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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-01-27 - Orange Coast Pilot• e Ire ( l -- -I Hugh · Bean Con1'icted \ In Finklea Murder , ' TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 27, 1976 VOL ... HO. t1, t HCTIONS, ... AOal : ! • • • • _Battin Att-orney Blasts DA 'Bias' .2Mammoth Siders Die MAMMOTH (UPI) - Two skiers were thrown off balance on thin, patchy snow in separate incidents· on Mammoth Mountain and crashed to their death on rocks. Daryl Gordon, 16, of ll.a· cienda Heights fell after starting down Dave's Run, the steepest and one of the most diffic.ult at Mam· · moth. George C. Smith Jr., 23, of La Canada, suffered multiple injuries including a fractured skull and rup- tured spleen. Firm Hiking Insurance For Lawyers SACRAMENTO (AP) -The same company that boosted medical malpractice insurance to strike-triggering levels is giv- ing California's lawyers a similar boost, says the State Bar. William Shannon Parrish of Oakland, the acting president of the State Bar. said Monday the lawyers' professional liability in· surance, also called "errors and omissions policies," is to go up 383 percent March 16. A number of doctors in Southern California have walked off the job because 9,500 received BROWN GIVING UP ON MALPRACTICE? AS increases of 327 percent. This had been cut by the state insurance commissioner from a requested increase of 486 percent. In both cases, it's the Travelers Insurance Co., Parrish $aid in an interview. · The State Bar is investigating at least two alternatives. One would be a bar-sponsored group insurance .plan, which would requir& permission of the Legislature, Parrish said. The other would be a com- pulsory "pay.as.you-go" plan in wbicb all the claims against all lawyers would be added up each year, and each of the 50,000 mem· 1>ers assessed equally to pay them. 'Unlike many states, California t. an "integrated bar," mean- that all practicing lawyers required to belong. 'And unlike the doctors, Parrish E he doubted if tbe lawyers . ld s uggest that the taxpayers tribute to a solution. tome Californta doctors' oups ere suggesting state in- ance plans toward which their n contrt butlons would be \ltuntary, with the taxpayers ~ckatopping. . ' Parrish, who practices law alone ln a "hlah·risk" field of Slft"Sonal Injury work for plain· wt,, Hid blJ. own insurance now ' (See LAWYERS, .Pa&e A2) it Hinshaw Trial ~2 March I By TOM BARLEY °' .. DallJ ~-Staff Congres, man Andrew lUnshaw was ~xpected to discuss his political future today at a Santa Ana press conference or- ganized in the aftermath of his conviction Monday on bribery charges. Hinshaw, 53, <R·Newport Beach> scheduled the conference immediately after it became. clear from day-long discussions that the Orange County District Attorney's omce is not prepared to drop a second set of charges contained in a separate grand jury indictment. Several hours of talks in and out of the district attorney's of· fice ended late Monday with Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland-the presiding jurist in Hinshaw's bribery trial-setting March 1 as the date the con- gressman will be tried on con· spiracy allegations contained in the separate indictment. Speculation late Monday that the new trial date may have led Hinshaw to decide on his resigna· lion seemed unfounded in the light of comments he made to newsmen in the district at- torney's office. "This was just the first round." Hinshaw commented while de· 'f ense attorney Marshall Morgan nodded approval. "I have no intention of stepping down or making any other de· cision than the one I have already made-fighting and winning this bribery batUe in the appellate court.'' It was successfully alleged in the former county assessor's first trial that he accepted free stereo equipment and a $1,000 campaign contribution from the Tandy Corporation in return for assessment favors granted the electronics firm. It will be alleged in Innshaw's second trial that he .knowingly al· <See WNSRA W, Page A2) * * * Congressman Andrew Htnshaw•s conviction Monday made blm the third Callf omla representative and lhe 19th con· gressman in the nation's history to be convicted of a felony while holding office. Hlnshaw's predecessors from California were John H. Oeppel (D·Arcadia), who was convicted ln 1936, and Erneal K. Bramblett (R·Fresno), who was lrled and found guilty in 1954. Oeppel's crime was that he tried to sell an appointment to West Polnt. Bramblett ~as found guilty 6f takinC ldckbackt from b1a office employu. Newport Ho~se Burns Dally Pll~ Sl•ll PhOto FIREMEN ATTACK BLAZE THAT GUTTED NEWPORT BEACH HOME MONDAY Spilled Lighter Auld Blamed for Destructive Fire In Harbor View Homes Political Slant Charged By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of UM O•lly Pllte Sutt The attorney for indicted Orange County" Supervisor Robert Battin continued his at- tempt Monday to prove the coun· ty District Attorney's Office is engaged in "selective political prosecution." Despite repeated objections by Deputy District Attorney Jack Ryan, Kurilich attempted to un- ravel the procedures used by the county prosecutor in probing al- 1 eg a tions of political wrong- doing. Kurilich presented Ryan and Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae with 20 documents support· ing his claim that two distinct groups of politicans exist in the minds of DA's investigators. He repeated his prior allega- tion that Battin is part of a large· ly Democratic group backed by Dr. Louis Cella and millionaire rancher Richard O'Neill. The other group, he claims. is com· prised of those backed by the Republican Lincoln Club. Kurilich said the Cella·O'Neill group is prosecuted for its ac· tivities while the DA ignores r e· ports of illegalities by the other camp. Monday's activity in Lae·~ court centered on Kurilich's at· tempt to get the DA to admit thE names of politicians kept in in· vestigatory files. Jury Convicts Bean In Finklea Murder Lighter Fluid Spill Blamed In Home Fire Kurilich questioned DA 's In vestigator Joel Hayes and Depu ty DA Michael Capizzi, trying le · establish that while politician: from both groups may appear it (See BATTIN, Page A2) Hugh Daniel Bean was found guiJty of first degree murder late Monday in the gunshot slaying of Orange Coast College scholar- athlete Stephen "Mike" .Finklea of Fountain Valley. The same Orange County Superior Court jury which found Bean guilty must now determine if Finklea's killer should be ex- ecuted or given a life sentence. The guilty verdict for Bean ended nearly three days of jury deliberations. Finklea, 19, was shot and killed ·by two m en who attacked and robbed him Oct. 31, 1974, while he was working as a 7-Eleven market clerk at the Fountain Valley store .at Euclid Street and Warner Avenue. ·Bean, Impassive throughout the trial, remained that way as Judie WWJ am L. Murray's clerk read the verdlct. Bean, 24, was additiona lly round guilty of first delfee armed robbery. Judge Murray ordered the jury to return to hls courtroom Feb. 2 · for the opening of the trial'a final phase-the recommendation or MUection of the death penalty. Later today be will set the date for openlng arguments ln the murder trial of the convicted killer's brother. Charles Denni.a -· Bean, 22, who faces identical charges. The brothers were arrested by Santa Ana police 24 hourli after the Finklea killing on Oct. 31, 1974, on the bas-is of information supplied by a clerk who was about to relieve Finklea frotn his <See GUILTY, Page A2) He Paid Bills And Not Taxes TRENTON, N.J . <UPI) _._ Warren Wilentz bas been sus· pended from law practice for a year because he paid his wife's clothing bills of $660,000 rather than his federal income taxes. Willentz, a former Middlesex County prosecutor, argued that lhc psychiatrist for his wife, Rhoda, told him to pay her bills instead of the t,axes because she was bordering on a nervous breakdown. , The New Jersey Supreme Court handed down the one-year suspension Monday. Wllentz is a former candidate.· for the U .s. Senato and his father ls a former attorney general of the state. Lighter fluid accidentally spilled by the owner's 18·year-old son apparently triggered a .fire that caused· an estimated $115,000 damage to a Newport Beach home Monday afternoon. firemen said today. . The blaze gutted the home or Roy and Joanne Kent at 1811 Newport Hills Ori ve East in the Harbor View Homes section of the city. Firemen said that. when they got to the scene of the 2:30 p.m. blaze, the fl ames were burning through the roof of the single- story structure. Mr. and Mrs. Kent were not at home when the fire broke out, ac· cording to firemen. who said the couple's 18-year-old son escaped with a singed arm. No other in- juries were reported. In reconstructing the cause or the blaze, firemen said the youth told them he was trying to fill a cigaret lighter when be spilled the fluid and a spark from the lighter ignited the fluid. Fire investigators estimated the structural damage at $40,000 and the damage to contents of lhe home at $'15,000. A neighboring home aust'alncd about $SOO worth ol smoke damage, investigatot's - added. Coast Weather Fair through Wednesday with continued warm and sunny days. Patchy fog near the coast. Lows tonight in the 40s. Highs 65 to 75 from the coast inland. INSIDE TODAY Pringle's i8 in the chip!. and. competitors .ar«r being crunched in their war. agaimt the "new-fangled" potato chips that come in .a con.and have chomped up 16 percent of the potato chip market. See P.age A1. l•dex At At111 Y"""1 a1 .. ...... .. •• MllhMll , .... 1 •• AS Ntti..1 Ntwt A ••• ,. •H·1' OfNllCMIMJ Al ., ........ ., ... .., .............. ., Al~ aH .. .._ __ ,... ..., a .. J Ttttvl.i-AH' .. ,,.....,, .. et~ M ................. .. • I , Al OAILYPtLOT s TuMday.Janu' 27. 1971 t P"tty's Mo~ Dad Attend Jury Pick ;.. ..... r~.u ~ BATIIN •.• mes, only the Cella-O'Neill g.r•otip are Investigated and prosecuted. Under questioning interrupted often by objections from Ryan, ~uriUch got Hayes to admit that the DA maintain• ftCOl'dl on c~r­ taln political figures but doesn'l keep them In a apeclal f\le. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Batricia Hearst's long-awaited trial for bank robbery began to· day under light security, with jury selection likely to focus on attitudes toward kidnap victims. radicals and the wealthy. The news paper heiress• father. Randolph Hearst, told reJ>()rters as he left bis apartment for lha courthouse, "If she hadn't been kJdnaped by a bunch of terrorists . . • we wouldn't be holding a trial today. ". . . The only reason she would be in a courthouse would be for a marriage license or to pay a parking ticket," Hearst. Trend Changes Pot, Booze J'ieaa Reversed NEW YORK CAP) -Since 1969, Americans have rev~rsed their attitudes about the seriousness of s moking marijuana and drinking alcohol, a Harris poll shows. (Related stories. A4, All> . A survey of 1,394 adults showed that 71 percent view the problem of "heavy drinking" as very serious, while only 58 percent feel that way about m arijuana. "This is a complete reversal of public attitudes sin~e 1969, . when 73 percent viewed pot smoking as very s erious' compared to 53 percent who felt the same way about heavy drinking," the polling or- ganization said Monday. Mos t American s still oppose legalizing the sale or use of marijuana but increasingly believe that Possession of s mall amounts s hould not be a criminal offense. Ha rris s aid. The s urvey s howed that 69 percent oppos ed leg alization of s ale or use of pot, about the s ame as in a s imilar poll in 1974. Twenty-five percent favored legalization. Birthday Surprise Nude Cake-jumping ! Ad GOes Unanswered I By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OftlM O.lly .. ll«SUff Student job opportunities come in many different ways. Consider this ad. tacked up on the Sad- dleback College bulletin board: I , "Wanted: A young man to rump out of a birthday cake at wife's birthday porty. Time: Approximately 9 p.m . Feb. 7. Pay: $25 for one hour's time. Thu ofter is st net ly on the up and up. rm serious. Coll Bill OT Pam Gro~ at rrc-:urr by Jan . 29. •• .... The ad, placed by a Mission Viejo couple lo add 5'>me zest to the wife's 30th birthday, has found no takers s o far. A possible drawback: The assignment calls for a nude appearance. Mrs. Gross, wife of a security analyst, said her husband f're.. Page AJ t GUILTY. • • counter duties. Finklea, a highly regarded athlete who was captain of the Orange Coast College wrestling team, was shot through the mouth as he confronted his two assailants. The Fountain Valley youth was shot five more times as he sought refuge from his killers in a rear storeroom at the market. Santa Ana police recovered what they said we re the two guns used in the killing and the $133 taken from Finklea during a search ofthe Bean brothers' car. Search Widened SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Coast Guard says it plans to beef up its search for a San Diego fisherman missing off the California coast. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT T ... 0.•"'1P (<>4\I O••IY Polot. "'"" who<~ • (on"btM'd lhr ~,,., p, "'"· '" JM,A>tt\hfd t>v ow ()<-(O.O\I p.,l>h\1111\Q ,_... S..CW.•••• ~hon\ •H pubh .t,f>d MO"d•y C~ r rtt»y tor (0\11) ltl>\.IJ. Nt1>wPot1 0..-Cf\ H\IMrfM.)ton Bf'•<"' r Chi1t'tt•1n v,u1ty h "W•l'f'. \.aodlfl>t'U<ti V•tlty •nO l •Qvn.. 6 f'i8(f\ '}ovtf\ (_°""l A \1nQIP rttiOftt• t O•Uon •\ 1.ivblt\~ !..Ah,r4'ty\""" ~"" e41Y1o l "tt Of1n<.1P•I P\ibh\ohH~ ~Md t'\ Al JlO Wttl 80 Sit•~•. (O\I• Mn.;. C..ltlorlll• .,.,.. Robert N . Weed ,.., O\•O.nl •t>O Pvt11IW# Jaclc R. Curley V1u PtttlO.nt •ncl Ge_ .. Mtl\ot9ff Thomas Keevll originally intended the cake- popping as a surpris e but that she got onto him. So they're planning to spring the surprise on 15 couples who have been invited to the party. "We looked into a theatrical agency in Los Angeles that of· fered this kind or service but they ~barge $125 which is a liWe steep," she reports. ,, "So we pi~qd Sad(lleback Colleee which ta ttre clos-.t p~ to advertise. lVe thought there might be a kid around who'd want to do something crazy like that." To date the Grosses have re· ceived only one call from a stu- dent who said he'd have to "think about it" upon learning that the cake pop was to be performed in the nude. The Grosses are anxious to hear from qualified applicants but they don't want their · telephone number known because of tbe possibility of crank calls. Just who will make the final selection from all the can- didates-if there are any brave enough to step forward-hasn't been determined. "I hadn't thought about that," Mrs. Gross confessed. One thing's sure though. Mrs. Gross bas had so much fun or· ganizing the party that she says "I haven't had a chance to think about turning 30. '' Ford Greets Israeli Chief WASHINGTON CAP> -Presi· dent Ford welcomed Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin today with a reaffirmation or American support for Israel 's security and a call for increased efforts for Middle East peace. The President greeted Rabin in a driving rainstorm at ceremonies held before some 2,000 spectators standing outside the White House. Ford and Ra bin stood bareheaded with rainwater drip- ping from their ears and noses as the U.S. Army band played the national anthems of the United States and Israel. MS. HE.4RST'S CREDIT GOOD? SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The mountain of mail sent to Patricia Hearst in jail includes at least one application for a credit card. The application, apparently one of many form letters sent out by American Exprtsa, was ad· dreised .. Dear Ms. Hearst .. and aa.idlnpart: '' ... You will always have money without carrying alzable ama.,ntl of cash tbatcaneully be l01t or stolen. You can buy itftl, send flowers. cable moncty, bolt a dlnn.er, eveo tf you can't be there tt president of the San Franclso0 Examiner, aald as he stepped from hls Nob Hlll apartment with hls wife, Catb~rine. and daughters Anno and Vicki. ln response t.o a question, Hearst said he I ell opUmlstlc about the trial and felt the jury would take into account the fact that Miss Hearst had initially been kidnaped. "I think 12 people can un· derstand that." he said. Patricia had a fashionable new outfit for her first day of trial, and it was selected by her mother. ~ The 21 -year-old Miss Hearst made her first appearance in the outfit Monday -a tailored navy blue gabardine pants suit with white silk blouse accented by a soft bow at the n~kline. She wore navy sling-back bigb- heeled shoes. Attorney Albert Johnson said Catherine Hearst went shopping· alter the Hearst attorneys en· countered problems finding size fi ve-clothes for a 93·pound heiress. Johnson said he selected Miss Hearst's first courtroom suit months ago and partner F. Lee Bailey shopped for another one. "But we don't know much about shopping for women's clothes," Johnson said. "The salesgirls kept asking if I was buying this for my daughter." Miss Hearst, meanwhile, was described by Johnson as "ap· prehensive as anyone in h'er posi- tion would be'' as the trrat ap- proached. Authorities said all spectators would be required to pass through a metal detector similar to those used at airports. As in all pretrial hearings, federal marshals were ordered stationed at every entrance to the 19th floor courtroom and to patrol the aisles inside. · . The stage was set Monday when opposing attorneys sub· milted lengthy lists of proposed questions for prospectjve jurors to U.S . District Court Judge Oliver J. Carter. Following stan- dard federal procedure, Carter, instead of the lawyers, will ques- tion potential jurors. Miss Hearst, 21 -year-old daughter or newspaper executive Randolph Hearst, was kidnaped by the Symbionese .{...iberation Army?eb. 4, 19'4, and later 1>ro- claimed allegiance to the tiny b~fl!l t4>f t~rrQris~~ She Vi ,as ebar,ea with helping the SLA tob a bank here in Aprll 1974 . She was arrested here last Sept. 18 after a nationwide hunt. E',.._ Page Al IDNSHAW. • DlllrP1*$'-'t""'4e lt'laat's Be Doing Here? Actor Paul Newman, well known for his penchant for auto racing, is competing in a different sort of contest at UC Irvine. To find out what he's doing and why, see Page A3. Luggage Screening System Proposed WASHING TON (UPI> -The Federal A viatton Administration said today it is considering a lug- gage screening security program that could force travelers to ar- rive at airports up lo three hours ahead of their flight departure time. John Mc Lucas, the new chief of the FAA, said the program to screen all luggage is one of many proposals growing out of the bombing that killed 11 persons at New York City's La Guardia Airport Dec. 29. The La Guardia bomb was placed in a public, coin-operated luggage locker. McLucas said he believes the security problem with that kind of locker has been solved by moving locker racks into secure areas or closing them completely. But, he said, the FAA must still consider security measures to deal with the approximately million pieces or luggage placed aboard U.S. airliners everyday. "When you start talking about checking every piece of luggage or cargo that goes into an airport, you're dealing with a formidable problem," McLucas told a news conference. Acknowledging that long pre· flight delays might discourage air travel and encourage bus or rail travel, particularly on trips of only a few hundred miles. Mc Lucas said the FAA is concen· trating efforts on security measures primarily for luggage going aboard planes, rather than just iotp term in al buildings. ••Nonetheless:· he said, "you are stuck with procedures that slow planes significantly. The de· lays we have been talking about may take from one to three hours." McLucas said the FAA will start within a few months testing luggage X-ray devices at two or three U.S. airports. He said most would be kept tn the DA'• "Alpha FUe0 on1enerat ipvesttgatlons. But Hayes did say that some poliUclan'a name.s are on Index carch in the DA'a organl.-ed trlme file. The only names Lee would permlt Hayes to reveal were BatUn'a and that ol former Supervisor David Ba~er. When Capizzi took the stand, Kurillch continued t)is complex questioning pattern, trying to work around Ryan's objections. KurUich asked Capizz:I if an in· vestigation had been launched in· to charges that campaign workers for Congressman Jerry Patterson and Assemblyman· Richard Robinson, both Democrats, had filed fraudulent voter registrations. Capizzi said s uch an investlga. lion was conducted and resulted in court action. But when asked about similar charges against Republican Congressman Charles Wiggins, Capizzi said he talked to Wiggins and was satisfied with his ex- planation. No probe or prosecu~ tion was undertaken. The long questioning sessions were part of Kurilich's "dis· covery motion, .. which is aimed at turning up any evidence of dis· criminatory prosecution that could result in dismissal of the Battin indictment. Lae has been ruling on the mo- tion in pieces and testimony was due to continue through the week. f',.._ Page Al LAWYERS •• costs $425 a year. Some doctors in high-risk fields such as neurosurgery say their insurance bills have eone from $8,000 to $40,000 a year. Parrish said the State Bar dis· putes the figures on which Travelers bases the increase. He said the State Bar is about two years through a five-year contract with Travelers. He said the contract permits Travelers to increase rates after two years to whatever it needs to be "on the basis or experience.'' During the first two years, Travelers collected $6.7 million but paid only $52,000 in claims, Parrish said. · .Parrish agrees that many claims based on legal actions during the two years could turn up many years later. ''But when we ask them where they get their numbers, they say from other insurance companies' experienqe," Parrish said. "We just don't think the num· bers add up to what we think they should be,'' he added. S · E If the full·scale security lowed county employes and enate yes measures are installed at all of materials to be used on county the nation's 60 major airports, Jn legis lative hearings on medical malpractice insurance, some doctors blamed trial lawyers for bringing costly suits. and some trial lawyers blamed what they called faulty practices of doctors. time for the campaign that won FBI Ch McLucas said, the increased him the 40th District seat once arges operating costs of about $100 held by John Birch Society million a year would add a new member John Schmitz. SAN DIEGO (A P) -The ticket surcharge of 50to75cents. Judge Kneeland set Feb. 17 as Senate Intelligence Committee is In the meantime, he said, the date h e will sentence sending two investigators to airlines are being urged to take Hinshaw to what could be one to study charges that the FBI pro-less drastic steps such as careful· Guilty Plea Filed · 14 years in state prison on each of moted guerrilla warfare against ly matching passengers with two bribery convictions if the left-wing groups and individuals their tickets and their luggage to judge rejects a motion for a new in San Diego, the ~an 1'1ego make sure no one slipped a bomb LOS ANGELES <UPI> -A trial that will be argued on that EveningTribunereports. intothecargosystemandleaves. 