Ba .... -wk; ~S ' I $36,""'' ; * VILLA * built home. 2500 sq . It. do. All xtr~. pool, club· Rancho San Joa'•Wll ~ Jewe . '7VV S.tl Homes ruse. $325/ mo. 645·3777 .. • ••• ••••••••••••••• •• •• mo 211 to 6/1176 (213 > 979-8533. l'erlecl for e nlerla1nlng w/2 guest houses + pool. ~ B8RR .. 22 ~ua. den .,A601?5~ F\replace, super clean 4 9fJI '0018 & (213) 69S-L383 ·
Ocean view. 2 Bdrms., 1 Huge master suite opens Formal entry. formal L~ont ln•ffhnenb Sharp, new cJl.'cor 3 BH, 2 c. .., .,.. ...,.,., b 2 b bit s er t bath, with lge. view l o sparkling pool , dining, breakfast room& EamMore Ba, pool No pets. $395 r , _ 3 • n • P s, Lge2br,2bu,ioc lud's uhl,
IUILDERS
PltE-COMSTR. SALE
32·4 .Bedroom homes m
deck. Priced right at waterfall and jacuizi. every amenity. This o d u 1 •• 1 d r P s · $ 3 4 5 I m 0 · $325 mo. Poolside. Call Elegantly s urrounded house could never b~ ur resa en u u1v1s 0 11 First, ll1i.t & cleaning 552-7500 963-4569/963·1786 631-2395 .,.
$42,500 .th r I replaced at this figure. hsls and sell& more m -dep. MS 6797 No Rental Fee ---·------
w1 grace ul y terraced vestment properties than -red h 1' I I Village Real Estate Bay r r o n t pan 0 ram I c gardens. MaJestic brick Beautiful,quietst .. N.E. mostinvestmenlofC1ces •2 Br twnhse. Mesa v· 2 B 2 B $450 I
fireplace m living area, Sant a Ana . Price P e r sona l Tra inin g, Verde. Gar. W t D, pool. SouthLCICJUfta 3286 5111~wav~.675~0zt6 yry.
vaulted ceUangs, wet bar. $125,000. li'or further in Pres tige OlCices, Fu II $275 Pvt patio. 833-8974 realty ••••••••••••••••••••••• --'---------
Truly gracious li ving In formallon please call F · 1· t . p t -38 •-th Lo ~-a 3780 John w. Roney. ac1 1 1es, . rope
1
r Y 3 Br 2 Ba, frplc, cpts, ~ r °' gues ouse. wer orurna Ano
Huntington Beach. 2 m·. fL~R--~ Blocks to ocean. Now ~ ~u ~
taking homesate r eserva· lll@eil~
l101~. 499·2800
LIOMS ESTATES 535.2579 (213) 592 50lO * CHARMING Laguna prestigious area. See 1t Eck.bore & Assoc., Inc. Purchase Plan, l''r n~e c.lrps, bllns, fenced yard, ~ 3 Arch Bay $500 per mo, •••••••••••••••••••••••
now. 541_2621 Be_nef1ts, Superior Com· Family $350 mo. 6ll-2'1ll 2 yr lease. No dogs.i---------•
E & k ds m Is s I 0 n • D y n a m I (' Rr....rr '"'LS 499.3429 ......... •ss '"'DOR , .......... s __ v_e_s_w_n __ 637_·396 __ 7 _1 Organization, Learning East.side 3 Br l Ba. Nu '""'A --------1 ""'"' ,_ A """"
__ __ Beach starter home. sur
lni-I 044 rounded by s rt. high CALL NOW '""" courtyard with patio, ~
rose an veget abli: • ... ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• d 752 7315 Mobile Ho-s
Univ. Park Home·4Brs ga rd e n . s 5 4 . o o o -----~~~~~~ For Sale 1100 FR, 3Ba, Private yard ZAG RODZK Y. Realtor DONALD M. BIRD l •••••••••••••••••••••••
$83,500 own/a gt. 644 71_20 494-861l Auo(lot.1, ttealto" $3500. Costa Mesa loca-
RARE FIND
Ideal home for active re·
tired or starter home for
young couplt'. One of
Irvine's finest com ·
munilies. 2 lJedrm &
family room. $50,000.
Owner moving out of
stale. Shows hke a model
home. With many extras.
Call 540· 1151
~HERITAGE
tion. Lots of extras. Cute.
BR ~ pool. All r?O.ms 2 beach units. $52,500. Gd Make of {er. ( 7 14 )
nice size. pvt pool, d1mng income. R·l cor lot. Gin-642·4780
rm, sunny. kjtchen, much n y Fortun c. r It r . ----------1
more! Priced for quick 675·7520. lOxSO Melody Home. Nice
sale. $72,500. Rita Myers H.B. Brk. 2br. awning,
HeaJ Estate, 494·5'20 or LIDO SANDS nu crpts, shed. $4,500.
960·1701 Well kept 3+ Den home Eves call 847·7374.
. EANVIEW 3 Br 2 Ba. w /b~au.tifu l covered Cetwt...-y Lob/
custom bwlt. Reduced to Lanai nnged with col· Cryph 1500
S71.900. 499.1112 aft 5 hrs orful flowers & greenery. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Only 144 paces from a , 499-1188 sandy beach & s hort Lv g area 2 ~lots Harbor
walk to pool & proposed Rest Me.mo~al Pk. $300.
I 050 park. 897·3994 aft 6_p_m ____ 1
•0 •••••••••••••••••••• Mow Reduced To Conwnen:ial • • REALTORS LIKE MEW ---------•! Relocatmg. 3Br. 2Ba. $4.5.900-0 wn. Assum G l.
Only $63,950. Property 1600
Cal1644·7211 quick: •••••••••••••••••••••••
SACRIFICE Decorator's 586-2811 -
L !Homed . ~~-~~!!!! .... ~?~~ ~ ove y e n un al -
Juill1ard; 3 BR. plus Laguna Niguel. -huge bonus room owned
211-213 62nd St. N. B.
2500 Sq. ft. concrete blk
bldg, retail store or of·
fice, lot 60x90. Contact
Mgr. 642·8252 or Owner
GANGI, 1213)247 -2120
J::nvironme nt, Full time crpts, drps, r e m od. 2 Br, l ba $375 HouSff Fumished or OF AMERICA
licensees who wall work k.alch. fe nced yd. J:o'amily. ~ BBrr.~ bdaen, 2 ba !5-M>~ Unfurnished 3300 TWWEOEKLOCLYARTAITO~~
for earnings an excess of $235 631·27 11 c. ' ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ $25,000 per year are en· 2 Br, 3 ba NB . $l200 0 u ts l ll n d Ing 1 8 r . FULL SERVICE
couraged lo apply for a Need active retired cpl for 3 Br, 2 ba $430·$4$380
70 walk/bch, patio, frplc, 2277 Harbor, C.M.
2 B r I I f d d 3 Br 2'n ba ,.,, f ""'"' 8 . tol S A posilion with our Invest· · r. rp c, ge ence y • 3 Br2, 2 ba NB $l500 $265 Unfurn, $2...... urn, ,.,.,.,, ns . · ·
m ents or Reside ntial gar. No pets or children. $.""c: 673-8617 CdM. 645-4840&540·2300
Divisions. Call Don 675·5595 4Br,2'h ba '""" -=~=w.=:------~~~~~~~~~~ P · d 4 Br 2'.2 ba SSOO Condominiums Berma n. rcs1 ent. 'h 3 b f , U fu--.1 ... _.... 3425 •-t t Q U A I L .P L A C fo; S arp . r, a m rm. 2 LE RAISOR " '"''~ --f?=ii14!11 s PROPERTIES I NC . fplcs: ammac cond .. cul -••••••••••••••••••••••• Unfurnished
752·1920 . d e·sac, $375. Vacant. REALTY llunlington Landmark •••••••••••••••••••••••
· Ava al now. Call Larry 4523 Campus Dr, lrvme Condo, Adults. 1 Br. $265 Balboa Peninsula 3807
546-5880. Campus Valley Shop Ctr mo. 968.2549 art 6PM. •••••••••••••••••••••••
I 2 U..._.ITS c LL 833 1111600 --...---Custom built, prof. dee l " 3br, f am rm .. pool. A .... SCl ·2 Br,fullkilc hen.nr. BR.lBa Stepstoocean
Costa Mesa enclosed gar. Crplc. $375. . .--pool , Clubhouse. Nice gar $33S mo 640·565U Aft 6, 646·5911. Uruv Park Terrace 2 Hr 2 Vu $250/mo 492-9888 · · AU 2 bdrm. units. Open _ Ba Twnhse. Crplc, $370. _ days. 642-5225 eves.
beam cealangs 1n half, Lux. Dplx 3 Br 2~1 Ba, Dm 552·7896& 586·8955 Townhouse Corona de4 Mor 3822
many with new cal"pets R~, .!~l~p7~1Ya~i. 6dbl Brand new. 2br Terrace Unfurnish•d 3525 •••••••··~··•••••••••••
and paint. S215,000. Wall g ·"" l , h e c pt d s •••••••••••••••••••••••
tak h g S ~ n s . r . r p . e exc an e" l Br, Fam. Rm. newly re· patios. frplc . $350. w 16 Newport Rivie ra an CM. 3 cnUGil l decor. $395. Ref's a must mo.min.lse. 552·3016 Br. 2 Ba. 2 sty Cathedral re .... v
... wa t e r , grdnr incl 'd ceil's Rec. Fac1I. $370. 'Tl l-•,:r:,S. ..... ac. • 548 3337 Turtlerock 3 BR, 2 Ba. 1 645-7000 as k ror Mr J;. ~ ~~ ... " ~ Prap..-ti•• blk to pool. $440. mo. Sullivan
752•1920 3-BR. 2·ba, frplc , big lease.646-1086 ----------1
1•00 OUA1Lst NlW..O.T uacH family rm. Avail now! Newport Crest. 3br, 3ba, CORONA DEL MAR
S 3 5 0 . S E L EC T ~a Beach 3248 dbl gar, i.auna, Jacuzz i & 2 Br Townhouse. frplc
•WALK TO BEACH• PROPERTIES. 556.2660 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tennis Avail March 1. Pool. tennis, continental
by a profe~s1onal mtenor the choice community · HWttil\C)ton Duplex • ELEGANT LJ v ING $450/mo. 673·5268 aft 7. breakfast. Some ocean &
designer. Ready for your
family to move into & en-
132' x 300' C2 Lot on 3-BR &2·BR. garages Mesa Verde Pool House MONARCH BAY VILLA 1 .--CataLina views. Close lo
••M OUNTAI N a nd NewportBlvd.C.M.Vac, $81,500. l 'lYr old forrent orlease.3b<l,2':i New 2 BrB2 '2 Ba,Ocean Se~.Cont 2 ar.1 ~Ba ,ten· sb<>pping & fine beach.
joy
LE RAISOR
REALTY
4523 Campus Or., Irvine
Campus Valley Shop <.:tr.
CALL 833-8600
OCEAN VIE W lovely prime loc. Prin. only Terms Rexible ba._ $500. mo .. incl pool view, balconies.<! frplcs, rus, xlnt fac1 I .no c.h1ld 644-2611
J Bdrm . town hom e . 646·1762 McVAY INVESTMENT maint .. 640·47_37 . pool, sauna, security, under 16. 8/10 s m1 to ~~~~~~~~~~
IM ta n Y.,IY>a()()()d d e d C·2 Zone art shop with CORP. 842-7481 2 BR duplex.-Cn_c_d_y_d_, leaseowner 644-1519 bch. $275.842·2070 ea ures ... ...,.,., . 2 & 3 Br Twnhse Apts. * • UN IQUE CUSTOM room for expansio.n on HA VE CLIENTS with frplc. garage, $235. SWIM THIS WI NTER Apartmenh furnished Encl patio, bltns, frplc.
built home wi th $12,000. MEW LISTING! lge ~ot: Ideal fo~ antiques condemnat ion money 3 BR. ~d. stove, children 3 br. frplc, mag .. ,l'W. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _6_7_3_·7_18_3 _____ _
kitchen, elegance and Harbor View Homes or similar . Dama Really, needs to invest same 1n ok. S27;, HEATED POOL Balboa Island 3706
pr eslige-p ri va l e PHASflll 645-2020or642·6560 good income propert~ 3 BR .fncd yd,frplc,gar .. 890 Ca n yon View ,••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 B~.J~~o~fdi~plc,
area ... $l9S,OOO. SOMERSl!:T PLAN 132' x 300' C2 Lot on fast. Bill Fernandez, poolH~,;EFJNDERS 497·1532 2br apt. Patio. nc:ir bay 673-7537or979·3084 ---------•! Laguna Niguel Realty 5-BR 3·ba. fam rm, wet Newport Blvd .• CM loc. Bkr. 675-7225 642·9900 RENTALS Av a 1 I ab I e J an 15 . .
PLAM 4 DUPLEX 830-5050 496-4040 bar. Pr ofcss1o nally Pnnconly.646-1762. 673·3458 Spectacular Va e w or
Courtyard entry takes -----;::::::::::.·-:::::::-. landscaped & decorated. I 0% SPENDABLE OCEAM YU 4 BR LAGUNA BEACH . Ocean & Bay. Upper un-1 ~ Vacant. Beautiful home. Duplexes/ Two Costa Mesa 4.l'lexes 2 Ba. 2 car garage. bltns. Sprawling 4 BDRM. & Yearly, ammac luxunous it. new duplex. Frpk, you 1nlo this Turtle Rock . 1 OPEN SAT./SUN. 10·5 Onits sate 1800 b bo h L" h rr\~1 RM . home Lge furn. 2 BR. no children/ encl gar. 3 Br 2 Ba, $495. lovely u•ith its 3 b<lrms 2 uy one or t . .:.ac cuts. drn". $395. 548-0259 d k \V I O C .,. AN .. .. 2301 PORT LERWICK ••••••••••••••••••••••• S88.500. Scheduled rents. 0~ 548.9882 sun e c r. pets Refs. req. $350. mo. 67~. 631·2333 • batru. upstairs, 1 bdrm., Blfl P acesette r view 67.,760 I FOURP• r.v --------VIEW. Bwlt an kitchen, 673-5099 1
h l ho Jb 2b o ~ ~ $920 pt:r mo, $13,500 -382 .. '11 bat pus luxunous me. r, a. wner • .....R.ocr........ down. Prine. Only . 3 Bd, den. 1:i.,. ba, good dbl.garage.$400mo. -Costa Mesa ,. '··tchen and fam1'ly room ~c:r:: 900 675-5982 -yti-"" ~" I 2 BDR.'1 • & RUu PUS •-.11..-a P-1·n .... la 3707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' ~. . . -· ....... This has to b e the 547.5793 or 540·7823 , local, many extras. ava1 ... ,.. -""" -with fireplace down. A REFS $365 RM . home. Bu1lt·1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• LRGlBr,pool,nr shops.
ter rific floor plan and a 2dBEpRo~~·tbath Con-For Big Ca nyon pro· shharpest availabl
8
eRaJong _Own __ er/Agt_.__ __ ~~~5~j3. · kitchen, dbl. garai::e. l BR. nr Bay, frplc, Sgl adJts/no pets. Uttl. pd.
very convcnienllocauon. o. mm ta _e occupan-pertJes. Call 81it Canyon l e coast. (1) 3-• (2) MESA VERDE 4.PLEX -------Quiet residential section. Adult only. $165. mo., yr-1884 Monrovia. 548-0336
$71 500 cy. A/C, refrig. Close to Realty 644·1193 2·BR. I 1> l ·BR. Only Absolutely beautiful! 4BR. 3ba, F/R. frplc. ten· $385 Mo. ly, ut1l pd. 673·1178.
' beach & golf. Only SJ.4~,000. OPEN Sat /Sun Principals only please. ~s. pool. gardener, $400. 1 B DR l\t . & o EN -----
$41 ,900 ,(·5.32116thSl.,H.B. 64().0008 OLDER HOUSE. Loe. CoronaMIMar 3722
Off leaten Path
1. 2, & 3 Br. Adults, no
pets. ds hwstlrs, shag
cpts. c lose d garage,
frplc. BBQ. Gas• water
552· 7500 BOHO REALTJ rm 44 UNITS best rental 3 Br.-H-.. -b-a-. _20_5_Lo_y-ol-a. near Pottery Shack 2 •••••••••••••••••••••••
d h II 831-9411 areaa~Fullerton. 5350. Brad Coons, BLKS FROM BEACH. S275 Sep Qlrs. 30+ Male re i I I Pnnc1pa~cf~'~.J?'ease. G45-3147 ur 549.9511 ~~e to everything S225 i;:l~.~75~~)3~rplc. qwel.
REALTYINC. 642-8550eves546·1081 FountainValley 3234 SfU.DIO.APT. ~~\e~CostaMesa 3724
pd. Pool. -
LA MANCHA AP'TS
778 Seott Place, CM
642.5073 714/846 1371. at V1ctona Beac , • ••••••••••••••••••••••• -: FOURPLEX·Good C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2000 YDS. TO BEACH.
k>c. Units have bu.iltns + BRAND new house. 3 br. 2 Partly furn. All utilities S37.50 WEEK & UP
Income ProfMrly 2000 dishwashers. FA heat . ba, comm. pool & tennis. pd. by owner. $175 Mo. •Studio & l BR Apls Newly decorated lge
••••••••••••••••••••••• Need 20% down. SEB.500. Nr. frwys. $325. Call In So. Laguna. 1 Bdrm. •TV & Maid Ser v Avail studio. Patio. 1 adult. Cat
Owner's Cardiff Model. Multi tenant industrial & )'EAGER REALTY Dina. 998·2290 apt. Located l blk. above •PhoneServ, Htd pool ok. Appliances. Util pd.
"The Terrece " .. Plush .:::::::::~:!=::~! of{ice bldg, Orange Co. 556-6171 Coast Hwy. Walk to s hop· •Children Seclio{l Sl60. 859 W. 19th. 642·3'52
crpls, drapes, many Airport Location. Prin. 3 BR, 2 ba, bltns, 2 car ping and beach. All util. •Low monthly rates. xtras. Attached garage. only.M9-1480. gar., community pool. pd.byowner.$200.Mo. •SSOFFweek's rent Enjoy the new year in a
Lndscpd patios. lots of NEWPORT Industrial/ More. Kids ok. No fee. MISSION REALTY w/ad spacious 3 br, 2 ba apt
pnvacy. $55.000. Eves. BETYOUCAN'Tlookat LIOMS&STATES ProfMrly 2100 $265. Isl Pioneer Rily, 98SS CstHwy,Laguna 2376 NcwporlBlvd,CM w/patio, frplc & pool.
552·3636 this lovely, immaculate, HEIGHTS Builder/Broker selling ••••••••••••••••••••••• 842·4421 Phone 494_0731 S48·9755or645-3967 Adults only. $275.
Umver-s-1t_y_P_a_r_k_V_i_ll_a_ge-l.1 ~~~ p~1e0~!anp r ~~-a ~~~ 3 BR. 2 Ba. JUSt hke new. Pprl::;t~r!~~ 1i~ u~~ni; For sale or lease 5600 sq fl4 __ B_r_2_Ba __ rn_c_d_b_k_y_d_v_e_ry_1 ______ 2035 Ftallertoft, CM 645-3381
· gt B b N &. ~ned M·l. 85% A/C & clean. Children &' pels lmmcd. Avail. Unfurn 2 CASA HERMOSA End unit lwnhse. J Jge with.out buying $69 ,000. Prine. only. m on eac . ew improved 400 amp. By OK $375 581-4852 Br. close to 111 School 1 BR Furn. 2 lrg closets,
bdrms. could be 4. 2 at.. .. $59,950 _A_g_e _n_l _. _5_4_9_._0_8_1_2_o_r
1 5
ne3a:_ n2e5w7.9 592·SO IO oAnwnaehre.im883. 9"~.9630East St.. ·• · Secluded. $300. 497.1970 queen s1ze bed. pri v. 148 W. WUsot11, CM balconies. 2 frpks .• 2' ~ &tjoy the Good Life! 645-4203 _ ..,.,.. dressing rm. xtra lge lemlfiful
ba. kit chen/fam .rm., 32325So.Coast Hwy. ----------1----------Huntington leach 3240 Laguna Charmer 3 Br, 1 roo m s . e n c l. gar .
s pacious master s uite 499 4584 SanCl4mente 1076 WANTED TAX SHELTER 13,500 sq ....................... Ba. 2':i blks to bch, $385 w/storage. Adults only. Tow~·=!r
w/frplc. Recently de-• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Byprivate party ,lOto~ ft.primebldg.Cityof ln· VACA.MT mo. 557-1989 o r (1) nopets. Just
corated,xlntcond .• close MiuionYiejo 1067 TOCLOSEESTATE Pr.1de of Ownership ~ustry. Rented w/grow· J BR,hugecornerlot,all 688·7538 _...:_ ________ 1 AcceptChildliPet
to pools, tennis & schools, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ocean bluff view. Uruls. 6424116 mg concern. 213/336·3451, bl t 1 . t d ... 'I •---!&1--By owner. $55,000. Pnn 8y owne r. Charming 3 1806CaheLosAlamos. askforChuckor645-55l5 ns. new Y pain e $18Rfo\lrn. Sl85. Al~ nl 552 8515 836 3447 $95 ooo Dup I ex, 7 94 1, 7951 ; aside/out. Cov patio, Mission Viejo 326 7 Lots of bltns, pool, walk 2BR $33S • 0 y. · · BR, 2 ba.; country kitch/ ___:_ ' Cypress St. H.B. 2 BR. 1 Lots for sale 2200 sharp. '350./mo. Ask for ••••••••••••••••••••••• t o s hoppin g. 1,.J Mi. 2BRw/frplc $3.cS
5 BR. $61, 900 fam. rm .• beaut. patio/ San Juan Ba ea. $40,900. 898-4121 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Keith or Faye, 960-2501 or 3Br, 2Ba, f.'/P. vu. $360 beach. 931 W. 19th St. 3BR $39S
UMIY. PARK BBQ. $55,900. 58l·9154 Capistrano I 078 Bkr. Builder wants R·4 tear 962 4471 Brkr mo. 581-7128 or 22696 Vaa 548-0492 Inquire next door:
Go 5 bed 2 ..... rt n_ h I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• downs or vacant lots an HUGE Tercero, MV Hacienda De Mesa rgeous room. "ewpo -ac S . 1 t . 1 . *Covi~on story! Prime cul·de·sac ••••••••••••••••••••••• . para s ~ircase eadang to ·~ Costa Mesa. area. Mail . 160 W. Wilson, Apt 1'1
loc .. tion. 2 Patios ! Tile DUPLEX W/SLIP ocean vaew retreat off of 4-'lexes* replies to Ad 11628, Dai-Prestige 2.s~ory 4 bedrm . .._._ port n-h 3269 El Puerto Mesa Costa Mesa .. t bed L 'd r b' l ly Pilot P 0 Bx 1560 formal dmmg rm. 21h f'llCW -ac I IB>ROOM entry Massive red brick B'll C II 640 5560 mas er room. uxury Pn e o owners tp, x nt . . • baths upgraded thruoul ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. 1 Ba. Pool, Bltns. · 1 t 1 arro · home. $89.500. local & cond .. 2 buildings Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626. • · . No children, no pets. rare p ace.. go u rm e Hastings & co. Realtor . 2 Yrs old Walk to oceao Univ Park Home-4Brs k · h h d J in FVly $120 000 ea l · . ' Pool & Recreation Drapes. $190 mo.
642·9367 Aft. SPM 1tc en w1l g ar e n AHCHOIAGE building' in Hunt.B~h. R-3 Vacant Lot. an s.an S450 /m o. incl~s FR,3ba.Privateyard 1959 Mapl ... CM view. Hideaway master R·2 Lot, Home w /alley ac· Cl l p t 1 g d A 1t f r Ke th I $575 644 7770 • "'v~ 1----------on ground level. Winding cess. $46,000. Del INVESTMENTS $11S.OOO.Byowner.Prin. emene. aria view ar ener. s 0 1 ease · · ' 1 BR EASTSIDE. cpts. only 526-4593. or oc.ean. ~~st see to ap o r Faye 960·2501 or 3-4 Br. 3Y.z Ba, Bonus Rm, $185. & UP. 1 & 2 Br. drps bl d h b $19 st ai r case t o 4 huge Ma n g els, SUNSET 17141496-7711 prec1ateth1s lot.$30,000. 962·4471Bkr. l & d I Garaaes green lawns . tns. s w r. S. bedroo m s. Separate REALESTATE,963·8991 SHARP•-'LEX 97s-.192 cp s rp s , ge . !'' • • 642-6243 laundry room. Perfect Super 4 br, 2 ba. cpts, patio/Over hang, auto punf1ed waler. Adults. ----------
big famil y home . Be.tifulUpper SantaA.na 1080 XLMTC.M.LOC. Attention Investors & drps, R/O, $345/mo. sprinklers. pool/tennis no pets. 2020 Fullerton 3Bdrm,2Ba
SELLER .ANXIOUS! Bay Condominium ••••••••••••••••••••••• Built-ins, s prinklers, Developers. 3 large lots 963-4.569963-1786 priv. S600 mo. 640-1327/ /\ve. l block E . or Mesa del Mar 4·Plex, no
Hurry, call now. 752·1700. 3 bedrms. 2 bath, huge co PP er P 1 um bin .g . in Apt. Complex. Hunt· . No rentalfee 640-1500ext 1465 Newport Ave & l block pets. $220. 645-1.208
OPfN 1119. 11\11JN rotil N><:1 • fplc, dining rm, putting S24. 995. privacy l Very well mam· ington Beach, 2 blks to Village Real Estate , k 3 br condo So. of Bay. $325. Near new 3 br 2 ha
I.:. ·(·::_ .. ,IQ:j.~;Jff;;"I· ~poo~ee~bosn, r~~~uasoo' d:iREA~'!!?L~T.~Yhi~~ ~r~~l~~l~. A~?. .. ~ yo! tained. Mat Mii! ~~~~ityF}r:s~s:ii~e 0:r· FrpJc, 3 br, 2 ba, enclosed 2!
6 b~~uble gar. $675.
642
"
8690 ~rp~c. gar&rono pets. E: • < l1f:\i~~ fixit!!Termsavailable. $87,000.10%.Down fered.213i963-5194 patio. c rpls/drp s. 545-764Saner5. l~ BR apts rurn. No, __ ._.642_·_1 _____ _
Best buy In Orange Agent 549-08 $345 /mo. 963-4569 / children or pets. Adults MESA DEL MAR lge 3 __::..._------~Ranches fanM 963-1786 4 Br 3 Ba Condo, Fam. only. Gd. 10(. 645-0632 BR 2 ~ B •$2 7 5 Lopna leach I 048 546-0814 CouSnCtyO. TT RE ""LTY Gro , • 2700 No Rental Fee Rm. pool, tennis, many Hunff~on hac.h 37 40 Children OK 1~i--01oc •
••• "' Classified Ads sell bi Yff Village Real Estate xtras. $475. 631·0797 •••••"•...-••••••••••••••••• · ••••••••••••••••••• • Spy Glass Hill. 4 Bd. 2 ba, 536·7533 items small items or••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR t d' l lh b lh
MONARCHIAY.TERR. Cam.rm., din.rm .• pool.1---------anyltem.642·5678. 44 Acres • near Perris SpoUesssmallhouse, &ck Bay. Lge 3Br, 2ba, BEAUTIFUL 1 br rum epts ~ ~~Ulncl a •
Excitingly decorated 4 Jacuzzi, maid rm., Pan. Lake, path of growth beaut. yard, $330 mo frplc. 2 car gar, beaut apts $170 & $180. Spanish • • ·
bdrm . 3 bath home with view. Owner, $175,000. · · level, view, good farm & inc. water&grdnr. garden & view of golf slyle bldg. pvt encl gar. $225. &4S-I079
1 o t s 0 r wood . hi g h 640.1751. Newport leoch I 069,Hewport •ocJa I 069 horse country, just off 962·7787 ask for Nan course. Cpt /dr1>9 /bltns. pool, sauna, lndry. adlt.s. •2Br Mesa Verde, lower.
I 1----------1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H 60 ..,"""'A 10% d Exec house $375 mo 17301 K l Ln 1 blk beamed ce tings; ·pro· wy • .-vv • n, r 1 • · ee son • Garage, adults $200. No
fess. landscaped, with uase/Op~I prinonly (714 )675-6675 3-BR 2-ba. ram rm, rp c. 961J..6.52S&541·9134 W.orBeachoffSlater. pets.833-8974
pool & jacuzzi, In a xro-~ $350. pe r m o. Call 842-7848
ed U 0 Close to beach, tennis. r-t..L ...... ,, Ba-'--. RHIEttah 898-1739 Spacious 4 BR. 3 Ba. 2 Br l~ Ba, brand oew
lect pu o. utstan mg pool. 3Br. FR, open '-""",,...... f1IUl:rf Exdtmtp 2800 Waterfront home. Avail. SMALLBEACHHO'l'EL Twnhsestylc. Frplc, Leo
ocean views. $187,500 beams. atrium, s undeck., RfSIOENTIAl ~RAGE COMAIWV •••••••••• • • • • • • •• ••••• Adults over .co. sngl or immed. $650. yrly. only! Rooms $23.50 week. pvt patio. gar, $275. 2Z4 7
TUR"ER ASSOC. Lse $450 mo, $2000 opt Sell/trade for beach m~tri1ed. ?Ahr sec. Comp 6'5-7C06 days, or 631-3155 Apta$110. mo.536-7056 Elden979-l658
1105 N Cflt, Laguna m 0 n e y . Fu 11 p rl c e .._. EWPORT hous pod 1 .cs yr roe. locl. adult classes. 2 PM's for appt
494-11'7 $65,500. " old M~lai:::c on~· Br 2 Ba. New furn or un-· ADULT garden apt, 1 Like New 2 Br, waH'n,f
--------• Wafet ft Oftt HOIMS I.&. YFROMI' LOT + acre Green house 460 furn. ~ ml fr ocean. Call IAYCREST AREA bdrm, pool & BBQ. No distance to 17th St.
Call 631·1400 A sq.fl. P,,500. n• 338-383S 536-814.9 all SPM 4 b r , 3 b a, ram r ~ children. no pets. 1035 mo. $48-49'11 tU0...11•'" $500/mo '·-Ava1·1 1--. 12thSt.$15.S.mo.538-7447
v/6/an
REAL ES TATE
•Jf)<I ( ,,, ,,,,. y' '1f
JJ: • ',\\.\\ti
A Demler
DUrLIX
200 Ft. to West Newport's
best beach! ' BR. up, 2
down. Only 3 yrs. old.
$118.000
CAYWOOD UA.LTY
• 541·1290 ..
Temple Ulll• location i Ho~ ot Income. Cute 2
CfHl Or pion otlertna bd. 2 ba. Quiet ,treet.
ert ncy " warmth Frplc, 1ge-1ncd yd .,
PrtH d to sell fast I $54,900. 714-338-3835 or
tm,SGO ~·41.23.
Fifty foot lot fully bulkheaded. Some
subordination or terms. F\a.U price
$178,500
A COUJIW8.l IAMlll CO.
644-1766
or---· WALK to beach bach cot· liH:'· .... 2 BR 2 b M Vdlk. ...... taie, util pd. Sl.S5. mediatedly. SS7-428l. La.-1 leec.h -3141 Pnva~ 1;trd.~.
..... •••••••••••••••••• 2 BRoondo,Crplc$2210 tBR,3ba,F/R,h'ptc,ten· ••H••••••••••••n••••• Select P ropcrt~
3 BR condo rncd yd, fp, nb, pool, aardcncr. $400 Sm1 furn bacb., or bch. ~2680 S2SO 640-0008 Utll'a pd. Emp'd adlt. _____ __..._......_
•••-•••••••••••••••••• c BR. fncd yd, 1a.rafc, $35/wkl)'. t9'-4200 2 YtL DC1! 2--B& 2.ba.
H6•H U.fw .... d boat1ate. $.100. Nr Be acb w /T enaia, vaulted ceil.IJli, Ii•. rm ••
....................... HOMEFINDERS Pools. 3 Br 2 B •• rrpk, .... ..,....... 3769 enclosed 1•r•1•. ~o ,.~....1.....1M 3222 942.9900 avail. lmmed $350 mo.•••••••••• ............. mo. w /rcfrlg. $230.
--.. 6'.5-1858 • without.<:allM2...s%70 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 BR. 2 ba. (rplc, crpts & OCIAMROMT
3br, 2ba; stove , r cfn11. drpm, nr H 8 . f-Ugh, $.175. i.st,y. A·frame; 3 BR, 2 McClern2Dr. Wlnw'350. 3 Br, 2 ba, f'tvlc.. bl\ns.
dshwshr. Nr heh. $425. mo., 1st. last & security ba. Dbl. pr. Pools, ten· yrly $00. Phones : clsb•br, pat.lo. tlo pets.
'38 &eaonfa. 675·7927. 968-9087. • nia. $425. All. 548-1290 6'7~2018cwf7S-7533. rwMllZ afterHSl;atl.I
l
/
..
jJI DAILY PILOT Tunday. January 20. 1916
Add it. .. Build IL.Diaper lt ..• Hamm~r It... Carpet SERVICE ·lt,.Cem~nt It ... Wire lt...Hoe tt ... Clean IL.M ove
, it...Press lt ••. Paint it... Nail it.:.Pla er IL.Fix It ... DIRECTORY
~--=···.. c. .. ...................... ~ " I c .... t/C~ Ga., .. , . H .. , J..atorial ....... , I ,_,..,,,.... ~ • ...•................... ·•·•·············•••••• ...... , ................ •···········•·······•·· ................................................... ~~ .....• ~ ...... ······················~ AP:~~~r~i~E[aAJR R 00 M Add l t Ion a Jo"tee Estimates' Phillipe Rcllable, ••pert aaril~b· •HAULING• Wkly Clean Wladowa, lllOVJM01 Let 2 expr. lbt/Ext, Jnl tafrm, ~it REPAJftS.ALLTYP£S ..
(7l4)50·Ml2 1ara1es. patJO co.-er Cement Co . Patloa. lna. Momalnt,aprklrs, YARDCLEA.NtJP cpts, noon. Stores, ot men move you. Rea1, (latr1·1C1ta) -tompl Reu,frteetls,lk. -----'-----1 ubtnets. Mr. Ker driveways.Lk .. Bonded. lnd1e-p•i . Plants a u556-03''1•• , flca,ztbr1v1.&420SS7 rda.5'5-ISl3or&s3·_.. <2strY·2clrtUWcompl Walta»S0201n1tJme
c--..M .. liMJ M7·73:M 751·5657after6 wbole11ale prices . •'-•-1 _....._~ p~·"lii..iii Tedm.TllS.: ,..._ •••••••••••• • • •••••••• c bln f c •· G40.10'T2 Hallnc anyuunf, 11ra1e -...,. , .. Kitch cabinets. cs tm wal • eu or onno~s~ur Cofttrodor cleanup. Rellable, fut ..................... , ................. o ... PAPtK/P1'1.N'l'-iCt tr ...................... .
unl I U t bo European Trained ••··~··••••••••••••••••Lawn malnleri.ance, mow. service. 963~ RotoUIUn,·tal. Landleap• P!:T~Jt.I PA.fNTlPIG .XJt. N.ed WOl'k lave CEltAMlC Tll+E. New Ii ~ ~6 ~f:t °'• 1 San Banfield 541H91 AJtcraUona, ~ add'ns. in1. ed1Jn1, P-lmmln1, 1 -..1.M lne. Sod·Bluearasa 16\¥ Int/lb t·Reu Rates bo wait. SatlifaeUo tmdt, Free est. Snil jobs
_r_m........:'-·--· --· ----..1c.tp.t S..lce patios, cement' .-rk. We. free est tel·l408 S 12 a Mll9m Sq.Ft. Tom 960-2170 Ca.II Gene a t SS2-0CM iuar .Free est 554-392'. wtlc0rde $M.it26
c.,.nter ...................... $48·0786• 6"-9203 .._. .. SW.le•• ¥~~01 "G~fll'J.I MC11011fY Prot. Pllnttr. Int ac E-Kt . ......, ,..,_. r .... s.r.1 ..
•••••••••••••••••••••••Shampoo & steam clean· GER WICK & SON ••••n••••h•••U•••••• COUtieStudent•~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quit w~k 6 ~ ••. P'r4M? •••dh•th••''''•'f•h '•••h•••ih••••••U•••
REMODEL18UJLO lna. Color bri1btenen; ADDITIONS-IDOITALLI Brtck pulnf, terraced •1st.-C/1t1.JT•. VER~ NEAT PA'l'CH~ftfloVils, Umblna. top·
SPECIAL on Insulate wht c arpts 10 mi REMODELLlc Bl·l10942 Electrical Plumbint HousectecMhtcJ . rront walks w/bric~ & JOBS Is REST UCCO. p I n It. Pru n l rt I·
REFS, UC. 645-s.39 blc.a~h. Clean liv rm, di 5'9-2170 673-00U etc. Reurt'tes. 642.,951 ' •••••••••••••••h•h•h concrete combined, 'tUe PAIMTIM~ 111/IM Fteent.893-1439. FIRtWOOD $80 cf)rd/·
rm & hall $U. Avg r wantaft£ALCLEAN enttya.Sl umpstonewatla &.J•·XlntwonQ'f..at def, l ie/bond/Ins.
Addit s, RcmodellnJC, $7.50, couch $10, chair SS ROMARO CONSTRUC· HANDYMAN·Homes HOUSE ? Call GJd,lham & plantere. Uc. 227'80. 1 .. J._ t t ft P'1umbi1t9 642·*4. · ~tloe, cabinets, panel· Guat ellm pet odor. Crpl TION room additions, Apta. Conscientious G. l Free e t.sk5-Sl2J Ph: 531·<t913 1.st en;• 2l /Jn · ralnt· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------
1 n 1 , c o n c r e l e . repair. 15 yrs expr. patios, concrete work& craftsman 64.S-6558 ir · 8 int, a~rtni.~rlels MARY'S ~LQMBtNb U~al.....,
.m.97391750-9490 Jack or w or le mys e If. Ref remodeling. 581·!225 . . *HOUSECLEANING.. 8rtck, Block, St.one ft Con· spra1, 25)'rs UP•1>Sl94 * 846·9807 ,t ••••0•Ul•••••••••U~•
John. 531-<JlOl. a.ctrtcal Make Your h.o me By reliable couple. Good crete work IJY Stewart Custol'n patnt/wiUpber· NOJOBTOOSMALt. liH't Uphol1t~
REMODELIHG Call United-Professional ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:i~~!~·d;:~ 'boi~l~ references. 536·7111 Masonry. 588-1108 Int. Pa!nt lntt t!O tht, DRAIN CLEAN~D fr0m Serving ofange .to over
Alterations repairs Carpet, uphlstry, win· ELECTRlCIAN·Small your 9uls.ide tloqrs. Call ~ HOUSECLEANING, MASONRY ·Tlle, br1ck, ;:e~ do exhtlot. $4.8o Evee,w1tnc!ss10ife !O .Yr5g,R~~~r;n~:' ~e-
stores. addatt~ns, baUu i, dow & f~oor cleaning. Jobs, ttiaint/tepalra. 22 for estimate 9am to Spm e~p~ri.e nced, H.B. fl blo~k, concrete, stone. ·7 prtee. Guar. W.7380 i:,abn~ ~mall, l3l. ~~
kitchens cabinets Reas pr1ces. Balbo yrsexpr #233108 5485203 Mon·Fti .64~·1822. Westrrun.ster area. CAii Ucd.968-2'04 'HOUSICO•TS . . Wr ~f ~ Id · • · Laland. &'15-90M. • before lOAM 892·0560 ,._ Plumber, repair, rep1pe, ce ore Y ec e. patios, cement work. furnitwe Complete & capable care • WILLIAMS &SONS Byt..arry (714)548..tfU service lines ~ lnslalla· m. · Ciyk~ •owner.
Contractor does own Cltlllftt/Concrete ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coe your home, car & you Spic Ir Span house 8t boa Masonry /Sriclt/Bloclt Uart. 0 . Oldley 142-9315. 645-Sfl0/64.S-61.0S. MorkbeP~l~mBbOAJCloMt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stripping, refinashang. by couple. Live In, gd cleaning. Call64S-4387o &Slone.CallS81·'1829 LOTSA PRtD,E. Fair D ... J IPYOll
· em r · · •or. Custom Brick Work. KITCHENS, Dln rm sets. refs . 642-5299. 631-1759 Prices. Lie/Int. Calleo 1\1\JNSCLEARED guar.962·8314. Patios & wall sou ChemClean.892·8389. Mo.-lng Paidttne . Xlnt. from$7.90·Call haveaservlcetoofreror
CUSTOM CAR PENTR y specialty. Fast -eHicient. Have someth.ina you want Don't give up t~ tblt> ! ••••.••••••••••••••••••• References. 979·333S. Moto-llooter 636-5001 Coods to stll, fl ace an ad
Pallos, remodel & 64.>8512 Have something you want ~sell ? Classified ads do "List" it in classlfled. Movme/Haullnf. Student . In t ~~ V a 1 r P 11 o t
dctill 549 4159 lo sell? Class1f1ed ads do 1t well -Call NOW , Ship to shore r~sult.s! w/larae tr"ck. Reas. Find what you wut In SELL ~le Items .tU-.a Classified Section ••• 3 ons. · Want ad results 642·567 it well. 642.5678. 642·5678. 842-5678. Barry 548·9723/838·5779 Daily PilotClassllleds. Dail1 P1tot CIH1ilied Ad. Phofle642·5678.