19-year-old man called the date. The paper said Monday that He also said a new system of "parking lot bandit" by police Conspiracy co-defendant Jack the investigators would spend up security seminars is planned to because or a series of crimes be· VaJlerga had not yet learned to-to two weeks interviewing make airport personnel more a llegedly committed in day which California county has onetime radical leaders and pre· security conscious, and sus· downtown parking lots pleaded been selected to hold his trial on sent and former law enforcement picious looking pieces of luggage guilty Monday to two counts of identical conspiracy charges. He , _o~f:..:.:fi:..::c~e::rs::,. _ __: ________ ar_e_be_in_;g;....s_e_ar_c_he_d_by;....._h_an_d_. ____ ro_b_be_ry_. ________ _ was granted a change of venue ·--------------------------------------... Monday. Vallerg~. 54, already stands convicted of charges of grand theft, conspiracy and misuse of public office that were tried in Ventura County. That conviction led lo a six-month jail term and his removal from office as Orange County assessor. Hinshaw said Monday that the jury's verdict in the bribery trial had in no way diminished his de- sire to campaign for re·election to the seat he won four years ago. The convicted congressman pointed out that it is unlikely that his appellate privileges will be exhausted before the June primary contest. "The verdict may put a crimp in my campaign, but it hasn't diluted my determination, .. the GOP legislator said. . Title Firm Grated Delay LOS ANGELES CAP) -A federal Judge haa delayed for two weeks a decision on a request by Tl Corp. of California to plead .. no contest" to fraud cb.,..res. The company. ~ COJ'l)Orate · entity which owns Tille Insurance Ir Trust Company, la accued of "check ldUng," or tranaf errtn1 funds between ban.le accounts in wbat prosecutors called .. an unprecedented pat· um ol fraudulent conduct d• tlped to tnfi•te and enhance lta Tl'1prolUplcture.'' . ... THE PRICE IS RIGHT (or is it?) HAVE YOU EVER GOME IMTO A STORE. AND BEFORE A SALESMAN APPROACHED YOU, TRIED TO DETERMINE PRICES OM GOODS MOT MA Ilk ED? MANY CARPET STORES DO MOT HAVE PRICES INDICATED OM THEIR SAMPLIS. THI THEORY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAM CHARGE "WHAT THI TRAFRC WILL IEAll." AT ALDIN'S PRICES ARE POSTED OM ALL OF OUR SAMPLES SO · THAT CUSTOMa5 CAM IROUSE THIQUGH THE SELECTIONS AND KMOW WHAT THEY ARE LOOkJMG AT. TOO, THERE IS ALWAYS THE POSSlllLITY OF A LOWER PRIC! IF COMDmOMS WARRANT. • *•••••• Cll'P' DEN'S : iiiSiiilitiiin: ·custom drapsriss • 1663' MCENTtA AVENUE I I Tu.ed!Y. January 21. 1978 DAILY PILOT A :J Cella,. 3 Dthe" Plead Innocent &1S .W®Mlf. ®®((\VJO©® The column appeut dally except Sat11rday1 aad MODd1y1. A9P1rtn9Artbt . DEAR PAT: I believe I have talent as a cartoonist, but I have no idea how to market my draw· ings. Can you tell me where to look for the information I need? J .L., Newport Beach · You may be interested in the book, "Artist's Market,'' p11bllshed by Writer's Digest. This 624·page directory lists 2,894 buyers of fine an, crafts, de· signs, illustrations, cartoons and photography. Each buyer describes the kinds of art be seeks and the rates be pays for it. • Thf" directory ls dJvtded into 45 market categories wltb Wastra- tlGm of the type of art or photo- graphy boqbt by buyers ID that category. Copyright Information on art, cartoons, comic strips, P.hotog r a ph y, fll ms and television also ls Included, in ad· dltion to marketing tips and a sample commlaslonfJCI art agree. meat. A free broebure, ".Jobs & Opportunities for Artists," ls available by writing to the publllher at 9933 AWance·ftoad, Cincinnati, OH 4524?. Bontnteader DEAR PAT : I want to homestead my house and handle the arrangements by mail, but I don't know bow much it costs or to whom the check should be sent. N.P .. Newport Beach You can buy a homestead form at any stationary store for about 50 cents. Fill it out carefully and have lt notarized. Mall 'tbe form to tbe Orange County Recorder, Bos %38, Santa Ana, CA mtz. Enclose a $3 check or money or· der payable to Oranie O>uty Recorder.· Coffee Stains · · DEAR PAT: I have Corelledis· hes by Corning. The cups have become discolored by coffee, and I don't know how to clean them without damaging the finish. Any suggestions? L. T., Laguna Hills Coming Glass Works recom· mends fllUng the cups with a solution made from two tables- poons of Uquld bleach and one cup of water. Give this 10lutloo tlme to work, and theft wash as usual. A brownish irrtdescent film can be caused by high iron content ln the water supply or by rusty water plpea. ZUd cleanser can be used to remove this type of stain, u well as gray marks caused by contact of metal with the flnilb of the china. Door-to-door DEAR PA1': What is the name or the association that is sup- posed to help mediate problems between consumers and door-to· door selling agents'! H.L., Balboa It's the Direct Selling Aasocla· tlon, 1738 M S&., NW, Washington, DC 20036. DSA ls a national trade usoclatlon representing some 190 dlrect-to·consamer retailers-. Its code of ethics program ls a voluntary self -regulation pro· gram that provides a redress mecbanllm for any consumer· with a complaint conceral.Dg any of Its members. If problems can't be solved with the company -directly, DSA wlll help con· IUIDerl 1atn 11tlaf 1dloe. 11te OD· ly requirements are tbat the complaint be la wrtdq and all pertinent lnlormaUon concern· Ing the transaction be Included. Free publlsbed matertall also are available by sending a self· addressed, stamped, bualness· size envelope to the above ad· dras. BrealaNixed On Minoritie• SACRAMENTO <AP) - Women and r a cl al minorities hired by school districts in af. firmallve action programs can't be given a break when it comes to layoffs, state Atty. Gen. Evelle Y OUftlel' ruled Friday. However, he said, bilingual teachers cao. Youn1er said the Lealslature round that apeaklnl two lan1ua1n ll a 1Pidal quallflca· lion ot· teachen hired for bll· i naual prol(t'am1 . That authoriMI • •AOol diltrlct to hep .au.ch an em,ploye Jn pre. f erenc:e to a senior employe who could 1pe~k only En,U.Sb. l ·Dana's Whale Eest Set Dana 'Point's annual Festival of the Whale will be celebrated at Dana Point Harbor for the next three weekends with whale watching trips, lectures, films, a parade and a beauty contest. (Related logbook Page A8. > The festival is held to com- memorate the annual migration of the California gray whale from the Bering Sea to warmer waters off Baja California, where female whales will bear calves. Whale watching cruises will leave Dana Point Sportfishing at the b,arbor Saturdays and Sun- days hourly from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m . The price or the two-hour cruises is $3 for adults an~ $2 for children. Tom Miller, autbor of a book on gray whales. will lead off a host of lecturers with a talk at 10 a.m. Saturday at Dana Wharf. Miller will return at 10 a.m. Feb. 14 for another talk. while Larry Lay man, a· Fullerton College oceanographer. will show a video tape on "conversations" with hunchback whales at 10 a.m . Feb. 7. A National Parks Service film on the whale will be shown in advance of each of the morning lectures. · Carol St ad um, a paleon- tologist, will exhibit and describe marine fossils found at the harbor. This is at 2 p.m. Satur· day at Dana Wharf. Joe and Robin Valencic, authors or a book on whale watching will appear at 2 p.m ea~t} Saturday and Sunday at Dana Wharf with cetacean (whale) displays. Slide presentation on animal life at calving grounds near Scammon's Lagoon and Baja California is lands will be shown by Margie Stinson at 10 a m Saturdays and Sundays at Mariner's Village 1 Marine movie matinees will be held at 1 and 4 p.m each Satur day and Sunday. A parade or c hildren and other favorite pets will step off at 10 30 a.m . Feb. 7. Later the same day, Miss Dana Point will be crowned by enter tainer Joey Bishop, who wm sail in on his yacht. Harpooh Renry's 'at Marine's Village will be the site of the I p.m . crowning. Other events will include tidepool tours, a dinghy race, 1dart tournament and ethnic dances. Amphibious boats operated by Army reservists will provide a "water taxi" service between ac- tivity points. The festival is sponsored by the Dana Point Haroor Merchants Association and the Dana Point Chamber of Commerce. 8 Die in Jungle LIMA, Peru CUPI) -Eight persons, three or them Americans, have been killed in a helicopter crash in a northern jungle region near where the Peruvian government is building a multimillion dollar oil pipeline across the Andes, authonties an· nounced today. The Great R~e The Mel Brooks company is at UC Irvine filming Brooks' latest laugher "Silent Movie" with Paul Newman, Oord DeLuise and Marty Feldman. Above, Newman ·Toy Gun Bank Heist Thwarted (right) and his double chat during a break while below, three actors try out their motorized wheel chairs for a scene . All Deny . D. . f 1vers1on Of Funds LOS ANGELES (UPI> -Dr. Louis Cella and three associates named in a 44 -count federal in- dictment denied Monday they diverted about $2 million from two Orange County hospitals for political and personal use. Cella and Theodore Schiffman .• 53, Santa Ana; George Ollendorf. 44. Laguna Beach, and Stephen Ev ans, 31 , Mi ssion Vie10. pleaded innocent before U.S. Dis- trict Court Judge Matt Byrne Jr. Trial was set to begin May 4. Cella, 51, a Santa Ana physi- cian. was among the largest political contributors in the state in 1974, -donating or loaning more than $500,000 to various can- didates. All three men were accused of misappropriating money from Mission Community Hospital in · Mission Viejo and Mercy General Hospital in Santa An a . The indictments include 26 counts of making false stale· ments in connection with Medicare reports, eight counts or filing false income tax returns, two coun'ts or income lex. evasion, four counts of stealing government property, two counts or mail fraud and one count off conspiracy. Ollendorf was administrator or Mission Hospital from 1972 until last August. -. Evans was assistant ad'- ministrator at Mission until 1973 when he moved to Mercy Hospital as administrator. Cella. is a part owner of both facilities. Until last fall he was secretary· treasurer or both hospitals. Cella. a registered Republican. donated or loaned $290,302 to the campaign or state Controller Ken Cory, $14 .381 to the campaign of Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., and $141 ,539 to Orange County 4 Supervisor Laurence Schmit, among others. If convicted, the defendants A Santa Ana man was arrested face maximum penalties ranging by Seal Beach police Monday, from three years imprisonment just minutes after be allegedly and $5,000 in fines for the false · robbed 9 banlc of $1,022 at "toy" tax return counts, lo 10 years in • gunpoint prison and $10,000 in fines for. f'BJ agents said today his theft or government property. weapon was a chromedimestore Cella and his three associates toy gun face similar charges contained in Roy ({olin Guthier, 27, of 2221 a 127-count 0 range County Camdert Place, Santa Ana, was Grand Jury indictment. They are arrested on charges of robbing scheduled to enter pJeas Feb. Sin Crocker Bank, 12331 Seal Beach Orange County Superior Court. Boulevard, investigators said. The alleged conspiracy began in 1971, the indictments charge. He was held overnight in when funds were diverted from Orange County Jail, FBI agents the two hospitals and the two swd, and was to be arraigned to-partnerships that own them . day. Bail was set at $25,000. Cella and Schiffman allegedly Officers said Guthier allegedly opened bank accounts in the • entered the bank at 12:28 p.m. name of fictitious hospital supply < Monday, walked to a teller's win· companies which then billed the dow, showed be-r the gun in a two facilities for supplies and papersackanddemandedcasb. services which were never or--·dered. He then stuffed the cash into.;::======================================:;-the bag and flfd in a 1966 black Lincoln, investigators asserted. Seal Beach Police Officer Michael White, responding to a robbery call, s potted Guthier's car just minutes after the alleged holdup at Seal Beach Boulevard and Katella A venue, officers con- tinued. They said the suspect was taken into custody without inci- dent and turned over to FBI agents. \ BOB RACITI .~s ti ESTATE SALE i.P. ,.-SoHt•;,. o;•monds ' \ )9 ladies Platinum Engagement Ring with 2 31 ... ~\ ct. Marquise and two 20 pt. tapered Dia· -t\~V mond Baguettes . . . ................ S5,200.00 f\.\• Cent's Yellow Cold, Gypsy-Mounting with r January 12 ct. natural Cat's (ye and two Diamond 30 31 . Baguettes....... . . . .............. $9,500 00 - l adies Elegant Platinum Engagement Ring with 5.10 ct Pear-s hape and two 20 pt. February 2 tapered Diamond Baguettes ........ S 15,000 00 ladies Platinum 2.01 ct. Marquise with two tapered Baguettes ......................... S4,250.00 ladies Exquisite Platinum Engagement Ring with 2 67 ct. Brilliant-cut and two 'I. ct. ,, Njguel Bank Rubber LOses Release Bid WHY BUY FROM ESTATES? tapered Diamond Baguettes (Apprai>ed by Graduate Gemolo~1sl at S 18.500) . .......... S8,500.00 Ladies Platinum Engagement Ring with 2 0 ct. Brilliant-cut and two tapered Diamond P.L-.,., -~=~~:t~~:·;i-~um ·E~-~~~~~·~~·;·R;~~ ~;:~-~ ~0,~ ct. Bri lliant-cut and two tapered Diamond ~ ~ CLEVELAND (UPI> -A farmer Clevelander convicted or the Laguna Niguel bank burglary, the biggest in American history, was denied re· lease from jail Monday by U.S. District Court Judge Ben. C. Green. Philip B . Christopher, 32, served three years of a 20-year sentence in the federal prison at Terre Haute, Ind., for burglariz· ing the Laguna Niguel branch of United Calif om la Bank. Bonds, rare coins, gems and cash worth $7 million were taken ln the 1972 burglary and half the loot ts sWl missing. Christopher was living in a Salvation Army halfway house in Cleveland and working at the CUyahoaa County Board of Elec· tions preparatory to scheduled parole next month. He was arreat~d by U.S. manb1l1 Jan. 16 to be ta.ken back to Terre Haute after Oevelad Police Chief Uoyd F . Oarey and U.S. District Court Judie Thomas D. Lambro& ex· pres1ed displeasure over bis qUlck release from l:on. He ts beinl held in the e County Jail east-of trer• j Christopher asked for release from the jail on grounds he bad not violated the terms of his re· lease to the halfway house. He told Green he had been jailed on· ly becaus~ of adverse publicity about bl& parole. But Assistant U.S. Attorney William J . Edwards submitted an affidavit signed by Federal Parole Board officials stating the board had received new informa· lion on the Christopher case. Not long after Christopher was arrested at the home of a girlfriend, U .S. Parole Board Chairman Maurice H. Sigler acknowledged that parole ex· amlners from Kansas City had not been told that Christopher was convicted of the California burglary or that he had been linked to a $430,604 theft from the LordJtown branch Serond Na· tlonal Bank of Warren -Ohio's lar1e1t bank bur1lary. Sl1ler said Christopher's riles had apparently .shown only that be served three years of a 10-year sentence for a parole violation. Cbttstopber is now due for a heartna ln Terre Haute to de- termine tf his Feb. 10 parole date will be racinded. Purchasing jewelry and art at estate sates provides substantial savings over buying from retail sources because at estate sales valuable items are offered from trustees. banks, bankruptcies and other means of liquidation. SAVINGS UP TO 50o/o AND MOREi Our January Estate Sale includes Jewelry purchased from estates all over the U.S. including, jewelry from the estates of Dame Agatha Christie, Tom Mix and others. I Baguettes. . . . . . . . . . ... S2,450.00 ~ v v ~ Diamond Ring Guards ::.Y Lovely 14 K White Gold with 1.28 cts. tw 0 Brilliant-cuts and 36 pts. tw Marquise ......... S1.125.00 Beautiful 14 K White Gold with 22 Brilliant· cuts and 14 tapered Baguettes ....... S1,320 00 14 K White Gold with 2.0 ct. center and 14 . small Brilliant-cuts .................... S1.750.00 Gems ladies 14 K Yellow Gold Ring with large Amethyst and 12 small Brilliant-cuts .......... S540.00 l adies 14 K White Cold with large Oval Lavender Jade Ring surrounded by 10 Ame-- ~i~~o~~~~--~~·i·l·l·i·~-~-t-~~·t···~-~~--.~~.~.~~~ 14 K Yellow Cold Brooch with 94 pt. Oval Co Blue Sapphire and approx 4 .50 cts, tw Mine- •cut Diamonds ..................... S1,150.00 RACITI JEWELRY 714 J-E-W-E-L-R-Y 1838 NEWPORT BOULEY ARD (at Harbor) COSTA MESA 14 K Yellow Cold Bcooch wit h large Bur- mese Carved Jade... . ..... . .......... S685 00 14 K Gold Locket and Chain with V. ct. European<ut Diamond . . . . . SJ95.00 Choker-length freshwater Pearl Necklace ....... sso.oo Platinum Pendant with 14 K White Cold Chain set with 4 cts ., tw Brilllant<ut and Baguette Diamond~. . .............. s~18SO.OO • Af DAILY PILOT ----- LOOKING BACKWARD: Since every body in the country ls currently on the bicentennial kick, it should come as little sur· prise that the good citizens of Newport Beach have joined the movement. At least they've done a &ood job of it. Instead of just printing up some red, white and blue napkins or passing out starred and striped ballpoint pens, Newport Beach people have done something for the bicentennial with their own history. They have issued forth a book titled, .. Newport Beach, Heritage and Horizons." TUMC!!y, January 27, 1916 Morocco Launches Offensive ALGIERS, Alg..-ia (UPI) - Moroccan armed forces have un· leashed a "brutal offensive" a•ainst areas ol former Spao1sb Sahara held by nationalist guer· rillas, the PoUsario Front said to- day. The Polisario Front, the Algerian-backed movement com· batting y,ol:,_occo's and Mauritania's takeowr of the ter- ritory, said in a ~tatement the situation in the area bad reached a "stage of extreme gravity." There was no immediate con· firmation in Rabat of the alleged offensive. Polisario sai.d the ''Moroccan monarchist troops have launched a brutal offensive backed by enormous m iii tary means against the liberated zone near, Amgala, controlled by the Polisario Front. "The Rabal troops are ac- complishing acts of unprecedent· ed savagery against the Saharan populations which sought refuge in the liberated zone." "¥ ellow Flu" llN Billlota Defense NeedS ' Told Congress WASHINGTON (AP> -Secretary of Derense Donald Rurnsfeld urged Con1ren tod111 to act now to reverse a danierous military· power shirt toward Ru.ala waminl that "confidence in the future adequacy or our force structure ls gradually declining.•• Gen. Georges. Brown, chairman or the Joint Chiefs of Staff, sup- ported Rumsfeld's plea. During the past ;1ear, Brown told the House Armed Services Committee, the extent ol the Sov- iet Union's improvements in strategic nuclear striking forces had been "somewhat greater than anticipated.'' The two Pentagon leaders said, in effect, that Congress must be prepared to vote a record $100. l billion defense spending budget for next year to maintain American strength so that the United States can achieve an equitable unclear arms limitation agree!Jlent with Russia. march on as little as a few hours notice." That means, Rumsfeld 1ald, that the troops are ready to go, with few of the telltale sips - calling up reserves, movins artillery or reinforcements - that could telegraph communist intentions. Marijuana Sex Study Draws Fire EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. (UPI> - Tb.is nicely done volume even starts out well, considering what everybody else is doing with the nation's 200th birthday. It does not have a red, white and blue cover. Instead, the Newport peo- ple selected a watercolor of the Newport Harbor entrance by famed Corona del Mar artist Rex Brandt. MAYOR DON MclNNIS wrote the introduction and I guess you can excuse him, under the circumstances, for quoting Thomas Jefferson. Inside, there are some glimpses and history and a fine collection of photographs. It is particularly interesting to note how the evolution and develop- ment of Newport Beach and its harbor have been so closely tied to transportation. THE STATEMENT accused the Moro cca n forces of "genocide" claiming they were sys t ematically destroying Saharan camps and killing the population in their advance. Sunday Morocco charged that a Moroccan F5 jet was shot down in south Sahara by a Soviet-built SAM missile which Rabat said must have been fired by foreign intruders helping the Polisario guerrillas. Detroit began a court-ordered school desegregation plan Monday involving about one of every eight students in the city. The "Yellow F1u" refers to the color of 250 new buses used to bus 21,853 students -60 percent of them black -with anti busing leaders calling for a continuation of a "Yellow Flu" boycott. Absenteeism was up to 40 per- cent in schools most affected by the integration plan. RUMSFELD INDICATED the Pentagon may move to build a bigger neet of m issile-firing Tri· dent supersubmarines. The addi· tional Tridents, which cost about $1.5 billion each, might replace some older submarines and land· based Minuteman missiles which Qlay become vulnerable to Soviet attack in the future. In his first formal report to Congress as secretary of defense, Rumsfeld said current U.S. forces are adequate to balance Russia's present arms strength. But, be said, "confidence in the future adequacy or our force structure is gradually declin· ing." A U.S. attorney says he plans to press obscenity charges against Southern Illinois University if the school gains federal immunity to , ' use marijuana for a proposed •; study of the drug's effect OD sex· l ual response ' The Polisario communique failed to indicate how many Moroccan troops were involved in the reported offensive, and what weapons they were using. U.S. Veto Angers PLO Over Israel "Because of the trends -re- ductions on our part and Soviet military expansion -there has been a gradual shift in the power balance over the past 15 years,"" Rumsf eld said. U.S. Attorney Henry Schwarz said Monday that if the govern-. ment sanctions the research with federal funds and with federally ·supplied marijuana it "would muddy the waler " in the pro- secution or other drug cases. Early in the book, there is a line drawing of the old steamer Vaquero, the vessel that first en- tered the harbor in 1870 and led to the creafion of Newport Landing in Upper Newport Bay. This opened the seaside village to commerce. Other old photographs show · how inland folks from Orange County beat the heat in 1892 by tr aveling to the seashore by horse and buggy. In 1891, the McFadden Brothers had their Santa Ana-to-Newport railroad in operation from inland to Newport Pier. The rail line car- ried 12,564 ~ssengers to the beach in its peak year of opera- tion in 1896. But the Moroccan command re- cently sent reinforcements into south Sahara to boost its 12,000· man force which occupied the ter· ritory after Spain had decided to surrender it to the two North African countries claiming it. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. CAP> -The Palestine Liberation Organization threatened to intensify its armed struggle against Israel following American veto ~fa U.N .. Security Council .r~solution calling for an independent state m 'Palestine for the Paleslin1ana and Israeli withdrawal from all territory it occupied in the 1967 Six-Day War. "IN LIGHT OF the momentum of Soviet military programs of all kinds, it will continue to shift un- less U.S. defense outlays are in· creased in real terms." He said that if immunity from possession of marijuana is grant· ed he would proceed against the research on obscenity grounds and present the case to a federal grand jury. "If it calls for it, I will do it," Schwarz said. THEN NEWPORT transporta· tion turned to the Big Red Cars of Pacific Electric Railway, which made its first run with beach· bound fun lovers on Aug. 3, 1905. Well today, the McFaddens' old r ailToad is long gone and so are the Big Red Cars of Pacific Electric. A considerable campaign was generated in Newport during the early 1960s to get the old PE tracks torn out and the right-of· way cleared for development. Today, with gasoline prices soar· ing, smog filling every lung and traffic choking every street, you have to wonder if the demise or the electric railroad was such a giant stride forward. ANOTHER PA GE or Newport's bice ntennial book shows two contrasting photos or Newport Boulevard where it in- tersects with the present Pacific Coast Highway. The vintage pie· ture is circa the 1920s showing a loog line of tin tizzies, crawling along, bumper to bumper, trying t o r each the sun and sand of Newport's strand. The modern photograph shows the same road, now much wider, with contemporary vehicles, slowly crawling along, bumper to bumper, trying to reach the sun and sand of Newport's strand. Ah, progress. Cold Weather Foils Deadly Booby Trap JEMEZ SPRINGS, N .M. (UPI) -The person who rigeed a deadcy booby trap in an aban- doned car apparently had no particular target in mind; but ''just wanted to kill anybody," says town marshal Dick Fent. Fenl> said Monday the trap, a .30-caliber Ml carbine set to fire when the car door was opened, did not go off. apparently because of the cold temperatures in the Jemez Mountains. The gun. he said, was tied to the front seat and covered with a sweater and a serape. A string tied to the trigger went around the front right seat and behind the front seats and was attached to the driver's door, the only door in the vehicle that was unlocked. FENT SAID the gun was set to fire at anyone opening the driver's door and said it would fire each time the door was opened. .. He had it zeroed right in there," he said. "There wasn't any way 1t could have missed. "I don 't think he was particularly after us. I ·think he just wanted to kill anybody." Fent said his office r eceived a telephone call reporting an aban- doned auto at a campground about 16 miles north of town. He said he knew the caller but declined to identify the person pending further investigation. The 15-nation council ended a two-week debate on the Arab. Israeli Dispute Monday night with a 9 to 1 vote in favor of the resolution. But the lone negative vote was cast by th.-United States, as expected, and con- stituted a veto. BRITAIN, SWEDEN and Italy abstained, while China and Libya did not participteate in the voting on the ground that the resolution was not bard enough on Israel. Voting for the resolution were France, Japan, the Soviet Union and the six cosponsors: Guyana, Pakistan, Panama, Romania, Tanzania and Benin Dahomey. Immediately after the vote, the United States and several other countries issued statements in an attempt to dispel any idea that a new Middle East crisis was im· minent. They pledged continuing efforts to achieve an Arab-Israeli settlement. But Secretaey-General Kurt Waldheim warned the council that it would soon face "new de- adlines which, in the absence of progress toward a settlement, can only bring on a new situation of crisis." He was referring to the expiration t" May 31 of the authority for be U.N. buffer force between the Syrian and Israeli armies on the Golan Heights. Syria's price last Nov· ember for extension of the man- date for the force was the council debate and the PLO's participa- tion. THE PLO CLAIMED a political victory on the basis of the support voiced for its cause during the two-week debate. "We shall go back confident, as we have always been, that the Warm Air • m Northwest Mild Skies Aid Beleaguered New England II u ... 10 ., 2S • ... u ...,,........, ..... I I ~-··--""-r-::-:.. ~)O ~:::;: -~-.-..,. " ........ .... ·--· ._ ....... ~ .. ... -., .............. c.tlle.1.•~ 10 .... ____ .. _ e.........,,.....,_. ..... ~C.---1'• .........,._...... ...... ,,,.,,.......... ... ... ... ~c-----. a... ..... c.....-c.-............ U90'lt. . ....... ........... .. aowtn ,..,.""""' llCUMO--- Coast 1t•tn. '" tll• cenlr•I '"" ..u-n poni.a"' tlle AolNll&IHM ...,_,,.,.-ma. 0.-... wlttl ¥1sl11UlllH ,_. mro '" -plKn ext...oect from New Ent!_. to Vl1"9lftl• INlklftO .,_. ••• "-lyllar..~Mrlytoday. Tiw ~ fl4 ,.1.uv1ty mild •'' -...... Eftelelld Ms llr~~tnd .. tM f,..llftQ rAill tl\tt plAgU9d tnl -ll(llOll4ley. H--· cOlcltr Air pl'od\lctd-anow •Wff W.ttffll Ptnn1ylva11la,. hdffll Otlle .,.,. In tllt llOfthem fl«• tlorlvf M ldlto-n. Clear .-... elld cold '"""'"""" •Md •rou ..-t part1 of tfle ,.."' ...0 MIMIWllPI VelltY today. Tem- ,_.. .. _.,.....llelOW lll"Ofoem ... -*tm De~ Into WIKOMlll end ~ltllllOla. ,,. -~..,., '''° ""'l'"OKhld ,,. freetlllt INfk 111 1*11 of Souttltm , ..... eut -""' temperetu,., .-... ,., _..,Into u. Mfthwellllm and -.tt ~··· ~Alllt •IOftO wlttl - •• a WP1 WIA'IMI fOIOC Alf • B•r M ~'MOW tmJ--." ~ .~~ . ,..._., .n ......,,_ ,,. ,.. ...... 0!'9. ... -...001y t• ,_._ SI S.Cr--. ta --~ JI s.tt u111 CJ1y n $lwl ,.,_,~. •• ~ .. Wfllhl"911111 Ja • A Af91n .. ,," and Vltlbllltlft _. C Al! ..strk tM to •-INiet *-• ., ... ,,. fe S.-y "'"' Md mlW ~ p --~ ... ------11 ~ -· "" .......... , .. _ d\M9f " """' """' 1n1r11 su .. 2. • 9r1tf'rl. -y llllet PflYllllM -• ... h llHer" w4l" •Mll'I ,..,,.., ...... " I.. '""1H In MO•t o,.M. HitN lit Ille ._., -..n, , • ....., .,_ q " n ......., ... ._...._._.~ ..... -..... ~,-~ c.IH.-N• IOOeY • ._., • <IOulfY ...... ~-tw.11 71~• . 11.s.s___.. "'"' s-w ,.. •lefle ~ .... .,,,. off .., ""•-ftlnt ....... ..... .., ... ...,..., .. _,...,,._, Tacllt"• Mfll .. Ult LM ~ Owl< c:.m.r ,. ..... at 7l. .,. t*9I • ""' ....,,., T1 ~·"' utflt ""'9 _,...,..... ..... &.ti ... ... , ....... .....,, • c.1-' ........ °"' .... ...,. _ _.... ............ ..,!'It ..... ..,. .. _,_ .. ...,.,... ... ....... l~tfltAt'-IC Arab masses will further in· crease their moral and materi8' support to our armed struggle," said Farouk Khaddoumi, guer· rilla cbief Yasir Arafat's chief political aide. Another PLO spokesman, Basil Aql, told a reporter the or·. ganizatlon would now consult friendly countries OD the next step to take while intensifying its armed struggle. The American veto was the 143rd in U .N. history and tbe 13th by the United States. Rumsfeld's 313-page report, prepared for his appearance before the House Armed Services Committee, was the opening gun of the Ford administration's bat· tie for its record $100.1 billion de· f ense spending budget. "Security is not available at bargain basement rates," said. "Almost one-half the Soviet total of front line divisions are d eployed in Poland, East Germany and Czechoslovakia. Together with non-Soviet Polish, East. German and Caecb divisions, they can probably THE TWO-YEAR research project at SIU's Carbondale, Ill., campus would be carried out un· der a $121,000 grant from the Na· tional Institute on Drug Abuse. SIU-Carbondale psychologist Harris Rubin would conduct the proposed research. He wants to pay some 60 adult male volun· leers from $10 to $25 a session to smoke marijuana and watch pornographic movies. The idea is to determine the ef • feet of marijuana on sexual arousal. The reaction of the volunteers would be measured electronically. Courses by Newspaper SHAMERfCA Without LemngHom• All you have to do Is open your mind -and your newspaper. We'lt put America at your fingertips every Sunday In the Dally Piiot. In our pages, you'll flnd thought-provoking views of Amertca at Its bicentennial. _Registration Form These weekly perspectives. are drawn by wel~known scholar-writers in a sertea of articles for American Issues Forum, the special bicentennial program of Courses by Newspaper. The topics are those on the minds of every concerned American -topics like government, land use end human rights. So relax In your easy chair and Join us In exploring our country's heritage and hort~ Its problems and potential. If you wish, you may enroll for two free course credits at Orange Coast Coll99e. Class enrollment closes Feb. 13. Midterm a.nd final examlnatlon-dJ1cuaalon ~ se11lon1 are scheduled for from 10 a.m. to noon, Saturdays April 3 and June · 5. The course text-reader ($4.95) and optional study guide ($2.95) are stocked by the Orange Coa1t College Bookstore. Campus coordinator for- Courses by Newspaper la Tom Wert, a member of the Orange Coast College social science staff since 1965. He will conduct the two on-campus dlscusaio·n and exam sessions and arrange voluntary seminar' sessions. He may be contacted by phone, 556-5759, or, during his atmpus office' hours, room 102A, Art Center Bulldfng. ----------------------------------------------~--- • 2. .... COURSES BY NEWSPAPER is offered by the Daily Pilot as a public service. Class credit may be earned by enrolling at Orange Coast College. COURSES BY NEWSPAPER REGISTMTION FORM THE MOLDING OF AMERICAN VALUES I wfSlt to tNIW my <l"ldlts re<«ded at lchedl-) u. O Gddln w.-t eo1.._ oo.r .. C:O.st CollelJI ~ W you plan to regiller for COUf'Mt other thM C.0W... by N9WSP11PW pt._ d~ th19 torm and regl•t• for all ct-. at the college. 3 lllr9' Diii .. ..,., .. c. ....... °"" .,_ °" -&.~~ -°" -e.::.-:.... . -----°" -1 '· 0 ..... 2 . 0 ,,....... .. -,..,-............. ~ t.tL-Y•of .. edlOOl.-.all111ori.edele...,.._1¥.._.• ..... •P......._ I 0 Yee I 0 No 1G ......... ,,_...., ... Cllbnleblpl' ..... °" ... __ _ tt.~-'*'-' t O•• t Q No ""'_..,,.. ..... ____ _ "'-------12..0wS 7 it TM•• 41'11* ... ' 111 •llGenWCL ,., ______ _ H -----------~---------------~-~ DAILY PILOT t ' Tueedey. January 2). 1976 DAILY PILOT AS )I Physicians Holding Out Rape Law Re(orm I! Measur/ Approve d ; Most Refusing to Pay lmurance Premiums LOS ANGELES CUPI) -Most physicians in the Southern California area hit by a doctors' strike are ref using to pay the higher insurance premiums that set off the w alkout and face the loss of their malpractice cov- erage Wednesday. With less than 48 hours to the deadline, surveys showed eight out of 10 doctors had refused to pay the 327 percent premium in- crease that is the target of the 27-day-old strike. GOV. EDMUND G. Brown re- portedly had virtually given up orr a solution to the crisis, and a leader of the strike movement oredicted it could spread to northern California next week. paid up. Another 1,350 signed with two doctor-owned Insurance cooperali ves -formed In response to the malpractice crlais -leaving more than 7 ,000 of the county's 9,500 doctors close to loslng their malpractice cov- erage. THE STRIKE COVERS a six· county area w lth 11 mllllon in- hab!tants from Santa Barbara to ported from Sacramento that the governor's chiet negotiator in the c risis. Deputy Health and We lfare Secretary Robert Gnaizda, had abandoned earlier administration proposals and urged physicians to find their own solution. "It appears now the medical profession is so divided that no state solution would be accepta- ble lo a majority of doctors, legis lators and the public " Gnaizda told the newspaper. ' U~IT ....... GOING HOME -Dr. William Hendricks, a Los Angeles physician who h as conduct- ed a two -week medical malpractice s it-in in the lob- by of Gov. Edmund BrO\yn's office, said he will go home today •'disappointed and dis- couraged." SACRAMENTO <-6> -A rape law rev1s10Q intended to "essentially comJflete" the rape law reform of r~cent years has been approved by the state Senate. • A 30-1 vote Monday sent the bill by Sen. Alan Robbins, (D-Van Nuys >, to the Assembly. Included in the bill are pro- visions which would require that: -Professional personnel trained in the examination of victims of rape and other sexual assaults be present or on call at all times at county hospitals in counties with more than 500,000 population. -Rape victims be given free tests for veneral disease and pre- gnancy at county hospitals. -The Department of Justice furnish hospitals with a forni for recording medical data from the examin ation of a rape victim. The Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training design a special course in police training dealing with the in- vestigation of sexual assault cases. Robbins said the last require ment was designed to "sensitize" police to the feelings of rape vie· llms The bill is SB 575. The Travelers Insurance Co. has warned that Southern California doctors who do not make the first quarterly pay- ment at the higher rates by mid- night Wednesday will lose their coverage for the year. ·the Mexico border. Dr. Sanford Marcus, head of the Union or American Physicians. one of the groups supporting the strike, said in San Francisco Monday that malpractice insurance pay- ments come due in Northern California on Saturday, warning that physicians there may join the strike rather than pay. "There is widespread indica- tion, especially among surgical specialists, that they simply can- not go on pay ing higher premiums ... and that there will be substantial curtailment or physicians' services effective Jan. 31," he said. BROWN, WHO MET with doc- tors Sunday, said he was worried that meeting tM..."d.emands of the doctors for state help would create a multi-billion-dollar ob- hgalion on the government "that could come back to h'aunt us" and urged the doctors to form their own insurance companies. lnf ormation Charge Coming?,: SAN FRANCISCO CUPI> -Pacific Telephone Co: is participating in a national advertising cam- paign to soften up the public for a n information service charge, the state Public Utilities Com· mission was told Monday. "It really costs each subscriber only five cents per month on his bill to pay for this entire service " he said at the PUC hearing. · At last CO'tWt , only 900 physi- cians in Los Angeles County had THE LOS ANGELES Times r e- About 3,000 general practi· tioners joined the strike tor two days last week to support the specialists who have carried most of the action. Surveys showed that although most of them reopened their offices Mon- day. many plan to close down again T hursday, after the in- surance company's deadline. Bernie Chiaravalle. president of the Com- munications Workers of ·America, disputed the campaign contention that directory assistance calls cost telephone companies $55 million a year. Pacific Telephone has asked the PUC for permission to charge 20 cents per information call with the first three such calls free each month l~ subscriber s. · Fat Helped Size Saved Woman· SAUGUS (UPI > -Margaret Berry, 41, owes her life to her size and her alert neighbors. A water t ank collapsed Monday. sending 210,000 gall ons rushing in a wave down a suburban hillside street, sweeping up autos and trucks like toy boats a nd a lmost swirling Mrs. Berry down a storm drain. SHE WAS WALKING near her home when the wall of water knocked her uncon~cious and swept her downhill, Into the entrance to the drain. One leg was pulled into the drain and her body wedged between the entra nce and a truck parked at the curb, the Los Angeles County Fire Department re- ported. Neighbors rushed to hold her head above the ·surface as the torrent of water pushed her into the drain. Firemen said they undoubtedly prevented her from drowning. . THE TORRENT passed quickly. She was treat- ed for cuts and bruises at Mayo Memorial Hospital in Valencia, where an emergency room nurse described her as "a large woman, about 5-foot-8, weighing about 170 pounds." Sheriff's deputies said that a s maller person - "or certainly a child" -would have been washed down the drain a nd drowned With Reservations l Adviser Backs· I State Budget SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's $12.6 blllion budget proposal for 1976-77 bas won a qualified endorsement from the legislature's nonpartisan chief fiscal adviser. Legislative Analyst A. Alan Post said the revenue estimates in Brown's budget message con- stitute "a reasonably optimistic outlook with which we have no quarrel." Howeve r , Post said in testimony Monday before the POST Senate Finance Committee, there are some inconsistencies in the Democratic governor's budget, and about $10 million in spending items h~ve simply been overlooked. RIVERSIDE <UPI> ( ) -An 89-year-old woman State mauled three weeks ago ..._ _______ _ by her two pet German shepherds died Monday as a result of the unprovoked attack. An autopsy was scheduled to determine the ex- act cause of Alm·a Umbarger's death. The dogs were destroyed by animal control authorities after the at- tack. lwta E.e•pe-Al•..C SAN QUENTIN CAP) -Two life termers managed to elude guard.5 for three hours at San Quentin Prison after leaving life-like dummies in their cells and hiding in an elevator shaft, officials said. Bobby Garcia, 29, convicted of the murder of a New Mexico 1awman in Tucumcari, and Norman Lucas. convicted of two counts of kidnaping for ex- tortion, were r eported missing during a 5:30 p.m . head count Monday, said Deputy Warden Lewis Fuage. But the m,en were found three hours later under the elevator in the prison's furniture factory, he said. 1""9e'• TJleater o,.... LOS ANGELES <AP>-AnadultmoUonpicture theater owned by a federal judge and two of his daughters has resumed operations after the state Supreme Court stayed a lower court order closing it. The theater ls owned by Chief U.S. District Court Judge Albert Lee Stephens J r. and leased to a theater chaln. which subleasedlt-over Stephens' protest- tothe Cirm showlne adult films. UKPreNa... LOS ANGELES CAP~ -One phase ot an ln- vestlsaUon into poll~1umdllng orthe 1968 asauslna· tlon of Sen. Robert F . Kennedy bas been closed by the CityCouncU. The council voted Monday to end a probe by lts Police, Fl re and Cl vu Def enae Committee beuuac ll had turned up little new •vldence. ...._.. $995 Last w eek· of our sale! Save $100 to $300 in our custom collection H ere is jusc a small sampling of our exceptional values in fine furniture. Choose from a wide selec- cion of frames and fabrics ... all part of our custom upholscery collection and all sale-priced. Example: A . Our 3-piece U-shaped sectional has room for the encire f amity ... and then some. A roomful of seating in textured cotton. 3 pieces. f 1295, $995 Here is another outstanding furniture value: B. Custom constructed elegance ... 88" sofa with 10 /90 down feat her back p illow and 8-way hand tied base. Brick pattern velvet. $750, S599 C. Classic saddl<; arm sofa, 105" of searing lux- ury covered in buttery sof c, Jeacher-l ike vinyl. Available forfmmediace delivery. $6 19, $399 D. Our popular 90" contemporary toss pillow so- fa in a rich Haitian cotton. 8 pillows to coss as you please. lo stock, ready for delivery. Special, S399 Purcha~ on a Termway Accounr. Furniture I A company spokesman s aid an information cha rge on assistance calls would reduce the average phone bill by 40 cents per month. .... ,~-- $599 Bullock's South Cout Plaza, San Diego freeway at Bristol, Costa Mesa, 556-061 1 . . -· . . 4 A8 . DAILY PILOT EDITO RIAL PAGE t Registration -up When the s tale Department of Mot.or Vehicles first announced its plan to put auto registration on a year-rouhd basi • it was proposed to include a 10 per· cent discount on fees the f 1rst year to compensate those who would be inconvenienced by having to pay for more than a 12-month reg1Stration period. But the discount was canceled out by Gov. Brown before lhe plan became law. 1-lis idea was to put the extra money toward state highway funds. However, it didn't take long for the stattstically minded to figure that anyone payl.I\g for more than 12 months of registration is quite literally being gypped by not getting credit for a lower c ar \'aluation in the second year. Now the Legislature is considering two separate bills to offset the alleged short-changing by mailing out 10 percent refunds to affected car owners. Once more it will take an expensive gesture to cor · rect a poorly hand.led piece of legislation The governor has said he is opposed to new taxes of any kind. This maneuver amoWlted to a hidden tax, ·and clearly a discriminatory one. Alien Survey The U.S. Department of Labor has come up with some facts and figures on the country's illegal alien population, based on interviews with aliens ap- . prehendcd by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. members, 73 percent had Federal income tax deduct- ed from their pay; 6.1 percent had Social Security tax ~ithheld and 31 percent flled U.S. income taxes. Less than 4 percent had collected any unemploy. ment insurance. 1.3 percent had secured food stamps and only one-halt ol 1 percent had received welfare checks. · More than half had been in the U.S. more than two years and 10 percent had lived here six years or longer. While it can be argued that illegal aliens taJce some Jobs that could be fiUed by Americans, it ap- pears at least some also make a contribution to the tax s tructure and apparently do not constitute a serioljS social welfare burden. The argument is strong for proposed legislation to grant legal s tatus tothosewbohaveproved themselves responsible over a period of years. thus permitting the understaffed Immigration Service to beef up con- trols to stem the influx of new job-seekers . Beach Boost 'Beach erosion problems on the Orange Coast will come in for further attention if Congress approves a S99.2 million allocation for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, included in President Ford's bud~et r e· quest. Among other projects. the Corps is seeking Sl00,000 for an ongoing project to measure the en· vironmental impact of anti-erosion work in Newport Beach a nd the Sunset-Surlside beach area. ~ ~ Sixty percent of those mterviewed were Mexican nationals. 30 percent came from other Westerrr Hemis phere nations and the remainder from other countries. Their average age was 28. and 50 percent earned less than S2 50 an hour. mostly in sen ice and laboring JObs. The unemployment rate among the ii· legals was 10 percent The problem of sand replenishment along the erosion-prone beaches has plagued the coastal com- munities for years, so it's encouraging to learn that the federal go\'ernment continues to take an interest in efforts to find a solution. ''li'S SEEN THE 6REATEST CE.NTU~Y EVE~.'' Inte restingly enough, 17 percent wer e union Happiness For the Une111ploy ed ( ART H OPPE ) A White House spokesman said last week the Administration knows "the economy is continu- ing to recover.. because un- employment is holding steady at 8 3 percent. Somewhat confused, I called the Bureau of Unemployment for • an explana· lion. "Yes. isn•t it glo rio us news?" said Assis tant Director Milt on Haberda s h enthusia s· tically. "It s hould go a Jong way toward making everyone happy." "Including the unemployed?" "Them in particular." he srud "You see, for years the bureau has been tryin g to fight un- employment by creating all sorts of new jobs, ranging from aardvark inspector to zygodactyl dancing instructor. Rut as the statistics s how . absolutely nothing has worked." "That's ~ood news for the un- employed?'' "Certainly. For now that we've proved beyond doubt that we can't lick unemployment. it's ob· viously our d uty to make the un· employed happy with their lot '' .. A BRILLIANT concept," l said. "if you can pull it off " "It shouldn't be difficult.'' he said. "The basic problem is to restore the unemployed's self. esteem, to make them feel they are contributing to society by not working.·• "That s ounds tough.•· ··Not really. Instead of 'un· Dear Gloomy Gus Those 300 Orange County employes who are so upset about their parking pro· blem have overlooked their strongest move. Why don't they just qwt and take their e xpertis e somewhere else? T.S. employed,· we plan to refer to them in the futµre as 'patriotic inflation figbt&"S who, through their personal sacrifices. are building a better world.