Apoe l1aHh ~ Apstln ... tt Unfurn. .Apartments Unfum. ApcwtMenh "'9fr& ltooms 4000 Office Refttal 4'400 ltfttalt W-...cl 4600 Mort~s. Trust .... ~ &
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••'••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• D.-SOJI P,...,_-citlon
CostaMesa 3824HuntlnCJfonleach 3840LOCJUf1a8each 3848 Hewportlea4h J869 Rooms S25 wk up. 1501W•ttcffffDr.3ot 4 &A house w/l yr •••••••••h•••••••••••• 0•••;;,,··~~:•••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/kitchen. Apts $ti.SO NewportlN"anci''"ICtr lease , Ll~bnll or LOANS tO 80% Jobt cllitM1. 7~75
· · k 5"8 9755 ~·..,. • N...., 0 -..... 1 ... ..1 UP •••••••••••••'•'••••••• CASA VICTORIA 3 Br 11'2 Ba Twnbse 1 Br Apt. in N End. h Blk 6 MO. sub-lease. Exc1tmg w up· .. · o r ~i Office SpciCle v .. port u.s•c • .... .,. LO"t •
t .2&3br.OeluxeUnfur. w 'd!>hwr, range, yd & to Shaws Cove. ~tany ParkNewportApls,N.B. 645·3967 cau'lsiteManager lusl. /I t/ 'htTDLoa11•~P/ .. o/o ~aturedJxper'iT1nt~~:
orf\!rtt.gastwtrpd. pati o. poo~ nea rby . tree~. pvt patio, $250 mo 1 br s~nny & lovely. Laguna Brh. Prl home. <71•>642·31ll9'Ct246 .ness ftYH WTDL--. Y!m::ywh;:!·i:Socal.
Adults-No pets Sec. gate 536·5006 or 536-7542 _· --incl d util. 494-2791 Adu Its o n I Y. $2 6 9 . Light cook mg fa ell ·' Finatee Fairest TMms since 1949 P...._ "'"" .,.. ... NB Pool rec rm elevators -640 1218 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• nune...v~, S2SVlclona' 6428970 SPACIOUS NEW TRI· N•wportBeoch 3869 494·6176or838·9615. ..IMH SalllerMhj.(:o. ~iiiiii---iiiiiiiiiiiiiii'-;;;;;;;;; PLEX J mile lo ocean ....................... S3.50 L!>l'. Newport Jsle. 2 RO 0 M w 1 k 11 ch en Opporfatiffy 9005 64.2·2111 S.S·Olll
$330 3 Br. 2 Ba bllns. lg UTILITIES PAID Br 2 Ba, upper duplex priv'lgs, employed pre· •••••••••••••••n••••u 5electlv,ilousehold,
ftlMECREEK
LIVES UP
TO fTS MAME
(htr 500 tall 111•<· .inti
l 0 ~ l r (' ;J 01 ' \\ I I h
"atedu lh • 11 .111• ,1
re l11xin ~ .. ,•1 1111 ~ fc11
your spu< Hnh nt·\\ I 111
2 bedroom ,1 JI•• rt 1111•11!
From $220 Furn1l11H'
ava1lal>le Smull p<•tc;
OK Adulh 11111\ Off1t l'
open 9 110 I" Ii (It I 2.ltNl
f'a arnl'\\ Hd I '''la
:'\lt•sa f'h111w :> 1;, :! 1110
~:1~· ~.tf sf.J/ w~~d~ BLOCK.TO OCEAN Oelux. <213 > 791.4348 rerred. 962·7520 DRESS shop for sale. Top nrterets/ Nursing & Famlly Care
aft 6 Deluxe Private 2Br, 2ba. Bayfront 2 Bd, 2 Ba. Pvt .I'°"""'"",....... Costa Mesa location. Call P_........t/ Personnel
Lge walk 1n clos~ls. Bch & pier $550. yrly.GuH .H ~:.*-PauJ831·14ddor645-5000 Lost&FoUred EmployerPaysFee
S245 LGE2br.2ba,D/W, bltns,garage.cablcTV. 9791935&644-4510 tome 4 150 .,1,""_.__.. apl218 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4500CamfusDriveN.B. R & o . c pt s. d r p 5 Adults no pet!> S300 mo ···~··••••••••••••••••• ../ .., .. _. , , Lost A Fouftd 5300 Cal !US-1505
Brookhurst & Hamilton till June 15 S375 mo on Sub lea!>e, Park Nwprt, Loving care for elderly ~._,-..ice..... •Mfg. 8 Fib1ls Sabot ••••••••••••••••h•••••l----------
Agt. No fee. 846.1311 : yearly lease See to ap 2br, 2ba. lennas. pools. To male or fe!"· Bal. diets, -' Sailboats. Ex. prqfits! LOST 12.21, LO MALE u t of St ate LI c
8464938 preciale. Call for appt /\pr 1 I 3 Ot h / Ion g er homey, patio. 544·3833 Sl800 all inv. 751-8861 1 R I 8 H s ET T I!: R . Cosmotologist desires
551-6042 after e PM. S325 1mo. 644-5564. •~UOI LICllMSI REWARD63:J.,8838 Receptionist position in
EX IJ:?c. 2 br, 2 ba, dlx -PARK ..iEWPORT WESTCLIFF 2 br l ' 2 ba Rentals to thare ~300 OR b• c-· ... i--u A4. ... Found.· Female Hu•'"y. Beauty Shop. Refs . poolside apt nr. bch. n • ••••••••••••••••'•••••• i JC. vul'I&.• VA ... LagunaHillaareapreC'd. Adil n o pets gi95 APARTMENTS twnhse. Adults only, n G 1 h 1 $140 up store-0ff1cts t pts S ALE O &(! EftAL Garden Grove area on 581-0677 536-~ . Bachelor 1or2 pets. $300. mo 1728 Bed· a to s are my apt, 11e drps a ir bath. 17301 "COCKTAILS ' r amp or Be a ch & ---·------
-Bedrooms and ford Ln .548 7533 br. pvt ba & drsg rm. Pk Beach Bl, H.B. 842.2834 Low, Low Price! Wettern. 898·1268 Hel8 W..ted 7100
NEW 3 Br 2 Ba Condo, dbl ---Npt. Lots of exttas. Call Call: Mr. Winston. ~~•:-••• ••••••••••••••• gar. pvt palio. nr Hntg Townhouses NWP'f'S FINEST CONDO Nila 8:30·S al 834-098() or FREE RENT . Collect. (21.3) 272.4249 L 01 t : Ma 1 ~ O e r1111111-...11111111_. .... _..._. ..... ,_
HbrS350.846·5107Eves. F'r.S2J9.5-0 Lido Spac 1 Br Sec. 6 -9:30pmat644·729' Officesaslowas35"per Shepherd/Cofhe .m ix. AcctngClerk/mlg$600+
Open 96 Da1l y Panorama Bayfronl 1q ft. Mission Vlejo & IEAUTYSALOM Blk/brn/wht lUr. Has OrdeH>e!lk $625
1BR,1 BA, $200. per mo. 2 Spa-Pools-Tennis $475. Slip avail. 675·3464 Male to share w/same Laguna Niguel. 200 to 1'H partl'/ rusted choke Accnt/prop mgmt \o<tolCI\ BR 2 BA $260 3 Across (rom fashion Npt Crest Condo, 2 Br, 2 NETSS1,400MON .,.,.,., BR: 2 BA, S3Sop~~rm!o. Island at Jamboree on For lease. Terrace apt. Ba, gar. Ocean Vu , 2000sqft.8Jl-1400 AL1.HELPRUN c.halnoh.646·8405. RecepL/type to$550
Beaut Ot!W, 1 unit bldg. San Joaquin ll1lls Road. 60' bay vaew. 2nd noor. $200.incl'd ulil. 642·1039 FREE RENT. NpBch at Orig. owne r moving LOST Jan 13th. female lrvinePenonnel Agency
Close lo beach, fplc. (7141644-1900 4l>r. 4 ba. 30' li v rm. din or644·1230GeneThibaull airport. Utilillc.?s & from area. Only reason golden Irish Setter. l8 488El7thCostaMesa
bllns. encl gar. Bkr. No -rm. brkfst rm. air. Call R t t h I t janitor incl. Garden shop ~or sa~e. Located mo. o ld. Vic . In· Suite224 842·1470
lBR W /w t d & r~. call Tom 893-1351 Ll\'E Near The nearh' 675 7U30 'inmmCda .. :. S2° 25s aerae. 1gecha1.P1d suites from $88. 979·6666. exclusive Mission Viejo dlartapolis. Magnolia &~~~~~~~~~ pa~ehng :Pb~'nsr~f~vl' --. ' Casa d~I Sol OK. SS6·3106, 640·8034 area. Gd terms. Xlnt Ne..Vland, Hunt. Bch.1---------
carporls w 'pat lo SIGO 3 Br condo, frplr. l i ba. Beautiful Adult Apls Aportmenb fouml5h•d eves. lalnn1 RtfttClll 4450 lease. Aat. U'l-UOO 968·6641 Alterations
mo 642·7973aft6pm Bwhard & Adams $270 FromSl90 or Unfurnished 3900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llLLIARDPAILOI ---------1 Jlt SS
962 7275 en's 2166l"brookhurst. HB ••••••••••••••U••••••• Responsible non·smoker JDEALahop located in the NETS Sl ,000 MONTH Fadnd sm Male blk dogd NLORE ~.;~ pBna!at;~a~~~iqapts2 New Deluxe :rr~plex. 2 & 3 962-6653 THE EXCITING M or F to share new No. mall at the Factory, Cao· Open only 60 brs wlc. ~.v~[ft~~r;~::arflel Part-Time B · ue Brs Nace. qwet. Nr. 5. PALM MESA APTS .... Lag':11la o~ean vie'!" ex· nery Village, N.B. $110. Much higher net with aa· Plea.st Call644·S070
r. 2 ba & 1 Br w/loft. Point Sbo pprng Cntr YRLY 3 br. 2 ba. b.> MINUTES TO NPT ecuttve unit. 2 lg bd s w/2 mo 673·9606 · 673-939! gressive. promotion F 0 U N D ; C a t , &ask for
sunken living .rm, brick S250 & S340 18482 Hunt: beach. Near new. bltns & BCH. .. ba, S200. +util. 675·8421. · ' minded owner . Near Himala)Can, 1/121 Beach . Mr.Carbajal
• frplcs. p vt pa t1 os. 102ton St. 557 4608 & garage. $390. 548 4063 ·u~l'h. 1&2 BR. Refs. 600 SQ FT store or office High School & Boys Club. City Dodge, H.B.842·9M5•--------::.J~f:; ::~2 :r:::· Bay 5.'k>-5775 . 3 Br. 2 Ba, yrly 2 blks to fmm Sl80. I front. $155. 646·!180 oa Owner movln1 & must Aduits.NoPets LvlncJAIOM 679·3709 · sell. Low re nt, good Lost Collie-Golden A/PAYCLEIK
La --Sharp 1 Br·apl in 4-Plex beach$350 mo 1561 Mesa Dr. Can•-a ._lll .. ftl'*r t A ... o .... """" Retriever· puppy, please Irvine Boat Manul. de. rge 2 brduplex.~t0\e, \dulls no pets $195 642·3188 (5 Blks EastofNewport gc -... UdolsJ•Area erms. •~·-·....,..,., all"..,.3798 to 'A Cl refr1g , 2 c ar ga r . t • • FINDSOMEONE S r . •---------c -,answers sirtsexperd /P erk
Hamilton nr II arbor si29494 or84.6·l848 2 BR. 1'2 Ba condo style. Blvd.) DEPENDABLE tore or of Ice avail. nr "Brute''. Reward. to handle heavy work
s 2 2 5 t m o N o p e ts Bllns, cpts. drps. end 546·9860 to share housing with entr~ce to Lido Island FOUND Lge puppy, possi· load. 979-2880.
675·5800 Bkr Nofee HOWREHTIHG patio, heated pool. CALLHOUSE·MA!ES Agt. 3-7300 -IHr&WlMT•Y.... blePitBuJl,blk&tan,no APT MANAGER (cou-~~:1~. ~~·p~tsba$25~1t~:1 l\leadow~Etu°X~Course ~~i no pets. $215 RESORT Re:·4~~~:fo:~·:a n ~~!':f~.~::!~ .. ~~-~~ o:~.~~ri~~~~h~3 ~~~a~o:1~'1e~=-8~.k. ~~~~:::J~~:haa~l!;
Walnut St 673 6041 0 n c , t w o . t h r e e YRLY spac 3 br, near wanted lo share 2 Br apt. Lease 1,000 sqrt w /office yrs. In business . 1 ( of apt management. Man •·-d P I lk to B h CdM 110·220 V' heat, hot long est. tavern has been FOUND )'ouna e m ale must be able to do lite
I.It' rooms available. all bch/bay. Only $374.95 . oo • wa c · · watel'i new bulldln•, gd a winner ~or years. Good dog vie lJrookhurst plumblnt & elec. n:· S225. 2 Br. drps. crpts. have blt ns & di s h · 673-19091eavemsg. Janette 646·1601 days, locale.S4S·22A4. ., game action. Lots of in· Adams. Sihrer/1ray "·pairs. Costa Mesa area..
frplc, pvt patio, adJ washers. Located in pre· 213-795-2081 Eves & dust. & local tude. Agt. tan. We.rln1 coll,ar fc No' c ... "dre". Salary +
s hopping 2!3·592 5227 1 :-.lagaous area. $365 Yrly Ocean Front 2 LI v I N G wknd$. _531 _ _... ________ 1 tac. •as.1. apt. •='1..,,_:; ---•3 BR fplc, 2('z ba. $375 •2 'Br, 1 Ba, bltins, deck, °"°* ~
DanaPoittt 3826 BR. encld yard, $290 •1 garage84S·3655 . (t..._sforR...t 4l50 AIRPORT O&ICAflSSn.a Found: .lttk/Wht Maie1-------•
••••••••••••••••••••••• BR,privbalcony$210 •••••/'•••••••••••••'••• 3200$QuateFeet o...11-••1100M0"'!.1-.... Pbddle.l /17/78Vlc:Hun·
Ocean View 2 Br 2 Ba , Jge will consider children For lease. Terrace apt. 60' Garage for rent . 19~9 Ma· 1§~r Per Sq. Ft. ""'" • "'" UnitonCenter. 8'2·4087. ASSEMBLERS dlx Bltn s . S239.50 See al intersection bay view. 2nd floor. 4br, pleAve,CostaMesa.$25. 2Alr·conditloned offices, Maui~ely equipped ,
·493.9577/83().3215/496-5079 Graham&Heil.H.B. 4ba, 30' llv rm, din r m, t:t"om$170 mo. ampleparklng. features Jourmet L06T:Cat,Black4rGrar
I( tR RHtty brkfsl rm, •ir. Call H,,.....ht'IHl.Co. cheeses & fine '!Vi~es, Tl'"°'Uiped M . "1Jer',
Lrg t br. crpts. drps, ::0.260°1ge
0
rrs8488300 675-7030. Oakwood o Hers the 1533 Baker <H lr b~r Reaffon 673•4400 does catt)' out c4Unng. Maenolla. & Garfield .
s tove, frig. $165/mo. finest in resort living al a B 1 vd · >. C · M · Lie ' Should pl'Omote cheese & FV.982·98!9atl. Sl'M
496 7058aft6orwknds Lido Isle 2 br. Ulil incl price you can afford. enclosed arell. $25 tho. 2000 S~ It . ot•. •·wine partlU. Agl. -----213·281-8406, Eves/wknds 540-2200 1 • 531 H-1.osT Jan leth .. ~mallBlk VERY lrg 2· BR 2·ba1 llKE TO BIACH 675-23-42 There's $1 million in •arehou space dired.· ..,.._, • Bm mate YOrkSbire
w terrace, ups trs . n o 1 23 Bed.room Apts . r ecreatiop facilities . Offi R al ....... 00 ly across from OC T l Bi C
LJON EST T 3 BR 2 ba gar patio NIGHT LIGHTED TEN· ce ...t ,.,. Airport. 549·1480. err e r , g anyon t;~~~~}2 25. 67 s. 5205. 536-2579• s A Jz~so10 block to beach. No pets: l'flS COURTS. A full lime •• .. •••••••••• .. •••••.. BURGER HANDQUJJ area. Reward. l40-1021.
- -Yrly. W. Nwpt 642-1603 a~ivilies director who •1 MO FREE R£flfT• New bldt !SO<> !q. tt .. M·l .,.. . . 1922 Silver Dollar with
For small eleclro
mechanical devices. Ex·
per in mechanical as·
sembly or small parta
prel'd.
ST.lCOSWfTCH, IMC
lJ.39 Baker, Costa Mesa
549-3041
Equal Oppor. Employer
· By CENT Pk 2 new 4 Br 3 plans parll~s. BBQ's, 1·2·3 Rm. office& from w/ft olc. Lee rear dr. 1'1t Located on ra1rvtew Rd. brass Buick rin $20 re-B Toro 3832 car gar. lse. s.t95 & SSZ5. Oceanfront w/Vu nr pier 2 trips & more! Free Sun· $135 per mo. Near sq .ft. Days !140-5710; n e ar Orange Cda~} ·ward 648•2291 1 • Assistant needed part
............. •• ••••••••• 536-06871840-2850 Br. furn or unfum. day brunch. airport. No lease req, ev~. 648-0881 Collete. Aver~e ~w. · . · time by Lawyer for work
Condo 2 Bd, 1 Ba . paUo, --- -----540-2018 536·3824 Plus beauurul sin1Ies, 833-3223 9Til noon . per ftat gross. ~xtt nl Plt"IOMlt IJIO ln Orange Co. Need ln· ga r. non smoker. no For Rent 1 HdrmApt. 1&2 bedroom a p ts, . Office/lnd.Jstrlat spate, lease wlt.b rene al ....................... telllgent, pleasant
child. pet. 5265. 586.5197 $180 per mo. Steps to Sand 2 Br 2 Ba, furnished & unfurnished. For Lease Pnme Loe. on Lag Niguel area 400/3000 pritilege. Valf for .,e. J>rtn~prot>lertt' person, age! $30. Write :
--515 7thSt.HB. frplc, deck, bltns. $300. RenlsfromS170.Modela Coast Hwy in CdM. S.F.NrF'twy831·108Z talli. CillAJ~hOlH~JpUbe Occupant,Bb~159e,Los
New 3Br. 2ba, air cond, 548·3869&642·0282 open10to7.Sorrynopet.s lM>Osqfl newly tc!ftovat· ~Sq Ft M·l apace! $12,000.. atbrtadayUS-3830 Angeles DaiJ1 Journal,
cpts, d~Lbllns. no pets Irvine 3844 2 BR . ParUy furn. or children. R.Oorumate ed . P e rfect r or w/front office lge rear ED RlDDlJE 210 S. Spring St., LA,
SJ85 mo. :,t1CJ·8t37 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 House to Ocean service available. Month ShO...-roo~. Real Estate door $~89 so' mo 629 Realtor 646_.11 SP1RrnJAL READER 90012 New abr, 2ba. Sep. din rm Call 673.7180 to month occup•ncy. Ofc, Boutique, or s~ore. Ter~inal ;ld1. 54Q_5710 Open 10AM·10 ffM •---------
Fountain Valley 3834 & den, ~rplc, all xtr_as. ~Jl Eves. 493·2718 01' days 648.oeauves t> M t d Advlceoo all matters. AnlMTIOMI
••••••••••••••••••••••• Jacuu1. community LGE31!DROOM S.1'34 ' . jAU~ ROC ~ •J"° 312N.E1Camln0Rtlll. l·6Mo'1Worll
Jmmac 2 Br, ADULT Coo· ~~ ~f~J9e,3~.ark · Split level, frplc, lncvffye S.lt" .._!_ COtf A MESA* ~~~~~lte~~·m. esa. fl'~mente. t~t~ II & OYer
do,aarcond,poot.nucpts sundecks.S425mo. Oakwood rutt 1erv1ce s uites ~Sq.rt.,a,oooSq.n .• ----.-------•---------·
& drps, $225, 968.7437 aft LC19Ma le•ch Jl41 645·8964 · G d ft avatlable In airport area 10,000 Sc:t. Ft., near S.D. WtlltM 1010 Lole 1~ cool with ycn.r We will traln JOU In our
5 O••••••••••••••••••••• . at' e tN.8.) Startina szoo. Call Fnfy. Nattress Realty, ••••••h•h•••••••••••• thlJdr~nT p.,Jp lJ avalla· bulimisa. No &trikes or Huntinclon.. h 3140 Drop a pebble Into the p:cib:~r:/ ~nr;1',2~;: Apartments 833-3640 979~71 Wanted-coin operated bldlhtt.k9-8938 layoffs, plenty of work. u .............. ~ ....... ~!:: {~~~,/~~~u~f:: 6'73·1909 leave message. ~ IHclt Seearale Lanai behlM F_!>R I~ 1:5 Plltentia =~~ 6;f1°lng blial. lion •111.S ~::iJ"~k! ~ :!!1'~:i• au':
Walk to b<;h S180 & up. No Mature adults. 31755 C!l. YRLY. 2 Br. 1w ba, frplc lrvlne pnvate home. Pri. en· ve, ta taa.1880sq · OUTCALL-NASSAOE' dr tlfe oHllnary. Call
Summerincreasts. Pool, Uwy.499.2835. 1 bllt to bch. $300 Call 1~:f5~h trance, Unfurn. Lge ft.$t9S. &te-l164 U9&10ll ITOll MODIUNG betWi19:30&3p.m.
rec rm. drps, crpt. Adltl, 645-7054. ~ace, ab e 1 v ~ s •OFFICE suite approx. 900 cau Home·Offlce..Studio. Ii
no pets. 220 12th St. OCEANFRONT year lnets, heated, lo rent. aq. fl. w/encr. patJd. IOM•4-J7t7 M2-31• f·l llJ
536·9505. 219 15th St. 'round 2 br $375. bacb Bayfront apt. Doell •van. IN COSTA MESA 7300bet91c5Linda. Completely furn,. Incl i-------.....,---
536-7031. $175. KJds/pets. Utll pd. 3br, 2ba, sundeck, frplc. near lhlne & Newpott FltE£ RENT 1 month on draftinl table w /plan ltn~~-. C tREOM~? ... saAtlf .........
2 Br 11 l Ba Twnhse 536-032l $465, util pd. 673.SSOO. 300-llOOaq. ft.deluxeofc. drawen, dra~, Cf'J>ls, U,.-iimlfy 1011 ar 01· ~onf denllal Petl W••ll•M••
w/dshwr. ranoe & P"lio, Ocean Vl·ew apac. 1 bl". BtwnUr lOpm. No. C. M. 540-2200 . A/C, atereo, ideal l°" ••••• ••••••••••••••••• cAobunstel~ng &d refletrl&l. Phdtft 'tt'IOdltltt a " .. rirttr "'t B ~ o~ un, I opt on ~ ..... M .. ..4..anJ"'al b ........ pool nearby 536·5006 or Adults. 2607 Solona Way, 2 Br duplex, newly dee.. . Cl a ... or. Utl ar If you have av• •~lt k p 1a ......... ,.;en \; nr. 536-7542 S22S. 494.1419 frplc, magnJficent view CPA or Prof. w•ated to a arm. Ample parklns. funat•Jdln 'J'e ln t llhly Ae:c:f(g k1·2M3 around pref'd. Outtld~
===::;===::.!========::-!of harbor, boats, share suite 13U.t life. •HS. rl\O· 2318 N•pt profitable fa'rmln busl· ---------tales oppor. avall. Xlnt C1.~-0 ,h,l _ f)~ ha.• Mariner's )tlle.$475.mo. $200 mo. lnol's recJpl le Btvd,C.M.548·2!811. neu. 1 a~ tbt work. PR£GNANT?Abortlo.n m edleal • 1ro"p ~~ 1.'Q\I ~t. ~ J:.J<I•;, 645·6392 day• ask for phone. Acct1 aec!y hall. Starocp 4510 LeBta\f. P.Q.8olC ltSl, COun1eJJ~ •referral. 2t benefits. ~40·'1063.
That Intriguing Word Game flfitll 0 Chudle Ted,or962-9666evea DISTIMCTIVI N•pt Ctr, 130jt Avdetldo, ••••••••••••••••••••••• taMesa.m26 ffrbel&RJlle, .. 1·9495. @fs~1B~~!!,l~~:
141!.41'yNYl.PCUAH----East Bluffs . 3Br. 2bl ..... ,... ......... SulteW.&I0-8500 '4 ACRE.t4nctct.u.ta.• w~ IOJO MASSA•! UnltL,C.M.
··-......... of IM Townhouse . nw , di•· Beautiful new dev,loP.· ELE(iANTEXECUTIVE arU Id ·S•lit• Ad•....................... Fl•uu ... o•&· i---~------, __ ,..led -dt b.. pout, dbl gar w/auto ment \tlth alt amenJtlei, OFFlCESPACE Hel«btl. Tax d~u~Ublo $10000 needed for 1-.per "" ., ,,
lew • '°'"' '°"' 11~ wordt opener . Jfool & Rec clubhouse, pool, tennis, Plush, all servlcea ltall. Ulrou&.b Sea ScouUI. Call ;,rim.e real eltlte •tD• ISCORTI A"ON T A y N A c I cet1ter. Adults onl~. S33! 1ym. Great noor plant, NewportCenter MMT•CM"-...e · {ure. t11,ooo returnecl butcaii.~.G~11t.o11 I
mo Le ...... vall ...... 1-.. pri vate pat101 /dtck~1 644·7180 ~ -"''"'-e mo 1te··..u a.. Ho ........ 1 ..
Ii I f I I · _...a · _... -· bearntd celllnes. Avau Nwu 1.000 5«1. ft . •tor•«e ~;;"o:iauv 1• uat:nleecr m. Ct· wu u tumoruntum, 60-PR SOflT -. .• a rea lg. door, H.8 . wrt .. l,Ji•ll>' Pll.ot, Bo~ 631•JIU
... _._......,_... ........ ~I :J OOIAMNOMT ttMtJ•t......... 1811WESTCLl1J'·NB afta.536-7059. l'80Cll,CA92162G.
• J i.8drm. Yearl1 $32& 911 P•llrlH.CM AGT. 541·90.U ~ W..e.d 4610 -_ _. ~~ .* Stll quallty productt In a sr.s TO llACH t7 I 4Jl4f· IJIJ MARIMMS MILi .-;j;.-;; ................ ~im-• f ftlll SOJI ~ ..,_,bJ 1errUof1. Hoe.
2 BR, 2 ba, yrly, furn. Nptf'tytoUt.btol.iUt SquAU FirD. bach. CdM (qr•••·~•·••••~-'••••••••• ~· I per. necesa. Xlnt eJlm· .___... .... .....,. __ .... 11 'the rec.••lon ht• iffect.d $37~ rtJbtatPaul•tfao. 2'700 w. COAST HWY. mahar• em/toyed ~· WTiMiiitWelhi $$.Coi.b·UI•• •ae I•••• ''J.!!t:· cialt
. '"•rybody .• ..,.n the .mv.nt. 3Jf.n'\2J>t~ h~~'l:s Sal~~n:s~;"°'" Now lu1ln1-sroand tmoUt'. Int tel•· Bu.yT.O.~larcull. 4sA~'*l Wlad. U0.*1or 'M.111.
In !ewrly Hiii• ~··. drt· SU WIMD . ___,. -noor eommerda~ -9'02 LoansOftJbaT.D.'• • •a•vAtg aoo•U __ __, ____ I
0
old c-...,-, ... ~:~""·~· .. ~._.,~·a. Condo: 2 BR, 2 ea. Un· Tr)'· a Dally Plio' oflOIOfi '-4900' a~. , 1• Feb 16, 2 bd, uturo., New~T.D.'• =:12 noolt·to•m It>~ *"'?r1'•.~~~ . fum. 1tarl1 <t..oN\ Classlned Ad to tnt1, tell ict spac .,.,., • n • matur workJn1 cpl. $9000 .• $30,000. -. 1$-f I -
._,., orru&80fMthln,_ the beaWUI H1' ....... ~ltory qwtl tom &a•U.rln~mt.Di\l. IPanA" • = ~Ora~ ....,_ttL;.;..,_..__...._...J VOii ....., ,_ .,.. . "-'-· IOOfM 4000 :=-::~ '';r ~ no p0tf/cllUdred. IAJUlllJT1' MTG. CO. Coat• lf•i · PO Bo 1l L • <lr. = ~ • • ctt II' · to 4p ... 541-... u= Ort Cty. 64MfA4 '..!~ ~...m'* . ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,... Upotltr•. t I net. Notovn • anJl.lme ........... hoal.
tt.~t~b::e~~~.'i>!l~.·~: :c:~~a:::,p~k~:. t~e'!_lt qulet, U'k'/ppt. f'm"Sale: ~. ~ tt\IJt ~.::.. r~ = ·~-........... .
Dally, wklyt monthlJ. cupaat'J .Jul1 4.C•ll wflrk• nr, N.8 . '121 diid.-,lO'JtMtafffftvM·.leila Noto\'CJ'8'4'rfwolJ/. me,own lr•*•
Caltm lrfl Aduttl. ~110 M44U1 mo. mH. ,.,..,.. llillliL.llri'--.if •
as sociat ed
" ~1 , ~ ,, • " f .. , ..J
; "' I • . .. --.-.-.-·
., l
\ ,,
,, ' ;,
f ,,
'
HtlpW..W 7100HltpW..t.4 7100 .w.w..w 7IOOtwpW.ted . 7'00 H.A..W
0
d I !I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ................................ ·;.:···~··:i:·~·.:·i:.· ·:i:·~·:.;· ~-;r. .. .... .... 7100 .... w ••ed 71 00 ..c.f:.;;.U!!day.;;;,;;.;;;.;;.1.•;..;;Janu--..~!IY-.....;20;.;.;... 1;..;;0;.;.79.;;._ _______ o;;.A;.;l;,;;L;.;.Y..;.P..;.ILO;;;. :;,r.;...:•::.::.l:i..:mw ""! ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -... W..ted 7100 Mltcetli..e.s IOI01ta.c.t1•1oa 1010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BOYS Atll GlllS . SALES MANAGER TRAINING 1! you are 12 to 16 years old and would
like to earn •o to SSO and more per
week, with a chance to win a trip to
-Phil~delphla . Cape Kennedy or
Washington, D.C. and cash award.a
bikes and oUier prizes, I have a Job for
you. If you are willing to work bard
learn responsibility and the value .of
money , call Mr. Scott, 549-8956.
:rransp0rtation will be furnished. This
ts not a paper route. ·
JUNIOR SALESMAN
10 To 15 Yen Old
Newspaper promotion company has
openings for people with vans or station
wagons. Earnings $150 to $300 ·or more
per w eek. Good c han ce f o r
advancement. Must be able to work
with teenagers.tThis is not a paper
route.
•UTOTEM•
EMP'LOYMEHT
OPPORTUNITIES
Full or Part-Time
UNCLAIMED
PERSONAL PROPERTY SALE
SAT. THRU WED.
. ,
' Earn S'l0-$40 pet week ·working after
No Exper. Necessary
Age 21 GS Eligible
Go To The Neu relit
TIC TOC MARKET ALLSPACE
Equal Opportunity Employer
achooJ & Saturdays. Huntington
Beach .& Fountain Valley areas only.
Leave na!!le. address & phone numbel' on tape recorder. Call 536-4298.
Call Mr. Scott at 549-8956 for
appointment.
Equal Opportunity Employer
For Applications & Info
OrtCALJ, (714)642·7702
Tic Toe Syslemli. lnc
WAITERS
IMl.U.SK.F.STOUGI WAIEHOUSISI
1564 HAMILTON ST.
(Comer Hamilton & Newland)
WIBDA YS 1-7 Wl:BEHJ)S 1-5
......._.Wonted. 7tooa.w..w-.&.-...1 7100 H.lpW•ted . 7100 HelpW..tecl 7100~~~ ••••• ?!!~ ~~~ ..... ?l.~! Professionals with ex·
,..,..,. • ...,. _._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• RECEDTIO .... IST lcosive experience in ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••••••••••• H l · ptU. ILIC .....-1 " SECRET ARY F't'ench <'Ontmental food, 8050 Hones 8060 Bab i wit nston Beach"11 fmest Ne d h JI · · Furniture ys tterneeded D health spa needs youno '! d& arp w,e bor· Allrucl1vc with jlood wine & service essential. MUST BE INT AL t cti •• RB.A TIOHS 11aru:i:e person or usy telephone voice Able to A p p I y A m b r o s i a . ••••••• • • • ••• • • • • •• •• •• • ••• ••• • • • ••• • ••• • • • • ••
DE p END A.BL E own Exp. Chair side usisl. : t~~ c ~~ ~aalue:e:i ~~ 3 Yn exper. in hospital J:iiltlon. Med1·Cal e~per deal w /public . Gd. between 2 & 5 pm sos Shop & Sav~ • new & used Reg. TB. t7 h, Uay , lO ,.~.
transp, 2 to 3 days per for busy HB ofc. Part persons .Call Town&. PR&/orBAlnpublicre· d~lphful. ~!so adm1.ttmg/ typist. 1''1hng. !!cimt: bk· 30thSt,room211,Balboa fu.rn., g1hs. m1bc . Tm'd. hunt/Jump SJ&>O.
week, 12 Noon to 6:30, Ume.963-4581. Country Spa 963•7723 liltions, advertising o isc arging. cashiering kp 'g. Excellent op-Penin, NB Wilson s Barguin Nook . Prpty 646.2668
N.B.642·6455 DENTAL,chairside betwee 10 • & 10 related area. Aggressiv ex~. Sub·a<:ute psych portunily w/spor'll corp. 545W.19thSt.C.M. · ------f . t n . am pm personality. Backaround hospital Garfield Care, M<>·6142 WE'LL PAY YOU Jewt4ry 8070
assistant. E"p'd . 5 Day orm erv1ew. in newspaper articl 77811 GaliieJd Ave. HJl. TO LE.ARM * *' BUY** ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~!~1;:[1N i:i'i~~fti: week. 9t.o6. 548·5602 Janitorial Svs needed, ap· ~e~~~ew~n~~~~~~!l f 847·9671 Secretary/Recept10111st A SKILL Good Used 1-urniturc & WANTED
_644_·_7_103_C_d_M_. ----I c°hE~~~~S,ts;~~~ r ~~:s ~~et h~t ::kn: So. Calif. Ability to or R.E. SALES g~~=~a:n~~J~.e t;~~~: Co~mJe~~portu~~t~~15163 Appliances -OH J will TOP CASH DOLLI\ H
necessary. N.B. 644·9211. salary $3.00 per hr. Call ganize & administer all START THE filing, etc. Appointments Huntington !:Sch 962 8822 sell 'sorTYERou. TIO PA 1 D F 0 R Y 0 UH afl.8PM.875-12H programs directed t NEWYEAR Mon thru Fri . 11 .5 SantaAna 542.4130 MA SAUC N JEWELRY. WATCHES. BANKS S &L O.ENTAL/RECPT both doctor & Jay com 897.7623 ---646;.a686&833·9625 ART OBJECTS. GOLD.
BRANCHM"-... "-AER Full time position open Jedro's Restaurant. male munity. Also, able t RIGHT! Aft all8 1542 SILVER SERVJ<.:i·:,
"'""'• for energetic, i m . or fem. help. Days or f~rther em rel a St41 HorMI SECRET ARY p /T ~~~!':'.~·:~ ... ••. ••• .. __ 6·C
42• Fl NE FUR~ & AN
aglnative, pleasant in· eves. Apply In person, bons. Ability todev lop L I t t T~ping, shorthand. some ..__..1qu .. s 8005 COFFEE TABLE -New TlQUES. 645 -2200
dividual,busyofflcefor3 1-4pm,3000Bristol,CM "realistic broc re." earn nves men' A1TI "' A Federal Savings ·As· doctors, good sal ary . Good appearan .. Sub· Earn More b kp'g. 9 AM lo Noon ••••••••••••••••••••••• custom made walnut Machinery 9078
sociation is seeking a h . 'd mi· t r "sum to ·. 0 r 'd ti l d ' I . Laguna Bch.'499·4017 for JOu"-TH"-uS con temporary table,••••••• .. ••••••••••••••• c a 1rs1 e exper very u . u resi en a iv s1on appt. * "-"'" 18"X51 ". Never us ed. . .. ~~~g~ffir~:. il~d~:i~::f! helpful. 552·8339 KEYPUNCH QPR Classified ad no. 6 . lists and sells "'!ore m· -ANTIQUES* S65. Call 979.8123 after M11lerfalls 3 belt sander. Daily Pilot, PO Box 1560, vestment properties than Secretary /Bkkpr is having their unnual in· 5PM & wknds. S.~.
sho1;1ldhavefinancialorDe t ail M a n , exper. Need i ndividual t o Costa Mesa,Calif.9262ti mostlnvest~entomces. Exper.Goodskillsreq'd. ventorysale. 4!M-2417aftcr 530
,._
business ex per. which Piecework Apply in lranscri be & verify . Per~o~aJ Tra1nin~, Video o . c. AirporHoc. To 5750. Up to40,,;, off!, Dinette :>el , chrome glass
can effectively stimulate person, Costa 'Mesa Car source for entry into Radiator s,hop male, 18· i:ra1mng. Presti~~ .or. ·Growth Hi·Fi speaker co. 422 31st St. N.B. & leather like vinyl xlnt. Misc-t•-4t04ls 8080 • ~
new bulliness develop· Wash,2059 Harbor.C.M. EDP systems. 6 Mo's yrs.Must'bemechanical· fices. Full Fac1ht1es, Call DickNeu,549.3833, 673.6001 cond.846·9025. • •••• ';!-':: •••••••••••••• ment. assist customers current working exper. ly inclined . $2 .50 hr. Property Purchase Plan, ---____ _,_ ____ -------
&motivate personnel'. Dishwasher wanted. Full n eede d o n eith er 557·1770aft6pm Fringe Benefits, SECJlETARY Dining rm set. pedestal
Xlnt working conds & & part time. Call or app. keyp~nch, key tape or REAL ESTATE SALES Su peri~r Com~issi.on. Over 40 only. Competent tbl. expandable. 6 chr~. & Ankle length, Saga ~nk
benefits. ly in per5on. 2633 W. Cst key disc. Must be able t ATTENTION Dynamic ~rg~nizatwn, w/good typing s kills ANTIQUE buffet. Antique wht. $300 coat. :lippered al kne~
Hwy· 642-8475. · test on IBM 029 or Univac LICENSED Learmng ~nv1ronment, needed for small bus i 673·5268 aft 7 for davtime wear. Small
1710 ?r lnforex: WiJI ~ UNLICENSED ~II time hcense~s w~o ness concern. 40 Hrs. AUCTION Ki . d size. Val ue, $2,500. Ask· working~ swing shirt GETTHERED. w11lworkforearmngs1n $2.75 per hr. w/op dJan2lst.?PM c~~~h~~.beoJ:bm&su~~ds~ ingSl,200.640·1882.
Reply to : Mr. Kerr,
714 /522·0610
Equal Oppor. Employer DOCTORS ASSIST.
Young ladies (18·28} to
work with legimate
massage in Health Spa.
w/a starting. sa~ary of CARPET excess of $25,000. per portunity for raise & · 644 "°J9 · ~75 + 10% shift d1fferen· TREATMENT! year are encouraged to medical benefits after 6 ct ton Spm 't1l . ......, Playboy magazines. Aug r· tial apply for a posi'ti'on wi'th Q sale time. .,,. d k $ • , h . 1957 to Feb., ·12, make o( · We train you to sell mo's. uiel. garden ore Carpe ter's Union Hall =CY ~es 125. se~y c ~Ir fer. 963·3279.
BARMA1D·Must be relia· No exp. req ., we train.
ble & dependable. no ex· Apply noon -8 pm. 2112
per.nec.847·5411. Ha rbor Blvd , Costa
Mesa. BARMAID Wanted .1----------1
Please Call homes with an acceler at· our . Inv~ s t m !! ~ t ~ or in CdM. Ca II wkdys only 1916 W . Ch a Pm an , $25. Ex~c. de~k $125 .. Ex· ---------
(714) 640-~27 ed course that starts Im· Residential 01 v1s1ons. bet w n 9a m & 4 pm Orange ec. chair S25. 4 cl;.assr°!1m Alias Aquanum, 4~ gal &
PACIFIC MUTUAL mediately. If you are in· Call Don Berman, Presi· 673-2356 ' To be sold to the highest tables 36x72 $25. ea. Call acc. Must sell. Like nu.
700 Newpor~ Ctr Dr terested Jn earning big dent. QUAIL PLACE . bidder, many different & aft 5 pm 556·7118 $60. 494-4778
Newport Beach 92663 money from the st"'rt , p R 0 PERT IE S l NC. SECRET ARY . I . s· .
lmmed. opening 34 hrs
per wk. Sun/Mon orr. I
Start $2.50. Grln n Beer
It, 548·9949.
DRIVERS WANTED
Menor Women
Must be 25 rover
Apply In Person
Yellow Cab
11251 SI ater A venue
Fountain Valley
Eq lo .. 7""1920 unu~ua itemll. ingerATTENTION·Oo you SEL• b1.kes SlO mtn ua ppor.Employer get individualized free ~· Est.CoronadelMar fi rm sewmgmach._circa1896. have quality u sed b1k"e' :no . H t!~dbr~
training on the job in one ROUTE SALES needs full time secty. r~ll sz .oak weight scales. furniture you would like "king' S50 v·1lue $130 .;·;
Lady who nds $500 & up a o( many top offices local· Aggressive person for Type 60 WPM' SH, It. Victonan . organs. beaut to sell. but don't wuntthe Eves. 551-439'7 .' · "'·. 1
Bartender position. Beer
& wine. Call for appt.
aner 3 pm. 549·9446
mo. Sales oriented. pb: ed thruout Orange Coun· route truck. Delivery & bookkeeping. Call: Belgian tile cook stove. bothersome phone calls --------~
Matilyn ·8378 ty. call for further de· Sa I es . Exp er in Mr. Riblett 675·6700 table top phonographs. 3 or traffic thru your For sale, 2·spd girl '~
t ails . Arle ne, (714) fiberglass industr y Secretary-Life Ins. & pc mahog bdrm set. lrg home? Lel us sell it for Schwinn stingray bike.
LEGALS CRETARY 848·8742 helpful. JOSS E. 4th St. Pension Sales & Svc. for Oa~ roll~op desk, Chtf· you on consignment Call gd cond., :! end tbles, &..