·" "They are?" "Certainly. By reducinJ? the demand for goods and services. they are doing far more than others to curb rising prices. Ry using less gasoline than their neighbors, they are m aking America s trong and indepen- ~ent, redl!,.cin~ smog and creat· mg more park mg places." "True." I said. "By steadfastly remaining out of work." Haberdash continued. ''they selflessly create jobs for other s. including tens of thousands or dedicated govern· ment employ es s u c h as myself." "And all those people who count food stamps." "RIGHT," he said "They must realize they belong to an elite minority, the leisure class. with plenty of tJ me for s elf· improvement, recreation and be· ing with their families. After all, what's the difference between the idle rich and the idle poor?'· "Only money,·· I agreed. "What's more. members of our new National Jobless Corps will wear little badges that will make them the envy of all their work· ing friends and neighbors. "What will the badges say?" "Thank God It's Monday!·· s aid Haberdash. Soriet Support Gi1'es CmR•unists Ad1'antages Italy Investment Justified W4SHINGTON -What a silly fuss over the report that the U.S. government might have given $6 million to non-Communist Italian political parties. Since the Soviet Union provides like support tor the Communist Party of Italy, t<1 match or exceed their amount is fair game, even in the era of de· tente. Now the choir boys like Sen. Frank Church CD-Ida.), can wring their hands and moan over how the United States should not interfere in the political process of foreign nations, but the truth is that if we do 'l!Ot help democratic elements in such countries, theul· Usnate victors are the Com· munists who have a habit of win- ning an election and making it the last authentic one to beheld. One important difference, in this era .or detente, between the Soviet Union and the United. States is that the Soviets can press their international interests at will, while the United Slates flaunts its "secrets." and tries to prove to the world that we are a nation or imperialistic con- spirators. And if the world refuses to believe it, they can ask Ute U.S. Congress and get confirmation. Do you hear that. Rep. Wayne Hays (D·Ohio), andSen.Cburch? lN ITALY. for example, the Soviets easily have the best of it. The Soviet Union can fwtd the Italian Communist Party by set· ting up monopolistic export· import enterprises, the profits of which go to the Italian Com· munisl Party. They can also fun· nel Cunds to their favorite party, even at a time when Italian elec- tion laws are more stringent. This political assistance is estimated to run between $2 and $4 million a year, and the Italian Communists are hard put to ac- count for at least $2 million a year in contributions. Now CIA Director William Colby stated on NBC's "Today .. show that "we have not spent a nickel in Italy in the past few ( TIII~~H J months, to be specific about it," and added that "l cannot discuss what our plans, what our thoughts might be for the future." What Colby didn't re- veal was bow much money the United States has given non· Communist parties in Italy at an earlier time. and for the next election campaign -which could be later this year. For 30 years, it bas been U.S. policy to keep Italy democratic, and. sorry folks. but that takes money. Congress is not innocent to this fact of life, and the con- gressional committees con,st.ant- ly briefed by Colby are especially aware of what is going oo. The New York Times story that the United States bas fun· neied $6 million to these political parties since Dec. 8 is not ac· curate; nor is it a "scoop" since it was leaked to The Times from the Congress. THE COMMUNIST press ex- cepted, most Italian papers re· acted to the news by saying, in er. feet. what else is new? The American money previously spent on Italy's democratic parties was not used to have op- ponents stuffed down sewers or taken to their final resting place. The money was spent to help publicize the candidates - American style, I guess - something the Communist press does constantly and effectively. Briefly , the dominant Chris- tian Democratic party in Italy bas been in power so long that it has become venerable and not ef• fective. In 1972, its vote declined to 37 percent and the Com- munists went up to 27 percent. In the recent regional election, the Communists polled 35 percent. Italian lite has changed con- siderably siace Italy j'oined NATO and stood up to com- munism back in the late Forties. Divorce is now permitted, the Catholic Church has largely withdrawn from politics, and liberalized abortion is even dis· cussed. Italy's industrialized areas are far m ore potent pc,litically than in 1948, and the Communists know how to get their votes. So the r u li n g Chris ti an Democrats catch bell for Italian economic problems. the Socialists are squeeud bec~use they are part of the government. and the Communists are not blamed because they are ex· eluded from government, and have been for many years. Thus. they attack. attack, attack, and never have to take responsibility. TIDS GIVES the Communists a great advantage. and to offset it the United States tries to re· vitalize the Christian Democrats and other non-Communist parties. If the Communists ever won in Italy and formed a government. they would try earnestly to gov - ern efficiently, but there's strong possibility that they would rule out future elections and the Com- munist government would hardly make it possible for Italy to re- main in NATO. Indeed, NATO, already weakened by the Turkish defe<:· lion (caused by U.S. Reps. Ben Ro,senthal (D·N.Y .), and John Brademas (D·lnd.),) is vulnera· ble to further shrinkage if Portugal and Spain go against Western interests. A !eek.less Western Europe would then stand with a patsy Uncle Sam · and allow the Soviets to in· timidate this once strong and free Western civilization. That's why it's worth it to spend $6 million in italy, and with inflation I don't know why we don't spend $12 million. A Test of Religion J'boagbts al Large: A person's "religioo" is truly tested only when it comes into direct conflict with his self- interest; and in the clash between the· two. it is almost ,always the former that ~ives way. : Although we allow ourselves the lu.'<ury of disliking whomever we please, it always comes as an unpleasant surprise to learn of someone who dislikes us. Statesmen pretend to be think- ing about the welfare of their countrymen, when all they are really thinking about is their place in the history books. A proverb is a statement we enthusiastically embrace when we are unwilling to examine the particulars in a general situation. ( SYDNEY HARRIS) neighbor's oppression until it engulfs us. The only way to make one's merit acceptable to others is by a willingness to acknowledge their merit. Pass ivity is not always blameworthy -doing nothing is the best thing some people can do. (As a wealthy elderly in· dustrialist of my acquaintance once shrewdly said, "Better my son should be playing golf than trying to run t he business.") Government Services Cost You More Punishment commonly does .not make the guilty penitential; it merely persuades them that they have paid their price and are free to commit the same of- fense again. A.s long as "revenge is sweet" there is little hope that the human race will make mucb moral progress : the warning that " 'Vengeance is mine,· saith the Lord" is the most ig- nored in the whole Bible. There's a bumper sticker going around that says: "If you like our postal service, you 're going to love nationalized oil." Yet there are s till some who ig- nore all evidence past and pre- sent, abroad and al home. They imagine that "govern· ment can do it better and cheaper than can pri vale industry.'' M o r e evidence· This that rm about to relatt is an offlcial fmdlng by our aovemment 's watchdo1 asency, tM ~eraJ Accountinl Of llce Goyemmenl ln•urance costs you more for leH tb-81\ private in· surance asroa £ we ltl socialist maJCGIJteftla mltlead &a lnto re· peaUnl Britain •1 tn.clc dis· W•lcmment -hear and heed a.t.: :__ •ecleral empJ01a b1nd.lln1 •enment Medicare claJm1 -. •AW more and produce les• t han thelr counterparts In ( PAU L HARVEY ) private industry. In fact. the GAO finds it costs "almost twice as much .. for the government to process a Social Security claim as it does private insurance companies. And that's not all. A SEPARATE study conduct- ed at Columbia University's . graduate school of business finds that twice-a -week curbside garbage collection -when city employes do it -costs 69 percent more than when private industry doait. This was not a study of just New York where munlcl\>al employes, includlnc 1anit•l1on workers, have muscled their way to pay and pensions whJcb helped bankrupt their city. ThiS'wu a 16-month long st\ldy financed by the National Sclen~ Foundation wblch c·xamined 2,000 rltlu with a combined population or S2 million. And sure enou1h. when mun.idpaJ 11rbage colltct.on - dU·P•id 1arba1e collectors - do it, ft takes twice as lonJ and m-Jts almott twice as much. POLITICIANS have found it•s easier to bide expenses in higher taxes than to assess us directly. Why are services provided by government less efficient and more costly? Patronage, mostly. The more garbagemen the city administrators can hire, the more votes they can count on. And without the snoopervisioo which competition imposes there is a Jot of goof ine off. In New York City after 1,500 sanitation workers were laid off; the sidewalks and streets were no Jess clean than before. Why is it mostly at funerals that relatives say to one another, •'It's ·a shame we don 'l get together more often•·? The tactless person has a bad ear more than a big mouth: be or she can't hear how tactlessness sounds to others, just as most of us can't recognize the sound of our own voice the first time we bear it transcribed on a tape. recording. People who attack their own mates in public fall to realize that they are lmptlll'll\I their own jud1ment in lelectJon ot a mate. tr youn11tera today havtt "too many advanta1es," why are paren .. IO anxlou. to provide for tbetr children as handsomely as they can before the, dJe? • -Wtt know that lf OW' Mi~bOr'a bou.1«1 lJ a nre·trap, It threateo.s. our house, too; but wt do not e.tte the parallel with oppression, and remain Indifferent to our ' • c Old men who fatuously com· pare their times to these would be embarrassed i1 their grandfathers were 'Still alive to do the same to them. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed. PubUsher Thof'fl4a K~evH, Edttor Barbara Kreibicl'I, Editorlol Page Editor The editorial page of the Dally Pilot &eeks to Inform and stimulate readC!rs by presenUna on thls page diverse commentary on topics ti Interest by 1yndlcat· ed columnists and cartoonJsu, by provlcllaa a forum for re.ders' views and by pre1enUn1 thl1 newspaper's oplnlons and ldus on current topics. The edltorial es>tnlon or the Daily Pilot appear only In the editorial column at the top or the paae. OpinJons ex· Pf Hd by the cohamnl ll and cvtoonJ1l1 and letter wrtters ire lMJr own and no ..,dOtMmtnt o1 thdr vi.,,... by the Dally Pilot Mlol.ISd be Inferred. 'Nesaay, Jan. 27, uni I ~ j l I J Tue9day. January 27. 1976 DAii. V PILOT A 7 _Pringle Victory .No Small Potatoes I"'-•·) . Crunch! By the Associated Press was okay "if people like to eat r;ass produced time ago disagreed. She loves Pringle's . Why., things like lb.at." "They're not greasy." Another shot is about to be fired in the continu· ing war between Pringle's and the potato chip in· CRITICS OF PRINGLE'S FOCUS on their ANOTHER CONSUMER SAID HE found Pr· dustry. taste. ingle's tasted okay, although a little blander than Pringle's, Procter & Gamble's "newfangled" "There is no resemblance to the taste, texture regular chips. product that features regularly shaped, evenly and odor" of a natural chip, said the institute Advertising Age, a trade publication, reported stacked chips in a can, won the last battle. spokesman. that Pringle's has run into trouble in some-areas because of taste, winning large numbers of test VICTOR\' CAME LATE LAST YEAR when the One consumer said he had tried Pringle's and buyers and failing to sustain return business. ~ Food and Drug Admlllistration ruled that Pringle's found they have basically the same taste as regular The publication quoted industry sources as say. and similar pl'oducts can use the term "potato potato chips, with a few differences, '!)8 lnb'.Jn lex· ing Procter & Gamble plJlnned to retaliate with new chip" as long as they also use the qualifying phrase ture. / types of Pringle's and 'With a patented ''potato "made from driedpotatoes''onthepackage. "They don't seem to be as oily and. I like m y flavor enhancer." The Potato Chip Institute International of potato chips oily,'' he added. ··As company policy, we don't speculate on Cleveland ls mapping strategy to strike back. An ln-A young woman who's been eating Pringle's anything we might do in the future," said a stitute spokesman said that institute represen-since they were introduced in the Midwest some spok~sman. v~~ t~vest willdH~eMan AUa~at~~s~wnext _________________________________________________ ~ JleliglolU mont a 'Yhether . to take '0.X. It's agreed. You cut your missiles and we 'fl dismantle our six mil/ton dollar man!' • a ny action against the ( ) former Sen. Edward FDA ruling. He did not CONSUMER Gurney, (R -Fl a .), say what sort of moves _ _ facing second COQ· were ~ing ~onsidered. spiracy trial Feb. 9, . Prmg~e s reportedly says he may have 1s pondering a counteratta~k . although company ! d 1 · · spokesm en refused to confirm or deny any new o u n r e _1 g 1 on moves. Among the rumored possibilities are ridged lhrough all his legal Pringle's and a new, improved flavor. problems. THE POTATO CIUP INSTITUTE HAS been • • fighting Pringle's. ever since the prod,uct was test. marketed in the late 1960s. In May 1975, Pringle's achieved national distribution and the war Ancient Ozone • Erosion? . WASHINGTON (UPI) -In a report with im· plications for the future, government scientists say they h ave found evidence s uggesting a severe erosion of earth's ozone shield 700,000 years ago may have wiped out some species or marine micro-or ganisms. The report said it ap- pears a "celestial triple play" was responsible for the partial destruction of the layer of ozone in the stratosphere that screens Qµt much of the sun's ul- traviolet radiation • THERE IS concern among some scientists now that exhaust from s upersonic transport pl a n es or th e (luorocarbon propellants from spray cans , rising into the uppe r at- mosphere, might touch off a chain or chemical re- actions that could deplete theotone layer . A number of studies, in· eluding som e at UC Irvine, are underway to see if such depletion is taking place. SCIENTISTS rear a weakened ozone shield would l et more ul· traviolet radiation reach the earth, increasing the incidence of skin cancer and possibly endanger· ing some forms of plant life. "It is possible that ma· jor ozone depletions OC· curring in the distant past have had a profound ef· feet on the development oflif e as we know it," said the new report, published in the British scientific journal "Nature ." THE RESEARCHERS who wrote the report are Drs. George C. Reid and J. S. A. Isaksen or the Na· tional Oceanic and Al· mospheric Administra· lion and Paul J . Cruzen and Thomas E . Holzer of the National Center for Atmospheric Research. • Killer of 2 Parents Gets Death SAN RAFAEL (AP>- . Charles David Riley, convicted of murdering his girlfriend's parents and burning their ~es in a barbeque pit, has been sentenced to death Ln the San Quentin J>rison gas chamber. Riley, 20, had ~ faint $mile on his face and raised his hand to his parents and a few friends Monday as he Jen. the Marin County q>urt{'oom after the Ren· tencing by Superior Court Judge E. Wtrren 'McGuire. Riley was convicted last wionth of first· deeree murder ln the deaths of 'James Olive 58, of Terra Llnda, and his wife, Naomi, 51. Olive was shot to death and his wife was bludgeoned with a hammer. The couple's dauahter, Marlene, 16, 11 awaiting trial In Juvenile Court on murder charges. She ls beina represent· ed by attorney Terence Halllnan under an Un· aaual fee arranatment whereby he will receive half the estate she stands (o inherit lf acQultted. I I • escalated. The institute claims Pringle's aren't "real potato chips" since they are made from dried potatoes and have additives not found in the natural products. A potato chip, says the institute, is a "slice of fresh, raw potato, deep fried in vegetable oil , salted and packaged." No more New York State Agriculture Commissioner John Dyson got in the act in Decembe r when he sug gested that Pringle's be labeled "imitation potato chips ." "A potato chip is a slice from a raw potato and that's not what this is," said Dyson "They are made from de hydrated potato flakes which are re constituted into a liquid mixture and flash fried '' PROCTER & GAMBLE SPOKESMEN never denied that their product comes from dehydrated potatoes They simply argue that a potato is a potato is a potato -even if dried -and, therefore, a potato chip is a potato chip, etc The potato chip industry is a $1 5 billion-a -year business Per·capita annual consumption or potato chips, according to the Potato Chip Ins titute, is 4 1~ pounds The institute spokesman said Pringle's has cap- tured about 16 percent of the m arket, "which isn't too bad" from tile so-called natural chip makers point of view Several manufacturers or the naturals have programs stressing the ·'real" ingredients in their products, a nd. Industry sources say the projects have been generally successful in staving off the challenge PRINGLE'S ARE MORE EXPENSIVE than regular potato chips -cos ting anywhere from 20 to 60 percent more per ounce On the plus side, there are fewer broken chips in the package, they have a longer shelf life, are easier to store and they are re- gularly s haped The Potato Chip Iqstilute doesn't think much of the pluses Longer shelf life isn't an advantage, said a spokes man, because more than 95 percent of all potato chips are consumed within two weeks or leaving the production line What about the lack of crumbs and the regular shape? "You do get some crumbs in Pringle's," said the spokesman, indicating that the regular shape LIFE INSURANCE TO HELP PAY BURIAL EXPENSE $500 to $5000* EVERYONE ACCEPTED BETWEEN AGES46-87 • OtpeftdlnQ on~ NO SALESMAN WILL CALL Write and give us your d•t• of birth LIFE OF AMERICA INSURANCE CORP of BOSTON ..a Broad St., Boston, Mass. 02109, Dept. ~-NB Or Call Toll Free: 800-225-1780 It Is not o simple task for a patient to reach and maintain "lean weight" for life. Firs! the patient must have on honest desire to cure his problem ... then accept professional guidance from trained Medical Doctors. llndoro's unique 10-week treatment and training progrom wlH teach patients how to reach and maintain their "lean weight'' for life. A safe. and practical pion. with proper nutrillonol · diet, and continual emotional support. New audio and sub-llminal visual aids ore used to motivote the patient. The entire program Is under the strict supervision of Medical Doct01s. special· lsts In Bartatrlc Medicine. llndofQ Cfinlcs ate owned and administered by Medico! Oociofl tN:Jt r9$1rlct their proclice IO 8orlotrlcs. ALL Oinlc Pefsonnel ate licensed by !tie State of ColllornlO. Coll for Information Monday thru Friday 8 A. M. to 6 P. M. Lindora""t MEDICAL CLINIC NEWPoRT BEACH 64S.3740 COSTA MESA 557-1893 Pooe Plofessionol Meso Vefde Bldg. Prote$SOlOI Bldg son lemafdno • E. t.oog -.acn • Mlll6& Hiiis Hawthome. ~. ~ teoc:h Garden Gfove • long leach • Pcnocteno Lo HobfO • WOodtond Hiiis • !het'mOn OokJ w..t Covino • Fullerton • Rlvenlde • scnto Mof\lco eoeta Meta • Pomona • c.mtos • Hollywood '( ( Pilot Logbook J Only Whales To Watch 8) FREDERICKSCHOEMEHL Ot I'll• Dally rnot swtt No, this reporter was assured, there won't be a T-shirt contest in Dana Point this year. For the unfamiliar, a T-shirt contest is a competition in which young women mod el T- sh1rts, among other things. S u c h a cont e!)t was he ld at the Wind and Sea H t>~t a ur a nt in Dana Point Harbor just one year ago, in conJunclion w4th the annual Festival of the WhaJe The festival itself 1s de· signed to draw atte1\tion to the annual migration of California gray whales from the Bering Sea to Ba· Ja California. SCHOEMEHL. THE T -SHIRT l'nntl'Sl turned out to b~ a \\hale of a n af- fair. Conservative estimates held that between 500 and 600 people surged into the dockside restaurant. They pressed even closer when several of th<' conte:.tants removed their T· shirts. Our man at the event later complained that there were so many people at the place that his lens fogged up. A Pl ayboy photo· grapher more accustomed to such affairs didn't appear to have any trouble. ONE CONTESTANT. WEARING hot pants and a sort of halt T·shirt edged with fnnge, drew enthusiastic reaction from the crowd. That may have been because she had a whale painted on her stomach, in keeping with the main purpose of the event. An inquiry this week to a Dana Harbor busmes~man who ai>ked not to be quoted by name produced the following : -THERE IS A LOT of interest in a r epeal of last year's festivities. -Major film studios offered substantial amounts of money in attempts to get a secbnd" contest off the ground. -Officials in the Orange County Harbors. Beaches and P a rks Department made 1t clear that a repeal contest would be frowned on. The department h as some control over con- cessions in the harbor. -NO RESTAURATEUR WAS willing to stick his neck out to sponsor a T-shirt contest. They hold liquor licenses and reputations as far more important. .. As a consequence. Dana Point residents and all the r est of us will have to be content to watch just whales this year. Fiscal ·Peril Wamed by State Aide By DOUG FRITZSCBE wider groups such as all extremely inefllcient." onea that should." The think nothing will be HE SAID the Serr~ 0t1Mo.1t,,..1«M.tlff medical providers or all Bums said. "Few of the Brown administration ia done this year in that Pri~taupreme CourttA- The tort o r civil thosecoveredbymedical dollars get to the client "working closely" with area." cision to equalize tfie lawsuit syste m is over-insurance. even if he wins, and it hospital administra-Concerning the nearly amount sJ)ent per chll:I crowded. incredibly ex· The larger question ot tends to screen out a lot tion.s, -tie said, adding he broke state roadbullding in schools throughout Ole pensive and the present the tort system. s oon will of people who cannot af'. is not in favor of the state program. he said getting state "smacks o(judlcl6J medical malpractice in-be causing problems in ford to get lawyers." taking over the hospitals rid of the state formula legislation of the wo']t surance crisis is only the other areas. Rates are But he offered no that crumble financially. by which highway funds sort." ' s nout of a r is ca I leaping upwards in pro-answers to the problem. ' are allocated to road pro-1~ behemoth lurking just ·duct liability lines for Burns conceded that R EGA RDING the jects is a step in the ''Anybody who thint's beyond the door, accord-man u fact u r e rs , some hospitals may go state coastal com-direction or putting making the property tax in g to the s tat e• s municipal ,insurance "is bankrupt in the wake of mission plan and