Recent Cal ornia litiga· REAL ESTATE SALES Santa Ana. Taking ap· Char tered Life Un· fc;imer display cabinet. for information. 548·7951. 'f?latching cofree lbl., sm
BARTEMDER
Exper·d. P /time, could
be f/time. 548·9006 art
6pm.
EXEC. SCTY lion & dom . relation plications 1121 only. derwriter. Salary open circa 1870. p1t<•her & bowl M<1ple cof. tbl. Call aft li
exp. Top skills. ng Jo1"n "*1 9am·2pm. Exper. pref'd Lovely ~ets. wa shstand~. hall K.t h t S40 dbl pm, 645-71\57. Ne~port C~nter Offices. lawyers. l,l.B. Prestj e rt stands & many small 1 c en se · ~ ----------
Ski I le,d in typing . office.848·1400. Tarbell.Realtors SALESPERSON Beach ofr.G?J00117 glass & wooden items. bdrm set, $175· Small24" cir . RCA TV S5S.
s horthand, filing and ---------•Free 15 day training Eves & wknds. Seren· Service Station Allen· Plenty of o;.a k furn . desk.Sl5·545·7945· Refrig S35. Girls 26 .. 10·
phone. Salary open. Call Like kids & work too'! course dipity. 557·2702. dant, exper'd. Day & tables, sets or chairs. spd S75. Skis bools \>Ind · BEAUTICIANS
~lgrs w/f for top •/v. NB
Salons. 54().8582, 644·0661
Mr. Letterman. 640·4550 Youth agency needs top •C8dillac car program Eves. Full & p/time. Ap· sideboards, ~ocke rs . HorsH 8060 mgs S70. 675-885~
FABRICATION DEPT. notch girl Friday. Light •Hawaii, Acapulco trips SALESPERSON ply. Shell Station. 17th & dressers. Larkins desk. •••••••••••••• •••••••••
correspondence. •1st place·sales in Needed for lighting fix· Irvine.NB. clocks, camel back & 312yrllayGeldmg. Fabricator needed for clerical, bulk mailings, & Orange County lure showroom. Decorat-slate mantel clocks. Part Thoroughbred. 16 JAKE WlLLSELL YOU BEAUTY· H a i rs tylist
w/follow. Needed Im·
med. 644·8762 or 644·0398
·lighting fixture Co. Exp office machine exp •lst place· listings taken ing background desira-Service Sta. At~endant, German wall clocks. On· hands. Color TV $69.95 guar
helpful. Please call helpful. Still reading? inOrangeCounty ble. Will t r ain right p/llme. Experd only. lyapartialhstmg. 644 .0665. B.WTV S29.95guar
546·2901 .. Or apply at 2031 646·7181. •1st place·listings sold in person. Please cal I Avail eves & wknds.1---------•l----------1 Vacuums $19.95 guar
Beauty Operator S. E. Main St., Irvine. __ it_______ Orange County ~-2901.or appl>'. at 2031 Ne a t . ~ p p e a r . & •--'iances 8010 V2 Arab. 1 z quarter . 8yrs. Kirby Vac S69.95 guar
Manicurist full time . . L •MachineShop •lst place·adver tising in S.E. Mam St.Irvine. handwntmg. Apply AM,_,...... geld. Exp rider. S4251bst JAKE'S·645-6421 must have following. As· Fashion ~usmess needs & Assembty California 2590 Newport Blvd. CM •••••~••••••••••••••••• of r . M u s t s e I I . 460 N Newport Bl, CM
sislant must be licensed. sharp gals. Sales to Good s tarting wage & •l t I d · · · Apt. size Maytag washer 673-4467/494·5043. EVESCALL642·5666 management Full or thse UpSacAe·a vertising in SALES CLERK . For of· Service Station, day man, & dryer combo. Xlnt Receptionist full time. . · benefits. Phone Cor appt. · Richard Ouellette p/hme. Mrs. Castrop, Compu-Lile Corp., 1 t '1 .. I RELO fice s upply s tore some exper preferred, $100. 963·8738/ 645·8913
-200N 846.7959 H• s P Bace w,nncer Pleasant work full t1"me. 3928 E. Coast Hwy CdM. eve. ewportCtrDr .N.B. · 711·Fl2 W. 17th St, CM ome uyers ontest . • · -------=----•---------
Food service attendant, _645-__ 1~_1_. ------If unlicensed, let us as· Be!ch Stationers 1803 Shaklee Distributors Whirlpool Washer . 5 BEAUTYOPR
t,/time. No following
nee. Comm/guarantee.
645·1050
part t~me., Near Orange Management sist you in obtaining your Ne port Blvd, C.M. wanted. Training pro· cycls, $100. Hotpoint Elet ~· Airport. 8:30 .am lo PEOPLE PERSON . Real Estate license. Call SALES vided. 631·3271 for Appl. Dryer $50. Gu~r /de!
1 ·30 pm M~n.-Fn. Call Exec looking for part· LEE COLLINS MAMAGEMENT Sh ... i t t 546·5672 ' 639·4214 all 9. 30am. l ime associate in 962-5566 ampoo ~ss 1 an S $ $ S $ $ Wed thru Sat. Jim Scott WATER softener, used 6
Must type 70·80wpm ac· capitalized. 673·2223. "•·• 7321 f 631 3281 548 n.AJO Your success is our re· .,..... er. · ; ·;ro
curately· & have figure
A CONVENIENf SHOPPING ANO
SEWING GUIDE FOR THE
CAL ON THE CO. -•8•0·~-s-&-G-·1·rl-s-• Gener al office/recept. wholesale supplies. f'ully Insurance Career Ha sr Design. Cd M. mo. Cost $325. M1i1ke of·
10 to 1 years of age. Dai· 8 pt it u de . S m a I I MANAGERS. ASSIST. ward! Old established SHOE SHINE BOY Auc.tion 8015 !i:a~i~ta~:~i,:~~ i~o:~~~ manufacturing firm. ~~::ct':i~o~~i~~=in ------'-----'--'----~:r~!a~1nd~3~~~. ~~~ Must be 21 & exper. App·••••••••••••••••••••••• Ruffled flattery
area. Earn profit for de· pleasant working cond. & For Appl 645·2666 perience not necessary. ly 111 person. 3333 Bristol
Hew Spring Knit!
liveries & cash, trips or g d c 0 m Pan Y Paid ---~-=------REAL ESTATE but helpful. Ground floor St. South Coast Plaza.
merchandise for selling benefits. Tapmatic Corp. MASS.AGE TECH. OPPORTUt-llTY opportunity due to ex· C.M · Located inside the
new subscriptions. For lg!)l Kettering St. Irvine. TRAINEE Well localed RE office. pansion in Orange Coun-s.hopping center. Twen·
information please call 979'.6080. Young lady (18-28) for Opening for 2 licensed ty. Xlnt commissions, tieth Century Ltd.
642-4321. From San GIRLllRIDAY legitimate full time posi· salespeople. Your own monthly & quarterly Telephone Sales·Need 15
Cle me nte-San Juan Lightlype, file. clerical, tion .. No exp. nee. We deskandphone.18Years bon~~es , sal~rY tf Studentsp/time.2l'i hrs Capistrano a rea, call h send l o school, earn in same location. Call for qualified. Amb1t10~ & per wk. Easy work.
495·-0630 and Mission Vie· P ones. $550 mo. 848·l 4 while you learn. Apply in interview. honesty only .r equire· 497·1034 . or apply 1027
jo-EI Toro area, call _H_un_t_'g_B_c_h_·-----1 person any afternoon or 646·3928; eves 673·4577 ~enl. ~11 interviews con· No. Coast Hwy, Ste (;,
581-6310. GirttoDeti•er eve. 2930 W. Coast llwy. lldent1al. Ph. 547·5122 Lag. Bch4-7PM. Equal Oppor. Employer 1 Nwpt. Bch. (9·12 daily) ask for ----------Fye rs ih new tr a cl George Clark. TELEPHONE
BOOKKEEPER highly
qual. pai1.time. Sat. OK.
M. K .. P. 0 . Box 2112.
Costa Mesa. Ca . 92626
~omes . 0.C. Sat morn· Mature Housewives p/t. mgs. N~s own car. $2.50 Cleaning Serv. Top SS SALES REP. Good oppty. ~xperienced telephone
hr + mileage. 848-1400 Gingham Girl. 645·5123. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil for ambitious person to s urvey pers.on. P art ---------•! sell office supplies in time. ~on·Frt. 547·5122 GUARDS M edical assista n t Receiving N.B. area. Will train. (9·12da1ly) Ask for Mrs.
Full & Part t ime in primarily back office. Sales exp. nee. Salary &l _M_oo_r_e ______ _
Cypress area. $2.50 hrly. Huntington Beach physi· MATERIAL comm. Beach Stationers,1---------· Job starts 1 /19/76. cian. Write care of Daily 4020CampusDr .. N.B.
.Uniforms ,& eqwp pro· Pilot Box #650 Costa TOOL & DIE
vided. Must be over 21 or Mesa, Ca. 92627 CLERK
: AUCTION
Indian Jewelry
& Arlifacts
Wed En Jan 21
7:30PM
Preview 6:00 PM
Holiday Inn
3131 Bristol St. C. M.
at San Diego Fwy & 405
Large collection or rim•
silver with turquoise &
coral jewelry handcraft·
ed l>) American Indian
silversmiths of the Nava·
jo, ~um & Hopi reserva·
lions. Baskets·pottcry-
Na\ aJO & Pueblo rugs-
o Id guns and o the r
artifacts. Don Mcloud .
Arcadia. (2131 447 -9520.
BOOKKEEPER
Accounting flr\m ·if\
Irvine is in need ol a full
charge bookkeeper.
Public accounting exper
& typing requi re d
833·9791
Business man looking for
part time associate.
Earn $5000. yr. 645-1182
older. Must have car & SCRAM·LETS MAKER home phone. Be alert & MEDICAL dependable Exp er. M e di ca I We. have an opening for NSWE (Mold Making Exper. BicyclH 8020
· GARDSMARKINC. Secretary.Generalprac-an individua l wHh a A RS AlsoDesirable> •••••••••••••••••••••••
999 N. Sepulveda, Ste. tice. Salary negotiable. minimum of 6 months re-Vacant -Parka Small precision tools. Men's l0·1>Pd bicycle,
500. El Segundo 90245 Send r esume Woody cent material ex Facet -Quaint _ Exper.inshortrunstnm· hkene"cond.
213-640-0195 Equal Oppor Sebaugh, 801 N. Tustin perience. Experience in CAVIAR pings & precision pro· 545·0630a£ter5
CAR WASH Emplr Ave. Santa Ana. 92705 receiving in stock is a The recession has affect· gressive dies. Able to D 8040 plus. If you are reliable ed everybody. even the work independently & <>9S HELP WANTED H"-IRDRESSED M.ODELS-MASSEUSES and are looking for a full· have ~wn tools. Small ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' "Y amuent. In Beverly Hills PET W RLD F/timeonly.20+ Withsomefollowing,for Figure.Models, Escorts limepermanentposition th ere 's a day -old s hop, good working • 0 •
METRO CAR WASH new salon, top percen· . needed. Top money. New please apply in person. CAVIAR store. <'onds. Pit Bu 11 s. Pekes ,
· 2950Harbor Bl, C.M. tage, Hair at 250 Design Studio. 631·3811 STACOSWITCH, IHC Chihuahua. Poodles.
Clft'icQI $580 Plaza 640•7870' N;:S~10~:nhe1s? 5 °;~~~! / STANDARD wes~s~~Mc~~:~~~s an
1139 8S~9~fo~t~ Mesa ~~~~-~~~d . M~~t~~~' l~O
Popular Irvine co. seeks Half Day Nice Pay eve openings. Will train MEMORIES INC immed. Vacancy for an Equal Oppor. Employer mixed puppies. Stud svs
"self motivated" person 9am·2:90pmor3:30-9pm . you a supply samples at , • exper'd seamstress mostbreeds.252SW.17th
to handle responsibility Earn $100 + + per week no cost. Car & phone nee. (An Applied w/min 1 yr exper. w/sa1l· ---------at Fairview. SA. Open
of the ofc. Some exper. doing enJO¥able work In S57-<>4S3,96J-7470 Magnetics Corp.) seaming on heavy duty TOW TRUCK DRIVER eves.531·5027.
required. Call Control our brind new ofc open· 2221 South Anne St equipment. Xlnt co. exper·d: G & W Towing,
Career E mploy ment ing near Q.C. Airport. NURSES.AIDES SllnlaAna,Ca92704 benefils,topwages.0.Wn 10001r vme,NB642·1252
Agency. 556·8505. Xlnt opportunity for Full or p/lime, AM & PM transp. nee .. Hrs 8·4::m TRAINEE· Mast builder,
CLERK -PT/TIME positive minded lndlv. shifts. Exper pref'd. Ap· An equal opportunity Mon thru Fri. Apply in KENYON MARINE
Dog OBEDIENCB Class
lo Start Thurs Jan22
7 :30 PM. Newport/ •
Irvine area. 546-4928
Requires knowledge to For personal interview, ply Park Superior employerm/f personC?nJytoJohn, 1638 SanlaAna.546.1101 ' £11 Calt833-8098. H ea tthca(e, 1445 PlacenhaAve,CM. Lookin~ for someone to
setup and maintain es Superior Ave , NB. . Tutor for elem ry re· takeMalePedigreed 2yr
7159
6ttf:l6uB~
Spring s comlne! Go lots ol places In this new jacht!
The hnes are slimmer. yet it lils comforlabty over every
thing. Knit this nilly \·acket ot worsted from the col ar down
including sleeves. Pattern 7159: Sizes 8· 18 incl. i :~a~~~ t 3 01n:~ wr~ H'OUSHIEPH 642·2'10. E.O.E. R.upflon~1t Have ":!edmetrundg to se111 ? ading & math. 2 k. old Golden Retriever 4 Hrs, S days wk. Own Girf Ft"lday Classi11 ada oitwel · 646·7582CM. Musthaveacreage&lov·. ~~294ge~~-9~30ir~~~'.rea. transp. Lido Isle. Nursing Attendant, ex· Great opportunit~ for M.a...W.........._~ 7100 u...1pw~-~ ingcare.640-1882.
$1 .00 for each pattern. Add
35¢ each pattern for first-class
Soft, feminine ruHles com· airmail and handling. Send ti:
bine with a hi-waist shaping Mci'lrMb I' Businsa phone,642·6830 pe rienced . Bayview l rt blti I l • ...,.,.. um..v nww _,.....v 0 ---'-Conv. Hospital. 2055 a e · 't amal otuls ~Ir to ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• ••• Irish Setter Puppy. 4 mos.
Coerce Shop .manager. ex· Housekeeper /Laundry Thurin A\<e, 'CM 642·3505. asslJI re es a e mves · AKC reg, $65. 549·3112 an
per. required. Salary Helper 5 Day wk. Apply, ment executive in •---------------..... • ()pen. Call for appt. Bob Bus. Ofc. Raleigh Hilla Office Help w/lite book· beautiful l girl office. SHARP GALS _5...:.p_m_. _____ _
VanBergan, 833-0570 Ex. Halp., 1501 E.16th St, NB keeping for lge Hntg Varied duties require We have the following positions ope fne to You 8045
..J:m3. 6'5·5707. Bch. Drua Store. exper. good education, public for employment if you have a good ••••••••••••••••••••••• ______ _.... __ , pref'd.114-847-2568 relations personality. EMERGENCY. 3 m o
Coamotologist Licensed Housekeeper, Christian lmaeination & creative retail selling background & are 1 1 h l ti I I k. f ·t· h · pups·sml dosts, u most or a r cul ng on y. non-s moker, live In .Part·Tlme~ves &~tAM. abillty. Typing is essen· 00 mg or a perm. post 10 in trained, nd loving home.
• 714·338·3835 or 548·4123. +$50. week. 3 Arch Bay. Perfect tor s tudents . Ual. The rl1ht airhhould fashion merchandising w /a growing
COUNTEI GIRLS So. Laguna. 499 ... 131. Inside work, 1uaronte.ed be self contldent, attrac· 000.2900. , waae. Call Al, AA 4pm, tlve, exceptio nally co. ••) ,,., I t-£•..a-AJaskan MaJamutemix
1'/Ume. Exper. prefdor Housekeeper all around S.A. S42·9013 or o.o. IJ'(>Omed & be very ala· "' .-'ill umrtu.,.. toagoodhome.
wlUtraJn.644·0893. live in or out, must be 53()..8'60. bJe. ONiat pay a. ldnge Aggressive girls w/at leasl·6 mo's 673·0216.
"'-· bondablc, local rec. $20 benefit&. Please send de-selling & manage ment experience. """-nter help. Week-ends. per day 5 toe da.y week. PART TIME Sales. Gift tails. hand written letter 3 Year Old Male Golden
Apply art.er 3pm. Dim· 842-7191 $.hop. Sundays & some t.o Classified Ad #320, C4• M-n.. 5del l'CMltlw Retriever to' good home
mitt Cleaners. 3200 E. eves. 84().1557 or 962-8910 Dally Pilot, P. o . Box With room for advancement. only.Call839·2216.
CstHw)',CdM . . HouHk .. per/Cook .lor Call weekday• btwn 9-10 -i5eOComaMcn,t2826 Fasblon clot'1ing e xperience
-it's the prettiest dress look tk .. rwft ....... 115 for now into spring! Sew in ....,,..
solid colors or prints. Illa Ill. aw a....-...
Printed Pattern 91601 Misses' ..,_,.,._HT IMl I.,_.. • Sim 8. 10. 12. 14, t6, 18, 20. .._;......., 7i.. ,...... Sim 12 (bust 34) takM 2~ _.. yd$. 45-lnch fabric. ......_ _
Send $1.00 for each pattern. MORE than ever bofort! 200
Add 35¢ tor each pettem tor deslans plus 3 free prlntld lrt-
flrst-clm alnnall, h1ndlin1. sido NEW 1976 HEEOUCRAt'T S11d tt1 CATALOG! Hu 1wrythln1. 1Sc. ......_w.tlit Ctodttl wltll S•uaru .:. $1.0D
..____ Croollet 1 Wini"" --$t.OO ..__.... ...,... 442 Nlftf Fifty Qollts ... t .ao ~=. llftt It., .._ lllpplt Crtdltt J.Cll
Twit, MY 1001 1. Pti•t Sew + Kftlt took ._·iu1 ... .. ..,. AMiii• ... , SID NHdltptll!t lttk _,l,00 :::;;m.. .._.......,-:,,..a.or flow1t Crte•tt toe• .tUO
Do you know •ow to fet 1 lnst"t Crtehet ltoll _.
pattem frn• Send now tot lllltlnt MlcnMt ... It ••
COUPL .... t l couple. Live·lft. Pvt. am. • 111"" FwnHur. · 1050 .,. or mor u ary room & bath 6'2·~ . -rr•-RecepllonJat needed for necess_. J •
-H1ft,in C~tt IMk~.tO
our new Feft.Wlnttt Patter~ lnst.allt Mo•ev hok _ 1.00
••••••• .... •••••••••••• C1talo1-cNo coQOn lnaldt tor Ctmol•t• Gitt loft $LOO s.led Used....... '"' rsttll'll ., JIUf cllotc:e. c ... ,1et1 Afth1111 , ... t•.• work. Sal. + apt'. San ,..., _ Newport Beac h Law CZJP_..TI .. SdtsPoslffoM
Clemente area 494-LUS Housekeeper. Lido tale, 5 Catherina aianatures lor Firm, C.ll 6'0-MOO. Selling experience necessary. If you
DeHnry M• ~~;~:it!: or out, loc November BalJO\. $5.00 meet tbese qualifications & are
Perm p/Ume u rly morn · to •·00 per hr. 551""°7 Selllnt anythlnt with a interested in an Interview
LA Times deliv. LO Costa Jlskpr. 5 daya per wlc ! I-!. aft 4PM. ' Dally Pllot Claalfied A.d C• 140.4500-THE LOOI
Meu bomot. Pref. ~•kp ln1 Ii cooklna. lt·• 1tmpte mal~T • l••••••••••••••••I ec:onomy cat. MS-.. L •3259/4.91·'1765. Claallled Ml tf.2.15671 Juat call eo~.
~ + 'trt·;~, !us 11Ptl.tt AfP•r ,,2 -·-This Weck 's Spec la It: lni1-nt Motley Crafts 1.00 lo11t of 11 Qa Its , I SC11
Metal lbl 4 c:h~ $1~ lli1Ht flallltl look t .00 MDttll .• Q•rtt .... n 5Gf
Gloss tp cof tbl °";5 lltltftt Stwlfll Ion '·"" 16 Qlillta ftr foQJ IS 5Gf 1635Superior Unit• .. ., ..._ of11 llffY ltp • .. -
....................................... ' C-Osta Mesa S48·79Sl ..
Open Mon lhru Sal
l
..
•
·'
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Jhwatt 200 Sla<'k " 18"
Vei;a 's, SH50
551 3975 ----Sportincj Goods 8094 •••••••••••••••••••••••
~URFBOARDS. <..:uslorn
d1•s1gned, l'UStom made
Supn1or workmanship.
Intro pnce $85. 003 4:!71
or 968 6475.
store, Restaurant,
Bor 8095
J I
CLASSIC l!J5R Triumph
650. c·nmp. rcl>lt cng, lots
<ii l'lvome, $550 or nfr
f>46 2i>52
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Freewrs, -.c:.ilcs. display
cases. <'andy Jars, l'tt·
645-2883
·72 Honda 350CL. cll•an. '71 '•T. Vt', auto. air.
dcpendabll', FUN ' so me bll ns, $23110
S525 ofr 546-012!1 645.;JSR
---TY. Radio, HIFi, Steno 8098
·~~~~~o~~eca~l~li ~Wanted 9590
ask for Tom 846-0707. ' •••••••••TOP••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Four Sa al 71 llonda Pioneer SX 990 rN•ct\'er . 1
pr. A R4 X SPl'akers,
Cassette deck w Dolby, 1
350SL. Xlnt c•oncl Like s
nu list ofr M:! 3013
~' r . m 1 k c• s . Ii O pre . MotOf' Hom.s,
recorded tapes t::xc. Sale/Rent 9160 C'on<.1. $.100. 499 :!805 AM onJy. •••••••••••••••••••••••
------!-'OR RENT 20' Mint
Boats & Marin• Motorhome. very d~an. Equipment self cont. w/gen. Reservt
••••••••••••••••••••••• n ow f o r h ol idays
Boats.. Malntnanc:•/ 962-6103
S..-.ic• f020 Auto Set-Yic• &--
••••••••••••••••••••••• Pcrt1 9400
Roti l 8 uald (' ris. Cst m ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oe~1~n . repair, r estora·
t1on Wood/alu.n/fbrgls.
f.4!>·2417 &6-46-5602.
loah,M.-. e.,..,.... 9030
•••••••••••••••••••••••
•A TTIMTION*
1968 SO Hortepower
Mercury outboard C 0
JjU!ation with mcrcontrol.
N•w w•t e r pump .
EnJjne m excellent cond.
SUPfo:R CLEAN. '650 or
For Sale. In duh Car
Stereos. J each. AM /FM
stereo r adio, 8 tral'k tape
w/AM/FM .stereo rad1c
& Cassell tap e
w/AM /FM stereo radio
846-5800
MOW IS THE TIME
for Job sttken to check
the Dally Pilo t Help
Wan~ cla.ss1ficatlun H
the Job you wanl is not
there you ma&ht considf'r
orferlng your services
with an ad in lhe Job
Wanted cAteior'Y. Phone
MZ-S8'78
.. bl-st offer C.lt SGa-17311
eves. ALSO 15 root ti
runaboul new seats,
tarJNUn1. with aood
trailer. Hull In ucellent
eond. f'OO or best otrer . W1U ICll both tor ~ o.r ScU thlnp rut with Dally
Olff'r. Call ta 8118 nn PUtll WanlAds.
Pa rd
fo'OH
Used VW's
Paid for or Hot
urm.;up
16711 8(' v .
Hunt. Reh 842-44.'JS
ORAHGE COUNTY'S
HIGHEST s
BUYER
ON IMPORTS
~fGlllwriA
V)TOYOTA
1966 Horbor ( M t.•b 9'\03
I want your '67 '69 VW
junker Will pay up to
$150 for frume, body,
lHnsaxJ~. Call 494·'77?1!1
. \
SEEK & FINl1. AFRICAN PEOPLES
D N P R A C K M U B I N S B 0 U H
H l V L F N H A R R P L A U N S
R U S C A E R 0 E l H B l P G I
E G 0 0 Y L T 0 Y H ~ 0 B I N S
H l N P U S B C H K 0 R K A 0 A E
S A G T JtO D H T l P U L H C M
I K B S l N E Y R C A H N T N A t
B K K U B A F R t C A N S 0 0 7 N R T
V A R B I R P H 8 Y M M E B E A A E
Y E D T F A E R E M A S 0 A E M J L B
T R N G 0 0 S N S ~.O S R G R E 0 Y A
L A l E T H l l l I R A 8 T B A E N l
f T 0 N V G R 0 0 M Y M A H E l H X R
T H 1 A T N 0 R W B E U B 0 R T E S Y
E M 0 U N E H W R 0 P N E R 0 I V A C
Arab Copts
Fanti
Kru
Kuba
Tomor'"°"': Portugal
Moor
Pyglny
Sem1tt
Molof
&n iny much l1111r "S-'i 6 Plnd" paui. •fdl1 .wr &O
d1ecowrlet Pff penet In '" .11 .... "'*el-..,. boollleu. To ord11 YOluu l U 11nd DI. tend fl .. eer)I, i'ulli~ ch«b
pay1bl• (ft ....... ~ ,,, eaH of llllll .....-.-r.
1
; ..
'71 Toyota Station Wagon.
new radial tires. R/H.
$1395. 675-8038
'71 Corona 2dr HT. Near
nu tires, eng. replaced,
Ex. con d . $1625/ofr.
968-0290
'71 Toy Corolla 2 dr, vinyl
root, 33 MPG, AM/FM;
caff stereo, tach, $1495,
833-0698
'71 164
71 Corolla W g n , Jtd Automatictrans,aircon·
transmission & m ileaae. clitionin,, AM/FM radio.
Nd$. M>m e work. 962 6123 (1.39VLJ).
a1\4PM.
VCleklw.,.. 9770 SA VE
•••• •••••••• ••• •••• •••• '68 I 22 2 DOOi
•gs vw 9 Pau. But:. Automatic trans .. AM
a.n/rm tape dk, dean. r • d' o · < V VS 3 s i >
$11SO. S48·U22 or J\educedto
497-&SSL $ t 699 -
'14 VW Bug, lo ml, xlnt eJ l••n:a eond: $2150, A•1 /F M fGll. Ull\O
atcreo ~
9602844 ~
·-'70-Sq-rrtlbA-ck-VW . 40.200 . VOLVO
m5, Oria C>Wn r. $1650. 1966 Hf111wl• CM ti•A '1303
~per aulo963-5878 Olfer &xplrff 1·~·76
'62 Lincoln Continental. ---------
Everything works 1 Runs
& looks super. Ni ce ear
PP S~rifice ! S595/b::.t
'73 Fury III. Very good
rond .. Contact .Joseph or
ll•avc message. 646·2820.
960-2325 ____ v~ 9974
••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful '64 Lincoln. Con
Unental. $1.150 ·74 Vega Coupe stick, xlnt
675-8465 cond, 19,000 ma, $1900,
---------PP.493·4725 Corv•tte 9932 --------
••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 VEGA, 4 speed , air
•TOPCASH' conditionin g. $2095.
For Corve\tes and other l140MCY ).
u sed cars & true ks• Theodor• Robins
HOWARD Chevrolet, FORD
Dove & Quail Sts. Near 2060 Harbor Blvd.
Jamboree, Bristol, & Costa Mesa 642·0010
MacArthur, Ne)Nport Beach 833-0555 74 Vega GT Wagon, 4 spd,
' AM /FM, rack , cust. mt.
Dodge 9935 lmmac. $2,750. Days,
••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-86!'>0 x 57, Eves.
Dodge '7 4 Monoco 633-0956
Brougham Nr perfect ----------
cond.. Only 11),50() mi., Find what you want in
Pvt pty. $3200. 640-4769. I Daily Pilot Classifieds .
~TA'R GAZ.EK#<~
AUD Ry CLAY JI. POLLAfl/l----.--.....;....-1
,..., '°'114. I J-t "°"' Do•l1 MHVTly Q.ldt )'< UHA -dt-...Mi " -V-A<eord1n11 lo I~• Slo<t. V 11"!· 11 ,ti\
11 I&,.. To drveloP "'ft'tQOe '°'Wednesday OCI. mii;t,.i
4Sl-63 rtocl WO.ck corrHponding to rurbtt; 4-IJ.19..34
of yout Zodoot birth sign. 2.JU7 1"""' ll T-61W-)lut• • l1'-..t 6JTol.""O 1v,,.,·11 lJO-63"-"'1• •f."' J4~ • .., Mlt ~No> 3) 1t_... 6) •--6 llo l6To 66 ....... ,.
1 """"' J1 c..... ., ~-:::-i;..;..;=-"'"-!.:.-W I W"" leOI 61 &. ,•o~ ltr.,., •••-"°......_ 10Y-llY-•t r._ 7I( •2'-•2M-,, ......... ,,~, ... •t-7J~ 14Y-UW-74 ~
1)11 •)Y..., 7)._ ... , • ._.. "6.. 76 ... 1 17 a..... ., ,__ 77 c-"J
'. to.M .. ,,,..., "...._..... .... !!~ .. ..,,.... ,...,_ .,.,__ :ior. '°"' 21u...-""' sir.. 11c.--
22 -S7 Tott ll '--n ~ ,, l<VI' IJ,. "'"r ~°"'-t~· en_, K-..-.;;:z....<:'-.1 26 0.. $6 I'~ -· IS'--~ "'............ ....._ a.r--. ,.c.:,.......... "..,.,.. ., c ..... -i.aw.... :v-..., .. .... "~... °"' '"'· u lO ,.. '° ....... tO ............ 11rr®Oaol ®A"'"' 4)J.2~,1
' \
7
7
,
Today's Clo Ing
N.Y.Stoek.s ,
EDITION
TEN CENTS
, L~tia's '76 POfi:eaiat Gees Ant~ric~n . . .
An .. almost all-American" Americans exclusively, except .Tbe program avoids reproduc-He said he had also chosen art
Pqeant of the ¥asters is OD tap for the closing which retains the tng such old standards of works from the breadth of
for the Festival of Art.a' 1976 traditional ''Last. Suppe~" by patriotic art as "Washldgton America's 200 years rather than
venion o( the f amou,, livinC pie· DaVinci. Crossing the Delaware" and rdtricting the PJOfram to works
tures this summer. '1 • Williamson explained the re-.:'The Spirit of '76,'' the band.a&ed of the revolution.
Pageaot Producer Don tentionoftheworkbytheltalian menwitbtheflfe,dnamandflag. He said, to many peopJe, the
Williamson outllqed tbe btcen· artist, this way: WiWam,on said these works revolutionary period symbolizes
tennial pro1ram Monday night to "When I took over as director have been tbe butt of too many the bicentennial spirit, but as for
the board of diretton and the of ·the show, a former director cartoons and other parodies, and art, "they were too busy revolu-
press. told me that if I ever wanted to be that they wUl be overdone during lionizing and earning livings and
The program is composed of rideen out of town on a rail, just the bicentennial thus depreciat-didn't have time to produce good
American al"t, or art by don'tdothe 'LastSupper'." ingtheirimpact. art."
The festival program includes·
27 presentations, depletions of
paintings, sculptures, or
artifacts with. living models
posed in special set.a and lighted
to closely resemble the original
work.
· The program includes artists'
depictions rangine from the
"Dinner for Threshers" by Grant
Wood, a representation of a farm
family's celebration at harvest.
to a three-sculpture presentation
entitled Bacchanalia, a celebra·
lion of a different sort.
And, w · e Pageant '76 steers
clear o e push·button patriotic
paint" gs, it does include some
po erfully patriotic sequences
including a series of eight works
entitled "Gettysburg Remem-
bered" and "The Event" a series
commemoratin~ the Lexington
<See PAGEANT, Page AZ)
•• e
Down 2nd ~ Year in a Row
Dillly f'llol Matt f'Mt•
WASHINGTON <UPI) -The
nation's gross national product
dee lined for a record second
straight year in 1975 despite signs
of solid economic recovery late
in the year. the Commerce
DepArtment said today.
The GNP fell 2 percent in 1975
following a 1.8 percent drop in
1974, the department said in a
year-end report.
WHEELS GET OIL BEFORE FREEDOM TRAIN PULLS OUT FOR YUMA, ARIZ.
Thooaanda Braved Long Linea to See Exhibit During Two-Day San Juan Stdp
The department said a 5.4 per-
cent rise in real GNP in the
fourth quarter was not enough to
offset earlier drops, leaving the
nation's outpiJt of goods and
services in decline for a record
second straight year.
There have never been back-
. to-back yearly d~ops in the
Lines Long
For Freedom
Train Tours
The waiting lines lengthened
today as more and more people
descended on San Juan
Capistrano to. visit the Ameirnn
freedom train before it JN1:1s out
for its next stop:-Yuma, Mis.
About l,SOO tickets for the train
were due to go on sale at 4:30
p.m. Coordinators said Uctets
would be sold up until 10 p. m.
Wait.a for of up to two and one-
half hours were reported Mon-
day, with the average wait about
an hour and fifteen minutes,
coordinators said.
The wait bad lengthened to
about three hours by this morn·
ing.
Although traffio problems
were reported to have occurred
at both Anaheim and San Diego,
the train's two previous stops, all
was reported moving smoothly in
San Juan.
* * * 3-hour Wait
Fo~ Niiuel ·
Train Vuit
What price freedom? Well, for
1,000 Niguel Hills Junior High
School students who visited the
Freedom Train Monday, tbe
price was about a three hour wait
in line.
According to a secretary at the
school who accompanied the
large eroup of 13 and 14-year-0lds
to the train, it didn't help to have
reservations to get OD the travel-
ing Bicentennial exhibit during
its stop at San Juan Cat>istrano.
I
Signs Point to TrOuhle
25 Percent of San Clemente's Si~ Illegal,
A door-to-door check of busi-
nesses by city building depart-
ment inspectors bas revealed il-
legal sip.a along Avenida Del
Mar in downtown San Clemente.
Wbile exact figures are not yet
_.ailable, it appears that about
25 percent of tbe signs in the busi ·
ness district were installed 11-
legally, said Richard Ahlman, ci-
ty building director.
M08t ~of the gjgns are illegal,
Ahlman said, because owners
never bothered to get a sign
permit .at City Hall.
Other signs are illegal because
they do not meet standards of the
ci!)''s existing sign ordinance,
adopted in.1966.
The door-to-door inspection,
which ~ventually will include
every business within the city,
was started in November follow-inl an order by the city council to
beef up enforcement of the sign
ordinance.
Ahlman said inspectors are
spending two to three hours each
day in the field, examining signs
and determining whether they
were legally installed.
Del Mar was the flrst area
selected for inspection because it
is the center of the city's business
district. Later checks will in-
clude business along El Camino
Real and other city streets.
Letters notifying Del Mar bmi-
Laguna Mulls· ~ike
On. Meter Pen~ty
A proposal to increase parking
meter fmes from $3 to $5 will con-
front the Laguna Beach City
Council .meeting at 4:30 p .m.
Wednesday at city ball.
LB C·onsumer
Office Open
Ginny Brady. a representative
from the Orance County Office of
Consumer Affairs will be availa-
ble for interviews and informa-
tion from noon to 2 p.m. every
Thursday at the Laguna Beach
City Hall.
One of the aims of the
Consumer Affairs Offlce is to
educate the senior citizens and
all memben of the community
ag.tnlt unfair and unethical con·
sumer praetlces.
Contact may be made by call-int the Lapna Beach City Hall
4M-tt¥at.zao. •
The issue of the fines is one of
28 items on the council's b~iness
agenda. At 7:30 p.m. the council
will conduct a public bearing on a
proposed law for protection of
"signi ficant natural
water<:ourses'' in the city.
The proposal for an increase of
fmes bas been backed by the
city's Chamber of Commerce,
however, during previous council
sessions, some merchants have
lambasted the suggested in-
crease. ·
Other council business in·
eludes:
-A request by the Laguna
Beach Museum of Art for in-
creased city support.
-An examination or the city's
design review procedures for
noticing of neighboring property
owners when projects are pro-
posed and for grading permit
evaluation. -~. -An oral repon on steps the .
police department bas taken
toward rape prevention.
STANFORD (AP> -A Stanfonl "University
secretary baa filed an $50,000 damaie suit acainat ber
baa, a •profeaor d psychiatry, aUectni be went into
a ftt of jri'jer ad beat her up 1n her office. . ~a Honeeger, a .stanford graduate student and~. filed sUlt 1n Santa Clara Oounty ~Court all4Ndnl tllat Dr. Karl Pribram on Od. ~.,n; into • nt"' aDaer0 and struck her ln tbe fac:e
lind aboUt ti.. head. 1m11h''\t the !ram• of ber _. •• uainlt tier~ lid e bttdge ol bernose.
Pribram bad no comment on the alJega~ns.
Univenit1.--Police mv~ated the tincldent and
filed a report With the district attorney, wbo did not
press charges. ' Ttie secretary, meanwhile, has been given.a tem-
por~ job in another department.
·" . . : .
\
nessmen of illegal s ign.5 are ex-
pected to go out later this month,
Ahlman said. ·
Once he receives a letter, an
owner will have a specified
amount of time to apply for a
permit or make necessary cor-
rections to the sign before the ci-
ty takes firmer action, Ahlman
said.
Meanwhile, city b~inessmen
have been urged to conform with
the existing sign ordinance by
Emil Radics, manager of the San
Clemente Chamber of Com·
merce.
Radics told chamber members
at a recent luncheon meeting that
individual action by b~inessmen
to clean up sign violations would
be a show of good faith.
Businessmen recently pro-
mised to clean up sign violations
on their own if the city would
drop consideration of a tougher
sign ordinance that would place
new limits on sign area and pro-
hibit roof signs. _
Consideration of the ordinance
stalled at a recent council meet-
ing on a 2-to-2 vote, with one
member abstaining because or
possible conflict of interest.
After the vote, the council
asked for a legal opinion on the
conflict of interest question. A re·
port will be made to the council
Wednesday night. -·
Boy Drowns
In Anaheim
Artificial respiration failed to s~ave the life or a 4-year-old
Anaheim boy found floating in an
apartment complex swimming
pool Sunday evening, an Orange
County Coroner's Offic e
spokesman said today.
Neiebbors of Delbert
Yearwood spotted him in the pool
and used mouth-to-mouth re-
suscitation in an effort to bring
him around. Paramedics con·
tinued the treatment when they
arrived at the scene but the boy
was pronounced dead.
'l'be boy lived with hi8 parents
at the complex, located at 10854
Magnolia Ave.,
Grinder Stolen
From Capo Store
Oranae County sheriff's of. ncen ..-e investi1at:ina the theft
of A •at pilldef' ·~· $1..soc> I from a tru4* ~ outalcf& a
San J"'an Captatl'aDO ~
~ore. ,
DeputJes aald tM &rU*r WU
taken trom the llOOelY service
truck ahortly after it parked to
make a delher)' at Von's
market, 31051 Camino
Ca~uo.
f ' .
broadest measure of national
economic activity s~n~e record
keeping began in 1~ the de-
partment said.
But the GNP report showed
clearly that the national
economy was in recovery as the
year ended. Every major
category of economic activity
rose from the third to the fourth
quarter, the report said
Nixon Name
Off Freeway
SACRAMENTO <UPI)
-A Senate committee has
decided to remove former
President Nixon's name
from a 3 th -mile-long
Southern California
freeway.
The legislation (SCR.67)
by Sen. Nate Holden, (0 -
Cul ver City), would de-.
signate the stretch of road
as the Marina Del Rey
. Freeway, the name that
currently appears on the
roadsigns.
The measure was ap-
proved Monday by the
Finance Committee on a
10-0 vote with no debate
and was sent to the floor.
Worth $3,300?
Inflation also moderated con-
siderably in 1975. Inflation for
GNP purposes was estimated at
8.7 percent for the year. down
from 9. 7 percent in 1974.
The Commerce Department
said the GNP, after adjust-
ment for inflation, was estimated
at $1.186 trillion in 1975, down
from $1.210 trillion in 1974 and
$1.233 trillion in 1973.
GNP in the fourth quarter was
estimated at an annual adjusted
rate of $1.217 trillion, up from
$1.202 trillion in the thi rd
quarter.
The third quarter GNP rose 13
percent from the second quarter
when the 1974-75 recession of-
ficially ended.
Commerce officials said last
week they expected the GNP to
rise 6.5 percent in the fourth
quarter, but the preliminary
estimate released today was
lower.
Officials said it was not an in-
dication of any weakness in the
economy.
The growth in retail sales and a
slowdown in inventory depletion
accounted for the improvement
in the fourth quarter, department
officials said.
Although the 5.4 percent in-
crease was less than half the 12
percent rise in the third quarter,
they said it was an indication
that recovery from the nation ·s
worst recession since World War
II was continuing. •
CUSDJloteMachine
Gets Critical Look
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL OUM O.llr ...... Sflllff
The purchase of a ·$3,300
machine that would record and
display votes taken at liCb~l
board meetings was placed in
li mbo Monday night by
Capistrano Unified School Dis-
trict trustees.
At the end of more than 30
minutes of discussion on the is-
sue, the board voted 6 to 1 to t able
any action on the purchase until
individual trustees. have the
chance to watch the system in ac-
tion ana discuss its merits with
members of agencies where it is
used. . ·
The board voted Jan. 5 to re-
consider earlier · action approv-
ing purchase of the machine.
It bad been proposed that the
· vote tallier be installed in the
board room of the new Education
Center which will open in San
Juan Capistrano in March.
Under the machine system,
trustees would vote by pressing
buttons mounted in the table in
front of them. The fmal vote
would be displayed after all in·
dividual votes were cast.