related money where it is most base equal will eliminate secreta ry of business totally out of sight", and doctors' walkouts. Ma.in-statewide moves at land badly needed. But he em-the problems is liv,ng·r, and transportation. auto and workers com-taining that a surplus of use control, he said, "I phaslzed that funds are a dream w or d ·' ' But Secretary Donald pensation is going up, he hospital beds is a pro-am skeptical of our abili-limited and "we can't However, he said, iflJ E. Burns told a luncheon said. blem in California. he ty to do it in an accepta· 'build a road for every sense a strong desire lb audience ID Irvine Mon-said, "some of those that ble way, but we are kid-dotted llne on every avoid this on ever~ day he has no solutions to "THE TORT system is go under will not be the ding ourselves if we •map." body's part.". the problem . That was the tone of a session be t ween Burns a nd members of the Friends of UC I rv1De at the Airport e r Inn luncheon. BUl\N8' ll JlM ~RKI carried him from t>ro- posed '!redlining" In the home mortgage market to medical m alpraclloe, state controls on de- velopment, transporta- tion and transit develop- ment, 1chool rlni'"tlng and higher education. But while he outlined a number of alarming pro· blems. he offeted rew answers. ultimately fall· ing back on the Edmund G . Brown Jr . ad· ministration refrain that "this isn't a gravy tram anymore.'' Although discussions on medical malpractice insurance pre continu- ing , Burns said, "If the medical profession is looking for a state ball· out. it also should look squarely in the eye at the fa ct that socialized medicine probably will ~low . I don't look with iavor on it." AMONG THE ways or addressing the problem, he said , are "puttlns up tax money. The medical profet1sion i1 the best paid group in our society and I have problems with usmg the general fund to s upport the medic al profession." Another approach, he said, Is "Looking for a deeper pocket" by spreading the cost. over After inventory • savings We'll open Wednesday at 12 noon! Great savings for men and boys! Special 3ror *10 Men'a golf 1hlrt 1n hnk slrelch st1toh paly11l1r with 4 ·button placket front short sleeves. Assorted solid colofl. Sizes S.M.L.lCL. Special 4.99 Short •~n Men'a Ult,.eaa• dre11 1hlrte in D1e1on • Polyester w~h long sleeve, long point coU1r11 T one-<:>n·tone pastet1 plus white. S1zn 1••,.1 7. Long sleeve. Specl81 5.99 Sodium Deaths Elsewhere In Water· paint' Discussed Shucks. Special 7.99 Mfll'a double knit polyH ter alacks wl1h llare legs. contr11tlng stitching Assorted fashion colors. Siles 29 to 33. TOGUS. Maine <A P> -Ralph E. Cline, 81, the "patriot" in the famous Andrew WyC'th painting, died at the Veterans Hos pital here Monday. He fou ght in France dur· ing World War l as a sergeant. He was wear- ing his old uniform for a July 4th parade when Deat•Nodc~• Wyeth decided to the portrait. LAS VEGAS. Nev. <U PI) -Comic Jerry Collins, 50, known for his comC'dy ro utin e of ··Frick and Frack", ctied Monday at his home here. Collins suffered a heart attack s ix months ago. • l(lllUCPATRICIC JMl.,.ry 2•, 191' Survived by Puss1strr. JOHN H. ICl RKPATAICIC, rM"denl MlrlMI lkekmMI of Mill Vallo. c.a of Coste Meu1, Ce . Oat• of de•lh Prlv•te l•mlly urvices w~e r..ld J-ry 2S. 1'16 Svrvlwd by t>ls wOe CCO A A ECTI ON I Pac I l1c View NcKa; mother. Mrs. Zit• IC lrltc>Mrkll of Mtrnor1el P•rlt Mortuary directors Coate Mtsa Fu~r•t servlc~ woll be MORGAN .,._,~y 11 00 AM, Melrow AO-HERBERT S. MORGAN. rPS1dent o1 brf O\apelln OrenQe, C• C.Pl We~ l.Aoune Beech, Ca. D•te of death H•ston olflc 1en1. Entombment. J8".,.ry 2S, 1'16. Survived by hh ""'•· Melrose Abbey. Bell Bro•dw•Y Miry E. Mor94n, steP-dauc;ihl~, Mrs MDrt&u1ryd1rec1ors NOrman Bun-of Torrance. c.a . ~st~. SAYER Ruth A•Hn of West Covina. Ca, GLADYS ANN SAYER dent of ~. Herbert Aaaen ol West CAiv· South La9une. Ca 0.i:eo~ dUlh Ina, nlKe. Mrs. T~ Mall50n of Tulsa. January 1•. t'76 S,,. wu • rHl<ll!!n1 of OltlllhOrna ~rial serv1~s will be 0r.,. County anci Laouna ~•nee l9S6, held •t 2 00 PM Wednesoay, PiK1l1c arid• res1dMI of Celllorn1" \•nee 1'M2 View Chapel, Rev. Thomas E Wa~r Survived by her dau9Mer\, Jea~ of TIW Laoun• lkach United Mtlhodltt Holman 01 San DI~. C• •'Kl Lillian Church 011tc1•nl Interment. PiKihc H"'"'°hrey of WutmlnSler Ca \!Sier View Mtmorlal Park, NewPOn &t'a<ll, Dorothy R~rs 01 Tu\to~. ca . ,,; Ca, In lieu of flowers memorial contri or•ndchlldren and onl' or~at but ons may be rnaoe to The Hea~ As· 91'....ichlld. Funeral s~rv1tes w111 "" =~•lion. Pee Ifie View Mortuary dorec- Mtd at 2 00 PM Friday. SMiier uouna GROM "Sodium Conte nt Of Your Tap Water" will be the subject of Gordon Elser , Orange County Water District inform&· tion officer. when he speaks at 7: 30 p . m., Wed n esday, at the Children's Hospital in Orange. Elser will be a guest of the Mended Hearts. an organization of persons who have had open heart surgery The public is ID· vited. Special 9.99 Men's pre·wllhed indigo blue cotton denim j1cket teams up w11h the 1een• tor 1 super leisure look. sizes S.M.L.XL Special 3tor$1Q Men"s polyester/cotton 1portshlrts in long or snort s .. eve models Ass0<ted solids and p11nts Sizes S.M.L.XL Ma ny membe r s of t h e g r o u p a r e Spec·ial on so-ca ll~d "s~lt tree" or low-sodium diets Elser is to di scuss how 6 99 the sodium content of tap • w~t~r can . vary widely ~n s pre-wHl'led Indigo blue cotton Within a City denim IHhion je1n1 w11h Hare legs Sizes 28 10 38 REFLECTIONS by Heyn She ff e r ., Qu1ntltlea limited. Llh it? Ch1rge ii. Uae your JCPenney ch1rge account. Beech Mortuary Chapel. Or Arthur J MARVIN GROM PU \e d away Tankersley of The Laquna lkacl\ January 1•, 1976. Resident of Dan.i , ... ___ _. Presbyt•rlan Church and An Don w Point, C.. lor the 1>9st 1 rnont~. wa~ a Tinsley Of TM Chapel 01 ti-. V<tlley veteran of World war 11, and._.., rp .... ----a ..... 111 OIUf"ch In Sprlnq V•lley, C..t. ofhC111nts tlr11d from the rallroed. Surv1~ by '"s Burial will follow In Wf\lmln\tpr wile, Carol Grom of th• l>Otnl! one Memorial Parle. Sheller LaQuN &each dauohler, two sons, four step. Noort.-ydlr•ctor\ dauohlers, sl• step.sons and l•n STURGES Qrandchlldren; mother, EdN G<om MAX A. STURGES, reslO.nt of -brother, Ronald Grom. botfl of Corona dlll Mar, C• Date Of Clffth Wlscon$1n. Funer•I wnrlces will ti.• :==========~held Wltdtteaday In Wisconsin. Sl'letf•r ~ .. Kh Mortuary loc•I dire<· ton. BAL TZ.flERGUION FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 673-iM.50 Costa Mesa 6"6-2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 6"2-9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Beach .. Q.4..941 5 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 'AC1flC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK CemetetY Mortuaty Chapel 3500 Plcffic View Dnve Newport Beech. Cellfomi• ~2700 I aOSHARO f WILLMI RTH JANE BOSHARD, re0 sldent of L.eoun• Ntouel, for the past fl,,. v-s. pasted away Janwry 26. 1'16 Funeral services are pend1no at ~lt•r Laouna k•cll Mortuary PUBLIC NOTICE "tW wlto hn Mly fw ....... ,...,. ..... , ...... .,.. .. ,.. off .... ter ..... .......................... ...., ................. . 1.c ...... - SttcFF€R tnOllTU~llY 'nt> so.ITH COAST 'ttGftNAV ~BEAOi •94-1535 SAN a.EMENTE ISU l'OTH a CNM¥:J REAL -m-0100 Special savings for men and boys. Hurry • 1n. • ~Special t' 5 p11r:1.99 Men's tube socks on ;icrytoc/ s1relch nylon robbed top Wh1lo. black.. navy. oark brown One !"IZC his 10 IO 13. Special 2.99 Boys· heavy-weight jeans wolh foare legs Polyesler/ collon denim navy Sizes 3 In 16 reauiar an<1 shm .Sizes :.t 10 7 with double knees Special 2ror $5 · Boys· subrtatatlc print T ·shirt of t 00°. polyes1e1. Brighi colors w11h 1ealos11c :lGl••)n prints. Sizes S·M·L·XL. Special 29.88 Split cowhide l1Cket. An e•cept1onal value• The 1a1est short style look. lullv toned with snap front and culls. Rugged colors. Smt$ 36 to •S. . ' ... .,, I I' "' .~ I .. I . , Baek Aehe No. I Pain?. , peared at the first workshop ln a planned national effort by the National Association for Human those, each morning. Wring your hands. Suck your stomach in wbenyou walk. ... DALLAS <UPI) -C. Carson tConrad, dlrector of the Prest-~ot's Council on Physical Fit· .,,pess. says lower back pain is ex- +,PeCted to become the No. 1 ail· · ;AJlent among Americans by next . Development to encourage ex- ercise among those over 60 years of age. .. , AM NOT TALKING about athletics. Just simple strength and flexibility . You will be amazed bow much better you feel. It helps you sleep, too." ,year. ., "The simple cure ls exercise," ne said. "Simple exercises. Make He also trumpeted physical fit- ness for everyone. your body stretch. That is \he "Low back pain is simple lack ,.¥oy." ot strength and flexibility in the ;. back," he said. "It can be cured • •·CONRAD, 64, HEALTHJER with simple. easy exercises each ,end filter than most people half morning. Just lean over and ·his age, 'was in Dallaa to de-hang. That stretches the big 1moostrate basic exercises which muscles in the thighs. Do 15 ,~ould benefi~ re elderly. Heap. s_itups, or. Jess if you can't do Coor ad, 64, led 15 oc- togenarians through a series of exercises in.. the gymnasium of Richland College. The exercises included stretching arms in a swimming motion, wringing hands, bendlng at the waist to ·stretch the back-. -OUEENJE By Phil lriterlondi Boy Doll Causing Problems HAWTHORNE (UPI) -Mattel Toy Co. 's "Ba by Brother Tender Love" has achieved a new level in realism -so much so that television advertising is proving a problem. The problem is that "Baby Brother" is cor· rect to the last detail, from his soft hair to what's hidden beneath the shorts which enables him to wet his pants. THE DOLL, produced at doll buyers' requests, !'---------------------comes in two versions - ' I rRight Thing' Moon Disciple :,. Arrests Mom I , NEW YORK CAP) -A 19-year-old California a fleshy pink blond and a chocolate, dark-haired model -and will be ''dis· creetly" packaged. ac· cording to Mattel spokesmen. "There will be a fully printed disclosure out- side the package so parents won't be sur- prised when their child opens the box," said Mat- tel's Joel Rubenstein. Special 1.99each Polyester·lllled bed pillows with novelty ticking Standard s11e Buy lots at this low pr1ee. Quantltiea limited. ' Dl"8reed British actress Glenda Jackson ha s been divorced by theater director Roy Hodges, 48, whom she married in 1958. • TuOlday. January 27, 1978 DAIL y PILOT A' Fly THE DIRECT WAY TO THE FJORD COUNTRY FOR UNUSUAL TOURS TO SCAN DINA VIA AND EUROPE C•: 00 7hJvel ~dml JtJI ntCH ST .. MIWPOllT llACH T ....... ,._O.C....,.. 540.5851 • dlsciple of a South Korean cultist, the Rev. Sun. HE SAID, "TV codes ,Myung Moon, says he did "therightthing" by having won't even let us s how a ffu& mother arrested for trying to take him forcibly. ·doll 's bare bottom. much from Moon's WestchesterCountyestate. less this. We will have to I Mark Goodman is one or many young members focus on a s ignificant 1of Moon's Unification Church who have been taken print campaign aimed at 1trom the organization by parents who believe their mothers. sav1n s ,children have been "brainwashed.". "We are treating this in I' a very serious way. We 1 GOODMAN CHARGES HE WAS seized and as-have established that •saulted by four young men in Tarrytown, then taken there is a market. a de-• !to a motel for "deprogramming" by Ted Patrick, a mand for a male doll that ~peclalistin undoing the influences of religious cults. is correct to the last de. Patrick and his secretary, Sondra Sachs. tail." leaded innocent in Mount Pleasant Town Court Fhere they were arraigned on a misdemeanor THE PACKAGING arge of unlawful imprisonment and released in shows a nude baby ~bail each for a further hearing Feb. 27. brother with his groin Mark's mother, Fay Goodman, 42, of San Fran-area discreetly shaded, !Cisco, his uncle, Milton J. Mosk, 46, and four other butdiscernablc. Alsopro- i~en involved in the all~ged seizure are awaiting minently dis played is a 1gtand jury action on a felony charge of unlawful im-description of what may :fr!sonment. They were arrested by Mount Pleasant be found under the shorts : Jplice after bystanders said they saw the i ncidenl. inside. ; ' "The reaction has been GOODMAN SAID HE HOPED HIS mother 'It 's about time' " ! would not be sentenced to jail. but "I feel very much I Rubenstein said. ' have done the right thing." lie added, "I realize that "We tested consumer there is a much larger thing at stake here.'' acceptance in four major • We'll open Wednesday at 12 noon with biggest savings! Beautiful buys for bedroom and bath, great fabrics to.sew! 4.99 I He said al a news conference called by Neil cities and children and Salonen, president of the Unification Church of mothers preferred Baby )America. therewas nootherwaytoput astoptosuch Brother 4 to 1 over other activitiesand "technicallyshe'sguilty ofacrimc.·· dolls . We have had : "When she realizes she's been misled, she'll be enough letters requesting lonmyside,"headded. ababyboydoll~call a~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ , tention to the need for the ~ I SALONEN SAID MANY MEMBERS of the doll. jUnification Church have come to feel "that there is 72x90" twin/ full size . Thermal·-ave blanket in hght· weight potyes1er with nylon t>tn<lll'tg. Machine washable in cool water. Fashion colo<s. lno other way to stop this but lo sacrifice their own ,parents for the greater good of the church.'' "FOR REASONS I cannot explain. we have had no requests for an anatomically correct female doll . Generally, I guess. dolls are perceived as girls and there has been no need for a female doll with all the parts." · Young Goodman said the complaint was "very lmuch my own decision," although he said he talked :with about a dozen officials and members of the :church at the police station before filing the com· !plaint. • Asked whether there was "anything you would 1not do for Mr. Moon if he asked you to?" he replied: : .. Probably not." ' ' I ' ' I I I lifesaver Event Set I Saddleback Valley It makes more Sense to lease a Mercedes-Benz I Because a car that retains its ® value better. is a better value at the end of the lease. Stop in for a lease quote. . I M ission Vie;o Imports 831-174Q). S. D Fw,. et_A~"":.!.:.' =Mh=--==...:..:Yi.te::!:.-------~"swingers" can try their uck in a ball shoot Jan. 1 and Feb. 6 at the Mis· si on Viejo Go If C 1 u b. -;:::;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;; I The game of skill is sponsored by the Rancho Viejo Junior Woman's Club to raise fonds fer .. Operation Lifesaver," a project to purchase lifesaving equipment for paramedics. Hours of the ball shoot are Crom 8 a .m . to 2 p.m. both days. Admission ls $1. Have aomething to sell 1 . Claullled ads dolt well. SALE! GLASS TUB ENCLOSURE $89 • 95 INSTALLED Mirror Wcadtobe Doors As Low Al $95.00 lnst•d CALIFORNIA SHOWER DOOR CO. Mon. thru Fri. 631-0560 SEvllil.E ... •he spjrH of 76 obtain the best price and the lowest lease rates Nabers COdillac 2600 Harbor B'lvd., Cona Mesa 540·9100 -· Special 1. 68l::~~. Floral terry bath towel wlll grace any decaf Solt. abSOf'bent coUon/ polyester 1n lots ol lovely COl()(S. Hand towel. Specie! 98c Washcloth. Specie! 68c Qu.ntltl•• llmlt~. Special 66cyd. Broadcloth remnants. Spectacular savings on the season's best looks. An amazing array of patterns and colors 1n canon and cotton blends. 44/ 45 tn. wide. Special ncyd. Polyester/ cotton broadcloth prints. Choose lrom lots of pretty patterns and col()(s Machine l washable 44/ 45 m wide Special 1.99 yd. Lu•urloua te•turlzed polyt1ter satin m the newest fashion colors Machine washable. U/ 45 tn. wide. Ou•ntitlta llmlttd. like 11? Charge it. Use your JC Penney charge account. - .. -Available in Loa AngelH, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counti ... ,. ~- 33 A \ l JlJ8 DAILY PILOT Tuesday, January V . 1976 NEWPORT. CENTER 24 FASHION ISLAND • .NEWPORT BEACH STO'RE ()NL Y er Inventory Savings ' We' I open Wednesday at 12 noon with a Store full of Savings! Terrific ban)Ciins in all .departinenls WOMEN'S HANDBAGS Black vinyl organizer. 24 only, two handles, many compartments. Orig. 4.99 NOW 9,c r SKI DEPT. Save on Ski outerwear. hard ski and ski accessories. Limited to stock on hand. SAVE 20%ro70% WOMEN'S PANTSUITS Better 2 and 3 pc. knits, woolens. and suedes. Fancies and solids. r Orig. 36.88 lo 58.00 NOW s1 GIRLS' DRESSES Dressy styles in short and long lengths. Asst. casual looks, sizes 3 to 14. Orig. 8.00 to 14.00 Now · s5aa BOYS' JACKETS Quilted Parkas. Letterman Jackets. Pile lined· styles. C.P.O. look. Entire stock winter coats reduced. Orig. I I . 99 lo 2 3.00 NOW $ 88 , MEN'S LEISURE I SUITS { Denims. twills. leather look, all in detailed western styling. Orig. 30.00 lo 85.00 NOW SAVE 30% DUROFLAME LOGS Logs burn 2-3 hrs. in color. Individually pkgd. or in Boxes of 6 . NOW 66~ s3" IOX WOMEN'S DRESSES Long and short styles. 100% polyester knit in bright fashion shades. Orig. 14.00 lo 19.99 NOW s4aa • BOYS' JEANS Denims. polished cottons, solids, patterns. Sizes 7 to 20. Orig. 5.00 to 8.50 NOW s3aa TOY SALE 'Over I 00 assorted,toys Reduced to Clear save 50%1o60% , CANVAS SHOES Women 's and boys' styles. not in all sizes. Tennis, Basketball and Casual. 100 pr. · Orig. 4. 99 to 9. 9? NOW 99c LADIES' PANTS Polyester slacks, denim jeans, better Jr. pants and lge. size polyester pants. Patterns and solids. "' Orig. I 0.00 lo 18.00 SAVE 50%~o70% BOYS' POLO SHIRTS Long sleeve. poly cotton knit. Sizes s, m, I in bicentennial designs. Orig. 3.50 NOW s1aa GIRLS' SPORTSWEAR Blouses , sweaters, tops, coordinates, slacks, jeans, pantsuits. Orig. 3.00 lo 15.00 SAVE 50%r0 80% FABRIC CLEARANCE Juvenile prints, double knits, qiana prints, polyesters. . Orig. 2.88 to 4. 99 yd. NOW 99~. CHARMGLOW BARBECUES Entire inventory of Charmglow Barbecues and accessories is now reduced. SAVE25% LADIES' TOPS Shirts, Blouses. Vests. Long and short sleeves. Patterns and solids. Orig. 7 .00 to I 1.00 H~OSTESS SET 40 p c. glassware includes: beverage, juice. rocks and sherbert glasses. OriCJ. 7.99 NOW s3aa GIRLS' COATS AND · JACKETS Entire· stock of heavyweight coats and jackets reduced. Sizes 3. to 14, Orig. I 1.00 to 34.00 NOW .. 1J ' .. , . "·' saaa ----------------------- . STEEL · BELTED RADIALS )I % OFF ~ H71-14 .. 71-14. H71-ll ORIG. NOW 62.00 41.JJ• 61.00 45.JJ• 66.oo 44.oo• • A .t SAVI ::~ ,.., 20.67 a 11 ~ .. 22.67 ., • •• 22.00 ::~ •:• ~·· •• Fashion Island Store Wll Close4:30 Tuesday To ~alce ln•entory and Prepare For Store-wide After l11•ent~ S•• . I ( ' Tonight's TV Highlights ABC D 8:·30 -Laverne and Shirley. This sptnolf from the PoPular Happy Days series features Penny Marshall and Cin.dy Wllllams as a pair of blab school grads ln the late FUties. · KCET 9 9 :00 -The ACJams Otronlcles. This eplsodeofthesmes COY· era the period from 1'170 to 1'116 when Jobn Ada111s gained his reputation as an outspoken New Englander. tBS f) 11:30 -· "The World, ·the F1esh and the Devil." Harry Belafonte, Inger Stevens and Mel Ferrer are the sur· vivors. of a nuclear holocaust in this 1959 movie drama. TV DAILY LOG DAILY PILOT IJBllKeane DAILY Pll.OT A JI ' Streu, DUcipUne Centro/, at Boot Camp ~ "Buifdin' this snowman won't take long, Daddy, 'cause you have plenty of help!" Costa Ricans Not ·Bothered by Pot NEW YORK <AP> -Chronic marijuana use was not found to be associated with any perm anent or irreversible impairment in higher brain function or lntelllgence in a study of native ~ta Ricans. The study resulta were said Monday to be com- patible with earlier controlled studies, but went further by employing additional controls. Researchers cautioned, however. that a final answer is not yet in. THE REPOR',1', FROM RESEARCHERS at the University of Florida and the University of Vic-• toria. said that the findings lend no support to speculation on an "amotivatlonal syndrome" among .chronic users marked by such things as apathy, confusion, memory defects. ' AFrER THE INITIAL SELEcrlON of sub- jects and evaluation of tests in Costa Rica, an ex- perimental group of 41 users and 41 matched con- trols was studied. Users in the final sample con· sumed about nine marijuana cigarettes each day for an average of 17 years. "It is hoped that the additional methodological controls employed in the present study, by in· vestigators with no vested interest in the results, will buttress what is clearly becoming a majority findings -namely that chronic marijuana use does not irreversibly damage the brain or personality," the researchers said. SAN DIEGO CAP) -The thin, quavertna recruit trl• bard not to Qlnch u tbe lbri.ne Corps drlll inalructor simulates un· armed com bat with vtcorou ctq,. and puncbee at his Uve "dummy." .. He's got two eyfll, doesn't. he?" bellows the DI. ••well, what's wrong with aticldns ye>u,r fingers in there, curling them up and pulling them out?" .. NOTHING, SIR!" CHORUS the dozens or skull·shaven young men going through basic train· ing, or "boot camp,'' at the Corps• recruit depot here. As it has for 200 years, the Marine Corps is still shecking youngsters into unbending obe· dience and, hopefully, manhood under fire. Although today's r ecruit studies nuclear warfare over closed.ci rcuit television. the credo of "First You Tear Down a Man, Then You Build a Marine" is still much a part of boot camp in1976. WHAT TRAINING officers call ·"The Basic Marine" is produced here and at Parris Island, S.C., in 78 days of classes, drills and or· ganized harassment known as "high stress." Col. R.A. Seymour, who heads recruit training here, says high stress is aimed at teaching recruits "absolute, instant, will· ing obedience to orders." But he says it doesn't include physical abuse. "We will court·martial any DI who even touches a recruit, much less hits one,•· Seymour said. NEVERTBELE~. a 19-year- old recruit fell dead Dec. 3 at Parris Is l and while being marched in a group carrying heavy knapsacks, and nearly 50 ·Dis were disciplined here last year for offenses ranging from excessive foul language to strik· ing a "boot" Marine. ''I'd be silly if I said it hasn't happened," said Sgt. Thomas Pfaffenberger, a former DI who teaches instructors here. "A DI Help! Jifte 1U: Service by H&R BLOClt at all ls under constant preaaure. · Sometimes. it'll set the best of blm. Anyone can be backed UJ> aaain.st thew all mentally .•• Today's recruit la ualcned to wetcht·llftioc program• if he can't handle the obstacle course and reading tutors U he can't master the training manuals. OFFICERS SAID they are proud that the percentage of recruits coming into the Corps with high school diplomas bas climbed above two-thirds for the firsttime. But today's recruit still runs himself glassy-eyed during drills and many can be seen Umping around in casts with what Marines ofClcially describe as "stress fractures," bones broken or ligaments torn by unac- customed doses of exercise. Eleven percent of the recruits don't make it. And the two-year tour of duty proves too much for 25 percent of the Dis, wh05e high divorce rate te~s of the strain placed on them. YET, THE CONFLICT between the DI and the young Leathernecks seems unlikely to Drug Weight Saved Him SINGAPORE (UPI) -A 24-year-old tailor beat the gallows by four one· hundredths of an ounce. Tan Phuay Hong pleaded guilty to drug trafficking and was sentenced to 20 years in prison and 15 strokes of the cane for possession of 13.67 grams of heroin. Under Singapore's tough new drug laws, a sentence of death by hanging can be . levied again,tt anyone possessing mol"e then 15 grams or just under half an ounce of heroin. Mutual Savings offices The nation's best known tax preparation service will 'prepare your individual Federal and California tax returns free, or for a small fee. Free, if you have a certificate account at any Mutual Savings Office with a balance of $7,500 or more. For $15 if your balance is a minimum of $3,000. If you are not now a Mutual Savings customer, open an account and become eligible for this exclusive offer. We will arrange to transfer your funds from your bank or other savings association. Not only will our tax service sqve you money, but your return will be covered by the famous H & R Block guarantee: "If we make any eITOr in the preparation of your tax return that costs you any interest or penalty on additional ~es due, while we do not assume liability for the additional ~es, we will pay that interest dlld penalty. Furthermore, if your retwn is audited, we will accompany you at no extrd cost to the Internal Revenue Service and explain how your return was prepared, even though we will not act as your legal representative'.' Save money. Have your returns prepared by the best known tax people in the business. Be protected by a guarantee. Just call or come in to any Mutual Savings Office to make an appointment. But do it soon because of the popularity of this offer: subside, partlally became of a new and .rowdier breed of recruits. "We're 1etting more kldl olf the street now than ever before - street-wise punks. we call them," said Seymour. "Some. you can do nothln1 wlth. We're having to work harder m di.a· cipllne now than ever.•• Dis so through elgbt weeks" training aimed at teaching them to lead their charges rather than bullying them. "YOU CAN ONLY humiliate a man so much/' said Seymour. Nonetheless, there are times when a clash between a recruit and a DI is handled quickly and simply. A recent graduate of the depot described one such inci· dent: "There was this one cat who said he wasn't going to do all that cleanup and stuff," he said. "He tried to Jump bad with this one DI, and the DI just dropped him. He wasn't hurt or nothing, but from then on, when that DI cat told him to move, he moved.'' AT LEABT ONE DI is always with the recruits, acting as counselor as well as tormentor. Recruits 'are on the go from 5:30 · a:m . until 9:30 p.m., and, while Dis keep the pressure on, they say "high stress" is not an end in itself. "You never ·want to let it get in the way of your actual training," said Sgt. Dennis Shepherd, an in· structor here. "You have a whole. list of objectives you haye to re· ach and if a man is too choked up to do anything, it's self· defeating." THE MARINES ARE trying to upgrade the educational level of recruits, with increasing em· phasis being placed on signing college graduates. But highbrow or not, recruits will still find themselves batteripg each other with th·e familiar canvas-padded "pugil sticks." Officers say that despite the modern-day methods, boot camp isn't any easier . "I think it's harder now than when I came in during World War II," said Seymour. l I r / A J% DAILY PILOT I 1 T SAVE Boys' Polo Shirts 2.22 Reg. 2.99. Crew necks in assorted bright stripe colors. Polyester/ cotton w /pocket. Machine wash. Sizes 8·18. VALUE Big Boys' "Tough Denim Jeans" 4.44 Reg. 5.99. The toughest, roughest denim we've got. Machine wash polyester/ cotton. Sizes 8· 18. 4.99 Reg. 6.44. Husky size jeans 8·18. SAVE 23% Boys' Underwear 3/1.99 Reg. 3 /2.59. Stock up now on boys' t·shirts and briefs made of l 00 % combed cotton. White. Sizes XS·S·M-L. , - Due· to Inventory; we will close today at 5:30 P·~·u OP.ening Wednesday at 12 Noon. SAVE OVER 25% Men's Polo Shirts 2.66 Reg. 3.n. Crew necks in assorted bright strWce colors. .Polyester/ cotton. ocket. Machine wash. Sizes S,M,L,XL SAVE $2 Men's Corduroy Jeans 6.99 Reg. 8.99. Western style flare leg jeans of cotton/ polyester blend. Machine wash. 29·38 waist, 29·34 length. For her. Dacron~ polyester /cotton that is machine washable. Assorted colors. Misses'.sizes 8·18. Limited quantities. Sale priced items effective Thursday, thru Saturday, Jan. 31, 1976 • • CLOSEOUT Misses' Tops 1.99 Our sleeveless, turtleneck top is lightweight and casual. Finely ribbed acrylic in assorted colors. S,M,L. limited qua'ntities. SPECIAL 2 99 Misses' • Irregular Panties Yourchoiceofseveral 3 1i99c short sleeve styles. # ~ $3. OFF OUR PRE·WASHED DOUBLE ZIPPED JEANS 7.99 Reg. 10.99. It's a steal at the .regular price. And now, WOW! In macnine wash cotton. Junior sizes 5 to 15. Navy only. SPECIAL BUY Electric Blankets · Wear 'em alone or over a blouse. With front pockets. Machine wash nylon in assorted colors. Sizes S,M,L. limited quantities. Slightly irregular blankets in assorted popular colors. Washable. All nylon binding. Polyester /acrylic blend. Limited quantities. 12.99 Twin Size-SingleContr,ol 15.99 Full Size-Single Control 19.99 Full Size-Double Control 24.99 Queen Size -Double Control 29.99 King Sfze -Double Control ---·--- Choose from assorted styles and fabrics. Great fashion colors. Machine wash. S,M,L. Limited quantities. SAVE NOW! Women's Casuals 1.99 Reg. 2.44. Vinyl uppers with rope trim wedges. Assorted colors. Sizes 5-10. (Whole) OVER $1 OFF Infants' Sleepers Reg. 4.98. Printtop, solid bottom. 100% polyesterknit flame resistant fabric. Gripper wais,t. Heel and toe guard for longer wear. Sizes 1-4. . - • One low price includes attachments •• I • Eureka Deluxe . UprightVac 74.99: Wall-to-wall cleaning power wit specially designed edge cleane plus 6-way dial-a-nap rug pile adjustment. Built-in headlight, vinyl hose. hose adaptor. crevice tool. dusting brush, upholstery brush and wand. (1424) • Limited quantities. « .... - SHAPE UP AND SAVE \ Wonder Body Exerciser 2.99 Reg. 3.99. Helps firm, shape, trim, tone. Attached to a door knob and it's ready to go. . •f\ s~. ~--:Jf., ~ \ '{ '\~ ------., . ............ ,, / Wonder Pedal Exerciser . ·4.99 Reg. 5.99. Helps tone stomach, waistline, thighs, hips. Steel frame, vinyl mat, too. SAVE OVER $3 100 lb. \.I Weight Set: Reg. 20.99. Includes 68" barbell, two 15 lb., four 10 lb., four 5 lb. black . Orbatron discs and more. · Great Buy . ..... Men's Sweatshirt 3.66 Men's pullover sweatshirt with long sleeves. Cotton/ llCfYllC blend. Grey. S,M,UQ.. .. • Cafeteria Speclal DAILY PILOT A JS 2530FF Cannon Dish Towels & Cloths Cannon dish towels Cannon dish cloths 2/91c3/74c Reg. 2/1.22. 100% cotton terry in assorted checks. Reg. 3/89¢. Great assorted checks. 100~/o cotton. 25°/oOFF The Treasury .lllltt'll!!'~·~~IM\ B~thRugs 2.41 Sale priced Items ~ffe(tive Thurs. thru Sat.; Jan.·31, 1976. LARGE SIZE SALE 229 Anacin Tablets 200's 149 Listerine Antiseptic 32 fl. oz. . 149 Right Guard Deodorant · Nt. wt. 13 oz. . I" Vicks Nyquil Night Time Cold Medicine 266 Bufferin Tablets 225's 129 Vaseline Intensive Care Lotion 15fl.oz. I" Prell Concentrate Shampoo Nt. wt. 7 oz. tube PRESCRIPTION SERVICE Let us fill your next prescription . .. ~·--· 11(.Yllll .. • AC•O lllllCO I IOOI -., A.OAClt( ., -· ACllll & MHil -n lllalll• i. JOO NC1S 179 Alka-Seltzer Tablets Foil-Wrapped 72's --... ~ ... ~ ~ I" Con tac Cold Capsules 20's 12• Arrid Roll-On · Deodorant Nt. wt. 2V2 oz. .166 Efferdent Denture Tablets 96's Healt~ & Beauty special prices good thru Sunday, Fe.bruary 1st. We reserve the right to limit quantities. ORANGE• City Dr. I\ G•den Gro¥t 8IYd. • -<>pen weekct.ya 1 o tot. Sundlly9 1 o toe. SANTA ANA• 3800 So. Brlatol-No. of SG. Coeet PllD-Open .-u•~ • 9:30 to 9. S.tur~y 9:30 to a. &I~ 10 to I. . ' • • . . "" -. . -~ .i -. . \ • A 14 DAIL y PILOT Tuesda,y,Januaryg7, 1978 On Continentals wide-bodied DC-10's you get tWo Hollywood fi]ms and plenty of extras.** Featuring specially condensed inovies at no extra cost. The films pictured arc JUSt a few of many to be shown. GENTI..EMAN'S AGREEMENT ... , ~~-~ - TI-IE BARBARJAN AND 1HE GEISHA nu: FLIM·FLAM MAN LAURA Featuring our fun food. . .. ~llllltli~ii.I.~" ;-::; '!I •. If you'r~ flyi1~g our lo~ cost ,Economy fare, ·r, · next tnp enj oy Contmcntal s famous w1dc-bod1ed frankfurter or a heaping ·· corned beef sandwich at nominal charge ~~---~P on lunch, dinner and snack flights. Plus wine ;md cheese for SOC. O r beer and pretzels for a quarter. ---·-(• .. Featuring a drink with a surprising ne-w taste. Only Conti'1cntal has Malc olm Hereford's Cow on board. It's just a buck for three Cows. . .... ··---.... A cow on the rocks is not :i bum steer. --............... IllE nm.EE FACES OF EVE , Featuring the only Coach Pub in the s~. t Everyone's welcome in the spacious Continental Coach Lounge. Test your skill at electronic PubPong, ~. order your favorite beverage, get to know your fellow passengers or just relax . .. t JANE EYRE PLANET OF THE APES Featuring action newsreels and cartoons on our wide ., DC-10 screen. ': Continental highlights the world of sports, news and human interest of the 30's, 40's · and SO's. And we're showing cartoons that will keep you laughing. The Coach Pub is available on most Continental DC-lO's excluding HaW2ii through service. For complete information and reservations on all our flights call your travel agent, our partner in getting things done, or Continental Airlines. TO CIIlCAGO: 9:00 AM·, 11 :30 AM :I: (Hollywood/Burbank), 11:40 AM ·l:, 12 NOON •t, 12:20 PM (Ontario), 3:00 PM·+, 6:00 PM·+, 11:30 PM·+, 12:45 AM •t •DC· 10 t Pub <All tl1glm non-srop l'XC\-pl whl·n· indicarl'CI :j: for din-ct) ··suning February 2nd CONTINENTAL AIRUNES The.Proud Bird with the Golden Tail. Los Angelcs-n2-6000; Beverly Hills and San foemando Valley-986--l<XX>; Burb~nk, Glendale and Pasadena-246-7181; Long Beach-537-4400; Ontario and Pomona-983-3664~ Orange County-537·3114; Riverside and San Bernardino Toll Free at (800) 222·2810; San Gabriel Vallcy-579-4210; Santa Monica and South Bay-646-2230. , . ., t • .. I o I ( Energy Loss Makes Her See Light I ~\\\\ Power Cuts One way to conserve energy is to change wasteful habits. That's what Kitty Borah, Shell special services represen- tative believes. She recommends a common sense approach to solving the problem. -Turn off lights when not needed. One 200-watt bulb burning for 10 hours uses the equivalent of a pound of coal or one-half pint of oil. -Caulk and weatherstrip doors arid windows. The equivalent of 580,000 barrels of home heating fuel could be saved each winter day if households were caulked and weatherstripped. -Lower thermostats to 68 degrees during the day and 60 degrees at nlgbt. The demand for fuel would drop by more than 570,000 barrels or oil per day if every household in the U.S. lowered heating tem- peratures six degrees. The savings would be enough to heat more than nine million homes during the winter season. -Wash clothes in warm or cold water and rinse In cold. National fuel savings would amount to the equivalent of about 100,0QQ:}Ja-rr.els of oil Jday .. Thit.JatwQ and~ half percent~t the total demand for N!Sldential h...aJng. -Be sure the dishwasher is full before using It. If just one load per week were eliminated by every dis· hwasher user in the country, the-equivalent of about 9,000 barrels of oil a day would be saved. That is enough to heat 140,000 homes in winter. -Drive at moderate speeds. Most cars get about 21 percent more miles per gallon on the highway_ at 55 miles per hour than they do at 70 m.p.h. -Keep your car tuned. Regular tune-ups can save as much as 10 percent on gas costs. A book with energy-saving tips called ·The Energy Challenge-What Can We Do?, is offered by~ell free of charge as a public service. For a copy write Kitt_.YBorah , energy con- servation booklet, Shell Oil Company, P.~Box 2463, Houston, Tex. 77001. _'i Job's Opening By JO OLSON Of(M D•llY PIMtSQff The women's movement can be puzzijng to men because they often are not sure bow to deal with the changing roles of their wives, mothers and sisters. This is why men should be in· vited to participate in activities at women's centers, according to Colleen Kilcoyne.' • As the first full-time director for the Golden West College Women's Center, she plans to open the center's doors to men and schedule some activities just for them. Through men's consciousness· raising groups, for example, she hopes that men will learn not to be threatened by the changes, and alonl{ the way, discover their own personhood. Another of Miss Kilcoyne's goals is to help women learn to function in the "real world," which includes men. .. For some women, it's all new," she said ... They haven't had the skills in decision-making that men have, or the business training." · A third goal is to help people become more adept at inter- personal relationships. "People have difficulty com· munlcating on a feeling level. It's not okay to show your f eelin.g:s." FRIGHTENING • This goes way back to the .. stole tblng," where peo]>le weren't supposed to "bare ·themselves,'' Miss Kilcoyne not· ed. If anyone does voice his thoughts about another person. "it acares people who aren't used to seeln1 feelinas e.l(posed.'' The reason most people are re· luctant to expreu thelr emotion.a la that th~y ·are afraJd of tejec· tlon, and many people don•t hlve a firm sense of self, the new director said. "They can't say, 'I'm all right, regardless of what others think.' " Though her degree from the University of -Connecticut is formally in child development and family relations, her train· ing is in inter-personal com· muntcations and human rela- tions. I She did fietd work and indepen· dent study at the university's Center for Personal Growth and helped start a drop-in center on the campus. The 23-year·old gave herself a homework assignment after graduating, which was to de- velop her own sense of self. Her solution was to move west away from most of her family and pro· ve to herself that she could make iton her own. UST OF CLINICS "I came prepared to wait tw~ months for a job," she said. After several weeks of fruitless searching, a friend gave her a list of clinics to call, and Miss Kilcoyne found that one was look· ing for an associate director. Alter serving in that post for 10 PM)l\lhl, she. landed 'tl)e .Job she really wanted -worldnl on a college campus In a student af. fairs Position. As she eases into campus Iii e, she hopes that students will have a feel for her .. as a person." and that they wlll drop in for coffee at the center. Miss Kilcoyne also wants peo- ple to rnake sug1estlons about what the center should offer. "I want the procram to come from the women I'm serving. Then l'll have 1omethin1 to 10 on.'' · In her. spare tlme, Miss Kil· By DENNIS McLELLAN' 00.M 0.11, f"l ... ltlff Can someone live for three days without any of the "energy conveniences" Americans have grown so accustomed to using in daily life? Kitty Borah of Houston, Tex. did. But it wasn't easy. . A Shell Oil Company special services representative, Mrs. Borah rode a bicycle to work and walked 15 flights of stairs to her offi~e. However, the office was dark and she couldn't use her .electric typewriter. At home she cooked on an out· door grill. It took too long to boil water for coffee. Hot baths were out. She found it was too difficult to read by candlelight a.pd mis· sed being able to keep up on the news from her radio. By the last day she found herself staring at the clock wait· ing for her self-imposed experi- ment to end. She had learned her lesson. "I sat there staring at these ap· pliances and conveniences but I couldn't use them," she said. "I realized how dependent we are and how much energy we waste." ENERGY MESSAGE Miss Borah was in Costa Mesa recenUy for an interview. It was just one stop in a traveling schedule that has taken her more than 200,000 miles in two years to bring her energy saving message to the public. Miss Borah. who points out that the United States has six percent of the world's population and uses a third of the world's energy, has studied energy usage and methods of conservation. Her goal is to pass out energy. saving tips and make people aware that the present supply is not unlimited. Last August her study took her to England aod West Germany where she stayed with lower and middl e income famili.es . BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tuesday, January 27. 1976 81 Germans and Americans both save energy by cooking outdoors. But Kitty Borah, below right, discovered only 2 percent of homes abroad have automatic clothes dryers. Although they have a similar standard of living to the U.S .. they use half as much energy. She wanted to know why. "The biggest thing is their overall frugality ," she said. '·Anything they use is made to count. They haven't gotten into the wasteful patterns we have." ROOM HEAT Miu Borah found that Euro- peans heat only 45 percent ·of their homes and never the bedrooms. (One Englishman told her the reason they wear turtleneck s weaters is for warmth, not fashion). In West Germany, she said. many families live in apartments <about 53 percent compared to 20 percent in the United States) r ather than single-family homes. The homes also are smaller, with about 60 percent less living space. Refrigerators and other ap- pliances are noticeably smaller -a 3-cubic·foot refri gerator is average compared to 16 cubic feet in the U.S. Many families market daily rather than stock· ing up. Miss Borah, who said she seldom uses her apartment refrigerator to its maximum capacity, believes Americans should learn to size appliances to their needs . . In Wes t Germany onl y percent of the famili es have clothes dryers compared to 42 percent in the U.S. Three-fourths of English homes do not have clothes dryers or air condi- tioners . They have more manually-operated appliances like can openers. HOT WATER American families use three times as tnuch hot water per capita as West Germans, who use point-of-use water heaters which heat it only before it is to be used, she said . . Miss Borah also reported that gasoline averages $1.40 per gallon, which obviously dis- courages needless driving. They have fewer and smaller cars. have a higher proportion of public transit and travel shorter distances than Americans. She suggests Americans do more bicycling, car-pooling and keeping their cars tuned, which gives better gas mileage. The biggest lesson she lea~d from her trip was r ealizing America needs to reassess its energy us age. "Some people think we should go to one ex· treme or another. What l'm in- terested in is making them re- aHze they can save by just chang- ing their habits." In her travels she bas received many questions from people ask- ing what they can do. Some tell her they wanted to do something, but didn't know what. "One thing I find heartwarm- ing is many just didn't know we ;till had a problem. They ap- preciate the fact that the effort's made.'' When people ask her what will 5olve the energy problem- eliminating waste, new dis- coveries of oil and gas or new energy sources-she tells them that it is all those things. "Conservation alone is not going to solve the problem,'' she said. Lady-in-waiting col.LEEN KILCOYNE TAKES DIRECT APPROACH ' coyne practices her philosophy of "people being who they want to be." She loves to read and doesn't mind .admitting that she spends a lot of time with her nose In a book, and isn't ashamed to say that ahe'a not! a talented athlete· -except in swimming. "l love the sun and the beach, and l blke occasl~ally. I enjoy getting together with friends to talk, go to plays and have parties." Colleen Kilcoyne is truly a "people SMCSOn.'' and will set a aood example for those Just leamiQS to communicate their feflln~s. She doesn't hesitate to shake hands and say. "I've really en· toyep 1ettlng to know you.'' • . . ' ·~ Tact Governs By GEORGE FRANK SACRAMENTO CUPI) Jackie Habecker once had angry protesters standing on her desk and now has them sleeping on her office floor . Mrs. Habecker is Gov. Ed- mund G. Brown Jr. 's receptionist and resident expert on political demonstrators . She was recep- tionist for former Govs. Ronala Reagan, Edmund G. "Pat" Brown, and also worked for Goodwin J . Knight and Earl War- ren. Her office, with doors thrown wide open to visitors, also hap· pens to be the wailing area for those who come to see the gov- ernor. Some come to the office by invitation, many do not. "It is a tough job ... said one. Brown aide. "She has the ability because she knows how to get along with all types of people.'· During the Reagan years, when protest,s reached their peak, the always gracious 49- year-old Mrs. Habeckeroccupied a front row seat at vocal sit·ins by wel(are rights demonstrators and t~ose protesting mental hospital budget cuts. Then, protesters often stood on her deak to get a'tention or set fires in the ash trays. · 11 But once the press and television crer-vs got here they were satisfied. They would leave or quiet down,'' she recalled. · ' Now all that has changed/,(e latest wrinkle in political protests is the "sleep-in." They come to the reception office carrying blankets and sleeping bags and they have that look in their eyes which says. "We are staying until we get to see him." The first sleei.>·in was started , Nov. 20 by members of the• United Farm Workers Union who · wanted Brown to fire the chief administrator of the new Agricultural La bor Relations Board and to do something about what they called unfair labor practices. They came on Thursday rtld. stayed until Sunday morning. The first night, Mrs. Habecker, who worked in the governor's office as a stenographer when Earl Warren was chief executive in the late 1940's, remained with the protesters until 3 a.m. She went home and returned five hours later to find them sleeping on the office floor and couehes. She stayed until 9 p.m. the following night and then went home for the weekend. State police stayed with them unUJ they left. I Those who came to the offfce on regular business had "mixed reactions" a bout seeing people sleeeing on the floor. "Some expressed support,'' she $aid. "Others Just couldn"t beUeve it." ·. , I . ' r . . ~ . ... . . 12 DAILY PILdT Tuesdai Janua!} 27 197G --It's . -.. 6' " . AT No WIT'S END Joke ~ By ERMA BOMBECK Although doctors are the current group bear· lng the brunt of malpractice insurance. life in· s urance executives are beiDJt told to look for new trends and a new day. It seems everyone wants assurance of what's , coming to h am or her and they want to insure their rights against risks. It is not inconceivable that in the not too distant future all of us will be carrying liability insurance. The other night at a party I approached a man who seemed rather depressed. "Cheer up !" I said. "Things aren't that bad." He grunted and went back to his drink. ·'Let me tell you a joke," I giggled. "It'll make me laugh?" he asked. ''It will make you hysterical." I promised "It seem s President Jo'ord. Pope Paul and Mayor Daley were aboard a boat that would only hold one person. As 1t began to sink lhey held a dis- cussion about who s hould be saved." "A boat capsizing is not funny," said the man. "Wait a minute. I'm not finished. President Ford said, 'There is no question that I should be saved because 1 am responsible for the destiny of over 200 million people. I should be the one to sur - vive.' The Pope interrupted and said, 'I can ap- preciate your importance, but I provide spiritual leaders hip for the entire world. My absence would throw civilization into turmoil.· At this point Mayor Daley spoke up and said. 