Supt. Jerome TtK>rnsley de-
fended tbe purchase of the
system. He said it would do away
with vote "influencing" that ex-
GliderTM/t
Loss $15,000
Hobie AJter'a newest J1ne of
merchandise -radio controlled
model gliders -bas prOyed a
popular item, at leutotth
thieves who stole $15,000 woRb of
the planes.
Offlctals at coast Catamaran.
.IDl llc:Gaw Avenue, Irvtne, told po.lie• an inventory check
---tut 71 of ttie elibl·fOot wl!!PP,an 1nden'ftn IDllaint. 'I'M 'yellow, or&n19 .'Ud~bl-..
.. Hobie 1"wkl" are the newest
11-QI pro4ucts by ~. wboH ~ .... coao ~after
rean, ol manof act\&riila aur·
fbOlrda and cai.maram. . .
ists under the current voice vole
system.
Thornsley said some trustees
change their votes depending on
votes previously cast by· other
members.
Trustee Stephen Smith of
Laguna Niguel said the way a
trustee votes is a personal mat-
ter, even if be is swayed by the
way another~ board .member
votes. He said he didn't like the'
idea of us ing a 'machine 'lo
change personal behavior.
Smith said he would support
the purchase only if it would
make school board meetings
more efficient. Thornsley said it
would. Thornsley noted that the
machine would be purchased
with school construction bond
money, not gen er al ftmd money,
and, therefore, would not be tak-
ing money away from teacher
(See MACWNE, Page AZ>
Coast
Weather
Fair. warm and dry
weather through Wednes-
day, according to the
weather service wlth bigbs
at the beaches 74 rising to
S> inland. Overni1bt lows
42to48.
INSIDE TOD~ Y .
Still trJlfng to cw~~
Chmtma.t iohotchamocallit
. that come iofth Anrwnicm
dir«tiou? For posdbk .Gl-
.utanc., ltt Page Bl.
~
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I
'
,
t 2 DAILY PILOT l/SC
. Chief's
.Rocky
Dilemma
Jerome ·Tbornsley, Capistrano
lTnlfted School District superln·
tendent since July, has been in a·
rather rocky situation. ,
It's embarrassing, be said.
"In hindsight, I publicly admit
it was not a prudent decision on
my part.••
Several months ago, he bought
a house which bad a yard which
· sproiated no lawn but a lot of
"large, heavy rocks." Perferrlng
the lawn, be asked the district's
maintenance chief, Bill Dawson
where be could hire someone to
carry the rocks away.
The rocks are valuable, the
maintenance chief said. IC the
superintendent could wait, the
district may need them some·
day.
The rocks were needed last
week at San Clemente High
ScbooJ. Thornsley said.
Dawson asked him if he was
still willing to give the rocks to
the district. Thornsley said he
was and district crews went out
to his home and picked them up.
A neighbor, however, objected
and called a local newspaper. He
thought the superintendent was
having district crews do his
yard work.
Thornsley said today that a
not the cas e .
"It's clear that I had no in
tion of defrauding the sch S·
trict," be said. Still, the sit lion
has evolved into much blic
criticism.
"I've publicly commented it
was not a wise decision and I just
accept criticism of it." he said.
He said district trustees are
also satisfied with his action.
It is common for district crews
to pick up gifts, as used
refrigerators or trees, from the
public, the superintendent said.
High Court
Nixes County
, Porno Appeal
f The U. S. Supreme Court has
dismissed an appeal from the
former manager of a Santa Ana
adult bookstore who was asking
... his conviction of distributing ob· ·
l scene matter be set aside.
Over the objection or three
justices Monday, the court threw
out the case "for want or a sub-
stantial federal question."
Justices William J . Brennan
Jr., Potter Stewart and Thurgood
Marshall dissented, arguing that
the court s hould review the
materials in question to de-
termine for itself wheter they are
obscene.
The case involved the convic·
lion of Nathan Pendleton, former
manager of an adult bookstore on
1 Harbor Boulevard who was tried
in Orange County Central
Judicial District Court in Santa
Ana.
Cagers ClQJlh
·On Donkeys
A donkey basketball game in
which faculty members will be
pitted against varsity cagers will
be staged at 7:30 p.m . Wednes-
day at Dana Hills High School,
33333 Street of the Golden Lan·
tern, Dana Point.
Tickets at the door will be $1.25
for children under 12 and $1 .SO for
adults. Advance tickets may be
purchased for $'l at Dana Hills,
Marco Forster Junior High and
Niguel Hills Junior High.
Proceeds from the event will
go to the Dana Hills High School
Athletic Boosters Club.
Tu.day, J1nu-x 20, 1978
SUCCUMBS AT 62
Mrs. Paul Nissen
Dorothie
Nissen
Succumbs
Mrs. Dorothie "Dodie" Nissen,
62, a Harbor Area resident for
rriore than 25 years. died Monday
at Hoag Memorial HospitaJ in
Newport Beach. A memorial
mass will be said next Monday in
Costa Mesa.
Mrs. Nissen had been active in
a variety or community and
family interests since moving to
the area in 1948. Among those
pursuits were active roles in the
Orange County Philharmonic
Society, Child Guidance Center
of Orange County and the
Children's Home Society.
An avid golfer until illness
slowed her pace, she held mem·
bersbip in the Irvine Coast Coun-
try Club and the Southern
CaJifornia Women's Golf As·
sociation.
A native of Minnesota, Mrs.
Nissen studied music at St.
Teresa Conversatory of Music in
Winona, Minn., and attended
Winona State University prior to
her marriage.
She and her husband, N. Paul
Nissen, moved to the Harbor
Area in l948 when he accepted a
position or assistant publisher of
the Costa Mesa Globe-Herald,
later the.Daily Pilot. Mr. Nissen
retired in 1969.
Survivors include her husband,
of the family home in Newport
Beach; five children: Mrs. Joan
Starr of Las Vegas, Mrs. Susan
Hemington of Laguna Beach
Linda Nissen of Balboa Island:
and Greta Nissen and James
Nissen of the home; a sister
Mrs. Elaine Baker of Cost~
Mesa; and one grandchild
Marla Hemington. '
The memorial mass Monday,
Jan. 26, will be said by Msgr.
Thomas Nevin of St. Joachim's
Church, of which Mrs. Nissen
was a member.
At her wish, Mrs. Nissen's
ashes will be sc altered at sea.
Memorial contributions can be
sent to the American Cancer
Society, the family said.
San Joaquin Fog
BAKERSFIELD (UPI)
Patchy fog moved over the San
Joaquin Valley this morning,
causing traffic acciden~ and .
closing some airports tem·
porarily.
• ...
.. Mishap
Injures .
Youih
An 18-year-0ld South Laguna
• youth is tn "guarded, but stable"
condition today at South Coat
Community Hospital after a car
versus motorcycle accident
virtually on the hospital's
doorstep Monday.
Chadwick Bowlin of 32213 Vista
de la Luna, underwent surgery
Monday for treatment of internal
injuries received in the mishap
shortly before noon at Pacific.
Coast Highway and 7th Street,
South Laguna.
At first, authorities believed
Bowlin was only bruised and
scraped in the accident but be
was taken to the hospital
emergency room where the more
serious injuries were discovered.
A spokesman for the California
Highway Patrol said today
Bowlin collided with a van driven
by Patricia Balent, 29, of 10474
Owl Circle, Fountain Valley
According to the CHP report,
Bowlin was northbound on Coast
Highway on his motorcycle when
he collided with the van turning
left from the southbound lane of
Coast Highway onto 7th Street.
Fra..P"fl*!Al
MACHINE. • •
s alaries or educational pro·
grams.
• "It's a touchy way to spend
bond funds in the middle of a
bond campaign," countered Jan
Overton. a San Clemente resi·
dent, who is working on behalf oJ
a $30 million construction bond
issue that will face voters next
March.
"The price is outrageous,"
said Trustee Robert Hurst of
Laguna Niguel. He proposed the
successful motion that the item ,
be tabled until board members
had a chance to review use of
similar machines by other public
agencies. Trustee George White
of San Clemente cast the sole
vote against the motion.
Supporting information pre-
sented to trustees showed that
the machine is used by the cities
of Newport Beach, Orange,
Placentia, Seal Beach, Manhat·
tan Beach, Indio, San Bernardino
and Barstow. among others.
North State
Forest Fire
'Surprise'
SONORA (AP> -A forest fU'\
was burning out of control today
in Stanislaus National Forest 20
miles east of here in what of-
ficials said was a SUJl>rising oc·
currence for January.
"We can't rcecall ever having
a forest fire of this magnitude in
Northern California this early in
the year," said Wanita Adams, a
U.S. Forest Service spokesman.
"Most of the forest ar ea is
normally covered by snow this
time of the year, but not this
year."
She said the fire started Mon-
day and bad consumed over 45
acres of grassy wood.land. It was
picking up momentum as 65
firefighters battled it.
"The area is dry and dusty and
we're gettin' temperatures we
usually have in spring." she said.
"It's quite a surprise to us."
There were no injuries from
the blaze and no structures were
threatened, she said There was
no estimate on when the frre
might be contained.
The cause of the blaze was un·
der investigation.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT Lawmen in Irvine
Seek Death Motive
Robert N. Weed Pret*"l •ftd Publl-
J ack R. Curley Vice Pr-nt _ c;....,.tl ~·
Thomas Keevll
Edi ...
Thomas A. Murphlne ~-l~Edlllw
Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall Auiu-t llMM91,,. Elli'-'
Lanu ... d, Offk9 Tllt~'PffS.,_ MM!lftt ........ •: ,.,o ........ ..,,
OH1ca c. .. AMM DW... .. .,SolrW
...... """" 19Nc1t· "''' .. .,, ~ . ~av.-ri lMtu,...._. .. ,.. 0..,. ,,....., •
ByDOUGLASFRl'l'7SCBE
Of ... Oelly" .......
Irvine police continued today
to probe for clu'es that would lead
to the slayer of a Santa Fe Spr·
ings man whose bullet-riddled
body was found ln an Irvine
orange aro"e Monday.
The dead man was idenUCied
as Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela,
42, of Santa Fe Springs .
Valemuela, whose occupation re·
malnecl unknown ~, left a
widow, 7.oila, and six children,
accordine to Irvine Detective
Steve Nub.
Nub described the victim ot
. the aecuUoD·style s1.nn1 u
.. aver .. e Joe CltJun.." wtth no
police r~d and no record ot al·
ftllat10ft with any of the lan&I
tbat prowl the southeast Los Anlel• County area.
Valert1llela·1 body wu db·
covered bJ an l"lne woman Wbo
WU Jouin• throq.b an Grqe
rro•e alonf the Santa Ana
P'teew11 eu ol CUiver Ort .. 11t ·•
10:30 Monday morning.
Police said t he man bad been
shot several times in the back
with a small caliber '1JD. Nuh
refused to elaborate, coatend1ng
that the information may lead to
the suspects.
"We have a number ol leads
we are working on, .. Nab said.
Valenzuela was shot ln the
orange grove and left lying f aee
down next to a tree for more than
a day before., bis bod)' wu found
by the Josee!\ police uld.
He was slain at a spot mare
than 100 yards from the DNnlt
residence.
Coroner'• del)ut1es rtlulld to
add any detallt lo tbefhWin1
Nub Hid, .. 1 ttayed 'G> all
nJ1bt trytna to ft,ur:e out a
motive for tbe 1bootla1. I
couldn't come up witb~."
Tbe dead maa. atl11 Md hll wao.t. appuaU1 rW.iDf out rob-
bery u a motive, NMb Mid.
•
... . ...
• Otlly"letSUlf .......
PAGEANT PRODUCER DON WILLIAMSON OUTLINES PROGRAM FOR BICEN'(ENNIAL FESTIVAL
An Aff·Amertcan Uneup-Wlth the Exception of Da Vlncf'a 'Laat sUpper'
Ford Talk Ignites
'
Congress Conflict
WASHINGTON CUPI ) -
Congressional reaction to Presi·
dent Ford's State of the Union ad·
dress shows there will be some
battles when the Democratic ma-
jority in the House and Senate
acts on his Republican program
in a pr~idential election year.
the status quo or cutbacks in pro-
grams that help the people."
Speaker Carl Albert, hoarse
from flu and daubing at his nose
with a tissue, said Ford's speech
·"was a typical Republican State
of the Union message in an elec·
ti on year . . . not really anything
new."
Senate Republican Leader
Republicans generally ap·
plauded the speech, but most
Democrats dismissed it as elec·
tion-year rhetoric signaling a HIGHLIGHTS OF FORD'S
r et r e a t i n t o th e p a s t . ANNUAL ADDRESS, A4
Congressional conservatives . ,
responded favorably while GOP Hugh Scott pr~1sed Fords pro·
liberals tempered their praise. . .. posal to create Jobs; for suggest-
Sen. Barry Goldwater CR-~g a plan to promote in_vestment
Ariz.) said, ''If this country is to m ~toc~s and for proposing a con·
be saved from disaster, it will re-sohdat1onofgrantprograms.
quire presidents with the coura~e Sen. Hubert Humphrey CD·
and foresight or Mr. Ford. His Minn.) said he thought the Presi·
strong ~fforts to reduce the over· dent's speech was "upbeat" but
burderung power of the federal failed to offer a s ubstantive pro-government should be applauded gram
by every taxpaying American." ·
But Rep. John Brademas CD-R_ep. Al Ullman (D-Ore.)
Ill.) found the program "about as chairman or the tax-writing Ways
forward -looking as the one and Means Committee, called
George III had for the Colonies 200 Ford's proposals "fragmentary"
years ago." and said, ''We need something
Assistant Senate Democratic Jong range to meet the inflation
leader Robert C . Byrd said: threat and long range to meet the
"Ford's rhetoric is Reaganish. It Social Security problem." fails to be realistic."
And House M ajorlty Leader
Thomas J>. O'Neill Jr. predicted
the Dem~rats "will not stand for
•
Horse Panel
_Requested
For San Juan
San Juan Capistrano city coun-
c ii men will consider the
Capistrano Valley Horsemans
Association's request that an
equestrian committee b e
established when they meet Wed·
nesday at 7 p. m . in the city ball.
The association bas asked that
the committee be established to
advise the city's planning com-
mission on the keeping of horses
and establishment of riding
trails.
City Manager James Mocalis
has recommended that the coun-
cil instru ct the Parks and
Recreation Commission to invite
the· equestrian organization to
work with them.
Also on the council's agenda is
the recommendation that several stnets be added to the Inventory
of Historical Sites and a recom·
mendation for amendments to
the city's Land Use Management Code.
Sen. Jacob Javits, (R·N.Y.), ·
called Ford's address "nonsensa·
tionaland centrist,:• and said : "A
.!_ot of it I liked. Some of it I dJdn't
uke. I thought the recommenda-
tions on revenue sharing and re·
gulatory reform and the in-
telligence community were good.
I thought his references to un·
employment and the methods or
treating it were inadequate."
Sowh Coa8t
Hospikil Set
For Meeting
South Coast Community
Hospital will hold its annual
membership meeting and elec·
tion of members of the board at
7:30 p .m. Thursday in the
hospital auditorium.
Nine positions to the hospital
board of directors are at stake in
·the balloting.
Members whose terms are ex-
piring are William Beck, Jody
Billings, Harold Hablbeck,
Lowell Phillips, Robert Thatcher
and David Whiting. Three other
openings have been created by
resignations of Peter Bramwell.
Bob Hurst and Robert Warner.
F...-•ogeA1
PAGEANT. •
and;Concord Minutemen and the
signing of the Declaration or In·
'dependence.
"This is going to be the nation's
200th anniversary and this dang
well better be a good show."
Wllliamson said.
Service Held
ForLagunan
Mr. McCready
A private funeral service has
been held or Laguna Beach civic
leader Albert W. McCready, Jr.
who died Wednesday after a two.
year bout with cancer. He was 66.
Mr. Mccready )Vas vice presi·
dent and managet of the Laguna
Beach office of Dean Witter Co ..
Inc. from 1966 to 1974. He was 1973
Chairman of the South Orange
County United way and received
the United Way Community
Leadership Citation in 1974.
In addition, be was active in
the Laguna Beach Boys' Club.
the Rotary Club and the Laguna
· Beach Chamber of Commerce.
The deceased is survived by
his wile, Dorothy of the family's
Emerald B~f-· home; sons,
Burt.on and Scott of the f amity
home: Bill of Santa Barbara; sis·
ters, Mrs. Robert Byington of Los
Angeles and Mrs. George Beckley ot San Diego; brother, Donald of
Huntington Beach and a grand-
daughter.
The family requests that
memorial contributions be made
to the American Cancer Society.
Funeral arrangements were
directed by Sheff er Laguna
Beach Mortuary. Interment is at
HollywOod Cemetery.
ICEBREAKER'S " 'IRIP .:MUDDLED
SEATTLE (UPI) -The Polar ~tar• America's mightiest
1 c e b re a k~ r , f J u n k e d it s
shakedown cruise -it got stuck in
modflats .• 1 The Coast .Guard vessel the
first icebreaker built in the U~ted
States ln 20 years, was com·
missioned during the weekend.
The. Polar Star set out in the
mommg Monday and quickly
became stuck in the mud between Bla~e Island and· the Great
Perun.suJa. It sat there 711.a hours
before tugboats, aided by the tide
pulled it clear. '
POLICI DAMl•ICJINI Of"EXECUT10N MURDl'R IN IRVINI 01tiNGE QR~E,..,,,.
. Senta Fe Spttnp Men l'ound Rlddl9d With 9unete Ne1r tam. An• ''""•Y : . . . -t •
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Medicare Cost
Up for: Elderly
By SYLVIA PORTER
If you are an elderly and/or disabled American covered
by Med.lean, you will pay more out-of.pocket for your·
health care th 1978 than in any year since the program was
begun.
-50 cents more a month, starting lb.ls July for the doc·
tOl" bW insurance part of Medicare;
-$12 more on your hospital bills to cover an increase in
the Medicare hos pital deductible;
-/\ 13 percent increase in your co·payments toward the
cost of your hospital stays of more than 60 days and post·
hospital stays of more
than 21 days ln a.killed
nuning homes.
WHY THI S NEW
pinch on you, of aJl
groups of citizens?
Because of the relen-
Money's
Worth
, tless upsurge in medical care costs. Since price restraints
were lifted in May 1974 physicians' fees and hospital costs
have been 1piraling upward at about twice tbe rate of the
overall Con.sumer Price Index; costs of the Medicare pro-
gram have far outrun earlier estimates. The deductibles
and co-payments that Medicare benefic:iaries must pay out
of their own packets, or through premiums for privately
purchased supplementary insurance, have soared propor·
tionately.
When Medicare was started in'· July 1966, the premium
rate for the voluntary doctor bill insurance was set at $3 a
montll -and this, with the matching $3 to be paid out of
federal revenues for each elderly person enrolled, was
figured to cover the costs of the program in the first year.
Thereafter, rates were to be reviewed each year and raised
if necessary. By July 1974, the monthly premium rate had
more than doubled to $6.70.
THEN CAME A RESPITE for Medicare beneficiaries
-but only because Congress made an error in drafting
amendments to the Social Security law intended to limit
future incr'eases in the .Medicare premium ratetotbepercen·
tage by which Social Security cash benefits had been raised
in a previous 12·month period
The drafters messed up the description of which 12·
month period, however. The result was the prJmium could
not be raised last July, even though cash benefits under
Social Security had been hiked 11 percent in 1974. And there
was the chance that the premium rate would be frozen for ..
another year -in the face or an additional 8 percent in·
crease in Social Security benefits in 1975.
But in the final hours before adjournment last month,
Congress acted to correct the drafting error -permitting
the premium rate to rise by 50 cents next July to $7 .20.
This increase will come on top of a rise of 13 percent in
the amount of the Medicare hospital deductible. If you. a
Medicare beneficiary, are admitted to this hospital this
year, you will be responsible for the first $104 of your
hospital bills, up from $92 last year. Your deductible
(roughly the average cost of one day's hospitalization) was
$10 back in 1966.
WREN THE AMOUNT of the hospital deductible goes
up, so do the co· payments by the same percentage as the de·
ductible increase. For instance, you'll pay $26 per day for
the 6lst to 90th day of hospitalization, up from $23.
For eacb of the 60 "lifetime reserve" days you use after
you have exhausted your initial 90 days of hospitalization,
your co-.payment will be $S2, up from $46. As for nursing
homes, the co·payment for the 21st to lOOth day of confine-ment is now $13, an increase of $1 50 over 1975.
So far, White. House efforts to control the costs of
Medicare -such as attempts to limit physician fee in-
creases -have served ma.inly to shift costs to the elderly
and disabled.
-PRESIDENT FORD Qevertheless will call for more
"cost sharing" when he delivers his budget for the next fi s·
cal year Wednesday, will propose -as he did last year , and
as President Nixon did before him -that Medicare deduc ·
tibles and co·payments be raised still further for those with
short or average length hospital stays.
This proposal, the President will argue, woµld "save ..
more than $1.3 billion a year in the Medicare buaget.
And from where would these savings come? From the
pockets o( the elderly and/or disabled. Make you feel good,
50-acre S ite
New Construction
Cente r in Irvine
Construction Center~ an environmentally-protected in-
dllstrial development for s uch uses as construc-
.tion storage yards, recycling plants, vehicle' storage,
landscaping contractors and other r~lated uses is being de-
veloped by the Irvine Industrial Complex (UC > in Irvine. it
was announced by Brian D. Hogg. UC vice president of
sales and marketing.
'
THE Sl·ACR E develop-:screening are included with
ment is located in the Irvine each lot. Industrial Complex, at the in-Construction Center will be
tersection of J a mboree and concentric in design with
Barranca Roads. landscaped industrial de·
· Construction Center will be velopment fronting on
the first development o( its perimeter roadways . The
type in t b e Southern circular inter:ior roadway ".'111
California area according to have extensive land.5capmg
Hogg. Sites will be offered for ~itb Con.stru~lion ~enter
sale with terms and flnancing identific.ation signs a.t its two
available. entry pomts, Hogg sa.Jd.
Improved lots will be de·
veloped and offered in incre· HOGG ANNOUNCED that
ments of one·acre or more, 17 acres of Construction
many with drive·through con· Center have already been re-
figurations. Heavy Jandscap-served by a diverse mix of in-
ing will screen the Interior of dustrial users, including con-
the development from nearby tractors, s ub-contractors,
road & Hogg stated. 'vehicle storage and related Landsc~ping, .fencins and industries.
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I
'
·.
A2 DAILY PILOT ~ l/SC
t -
Chiefs
Rocky
Dilemma
Jerome Thornsley, Capistrano
Unified &;boot District superln-.
tendeot since July. bas been in a
rather rocky situation.
It's embarrassing, he said ..
"In hindsight, J publicly admit
it w~ not a prudent decision on
my part."
Several months ago, be bought
a house which had a yard which
· sprouted no lawn but a lot of
.. large, heavy rocks." Perferring
the lawn. he asked the district's
maintenance chief. Bill Dawson
where be could hire someone to
carry the rocks away.
The rocks are valuable. the
maintenance chief said. If the
superintendent could wait. the
distrit't may need them some-
day.
The rocks were needed last
week at San Clemente High
School. Thornsley said.
Dawson asked him if he· was
still willing to give the rocks to
the district. Thornsley said he
was and district crews went out
to his home and picked them up.
A neighbor. however, objected
and called a local newspaper. He
thought the superintendent was
having district crews do hjs
yard work.
Thornsley said today that was
not the case.
"It's clear that I had no inten·
tion of defrauding the school dis·
trict," he said. Still, the situation
has evolved into much public
criticism.
''I've publicly commented it
was not a wise decision and I just
act'ept criticism of it," he said.
He said district trustees are
also satisfied with his action.
It is common for district crews
to pick up gifts, as used
refrigerators or trees, from the
public, the superintendent said.
High Court
Nixes C ounty
. Porn o A ppeal
r The U. S. Supreme Court has
dismissed an appeal from the
former manager of a Santa Ana
adult bookstore who was asking l his conviction of distributing ob-·
I scene matter be set aside.
Over 'the objection of three
justices Monday. the court threw
out the case "for want of a sub·
stantial federal question."
Justices William J. Brennan
Jr., Potter Stewart and Thurgood
Marshall dissented, arguing that
the t'Ourt should review the
materials in question to de·
termine for itself wheter they are
obscene.
The case involved the convic-
tion of Nathan Pendleton, former
manager of an adult bookstore on
1 Harbor Boulevard who was tried
in Orange Co unty Central
Judicial District Court in Santa
Ana .
Cagers Clmh
·0n Donkeys
SUCCUM B S AT 62
Mrs. Paul Nissen
Dorot hie
Nissen
Succumbs
Mrs. Dorothie "Dodie" Nissen,
62, a Harbor Area resident for
more than 25 years. died Monday
at Hoag M·emorial Hospital in
Newport Beach. A memorial
mass will be said next Monday in
Costa Mesa.
Mrs. Nissen had been active in
a variety of community and
family interests since moving to
the area in 1948 . Among those
pursuits were active roles in the
Orange County Philharmonic
Society, Child Guidance Center
of Orange County and the
Children's Home Society.
An avid golf er until illness
slowed her pace, she held mem·
bership in the Irvine Coast Coun-
try Club and the Southern
California Women's Golf As-
sociation.
A native of Minnesota, Mrs.
Nissen studied music at St.
Teresa Conversatory of Music in
Winona, Minn., and attended
Winona State University prior to
her marriage. _ . ~ .
She and her husband, N. Paul
Nissen, moved to the Harbor
Area in 1948 when he accepted a
position of assistant publisher of
the Costa Mesa Globe·Herald,
later the Daily Pilot. Mr. Nissen
retired in 1969.
Survivors include her husband,
of the f amity home in Newport
Beach; five children: Mrs. Joan
Starr of Las Vegas, Mrs. Susan
Hemington of Laguna Beach,
Linda Nissen of Balboa Island,
and Greta Nissen and James
N'ISSen of the home; a sister,
Mrs. Elaine Baker of Costa
Mesa; and one grandchild,
Marla Hemington.
The memorial mass Monday,
Jan. 26, will be said by Msgr.
Thomas Nevin of St. Joachim's
Church, of which Mrs. Nissen
was a member.
.At b'ef' wish, Mrs. Nissen's
asfieswill be scattered at sea.
A donkey bask~tball game 'in "~'Memorial contributions can be
which faculty r.nembers will be • sent to the American Cancer
pitted against varsity cagers will . Society, the ~amity said:
be staged at 7:30 p.m. Wednes·
day at Dana Hills High School,
33333 Street of the Golden Lan-
tern, Dana Point.
Tickets at the door will be $1.25
for children under 12 and $1.50 for
adults. Advance tickets may be
purchased for $1 at Dana Hills,
Marco Forster Junior High and
Niguel Hills Junior High.
Proceeds ftom the event will
go to the Dana Hills High School
Athletic Boosters Club.
San Joaquin Fog
BAKERSFIELD (UPI)
Patchy fog moved over the San
Joaquin Valley this morning,
causing traffic accidents and .
closing some airports tem-
porarily. ..
.. •
Mishap
~njures
Youth
An 18-year-old South Laguna
youth ia in "guarded, but !Uble"
condition today at South Coaat
Community Hospital after a car
versus motorcycle accident
virtually on the hospital's
doorstep Monday.
<;had wick Bowlin of 32213 Vista de la Luna, underwent surgery
Monday for treatment of internal
injuries received in the mishap
shortly before noon at Pacific.
Coast Highway and 7th Street,
South Laguna.
At first. authorities believed
Bowlin was o'nly bruised and
scraped in the accident but be
was taken to the hospital
emergency room where the more
serious injuries were discovered.
A spokesman for the California
HighW,llY Patrol said today
Bowlin collided with a van driven
by Patricia Balent, 29, of 10474
Owl Circle, Fountain Valley
According to the CHP report,
Bowlin was nc;>rthbound on Coast
Highway on his motorcycle when
he collided with the van turning
left from the southbound lane of
Coast Highway onto 7th Street.
Era.. Page AJ
MACHINE. • •
salaries or educational pro-
grams.
"It's a touchy way to spend
bond funds in the middle of a
bond campaign," countered Jan
Overton, a San Clemente resi·
dent, who is working on behalf of
a $30 million construction bond
issue that will face voters next
March.
"The price is outrageoos,"
said Trustee Robert Hurst of
Laguna Niguel. Re proposed the
successful motion that the item .
be tabled until board members
had a chance to review use of
similar machines by other public
agencies. Trustee George White
of San Clemente cast the sole
vote against the motion.
Supporting information pre·
sented to trustees showed that
the machine is used by the cities
of Newport Beach, Orange,
Placentia, Seal Beach, Manhat·
tan Beach, Indio, San Bernardino
and Barstow. among others.
North State
Forest Fire
'Surprise'
SONORA (AP> -A forest fm.
was burning out of control today
in Stanislaus National Forest 20
miles east of here in what of-
ficials said was a surprising oc-
currence for January.
"We can't rcecall ever having
a forest fire of this magnitude in
Northern California thi.a early in
the year," said Wani~a Adams, a
U.S. Forest Service spokesman.
"Most of the forest area is
normally covered by snow this
time of the year, but not this
year.''
She said the fire started Mon·
day and bad consumed over 45
acres of grassy woodland. It was
picking up momentum ·as 65
firefighters battled it. \
''The area is dry and dusty and
we're getting temperatures we
usually have in spring, .. she said.
"It's quite a surprise to us."
There were no .injuries from
the blaze and no structures were
threatened, she said. 'lb.ere was
no estimate on when the fll'e
might be contained.
The cause of the blaze was un-
der investigation.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT Lawmen in lroine
nw0r--. c;oen o.,,, Piiat, wltt1W!>k11 t><om.
bi,,.., u.. N•~·Prtts. it pubtoshecl b'( tr. OrM>llf
Coe\l P\lbll"'•"9 Comci..-y. Seo¥.t1e0<1l1tons •r•
-htM<I Monda' tl\rouq11 Friday '°' co" .. Mo!~. New00<1 e...u.. t<"nt1"91on 11..,c:l\l~oun
t•in Valt•y. lnl'lne. S..CkfttO«fl V•Utoy ~nd
"'111N Be..c:l\/!'>Outll CNSI. A !lr>QW r~'°""' M• tll>n " Pllb'ISM<I S.hmS•V• _.., s..no.t~ Th• or•n<.>0•' P\IOllS11l119 P'•"' '' o11 llO Wot ea, StrHI, (.oil• f.MW. Celifornl• 926lll.
Robert N. Weed Pruldenl ~ PUl>ll-
Jack R. Curley \lice Pr-nt _ c:;.,_.,. ~,
Thomas Keevll l Ecll ...
Thomas A . Murphine
Me.-.vl"9 Edit.,.
Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall ~·••-• MAMOlllO Ecmon La, ..... llffdOffiU ll•C~t~l'"' ' ~111"9Adldt'elt: "'°· ....... ..u
Offices c..-.. -: &10Wetl a..,St,....
M11110..-.. ~11: 1711 ... kll~
• ~kVel .. 't'n:JlllA~N ...... efS..0 .... ,.,_
.•
Seek Death Motive
By DOUGLAS FRITZSCllE
OllMO.ll'fPfllll ....
Irvine police continued today
to probe for clues that would lead
to the slayer of a Santa Fe Spr-
ings man whose bullet-riddled
body was found in an Irvine
orange grove Monday.
The dead man was identified
as Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela.
42, of Santa Fe Spr i n gs.
Valenzuela. whose occupation re-
mained unknown today, left a
widow, 1.oila, and six children.
according to Irvine Deteetive
Steve Nub.
Nub described the vlctlm ~
. the executlon-style sla;ytq as
"avera1e J oe Citiun, .. ·wtth no
police record and no record of al-
ftliation with ey of the l&nll
that prowl the southeast .Loi
Anlelet Count,Y area.
Valen1ueJa'1 body wu dla ..
covered by an lmne W01UD wtio
wu Joslfns t.b.Jou1b ari or•e 1rove alon1 the Saata ·Ana
Freeway eut of Culver Drift 8t
10:30 Monday morning.
Police said the man had been
shot several times in the back
with a small caliber gun. Nash
refused to elaborate, cootending
that the information may lead to
the suspects.
"We have a number of leads
we are working on," Nash said.
Valenzuela was abot in the
orange grove and left lying face
down next to a tree for more than
a day before bis body was found
by the Jo11er, police ul4
He w.. alain at a spot IDOl'e
than 100 yards from the nearest
residence.
. Coroner 's deputies refused to
tldd all)' detallJ to the tboottq .
Nub said, "'I stayed up all
ntabt trytn a to !l1ure out a
motive for Uae 1boot1n1. I
couJdD 't come up with anythlq.''
1.be dead man. ltlll bjd bis
wallet, apparently ruHDi out rob-
bery u a motive. Nub aald.
•
-·-···
\I •• ..
. . . ...
. 0.ll'f Pllet SUH f'Mto
PAGEANT PRODUCER DON WILLIAMSON OUTLINES PROGRAM FOR BICENTENNIAL FESTIVAL
An All·Amertcan U neup-Wlth the Exception of Da Vinci'• 'Last Supper'
Ford Talk Ignites
Congress Conflict
WASHINGTON (UPI> -
Congressional reaction to Presi-
dent Ford's State of the Union ad-
dress shows there will be some
battle8 when the Democratic ma-
jority in the House and Senate
acts on his Republican program
in a presidential election year.
the status quo or cutbacks in pro-
grams that help the people."
Speaker Carl Albert, hoarse
fx:om flu and daubing at his nose
with a tissue, said Ford's speech
·"was a typical Republican State
of the Union message in an elec·
tion year . . . not really anything
new,u.
Senate Republican Leader
Republicans generally ap·
plauded the speech, but most
Democrats dismissed it as elec-
tion-year rhetoric signaling a HIGHLIGHTS OF FORD'S
re tr e a t i n to the p as t. ANNUAL ADDRESSt A4
Congressional conservatives , responded favorably while GOP Hugh Scott pr~ised Ford s pro-
liberals tempered their praise. . .. p<>sal to create Jobs; f~r suggest-
Sen. Barry Goldwater <R· ~ng a plan to promote myestment
Ariz.) said, "If this country is to m ~toc~s and for proposmg a con·
be saved from disaster, it will re-sohdatlonof grant programs.
quire presidents with the coura~e Sen. Hubert Humphrey {D-
and foresight of Mr. Ford. His Minn.) said he thought the Presi·
strong ~fforts to reduce the over-dent's speech was "upbeat" but
burdening power of the federal failed to off er a s ubstantive pro-govemment should be applauded gram
by every taxpaying American." ·
But Rep. J ohn Brademas (D-Rep. Al Ullman (D·Ore. »
. Ill.) found the program "about as chairman of the tax-writing Ways
forward-looking as the one and Means Committee, called
GeorgeJilhadfortheColonies200 Ford's proposals "fragmentary"
years ago." and said, "We need something
Assistant Senate Democratic long range to meet the inflation
leader Robert C. Byrd said: threat and long range to meet the
"Ford's rhetoric is Reaganish. It Social Security problem."
fails to be realistic."
And House Majority Leader
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. predicted
the Democrats "willnQt stand for
Ho~Panel
Requested
For San Juan
San J uan Capistrano city coun-
cilmen will consider t he
Capistrano Valley Horsemans
Association's request that an
equestr ian committee be
established when they meet Wed·
nesday at 7 p. m. in the city hall.
The association has asked that
the committee be established to
advise the city's planning com-
mission on the keeping of horses
and establishment of riding
trails.
City Manager James Mocalis
has recommended that the coun-
cil instruct the Parks and
Recreation Commission to invite
the equestrian organization to
work with them.
Also on the council's agenda is
the recommendation that several
streets be added to the Inventory
of Hi!torical Sites and a recom-
mendation for amendments to
the city's Land Use Management
Code. ..
Sen. Jacob Javits; (R·N.Y.), •
called Ford's address "nonsensa-
tional and centrist.~· and said: "A
lot of it I liked. Some of it J didn't
like. I thought the recommenda·
tions on revenue sharing and re-
gulatory reform and the in-
telligence community were good.
I thought his references to un·
employment and the methods of
treating it were inadequate.'• ·
South Coast
Hospital Set
For Meeting
South Coast Community
Hospital will hold its annual
membership meeting and elec-
tion of members of the board at
7:30 p.m . Thursday in the
hospital auditorium.
Nine positions to the hospital
board of directors are at stake in
.the balloting.
Members whose terms are ex-
piring are William Beck, Jody
Billings, Harold Hahlbeck,
Lowell Phillips, Robert Thatcher
and Dayid Whiting. 1bree other
openings have been created by
resigriations of Pet.er Bramwell,
Bob Hurst and Robert Warner .
Era. Page A 1
PAGEANT. •
and:Concord Minutemen and the
signing of the Declaration of In·
dependence.
"This is going to be the nation's
3)0th anniversary and this dang
well better be a good show,"
Williamson said.
Service Held
ForLagunan
Mr. McCready
A private funeral service has
been held or Laguna Beach civic
leader Albert W. McCready, Jr.
who died Wednesday after a two-
year bout with cancer. He was 66
Mr. Mccready )Vas vice presi·
dent and managet or the Laguna
Beach office of Dean Witter Co.,
Inc. from 1966to1974. He was 1973
Chairman of the South Orange
County United way and received
the United Way Community
Leadership Citation in 1974 .
In addition, he was active in
the Laguna Beach Boys' Club.
the Rotary Club and the Laguna
. Beach Chamber of Commerce.
The deceased is survived by
his wife. Dorothy of the family 's
Emer a ld Ba)Y home; sons,
Burton and S~tt of the f arnily
home ; Bill of Slnta Barbara; sis·
ters, Mrs. Robert Byington of Los
Angeles and Mrs. George Beckl'ey
of San Diego; brother, Donald of
HWltington Beach and a grand-
daughter.
The family requests that
memorial contributions be made
to the American Cancer Society.
Funeral arrangements were
directed by Sheffer Laguna
Beach Mortuary. Interment is at
HollywOOd Cemetery.
ICEBREAKER'S ".
11UP .. :MVDDLED
SEATTLE (UPI) -The Polar ~tar, America's mightiest
1 c e break~ r, f I u n k e d its
shakedowncruise-itgotstuckin mudflats. •1 The Coast .Guard vessel the
fll'St icebreaker built in the U~ted
States in 20 years, was com.
missioned during the weekend.
The Polar Star set out in the
morning Monday and quickly
became stuck in the mud between
Blake Island and· the Great
Peninsula. It sat there 7~ hours
before tugboats, aided by the tide
pulled it clear. '
POLICI EXAMINE ICl'.N! 01' !X!CUTION MURDER IN IRVIH! ORANGE GR~._...,,,.,.
. l•nta Fe Spftnga M•n Pound Rlltdled With .URN Ne•r lanta An• frHW•Y : . . .
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L/SC OAILYPILOT
DbaWftl; Too
Medicare Cost
Up for: Elderly
BySYLVIA PORTE&
Tr you are an elderly and/or di.sabled American covered
by Medicare, you will pay more out-of.pocket for your ·
health can lo 1978 tban in any year since lhe program wu
begun.
-50 cents more a month, startlng this July for the d~·
U>rbW insurance partoCMedkare:
-$12 more on your hospital bills to e<>ver an increase in
the Medicare hospital deductible;
-A 13 percent increase in your co·payments toward the
cost of your hospital stays or more than 60 days and post·
hospital stays of more
than 21 days in skilled ·
DW"SUlg homes.
WRY THIS NEW
pinch on you, of all
groups of citizens?
Because of the relen-
Money's
Worth
tless upsurge in medical care costs. Since price restraints
were lifted in May 1974 physicians' fees and hospital costs
have been spiraling upward at about twice the rate of the
overall Consumer Price Index: costs of the M.edieare pro-
gram have far outrun earlier estimates. The deductibles
and co-payments that Medicare beneficiaries must pay out
of their own pockets, or through premiums for privately
purchased supplementary insurance, have soared propor·
lionately.
When Medicare was started in. July 1966, lbe pre mium
rate for the voluntary doctor bill insurance was set at $3 a
month -and this, with the matching $3 to be paid out of
federal r evenues for each elderly person enrolled, was
figured to cover t he c~ts of the program in the fi rst year.
Thereafter, rates were to be reviewed each year and raised
if necessary. By July 1974, the monthly premium rate had
more than doubled to $6. 70.
THEN CAME A RESPITE for Medicare beneficiaries
-but only because Congress made an error in drafting
amendments to the Social Security law intended to limit
future increases in the Medicare premium ratetothepercen-
tage by which Social Security cash benefits bad been raised
in a previous 12-m onth period.
The drafters messed up the description of which 12·
month period, however. The result was the premium could
not be raised last July, even though cash benefits under
Social Security had been hiked 11 percent in 1974. And there
was the chance that the premium rate would be froien for
another year -in the face of an additional 8 percent in· ..
crease in Social Security benefits in 1975.
But in the final hours before adjournment last month.
Congress acted to correct the drafting error -permitting
the premium rate to rise by 50 cents next July to $7.20.
This increase will come on top or a rise of 13 peTcent in
the amount of the Medicare hospital deductible. If you, a
Medicare ~neficiary, are admitted to this hospital this
year, you will be responsible for t he first $104 of your
hospital bills, up from S92 last year. Your deductible
(roughly the average cost of one day's hospitalization) was
$40 back in 1966.
WHEN THE AMOUNT of the hospital deductible goes
up, so do the co-payments by the s ame percentage as the de-
ductible increase. For instance, you'll pay $26 per day for
the 61st to 90th day of hospitalization, up from $23.
For each of the 60 ··ureume reserve" days you use after
you have exhausted your initial 90 days or hospitalization.
your co-payment will be $52, up from $46. As for nursing
homes, the co-payment for the 21sMo lOOth day of confine-
ment is now $13, an increase or $1 50 over 1975.
So far, White. House efforts to control the costs of
Medicare -s uc h as attempts to limit physician fee in-
creases -have s erved mainly lo shift costs to the elderly
and disabled. -PRESIDENT FORD nevertheless will call for more
"cost sharing" when he delivers his budget for the next fis-
cal year Wednesday, will propose -as he did last year, and
as President Nixon did before him -that Medicare deduc·
tibles and co-payments be raised still further for those with
short or average length hospital stays
This proposal, the President will argue. would "save"
more than $1.3 billion a year in the Medicare budget.
And from wher e would these savings come? From the
pockets of the elderly and/or disabled. Make you feel good.,
50-aere Site
New Construction
Center in Irvine
f l • .
Construction Center, an environmentally-protected in-
dustr ial development for s uc h uses a s construe· I
tion storage yards, recycling plants, vebicle'storage,
landscaping contractors and other related uses is being de-
veloped by the Irvine Industrial Complex (llC) in Irvine, it
was announced by Brian D. Hogg, JIC vice president of
sales and marketing.
THE so.ACRE develop-;screening are included with
ment is located in the Irvine each lot.
Industrial Complex, at the in-Construction Center will be
tersection of Jamboree and concentric In design with
Barranca Roads. landscaped industrial de·
Construction Center will be velopment fronting on
the first development of its perimeter roadways. The
t y p e in t b e Sou t be r n d rcular intei:ior roadway ~11
California area according to have extensive landscaping
Hogg. Sites will be offered for ~ith . ~on_stru~tion <;enter
sale with terms and financing identification signs at its two
available. entry points. Hogg said.
Improved lots will be de·
veloped and offered in incre-HOGG ANNOUNCED that
menl!s of one-acre or more. 17 acres of Cons truction
many with drive-through con· Center have already been r e-
figurations. Huvy landscap-served by a diverse mix of in·
lng will sc-reen the interior or dustrial users, including con.-
the development from nearby tract ors, s ub· con tractors •
roads, Hogg s t ated. 'vehicle storage and related
Landscapine •. fencing and industries.
.. ' . ..
ti
I 1 I ' t
i
f I
1
(
Al4 DAIL y i>ILOT ..
,
GENTLEMAN'S AGREEMENT THE BARBARJAN
AND THE GEISHA
THE fl.IM-FLAM MAN LAURA THE TIIREE FACES OF EVE
JANE EYRE PLANET OF THE APES THE AGONY AND THE ECSTASY THE GRAPES OF WRATH
HUSTI..ER THE LEFT HAND OF GOD OUR MAN FLINT HOW TO MABRY
A MlllIONAIRE
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Starting February 2nd on our wide DC-10 screen we're
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Newsreels, cartoons and Double Feature Films, you'll find
they add up to the finest entertainment package in the air today.
To reserve your.self a seat for the only Double Fea-
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TO DENVER: 8:30 AM*, 9:15 AM;, 10:15 AM (Ontario), 11:40 AM•. 2:00 PM. 5:05 PM•, 12:45 AM•.
TO HOUSTON: 6:25 AM;, 7:00 AM:f;, 9:30 AMt, 12:20 PM;, 12:25 PM;, 2:15 PMt, 3:51 PM;, 7:00 PMt, 7:45 PM;, 12:05 AM;, 1:00 AMt.
*DC· 10 without Pub tDC-10 with Pub (All fli~ts arc non-stop unless indiated with t for direct)
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0 . . '
Lot Angeles-71~: Beverly Hill' and San Fernando ViUey-986·1000: Burbank, Glendale and Paiadena-246-7t81: Long Beach-537-+400: Onttrio and Pomona-983· ; Orange Counry-537·3114:
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• K I
)
.
Today'H Closing
N.Y.Stoeks
EDITION
TEN CENTS
GNP. Declines ·second Year • Ill
• Row a
WASHINGTON <UPI) -The
nation's gross national product
declined for a record .second
straight year in 1975 despite signs
of solid economic recovery late
in the year, the Commerce
Department said today.
The GNP fell 2percent1n 1975
following a 1.8 percent drop in
1974, the department said in a
year~nd report.
Tbe department said a S.4 per·
cent rile In real GNP in the
f~ quarter was not enoqb to
offset earlier drops, leavtn1 the
nation's output of 1oods and
services ln decline for a record
second straight year.
There have never been back-
to-bac k yearly drops in the
broadest measure of national
C®Mmic activity since req>rd
keeplna began in 1946, the de·
partmeot said.
But the GNP report showed
clearly that the national
·economy was in recovery as the
year ended. Every major
category of e~onomic activity
rose from the third to the fourth
quarter, the report said.
Inflation also moderated con-
siderably in 1975. Inflation for
GNP purposes was estimated at
8.7 perceDt for the year. down
from 9. 7 percent in 1974.
The Commerce Department
said the GNP, after adjust·
ment for ln!lation, was estimated
at $1.186 trillion in 1975, down
from $1.210 trillion in 1974 and
$1.233 trillion in 1973.
GNP in the fourth quarter was
estimated at an annual adjusted
rate of $1.217 trillion, up from
$1.202 trillion in the third
quarter.
The third quarter GNP rose 13
percent rrom the second quarte-
when the 1974·75 recession of·
ficially ended.
Commerce officials said last
week they expected the GNP to
rise 6.5 percent in the fourth
quarter, but the preliminary
estimate released today was
lower.
Officials said it was not an in·
dkation or any weakness in the
economy.
The growth in retail sales and a
slowdown in inventory depletion
accounted for the improvement
in the fourth quarter, department
officials said. •
Although the 5.4 percent in
crease was less than half the 12
percent rise in the third quarter,
they said it was an indication
that recovery from the nation's
worst recession since World War
II was continuing.
Riley Loses ., LW Mortuary Battle ·
F our A rre s ted
Chase Follows
Trabueo Holdup
Four people s uspected of
burglarizing a Trabuco Canyon
store early today were arrested
by Orange County Sheriff's de-
puties following a harrowing
high speed chase that ended in El
Toro when the suspects' van
crashed into a ditch.
Deputies still are searching for
the driver of the vehicle. He
escaped from the car and jumped
a barbed wire fence seconds
before the van crashed.
The 4 a .m. burglary occurred
at the Country Store, 31 ,021
Trabuco Canyon Road, owned by ,
Gene Taylor, 42.
Taylor, who lives in a house
behind the store, said be was
awakened when be beard com-
motion coming from the store.
He said he got UP' and saw people
r/ carting merchandise awa7. As the burglars started to
leave, Taylor said he called up a
horse stable down the road to set
up a roadblock while his wife
called the sheriff's office.
Meanwhile, employe Ann Holl-
ingsworth gave chase in her
foreign car toward Cook's Comer
with Taylor almost behind her.
"Her Datsun started sputter-
ing on the way down to Cook's
Corner because it' was low on
gas, but she ran into the sheriff in
time to tell them which way they
went," Taylor said in a later in-
terview.
He said the employe's brother,
Henry Hollingsworth, owner of
the stable stood out in the middle
of the road to flag down the speed-
ing van but without success.
The pursuit finally ended when
dep1.Jties sealed off both ends of
the canyon and concentrated.
their pursuit on the weaving van.
Deputies said the driver, raced
by " patrol car standing in his
path on the roadway, leaped
from behind the wheel and ran
down an embankment.
The van and its four screaming
occupants was about five yards
behind him, deputies said. It
smashed into the barbed wire
fence seconds after the driver
scaled it.
Booked into county jail on
buralary charges were Boni
Lynn Logt, 19, of Wood.land Park.
Colo; Gary Wayne Goodin, 18,
and Thomas Wayne Moss. 20,
both of Santa Ana. Also booked
and receiving treatment at
Orange County Medical Center
for cuts and bruises was David
Smedley South, 20, of 1933 Meyer
Place, Costa Mesa.
Deputies said burlgary
charges may be superseded by
federal charges since the the. <See CHASE, Page A%)
Lawmen in lroine
Seek Death Motive
By DOUGLAS FJm'ZSCJIE
OUlle Dellr 11'19'1 .....
Irvine police continued today
to probe for clues that would lead
to the slayer of a Santa Fe Spr·
ings man whose bullet-riddled
body was found in an Irvin~
orange grove Monday.
The dead man was identified
as Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela.
42, of Santa Fe Spri~gs .
Valenzuela, whose occupation re·
mained unknown today, left a
widow, Zoila, and six children,
according to Irvine Detective
Steve Nash.
Nash described the victim of
the execution-style slaying as
"average Joe Citizen," with no
police record and no record of af.
flliation with any of the gangs
that prowl the southeast Los
Angeles Cou_nty area.
Valenzuela's body was dis·
covered by an Irvine wom&11 who
was jogging through an oranae
grove along the Santa Ana
Freeway east of Culver Drive at
10:30 Monday morning.
Police said the man bad been
shot several times in the back
with a small caliber gun. Nash
•efused to elaborate, contending
that the information may lead to
the suspects.
"We have a number of leads
we are working on,'• Nash said.
Valenzuela was shot in the
orange grove and left lying face
down next to a tree for more than a day before his body was found
by the Jocger, police said.
He was slain at a spot more
than 100 yards from the nearest
residence.
I Coroner·s deputies refused to
add any details to the shooting.
Nash said, "I stayed up all
night trying to figure . out a
moUve for the shooting. l
rouldn 't come up with anything."
nie dead man still bad bis
wallet, apparently ruling out rob-
bery as a motive, Nash said.
. Secretary Allegea Beating
'
STANFORD CAP) .-A Stanford University
secretary has filed an $50,000 damaae suit against her t>Oss, a professor ol psychiatry, allegJna he went Into
a fit of anger and beat her up in ber office. .
Barbara Honeaer, • stanford ll'•duate student
and secretary. filed suit in Santa Clara County
Su pert or Coi.lrt 6llelinl that Dr. JCarlPribram on Oct.
29 ''Went Into 1, flt fl ariiet" and struck her in the face
and about the head, ansaslllnl the A-am. ol her
glasses ai•lnst her temple and the bn~of bet noee.
Prlbram bad nooommenton the atlom. .
Univenitr. police invesU,ated the cldent and
filed a report with the diatrict attorney, wbo dld not
press charges. . The _secretary. ineanwhlle, has been atven'. a tem-
porary job 11' anotb« departm~nt.
O.lly f'llGt Staff PMto
WHEELS GET OIL BEFORE F=REEDOM TRAIN PULLS OUT FOR YUMA, ARIZ.
Thousands Braved Long Lines to See Exhibit During Two-Day San Juan Stop
I ,ines Long
For Freedom
·Train Tours
The waiting lines lengthened
today as more and more people
descended on San Juan
Capistrano to visit the American
freedom train before it pulls out
for its next stop -Yuma, Ariz.
About 1,500 tickets for the train
were due to go on sale at 4: 30
p. m. Coordinators said tickets
would be sold up until 10 p.m.
<Related stories, picture Page
A3).
Waits for of up to two and one-
half hours were reported Mon-
day, with the average wait about
an hour: and fifteen minutes,
coordinators said.
The wait bad lengthened to
about three hours br this morn-
ing. .
Although traffic problems
were reported to have occurred
at both Attaheim and San Diego,
the train 's two previous stops, all
was reported moving smoothly in
San Juan.
* * * 3-hour Wait
.For Niguel
Train Vis it
Battles Likely
Ford -T alk Incites
Congre ss Conflict
. WASHINGTON CU PI) -
Congressional reaction to Presi-
dent Ford's State of the Union ad-
dress shows there will be some
battles when the Democratic ma-
jority in the House and Senate
acts on his Republican program
in a presidential election year.
Republicans generally ap-
plauded the speech, but most
Democrats dismissed it as elec·
tion-year rhetoric signaling a
retreat into the past.
Congressional conservatives
responded favorably while GOP
liberals tempered their praise.
Sen. Barry Goldwater <R·
Ariz.} said, "If this country is to
be saved from disaster, it will re·
quire presidents with the coura~e
and foresight or Mr. Ford. His
strong efforts to reduce the over·
HIGHLIGHTS OF FORD'S
ANNUAL ADDRESS, A4
burdening power of the federal
government s hould be applauded
by every taxpaying American."
But Rep. John Brademas <D·
Ill.) found the program "about as
forward·looking a~ the one
George Ill had for the Colonies 200
years ago.··
Assistant Senate Democratic
leader Robert C. Byrd said:
Speaker Carl Albert, hoarse
from nu and daubing at his nose
with a tissue. said Ford's speech
·"was a typical Republicap State
of the Uni on message in an elec-
tion year ... not really anything
new."
Senate Republican Leader
Hugh Scott praised Ford's pro·
posal to create jobs; for suggest·
ing a plan to promote investment
in stocks and for proposing a con-
solidation of grant programs.
Sen. Hubert Humphrey CD·
Minn .) said he tl)Ought the Presi·
dent's speech was "upbeat" but
failed to offer a s ubstantive pro·
<See REACT, Page A2)
Boy Drowns
In Anaheim
Artificial respiration failed to
save the life of a 4.year·old
Anaheim boy found floating in an
apartment complex swimming
pool Sunday evening, an Orange
County Coroner's Office
spokesman said today.
Neighbors o f De lbert
Yearwood spotted him in the pool
and used mouth·to-moutb re-
suscitation in an effort to bring
Board
Divid ed
O n I ssu e
Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Riley has lost his last-
ditch bid to prevent construction
of a mortuary just outside a gate
of the Leisure World retirement
<'ommunity in Laguna Hills. The
:-iearness bothers the retirees.
A majority of supervisors vot-
<'d today for Riley's proposed
<'mergency zoning ordinance
prohibiting mortuary construc-
tion adjacent to Leisure World ,
but a four-fifths vote was re-
quired.
Supervisors Ralph Diedrich
and Ralph Clark voted against
the o rdinance, contending
McCormick Mortuary had
purchased the property at Calle
Aragon and Moulton Parkway in
good faith based on the current
zoning designation.
Riley's bid was aimed at halt·
ing issuance o( a building permit
for the mortuary, which has
already been approved by the
·county planning commission.
The effect or Riley's ordinance
would have been to send the mat·
ter back to the planning com-
mission for 60 days of r e -
consideration before supervisors
again acted on the matter.
In presenting his case, Riley
said "It appears the site impact
is.not the problem . but it is more
of a psychological thing."
About half of the senior citizens
who attended the meeting sup·
ported Riley's move, but another
group of Leisure World residents
who live in the immediate vicini-
ty of the affected gate spoke
against any delay in construction
of the mortuary.
Phillip Steiner, who has lived
in the community for 12 years,
said the mortuary is ''out of
place, depressing and in bad
taste."
Supervisors were · told that
1,400 signatures had been
gathered on petitions in opposi-
tion to the mortuary-about one-
tentb of the residents of the com-<See PERMIT, Page A?)
Viejo Homeo'Wners
Plan Skating Party
A skating party to raise funds
for the Barcelona Homeowners
Association will be held Saturday
from 6 to 8 p.m. in the Mission
Viejo Skating Rink, 25410
. Margerite Parkway.
Admission will be $1.5(r per
person and an additional 50 cents
for rental of the skates.
What price fTeedom? Well, for
1,000 Niguel Hills Jwlior High
School students who visited the
Freedom Train Monctay, the
price was about a three hour wait
"Ford's rhetoric is Reaganisb. It
falls to be realistic." him around. Paramedics con· ~·----------....._ tinued the treatment when they
arrived at the scene but the boy in line. · And House Majority Leader
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. predicted
the Democrats "will not stand for
the status quo or cutbacks in pro-
grams that help the people.··
was pronounced dead.
The boy lived with his parents
at the complex, located at lb854
Magnolia Ave.
According to a secretary at the
school who accompanied the
large group of 13 and H·year-olds
to the train, it didn't help to have
reservation$ to get on the travel-Lnc Bicentennial exhibit during it.a stop at San Juan capistrano.
"We had a three-hour wait,"
said the secretary who asked not
•to be quoted by name. "To con·
trol that many students fot three
houn was a dllaster. ••
2 From Saddleback
Students at Niguel Hllls, locat· ed ln Laguna Nipel, were the . first of. several groupS trom
schoob In the Caplstrano Unl!led
School District to vlsft the
Freedom Train durtq lts two-
Held on Pot Raps
Two Saddleback Valley men
and 11 others arrested over the
day_stop. ·
Tbe sectttary said the students
arrived at the trail\ .it 1n td·
vance of the 12:30 p.m;=a;-tloa. time. They Weft tr eel
to the train by school bQHS.
· weeltel\d in connection with a $5
mUUon marijuana smuggling
scheme were arraigned on
federal ~barges Nooday before a
U.S. maalatrate ln Santa
Bar ......
Problem wu the ~ had to
lHv• 1tarUng at i p .m . to
trat\aport students at other
1cbool1 to tbeir homes after,
schooJ. That left the Niiuel Hilla
ltudenfs slnnded at the train un·
tn •~4p.m. •belltM.,..'!;. •.
·tumid, tbe1ectetarrtma;
& ·' ! I
Philip Samuel Moskios, ZT. or
Lqona Hllls, and Gary Eugene
GmedJ.,, 28, of El Toro. are be-
lftl held in Ueu of $100,000 ball
~Kb PJ!edinc th~lr pre-trial hear-u.p.
)
tempt to land eight tons or Mex·
ican marijuana by boat onto the
California coast between Oxnard
and Ventura.
Moskios was char1ed with
possession of marijuana (or sale
aDd Stnedler for aJ'.OUlaUni con·
traband materials.
A third Otaqe c.ounty man,
Dennis Latter, 33. of Buena Park,
was charged With poaeasion of
marijuana for aale and ii be1.na
held in lieu of $100,000 bond.
The addreues of the Orange
County men were not being re-
leased by the Ventura County
Sberiff'1 Department.
·Coast
Weather
Fair. warm and dry !
weather through Wednes-,
day, according to the
weather service with highs:·
at the beaches 74 rising to
S> inland. Overnight lows
42to48.
INSID E T ODA V
Still tryiftg to aaaemble your
Chriatmcu iohotchomacollit ·
th.al eome with A~on
diT«tionl? For pouibl.e .as~
liltance, IU Page Bl.
•••ex
_,Y_lentce Al ...._ U t L..M....,. "'' ............ All ~ ......... ..._ A4
0........ DMOr-..0.., ~ aa M,tt-11 a--• ., ...._ ••.a ._....._. All _.....,,__ All ...,..,... ,.....,.. aw
• l ln•111t ., ._.._,__ Ata..11
...._. AH•U T....... Atl ... ......... , ... .,..,...,.. .,
llM I d at..... ae ..... 11111 aJ ......... ..... --~ ... -·
..
2 DAIL V PILOT SB Tulldly, Januaty 20, 1878
U~ITe ........
PRESIDENT FORD DELIVERS STATE OF UNION
Behi~d Him, Nelson Rockefeller and Carl Albert
ff'rorn Page Al
REACT. • •
gram
Rep. Al Ullman (0 -0re.)
chairman of the tax-writing Ways
:md Means Com mittee, called
Ford's proposals "fragmentary"
and s aid, "We need something
long range to meet the inflation
threat and long range to meet the
Social Security problem."
Sen. Jacob Javits, CR-N.Y.),
called Ford's address "nonsensa-
tional and centrist." and said: "A
lot of it I liked. Some of it I didn't
like. I thought the recommenda-
ttons on revenue s haring and re-
~ulatory reform and the in-
telligence community were good.
I thought his r eferences to un-
employment and the methods of
treatinl? it were inadequate.··
Sen. John McClellan, <D·Ark. ),
chairman of the Appropriallons
Committee, was not happy about
the recommendation for increas-
tnj? Social Security taxes.
· • J think people th ink their taxes
are as high as they can be right
now, .. McClellan said.
Sen. William Proxmire, <D·
Wis. l. chairman of the Senate
Banking Committee. said he
hoped Congress would stick to the
President's proposed $394 billion
budget but doubted it. In other
areas, the program amounted to
"too much of a stand-pat opera-
tion," he said.
House Republican Leader John
Rhodes said he did not feel Ford's
proposed tax cut, with a nominal
price tag of $10 billion, was infla-
tionary. He said there was a feel-
ing in Congress "that it is time to
turn back some of his dollars to
the American taxpayer ··
Man Leaps
From Bridge
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A
man who told an impromptu au-
dience he was deeply depressed
for lack of work counted "one two
three," and leaped to his death
from the Golden Gate Bridge.
The deadly drama was wit-
nessed Monday by Mi chael
Smith. a student, his fri end Jack
Sullivan, and officers whotrled to
talk the victim out of killing
himself
ORANGE COAST
S8
Film Machine
Buy Delayed
In Saddleback
Saddleback Valley Unifi ed
School District trustees withheld
approva l Monday for the
purchase of a $7,641 film inspec-
tion machine until they given
more information about the need
for the equipment.
Their inaction, according to
Trustee Carole Neustadt, is just
the beginning of more questions
they will be asking of expen-
ditures which will be coming
before them while they try to
whittle away at the defi cit pro-
jected for next year's budget.
In De cembe r , trus tees
authorized administrators to ad-
vertise for bids for furniture,
equipment and services needed
·for new construction. The mm in-
spection machine was to go into
tbe Instructional Res ource
•'Center and Superintende nt
Richard Welte had recom-
mended that the low bid on it be
accepted.
But after Dr. Robert Ford, who
was substituting for the ill
superintendent, read the recom-
mendation, three trustees pre-
sent quietly paused before con-
sidering the suggestion.
Mrs. Neustadt questioned its
need in terms of the district's
educational programs.
She w as told it will be needed to
save the labor of checking films
so, if damaged, they can quickly
be repaired.
This, however, was not enough
to satisfy the board members.
The issue was tabled until they
receive more in~rmalion.
-F,....PageAJ
CHASE •..
store was entered through the
section taken up by the Trabuco
Post Office.
Loss at the store included beer,
rolled coins and cigarettes.
Homeowners ·Meet
The general meeting of the
Barcelona Home Owners As -
sociation will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday in Glen Yermo School,
26400 Trabuco Road, Mission Vle-
jo. Greg Currins, a member of
the Mission Viejo Company's
architectural committee, will be
the guest speaker.
\ .
-'Open Lune~'
Issue in. ·Viejo
Education goes beyond math
and science books.
It should even include "open
IWlch" and the opportunity for
students to prove their maturity,
accordinil to Kelly Cox, president
of the Associated Student Body
at Mission Viejo High School.
The young man was elected to
his school post with open lunch as
one of his campaign platforms.
Now he and Tim Grant, the
school's student representative
Hinshaw
Grilling
Concluded
By TOM BARLEY
Of tlle O.lly ~ ... Meff
A long and often heated cross
examination of Congressman An-
drew Hinshaw ended Monday in
Orange County Superior Court
when Assistant District Attorney
Michael Capizzi announced he
had no further questions for the
former county assessor.
Hinshaw ,.SJ, breathed an audi-
ble sigh of relief and slumped
back on the witness stand as pro-
sec ut or Caaizzi told Judge
Robert P . Kneeland that be was
through with the final defense
witness.
Hinshaw now faces cleanup
questions from his two defense
lawyers and possible· further
minor questions from Capizzi
before Judge Kneeland orders
the final phase of the bribery
trial-final arguments and jury,
instructions.
Lawf ers for both sides agreed
that it is possible the issue
will go to the jury later this week.
Capizzi will ask the jury to find
Hinshaw guilty on three felony
counts of bribery, all three acts
allegedly committed while the
Newport Beach Republican was
serving as county assessor.
It is alleged that Hinshaw ac-
cepted free ster eo equipment
from the Tandy Corporation and
an additional $1,500 campaign
contribution from Tandy Vice
President James Buxton in re-
turn for assessment favors that
allegedly saved the Garden
Grove firm m any thousands of
dollars.
It is further alleged that the
40th District representative
solicited a bribe from a lawyer
during an assessment appeals
hearing affecting Beckman
Jnstruments of Fullerton.
Hinshaw has admitted receiv-
ing two stereo sets without pay-
ing for them and has conceded
that Buxton gave him $1,500 in
campaign contributions.
But he has firmly denied from
the witness stand that be ever
suggested to Beckman's lawyer
during the appeals bearing that
the firm s hould buy $1,000 worth
of seats at a Hinshaw testimonial
dinner.
Del Cerro
PTA to Meet
All interested members of the
community are invited to attend
the Del Cerro Parent Teachers
Association general meeting at
7:30 p.m . Thursday in the
school's multipurpose room.
The Saddleback Valley
Unified School District's fman-
cial condition and the ways of ob-
t aining community input on
future budget cuts will be dis-
cussed during the meeting.
The program will also include
a presentation by third, fourth
and fifth grade classes on the
Science Curriculum Improve·
mentStudy.
to the SaddJeback Valley Unified
School Diltrict board, are cam·
pai1ntnf to get trustee's aP-
proval o their proposal.
Although trustees are not due
to act on the proposal unW their
next meeting, their concerns/of
what might happen ln the com.
munlty if the students are al-
lowed off campus at noon were
discussed brteny Monday.
"If you give us more
privileges, then we've got to ex-
erciJe more responsibility," said
Grant.
"I really think we should be
given the chance. That's all
we're asking for."
Trustee Loa Young asked a
number of questions about im-
plementation of the program,
handling of violations and the
possibiUty of its being revoked
after it is instituted.
Grant promised he would have
the answers to these and more
questions by the next board
meeting. In the interim, he said,
he will meet and discms the issue
with the trustees and ad-
ministrators.
Both Mission Viejo and El Toro
High School, which is also being
considered for the open lunch,
have completed surveys which
indicate students favor the pro-
posal while the faculty oppo6es
it.
Jane Simon
Honored at
SUCCUMBS AT 82
Mrs. P~ul Nluen
Dorothie
Nissen
Succumbs
Mrs. Dorotbie "Dodie" Nissen,
62, a Harbor Area resident for
more than 25 years, died Monday
at Hoag Memorial Hospital ln
Newport Beach. A memorial
mass will be said next Monday ln
C-Osta Mesa.
Mrs. Nissen had been active In ·Le• W Jd a variety of community and 18Ure or .. family int~rests since moving to
the area in 1948. Among those
Former educator Jane Simon pursuits were active roles in the
has been chosen Leisure Worlc;ter Orange County Philharmonic
of the month for February, an Society, Child Guidance Center
honor bestowed upon outstanding of Orang, County and the
residents of the Laguna Hills re-Children's Home Society.
tirement community. An avid golf er until illness
Mrs. Simon, of 603-A Avenida slowed her pace, she held mem-
Sevilla, is the second recipient of bersbip in the Irvine Coast Coun-
the new program. An oil painting try Club and the Southern
of her hu been commissioned California Women's Golf Al.-
and wi\l hang in the main hall of sociation.
the Leisure World sales office for A native of Minnesota, Mrs.
one month after which it will be Nissen studied music at St.
presented to her. Teresa Conversatory of Mmic ln
M.rs. Simon, a native of Lon-Winona, Minn., and attended
don, England, came to Los Wmona State University prior to
Angeles at the age d. seven and her marriage.
has remained a Californian She and her husband, N. Paul
since. Nissen, moved to the Harbor
After attending UCLA, she Area in 1948 when he ac~pted a
began a teaching career which position of assistant publisher of
spanned 39 years, starting in the Costa Mesa Globe-Herald
South Whittler where at 22 she later the Daily Pilot. Mr. Nisse~
was a principal in a small coun-· retired in 1969.
try school that bad an oil well in
the backyard.
Mrs. Simon moved to Leisure
World ln 1973 and devotes much
of her time to sculpture, wood
carving, ceramics, and a SUnday
discussion group which offers a
memory course. •
Fr .. P.,,eAJ
PERMir ..
munity.
John P. Pack, a retired
minister, spoke for the
mortuary, saying it is a good use
for the land and •'people must
face the fact that everyone ls go-
ing to die sometime.''
Bill Sweeney, attorney for the
McCormick chain of mortuaries,
s aid planning has been
meticulous to make the facility
conform to the surrounding re-
sidential areu.
He said more than $350,000 has
been invested in the project to
date and that the mortuary has a
legal vested interest in the pro-
perty that would be upheld in-
court.
Eatery Burm
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Bill's Place. which bad a reptrta·
tion for 1ervtng San Franclsto's
best hamburgers, has been
destroyed by a fire that did an
aUmated '100,000 damage.
Survivors include her husband,
of the f amity home in Newport
Beach; five children: Mrs. Joan
Starr of Las Vegas, Mrs. Susan
Hemington of Laguna Beach,
Linda Nissen of Balboa Island,
and Greta Nissen and James
Nissen of the home; a sister,
Mrs. Elaine Baker of)eosta
Mesa; and one grad'cbild.
Marla Hemington.
The memorial mass Monday
Jan. 26, will be said by Msgr'
Thomas Nevin of St. Joachim's
Church, of which· Mrs. Nilsen was a member,
At her wish, Mrs. Nissen's
ashes will be scattered at sea.
Memorial contributions can be
sent to the American Cancer
Society, the famUy said.
Glithr Tlwft
Loss $15,000
Hobie Alter's newest line of
merchandise -radio controlled
model &liders -has proved a
popular item, at least with
thieves who stole $15,000 worth of
tbeplanes.
Officials at Coast Catamaran,
2026 McGaw Avenue, Irvlne, told
police an inventory check
showed that 71 of the eight-foot
wtnnpan 1Cllden were misslu.
Th-•Of•"'9t (Ol\t Oa1ly P·lot . .W,l"-"•<-h ·~<Ot'T"t-o
~nf'd tN N ll"W'\ Pfl'\\ •• Shibhtl'WCI by t"t Ot-. (o.e.,, Pvt>l•\.h•t1Qf'O'l ~n., X~ .. f'~•I~•,,.
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I'°" I\ IM>ll\,...d ~lu<dAy\ and W-Y\ Th~
pr1r1f 1p-.1 outA1\I\ nq p11nt i\ .ti J.J) Wt\t S.y
5ttrHt CO'\t• llf'\li. (•htorn••t2'21
RobertN.W~ Pr•\I0.,.1 •I'd Putlll
Jack R. Curlev •
VIit Pfhl<ltnt •nd 0.N•AI M.IW\lllr
Voting Machine Issue D_elayed
Thomas Keevll
Cdllor
Thomas A. Murphine
~•n•Q•no ldll.,
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~in.c-v., •• , ,._°".., ,.,_.,,.
''-""''·-4ts-o6JO
··-·
'
By FREDERICK SCllOEMERL
Of .. O.Oy"llllillft
The purchase of a $8,300
machine that would record and
display votes taken at school
board meetines was placed ln
limbo Monday ni1bt by
Capistrano Unified School OiJ-
trict trustees.
At the end of m«e than 30
minutes of dl.scuasion cm the ll·
sue, the board voted S to 1 to table
any action on the P\ll'd'llM until
Individual tru1teea ba.e the
chance to watch ihe 1ystem ln ac-
tion and dlacua1 it.a merits with
members of a1encies where it it
UHd.
'nte board vbted Jan. 5 to r e-
consider earlier actton approv· ·
inf pur-ehue of the machine.
It bad been propoeed that the
vote tallier be installed tn the
board room of the new Education
Center which will open lD San
Juan Capistrano in Marth.
Under the machine syatem,
trustees would vote by preulng
buttons mounted ln ~ table ln
front of them. Tbe 'Jlna1 vote
would be dltplayed aft.er all In·
dJvidual votes were cat.
Supt . .Jerome Tbornllet d•
fended the purcbue ol the
system. He aatd it would do awq
with vote "influenctnc'' that ex·
lsta under tbe current valce vet•
l)'IWn. .
· 'l"bomlley uld .ome tnllteee
chani• their votes depe..Uq on
votes previously cast by other
members ..
TrUJtee Stephen Smith bf Lacuna Nlruel aald the wq a
<
trustee YOtes la a penonal mat·
ter, ne:n lf be la 1wqed by the
wa1 another board mt .. ber votea. He 1ald he dJdn't Uke the
. Idea of u1ln1 a machine to
cbaqe personal behavior.
Smith Hid he would qpport
the pqrcbue ooty if lt would
make 1cbool board meeUn11 more efficient •. Thormle:1 lakt It
would.
Tbon1le1 noted tbat tbe
machine would be purebuect
with acbool conetnlcUoa boDcl
IDCIM1. not ..... a1 fund~.
-. tber'9for9, ...... DOt be tak· Ina IDOMJ aw., 6'0ID teaeber
1aJartn or ed•caUonal pro.
ll"AIDI• 0 1t'• • toadl1 • ., to 8pmd
ban4 tmda la the mlddle Ol a
bond campelp." ......... cl• ,.
<
·Overton, a San Clemente resl·
dent, who ls worklnl OD bebalf ol
a $30 million construction bond
bsue that wlll lace voters na.t
March.
·'The price i1 outr11eou1, ••
uid Trustee 'Robert Hurst of
Latun• Nlauel. He propoeec1 the
1UCc..aful motion tbat -the item .
be tabled until board memben
had a chance to NYiew .,.. al
limilar m•bJ.w = publi~ aie.ndel. Trwtee Whltj
al Sm Clement• cut the ..ae
YGte aaatut tM maUca.
&ipportln& laform1U. ,,..
Mated to tl'ultMI ..... *"* tbe maddu ii ..... .,, ... dd.a
Of Newport B•a:i,, Orua•. Plaeotta. s.ai ... Jlablt,. taBeada. lndlO,laill.....,..
ao4 Bantow. amoaa au.n. ·
·-
Chief's
Rocky
Dilemma
Jerome Tbomsley. Capistrano
Untiled School District superin-
tendent since July, bas been in a
rather rocky sltuaUoo.
lt'1 embarrassing, he said.
"In hindsight, I publicly admit
lt wu not a prudent deeision on
my part."
Several months ago, be bought
a house which bad a yard which
sprouted no lawn but a lot of
''Jar1e, heavy rocks.'' Perferring
the lawn, be asked the district's
maintenance chief, 1lill Dawson
where be could hire someone to
carry the rocka away.
The rocks are valuable, the
maintenance chief said. If the
superintendent could wait, the
district may need them some-
day.
The rocks were n ed last
week at San Clemen e High
School, Thomsley said.
Dawson asked him if h was
still willinJ to give the r ks to
the dlatrict. Thornsley s d he
was and district crews we out
to his home and picked them up.
A neighbor, however, objected
and called a local newspaper. He
thought the superintendent was
having district crews do bis
yard work.
Tbornsley said today that was
not the cue.
"It's clear that I had no inten·
tion of defrauding the school dis-
-trict," he said. Still, the situation
has evolved into much public
crlticilm.
"I've publicly commented it
was not a wise decision and I just
accept criticism of it," he said.
He said district trustees are
also satiafied with his action.
It ia common for district crews
to plck up g i rts, as used
refrigerators or trees, from the
public, the superintendent .said.
Esperanza
Pool Fund
Progressing
Mel Packel, principal at
Esperanza School, promises he'll
get a pool for his students
"anyway he can."
Since the middle of December,
when his fund raising effort for
the pool at the 1cbool for traina·
ble mentally retarded
youngsters began, $4,400 bas
been collected.
Although architects have
estimated the pool will cost
$34,000, Packel is optimistic he'll
get the needed funds. J;le is
especially pleased with one pool
manufacturer's word that the
facility can be constructed for on·
ly$17,000.
If that estimate proves ac·
curate, he said, he's about a third
of the way there.
Packel said be has sent letters
to 61 foundations and organiza.
tions asking for a donation. But so far, be said, the contributions
have come from individuals and
students at.Serrano and La Paz
Intermediate Schools.
Also, the 2C).30 Club of El Toro
has scheduled a swim·a ·thon at
Mission Viejo High School on
March 7 to help raise the needed
f unda.
"l Just gotta have a pool for
thole kids," Packel said.
The principal explained that
swimming is the best kind or
therapy for his students who
come from Laguna Beach,
Irvine, San Clemente and San
Juan Capistrano as well as the
SaddJeback Valley. ~ause it
improves muscle coordination,
·he said, it speeds up the learning
process.
Also, be said, 80 percent of his
students participate in the state's
Special Olympics and they would
use the pool for practice.
Ground should be broken
March 1 for expansion of the pre-
sent school building. A worbhop,
sewing and art center and IYUl·
naslum are included In the.
$$13,000 project.
However, the expansion Is be. lni financed by state funds which
cannot be uaed for the pool.
Nixon Na11M
Off FreewOy
SACRAllBNTO (UPI>"
-A Senate cornmlttee bu
dedded to remove fonner
PHtldent Nixon's name
from a l~·mlle·lons
Southern Call fornla '.r;:ar..:....1atJon <SCR8'7>
bJ ~-Hate Holden U>·
calHr City), w~ de-.
..... tile •trelch al l'Olld
• ttie Marina Del Rey Fl'M?t9• the ·name ·that ew1'1111U7 eppean on the n.lqu.
Tb• meuure wu •P-
· ~•tHI' Monday by the
1'DaDct CommJttee on a IN .,. wtua no debate
---~to\latGoor.
J
..
.Irvine T oday's Clo Ing
N.Y.Stoeks
TEN CENTS
·: Demo.crats Critical ·of F oi-d Speech
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Congressif.nal reaction to Presi-
dent Ford s State of tbe Union ad-
dress shows there will be some
battles when the Democratic ma-
jority in the House and Senate
acts on bis Republican program
in a presidential election year.
Republicans generally ap·
plauded the speech, but most
Democrats dismissed it as elec-
tion-year rhetoric signaling a
r 'e t r e a t i n t o t h e p a s t .
Congressional conservatives
responded favorably while GOP
liberals tempered their praise.
burdening power of the federal
government should be applauded
by every taxpaying American.''
But Rep. John Brademas (D-
Sen. Barry Goldwater <R· HIGHLIGHTS OF FORD'S
Ariz.) said, ''If this country is -to ANNUAL ADDRESS, A4 J>e saved f~om dis~ter, it will re-. -Ill-.-)-fo_un_d_t_h_e_p_r_og_r_a_m_"-abo,,,,_u..,.t_as_ quire presidents with the courage
and foresight of Mr. Ford. His forward-looking as the one
strong efforts to reduce the over-GeorgeJilbadfortheColonies200
O.lly Piiot Sl.-ft Plloto POLICE EXAMINE SCENE OF EXECUTION MURDER IN IRVINE ORANGE GROVE
Santa Fe Springs Man Found ~iddled With Bullets Near Santa Ana Freeway
Slaying Clues Sought
Irvi:tw Polwe Prol>e 'ExecutWn Murrkr' Cmue
ByDOUGLASFRITZSCllE
OfllM Deity Pi .......
Irvine pallce continued today
to probe for clues that would lead
to the slayer of a Santa Fe Spr-
ings man whose bullet-riddled
body was found in an Irvine
orange grove Monday.
The dead man was identified
as Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela,
42, of Santa Fe SJlrings.
Valenzuela, whose occupation re-
·Near <:rash Site
mained unknown today, lert a
widow, Zoila, and six children,
according to Irvine Detective
·Steve Nash.
Nub described the victim of
the execution-style slaying as
"average Joe Citizen," with no
police record and no record of af.
filiation with any of the gangs
that prowl the southeast Los
Angeles County area.
Valenzuela's body was dis·
covered by an Irvine woman who
was jogging through an orange
grove a1ong the Santa Ana
Freeway east of Culver Ori ve at
10:30 Monday morning.
Police said the man had been
shot several times in the back
with a smaJl calibe.r gun. Nash
refused to elaborate, contending
that the.information may lead to
the suspects.
"We have a number of leads
we are working on,•· Nash said.
Fluor Landing Pads
Get lr'7ine Okay
· Valenzuela was shot in the
orange grove and left lying face
down next to a tree for more than
a day before bis body was found
by the jogger, police said.
He was slain at a spot more
than 100 yards from the neatest
residence.
Coroner's deputies refused to
add any details to the shooting.
Nash said, "I s tayed up all
night trying to figure out a
motive for the shooting I
couldn't come up with anything."
F1uor COrp. got the nod from
Irvine planning commissioners
Monday to install a pair of
helicopter landing pads at the
·firm's new site in Irvine.
Ironically, planners noted, the
helicopter pads are at almost the
same place on the site where two
·light planes crashed, killing
three men after a mid-air col-
lision Sunday. . .
According to Plannmg Direc-
tor Eddie Peabody Jr. the crash
Sunday was not seen as a key
part of the consideration of the
proposed belipad facility.
The helicopters. which will
sbutt.le Fluor executives
throughout the Los Angeles area,
Coas t
Weathe r
Fair, warm and dry
weather through Wednes-
day, according to the
weather service with bigm
at the beaches 74 rising to
80 inland. Overniaht lows
42 to48.
INSIDE TODAY
StUI tf'l/fng to a11tmblc JIOt#'
Chrlltmcu whatchamacallit
that cam• wfth Annn1an
dirtctfon1? l"or po11itu • cu-
. .tdonc•. IH Pao-Bl. I
... x
-..;....,... AJ..... .,
~~· AU ........... Atl ~ Al ............ M ~ ... , . ._~
CIMlkt •• • M.tt-11 o...... •. ...... "'' F ,.,, .... ~ Atl .... At..... .... • IJ ............ A1MI .,,.,, ~........ .,.
--~·"·a ,....... ., ...... !.... .... '" ,_AMII •,. ......... M .... ~ ..
are to make about 120 arrivals
and departures a month.
The fiieht path will take them
directly across Orange County
Airport, a route seen as the sa!est
by airport officials.
That approach, said Peabody,
will keep the Bell Jetranger
206-B helicopters in sight of the
airport control tower and pre-
sumably in a safer landing pat·
tern.
The helicopters prod~ce 70 to
79 decibels of noise at 250 feet, a
noi.$e level compared to that pro·
duced by a deisel truck by Plan·
ning Commissioner Basil
''Bill ''V ardoulis.
The helicopters should not be
beard from Park West apart·
ments, three.quarters of a mile
away. The apartments are the
n earest residences to the
heliport. .
F1uor already bas received the
approval of the Orange County
Airpori Land Use Commission,
Orange County Airport.. and· the
Federal A viatlon Administra-
tion. Aprpov al ls still needed from
the California Aeronautics
Board.
Planning commissioners al·
lowed Fluor to build the helipads
as a right of land
ownership, but asked the city
councU to pass an urgency or·
dinance that would require a con·
dlttona1 ute permit for future
belipada tn the Industrial areas
~theclty.