'Look. we live in a democratic society. Let's put it to a vote.' Mayor Daley won 7-2." "You call yourself a humorist?" asked the man unsmiling . "I've done that Joke a million times and it's always worked before." I said. The next morning I heard from the man's lawyer, who said his client had lain awake all night long worry ing about Jerry Ford and Pope Paul bobbing around in the water. "He s uffered m ental anguish, msomnia, and an emotional w~iplash. Hc 1ssuingyoufor$500,000 " "Five hundred thousand dollars! .. .. Right. He said you promised to make him laugh and he didn't.'' "But ... " "There are witnesses." "But ... •· "You s hould h ave spelled out the options: 0) He may not get the joke; C2> He's heard the joke · before: (3) He is related to Mayor Daley and did not see the humor in it. If I've told you humorists once. I've told you a million limes. When you see a person depressed -don't get involved!" Taurus Good Sign WEDNESDAY,JANUARY28 ..,. By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (Ma rch 21-April 19>: Accent on stand- ing. pres tige. a mb1llon. ability to make room for yourself at a more elevated position. TAURUS (April 20 · May 20): Good Moon aspect coincides now with long-range plan, langu age. s pecial s tudy and spiritual ex- perience. Burden you have been carrying is about to be r e moved. GEMINI CMav 21-June 20 ): Concern with hidden or occult affairs could dominate. Taxes, leases. specific rate of payment -these m ay be part of concerns. CANCER (July 23-July 22): Lie low, play waitmg game, detect subtle signals others are throwing your way. Means the obvious is not always so easy to discern. LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22>: Diversify. Experi· menl. Break free from e m otional restrictions. Show that you a re capable of laughing at your own foibles. Your popularity is on upswing. VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22 ): Good lunar aspect corresponds now to time when c reative j uices flow when you effect significant changes and have better communications with children. LIBRA <Sept. 23 · Oct. 22 ): Be r eady for change, analysis of recent actions, questions and answers. Accent on solidity, conservative responses and react ions. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Accent on ideas. r elatives. close neighbors. calls and significant m essages. Home, domestic areas are emphasized. SAGITTARI US <Nov. 22 · Dec. 21 ): Em· phasis on money, personal possess10ns, ability to protect valuables and to collect needed material. CAPRICOR N Wee. 22 ·Jan. 19): Lunar cy· cle is such that you feel pulse of public. Your lim- ing improves ;Youn re able to be where you should be to obtain greatest benefiL'i, Opportunities. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 ·Feb. 18): What occurs behind the scenes may be more important than initially perceived. PISCES (Feb. 19 · March 20): Accent on friends, romantic inclinations, changes, rewards for profession al e fforts. ( ticadboJrd~ -BedsprC'ado; Dr&1peri es -Boudoir Chairs LAST 5 DAYS MIWPOIT llACK JJ ,....._ ..... 644-1160 Betrothed • A March 27 wedding tn St. Andrew's ! Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach, is planned by John David Kumet and Victorl a Ann Lohman. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Rowland G. Lohman of Newport Beach and the Frank Kazmers of HotSprin1s, S.D. Miss Lohman is a graduate of Newport Harbor Hlsh School and now is a senior at Cal State Long Beach, where she is presi· dent of Delta Delta Delta. She was a 1972 Na· tional Charity Lea~uedebutante. Her Clance'. a graduate of CSULB, played basketball and affiliated with Sigma Chi. He now coaches bas ketball at La Quinta High School, Garden Grove. John Kazmer, Victoria Lohman Keeping Grass Costly D E A R A N N LANDERS: This letter is being written by a mother in Indiana. Our 20-year-old son was just sent up for marijuana. We sat in that courtroom and heard the Judge say, "One to 10 years "Ann, if this letter saves just one child I will feel as 1f 1 did wonders. gr ay in the last six weeks. ady to make a new life for After talking to my doc-myself. (Incidentally, I tor I feel as if we are liv· was left very comfort&· ingin a sick wor ld . ble, but not rich.) Ask these kids to put A divorced man has thems·etves in their been attentive lately and parents· place for 10 I need your advice. A few minutes. justlong enough of my women friends to stand in front of a have told me some very Judge. May be then they negative things about will say NO the next time him but I think they are someone offers them pot. envious. Ann(~ Landers Any ideas, Ann? - ~IJ;":t'.'-·Yv,'': .'·:~>.:~Sharon Allen $ • , ··:-frt'l' ... -1'.~'". -·--·-. *' .... ·--·-·· ... ~·~,·· f ~~'.·:·... ~EREN ITV · .····:~~ Skin Care Center ·~ JANUARY SPECIAL FACIALS - 1 Oo/o OFF l ANAL WEEK ~ The shopping and super busy • season.ts over. ancfisn1 it time' '. to do IOmlthlng for~? An hOur and a half of pampering and relaxing. A fecill designed for you-to help 1 probler.1 skin or to maintain 1 lovety complexion: the European way. Call for )"OU( Serenity appointment ~ Gift Cettlflcates '20 t ·[ ,.,.. ...._. ' E~ .,...._ -"* 0...,C-llca I .......,_ Fadllllod,Wuing ~ .i ·1 n Lido Village 1 ·3400 Via Oporfo, Suite 6 ~ on the boerVtor1llr. upai.ts a •·. · . · Newport Beach :i..l "·.~ .... : ,.._ ... ~~ .. .: ....... ~-~ ~:~!..~~~-~.~-~ ... ~·:d,J I knew Bill s moked pot but never at home or in front of us. It wasn't al- lowed. So he and his friends decided to rent a house. It la s ted two weeks until he got caught with 30 grams. He lost his car to the state . The fine was $500 and the attorney's fees aren't in yet. butthey 'll be plenty. Sign me -TORN UP IN Fred has been married INDIANA and divorced twice. He JI G·SA W UNSOLVED p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:::=:=:=:=;::;;;::;;:=:;::::;;:;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;- DEAR J.S.U.: Yes, several. Before you get serious with Fred, do some investigating and learn the answers to those questions that are panllng you. I suspect that once you do, you won'tneed any advice. DEAR INDIANA: It's has a position in a depart· time Indiana joined fl. ment store . (He told me linots, Colorado, Alaska he was an assistant and tbe other enlightened buye r , but I heard he is states. POSSESSION of n ot a buye r , j ust a marijuana should NOT salesperson.) The man is be a crime. It should be a extremely good-looking, misdemeanor. A fine, dresses like a fashion YES -butjaU, NO. plate and has elegant GET THAT PROFESSIONAL TOUCH IN YOUR SEWING!!! A New Pattern Mo Icing. Fitting & Design Method Copy or Design Your Own Clothes!!! NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY NEVER BUY ANOTHER PAnERN! Pushers should get the manners. He lives weU , ----------LEARN HOW YOU CAN: 'Eliminate costly £ & tirn•·consuming olterolions • Droft pol· lerris lo your siu & contour •Complete o garment in 2 hours "Get o good I'm not bitter at the judge or the police. They were doing their job. I just wis h kids would wake up a nd see what they are d o in g to themselves and their parents. Bill's "friends" didn't stand by him . They didn't even show their faces at the trial. No one was there but Mom and Dad. 1 pray we never have to go through this with any of our other c hildren. Ann, m y h air has turned book thrown at them, but drives a new car and kids who are caught seems to be able to afford smoking should not be ln· many luxuries. There are c a r c e r a t e d w I t h rumors that he is collect· hardened criminals. It's ing alimony from a rich an outrage. eX·\\!ife. I find this hard to I am NOT for the believe. legalization of pot but I My big question about feel very strongly that it Fred is that he never should be decriminalized speaks of his children (he in every state in the UD· has four), has no rela- ion. tionship with his sister or DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hus band passed away e i ght months ago and I am re· brother who live in this ci- ty, and is on the outs with his mother . He has no telephone because "he hates to be bothered.·· . U~ITtr.,tlett Five nuns. all Sisters of Charity, face fines and eviction from their GlE'.n Ridge, N.J . home because the town's zoning .forbids non-family members from living in one-family houses. Their attorney said his defense will be an argument "that the term 'marr~agt:' would include members of a recognized religious orgamzat1on who take vows as members of such an organiza-tion." · R A NEW WOMEN'S FACILITIES NOW OPEN 70AYS A WEEK c Reducing& Fipre C'ontat1ring NO CONTRACTS! MONTHLY RA TES! SPA ADA IMCWDIS • ..,. ....... ,,ool • Sast•• Sh• LATIST MOOmM . ~-f1' Dietary ~otion •~Individual Supervlllon call or appt. 631 -2000 214 VICTOllA STlll1' •COSTA MISA • C714J 6Jl;JOOO ACROSS FROM COST A MfSA HOSPIT Al NEAR NEWPORT BL VD . • N y T " I II f11 every lime •Attend only one class .,._ __ , 90·MINUTE LECTURE S leom to fit btrore you learn to sew. ESTELLA Ti ,:-:.';~"&At ~MAN •Rr 1'3n,~:M. rRESEHTS FOR THE ~ ~ FIRST TIME EVEI 1H COSTA MESJt W.._ldcry, J..ary 28 n.nday. J__, 2' COSTA MESA IHH lGOlll26S 1205 Hsbor lotlieYcrd llYM TUISOAY. J_, 27 ST. MA TTHIW'S LUTHEIAM CHUICM 11112 c.t.er DrfH ,....._ SJ.SO 504 '"• wi .. llib .. Draffiltt m1tetlll1 for ut11t dus. Everything Goes at Anything Goes 50-75~ OFF 326 Marine Ave. N eo&s Balboa ltland e1s.1860 3432 Via Oporto Lido Village Newport Beach 873-0604 Town Resort & Crulaewear 272 N. Canyon Or. Palm Spnngs 325-8129 FINAL DAYS CHILDREN SHOES FURTHER REDUCED Store Opens I 0 a.m. BUSTER BROWN-CHILD LIFE-KEDS· ATHLETIC SHOES & SANDALS 5 10 58 00- Reg. to 12300 SOME RE.AL OUTSTANDING VAWES . . t ' t I I IOOMIR by Wrn. F. lrown cmd Mel Casson TUMBLEWEEDS WHA1'R.E '1t() rorN& wrrn -me CAN~ Pt:PU1V? FUNKY WINKERBEAM .SHIA10R NOAH VALE 15 EXPECTED 10 BE UP AND AROUND OOON J FIGMENTS NANCY -£RN•L4 B"Sl9"41LL,..., - ---=~ -~ - SEflN' WHAT WAY 1lff WINPS IJLCNllN'l VA CANTELL EJV 1HE FLAME! HE WA5 INJURED RECENTll.,) WHE~ HE FELL OFF A .st.t.llNE:i ... •• A 1WO .. J.WNDSlfQ- ~Acz .. OLD .. f06 ! by TOlll K. Rymt by Tom Batiuk DORIN(J A RECE~T CONGRE&&IO~AL RE!:E55 / by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller YOU KNOW IT, AND I KNOW IT, BUT DOES THE DOG KNOW IT ? TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE PEANUTS ACROSS l Wart of tllt 6 Legalmen: Abbt. 10 ICnocks 1' Grown-up 15 Hindu "~pus" 16 Nigerian •5 Obselved clotefV •7 Fi•es f1tmly ~1 H1brtual dmk"1 52 Y twf' I jib 5' CIUMtO mow 58 Crtvats 59 Priell Ytstefdly's Puz:z:te Sol'led: ~~~ A M A T I • c l.ah! I II I ,, lillUI \I I S E A ~ It E S M N T YI , .. , "'" ,,.~I IC I ,! A I'~.!!.,!! U l 0 P I 11 S ~_!,! C ~ ti S 0 l T 11 0 V £ ti £ ltlT TAllS OP(t1ro A A S C A \I It r II JUDGE PARKER Ml{ PET ROCK 15 AN EXCEUENT 60LFER ... Hl5 FAVORITE COORS€ 15 ~ PelKE 6EACH " ! 1·27 TIHlldey, Jtnu1ry 27 197& DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK MOON MULLINS HfY, B,ABY·· Jlt.L Bs OFF DUTY IN AN HOUR ... HOW ~ ." ABOUT Yot.J ;L!PPIN'ME 'fe.Fl. PHONE NlJMBER? ~ SAY, M A 'AM, CAN :! e>O RROW ONe OF "rHOSe L.l't... GL-A.SS c>I PS,-IC.KS ~ by Charles M. Schull --------.. HA HA HA HA! L{OU MAVE A pi(ETT{ OIJLl GROUP HERE. MA'AM l 1 ' ~ I · I ·Hl. MAD£ QWTI: AJtJ ll\PRES$ION ON ME! by GeOrcje Lemont by Ferd Johnson 13~ PRECINCT1 s~r. MAC'r< spr;.Al'IN<27 . THE GIRLS .. J N1ti¥e:V1t. 17 lnnowav 18 Nobleman 19 Accept 81 Hole ····· 62 At firtt 63 Flbled giant M~Nle 65 SOlks ""., .. I t~ ! ;p (Ill IT I T I ( l S • D It D P I IA II !.! .! I E T A p ( . ICU A T 0 0 T T E It s ll I II li!1Jlll1WJW.u.uw:.ww.===ww11 WE'LL PLAN t!,M~EANWH~~lLE~!!!!!:fQF"C0ljRSi~)Ul 20 Fulof~ egga 22 Shltk or ligM 24 T1tt1n's friends 26 Gauulous ~ 27 One p1ylng 1ttenrion 31 Mrs. Equiva· lent 32 o· ArtlO""''s friend 33 Hoktiftg ~ 35 -of1812 JI llollt9d roct 39 Wort vov-s 40 Window fecet .. , NJICll Pf°"°"" •2 .. wealed '3 Aw: 'refi• 44 Malelllfd I 2 " 11 Ill I ti [ " It [ It U II ~!~ '"•" I~ S [ S II 0 II ( .!.L ... M Changt ltle decOf 67 Bottoms of 21 European •2 Oislpproves ships nation: Abbr. vocally 0 N 23 Trees '3 Big name 0 w 25 o•" .. -:..10 • I Resounded "'""' •• '"hockey 2 Polish rivef pans 44 Storage 3 Clty of f'!i 27 T tnninal bo11es ' Moving 28 Skin 46 The tf eenution Republicans: plS 1 °""net 29 Light Abbr. 5 tall I . '7 Behind in -·--Clmlge I One~ 30 St.Law· time per MC. rence. fOf '8 Blaclc: one French 7 Pour .... , _ _. ft IS~ .,....,_., 49Tu 9'*ill peru 50 Bloebde t fMly 35 SC9PW SJ Rendered rnonidters 35 In tront of: hog f It 10 Second Pr9fi1 55 Com breed filming 37 s tlldy 56 Chemlell 11 l...., 39 PartofNew· ~nd 12 ~ foundtlnd 57 Eye pan 9MM 40 Q.eracters 60 N-form: t3 ~ .. e play Prefis TMAT AS A SEEN ONE OF KATMERINE'S SURPRISE nWORITE ACTORS! r MIGHT FOR HER. EVEN MAKE A TEN·OOLLAA JUDGE! CONTRl5l)TION 50 THAT HE CAN Kl55 HER! MISS PEACH . . ~· An~, WE~ WAITING FOlt YOUl' A~noc..o6Y Cet.WMN ! Ml.Alm'(, ~ !'LL lrEPLACE. Ya.A! by Mel rT' 1'AKE'~ ~ CE~TltlN EXPE"TlSE TO 00 TH~, MA~CIA • YOl.A THINK AN"/ DOPE CAN FIGIAla: OUT THAT NEXT MONTH EVE'lrY 71GN ~ ro VV()f{~Y Aeru r J:ErJ~IAA~Y ? "About all 1 'vc ever Jone with my life is w.iit for something to be reduced 50 per cent." DENNIS THE MEMACE \ #~I EAT w~ AT GINA'S~ UER Ab\'s~· >&IT A HlJlltlRD MILES Cf SB\91ETTI I' . . l .. i ' ~ f , ) •• 114 DAJL Y PILOT Woman To Ump Dodgers LOS ANG EL ES -Christine • Wren of Yakima, Wash .. the only woman umpire in or ganized baseball, will be one of the um. pires on Feb. 15 when the Los Angel es Dodgers face the University of Southern California man exhibition game. She worked in the Northwest League last season la lllfl11 E•• ra•• John Mar tin of ln1ne 1s the first driver entered m the bicen· . tennia l year running of the 500-mile race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on May 30. along with teammate Sheldon Kinser who will be driving a com- panion car . At the m om e nt . however, Martin is hospitahzed and his wife Nancy says the illness 1s serious but gives no further dt'· tails. C.•e• Fired DETROIT -Ray Scott. the on- ly Detroit Pistons' coach ever to compile a winning record, was fired Monday because ~f what management described as a communications breakdown. The National Basketball As- s o ciat io n team's general manager , Oscar Feldman, said that brf?akdown was the reason Scott was fired as coach. not the team's injur y-riddled 17 -25 season. Assistant coach Herb Brown, who joined the Pistons staff last s ummer, will coach the team for at least the reSIL of this season. BaU •I Fa.er• CANTON, Ohio -J im Taylor. Ray F1 aherty and the late Len Ford, integr al parts of gridiron <tyn asties in four differ ent de - cades, have been elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Fl a hert y c oache d the Was hington Redskins through their most successful era in the late 1930s a nd early 1940s. F ord. a bruising 250-pounder who was converted from offensive lo de· fensive end, helped the Cleveland ... Browns to divisional titles seven times in eight seasons in the 1950s. The 40-year-old Taylor 1s the •.most familiar name lo the cur- rent ge neration of pro football rans. The powerful fullback ,. PJayed a key role in transforming the Green Bay Packers from Na- ,· tional Football League door mats • to champions in the 1960s. IUasftl ..... PHILADELPHIA-Defending champion Marty Riessen r olled to an easy fi r st-round victory over J eff Borowiak. 7-5, 7-5, Mon· day night in the $115,000 pro in-t door tennis championships. t Earlier, Ton y Roche came , within one game of losing before I r a llying to b eat Sherwood I Stewart, 2·6, 1·&. 6·3. In other first round matches, Eddie Dibbs de· I feated Alex Mayer, 3-6. 6·2, 6·2. I a nd R oss Case toppled Bob C Hewitt, 6-0, 6·3. t J Tu8$C11y, January 27, 1976 u ... .,. ........ CHARLIE SANDERS GOES UP FOR A PRO BOWL CATCH. Basketball Roundup Bartow to Juggle; Hoosiers Rip Iowa LO S ANGE LES CAP>-Gene Bartow. coach of the 12th-ranked t;CLA Bruins. hinted agarn Mon- day that he may c hange his start· ing lineup for Saturday night's game against USC at P auley P avilion. "We 'r e going to do some evaluating this week that may or may not lead to starting li neup changes," Bartow said. Bartow, whose team has lost three of 17 games and dropped quickly in the national basketball rankings. would not say where changes may be made But the starting Jobs of center Ralph Drollinger and guard An· dre McCarter appear to be 10 the most danger. Drollinger, 7·foot-l, has been inconsistent t h is season . In UCLA's 95-85 loss to Notre Dame Saturday, be accounted for just one rebound in the 21 minutes he played. "Ralph has played some great basketball a nd you can't fault anyone for one isolated game," Bartow comm ented. "But we ar e concerned that we flren't getting 12, 15 or more rebounds a game from a 7-foot-l player." Mccarter tops the team in as· sists with 82. but his shooting has dropped to 27 .5 percent from the floor in the Bruins· last three games. "We're also going to have to take a hard look at our guard situation," Bartow said. "We're not as cons ist ent there as I hoped we'd be." Whil e Ba rtow talked o! lineup changes, he did not dwell on the possibility. He had first men- tioned making switches after a UCLA victory over Stanford Jan. 16, but he made none. * * * Indiana (I 7 -0) Breaks Loose IOWA CITY CAPJ -Top- ranked Indiana used a poised pressure defense and 32 points from Scott May lo defeat Iowa 88-73 in Big Ten basketball Mon· day night. The victory gave the Hoosiers a conference-leading 8-0 mark and was their 27th consecutive triumph in Big Ten action, tying the record set by Ohio State in 1960-62. It also moved coacl1 Bobby Knight's team to a 17-0 season r e- cord and was its 47tb straight re· gular season victory. A sellout crowd of 13,395 in the Iowa Fieldhouse watched as for mer Ma rina High coach Lute Olson's Ha wkeyes fell to 4-3 in the conference and 13-4 overall. i l • • • ~ Bratten Takes Over · The lead cha nged hands five times and the score was tied twice in a close first half, which ended with Indiana ahead 43·39. May, a 6·foot-7 forward who was a n All-American last year as a junior , led the deli berate Hoosier offense with 15 first·half points. Iowa's demise came slowly but surely through the second half as the Hoosiers' tight man-to-man defe n se for c ed f r e que nt turnover s .. • • • • • -. • . • • • • • • • • • . . • . . ,. • I ~ Estancia Grid POst By ROGER CARLSON Ot l.M Dally ~llot SU" J im Br atten, a 26-year-old ex-M ag n o li a H igh a nd Uni vers it y of Colorado quarterback, has been select· ed to guide E stancia High's football program . Bratten, an a ssistant at Newport Harbor High the past three years under Don Lent and Bill Piziica, fills the void left by Ken Kiefer, who was fired after a tw()lyear re. ign which produced 7 wins, 10 losses and a tie. And he says he 'll be install- ing a similar g rid philosophy lo the thinking of the 1970 era when Phil Brown led Estan· cia to a 9·2 record-the only losses a 15-14 decision to Bonita and a 14-12 setback to CIF 3·A champion Edison. "Defe nsively we'll attack and make things happen," says Bratten. "You might say we'll have an offensive de- fense. "Our offense will be con· trolledalmplicity. Wewon'tbe doinaalotoUancythlngs. "I considtt mys elf ..a dis- dpU.narian and advocate fun· damental football. When the mind ls disclpUned you come up with tbe r ight reaction.~." Duri ni b la lenur~ at Newport Harbor he waa in • char1e of lh e o H e nslve backfield-particularly th.t .....,terwcks. "Tbil bas been my ioal 1iac9 I wu a Junl« 1n Jllab ichool," H)'I Bratten. ''I had ·. • C:Mace to coach on the col· 1•1• leyeJ when J wa1 .,..tnated from Colorado, but • JIM BRATTEN New E1gle1 Boaa I wanted to be involved on the high school level because that is where you can motivate players." A sprlntout quarterback as a prep, he scored 197 points in 1966 for Magnolia, then unde r the reins of Don Lent. He ran for Z7 touchdowns, klckf'd 26 PATS and booted three field goals . A first team All-CIF tholce at Magnolia. Bra tten was a schol astic All ·American wtlik at CoJo_raclo ud a1ao dld graduate work at cal Stale <Fullerton> and UC lrv\M, in additio n t o g ~ttln1 ti ls master's At Pepperdine . \ Indiana opened the margin to 74·56 with less than six minutes remaining and coasted to vie· tory . Iowa was p aced by senior guard Scott Thompson's 28 points . Indiana connected on 6l.S per- cent of its shots from the field to Iowa's SS.7. The Hoosiers held a 33-28 rebounding edge. * * * Anteate.rs Vie Tonight UC Irvine's basketball team still has thoughts of gaining the NCAA regional tournament this season, but the Anteaters face a pair of must win situations this week if they a re to have any chance of r ealizing that goal. Coach Tim Tift's UCI club hosts UC Riverside tonight at 8 at Ctawford Hall and meets invad· ina UC Davis Saturday night. Both Riverside and Davis, along with UCI and Puget Sound gained the NCAA reaional pJayoff1 last year al Irvine. Two lo11e1 would virtually eliminate the Anteaun from playoff consideration and even a 1pUt of the two games would ~rlously dampen UCI '1 hopes. Rlvenidc ts led by Reigle Mims, Larry Jteynoldl and Leo Willi. The Hltblanden are de- f end.in& NCAA relional cham· plons. "We'll have to win moat ol °"" remalnlnl tames to a~ lJl Ui• playof(a," 1aya Tl.ft .• .,,._. two c•m~ thla week are apectalb. important." UCI 1• tnto toni"1t'• 1•me wlth an 8-7 season record. • Two Special Plays ... Pull It Out for. NFC ~ NEW ORLEANS (AP> - Young Mi ke Boryla of the Philadelphia E agles. who only made it to the Pro Bowl because five other quarterbacks couldn't, threw touchdown passes to Terry Metcalf and Mel Gray in the final four minutes to lead the National Football Conference to a 23·20 victory over the American Con· ference. "I didn 'l even expect to get into the game, especially when there were only seven minutes left," Boeyla said. "But even though I didn't think l was going to get to play, I s till stayed in there and watched the defenses and kept myself ready .'' Minnesota's Fran Tarkenton was picked fo r t he game along with St. Louis quarterback Jim Hart but had a sore arm a nd was sc r a t c h e d . D a llas' R oge r Staubach , the first choice to replace Ta rkenton, had sore ribs as a r esult of a Super Bowl poundV'g and couldn't make it, either. National Football League of· fi cials tried to get New Orleans' Archie Manning, but he reported a sore arm . So did Steve Ba rtkowski of Atla nta and James Harris of Los Angeles. They finally settled on Boryla, a sometimes starter in his second year as a pro. When assis tant coach Ken Meyer put Bory la into the gam e, the you'n g signa l-caller from Stanford pulled two special plays out of his bag of tricks, one which he put into the NFC repertoire and one that Hart installed. The first one. Boryla said, was call ed the ''Mike Special." That we n t f o r 14 y ards a nd a touchdown to Metcalf with 3:03 remaining and pulled the NFC w.ilhin 20·16 after they trailed at the half 13-0. The second one, called the ''Hart Special," went to Mel G r ay, Metc alf 's St. Louis Cardinals teammate, for eight yards and the winning TD with just 1 :09 to play. The "Mike Special," Boryla said, was an elaborate play· action pass . "You fake a handoff to the fullback, then fake a reverse to the slotback and alley-oop it over the linebacker to the other run· nmg back." he explained. The "Ha rt Special" was a sim· pie crossing pa ttern with the tight end clearing the area for. Gray. "I didn't expect to be here at the Pro Bowl, but it sure wu a nice way to end the season.'' Boryla said. ''Even if I hadn't got to play. it would have been a valuable experie nce just being around the klrld of. players they have In the Pro Bowl. You can't help but learn from people like that." Boryla Just missed being the second substitute in a row to win the Pro Bowl's most valuable pla,y~r award. He wa.s edged for that honor by Houston kick re· turn specialis t Billy Johnson. Johnson raced 90 yards to a touchdown with one punt and 5S yards lo set up a field goal with another as the AFC took a 20·16 lead that held up until the final 69 seconds. Boryla's scoring pass to Gray capped a short drive set up by a razzle-dazzle punt return that saw Detroit's Lem Barney take a lateral and race 50 yards to the AFC 30. It put the NFC in the lead for the first time and overcame what appeared to be a commandini AFC edge sparktd by two Jong punt returns by Johnson. Al New ~lean. -J:l, lot AFC 0 13 0 7-10 NFC 0 0 t 14-21 AFC -FO iMlleNd tO AFC -FG S'-'erud U Al'C -lwrro110ll •4 H IS from PHtOrll'I CSl-Nllkk ll) ""C-F'O .. llQflU E NFC-~•pan .._, Cllktlftlled) AffC-....,._,, toiwnt r W1'I <St-t\ldllk lll NFC -Metulf 14 pa from INr/I• Ca.llJIM llk lll NFC-Grrtl.