Mother Sit-in
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A San
Francisco mother is ataitng a
alt-in at a 1tato omce with her
16-year-old autlatlc tcJD. Marie
White, 51, vowed Monday to stay
until the state provides the re-
babllltative aervlces 1be wants
for ~ mentally retl:rded son
Doualai,
. ~
The dead man still bad his
wallet', apparently ruling out rob-
bery as a motive, NashsaJd
Council Seeks
Dart Gun Ban
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A Ci-
ty Council committee bas voted
to ask the Legislature to classify
the Taser electronic dart gun as
an illegal weapon.
The state, county and federal
affairs committee voted Monday
to ban the shock device following
testimony by police officials and
the weapon's manufacturer.
Nixon Name
Of/Freeway
SACRAMENTO <UPI>
-A Senate committee has
decided to remove former
President Nixon 's name
from a 3\ia -mlle-lonf
Southern California
freeway.
, The lefislation (SCR6'7)
by Sen. Nate Holden, U>·
Culver City), wpuld de·
•isnate the 1tretcb of road
as the Marin,..,,el Rey
Freew.Y, the' name that
currently ai>pears on the
roadatins.
The measure was ap-
eroved Monda y by the
Finance Comm ttee Oft a •
10-0 vote with no debate
and-wu sent to the noor:--
years ago."
Assistant Senate Democratic
leader Robert C. Byrd said:
"Ford's rhetoric is Reaganisb. It
falls to be realistic."
And House Majority Leader
Thomas P . O'Neill Jr. predicted
the Democrats •'will not stand for
the status quo or cutbacks in pro-
grams that help the people.''
Speaker Carl Albert, hoarse
from flu and daubing at his nose
with a tissue, said Ford's speech
"was a typical Republican St.t.te
of the Union message in an elec-
tion year . .. not really anything new.·•
Senate Republican Leader
Hugh Scott praised Ford's pro-
posal to create jobs; for suggest-
ing a plan to promote investment
in stocks and for proposing a con-
solidation of grant programs.
Sen. Hubert Humphrey <D·
Minn.) said be thought the Presi-
dent's speech was "upbeat" b\,lt
failed to offer a substantive pro-gram.
Rep. Al Ullman (D-Ore .)
chairman of the tax ·writing Ways
and Means Committee, called
·Ford's proposals "fragmentary"
<See REACT, PageA2)
e
Down 2nd Year • in a Row
WASHING TON <UPI> -The
nation's gross national ,product
declined for a record s econd
straight year in 1975 despite signs
of solid economic recovery late
in the year, the Commerce
Department s aid today.
The GNP fell 2 percent in 1975
following a 1.8 percent drop in
1974, the department said in a
year-end report.
The department said a 5.4 per-
<'ent rise in real GNP in the
fourth quarter was not enough to
offset earlier drops, leaving the
nation's output of goods and
services in decline for a record
second straight year.
There have never been back-
to-back yearly drops in the
broadest measure of national
economic activity since record
keeping began in 1946, the de-
partment said.
But the GNP report showed ·
clearly that the national
economy was in recovery as the
year ended. Every major
category of economic activity
rose from the third to the fourth
quarter, the report said.
Inflation also moderated con-
siderably in 1975. Inflation for
GNP purposes WM estimated at
8.7 percent for the year, down
from 9. 7 percent in 1974.
The Commerce Department
said the GNP, after adjust-
ment for inflation, was estimated
at $1.186 trillion in 1975, down
Four Arrested
On -Trabuco
Theft Charges
Four people suspected of
burglarizing a Trabuco Canyon
store early today were arrested
by Orange County Sheriff's de·
puties following a harrowing
high speed chase that ended m El
Toro when the suspects' van
crashed into a ditch.
Deputies still are searching for
the dnver of the vebJcle He
escaped from the car and jumped
a barbed wire fence seconds
before the van crashed.
The 4 a.m burglary occurred
at the Country Store, 31,021
Trabuco Canyon Road, owned by
Gene Taylor. 42.
Taylor, who lives in a house
behind the store, said be was
awakened when he beard com-
motion coming from the store.
He said he got up and saw people
carting merchandise away.
As the burglars ~tarted · to
leave, Taylor said be called up a
horse stable down the road to set
up a roadblock while his wile
called the sheriff's office .•.
Meanwhile, employe Ann Holl-
ingsworth gave chase in her
foreign car toward Cook's Comer
with Taylor almost behind her.
· "Her Datsun started sputter-
ing on the way down to Cook's
Corner because it was low on
gas, but she ran into the sheriff in
time to tell them which way they
went," Taylor said in a later iO-
terview.
He said the employe's brother,
Henry Hollingsworth, owner of
the stable stood out in the middle
of the road to na1 down the speed-
ing van but without success.
The pursuit finally ended when
(See CRASE, Page A!)
Hol>te Alt.er·• ~ lioe of
merchandtae -radio controlled
model 1lidert -h• proved a
p0 .. ular itemi at leul with
tl\5'vet .,ho ato e $15,0001"Jftb ot u..· ....... Of nctals at Cout C.tamaran,
2036 NcOaw Avet\M, lmne, tol4
police an Inventory eh•ck abowed that 71 or the elaht-f oat
win.Capan •llders were mlsslna ..
from $1.210 trillion in 1974 and
$1.233 trillion in 1973.
GNP in the fourth quarter was
estimated at an annual adjusted
rate of $1.217 trillion, up from
$1.202 trillion in the third
quarter.
The third quarter GNP rose 13
Irvine School
percent from the second quarter
when the 1974·75 recession of·
ficially ended.
Commerce officials said last
week they expected the GNP to
rise 6.5 percent in the fourth
quarter, but the preliminary
estimate was lower.
Workman stands on webbing of beams atop administra-
tion building for the new Irvine High School, under con-
struction on Walnut Avenue, east of Culver Drive.
Designed for 1,800 students, campus i·s expected to open
with an enrollment of ~ ninth and tenth graders next
September. Work on the $10.3 million school has been
delayed slightly due to rebidding part of the interior
f'mishing but the humanities, math-science, shop and ad-
ministration buildings are expected to be complete in
September. ·
Irvine Company
Ponders Inn Fate
' Negative reactlon to the pro-
posed "Holiday Harbor" project
in Newport Beach bas caused
Irvine Company officials to ask
for a postponement and to con-
sider scrapping the plans for a
200-room Holiday Inn.
The $7 million proposal for the
site at Jamboree Road and East
Coast includes the hotel, a health
club, two restaurants and a li-
quor store.
Newport Beach planning com·
missioners were scheduled to
vote on the project at this week's
meeting. However. the Irvine
Company bas asked for a conU·
nuance until May 20.
At that time, the Irvine Com-
pany will return with either ri!-
vised plans for a hotel complex
or a different project entirely,
according to Dave Neish, Irvine
Comp a n y p 1 an n i ~I ad •
minlstrator. ..
"We still believe a hotel 1s an
llPPl.'OPdate use for the site, but w·n .... th• comtna•months to ·
,ttudy all the alternatives," Neish
said. · · He added that the Irvine Com·
pany is ln"Alreement with critics
who apou at a public beadn.a
held last Qiont.h that the botel
aould uae ••a little softenlnc. ''
' Neiah aald that lf the lrvtne
Com_pan1 decides to continue fta
hotel plant, a new deslgn would
\
••
be submitted that would be
smaller and more residential in
appearance.
At the public hearing, held
Dec. 18, private citizens and a
few planning commissioners
spoke strongly against the pro-
posal.
They cited concerns over addi·
tional traffic, water quality in the
adjacent Upper Newport Bay
and the larger ques tion of
whether or not the city wants, or
needs, another hotel.
Despite criticism of the pro-
ject, Neish contends that a hotel
is still the best option.
He says a Holiday Inn would
serve a different market than the
existing hotels in the area, since
its rates are lower than tbe
Newporter Inn and Marriott •
Hotel and it would oot be geared
. towards conventions· and meet·
ings.
Also, Neish maintains that
with Newpart Center sdieduied
for further development in the J
coming years, there will b9 ~
greater demand for hotel
facilities closeby.
However. he says that if it ap-
llle&rs that they ~noot ov~me
the neaative feellnp about the new bot el, another type of project
wU1 be proposed for the 1lte::.;h tbe plans return to the pl
·commission in May. •
• I
I
l,
A2 OAl.LYPllOT
For l;ebare World
Funeral Parlor . .
Protest Futile
£0ranae County Supervisor
1 ~mu Riley has J05t his last·
ditch bid to prevent construction
of a mortuafy just outside a gate
of the Leisure World retirement
rommunlty in Laguna Hills. The
nearness bothers the retirees.
A majority of supervisors vol·
ed today for Riley's propQS_ed
emergency zoning ordinance
prohibiting mortuary construc-
tion adjacent to Leisure World,
but a four-fifths vote was re-
quired.
Aragon and Moulton Patkway in
good faith based on the current
zoning designation.
Riley's bid was aimed at halt-
ing issuance of a building permit
for the mortuary, which has
already been approved by the
county planning commJssion.
The effect of Riley's ordinance
would have been to send the mat-
ter back to the planning com-
mission for 60 days .of re-
consideration before supervisors
again arted on the matter.
W O.llJ l"'llell 5' .. I l"Mte
HEELS GET OIL BEFORE FREEDOM TRAIN PULLS OUT FOR YUMA, ARIZ.
Supervisors Ralph Diedrich
and Ralph Clark voted against
the ordinance, contending
McCormick Mortuary had
purchased the property at Calle
In presenting his case. Riley
said "It appears the site impact
is not the problem, but it is more
of a psychological thing." Thousands Braved Long Lines to See Exhibit During Two-Day San Juan Stop
lines Long
For Freedom
Train Tours
The waiting lines lengt hened
today as more and more people
desrended on San Juan
Capistrano to visit the American
freedom train before 1t pulls out for its next stop Yuma, Ariz.
About 1,500 tickets for the train
"ere due to go on sale at 4. 30
p.m. Coordinators said tickets
would be sold up untJI 10 p.m.
<Related stones. picture Page
AJ>.
Waits for of up to two and one-
half hours were reported Mon-
day, with the average wait about
an hour and fifteen minutes,
coordinators said.
The wait had lengthened to
about three hours by this morn-
ing.
Although traffic problems
wert> reported to have occurred
at both Anaheim and San Diego,
the train's two pre.wious stops, all
was reported moving smoothly in
San Juan.
E'_ra. P,..e A J
REACT •..
and said, "We need something
long range to meet the inflation
threat and long range to meet the
SocialSecurity problem."
· Sen. Jacob Javits, (R-N.Y.),
called Ford's address "nonsensa-
tional and centrist," an4 said: "A
lot of it I liked. Some of it 1 didn't
like. I thought the recommenda-
tions on revenue sharing and re-
gulatory reform and the in·
telligence community were good.
I thought his references to un-
employment and the methods of
treating it were inadequate."
Sen. John McClellan, (D-Ark.),
chairman of the Appropriations
Committee, was not happy about
the recommendation for increas-
ing Social Security taxes.
•'I think people think their taxes
are as high as they can be right
now," McClellan said.
Sen. William Proxmire, CD·
Wis.), chairman of the Senate
Banking Committee. said he
hoped Congress would stick to the
President's proposed $394 billion
budget but doubted it. Jn other
areas, the program amounted to
"too much of a stand-pat opera-
t10n, ··he said.
House Republican Leader John
Rhodes said he did not feel Ford's
proposed tax cut, with a nominal
price tag of $10 billion, was infla-
tionary.
4 T eens Killed
CAYUGA. 111. CUPO -Four
Pontiac. Jll.. teen·agers were
killed when an Amtrak
passengt>r train collided with
their rar at a crossing near this
No~h Central Illinois village,
pohct> said.
ORANGe COAST
DAILY PILOT
T,.Ot~ (H\I 0'''' Pllot .... til ..... <llltCOtf'
bol"llCll'-N•"'• P.Ht.h ~Oli-byt,.0.
Co.t\t P..Olhl\OnQ CO"'P•ny ~-"4•e<11t~•••
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Thomas Ke.vii
Editor
Thomas A. M urphlne Aile~ .... ., ...
Q\artes H. Loos Richard P. Nall
Atdltt.,il ~-1,.. [tllton
Huntington Hospital Hit
Surgeons Eliminiite Elective Surgery .
By JOA'NNE R EYNOLDS
Olt!M O•llY PlioUi.lf
Huntington Intercommunity
Hospital in Huntington Bearh
became the first casualty of the
medical slowdown as
anesthesiologists and surgeons
there have eliminated elective
surgery.
Hospital Administr(itor
Richard Grundy said the boycott
has resulted in the layoffs of about
Inmate Slain
SS staff members as the hospital's
rt-nsus dipped to 53 patients on
Monday. The hospital's average
rensus is about 90 patients, Grun·
dysaid.
But. Grundy noted, the sur-
geons and anesthesiologists are
still performing emergency sur-gery.
"We are doing business as u5ual
in the emergency room. We're not
turning anyone away,·· he said.
New Jersey Prison
Escape Try Foiled
TRENTON, N.J. (U PI ) -
Authorities foiled an escape at-
tempt and regained control of
wing 17 at Trenton State Prison
today after an 11-hour dis-
turbance. An inmate who tried to
shoot his way out of the walled
fortress and flee in a waiting van
was killed.
Lab Worker
Tortured
For 'Speed'
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UPI> -A Virginia man and
four Floridians were arrested in
the bizarre abduction and tortur-
i~g o~ a young laboratory techni·
c1an man attempt to force him to
aid in the manufacture of the
~g known as "speed," police
said.
Held by Daytona Beach police
were Charles Jackson Carlton,
23, Marion, Va.; and Elaine Page
SaJ:!nicandio, 23, Walter Lee
Wolf, 23 , Max well Gregorio
Napolitano, 26, and Amy J o
Forkosh, 19, all of the Daytona
Beach area.
They were held in the Friday
night abduction of Thomas Led·
don,23.
Miss Sannicandio and Wolf
were charged with manufactur-
ing a controlled substance.
Carlton, Napolitano and Miss
Forkosh were charged with false
imprisonment and aggravated
assault.
Police Chief Robert H. Palmer
said three men went to the Led-
don home and forced Leddon to
accompany them to a house in
suburban Port Orange, where he
was beaten , tortured and
chloroformed in an effort to force
him to help manufacture
methamphetamine (speed) in a
well-equipped laboratory in the
building.
Leddon said he was taken to
several other locations in the
area until he finally escaped
from a house in suburban Holly
Hlll Monday morning.
Three pris on guards were
wounded and · another prisoner
was shot during a five -minute
gun battle at the maximum
stturity prison that touched off
an 11-hour disturbance. One of
the wounded guards was hit by a
homemade bomb. The prison
howses 890 inmates.
After ordering 120 inmates in
three tiers to strip naked and
leave their cells. authorities
began tearing apart the cells in a
search for weapons believed
smuggled into the prison for the
escape attempt.
One .2:1-ca liber pistol was
thrown from a tier by an inmate
during the upris ing, a prison
spokesman said.
A prison official said the dead
inmate. John Clark, ·JO, of
Newark, N.J ., who was serving a
life sentence for the killing of a
policeman in 1973, had tried
twice before to break out of the
prison.
In his latest attempt last year,
Clark dug a tunnel undemeatti
the prison hospital, but hils
passageway was discovered and
he was caught. '1
State police said they learned
during the disturbance that a van
was parked near the prison in a
residential neighborhood. They
said they planned to search the
van for weapons after obtaining a
warrant.
Prison officials believed the in·
mates had at least three hand
guns and a homemade bomb.
The weapons could have been
smuggled into the maximum
security wing during vi.sits by
friends and relatives, according
to police.
State police said they believed
several inmates were involved in
the breakout because other shots
were fired by inmates after Clark
was killed. He wassbotfivetimes,
a spokesman said.
At 7 a.m. news briefmg on the
front steps of the prison. Institu·
lions and Agencies Com-
missioner Ann Klein and other
officials said there were no in-
juries other than thOle wounded
in the shootout and no major
damage during the incident.
"It was just a break-out at-
tempt," a state police official
saJd.
OC Case at Top Court
Grundy said he does not an-
ticipate any further staff layoffs
since the hospital is running with
a skeleton crew now.
"In fact, our census is up slight-
ly with medical and obstetrics,··
he said.
Grundy said he doeit not an-
ticipate any substantial c'hange in
the situation until after Jan. 28 ,
the date most local physicians
have to pay their malpractice in·
surance premiums.
"Realistically, I would say that
at the very best it would be Feb. 2
before we get back to normal, if
then," Grundy added.
Huntington I ntercommunity to-
day was alQne among Orange
Coast hospitals as other local in-
stitutions reported business as
usual.
Spokesmen for Costa Mesa
Memorial , Pacifica, Mission
Community, San Clemente and
South Coast Community all said
t~eir surgery schedules and pa-
tient census were about normal.
At Hoag Memorial, in Newport
RE>ar h, the spokesman said the
census and surgery schedule in-
creased art i vity over Monday. .
Linda Mottin said the Hoag
staff is running a three-day check
of the rensus and surgery
srht>dule in an attempt to
measurt-what effect, if any, the
slowdown is having on the hospital.
College Deaii
Arrested· on
Vice Charge
SACRAMENTO CAP> -John
W. Christian, academic dean at
Pacific Union College, faces a
Feb. 2 court appearance on a
charge of soliciting a woman un-
dercover agent for an act ot pro-
stitution.
The Sacramento Police
Department said Christian, 40,
was arrested Friday afternoon
and released without bail an hour
and 15 minutes later after pro-
mising to appear in Municipal
Court on the misdemeanor
charge.
Officers said Christian was ar-
rested at 5th and T streets in the
so-called "Stroll" area where
prostitutes congregate in
downtown Sacramento a few
blocks from the Capitol.
Man Leaps
From Bridge
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A ~an who told an impromptu au-
dience he w~s deeply depressed
for lack of wdrk counted "one two
three," and leaped to his death
from the Golden Gate Bridge.
The deadly drama was wit-
nessed Monday by Michael
Smith, a student, his friend, Jack
Sullivan, and officers who tried to t~k the victim out of killing hunself.
Porno·Ap Dismissed
\. "fbe U. S. Supreme Court bu
refused to hear an appeal from 11
men convicted ln Orange County
Municipal Court oC distributing
obscene material.
· Over the objection of three
Justices, the court rejected the
case ''for want of a substanti11J
federal question."
Justices WUlim J . Brennan Jr.,
Potter Stewart and Thurgood
Marshall dissented, arguing that
the court 1bould review the
materials in que1Uon to de·
termine for luel! whether they
are oblceoe.
1be c.ue Involved 120 movles
ttbed from the JJM Adult
••
Bookstore, 220 N. Harbor Blvd.
by Santa Ana police over an eipt
month period ln 1974.
Ten of th~ motion pictures
were shown dufin1 the trial tn
Orance County Central Judtclal
District Court before Judie
Phillp Schwab. •
The appeaJ wu filed ln the
name of one defendant, Nath"1
Petld.Jetoa, 61 of Garden Grove. a
former man acer of tbettoN wbO
wu fined $3,W and teatmced to
five months tn county Jall.
Abo tlned an sentenced were
Myr°" K. Curdy of !AS Anfel•,
the allefed praldent al Jn1 .. . -
'
Inc., SS,625 and nlne months; An-
drew DiOrlo, 39, of Orange,
12,SOO and four months; Wayne·
Fahrback. 26, of Calta Mesa.
13,125 and five montbl; Richard
Jordan, 37, of Oran1e. 12,500 and
four montba, and Steven Hachey,
27, of Newport ~acb, ~and
one month.
Flve of the 4ef eNW:lta w~re
tried and convicted in at.eotia.
They were Clinton ~..:}.~>uis
McCheeny. Vetenuno J\OOlllUe'l,
and Phlllp Vl~l, all of Santa Ana
and Edward 1'1lone of f\lllerton.
Tb• flnn and Jall terms were
lta,yed pe11din1 tbo outcom• of
. the appe&l.
About ball of the senior citizens
who attended the meeting sup-
ported Riley's move, but another
group of Leisure World residents
who live in the immediate vicini·
ty of the affected gate spoke
against any delay in construction
of the mortuary.
Phillip Steiner, who has lived
in the community for 12 years,
said the mortuary is "out of
place, depressing and in bad
taste.''
Supervisors were told that
1,400 signatures had been
gathered on petitions in opposi-
tion to the mortuary-about one-
tenth of the residents of the com-
munity.
John P . Pack, a retired
minister, spoke for the
mortuary, saying it is a good use
for the land and "people must
face the fact that everyone is go-
ing to die sometime."
Bill Sweeney, attorney for the
McCormick chain of mortuaries,
said plannU\g has been
meticulous to make the facility
conform to the surrounding re-
sidential areas.
He said more than $350,000 has ·
been invested in the project to
date and that the mortuary has a
legal vested interest in the pro-
perty that would be upheld in-
court.
From Page A J
CHASE .•.
deputies sealed off both ends of
the canyon and concentrated
their pursuit on the weaving van.
Deputies said the driver, faced-
by a patrol oar standing in his
path on the roadway, leaped
from behind the wheel and ran
·down an fmbankment.
The va-.and its four screaming
occupants was about five yards
behind him, deputies sald. lt
smashed into the barbed wire
fence seconds after the drlver
scaled it.
Booked into county jail on
burglary charges were Boni
Lynn Logi, 19, of Woodland Park,
Colo; Gary Wayne Goodin, 18,
and Thomas Wayne Moss, 20,
both of Santa Ana. Also booked
and receiving treatment at
Orange County Medical Center
for cuts and bruises was David
Smedley South, 20, of 1933 Meyer
Place, Costa Mesa.
Deputies said burlgary rharges may be superseded by
ft>deral charges since the the
store was entered through the
section taken up by the Trabuco
Post Of fire.
Loss at the store included beer,
rolled coins and cigarettes.
Winner Takes
All in State
WASHINGTON CAP>
Spokesmen for President Ford
and Ronald Reagan say a
SUpreme Court decision uphold-
ing California's winner-take-all
primary wiU make no difference
in the campaign for the
Republican presidential nomina-
tion.
"We'll just proceed as we have
been proce·ediog," Reagan's
press secretary, Lyn Nofziger,
said at his home in Sacramento,
after Monday's unanimou.s court
ruling. "We'vealwayscountedon
it so it makes no difference in our
plans," a spokesman 1 for the
President Ford Committee said.
SUCCUMBS AT 62
Mrs. Paul Nissen
Dorothie
Nissen
Succumbs
Mrs. Dorothie "Dodie" Nissen
62, a Harbor Area resident fo;
more than 25 years, died Monday
at Hoag Memorial H05pital in
Newport Beach. A memorial
mass will be said next Monday in
Costa Mesa.
Mrs. Nissen had been active in
a variety of community and
family interests since moving to
the area in 1948. Among those
pursuits were active roles in the
Orange Coun ty Philharmonic
Society, Child Guidance Center
of Orange County and the
Children's Home SoCiety.
An avid golf er until illness
slowed her pace, she held mem-
bership in the Irvine Coast Coun-
try Club and the Southern
California Women's Golf As-
sociation.
_A native of Minnesota, Mrs.
Nissen studied music at St.
Teresa Conversatory of Music in
Wtnona, Minn., and attended
Winona State University prio·r to
her marriage.
She and her husband, N. Paul
Nissen, moved to the f{arbor
Area in 1948 when he accepted a
position of assistant publisher of
the, Costa Mesa Globe-Herald
later the Daily Pilot. Mr. Nisse~
retired in 1969
Survivors include her husband
of the family home in Newport
Beach, five children: Mrs. Joan
Starr of Las Vegas, Mrs. Susan
Hemington of Laguna Beach
Linda Nissen of Balboa Island '
and Greta Nissen and Jame~
Nissen of the home· a sister
Mrs Elaine Baker of Costa
Mesa, and one grandchild
Marla Hemington. '
The memorial mass Monday,
Jan. 26, will be said by Msgr.
Thomas Nevin of St.,Joachim's
Church, of which Mrs. Nissen
was a member.
At her wish, Mrs. Nissen's
ashes will be scattered at sea.
Memorial contributions can be
sent to the American Cancer
Society, the family said.
Boy Drowns
In Anaheim
Artificial respiration !ailed to
save the life of a 4-year-old
Anaheim boy found floating in an
apartment complex 'swimming
pool Sunday evening, an Orange
County Coroner's Office
spokesman satd today.
Neighbors of Delbert
Yearwood spotted him in the pool
and used mouth-to-mouth re-
suscitation in an effort ·to bring
him around. Paramedics con-
tinued the treatment when they
arrived at the scene but the boy
was pronounced dead.
Prof AceDsed
~etary Allegn Beating
STANFORD (AP) -A Stanford University
secretaiy has m~ an $00,000damage1uit against her
boss, a professor of peychlatry, alleaina be went into
a fit of anger and beat her up in her office.
Barbara Honegger, a Stanford graduate student
and secretary, filed suit in Santa Clara County
Superior Court alleging that Dr. Karl Pribram on Oct.
29 "went into a flt ol anger" and struck her Ln the face
and about the head, amashlna the rrames of her
glasses against her templo and the bridae of ber nose.
Pribram had no comment on the allefations.
University poll~e investltated the lnclden.t and .
fl.led a report with the district attorney, who did not
press char1es. .... The secretary, meanwhUe, bas been liven a tem-·
porary job ln another department .
I
I ~
I
. ' ' ·!"· ..
I .. . . I
..
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• I
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t I
~I f '
"' .
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
' EDITION
Afternoon
N.Y.Stoeks .
TEN CENTS
Action Against BB Aide~. Called lliegal
For the record, Huntington
Beach City Ad minllt.rator Dave
Rowlands ls on probation and Ci·
ty Councilman Jerry Matney has
been given a reprimanc:f by his peers.
But the meaning and
significance of the City Council
sanctions appear to be anybody's ~today.
City Attorney Don Bonf a told
council members Monday night ·
in no Uncertain terms that they
acted illegally and were in viola·"
lion of California's Anti·secrecy
Brown Act on Jan. 12 when they
took the twin actions against
Rowlands and Matney.
Bonf a said the action was il·
legal in tbat Rowlands was not
properly notified of the Jan. 12
executive session and that M.at·
ney's case could not be handled
behind closed doors. ..
He said further that there are
no provisions in the city' charter
for putting a city adminlatratol'
on probation and for reprim.a.ad·
iJ1g a councilman.
"I don't know what Matney is
going to do with his censure,"
Bonfa said this morning, "but it
appears 10 have bo legal effect
and is meaningless."
Following the admonitions of
their city attorney, city council
members voted at mldJ\ight to
put their actions against
Rowlands and Matney on public
record.
Bonf a said that the Brown Act
violations could conceivably be
turned over to the District At·
torney's Office for prosecution on
technical grounds.
Rowlands Monday night
waived action requiring notifica-
tion of last Monday's executive
session and said be was willing to
let the council action stand.
Matne y was due to enter
Pacifica Hospital for tests today
and was not available for com-
ment.
In a related action, Council
members voted to push ahead
with completion with the ad hoc
committee studying charges
brought against Rowlands by
Matney.
Mayor Norma Gibbs and
Henry Duke said they thought
that it was important to get to the
bottom of the charges.
Coen who is chairman of the ad
hoc panel and Ted Bartlett.
another member, both urged
termination of the group.
"I don't think coptinuing the in -
quiry will serve any useful
purpose." Coen told council
(See ROWLANDS, Page A2>
Hospital B()ycott
)
Elective Surgery Out for Pat~nts
U~ITe...-.U
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of u,. O.lty Piiot SUff
Huntington Intercommunity
Hospital in Huntington Beach
berame the first casualty of the
mediral s lowdown as
anesthesiologists and surgeons
there have eliminated elective
surgery. .
Hos p ital Administrator
Richard Grundy said the boycott
has resulted in the layoffs of about
DiStefano
Kin Not
At Hearing
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
OftM O.lly Pll«SUH
PRESfDENT FORD DELIVERS STATE OF UNION
Behind Him, Nelson Rockefeller and Carl Albert
Mourning members of the im·
mediate family who must testify
stayed away today when Arthur
R. DiStefano appeared in court
for preliminary hearing on
charges resulting from a violent
feud in which Huntington Beach
police shot and killed bis younger
brother.
Defense attorney Sal Eppolito
and prosecuting Deputy District
Attorney Melivin Jensen agreed
on a continuance until Feb. 19
and Judge Samuel B. Taylor
quickly granted it. Ford Talk Ignites
Congress Conflict
The Central Orange County
Judicial Dis trict Court jurist
questioned Eppolito about the
lengthy 29-day delay when
DiStefano, 35, bas the right to a
speedy trial.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Congressional reaction to Presi·
dent Ford's State of the Union ad-
dress shows there will be some
battles when the Democratic ma-
jority in the House and Senate
acts on bis Republican program
in a presidential election year.
Republicans generally ap-
plauded the speech, but most
Democrats dismissed it as elec·
tion-year rhetoric signaling a
retreat into the past.
Congressional conservatives
responded favorably while GOP
liberals tempered their praise.
Sen. Barry Goldwater <R·
Ariz.> said, "If this country is to
be saved from disaster, it will re·
quire presidents with the courage
and foresight of Mr. Ford. His
strong efforts to reduce the over-
burdening power of the federal ·
government sbould be applauded
by every taxpaying,,f\merican.''
But Rep. John Brademas CD·
Ill.) found the program "about as
forward -looking as the one
George III had fortbeCoJooles200
yean ago." ,
Assistant Senate Democratie
leader Robert C. Byrd said:
"Ford's rhetoric is Reaganish. It
fails to be realbtlc."
And House Majority Leader
Thomas P. O'NeiU Jr. predicted
the Democrats '·'will not stand for
the status quo or cutbacks in pro.
grams that help the people.'·
Speaker Carl Albert, hoarse
from flu and daubing at bis nose
with a tissue, said Ford's speech
"was a typical Republican State
of the Union message in an elec-
tion year ... not really anything
new."
"Naturally, the family is still
in a state of mourning," Eppolito
explained. •
Arthur DiStefano, of 6232
Chinook Lane. Westminster, is
free on $5,000 bail following bis
Jan. 7 arrest and faces two counts
of assault with a deadly weapon.
He was arrested at tbe
DiStefano family's Ocean View
Mus hroom Growers Inc. 18196
Golden West St., after a two-hour Senate ltepublican Leader confrontation in which Nicholas
HIGHLIGHTS OF FORD'S
ANNUAL ADDRESS, A4
DiStefano, 23, was slain by police
shotgun blasts as he fled the
farmhouse where gunshots had
been reported.
Hugh Scott praised Ford's pro-So far, authorities had not ex-
posalto create jobs; for suggest· plained w·hy the younger
ing a plan to promote investment DiStefano ran from the house and
in st()("b and for proposing a con· toward police, refusing com-
solidation of grant programs. mancls to halt and resulting in
Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D· their opening fire on him.
Minn.) said he thought the Presi· ,, Nicholas, second you~gest
dent's speech was ."Upbeat" but ai:nong ~r. and .Mrs. Victor
failed to offer a substantive pro· DiStefano. s four children and re-gram portedly intended to take over
· the lucrative family mushroom
Rep. Al Ullman (D-Ore.) empire which bas flourished for
,chairman of the tax-writing Ways 25 years, bad re,J>OrtedlydefeDded
and Means Committee, called the household against bis armed Ford's proposals "fragmentary" eldest brother.
and said, "We need something Arthur was banned from the
tong range to meet the inflation funeral that drew some 700
threat and long range to meet the persons and a 115-car procession
Social Security ;roblem. ·' <See FEUD, Page A!)
'
55staff members as the hospital's
census dipped to 53 patients on
Monday. The hospital's average
census is about 90 patients, Grun·
dysaid.
But, Grundy noted, the sur-
geons and anesthesiologists are
still performing emergency sur·
gery.
''We are doing business as usual
intheemergencyroom. We 'renot
turning anyone a way,·· he said.
UPI Te~
Lea"e• Cotirt
Manson cultist Sandra Good
leaves the federal building
in Sacramento after being
told by Federal Judge
Thomas MacBride that he
would rule Thursday on her
demand that he disqualify
himself from hearing her
death threat case. Story,
Page AS.
Hit.nm Victim
NORWALK <UPI> -The body
of a young woman, apparently
the victim of a bit-run motorist,
was found early today on Im·
perial Highway by a passing
driver.
Jmiior i,igh Vot~ Postponed
B1DTUY CUNcY
" Ot .. DlllyPI.,. .....
Tru1he• i n H untln1ton
Beach 'a Qcean View School Dls·
trlct held a record aeven·bour
meetlnf Mond•Y nilbt, then
ppstponed action on a St.~ mlllloD Ph>vam to revile sevrGtb and •
a,btb 1ude f•cllltles.
•Al lealt 20 puenta ct the more
t)an 400 ln tbe audleDce spob at
tfte7 :al>p.m. to2:20 a.m. ~
rbOlt of l.bem fro m Haven
Meado" View , Schooll1 whlcb
ltand to lose thetr Jwuor htab
ptOll'amsr.
At tbe end. tn1.1teesvotedSto2 to del11 action on the proc:ram tor another montb to allow for more commu.nlty 1tudy.
SUperintendent Dale Qoopn
11.id Trultfft Jean Boaen I.Gd
Ka.rtanne Blank voted a1a1nst
, t
tbe del.,, while the district's
arcbltectural consultant ex·
preaed concern the postpone·
ment eould Jeopardi1" the build·
m.1chedule.
'l'rultees did set a 7:30 meeting
for Mooday nlaht in district of· flees, to dlacuu altemaUves to
tbe propo .. 11.
TIM prolf&m, recommended bJ a district 1talf tuk force, calls
for bulldlnt one new kin·
derprten to ei&hth erede school,
c toslnt tbe dlltrlcl '• oldest scbool, Rancho Vlew, and re·
'Dovat.1Jti 1even otbeT schools. In addltlon, ll calla for
ellinlnaUn1 th~ aeventh and
ellbth arade proframs at Haven and ,Meadow Vlew SchoolJ over
the next two yean.
By the lime the. program ls
c;ompleted in September 1977, the .
Cf
district would have 13 kin·
dergarten to slxtb grade schools
and J 1 kindergarten to elghth
grade f actliUes, with junior high
populations of between 250 and
350 students at each school, ac·
cording to Assistant ~nten·
dent Monte Mc Murray.
Mrs. Robert Blackbum, one
Meadow View parent. ~aid her
community hadn't learned ot l.be
proposal untll last week.
"l.Jhink the emount of money
that ls goinJ to be 1pept on t.hh ls
kind of ridiculous," &be said, not·
inl other school• lo the distrld
need attention as well. '"11\is Is
JOinl to be like & little lbost
school."
t>an Haggerty, chairman of
the School Advisory Committee
et Meadow View, said h1s com·
mittee should have been advised
• A
of the plans long ago.
"All we want is a reasonable
amount of time to evaluate the
program," he said. "You came
to the committee and told us ex·
actly what you were going to.do,
andl think many of us re1eDtit."
l)tstrlct offtelals explained
MYeral Umet that they did not
know of the immed14lte effed on
Meadow View until a Dec. 30
board roeetlq, then they trled to meet u qulcldy as possJble with
community frOups.
Mn. l>avld Stark, also from
Meadow Vie.,, commented, "l
would like tome cuarantees that tn givina up our netibborbood
schools we are gotng to get
aomethlnl better. 'nl~. I think
we would 1upport you."
Another Meadow. Vlew parent
<See TRUSTEES, Paie A2)
'
Grundy said he does not an-
ticipate any fu rther staff layoffs
since the hospital is running with
a skeleton c rew now.
"In fact, our rensus is up slight-
NEED FOR URGENCY
OBVIOUs-Edltorial, AS
ly with medical and obstetrics,''
he said. .,
Grundy said he does not an-
ticipate any substantial change in
In Huntington
the situation until after Jan. 28,
the date most local physicians
have to pay their malpractice in-
suranre premmms.
"Realistically, I would say that
at the very best it would be Feb. 2
before we get back to normal, if
then," Grundy added
Huntington Intercommunity to.
day was alone among Orange
Coast hospitals as other local in·
<See HOSPITAL, Page AZ>
Gas Treatment
PlantApproved
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .... 0.lly ..... ""' Standard Oil Company of
California received tbe approvaJ
of Huntington Beach City Council
Monday night to go ahead with
plans to build a gas treatment
plant at the corner or Garfield
Avenue and Golden West Street.
5Masked
Suspects
Arrested
Five people , suspected of be·
ing the Halloween.masked rob·
bery team which struck two
markets in Fountain Valley and
Huntington Beach recently,
were arrested Monday by
Orange police.
Officers said Pico Wiley, 38;
Yvonne Mccaslin, 38; a 17-year·
old girl and boys 16 and 17, all
from Garden Grove were ar-
rested at 3: 15 a .m. Monday on
"numerous" robbery charges.
At the time of the arrest at
Linda Vista A venue and San-
tiago Street in Orange, police
alleged, Wiley was carrying a
loaded M-1 carbme rifle and
Miss Mccaslin was carrying a
loaded .25 caliber automatic
pistol.
In addition to the weapons,
detectives also r ecover ed
several rubber Halloween-style
masks, helmets, Navy peaC9ats
and overcoats, along with other
disguises that had distinguished
the team for several weeks. of-
ficers said.
Officers also alleged Miss
Mccaslin was driving a 1970
Ford stolen in an armed rob-
bery in Riverside.
HuntiQgton Beach Police said
Friday the five were suspected
of holding up Charles Wong, a
clerk at a 7-Eleven food store
at Brookh urs t Street an~
Yorktown Avenue as he worked
alone that morning. In addition
to taking cash and jewelry, they
tied him before they fled, police
alleged.
Officers said then the same
team was suspected of three
other armed robberies in Santa
Ana and Orange during the suc-
ceeding 48 hours.
Fountain Valley Police Detec-
tive Vic Deutsch said the team
also is suspected or holding up
the 7-Eleven Market at Bushard
Street and Garfield Avenue Jan.
2, when they allegedly fled with
$60 in ca.sh aod 6\her items.
· Orange police said their of·
ficers had staked out the five
after reports of their disguises
and other information. They
· wen arrested without lncldent,
officers reported.
'
The issue touched off spirited
debate on the part of Seacliff re·
sident.s who sougbt to block the
facility because off ears of odors,
noise and blight.
These and other concerq,5 had
led them to appeal approval of
the project by the planning com·
mission. ·
Attorney Edward B. Scott. an
attorney for Standard, ruscount·
ed the arguments of r esidents
concerning harmful environmen-
tal effects and s aid the compahy
has taken steps to mitigate the
noise.
"You can't see, smell or hear
it," Scott told the council and
large audienre.
Homeowners also expressed
desires to establish a buffer zone
between-the facility planned on a
oqe.arre plot in a 75·acre oil field
and their housing developments.
City Counril members voted
approval of the Standard Oil pro·
ject with the provision that Stan·
dard refile a new use permit that
would call for an environmental
Scott said the operation at the analys is. I
gas treatment plant is comprised ~·
of a low temperature separation
unit and it is used to separate
heavy gas which is piped to El
Segundo from the light gas which
is used in the oil field.
Opponents to the project said it
was inconceivable to them that
the growth of a major industrial
area adjacent to the Seacliff re·
sidential area and close t o
Beachwalk could be compatible
with the city's plan .
The protes ters said that
Seacliff residents have been ex-
posed to .obnoxious gases which
are apparently emanating from
existing oil processing equip·
ment. They said the conrution
r reat es a potential health
hazard.
Co ast
Weathe r
F air, warm and dry
weather tbrough Wednes-
day, a ccording to·the
weather service with highs
at the beaches 74 rising to.
~ inland. Overnight lo~
42to48. ·
I NSIDE TODAY
Still trying to aunnble your
Christm<U whatchamacallit
that came with A~an
~rrctwru? For poui~ ,0$·
ftltanu, see P.oge Bl.
··' ~ ,
I
2 •DAILY PILOT H/F
Hearing
.
On Bond·· .
Bid Set
The Fount aip Valley City Coun-
cil is expected to hold a final
public hearing tonight on a pro·
posed $4 to $6.2 million bond elec-
tion t o expand recreational
facilities.
The 8 p.m. hearing will be at ci-
tyball, 10200Slater Ave.
The council also will consider a
resolution calling for a June 8
election on the issue.
The bond funds would finance
swimming pools, a cultural arts
building and expanded sports
fa<'ilities at the city's Recreation
and Cultural Center in Mile
Square Park.
The city already has spent
about $2 million on a community
building and recreallon facilities
in the park
The council also has a JO .
member citizen group reviewing
plans for the complex.
That committee is expected to
recommend a final dollar amount
forthe bond election by March 1.
The bonds could add as much as
.JQ cents per $100 of assessed
valuation to the tax rate. In addi·
tion. the city s taff is rE!<'ommend-
ing a tax override of as much as 20
cents to pay for upkeep of the
facilities
If ,the council and later voters
approved the entire 60 cents, the
issue would cost the owner of a
' $50,000 home $75 a year.
F,.._PageAl
TRUSTEES
drew s upport from Trustee
Charles Osterlund. when she sug-
gested forming separate junior
high schools. if the di strict was
going to move children around
ilnyway.
Osterlund said he had proposed
junior highs earlier. contending
it could be accomplished with the
dollars available.
But Trustees Bogen, Blank and
Jay Rivera argued against a
junior high system. citing dis-
c ipline and a need for
··personalization·• between a
teacher and the young adolescent.
t Fr-Page AJ
-ROWLANDS
members.
He said his panel has complet·
ed investigation of the four most
important allegations and that
nothing s tartling has been
brought out in additional charges
or clarification.
Bartlett S'aid, "I see no reason
for this witch-hunting to go on. I
think it is a waste of time.''
Rowlands favors continuation
of .the inquiry and says it will
show that he has been vin-
dicated.
Boy Drowns
In Anaheim
Artificial respiration failed to
save the life of a 4-year-old
Anaheim boy found floating in an
apartment complex swimming
poof Sunday evening, an Orange
County Coroner's Office
spokesman said today.
Neighbors of Delbert
Yearwood spotted him in the pool
and used mouth-to-mouth re-
suscitation in an effort to bring
him around. Paramedics · con-
tinued the treatment when they
arrived at the scene but the boy
was pronounced dead.
The boy lived with his parents
at the complex, located at 10854
Magnolia Ave.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
,. .. Or~ CN\I °"''" P•I04. Wllfl -·<" I• <-IM ,.eW\·P""· t\ llUl>ll\NO by tllo-Or-(N•I Pub4111\•nQ C"""*'Y S-Potr•l•
..SlllQn\ ue pub411Md MoNIAY IMOUQI\ rr..,_.;
'"' ~·· M.... ,.ewporl e..-c11. Hunt1noton &..t<h Fo~t••n V•H~y. lr¥1M. ~l,.bAO
"•tit; Arc:I l•Q-INKll/So;llh Co.8\1 A """"
rt<jfONI edllloft h publh-S.01.....,.yl.,,., ~un
doty\ T~ p<1n<IPfl P"blt\11•"11 piM11 1, fl JJU
W.•1 B•1 S1ree1, C•ut• Mew. c..111.,,n1• 'l?~I~
Robert N. Weed • "'••kMnt ef!d ""bltw-r
Jack R. Curley
Vl<e PrHfCletll tlld c;.,,...~ Mal>tO"'
Tttom•s Kffvll fdltor
Thomas A. Murphlne
M.tM91flt (dllor
Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall ,11\~,,_,,, M.tn.91119 E"41on
Robert B•rlt_, w~•• °'',,.. c-•h fdltor
. HUfttl.-en 8e.00ff~ 11'11Je.K11 ..... _
IMlli"t A411"U ,. 0 ... 1'I,.,...
Offka
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c-i. ,,_.... 1JI -·· ..,, '""' ~-· ..,., ... '"" l• ~·It-., WI\ Ole99 ~ ~-""
'•
..
Tuesday. January 20, 1978 .
SUCCUMBS AT 62
Mrs. Paul Nissen
Dorothie
Nisse n
Succumbs
Mrs. Dorothie "Dodie" Nissen,
62. a Harbor Area resident for
more than 25 years, died Monday
at Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport. Beach. A memorial
mass will be said next Monday in
Costa Mesa.
Mrs . Nissen had been active in
a variety of community and
family interests since moving to
the area in 1948. Among those
pursuits were active roles in the
Orange County Philharmonic
Society, Child Guidance Center
of Oran~e County and the
Children's Home Society.
An avid golfer until illness
slowed her pace, she held mem-
bership in the Irvine Coast Coun-
try Club and the Southern
California Women's Golf As-
so<'iation.
A native of Minnesota, Mrs.
Nissen studied music at St.
Teresa Conversatory of Music in
Winona. Minn.. and attended
Winona State University prior to
her marriage.
She and her husband, N Paul
:'-lissen, moved to the Harbor
Area in 1948 when he accepted a
position of assistant publisher of
the Costa Mesa Globe-Herald,
later the Daily Pilot. Mr. Nissen
retired in 1969.
Survivors include her husband,
of the family home in Newport
Beach; five children: Mrs. Joan
arr Qf Las Vegas. Mrs. Susan
mington of Laguna Beach,
da Nissen of Balboa Is land,
and Greta Nissen and James
Nissen of the home, a sister,
Mrs . Elaine Baker of Costa
Mesa. and one grandchild.
Marla Hemington
The memorial mass Monday,
Jan 26, will be said by Msgr.
Thomas Nevin of St Joachim's
Church, of which Mrs Nissen '
was a mern ber
At her wish, Mrs. Nissen's
ashes will be scattered at sea.
Memorial contributions can be
sent to the American Cancer
Society, the family said.
Corincil
Closes
Street
Huntington Beach City Council
members said no Monday night
to a larMe and emotional. au-
• d.ience protesting the closure of
Mc Fadden Avenue between
Bolsa Chica and Graham streets.
The council closed the street
last summer because members
felt that heavy trucks and bilsy
industrial trafCic posed a safety
hazard to re~ents of the area
which i.Acl'Udes many school
children.
Opponents said they had 458
signatures on a petition favoring
reo;ning of the street.
Tb y said they weren't proper-
ly no 'fied of the closure and that
it constituted a great inconve-
nienceto them.
Councilman Al Coen countered
by saying that safety of the
children is paramount.
"There were severe traffic
hazards to the kids in the area,"
Coen said, "and any inconve·
nience to residents is of secondary
importance."
A father of a child who was
struck in ·the area last year told
the council that he was in favor of
reopening the street.
"The fire engines and police
will have to drive farther with
the fence wall up," he said. ''I
don't want any cotton-pickin'
wall."
The council voted 3-2 not to
rescind action that closed the
s treet. Ted Bartlett, Mayor
Norma Gibbs and Coen voted in
the majority against Henry Duke
and Don Shipley.
Public Works Director Bill
Hartge said that despite the clos-
ing, children can still ride their
bicycles through tne tract to
Robinwood and Marina schools.
Mesa Officer
Hit by Suit
A Fountain Valley man who
claims a Costa Mesa patrolman
cballeoged him to a fight while
investigating a traffic offense
sued the officer and the city of
Costa Mesa Monday for $10,000 in
damages.
David E . Bienek Jr. of 10669 La
Rosa Lane, Fountain Valley,
claims in his Orange County
Superior Court action that Of.
ficer Jeffrey A. Miller applied a
head lock on May 9 after halting
the plaintiff's car on Harbor
Boulevard. .
Bienek claims that he suffered
a concussion and partial loss of
vision as a result of the alleged
attack.
FV Boys Club
Banquet Set
Bill DeFragaof Valley.Printing
will be installed as president of
the Foµntain Valley Boys Club at
a banquet and award.5 night Fri·
day.
· The meeting will be atSp.01., at
the Crossroads Restaurant, 10850
Brookhurst St., and tickets are
$10.
Inform at ion about ticket
purchase can be obtained from
club executive dir ector Chris
Torres at 968-5252.
Delly Pli.t Gt.ti PMto POLICE EXAMINE SCENE OF EXECUTION MURDER IN IRVINE ORANGE GROVE
Santa Fe Springs Man Found Riddled Wtth Bullets Near Santa Ana Freeway
W~manRaped · Lawmen: in ltvine
In Huntington
After 'Light'
A Huntington Beach woman
told police she was raped early
today by a man who stopped her
outside her Commodore Circle
apartment to ask for a light.
The woman, who officers said
was in her 20s, was parking her
car about 2: IS a.m., when a man
accosted her, asking for a light
for his cii?arette, police reported.
She gave him a light, theo he al·
legedly grabbed her, dragged her
into his dark-colored van and
raped her, police said.
Officers today were investigat-
ing additional details of the inci·
dent. They d escribed the
woman's attacker as between 20
and 30 years old. six feet , two in-
ches tall, with dark, curly hair.
Fro. Page AJ
HOSPITAL ..
stitutions reported business as
usual.
Spokesmen for Costa Mesa
Memorial. Pacifica, Mission
Community. San Clemente and
South Coas t Community all said
their surgery schedules and pa-
tient census we re a bout normal.
At Hoag Memorial, in Newport ~ach. the spokesman said the
census a nd surgery schedule in-
creased activity over Monday.
Linda Mottin said the Hoag
staff is running a three-day check
of the census and surgery
schedule in an attempt to
measure what effect, if any, the
s lowdown i s having on the
hospital.
Bobby Sox Signups
Slated for Valley
Registration for Fountain
Valley's Bobby Sox softball
league will be held from 10 a.m. to
1 p.m. Jan. 31, Feb. 7 and Feb. 14
at Von's Market, Talbert Avenue
and Magnolia Street
Girls 9 to 15 are eli.gible.
Registration 1s $5 with an addi-
tional $3 75 optional for photos.
Girls should bring a parent and
proof of age to register.
Seek Death Motive
By DOUGLAS FR.ITZSCRE
OI tM O.llr ~Ille Su.ti
Irvine police continued today
to probe for clues that would lead
to the slayer of a Santa Fe Spr-
ings man whose bullet-riddled
body was found in an Irvine
orange grove Monday.
The dead man was identified
HB Employs
Group Joins
Library Case
Members of the Huntington
Beach Municipal Employes As-
sociation have joined forces with
the Orange County Employes As-
sociation in challenging a city de-
cision to open the public library
for four hours every Sunday.
The Orange Count~ Superior
Court lawsuit filed by both
groups claims the city made its
decision in favor of Sunday open-
ing without discussing the issue
with membel"s of the library staff
who are also members of
HBMEA.
lt is alleged that the city violat-
ed "meet and confer" provisions
of stale law when it decided to set.
Sunday hours for the public
library. Court officials have not
yet set a date for the court hear-
ing sought in the lawsuit.
From f ageAJ
FEUD •••
to the cemetery, but appeared
with hfa wife and her family in
court today.
His father and youngest
brother Victor. were not in court
although they wiJJ be witnessses
in the case against Arthur.
"I only have two children
.now," the Distefano patriarch
has told acquaintances since the
death of Nicholas and the arrest
of Arthur.
The beefy. bearded defendant
appeared briefly before Judge
Taylor to say he understood he
had a right to start his pre-
liminary hearing but.agreed with
the continuance asked by his at-
torney.
as Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela,
42 of Sant a Fe Springs.
vaienzuela, whose occupation re·
mained unknown today. left a
widow, Zoila, and six children,
accord!ng to Irvine Detecli ve
Steve Nash.
Nash de~ribed the victim of
the execution-style slaying as
"average Joe Citizen," with ho
police recor d and no record of af.
filiation with any of the gangs
that prowl ·the southeast Los
Angeles County area.
Valenzuela 's body was dis-
covered by an Irvine woman-Who
was jogging through an orange
grove along t he Santa Ana
Freeway east of Culver Drive at
10~30 Monday morning.
Police said the man had been
shot several times in the back
with a small caliber gun. Nash
refused to elaborate, contending '
that the information may lead to
the suspects.
"We have a number of leads
we are working on," Nash said.
Vale1m1ela was shot in the
orange grove and left lying face
down next to a tree for more than
a day before bis body was found
by the jogger. police said.
He was slain at a spot more
than 100 yards from the nearest
residence. ,
Coroner's deputies refused to
add any details to the shoot\ng.
Nash said, "I stayed up all
night trying., to figur e out a
motive for the s hooting. I
couldn't come up with anything."
The dead man still had his
·'"Wallet, apparently ruling out rob-
bery as a motive, Nash said.
Saf ecrackers
Foiled in HB
Nighttime thieves broke into a
Huntington Beech taco stand
early tod ay t>ut left empty.
handed after failing to open a
safe, police reported.
Officer Keith Nale discovered
a broken window and opeo back
door at Taco Bell,· Beach
Boulevard a nd Blaylock Place,
1:27 a.m . today.
Offjcers said. however. the
thieves apparently failed to open
a safe and fled without takinJ:?
anything.
Riot fluelled at Trenton Pd,son
TRENTON, N .J . (UPI)
Authorities foiled an escape at-
tempt and regained control of
wing 17 at Trenton State Prison
today after an 11-hour dis-.
turbance. An inmate who trled1o
shoot his way out of the walled
fortress and flee in a waiting van
was killed.
Three prison' guards were
wounded and another prisoner
was shot during a five-minute
gun battle at the maximum
security prison that touched off
an 11 -hour disturbance. One of
the wounded guards was hit by a
homemade bomb. The prison
houses 890 inmates.
After ordering 120 inmates ln
three tiers to strip naked and
leave their cells, authorities
began tearing apart the cells in a
search for weapons believed
smuggled into the prison for the
escape attempt.
One .25 -caliber pistol was
thrown from a tier by an inmate
during the uprising, a prison
SJ>Okesman said.
In his latest attempt last year,
Clark dug a tunnel tmdemeath
t he prison hospital, but his
passageway was discovered and
he was caught.
State police said they learned
during the disturbance that a van w~ parked near the prison in a
residential neighborhood. They
said they planned to search the
van for weapons after obtaining a
warrant.
Prison orricials believed the in~
mates had at least three hand
g\ms and a hom emade bomb.
The weapons could have been
smuggled into the maximum
security wing during visits by
friends and relatives, according
to police.
State police said they believed
several inmates were involved in
the br eakout because other shots
were fired b1 inmates after Clark wu ldlled. He wassbotfivetima,
as pokes man said.
At 7 a.m . news brlef'ani on the
lront steps of the prisoo. lnaUtu-
tl on a and A1en cl ea Com·
m.Wioner Ann Klein and other
A prison official said the dud olltcials uid there were no ln·
1 t J b Juries other than those wounded nma e. o n Clark, ao. of ln the abaptout and no m_,or Newart, N.J .• who WU aerviq a d d rt lb incident life aentence ror the lW1n., ol a • ama.ie u n1 e . .
policeman in 1973 bad t.rted "It wu Jaut a break-out at-
twice before to bre~ out ol U.ie tempt," a atate police ~clal
prison. sale[ .. . . ' t I
. u ... ,...,....
STATS LOCAL POLICE STAND VIGIL AFTER 9HOOTOUf AT TAINTON STATE PRISON
· 'Authorftl .. Regain Control aa lnm•t• 11.tn Trylf'9 to lhoot HI• Way 0~ • .
. f I ... _.,.. . ·.·. ·. (
'
l
/:
'
7
,
.. .
7
" .
Ora;nge . Coast.
. EDITION
* * VOL. 69, NO. 20, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES.
Insurance Sttlndoff
'SloWdown Affects
One OC :Ho~Bi4il '
•,
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OltMO.ltyll'ti.clWt
' Huntington lntercommunity
Hospital in Huntington Beach
'became the first casualty of the
medical slowdown as
anesthesiologists and surgeons
there have eliminated elective surgery.
Hospital Administrator
Richard Grundy said the boycott
has resulted in the layoffs of about
Ryckoff's
{
NBs· First
Candidate
City Councilman Paul Ryckoff
became the first official can-
didate in the Newport Beach City
Council election Monday when be
filed his nomination papers with
the city clerk.
A second candidate, Duncan
Mcintosh, Of Harbor View
Homes, was added to the list to·
day when his nomination papers
were rec:!eived by City Clerk
Laiira Lagios.
Miss Lagios said a total of
seven people have taken out
papers for the election which will
beheld April 13.
Those who have not filed their
nomination papers are Mayor
Donald Mcinnis; Per Trebler, of
Sborecliff s; Ray Williams, of
Harbor View Homes; Archibald
Scott DI, of Spygla.u Hill, and
Tom Blandi of Spyglass Hill.
Council candidates are
nominated by _district, but they
are elected by a vote of the city at
large .
So far, Mcinnis and Ryckoff
have encountered no opposition
in their r~spective districts.
But in the Corona del Mar dis -
trict represented by Councilman
John Store, there are five can-
didates. Store has indicated he
will not seek re-election. Can-
didates have until Feb. 10 fo ftle
nomination papers for Store's
district.
Filing will close on Feb. 5 for
Melnnis' district, which is west
Newport and Ryckoff's which
covers Eastbluff, Park Newport,
Promontory Point, Beacon Bay
and Balboa Island.
ICEBREAKER'S
7RIP MUDDLED
SEATrLE (UPI) -The Polar
Star, ~merica's mightiest
icebreaker, flunked its
shakedown cruise -it got stuck in
mud fiats.
The Coast Guard vessel, the
rftrst icebreaker built in the United J States in 20 years, was com-
missioned during the weekend.
The Polar Star set out in the
morning Monday and quickly
became stuck in the mud between
Blake Island and the Great
Peninstlla. It sat there 7~ hours
beforetu1boats, aidedbytbetide,.
pulled it clear.
Hit-run Victim
NORWALK (UPI) -'Jbe body
of a young· 9ioman, apparently
the victim of a bit-run motorist, wai · found early today on Im·
perial Highway by a passing
· driver. "
Nixon Name
Of/Freeway
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
-·A Senate committee bu
decided to remove fonner
President Nixon 'a name
from a 3~-mlle-1001
Southern Callfornla
freeway.
The le'1tlat1on <SCR6'7>
by Sen. Nate Holden, CJ>.
Culver City), would de.
stpate the stretch ol road ·
u tht. Manna Del Rey
Freeway, the name that
currently •we•n on the road lllftl.
~ The meuure waa •P·
proved Monday by the
Ji1nance Committee on a
10.0 vote with no debate
• and wu sent to the noc.-. .
Mstaff members as the hospital's census dipped to 53 patients on
Monday. The hospital's average
census is about 90 patients, Grun·
dysaid.
But, Grundy noted, the sur·
geons and anesthesiologists are
still performing emergency sur-
gery. . .
•'We are doing business as usual
intheemergency room. We're not
turning anyo~e away.'· he said.
SUCCUMBS AT 62
Mrs. Paul Nissen
Mi-s. Nissen
Of Newport
Deadat62
Mrs. Dorotbie "Dodie" Nissen,
62, a Harbor Area resident for
more than 25 years, died Monday
at Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach. A memorial
mass will be said next Monday in
Costa Mesa.
Mrs. Nissen bad been active in
a variety of community and
family interests since moving to
the area in 1948 Among those
pursuits were active roles in the
Orange County Philharmonic
Society, Child Guidance Center
of Orange County and the
Children's Home Society
An avid golf er until illness
slowed her pace, she held mem-
bership in the Irvine Coast Coun-
try Club and the Southern
California Women's Golf As·
sociation.
A native or M inn~a, Mrs.
Nissen studied music at St.
Teresa Conversatory of Music in
Winona, Minn., and attended
Winona State Unifersily prior to
her IJlarrlage.
She and her husband, N. Paul
Nissen, moved to the Harbor
Area in 1948 when be accepted a
position of assistant publisher of
the Costa Mesa Globe-Herald,
later the Dally Pilot. Mr. Nissen
retired in 1969. .
Survivors include her husband,
of the family home in Newport
Beach; five children: Mrs. Joan
Starr of Lu Vegas, Mrs. Susan
Heminiton of Laguna Beach, ~ Nissen of Balboa Island, ·
and Greta NiHen and James
Nissen of the home: a slster,
Mrs. Elaine Baker of Costa
Mesa; and one grandchild,
Marla Hemineton. . The memorial mass Monday.
Jan. 218, will be said by Msgr.
'lbomu Nevin of St. Joachim's
au1n:b, of which Mn. Niasen
wu a ftiember.
. At her wiab, Mrs. Nissen's
. ashes wlll'be scattered at seL
• Memorial contribuUons can be
Mat to the American cancer
Society, the tam Uy taid.
.I
4 Teena bed
CAYUGA, JU. (UPI) ._Four
Pontlac, IIJ., teen-aa~ra were
kllled when an Amtrak pusen1er train colllded wlth
their_ car at a crosstna. .
Grundy said he does not an-
ticipate any further staff Jayoffs
sin¢e the hospital is running with
a skeleton crew now.
"In fact, our census is up slight·
ly with medical and obstetrics,"
he said. ·
Grundy said he does not an·
licipate any substantial change in
the situation until after ~an. 28,
the date most local pbisicians
(See HOSPITAL, Page A2),
GNP Drops
ForS~cond.
~~!T!~u ~"::
Ull'I Tt...,._.
nation's . gross national product
declined for a record second
straight year in 1975 despite signs
of· solid economic recovery late
in the year, the Commerce
Dt>partment said today. ·
PRESIDENT FORD DELIVERS STATE OF UNION
Behind Him, Netson Rockefeller and Carl Albert .. The GNP fell 2 percent in 1975
following a 1.8 percent 4.rop in
1974, the department said in a
year-end report.
The department said a 5.4 per-
cent rise in real GNP in the
fourth quarter .was not enough to
off set earlier drops. leaving the
natiQn's output of goods and
services in decline for a record
second straight year.
.Ford Talk Ignites
Congress Conflict
There have never been back-. WASHINGTON (UPI) -
to-back' yearly drops in the Congressional reaction to Presi-
broadest measure or natiooal · dent Ford ·s State of the Union ad-
economic activity since rttOrd dress shows there will be some
keeping began in 1946, the de~ battl~ when the Democratic ma.
partment said. jority in the House and Senate
But the GNP report showed acts on his Republican program
clearly that the national inapres1dentialelectionyear.
economy was in recovery as the Republicans generally ap·
year ended. Every major J)lauded the speech, but most
category of economic activity Democrats dismissed it as elec-
rose from the third to the fourth tion-year rhetoric signaling a
· quarter, the report said. re t r e a t i n t o t h e p a s t.
Inflation also moderated con-Congressional conservatives
siderably in 1975. Inflation for cesponded favorably while OOP
GNP purposes was estimated at liberals tempered their praise.
8.7 percent for the year, down Sen. Barry Goldwater CR·
from 9.7percentin1974. Ariz.) said, "If this country is to
The Commerce Department be saved from disaster, it will re-
said the GNP, after adju~t.t.. quirepresidentswiththecourage
ment for inflation, was estimatea-and foresight of Mr. Ford. His
at $1.186 trillion in 1975, down strong efforts to reduce the over-
from $1.210 trillion in 1974 and burdening power of the federal
$1.233 trillion in 1973. government should be applauded
GNP in the fourth quarter was
~mated at an annual adjusted
tale of $1.217 trillion, up from
$1.M2 trillion in the third
quarter.
The third quarter GNP rose 13
percent from the sec<llld quarter
when the 1974-75 recession of-
ficially ended.
Commerce officials said last
week they expected the GNP to
rise 6.5 percent in the fourth
quarter, but the preliminary
estimate was lower
Officials said it was not an in·
dication of any weakness in the
economy.
Although the 5.4 percent in·
crease was less than half the 12
percent rise in the third quarter,
they said it was an indication
that recovery from the nation's
worst recession since World War
II wu continuing.
SI'OCK TIU.DING
HE4VY AGAIN
NEW YORK (UPI>-..:..... Prices
closed higher today m heavy
trading on the New York Stock
Exchange after battling profit·
taking pressures all day
The Dow Jones mdustrial
average off more than two points
at one time, gained 6.14 points to
9-19.86. The blue-chip average, a
14 09-pornt winner Monday,
gflined 91 Points through the first
12 sessions of the new year.
Advances led declines by about
a nine-to-five margin. (Tables,
AJ3).
Turnover was 36,690,000
shares. up from the 29,450,000
traded Monday. The 10,640,000·
share first hour was the second
heaviest on record.
lrrine Co. Bolds Oii
by every taxpaying America.q,"
But Rep. John Brademas (0.
Ill.) found the program "about as
forward-looking as the one
George m bad for the Colonies 200
HIGHLIGHTS OF FORD'S
. ANNUAL ADDRESS, A4
years ago."
Assistant Senate Democratic
leader Robert C. Byrd said:
"Ford's rhetoric is Reaganish. It
'failstoberealistic."
·And House Majority Leader
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. predicted
the Democrats •'will not stand for
the status quo or cutbacks in pro·
grams that help the people."
Speaker Carl Albert, hoarse
from flu and daubing at his nose
with a tissue, said Ford's speech
••was a typical Republican State
of the Union message in an elec·
lion year . . . not really anything
new.·•
Senate R'epublican Leader
Hugh Scott praised Ford's pro·
posal to create jobs; for suggest-
ing a plan to promote investment
in stocks and for proposing a con-
solidation of grant programs.
Sen. Hubert Humph~y CD;
Minn.) said he thought t.tie Presi·
dent's speech was "upbeat" but
failed to offer a substantive pro-
gram.
Rep. Al Ullman CD-Ore.)
chairman of the tax-writing Ways
and Means Committee, called
Ford's proposals "fragmentary"
and said, "We need something
long range to meet the inflation
threat and long range to meet the
Social Security problem.'•
Sen. Jacob i,avits, CR·N.Y.),
called Ford's aadress "nonsensa·
tional and centrist." and said: "A
lot of it I liked. Some of it I didn't
<See REACT, Page A.%)
_Hotel Proposal Delayed·
Negative reaction to the pro-
posed "Holiday Harbor" project
in Newport Beach bas caused
Irvine Company officials to ~k
for a postponement aixl to con·
slder 1crapplng the plans for· a
m.room Holiday Inn. ·
: The ti mtlllon proposal for the
site at Jambdree Road and East
Coast includes the botel, •health
club, two restaurants and a 11·
quorstore. .
Newport Beach plal\ning com·
mlaslonen were scheduled ·to
\'Ole on the project at tJdf ,....,
meeUnf. Howevert tlll lntlaj_ ~ h .. --~ejltt~uatll-87IO .
At that llm•, U.. lrvidt Oom-
PU1 will ·r«urn _. either
vised plans for a -1 c:elnpl• or a different pro~ •tlreli. act0rdln1 to o·av•~
Compa n y pl•DD a1 ad·'
mlnlltrator.
"We still believe a hotel is an
appropriate use for the site, but
we·n use the coining montbs~to
study all the alternatives," Neish
said.
whether or not the city wants, or
needs, another hotel.
Despite criticism of the pro-
ject, Neish contends that a hotel
is still the best option.
He says a Holiday Inn would
He added that the Irvine Com· serve a different market than the .
pany is in agreement wit)l critics .existJ.nC hotels in the area. slnce
who spoke at a .public bearing its rates are lower than the
..held last month that the hotel Newp0rter Inn and Marriott
could UH "a little softening." Hotel and it would not be geared
Neish said that lf the Irvine towards cc>nventions and meet·
Company decides to continue its ings.
hotel plans, a new desip wduld Also, Neish maJntafns. that
be •\lb ... •U•~ th-1 -wq\&Jcl be-..,. NeuOrt ~ ~ Im.JI *-! 8'~ ~al! tn for turtW .... ~elOPlliiilt t.be ~~· , eomhlt Y•lrs. 'ftiere wllf be
· At tM publtc b 6eld areater demand tor bot41
Dff. 18 private ~ ~ a facWtlcs c .. eby
few plannlDI commlillobers Ho-hver. h• 1'1s that lf It Q--'
sul*e strcm• a1at• tbe pro-pears that tbetepnot ~
PCJlal. · t.be neiau .. ffflillp lbcNt tM
Tbey elted ~nccns ~ addl· otW hotel, •th•t typt of~ . r.ivamc:. wa~~ lntbe : will" pnpoeed fOJ.tM~~ :!'~ ~rn:f ~~~ ~~-:::t:~:~.~pa...,.
• . ..
Today's Closing ,
N.Y.Stoek8
N TEN CENTS
·Charges
Pending
Mesan's
Newport Beach police said to-
day they will file additional rape
and robbery charges against a
Costa Mesa man already in
custody on charges of assault
with intent to commit raPS,.
Det. Sam Amburgey said be
arrested Geral Ruiz Granados,
29, ol 180 E . Wilson St. Sund~
night after police allege he at-
tempted to rape a nurse at Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
The investigator said the nurse
was assaulted jn the hospital's
parking structure as she walked
to her car after her shift was
over. As she struggled with her
assailant, some other nurses who
were also leaving the hospital
chased the suspect off.
Amburgey said a hospital
security guard got the license
plate number as the suspect
drove away. .
He alleged the license was
traced to Granados' car which be
found at the man's Wilson Street
home.
Amburgey said he believes
Granados is also the suspect in
the rape and robbery of a woman
which took place in the same
parking structure last March.
The 44 -year-old Anaheim
woman was walking to her car
after visiting a patient at the
hospital when she was accosted
by a knife-wielding suspect.
Amburgey said the suspect
forced the woman into her car,
raped her then robbed her.
Granados remains jailed in
Newport Beach pending the fiJ.'
ing of additional charges.
Pot Not Only
·Contraband;
Pair Arrested
The youths protested, "We
have less than an ounce," when
Patrol Officer Steve Shulman,
detecting the smell of marijuana,
asked them wh"at was in their van
parked outside the Jaws dance
spot in Costa Mesa.
But the officer said he found
more than.marijuana in the van,
park¢ at 2285 Newport Blvd.
Monday night.
In addition to a plastic baggie
containing what looked like
marijuana, Shulman reported he
found a medicine ·botUe contain·
ing a white powdery substance, a
loaded .22-caliber pistol and a bil-
ly club.
The result was that the two
men, George Daniel Stockert, 22,
and James Lindsay Childers, 19,
both of Colorado, were cited for
possession of marijuana and ar-
rested and charged with
possession of dangerous drugs,
possession or a billy club and
possession of a concealed
weapon.
LA Seeking
Dart Gun .Ban
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A Ci-
ty Council committee bas voted
to ask the Legislature to classify
the Taser electronic dart gun as
an illegal weapon.
The state, county and federal
affairs committee voted Monday
to ban the shock device following
testimony by police officials and.
the weapon's manufacturer.
~weather
Fair, warm and dry
weather tbrou1h Wednes·
day, according to the.
weather service with highs
at the beaches 74 rising to . ·a> inland. Overnight lows
42to48.
INSIDE TODAY
StfU t'1/fn(I to.~ 1JOU1'
Chriltmo1 iohalclaamacalltt
. that came 10ith A~
dfredfonl1 For ~blc.ot-•
IUtanc•,IH P.~ 81., .. •-'• ,..,_~· Al...... .,
~ i · AO_..._.. AU cm• .. ...._....._ M a.... ... ,. or-.a..r Oll*ll .. . • M. n<tl
Gewa• a...... f't4:
........ A11 ............ (A•· ........... Ml= ..... . a1 ..._.. A•i ..__. .,....... ... . ,. ........... ," .. ,......
HMllllS M ...._ M • .... ••11 ., ....... . .. ... ~ "
L... ~ •. -.. J ' ..
I
I
A % DAllYPILOT
~Porno '
AppealS
Denie d
The U. S. Supreme Court has
refused to hear an appeal from 11
men convicted In Or~ County
Municipal Court or distributing
obscene material.
Over the objection of three
justices, the court rejected Jhe
case "for want of a subst.anfi'al
federal question.·.,
Justices Willim J . Brennan Jr.,
Potter Stewart and Thurgood
Marshall dissented, arguing that
the court s hould review the
materials in question to de·
!ermine for its elr whether they
are obscene.
The case involved 120 movies
s eized. from the JJM Adult
Bookstore, 220 N. Harbor Blvd.
by Santa Ana police over an eight
month period in 1974 .
Ten of the motion pictures
wt>re shov.·n during the triaJ in
Orange County Central Judicial
District Court be fore Judge
· Philip Sch1,1.-a b.
The appeal w....S-filed in the
name of one r.:endant, Nathan
Pt'ndleton, 61 Garden Grove. a
former mana er of thf:'-store who
was fined SJ, 125 and sentenced to
five months in county jail.
. .\lso fined an sentenced were
~lyron }{.. Curdy of Los Ange les,
the ailitged president of JJM.
Inc ., $5,625 and nine months ; An -
drew OiOrio. 39, of Orange,
S?,500 and four months; Wayne·
F'ahrbaC'k, 26, of Costa Mesa,
SJ.125 and five months: Richard
Jordan:37, of Orange, $2,500 and
four months. and Steven HaC'hey.
-n. of Ne>A•port Beach, $625 and
ont> month.
Five of the defendants were
tried and convicted in absentia.
They were Clinton Due. Louis
~t<.'.'Chesny, Valentino Rodriguez.
and Philip Vigil. all of Santa Ana
and F.d'A'ard Talone of FUilerton.
The fines and jail terms were
stayed pending the outcome of
the appeal
Church Loses
Four Tons
Of N ewspaper
The congregation of the
Newport Harbor Lutheran
Church would like to find the two
men who have been helping
themselves to the church's supp·
ly of used news paper
Members of the church, located
at 798 Dover Ori ve. collect old
papers to sell to recycling plants
The money is used for church pro-
jects.
Last week the drivers of two pickup trucks helped themselves
to more than four tons of
newpaper which was stored in
the chur-ch parking Jot, a church
spokesman said
Wilm Frerichs said that an ad-
ditional four tons has been stolen
in the past two months, apparent-
ly by the same two men.
He said one truck is a black,
1950 Ford and the other is a re-
cent model orange.yellow Dodge
with hand-made plywood boxes
in back:
Frerichs s aid the first two
thefts went unreported. but after
the most recent theft, police were
called into the case.
"We just want to find these t'f'o
men and help them sell the
papers legally,·· Frerichs said.
Arab Guide lines
UNITED 'NATIONS, N .Y .
· (AP> -After a week of dispute.
the Arabs have agreed on new
guidelines they want the Security
Council to lay down for an Arab-
Israeli peace settlement. The
United States appears certain to
veto them.
ORANGE COAST •
DAILY PILOT
T ... Or-c ..... 0•11¥ Pll•t w.th who<h 1\
·--,... ... Pl-•>\. j~ l*tltl-In -0.-C-\t P-1\111"0 C...,._, !otp.ot ... ~
ed<ho•" ••• """''.....,. ,,..,......,, 1,..0UCjh ''""' '°' o..•• -......... _, -h. ~""''"'1"" keo<hJf"1tMnl••n llelle,, "••t>e, ~••n.o<•
ll••lt• • ..., l•<a""• IMIMh~h C.00" ,_ .. ~
~I t<lltlooo I• Plll>li-s.t ... 111.~ -Wt>-~ .. "" ll"•"<•Pll 'Pl>l>ll"'l"ll pl-" '1 lJO WOM Ill y 51,ffl, ~ -w. (..olitof"4• m11o
' Robert N. Weed
PTe• .... nl-PUOll,,_
ThOmas Keevll
fcll!CN'
Thomas A. Murph\M ................ IE~-
ONtr~ H. Loos Rkl'llrd P. Nall ~-·..,,~ ..... IE~
TU!!C!!y, J.,,uary 20, 1979
Le111,es C9Urt
Manson cultist Sandra Good
leaves the federal building
in Sacramento after being
told by Federal Judge
Thomas MacBride that he
would rule Thursday on her
demand that he disqualify
himself from hearing her
death threat case. Story,
Page AS.
Lines Long
For Freedom
Train Tours
The waiting lines lengthened
today as more and Qlore people
descended on San Juan
Capistrano to visit the American
freedom train before it pulls out
for its next stop -Yuma, Ariz.
About 1,500 tickets ror the train
were due to go on sale at 4:30
p.m . Coordinators said tickets
would be sold up until IO p.m .
<Related. stories. picture Page
AJJ.
Waits for of up to two and one-
half .hours were reported Mon -
day, With the average wait about
an hour and fifteen minutes,
coordinators said.
The wait had lengthened to
about three hours by this morn-
ing .
Although traffic problems
were reported to. have occurred
at both Anahei rn and San Diego,
the train's two previous stops, all
was reported moving smoothly in
San Juan
1 2 Languages Set
For Coast College
T\\-·elve languages will be
taught in conversational
language classes at• Orange
Coast College in the spring
semester.
Classes will be available in
. <\rabic , Chinese, French ,
German, Hebrew , ftalian ,
Japanese. Polish, Portuguese ,
Ru ssian. Spanis h. and Swedish.
Registration is under way for the
seT!lester which begins Feb. 2.
, .......... )
REACT •••
Uke. I tbou&ht the recom•nd•·
Uons on revenue sharing and re-
1ulatory reform and tbe in·
telliaence community were rood.
I thought his references to un·
employment and the methoda ot
treating It were inadequate.••
Sen. John McCleUan, (0-Ark.),
chairman of the Appropriations
Committee, was not happy about
the recpmmendation for increas·
ingSocial Security taxes.
''I think people think their taxes
are as high as 'they can be right noW, ··McClellan said.
Sen. William PrOxmire, tD·
Wis .), chairman of the Senate
Banking Committee, said he
hoped Congress would stick to the
President 's proposed $394 billion
budget but doubted it. Jn other
areas, the program amounted to
"too much or a stand-pat opera·
tion, ··he-said.
House Republican Leader John
Rhodes said he did not feel Ford's
proposed tax cut, with a nominal
price tag of $10 billion, was infla.
tionary.
DiStefano
Kin Not
At Hearing
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ... Delly ")ell SCMf
Mourning members of the im-
mediate family who must testiry
stayed away today when Arthur
R. OiStefano appeared in court
for preliminary hearing en
('harges resulting from a violent
feud in which Huntington Beach
police shot and killed his yaunger brother.
Defense attorney Sal Eppolito
and prosecuting Deputy District
Attorney Melivin Jensen agreed
on a continuance until Feb. 19
and Judge Samuel B. Taylor
quickly granted it.
The Central Orange County
Judicial Di strict Court jurist
questioned Eppolito about the
length y 29 -day delay when
DiSterano, 35, has the right to a
speedy trial.
"Naturally, the family is still
in a state of II)ourning," Eppolito
explained.
Arthur DiStefano, of 6232
Chinook Lane. Westminster. is
free on SS,000 bail following his
Jan. 7 arrest and faces two counts
of assault with a deadly weapon.
He was arrested at the
DiStefano family's Ocean View
Mushroom Growers Inc , 18196
Golden West St., after a two-hour
confrontation in whi('h Nicholas
DiStefano, 23, was slain by police
shotgun bl as ts as he fled the
farmhouse where gWlShots had
been reported.
So far, authorities had not ex·
plained why the younger
OiStefano ran from the house and
toward police, refusing com·
mands to halt and resulting in
their opening fire on him.
Nicholas, second youngest
among Mr. and Mrs. Victor
OiStefano's four children and re·
portedly intended to take over
the lucrative family mushroom
empire which has nourished for
25years, had reportedl_ydefended
the household against his armed
eldest brother.
.i\rthur was banned from the
funeral that drew some 700
persons and a 115-car procession
to the cemetery, but appeared
with his wife and her family in
court today
His father and youngest
brother Victor, were not in court
although they will be witnessses
in the c~e aJainst Arthur.
. . o.u, PllOI ~-" 1''9\•
POLICE EXAMINE SCENE OF EXECUTION MURDER IN IRVINE ORANGE GROVE
S anta Fe Springs Man Found Riddled Whh Bullels Ne ar Sa nta Ana Free way
Fr-Page Al
HOSPITAL. •
have to pay their malpractice in-
suranC'epremiums.
"Realisti<.'.'ally, I would say that
at the very bes t it would be Feb. 2
before we get baC'k to normal if
then," Grundy added. '
Huntington lntercommWlity to-
day was alone among Orange
Coast hospitals as other local in·
stitut ions reported business as
usual.
Spokesmen for Costa Mesa
Memorial, Pacifica, Mission
NEl!O FOR URGENCY
OBVIOUS-Ed itorial, AS
C',ommWlity, San Clemente and
South Coast Community all said
thPir surgery schedules and pa·
tient census were about normal.
At Hoag Memorial, in Newport
Beach. the spokesman said the
census and surgery schedule in-
creased activity over Monday.
l.inda Mottin said the Hoag
staff is running a three.day check
of the census and surgery
sc hedule in an attempt to
•measure what effect. if an~, the
slo'A-·down is having on the
hospital.
NB Athlete
Facing Trii.O
Over Calls
..\ jury trial has been set for
Marc h 2 in ·Orange County
Harbor Judicial District Court
for high school athletic star
Brian Theriot who has been ac·
cused of making annoying phone
calls to an ex -girlfriend.
Theriot, 18, a former football
and track star from Newport
Harbor High School, was arrest·
ed at hi s home at 301 Vista Baya
Circle on Jan. 9 on a warrant al·
leging he made 14 annoying calls
to the 17-year-old girl and her
family.
Theriot, an Olympic hopeful,
holds several campus track re-
cords in sprint events and was a
running back of ihe football
team. He is currently a student at
UCLA.
Arraignment in the case was
held Monday at the municipal
court where a pre-trial con-
ference was set for Feb. 19.
Lawmen in Irvine
Seek Death Motive
By DOUGLAS FRITZSCllE
Of tlll 0.11, "letSCMf
Irvine police continued today
to probe for clues that would lead
to the slayer of a Santa Fe Spr-
ings man whose bullet-riddled
body was found in an Irvine
orange grove Monday.
The dead man was identified
as Eulogi.o Ramos VaJenzuela,
42, of Santa Fe Springs.
Valenzuela, whose occupation re-
mained unknown today, len a
widow, Zoila, and six children.
according to Irvine Detective
Steve Nash.
Nash described the victim of
the execution-style slaying as
"average Joe Citizen," with no
poli('e record and no record of af.
filiation with any of the gangs
that prowl the southeast Los
Angeles County area.
Valenzuela's body was dis-
covered by an Irvine woman who
was jogging through an orange
grove along the Santa Ana
Freeway east of Culver Drive at
10:30 Monday morning.
Police said the man had been
shot several times in the back
with a small caliber gWl. Nash
refused to elaborate, contending
that the information may lead to
the suspects.
"We have a number of leads
we are working on," Nash said.
Valenzuela was shot in the
orange grove and left lying face
down next to a tree for more than
a day before his body was found
by the jogger, police said.
He was slain at a spot more
than 100 yards from the nearest
residence.
Coroner's deputies refused to
add any details to the shooting.
Glider Theft
Loss $15,000
Hobie Alter's newest line of
merchandise -radio controlled
model gliders -has proved a
popular item ,' at least with
thieves who stole $15,0CX> worth of
the planes .
Officials at Coast Catamaran,
2026 McGaw Avenue, Irvine, told
police an inventory check
showed that 71 or the eight-foot
v.:i.ngspan .'!'.liders were missin,e.
Nash said, "I stayed up :tll
night trying to figure out a
motive for the shooting. J
('OU!dn't come up with anything."
The dead man still had hi s
wallet. apparently ruling out rob-
bery as a motive, Nash said.
HB Council
Sanctions
'lliegal'?
F or the record, Huntington
Beach City Administrator Dave
Rowlands is on probation and Ci-
ty Councilman Jerry Matney has
been given a reprimand by his
peers.
But ·the meaning and
significance of the City Council
sanctions appear to be anybody 's
guess today.
City Attorney Don Bonfa told
council members Monday night
in no uncertain terms that they
acted illegally and were in viola-
tion of California's Anti-secrecy
Brown Act on Jan. 12 when they
took the twin actions against
Rowlands and Matney.
Rowlands was placed "on pro·
bation" because of asserted ir·
regularities in administrative
operations. Matney's wrist-slip
·resulted from his public blasts at
Rowlands.
Bonfa said the action was iJ.
legal in that Rowlands was not·
properly notified of the Jan. 12
executive session and that Mat·
ney's case could not be handled
behind closed doors.
He said further that there are
no provisions in the city charter
for putting a city administrator
on probation and for reprimand·
ing a councilman.
"I don't know what Matney is
going to do with his censure,"
Bonfa said this morning, "but it
appears to have no legal effect
and is meaningless."
Following the admonitions of
their city attorney. city council
members voted at midnight to
put their actions against
Rowlands and Matney on n.ubli<.'.'
record.
Riot fluelled at Treti_ton Prison
TRENTON, N .J . (UPI) -
Authorities foiled an escape at-
tempt and regained control of
wing 17 at Trenton State Prison
today after an ll·hour dis·
turbance. An inmate who tried to
shoot his way out of the walled
fortress and flee in a waiting van
was killed.
Three prison guards were
wounded and another prisoner
was shot during a f1ve ·minute
gun battle at the maximum
security prison that touched. off
an ll·hour disturbance. One of
the wounded guards was hit by a
homemade bomb. The prison_
houses 890 inmates.
After ordering 120 inmates in
three tien to strip naked and
leave their cells, authorities
began tearinc apart the ceU. ln a
search for weapons believed
smug&led into the prison for lbe
escape attempt. ·
Ope .25-c&liber pistol wa1
thrOwn from a Uu by an lrunat.
durln& the upri1in1, a prisOll
spokesman said.
A prison of!iclal said the de.a
inmate, John Clark, 30, of
Newark, N.J ., who wuse:rvillJ a
life Hnttnce for the kllllnl o( 1
polleeman In I 973, bad tried
twice before to break out ol the
pril<m.
In his latest attempt last year,
Clark dug a tunnel wxlerneath
the prison hospital, but his
passageway was discovered and
he was caught.
State police said they learned
during the disturbance that a van
was parked near the prison in a
residential neighborhood. They
said they planned to search the
van for weapons after obtaining 8.
warrant.
Prison officials believed the in·
mates had at least three band
guns and a hom emade bomb.
The weapons could have been
smuggled into t he maximum
security wing during visits by
friendl and relaUves, ~
topalice.
State police saidltbey believed
several inmates wereinvo1ved In
,lhe breakout because other shots
were fired by inmates after Clark
·was killed. Hewu abotfivetimes,
a1pokesmansaJd. '
At 1 a.m. newa brief""lt on the,.
front atepe of the prUan, lnsUtu-.
tion1 and A1en cle1 Com·
mls1loner A1111 Klein and other
otnctall aald there were no ln·
Jurl .. other than thole wuunded
In the 1hootout and no m~or
.S.maie durln1 the lnckleht.
"It wu Jm t a break-at-
tempt;• • state police oftlclal
iald.
• , ' .
... _
STATE LOCAL liOUCE STAND VIGIL AFTEI ·SHOOTOUT AT TRl!NTON STATE PRISON
'Authorltlff Regain Conttof~a lnmete •81n Tryl"9 IO 1/1091 HI.aw.., Out
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Tuesday's
Closing Prices
•
NEW· YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
Year'11 High·l.ow11 Appear Every Saturday
p (
Mariott 211tk 24 MnhM 18021 MarSllF I 2• 12 10
Mart M I 30 I 294
Md CYp 00 8 131
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Mc Don D -0 9 390
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Mclnyr SOb b z8'.W
Mc.Kee A ta S l'1 M<L&an 80 l2 45 Mc lthS I 60 II 102 Mc:N•ll 80 8 11 Mead C I 20 I 549
Meadpl 2 80 ' MeaplB 1 80 10s
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Mesab 1 22b 9 121
Me•ta M 80 8 9
MGM 21<1 1 dl6 Motrom 60 10 263 MetEpt 3 90 120
MGIC In 10 252
MlchGs I 10 24
MkhST I 20 25 MkhST WI 4 MchWpl 2"' 21 Mic rodOt I 1 6~
Microwave 11 23 Mid<:Of\t I 08 9 55 M1dSoU 1 32 9 49()1
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Ml!e<slb I l-8 8 :i'l
MittnBr 3bd 12 318
MM&M I JS 26 '18 MIMPL 1 ~ r 21
M1rro Al % 8 3
M1ssnEq 28 6 SO
M1uR11 1 JO 1 59'J Mo Pac pf t 24
Mo"rtC 1 60 4 NYJ PbS 8'<j 2•
Mobilt> Hom 11S
Mob1IOI :l .CO 1 131
AAohas<:o 6(l 2 S 78
Mo.hawk Dt 1 JJ
'-Aohwk Rb ! l
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MonroeA 20 21 1464
Monsen 2 60 '' t.>13 Mons pl 214 • MontOk 2 08 8 4 MonPw 1 80 8 ••
Mnt9S I 80a 66
lilonyM 19d 11 52 Moor M< 80 • 201 """"J p 1 80 11 3<rl NlorrsnKn t 6 11
Mone EI Pr 43 .¥.orwSh JO 1 7 J MtQe Tr Am 11
.YtortNor 88 10 Ul
Motorola 70 •O u1
Mt Fuel 1 48 14 6.6
MTStTl!I 1 Si 8 31
Munft>rd 36 6 4-4 Mumci pt 40 21 Mon-sng t 08 18 3
MurpCo 1 10 8 4S
MurphOI 6t.J 6 PO
Murry Oh 1 6 10 MutQm l l1 JI
Mrers l 40 252 38 --f!N N4!1t:MS<:o 2 30 11 141
Nalco Ch n 12 138 Narco Sc 60 8 3.4 NaSlluaC 61) 1 o SJ NatA1rtn 50 13 298
NatAVTI J7d «
Nall can SJ I 210 NtCnpfl1 2 NChm>h l1 26 31 Nt Cityl 90 11
NtDetrt 2 11 5 xYJ
Ntl01'\tl 1 10 7 1206 Nt1Fuell06 7 18 NH Gyp 1 OS ll 383
Natl Hompc; lll
Nat lndu 30 3 100 Natlndpl W 1 Nat lpf8 11,,:. 5'
NIMed Ca,. 16 1%
NaPrs I 20a I 1
Nt 1 Semi con 3-4 183 Nat Serv 1.-q l!M
Nt Stand 90 7 2ti.
NtS1arch so 20 20 Nat S11 2v~a 10 141 Natt Tea Co lS
Natom,, 1 20 • 111
NCR Cl> l2 9 611 Neptune so 9 n
Nev Pw 1 so a s.. 19~
Nv?wpt 2 JO 1ia10 23 ....
~Ppf 1 60 zl70 1i "
NEngEI 1 78 7 7l 19''• + NEG>E 1 28 8 39 13+, NE? pf 2 76 23 2811" NEgT T 2 36 II Ht 26't+
Ne-wNill 40 1 18 11 :1
Nwmnt 1 60 U 1Sl 2611, + 11'11
Nwrnnpf' -41 ~ 3 80 1 i
NYSEG240 128 26'-'-'" NVsf!pf2 12 4 2214 10 N1avMo 1 24 7 309 1A Nl•Mpf 3 90 • 1150 '1 N1aMpf 4 10 110 •ti NlaMpf 5 15 rb-0 52 N>aMpl 6 10 • 1100 61
NiaMpf 7 n zlSo 78 Nt~f.!a106Q z190101 Nla;sh 11 ~ 1360 109 + 1 ~L.,nc1vs~~ a ~i gz:; :~
~r~'f~~s~ 1~ ~ g'1!! 1~
Nof'lnCp 111• 5 16 t6 Norris l 20 8 •3 29 + 2''1 NA Coal 80 9 6 31iv,.,, 1,
NA Mt 1 15b 10 50 7 > t NAmPh i 20 13 13S 2-4 1 +
NCnA1r lOb 1 105 2'11
NoCnA1r! wt 19 l 'i 16
N<>eslUt I 02 J •04 101• +
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NthQate Ex Ml 90 1 1 Norfhrop Cp 6 37 :n ; .., N~tA1rl 45 14 12•i7 26'Wt NwSan 1 70 10 16 .47\ii .. Nw Energy 115 28 NwEn9yct 2 37 28:\.'ti +
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Parhr Orlll 6 S1 1•"' + "' ParltHti 1 12 1 1l 2A1'11 Pitrt«'Pn ,,., 1 ,,, 121 1 +
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.a.
-·
Tueeday. January 20 197'6 N DAIL y PILOT Al .'J
Disabled, Too
Medicare Cost
Up for Elderly
By SYLVIA PORTER
If you are an elderly and/or disabled American covered
by Medicare, you will pay more out-0f pocket for your
health care in 1976 than in any year since the program was
begun.
-50 cents more a month, startrng this July for the doc
tor bill msurance part or M1..>d1care,
-$12 more on your hospital bills to cover an increase in
the Medicare hospital deduct1blt•,
~ A 13 percent mcrease m your co payments toward the
cost of your hospital stays of more than 60 days and post
hospital stays of more
than 21 days in skilled
nursing homes.
WHY THIS NEW
pinch on you, of all
groups of citizens?
Because of the relen·
Money's
Worth
tless upsurge in medical care costs. Since price restraints
were hfted m May 1974 physicians' fees and hospital costs
have been spiraling upward at about twice the rate of the
overall Consumer Price Index; costs of the Medicare pro
gram have far outrun earlier estimates. The deductibles
and co payments that Medicare beneficiaries must pay out
of their own pockets, or through premiums for pnvately
purchased supplementary insurance, have soared propor
tionately.
When Medicare was started in July 1966, the premium
rate for the voluntary doctor bill msurance was set at $3 a
month -and this, with the matching $3 to be paid out of
federal revenues for each elderly person enrolled, was
figured to cover the costs of the program in the first year
Thereafter, rates were to be reviewed each year and raised
1f necessary Ry July 1974, the monthly premium rate had
more than doubled to $6 70
THES CAME A RESPITE for Medicare benef1c1anes
but only because Congress made an error in drafting
amendments to the Social Secunty law mtended to hm1t
future increases in the Medicare premium rate to the percen
tage by which Social Secunty cash benefits had been raised
ma previous 12-month penod.
The drafters messed up the description of which 12
month penod, however The result was the premium could
not be raised last July, even though cash benefits under
Social Secunty had been hiked.11 percent in 1974. And there
was the chance that the premmm rate would be frozen for
another year -m the face of an additional 8 percent m
crease m Social Secunty benefits in 1975.
But m the final hours before ad1ournment last month.
C..ongress acted to correct the draftmg error -permitting
the premmm rate to nse by 50 cents next July to $7 20
This increase will come on top of a rise of 13 percent m
the amount of the Medicare hospital deductible. If you, a
Medicare benef1c1ary, are admitted to this hospital this
year, you will be responsible for the first $104 of your
hospital bills, up from $92 last year. Your deductible
(roughly the average cost of one day's hospitalization) was
$10 back m 1966.
WHEN THE AMOUNT of the hospital deductible goes
up, so do the co·paymenL<; by the same percentage as the de-
ductible increase. For instance, you'll pay $26 per day for
the 6lst to 90th day of hosp1tal1zation, up from $23.
For each of the 60 "lifetime reserve" days you use after
you have exhausted your imt1a1 90 days of hosp1tahzat1on,
your co-payment will be $.52, up from $46 As for nursrng
homes, the co-payment for the 21st to tooth day of confine·
ment JS now $J3, an increase of $1 50 over 1975
So far, White House efforts to control the costs of
Medicare such as attempts to I 1m1t physician fee m
creases have served mamly to shift costs to the elderly
and disabled
PRESIDENT FORD nevertheless will call for more
"cost shanng" when he delivers his budget for the next f1s
cal year Wednesday, will propose -as he did last year, and
as President Nixon did before him --that Medicare deduc.
tibles and co-payments be raised still further for those with
short or average length hospital stays
This proposal, the President will argue, would "saH' ·
more than $1.3 bilhon a year in the Medicare budget.
And from where would these savings come? From the
pockets of the elderly and /or disabled Make you feel good.,
Market Indexes
8y United Prns lnt•f'Mf'MMYI
NYSE lnde• 52 33 up 0 ?6
A'>E Ir.de:.: <iJ 00 up 0 0) Dow Jonf>'> Ind 949 86 lJP 6 14 S & P 500 S1od; 98 % "P 0 S4
Gainer• and Le•ers
r+tw Yon: IUP!J Thf!I fOfk>Wtnq list
'ihoW"> the stocks that have gained mwJ aOO lost the most ba<;.f!"d ~ P"n:..ent of
cr.anqe on the Ne# Von< Stock
Exchange
Net and perc•ntage ch""VP'S are the
d1fttrence b@fwffn The previous dosing
pr!Ce Md '""" G~~;,.r;~\ closjng pnce
1 Chr~lt-r wt \"fl + '!I Up SO O 2 C0+.1$4ns Mtg 1 .i.:. .. 1;_. Up 16 1
J ky~ In Z0 6J.lii + 1Jt Up t• 9
it Chryshtr Cp 131/t + 1);, Up 14 4 :S Puritan Fs.h S + \It Up t.t 3
Nf"'tr l'ork
15 Mo•t Artlre
N(W YORI( UPI I ThP 1S ""°"'' l'K.fl'W'
stocks tradf>d on the New Yor-._ Stocti:
E.11:chanve Tuesday
M1ddU!' Soutil
Intl Mtn Chem Gulf We-st Searle G 0
RCA
Ottcorp Pan Am Air Hercul~ Arlt!'C Oil
~r~. W\
Int Tel & Tel Wosl!lhSe El • Am MotOrt
Merrill L ync:h
S•lH
49S 000
411 400
~;gg
317 700
176 700
318 800 3()2 000
2116 700
265 000
157 !IOO 244 100 245,000
133900
126 500
Clo.. °'9
16 I + I •
JJ " I 7
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14"· ~ 24 " .. ! t 18 • ~.
5''• + ::i.o. li + l"
3l + '" tJT.le + 1:1,. 5 It .+-l .. 251.. +-1,
,1S~ + l'4 b,, + l,,.
20 + 1/41 6 A.m Motors 611+ l.lii Up 130 7 l.tth Val Ind 11,,. + 1't l,Jp 12 5 L..-----------------
8 Man Ind OSb 6"' + ... lJp 12; Nf"K' }' ork '9 Don Luf Jen J l + \.9. Up 12 O
10 Amrep Corp 2111+ 'I• Up 118 sa•-''•f-e 11 BTM<,ie :IOI> 2"il• •;, Up 118 ~ -l2 AmStto 10b 10!11' + '1111 Up t1 S
13 Gtn Portlnd &111 + ~ Up 11 4 U A~o Corp 1111 • 11,. Up It 1 15 C I Mtge ii;.+ 119 Up 11 I
16 Norris 1 20 29 + 2'19 Up 11 o
17 WPll~F Mtg 614 + ~ Up lO 2
18 A.dfoen ln<P .-1-. + i,;i Up tO O
1q RepMQe Inv 1\iti + 'Ill Up 10 O
20 Palm Sh 2S s:a.i..+ ~J Up 'S
1 8anC.al 1 34
1 qReadng Co 3 Z•palo JO 4 C~to Inv S Avco Cp wt•,
b Calahan 30f
~ ~::x~~I~: 9 O>I ,..nn 50
lOCa~ 8r
11 (.NA. LAwin
12 e.nvieon o 1J Dlwrslld In
1• PenDlx 2~ 15 Req 1
16 ~LC Am • 11 O<<d Pet wt
18 Boll Hwl IM 19 8'1_,,I.. 60 20 Wll191'11t Sil
Solos
PI (IQ! Clow -·-
Off
Off
Off '1/. Off 11 16 Off
ti Ott
11 16 Off ... Off 211/4 Off
11') IJe Off
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'"' 1-. Off 1 .. -'" Off 5 .. Ott
'" 119 Off l"' "' Off 71'1;~ 'h Off
11 -1\tt Off 30\At-2 Off 1914-IV. Off
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Two.,.., .Jr 1q
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By UPI
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17 752 030 l4 ,~.,
17 328 810
318 095 JI()
232 ""' 090 l Sil lJ6 17'1
narketTn-nd
NYSE MARtlET TMENO
., U.ltff p,.. .. ··-· T-y-y "57 1173
567 ]Ill
3'IJ 341 1917 1901
MEX MARKET TREND T_y_,, 405 .,.,
315 t3'> 315 311 I03S 1071
..
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A J 4 OM. y fatu>T
GEN1LEMAN'S AGREEMENf THE BARBARIAN
AND TIIE GEISHA
TIIE fLIM-FLAM MAN LAURA 1liE 1HREE FACES OF EVE
JANE EYRE PLANET OF TIIE APES 1liE AGONY AND nIE ECSTASY niE GRAPES OF WRATH BUS-STOP
HUSTLER TIIE 1'..EFT HAND OF GOD OUR MAN FLINT HOW TO MARRY
A MILLIONAIRE
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•• . .
.
01".aage Coast
EDITION
•
•
Today'~ Closing
N.Y.Stoeks
VOL. 69, NO. 20, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA C TEN CENTS
, M~~a D~nies Zeppo's Dance Permit OK
By ALAN DllUQN °'*Otllrl'tlll...,.
The city of Costa Mesa's
1 leJllthy / legal struggle to close
the dance spot once known as
Pier 11 and now called Zeppo's
cam'e to a bead at a 2'h·bour
public bearing Monday night.
After the hearing, the council
voted S to O to deny a dance
permit for Ze po's, located at
1976 Newport vd .• and Assis-
tant City Attorney R.R. Campa·
gna said it appeared the city may
now be in a position to close down
the operation.
But Michael Ortlr., new owner
of the night spot, indicating his
determination to stay open, said
be would appeal the council's de·
cision to the Orange County
Superior Court
The bearing for a dance permit
grew from a change in ownership
ot the premises. Testimony was
given at the hearing that Michael
Ortiz, formerly a manager of
Pier 11, will be th.e sole owner
when a recent sale clears
escrow.
City officials testified that the
previous dance permit was held
in the name of another entity and
that the business license~ was
held by a former owner, Jerrt
Owens .
U Pl Tel911hoto
Youngest Transplant
Three-month-old Alexander Kelly wails his
discontent after receiving two kidneys from
an infant donor which were flown to
Brooklyn by Navy jet from Virginia. Doc-
tors said the six-pound patient was one of
the smallest and youngest people ever to re·
ceive a transplant.
PotNotOrdy
Contraband;
Pair Arrested
The youths protested, "We
have less than an ounce," when
Patrol Officer Steve Shulman,
detecting the smell of marijuana,
asked them what was in their van
parked outside the Jaws dance
spot in Costa Mesa.
But the officer said he found
more than marijuana in the van,
parked at 2285 Newport Blvd.
Monday night.
In addition to a plastic baggie
containing what looked like
marijuana, Shulman reported he
found a medicine bottle contain-
ing a white powdery substance, a
loaded .22-caliber pistol and a bil-
ly club.
The result was that the two
men, George Daniel Stockert, 22,
and James Lindsay Childers, 19,
both of Colorado, were cited for
possession of marijuana and ar-
rested and charged with
possession of dangerous drugs,
possession of a •billy club and
poss~ssion of a concealed
weapon.
LA Seeking
Dart Gun Ban
LOS ANGELES <UPI> -A Ci-
ty Council committee has voted
to ask the Legislature to classify
the Ta.ser electronic dart gun as
an illegal weapon.
The state, county ·and federal
affairs committee voted Monday
to ban the sb~k device following
testimony by police offlciala and
the weapon's manutacturer. ,
BB B«;t.,Utal
Boos Greet Nabers
Car Zoning Bid OK
Jeers and boos broke out at a
meeting of the Costa Mesa City
Council Monday night during a
controversial vote on the land use
of a lot at 464 Princeton Drive.
The lot, which faces Harbor Boulevard, is owned by the
Nabers Cadillac auto agency,
which sought a general plan
amendment changing the lot
from residential to commercial
The agency wants to use the site
to display automobiles for sale
The general plan change was
strongly protested by residents of
College Park who charged that
the amendment would result m
commercial intrusion mto thE'
neighborhood and would con
stitute spot zonmg
College Park homeowners had
succesfully defeated previous at
tempts by Nabers Cadilla<' to
have three residential lots on
Princeton Drive changed to com
mercial, but Monday night's
bearing was confined to one lot
The three-lot denial had been
made on a 3-2 vote. with coun·
cilmen Alvin L . Pinkley and
Robert Wilson in the minority.
But Monday night when the
time to vote on one lot ap-
proached, jeers broke out when
Councilwoman Norma Hertzog
indicated that she was going to
vote in favor.
She said it would be for the
benefit of the community for the
lot to be commercial beeause it
faces Harbor Boulevard, but
some of her words were drowned
out. Councilman Robert M. Wilson,
who presided over the meeting,
Dally POCllC SUft fllottt
VOTE DRAWS BOOS
Councilwoman Hertzog
told the audience that he had
authority to clear the chambers
if calm was· not restored. He
called for the question and a 3-2
vote in favor of the change was
taken.
Wilson made a comment that
the audience was one of the
rudest be had heard while a coun-
cilman.
Today Mrs. Hertzog said she
would ·not vote for commercial
use of the other lots owned by
Nabers in College Park.
Elective S11rgery Ends
By JOANNE REYNOLDS • Ol .. DIMr Pt ......
Huntlnaton lntercommunlty
Hospital ln Hunttnatoo Beach
became the first casualty <II the
medical 1lowd own ae
anestbesioto1lsta and surieoas
there have eliminated eleet1'e
sur1ery. Hospital A dmlnlltrator
Richard Grundy aald tM boycott
bu resulted ln tbe layotf1of about
~ataff memben a.a the botplt.I'a
census dlpl)ed to 53 patient.I oo
Monday. The bospltal's averqc
census ls about 90 patients, Grun-
d)' said.
J
But, Grundy noted, the sur·
geons and anestbesiologists are
still performing emetgency sur-
gery.
''Wearedoine business as usual
iotheemerge.ocyroom. We'renot
tulbf.naanyodeaway,"besald.
Grundy saJd he does not an·
tJclpate any further staff layoffs
1iDH the boepital 11 runnlna with
a1keleton crew now. "Jn fact, our census Is up slight·
1y with medical and obstetrics.··
be said.
Grundy aald he does not an-
ticlP~te a~ •ubstantlal chanae tn the aituatlon until after Jan. 28,
the date most local physicians
have to pay their malpractice in-
surance premiums.
"Realistically. I would say that
at the very best it would be Feb. 2
before we eet back to normal, if
then," Grundy added.
Huntington lntercommunity to-
day was alone among Orange
Coast hospitals as other local in·
stitutlon.s reported business as
usual.
Spokesmen for Costa Mesa
Memorial, Pacifica, Mlsslon
C'.ommunity. San Clemente and
(Sff HOSPITAL, Page A%)
City aides also said there were
minor building code violations at
the premises, that a proper fire
department permit had not been
obtained, and that parking was
short of city requirements.
But Ortiz' attorney, Patrick
Schultz, drew admissions that
the building code violations were
correctable and an agreement
from his client that he would
curtail occupancy at the dance
spot to conform with the parking
and fire department require·
ments.
Ortiz P.resently is required to
have Wlilormed security guards
and a lot attendant in the parking
lot when the night club is in
operation.
This requirement followed pro-
tests by neighbors about dis,
turbances in the parking lot and
the order of Orange County
Superior Court Judge J .E.T.
"Ned" Rutter, who has ruled
that a public nuisance existed at
the night club. Rutter ordered
that guards be stationed in the
parking lot to abate the nuisance.
Schultz cited the court de·
cisions in an attempt to show that
efforts had been made to resolve
prevLous complaints. Schultz
who said no evidence had been
<See ZEPPO 's, Page A2>
With CDA Funds
Mesa Seeks Hotne
Sites f Or Elderly
A plan to commit $190,000 to a
fund to buy land for housing sites
for senior citizens was approved
by the Costa Mesa City Council
Mondav ni~ht.
The proposal was part of a
package of recommendatibns
submitted by the city's Housing
and Community Development
Committee for the di~tribution or
$508,000 in federal funds the city
hopes to receive next year.
City officials have indicated'in
the past that special housing pro-
jects for the elderly are likely to
be in the downtown area and be
part of the downtown redevelop·
ment program.
The next largest allocation was
$136,000 t o pay for sites
for a recreation center for the
elderly and a day care center for
children.
If the federal government ap-
proves the application, another
$70.000 will be spent on continu·
ing the program to provide
grants or low·interest loans to
low·income families to bring
their houses up to code.
(!. total of $15,000 will be com-
mtlted to the progTam to provide
temporary housing to homeless
families in a crisis This
emergency shelter program ~as
started in 1975 and the counctl
was told Monday night that the
service has assisted 76 people
A $97,000 allocation was made
for the fixed admm1strahve
<'osts of the housing and com
munity development program
The committee further recom
mended to the council that two
additional projects-a $10,000
subsidy toward the proposed ac
quisition of the 35·acre Canyon
Park in the westside, and $25,000
Mesa Officer
Hit by Suit
A. Foumam \t alley man who
clrums a Costa Mesa patrolman
challenged him to a fight while
mvestigatmg a traffic offense
sued the officer and the city of
Costa Mesa Monday for $10,000 in
damages.
David E. Bienek Jr. of 10669 La
Rosa Lane, Fountain Valley,
claims in bis Orange County
Superior Court action that Of·
ficer Jeffrey A. MilJer applied a
head lock on May 9 after halting
the plaintiff's car on Harbor
Boulevard.
Mothe r Sit-in
SACRAMENTO CAP) -A San
Francisco mother is staging a
sit·in at a state office with her
16-year-old autistic son. Marie
White, Sl. vowed Mood.ay to stay
until the state provides the re-
habilitative services she wants
for her mentally retarded son
Douglas.
STOCK TIUDING
HE4J'Y AGAIN
NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices
closed higher today in heavy
trading on the New York Stock
&'<change after battlin& profit-
taking pressures all day.
The Dow Jones industrial
averaee off more than two points
at one time, gained 6.14 points to
949.86. The blue-chip averqe, a
14 .09·point winner Monday,
gained 91 points through the first
12 sessions of the new year.
Advances led declines by 'I bout
a nine-to·five margin. (Tables,
Al3).
Turnover was 36,690,000
shares, up from the 29,450,000
traded Monday. The 10,640,000-
share first hour was the secol'ld
• heavie~ on rec<>rd .
for funding of a human services
program-be coqsidered for
funding from other city budgets.
The committee said it had
planned to include the park and
human service projects in its
budget, but they were deleted
when the budget was reduced.
SUCCUMBS AT 62
Mrs. N. Paul Nissen
The application for S..508,000 in
federal funds will be the second·
year request in a six-year pro-
gram, which could bring the city
a total of S4.2 million. Last year the city received $2291000; next
year it will be eligible for
S807,000.
GNP Drops
For Secorul
YearinRow
'WASHINGTON <UPI ) -The
nation's gross national product
declined for a record second
straight year in 1975 despite signs
of solid economic rerovery late
in the year, the Commerce
Department said today.
The GNP fell 2 percent in 1915
following a 1.8 percent drop in
1974, the department said in a
year-end report.
The department said a 5.4 per-
cent rise in real GNP in the
fourth quarter was not enough to
offset earlier drops. leaving the
nation·s output of goods and
services in decline for a record
second straight year.
There have never been back·
to·back yearly drops in the
broadest measure of national
economic activity since record
keeping began in 1946, the de-
partment said.
But the GNP report showed
Mrs. Nissen
Of Newport
Deadat62
J clearly that the national
economy was in recovery as the
year ended.· Every major
category of economic activity
rose from the third to the fourth
quarter. the report said.
Mrs. Dorothie .. Dodie" Nissen,
62, a Harbor Area resident for
more than 25 years, died Monday
at Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach. A memorial
mass will be said next Monday in
Costa Mesa.
Mrs. Nissen had been active in
a variety of community and
family interests since moving to
the area in 1948. Among those
pursuits were active roles in the
Orange County Philharmonic
Society, Child Guidance Center
of Orange County and the
Children's Home Society.
An avid golfer until illness
slowed ber pace, she held mem-
bership in the Irvine Coast Coun·
try Club and the Southern
California Women's Golf As-
sociation.
A native of Minnesota, Mrs.
Nissen studied music at St.
Teresa Conversatory of Music in
Winona, Minn., ·and attended
Winona State University prior to
her marriage.
She and her husband. N. Paul
Nissen, moved to the Harbor
Area in 1948 when be accepted a
position of assistant publisher of
the Costa Mesa Globe-Herald,
later the Daily Pilot. Mr. Nissen
retired in 1969.
Survivors include her husband,
of the f amity home in Newport
Beach; five children: Mrs. Joan
Starr of Las Vegas, Mrs. Susan
Hemington of Laguna Beach,
Linda Nissen of Balboa Island,
and Greta Nissen and James
Nissen of the home; a sister.
Mrs. Elalne Baker of Costa
Mesa; and one crandchlld.
Marla Remington.
Tbe memorial mass Mondai,
Jan. 26, will be said by MSIJ".
'Thomas Nevin ·of St. Joachim's
Oturch, of which Mrs. Nissen
was a member.
At ber wish. Mrs. Nisse-n's
ubes will be scattered at sea.
Memorial contrlbutlom can be
sent to the American Cancer
Society, the family sald.
)
\
<See GNP, Page A2)
ICEBREAKER'S
1RIP MUDDLED
SEATTLE (UPI> -The Polar
Star. America·s mightiest
ice break er. flunked its
shakedown cruise -it got stuck in
mudflats.
The Coast Guard vessel, the
first icebreaker built in the United
States in 20 years, was com-
missioned during the weekend.
The Polar Star set out in the
mornin,g Monday and quickly
beeame stuck in the mud between
Blake Island and the Great
Peninsula. It sat there 71"1 hours
before tugboats, aided by the tide,
pulled it clear.
Coast
Weather
Fair, warm and dry
weather through Wecines-
day, according to the
weather service with highs
at the beaches 74 rising to
~ inland. Overnight lows
42to48.
INSIDE TODAY
StiU hying to_ a.saem~ your
Chriltm<U whotchomacollit
thot come with ANMniqn
dirtt1ion.8? F'or possible .oa-
mt~. au Page 81.
C T~eedey. Januirx 20, 1979
_ UPITtl~o
PRESIDENT FORD DELIVERS STAT~ OF UNION
Behind Him, Nelson Rockefeller and Carl Albert
Ford Talk Ignites
Congress Conflict
WASHINGTON <U PI l -
Congressional reaction to Presi-
dent Ford's State of the Union ad
dress shows there will be some
battles when·the Democratic ma
jority in the House and Senate
acts on his Republican program
in a presidential election year
Republicans generally ap
plauded the speech, but most
Democrats dismissed it as elec
tion-year rhetoric signaling a
retreat into the past
Congressional conservatives
responded favorably while GOP
liberals tempered their praise
Sen. Barry Goldwater <R·
Ariz.) said, "If this country is to
be saved from disaster, it will re-
quire presidents with the courage
and foresight of Mr. Ford. His
strong efforts to reduce the over-
burdening power of the federal
government should be applauded
by every taxpaying American.'·
But Rep. John Brademas (D.
Ill.) found the program ''about as
forward-looking as the one
George III had for theColonies200
years ago."
Assistant Senate Democratic
leader Robert C. Byrd said:
.. Ford's rhetoric is Reaganish. It
faHs to be realistic.··
And House Majority Leader
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. predicted
TONIGHT
' ' .B E H I N D T H E
HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T.
Brown, OCC For um, 7:30p.m.
"THE NATIONAL HEALTH"
-South Coast Repertory.
the Democrats "will not stand for
the status quo or cutbacks in pro·
grams that help the people.''
Speaker Carl Albert, hoarse
from flu and daubing at his nose
HIGHLIGHTS OF FORD'S
ANNUAL ADDRESS, A4
with a tissue, said Ford's speech
"was a typical Republican State
of tbe Union message in an elec-
tion year not really anything new ··
Senate Republican Leader
Hugh Scott praised Ford's pro-
posal to create jobs, for suggest-
ing a plan to promote investment
in stocks and for proposing a con-
solidation of grant programs
Sen Hubert Humphrey <D·
Minn.) said he thought the Presi-
dent's speech was "upbeat" but
failed to offer a substantive pro-
gram.
Rep. Al Ullman (D-Ore.)
chairman of the tax-writing Ways
and Means Committee, called
Ford's proposals "fragmentary"
and said, "We need something
long range to meet the inflation
threat and long range to meet the
Social Security problem."
Sen. Jacob J avits, <R·N.Y.),
called Ford's address "non.sensa-
tional and centrist," and said : "A
lot of it I liked. Some of it I didn't
hke. I thought the reeommenda-
tions on revenue sharing and re-
gulatory reform and the in-
telligence community were good.
I thought his references to un-
employment and the methods of
treating it were inadequate.''
Sen. John McClellan, <D-Ark.),
chairman of the Appropriations
Committee, was not happy about
the recommendation for increas-
ing Social Security taxes.
''I think people think their taxes
are as high as they can be right
now." McClellan said.
-Mesan's
Charges
Pending
Newport Beach police said to·
day they will file additional rape
and robbery charges against a
Costa Mria man already in
custody on charges of assault
with intent to commit rape.
Det. Sam Amburgey said he
arrested Geral Ruiz Granados,
29, of 180 E . Wilson St. SUnday
night after police allege he at·
tempted to rape a nurse at Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
The investigator said the nurse
was assaulted in the hospital's
parking structure as·she walked
to her car after her shift was
over. As she s truggled with her
assailant, som~ other nurses who
were also leaving the hospital
chased the suspect off
Amburgey said a hospital
security guard got the license
plate number as the suspect
drove away
He alleged the li cense was
traced to Granados' car which he
found at the man's Wilson Street
home
Amburgey said he believes
Granados is also the suspect in
the rape and robbery of a woman
which took place in the same
parking structure last March
The 44-year-old Anaheim
woman was walking to her car
after visiting a patient at the
hospital when s he was accosted
by"a knife-wielding suspect
Amburgey said the suspect
forced the woman into her car ,
raped her then robbed her.
Granados remains jailed in
Newport Beach pe nding the fil-
ing of additional charges.
Nixon Name
Of/Freeway
SACRAMENTO <UPI)
-A Senate committee has
decided to remove former
President Nixon's name
from a 31h·m ile-lon g
South ern .Californ ia
freeway. ·
The legislation <SCR67)
by Sen. Nat~ Holden, (D.
Culver City j, would de·
signate the stretch of road
as the Marina Del Rey
Freeway, the name that
currently appears on the
road signs.
The measure was ap-
proved Monday by the
Finance Committee on a
10-0 vote with no debate
and was sent to the noor.
FronaPageAly
GNP •••
Inflation also moderated con·
siderably in 1975. Inflation for
GNP purposes was estimated at
8.7 percent for the year, down
from 9. 7 percent in 1974.
The Commerce Department
said the GNP, after adjust-
ment for inflation, was estimated
at $1.186 trillion in 1975, down
from $1.210 trillion in 1974 and
$1.233 trillion in 1973.
GNP in the fourth quarter was
estimated a t an annual adjusted
rate of $1.217 trillion, up from
$1.202 trillion in the third
quarter.
The third quarter GNP rose 13
percent from the second quarter
when the 1974-75 recession of-ficially ended.
' Delly ...... St~ l"lloto
POLICE EXAMINE SCENE OF EXECUTION MURDER IN IRVINE ORANGE GROVE
Santa Fe sprtngs Man Found Riddled With Bullets Near Santa Ana Freeway
E'ro..PageAJ
ZEPPO'S •..
offered to show Ortiz was not a
proper applicant for the dance
permit . :
The councilmen voted un-
animously to deny the request,
however, with Mayor Alvin L.
Pinkley citing the parking pro-
blem, the lack of a business
license, and some checks that
had not been honored as a basis
for denial.
The city has twice taken
owners of Pier 11 to court on the
grounds that a public nuisance
exists at the premises, but
though the city has requested an
order for the business to be
closed down the court has
stopped short of that.
In addition, a court decision is
pending on action taken oy the ci-
ty in 1972 to revoke a zone excep.
tion permit for the property on
the grounds that conditions of the
permit were not met.
Front Page Al
HOSPITAL ..
South Coast Community all said
their surgery schedules and pa-
tient census were about normal.
At Hoag Memorial, in Newport
Beach, the spokesman said the
census and surgery schedule in·
creased activity over Monday.
NEED FOR URGENCY oevrous-Ed1torta1, Ae
Linda Mottin said the Hoag
staff is running a three-day check
of the census and s urgery
schedule in an attempt to
. measure what effect, if any, the
slowdown is having o n the
hospital .
Glider Theft
:Loss $15,000
Hobie Alter's newest line of
merchandise -radio controlled
model gliders -has proved a
popular it em, at least with
thieves who stole $15,000 worth of the planes.
Officials at Coast Catamaran,
2026 McGaw Avenue, Irvine, told
police an inventory check ·
showed that 71 of the eight.foot
wingspan gliders were missin2.
LaWmen in Irvine
Seek Death Motive
ByDOUGLASFRITZSCHE
Of tlle DAiiy P'ltot StMf
Irvine police continued today
to probe for clues that would lead ~o the slayer of a Santa Fe Spr-
ings man whose bullet-riddled
body was found in an Irvine
orange grove Monday.
The dead man was identified
as Eulogio Ramos Valenzuela,
42, of Santa Fe Springs .
Valenzuela, whose occupation re-
mained unknown today, left a
widow, Zoila, and six children,
according to Irvine Detective
. Steve Nash.
Nash described the victim of
the execution-style slaying as
"average Joe Citizen," with no
police record and no record of af-
filiation with any of the gangs
that prowl the southeast Los
Angeles County area.
Valenzuela's body was dis-
covered by an Irvine woman who
was jogging through an orange
grove along the Santa Ana
Freewa~ east of Culver Drive at
10:30 Monday morning.
Police said the man had been
shot several times in the back
with a s mall caliber gun. Nash
refused to elaborate, contending
that the information may lead to
the suspects.
"We have a number of leads
we are working on," Nash said.
Val enzuela was shot in the
orange grove and left lying face
down next to a t ree for more than
a day before his body was found
by the jogger, police said.
He was slain at a spot more
than 100 yards from the nearest
residence.
Coroner's deputies refused to
add any details to the shooting.
I~ Languages Set
For Coast College
Twelve languages will be
taught in conversational
language classes at Orange
Coast College in t he spring
semester. ·
Classes will be available in
Arabic, Chinese, French ,
German, Hebrew, Italian,
Japanese, Polish, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish, and Swedish.
Registration is under way for the
semester which begins Feb. 2.
Nash said, ''I stayed up all
night trying to figure out a
motive for the s hooting. J
couldn't come up with anything.·'
The dead man still bad his
wallet. apparently ruling out rob-
bery as a motive, Nash said.
OC·Porno
Case'Nixed
By Justices
The U. S. Supreme Court has
ref used to hear an appeal from 11
men convicted in Orange County
Municipal Court of distributing
obscene material.
· Over the objection of three
justices, the court rejected the
case "for want of a substantial
f ederal1question."
Justices Willim J . Brennan Jr.,
Potter Stewart and Thurgood
Marshall dissented, arguing that
the court s hould review the
m aterials in question to de-
termine for itseU whether they
are obscene.
The case involved 100 movies
seized from the JJM Adult
Bookstore, 220 N. Harbor Blvd.
by San.ta Ana police over an eight
month period in 1974.
Ten of the motion pictures
were shown during the trial in
Orange County Central Judicial
District Court before Judge
Philip Schwab.
The appeal was filed in the
name of one defendant, Nathan
Pendleton, 61 of Garden Grove, a
former manager of the store who
was fmed $3,125 and sentenced to
five months in county jail.
Also fined an sentenced were
Myron K. Curdy of Los Angeles,
the alleged president of JJM,
Inc., $5,625 and nine months ; An-
drew DiOrio, 39, of Orange,
$2,500 an<f four months; Wayne
Fahrbaclt', 26, of Costa Mesa,
$3,125 and five months; Richard
Jordan, 37, of Orange, $2,500 and
four months, and Steven Hachey,
'n, of Newport Beach, $625 and
one month.
Five of the defendants were
tried and convicted in absentia
Theater, through Sun. 8 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 21
BASKETBALL-OCC vs. San-
ta Ana, 7:30 p.m . Costa Mesa at
Tustin, Villa Park at Estancia,
Newport Harbor at Western, all 7
p.m.
Riot fluelled at Trenton Prison
ORANGE COAST c
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Robert N. Weed
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Clolitffled Advertising 642-5'71
TRENTON, N.J. <UPI ) -
Authorities foiled an escape at-
tempt and regained control of
wing 17 at Trenton State Prison
today after a n 11-hour dis-
turbance. An inmate who tried to
s hoot his way out of the walled
fortress and flee in a waiting van
was killed.
Three prison guards were
wounded and another prisoner
was shot during a five-minute
gun battle at the maximum
security prison that touched off
an ll·hour disturbance. One of
the wounded guards was hit by a
homemade bomb. The prison
houses 890 inmates.
After ordering 120 inmates in
three tiers to strip naked and
leave their cells, authorities
began tearing apart the cells in a
search for weapons believed
smuggled into the prison for the
escape attempt.
One .25-caliber pistol was
thrown from a tier by an inmate
during the uprising, a prison
spokesman said.
A prison official sald the dead
Inmate, J ohn Clark. 30, of
Newark, N.J ., who was servinJ a
Uf e sentence for the kllllng ot a
poficeman in 1973, bad tried
twice before to break out ot the prtaon.
In his latest attempt last year,
Clark dug a tunnel underneath
the prison hospital, but his
passageway was discovered and
he was caught .
State police said they learned
during the disturbance that a van
was parked near the prison in a
residential neighborhood. They
said they planned to search the
van for weapons after obtaining a
warratft.
Prison officials believed the in-
mates had at least three band
guns and a homemade bomb.
The weapons could have been
smuggled into the maximum
security wing during visits by
friends and relatives, according
to Police.
State police said they believed
several inmates were involved in
the breakout because other shots
were fired by inmates after Clark
was killed. He was a bot five times,
a spokesman said.
At 7 a :m . news briefing on the
front steps of the prison, lnstitu-
ti on s and Aeenctes Com-
nmsioper Ann Klein and other
officials said there were no in·
juries other than those wounded
in the shootout and no major
damaae during the incident.
.. It was just a break-out at-
tempt," a state police official
said.
4
UltlT....._. STATE, LOCAL POLICE STAND VIOIL AFTER SHOOTOUT AT TRENTON STATE PRISON
Authorttlea R~1ln Control •• lnm1te 811ln Trying to Shoot HI• W1y Out . .
• -•
..
..
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