-Ulrom 9erY&a C8"kMllklll AFC HffC "~..._. t• n ~.,.,.. #·m •1·m ~•lffttYM'ft IJ) IJ7 "9Wnl yaM ,., HS • ,.._ .. u.1 14-36-1 """"'s M7 ""' FumtJ4H.lost l-4 1-0 ~lllH-yerlh 4·15 ~IS INDIVIDUAL &.UotEltS !'USHIHG -AFC. 5f"'Ptof\ IC>-52. AI091ns 1CM7, Hal'W'IS t.a, Mllt ... 11 ..... Hf'C. ~ I~, McC:Utclleofl , • .,,, -.t<•lf IMl, Olls"n. RECEIVING -AFC. 8umlY!ll'I "'6, Sw1M t-21. NFC. F«ef'llafl 5-41, Gfrt 2'33, s.ndws 2-37, Met<_.. Ml, Gllllllfft 2·21. PASSING -AFC, PU10flnl S.12-1, 1J3 Yanh: ~ton4·1H, 4'. NFC. Hart 10.21-1, IOO; 8ofyla ...-o.n. Penalties Ban1b? MSU Was Lax, Says President EAST LANSING, Mich. <AP) -Michigan State University's president h as admitted the school was l a x in enforcing recruiting rules, but still main· tained the penalties the National Collegiate Athletic Association slapped on it for the violations were unduly harsh. "We should have been more vigilant ,•• acknowl e dg e d Michigan State president Clifton Wharton Monday at a two·hour news confere nce. The conference was Miehigan State's r esponse to the NCAA finding Sunday that the school was guilty of 34 rule violations and questionable practices, for which it was put on probation for three years. But head footba ll coach Denny Stolz said the NCAA ruling will not seriously cripple Michigan S t ate footb a ll. which has stumbled alon g for several years. He claimed recruits are more interested in doing well than in being on television or in bowl games , bolb of which Michigan State is banned from under probation rules. "There's more than enough blame to go around, starting with myself and going right on down," Wharton said Monday. But he charged the NCAA with r eaching "an unfair verdict," sometimes on evidence he called factually incorrect. Wharton said the Michigan State board of trustees would consider whether to take the case to federal court at its monthly meeting Friday. The NCAA's accusations main- ly involved violations made dur- ing the 1973 football season, head coachStolz's first. 1 Stolz, s elf-confident and cool. admitted he too was ~esponsi­ ble" for the s ituationnlichigan State now finds itseU in. ' But he promised that despite I the probation, which also limits MSU's football scholarships, the Spartan spirit would not go limp. "I will dedicate my life to mak- ing that football program suc- cessful over the next three years," said Stolz, denying ex- pectations that the long proba- tion would c ripple Mi chigan State recruiting and morale. ot the 34 violations and .. ques· tionable practices" attributed to Michigan State by the NCAA, Wharton admitted 24 occurred, but quibbled over technicalities and interpretations on 16 of those, questioning whether the unive r s ity should be h e ld responsible. On many, be said, assistant coache s or M ichigan State boosters were simply unaware of NCAA rules, which he noted ''change frequently." He denied 10 of the NCAA's ac- cusations, mostly because two assis tant coaches involved passed p6tygraph examinations taken at the request of Michigan State . OSU Inks White Dave White , who quarterbacked Orange Coast College to an undereated season and the mythical national junior coll~ge football championship in 1975, has signed a letter of intent to Oregon State University. COLLEEN O'CONNOR, JIM.MILLNS AWAIT OLYMPICS. And his favorite passing target-Mike Gage-bas signed a letter of intent with the University of New Mexico. . U.S. Skating Dopes Rwalate Hamill, Pairs Team Head Ol-ympic Contingent COWRADO SPRINGS CAP > -The U nited States' figure- skating team for the 1976 Winter Olympic Games features a uni· que blend of expert~nce and youth that most experts believe should produce two medals, posalbly even a gold. This year'a team, which hoPeS to break the Eaat European domJnance or recent lnterna· UonaJ competition, ls headed by Dorothy Hamill ln the ladies' division and Colleen O'Connor and Jim Mlllns in the dance. They easily won gold medals at the U.S. championsblpa here lwo week aao. Both Hamm and the dance team of O'ConnoT·Millns would be expected to win silver medals off pu performances. meaning both have a shot at the co\·eted 1old rn tbe men'& nsun skating and \n tho pair'• competition, the Americans .re llktly to be s hut out . Team leader Paul George calls the 1976 squad "a very strona team, and certainly stron1er than ln 1972. J think we'll wln medals, with our best chances ln the ladies and dance." Georae feels Am.tea'• belt shot at Olympic sold rests with . I.be 19-year-old tf amtll., "Dorothy has a unique, clean style," Geqrae sa)'I ... She•s in • more poslUve frame ol mind. Last year abe bad a lee problem, wb.l~h sbe•1 over :U, and lhe•1 in better pQltcal tlon." Hamlll Mmed 1Uv.-med&la ln the last two World Cham· plonshlps and thll monUi claimed .her third straJaht U.S. lad.Ju' crown, At tbla year's nallon'als, Hamill, raled the world'• beat frffStyle skater, won all tnr.e segments or the ladl•' compeU· lion -the compullol'y ftpret, short program and free 1kaUn1. Hamill r~11i1ea 1he must ai.o ' I start quickly at Innsbruck in the 1 Winter Games. "She ha1 to. make sure sh& ceta out ahead," says George. ••She can't reb' on an eleventh· hour, come·from·behlnd type of perf~ance.'' Her main competition will come from Dianne Del.Muw or The Netherlands, wflo won the lt'15 world tlUe, and Ouistlne Er· ratb of Eut Germany, the 1974 world champion wbo wu third In ms. "In tbe dance com~ we 10. ~itJI I proven ~ in eou... and Jim. n layt Georte· "'~'•• alre•dY aone belld·lO-IMtad with IJ\e Ruaalans, and thlt'I an eDCOGfqJ.nc poslUon to be in.'" O'Caanor, ~ b4 M~ al. l»ot.h ol Colorado lprlnp. neatly c~ a wotN ttU• lat :1•at. ftnllhin1 1tc0tid hhht the sov .. llt Unloa'a 1'1na McUeria ad Andnl Mlftenko~. I .. _Tu.iay __ .._. J_an_uary __ 21 .... _19_7_e ______ ..;O;.;.Al.;..;L.;..;Y...;.P...;.ILO~T;..,;..,:B::;.;::3 .South .Coast Dogfight Resumes CdM 20d What apfce•red to be a leade r , are at home ' , In Poll S anta Anita .. ... .. Race Entries rune away or the South against tho always· cgeanmt.es, hittlng al 30 per-Witherell and Mark Ed Burllngham's oaat League cham-d Sherry. ·Artiatl like to slow the Undereated Corona del pionshlp has turned into an g ero u 8 L 8 gu na Mea n w hi 1 e. San The Diablot will have tempo and normaJl .. p)ay Mar High School re. TIM Scot.,,..,. (HerrtO 8110 Water CCiOflztltrJ S.rco (Slloemei.er) l.otGMytn CHowarell Trono Slnll CValOtt) a mad scramble and all Beach Artists <3·3). Clemente is coming off a to get mOT"e conslatent a 1·2·2 ione. The Artists tamed second place in . six team~ that play at 7 And Dana Hills' l up. 6'·57 win over El Toro pJay f'rom their forwards are also taller than El the CIF 4·A basketball tonight have a realistic and·coming Dolph1rus 2-4 Md only lost to Unlvers1-1r they hope to win. Toro aod 6·5 center Ben poll this week. behind . shot at the basketball ti-but victorious in two of ty in two overttme~. Center Steve Sawyer Bacon (13.3) could be Long Beach Poly High. ............... .,, '"· u 0•11• °""" ... ''*" ... ••ce1 . .., ........... 1tll .. ttll ltlcft '" XII~ 114 , .. ,., Ue. their last three host Earlier, the Tritons fell (14.5) and guard John troubltsome. Biggest surprise in the • •. Mission Viejo's slump. another improving team tp _Mi ssion Viejo by lour Hattrup (9.9) have been Unlvenity, which runs weekly ratings was the. ing Dl~blos, tied for the l~ University. 3.3 and pomts. steady. ·a 1~1 zone, has a top advancement of coach "IRIT RAC• -Clint mlle. > Y'flro!OL O.lml119. "u"' "*· Cl•lmlrio priu $10,«11»1',000. Netlon•I Counc.11 of JewbllWIOmtn. SIXTH a.ACl-Uurl0<19s 1.,...rtld lillles. Allowences. Purse $11.000. R-rsouo ,All Wffll End CCespeO.\) lltor111111 '°''"n IPlnc•v Jr.I Flffllf\O Meld IVeroer•I Oencer's Tlrne IC•m~s> Gey P•trk e !R1m1 rt1) 11• 119 leadw1tha4-2recordbut w1nnersoftwoinarow. ·_If San.Clemente is to Steady •lso describes sophomore in Roger Elmer Combs' Hunt· losers or two straight Pat Roberts' Diablo.s win, it wdl have to get its Wendell Witt's Chargers Poirier who is averaging ington Beach Oilers to host the improving SM once 4-0 and ranked No: usual point production who are small, qulck and 18.3 points. the No. 10 spot in the 4·A ClementeTritons (2-4). 10 in the CIF 2_A poll "a· £0r om g u a~ d Tim aggressive. Leading Dana Hills is led by polL El Toro's scrappy . 1 • 11 unham <20.6 m league> 'their attack are Bob (or ward H e nry Mater Dei's Monarchs Chargers, the other co-.ve~ tp ayed up to expec-and strong board play Charles (9.8), Marie lllil Mlktewicz who ts scor -took over ninth while tahons in their last two from r orwards J ohn (9.7) and Mike Hill (8.7>. ing13.8polntsinleague. Marina's Vikings moved to fifth and Estancia was rated 12th in the 4·A poll. losAI Racing Entries l'w W .. AeMIY 0.11, Tr1e11 fl'ut fl'lf\t ~117:4s,.m. U ~ICU fl'l"t Rice. U IEuct.116tll, ltll IM ttll 1tKes fl'IRST RAC• -uo YlrdS. 3 \'ffrOlcn &. up. Cl1lml1'9. Purse '1700. Cl aiming prl<e '1600. ,..gusus Moon (Rlcllerds I OesenTrHwrt <Clerln•> Carter'&O.ndy CGerte) Ecllols Hermony (Call) Dupe's Niner ICardoie) Mr. Klndy Clleroe (P1ge) &ev.,, Clllcll (Lll)fleml ArlOflMlulon ITreesure) Jtt 0.Ck Red (AClll r I Hldlbeyou (Hert> 119 119 ... 119 111 119 119 ll9 122 119 119 St!CONO RACI -.00 yards. 3 ye.I Olds &. up. Clelmlng. Puru 12100. cietmll'lll price USOO. Tile Nlllorw!J Auocletlon of A"ounttnlS -Or~ County Chlpter Ktlcllup IW1rd) P111eo·s Ber <Hert) Snlffy Du ILll)flem) Erie's Gold INlcoellmus ) Acc•lerete <B1niu1 Sir e.n0 CPeoe1 119 119 llt 117 122 1 It THt•o RACI! -lSO yards 3 ., .. , Old' meloens. Purn •1100. Tile Mn. Wllll•mE Oeeo Udy Bu1f 1 Gel IB•nkSI Dkk•y's S.oeoust IWerol FlclcleL~ (Ad1fr) Llttle Replk a IKnlgllt) llleu AWlly IClerlsse I I'm A Tom Boy CNfcodemusl RUtllAlfce CHtrt) JIOIMf"s Clleroer IRlcllerdsl Auu....O's Red L•dy CTreesurel T1Cnzlne IC1rdo11I ~ l'OURTH RACE '40 v•ros. 3 ...... olds. Cl1lmlng Purse Sl900 Cl•lml~ price usoo. Tile Wiiiis 011 Tool eom. peny WESTMONT HOSTS SCC Mission Viejo, 10th in the 2·A poll a week ago, dropped from contention after losing a pair of South Coast League out· SANTA BARBARA-ings last week. Sout hern California ._.... College of Costa Mesa ..... ScllMI, .. con will be seeking its third ~ ~Y~11~r m:1, win in Northern Division 3. Al111mtw• 110-01 NAIA District III basket-;: :.::~~:~~!;)'(IHI ball action here tonight •· ver0um 0e1 en., 1 a a 8 l' t W t 1. SenGorgonio CIS~O "91nts 100 1'S 161 142 Ut 13 76 50 J:J 11 B n S e S ID 0 n t 1. St Jolvl Bosco (IJ.2) College with tipoff at 8. •. Me* 0.1 114-m David Barron and 11• H1011tl""*'e .. c11cu .. 1 ,. .... Randy Adams returned 1. LI Mirao• 111.01 to the lineup Friday 2. C•mar1110 n•-21 . ht l. Victor Valley llS·21 191 11S 14' rug . Baseball Changes In Store The designated hitter rule used in Orange Coast area prep baseball circles will be exoanded to include all non-league tournament and Cl F ~ playo(( games following the adoption or the de· signaled hitter by the National High School Federation. It will not be man· datory that a designated hitter be used, however. if a team doesn't open the game with a de· .. Palm Springs (12·1l 118 s. Fullerton ( 11·31 11'1 6 Lynwood (lb·ll ICM 1 Aemorwi (U ·ll 13 I. Glrey (1 4·S> 68 '· W•rren (14 Sl 46 10. Redondo 116·31 21 l·A 1. Santa Cl•r• (IS ll 181 1. S•n M;arlno (U·21 111 3. Alla Lome Cl 7· ll 16S 4. MorenoV•lley 111·3> ISO s. El~non (13·21 113 6. Yuuipa (IS I) "" 1. Perris 114·31 S4 •• Worltmen ,,.,, 42 9. Glllrl14-61 31 10. C4lf\ )'Oft ( 1 l-61 79 1 .. , I. lolorro B•y CIS 1) 1 Bog Belf' ll~ll 3. MonlClalr Prep Cll·ll 4. Tellecllapl (11·SI S. AmO.ss.dor Ovhh1t1 CI0-3) 6. Clladwock II>-H • Frosh Basketball lffwl*1 (UI In ) Wntmlftfl ... Sutllv1n IOI F (?I Foster S-.k It) F (0 Maciel Boyd c.I C (8) Fossum 0.nlel 1') G CO Medsef'I FrM~ (201 G (6) P.arker NH scorln11 sut>s: C.arnall•n 1, 81.:k 2, Sll'ftt 2. Reed•. Brown 2. HallUme: NH, n 16. Milrllelftr C~m•k••l O.titr1 S.llw I Nogue r I Soler 1t11ter CGonuled Flfft Rep (Mflll) Try SNIP Roy•I ILemoertl S'#ltUocU (Vllderl Arllculetlon IHemlltonl L'9tlt Open I Pierce I Lucky Meritorious CPln<o Jr ) lien J. (H•wley I 116 121 )(111 116 116 11• 116 ,,, .,. "' Miss Terreslo (Toro) s -t ROOC.ry IOll••••s I 11•111119 (Noguezl GlrllSll L"'k !Gonulezl O.lsy Do (H•wley I I 116 l lJ 11J r; "J llJ I 11' • )(114' • llJ SIVENTH •ACE -6 lurlpnf~. Flllles &. m•res. • yur old> &. IOI> Cl•ssllled •ll-•nc•s Purse '1•,000 R•ncllo Set! Miguel AIMEllt lltle Welk In High I01fv1ro I T•• Markel I Loper I V•llent Bl•fr ITorol 116 Sc>tcl•I Godden <V•roar•l 112 Juturna <S.mkln) 111 XloY 1n lib 11• ,,. 116 Bird Island CPlncay Jr I Gonteder•t• Belle INoguer) A-Sleek ana FINI 10••• I Exotic Age (Sf>oe.ma•er I St!OOHO •ACf -1 furlongs. 3 yeer o4os Cl•lmlng Purse sssoo a-no prk.1,10,000 Llgun• Hills Tr•vel. A·...._, Hlh (MUl\Ot) 117 Greet O.dslon (Leml>ertl 111 A·Mlrked Trldltlon (Munol) 111 Ruling King ISl!oem•k•rl 117 O\q#tn"s Boy IGcwu11e11 Xlll Regel Intent (Mtn•l 1u Crl-Angel (AT'90'1) Xl01 TenlyntY IToro1 111 Sir G..., Bo• (Plnuy Jr ) 111 A·J Ovnon lr1lnedentry. TNll-0 ltACI -11/16 mlles. 3 yHr Old melden colts & gelalngs. Cl•lm. Ing. Purse '6SOO. Cl•lmlng P<ice ,u,000.,12.soo. v.w c A.of Redltn<IS TDUQfl Orl)flen (Munoz) 111 Gold Accovnl CMor•les) 111 Prln<• MlclleiOO (ROHles) 118 Fl•mt Tllro,.., (Valdtrl 114 lu•llMsecorr (Pierce) 111 l&PY IPlnc•y Jr ) 11• Hlytl IL•mO.rll 118 Re99nn F119111 !Sellers) 119 Dlrw<1 CH1ml1ton ll 111 Gre•t Ao• (Olivares I 118 Aciutlegl•'s Don CLeon•rd) 111 Ttme For Glory IAr•gon) X113 A· Lady By Choice CToro) Bright Design (Munor) Mama IC•lt IH•wley I ~ 11• ) IJ 11~ A-W.slerly stud owned entry, EIOMTH aACE -6 furlongs l Y'9•• 010 fllltes. Sl•••s Purse U0,000 edded Gross US.HO To w~n•r '21.?SO, s.cond '6000, lhttO N WIO. fourth $22SO, ft1111 $1SO. PH•O.n• stakes. 0uee<t To Be IL•mbert) 111 Lulllby So<>Q CMuno1) '" Oen<onq Gemme !Toro) 11• WlnOy Welcome IH•wley) 111 Fl""'" tLoper I 1 114 OllveWruth IS•lnnerl ,,. '<HNM Of Spring CSnotmeker) 11q Awaken (Alv•rez) ") 114 H•ll Hll•flovs (Pierce) 11• First C•s• CHarrlsl 111 Doc Sll:1"'s Siren IPlnuy Jr ) 117 . NINTH "ACE -11/16 miles. Ffl'-'" a. meres, • year olas & up ClalmlnQ Purse '10.000. Clo•mlng dlrcoe '16.000.• 13,000 Movlmrento (Aragon) Slllrley'l Wlsll CValaezl Do Pl .. se IGon111ez l • X1oe Also ElltllMe Aedlcel Love (Men•> · 111 Plcnk P!'ol>lem !Pineo Jr.) Blll•'s Belle ftt•wley I Wind "N Woods (Hamilton n Clluck Pet I Hawley I 114 Erin's Gold <Morales> 118 Brenoa·s lnlenl ITorol lrnl>ro\ Doll iS~malltr) Pteture Po.stcara (Lemberl) l'OUaTH ltACE -6 turlOflllS 3 year Old tnelden colts & geldings Bred on Calif. Purse $tOOO. 011n1ro Elks Loc199 1 It 11 11~ Gor99ous Grttk (Sellers> Flglltlng Polity (Toro) King of Rllytllm IOllv1resl Doullle DISCOU<ll (Men•) Jun lot' Stalus CS11oemoer) Appllclllon (C.mpH) King Sorrel (Ar•oonl 118 Ill Ill 111 111 118 Cage Poll Hiii Mlrecle IPinc•y Jr.I Llnvoy <Goto Hitz I Xlll 111 Xlll The Too T-nly lums In n..'As· soclateo Press college baskett:Nll DOii wltll se•son records throvgll Sundly and tolll DO•nts. I. Indiana fl'll'TH "AC~ -IV. miles on turf. 4 ~•r olds a. UP. Allowances. Pvrse ,u.ooo. Kiwanis CluD of H- 1. ~rquette 3. No-Les Vegn 4 Norlh Carolina S Rulgers 1~.198 14 I '10 ~ 131 13.~ ft, IW S B•y. Pogul.,. VIClory (Plerct) T.9 Mission (Vtrgar•) E•rly RelHH (Toro I Kicking Up !Morales) DumDw1iler (Pinuy Jr ) 113 6. Washington 7. Maryland 113 I . N C.trohna Stale 114 'I Tennessee lll 10. Noire Oame 114 11. Al•bima 17. UCLA Gee Man Go CNlcoo.musl OMdySwlr19s ITrffct) Our11 Stint (Treasure) Mll'"yvlew Farm Gfrl (Ad11r) BoldOulncy (Orey.,) 122 122 111 111 122 122 122 111 122 122 g===~~ signaled hitter it may not introduce that phase of the game later. Other rules changes or modifications include the following: Los Al Results 13. Mluourl u . St. John's IS. Mlchl9"n 16. Oregon Sllle 11. P!'oncelon 16-1~ 1J.l. ~ 13-1 •11 14 . ..z 131 tl·3 Mll tH l lA 10 m l5.J1 169 14-l 138 11-3 118 11-S "" ., l . ?8 Rick V411\ Rocket (0.rH ) LI Creme Kid IBrooksl P!'IHyJoy CCruoer> F~ty ISie (ltlclllrdsl Fastest Jet Vet ILipll•ml fl'I llTH RACE -lSO yards 3 Yffr olds. Allowence. Purse UOOO. The Alpl\a Zele Cl\lpter Piii T•u Ornt941 Sorority Som.kl~ (NlcoOtmusl 119 LlmltJ Regeroi CMltc11e111 1n VtatcllMeMoon CClrOor•> 117 Of! OMdy Otl 11.lpl!•m) 11' Bella Tu (Hen> 111 ltlps Son ICltrl,sel 122 VlftOAecll,•t (TrffSUrtl 122 A·Udy Ell•bo CA01lr) 117 A·lrlSll Abl>y CMyleSI 117 LuAnm FH\I CKnlglltJ 117 A -Bl-Scllv-veldl •nd Asllrnenl &. Colvfll• entry. SIXTH ltACE -)$0 yardS. l YNrol~ a. up. Clelml119. Purse UIOO. Oatml119 ortc• 14500. LeadOH CClrdoII) 119 Cl\lrllego (Brooks) 11• MIQnC>UI HorMt IBenkSI 119 Top Tonto 81rs ITrHsure) 122 O.wn Imp ILIC>fl•m> 119 St. t.oulsJr (W•tsonl 11• SolarClllroe IWe rd) 119 Coc>y RIOllt IClerlssel 119 Ov!)edMdoo IKnlglll) 119 Jet One Eleven (Nicodemus> 119 SEVINTH RACE -440 yuo, l VNr olds &. up Allowen<e. Purse $1'000 The Rock-II lnternetlonal Ma~· mentCluO FIOI• Frenry (Wthon) Dr Twlelllu' (Hert) Thi Lyn11 IB.,,ks) Sl1Wr10Wll (Ward) Jet Ceotaln CNlcodlmuSI EnySl1 (Adllrl O.ll"s Sllldow IRlclltrds) Ht Temp IC..rdoze) Dally l'lllt ,.._... lly Lffey11 °"""•" SOUTH COAST ACTION -Laguna Beach High's Jim Evans and John Liljestrom fight for possession as Dana Hills' Jeff Paulson (22) looks on in recent basketball action. Tonight it'll be Laguna Beach at El Toro and University at Dana Hills. Spicy Schedule Due For s·cc In Baseball Southern California College of Cost a Mesa will face its biggest challenge ever on the baseball field during the 1976 season under coach Fred Keener. . . Mike Wardlow, a hard· throwing right hander with an S·ll record and 102 s trikepµts last season, is joined by sophomore right h ander Gale Thornton as return- ing starter s. transfer from Cal State <Stanislaus) i s the number one catcher at the moment with Stan Thomas, a 6·3 freshman from Northern California, close behind. Other starting pitchers include Marty Quisen- berry, a transfer from Warmup catchers must wear a mask. A batter issued a free pass must go to first base without interruption. And the score of a forfeit· ed game will be 7-0, un- less a team g ranted the forfeit is ahead. then the score shall be the same as when the game is called. An appeal must be made almost instantly. It must be made before the next pitch or prior to the awarding of a base on balls without a pitch or before the players leave fair territory at the end of the half inning. Any player , coach, sub or bench personnel de- Ii berately throwing a bat shall be banished from the game. The Vanguards will have nine returning let· termen. including six starters from a year ago, and will tackle an up- g r a ded 51-game schedule. Bill Powell is back in left field as a junior. He hit .308 last season, led the team in home runs with four and in rbi with 37 Orange Coast who red-all shirted last season ; Kent Basketb Miyashiro, a freshman ( H 1 1 8 t h "'' ••tlletNll rom 0'10 U U; U C Golden St•1e llS, Miiwaukee 104 FOf' Meneley . Ot1r. Treck Fut fl'lltST RACE -400 yards. 3 '(Nr Olen&.""· Cla1m1ng. Purse '1100. Altnilstic (Blnksl 11 IO 6 20 3 60 •111 Street S.m (Adair) '·00 540 Ntfty Note ILIP'laml 10 00 Tlr'M-20.JS Also ran -Joyovs V•l~nlln. Moss Lori Lynn, Rocke1 To ~. Mr Cul• Brrlches. Tllree Mlr11rus, TonlO Bers VIC. Do Rick Do Scretclled -kau Lano, RMy Joy, Mr. Shady, Sl9C) Trouble U Euct.e -?·Altr11istlc & ,_ Street S.m, F•14 S4t ... SECOND •ACE -•oo yards. J YHr OldmeicMns. PurM $1700 Klpty's Drum IKnfOllll 6.'° 1 90 7.40 Winning Sonll (AO.fr) 2.40 1 20 Tep A Tosle (W••OI 3.40 T1me -20.2S Alsoren -Sunset Candy Bar. Moon Stelle, Miss B•nducci. Deep Malden No scratches THlaO AACE -lSO yards. 3 year olds. Claiming. Puru $1900. Kerry K•Y (Morrison) IS 2'0 6 60 4.(11) uo 3.00 •.20 O'R-sme (Hartl Frenkle Cotton (Ad•1rl Tlme-11.99 Also r•n -~ronfe Bug, A Little Llk• Me. OouDlt Dtrecl. Sltecrec:ur, . Kracklln K•tlly, Swinging SlllTI. Easy"sFolly Screlched -Tllree Pollcys, Superfine, T-C.r Crull, Shldy Cute Bir l'OURTH RACE -110y••Os lyear OIOs &. uP. Claiming. Purse $2800 SIXTH ltACE -'00 vard~. l ye.ar otas & up Claiming Pur~e UIOO V•lleyBuu IClrOOza I 20 70 1 00 1 80 Hidden T1len1 Too <Brooks) 6.80 S 80 Burlee"s Pistol IP1gel IS.60 Tlme -199' Also ran -Slllsta Rebel. Mr Zing. Hot Shot Cul• Bar. Im For Voo. E•.sy Dvs11, Tommy 0.an, 0111e Doodll ScralCMO -Gu1Jlllo. Fly Bir Too U Eaect• -4·V•llty .. .., & M- Hl._ft Ttltftt TH, paid '116.00 SEVENTH RACE -300 yards. l yur Olds a. up. Cl•Uffleo 111-.nce. Pvne'8000. Jet Mine (Nlcoaemusl 6 00 3 00 2.40 W•r Chlc"s Ecllo ICerdoiel 3.60 2.80 TheAml>Hsldor (Treasure) 3.00 Tlme -IS.3S Also ran -M'fjttry Moon, Wllcllin" Hour, Andy Go. Myna<nf!1~SUI', M4d· nlgllt Becky, Rtbel IC•y, C•rd~ and Leners Noscr•tclles" EIGHTH ltACE -400 yards. Jyear olds a. uP. Claiming. Purse $1900. Mrgllty Lovin 18.tnltsl OH-Fearless Frenk 22 90 8.20 S.60 IWllsonl 1010 1S6( OH·RunMoon Run (Harl) 3.00 3.60 Time -10"' Also ran King Hui•, Slylflll Man. Gel R••Oy, S•m's Wonaer Man. Scooby DooDy Do, Roy•I Top Bir. Jet Account Scrllclled -Slledy Everett, Hy Slrl<lllfr U Euc1• -1•Ml9llty Lovin &. >- OH·,..arlt11 ,,.nk, p.1IC1 $"6.50 U Euct• -10-Motlll y L.9.tn & '-Miu P9pStrew <Llpll1mJ 111 122 122 111 122 m 119 171 111 Included on the slate are three games with UC Irvine. a home-and· home series with Cal Randy Greer is back in center field. He was the stolen base leader with 23 and in game-winning hits with four. Rick Guerra. a sophomore, returns in right field. Ward, a 6-4, 210-pouhd c.11e9e aasketNll fr e Sh m a n (r 0 m San Fordlwlm O. Columbl• S1 M;arquetle SS, Georgia Tecll4' D i e g o ; a n d L a r r y Te""'"" 10s. LSu n Adams, a freshman from Tu1-101. T11e c11aor11s V41ndlH1>jlt-1, Florlde 11 Madison, Wisc. who v1r111..ieTecht1.wv1rg1n1a1s Stands 6·3. Clnclnnallt2,Wlcl\llaStBS,OT Bar Fame (Ricllll"llsl 7.2'0 3 60 3 20 OH·•uft-"""•paid S U.J.SO 260 EIGHTH RACI -lSO yards. 3 yur olds &. up. Clelmf119. Purse '1100. Clllmlng price i 1600. Pei's D1n0y.(Ao1lrl Count Of Honor CBani.,) 5peectySl• IBrooksl Bleck Cyn CKnlgllll s.go TrooOle (Tllomts) Flttl Rullell CMorrlsonl Triple C Truly IRl<.11.,ds) MitJutfc Ole !Myles) Pellffl'l'S Dendy !Cruger) K1llt Gold (Cell) "' State (Fullerton) a-third ::: with UCI to start a four· 111 team Orange County ::! tourney, and a pair of nt games with UCLA. :~ "I 'm really excited 119 a b o u t t h e s e a s on . " NINTH ••cl!_ 440 yards. 3 ..,.., Keen e r says. ''We're olds. Clelmlng. Purs. $1900. Clelmll'lll playing well right now =~·~·1m1tmin l'Trtesur•I 122 and I hope we don't peak Mltoy<P•oe> 121 too soon.'' Dave H or n , a let· terman pitcher, has taken over at shortstop. lie played there for the University of Oregon two years ago. Miyashiro is the lone :~~1:t.~~~"~~;n 7s left-hander on the staff. Mic11191nSu•. Purouus Judy's Man CB•nksl Oorthy"s Palleo IH•rll Ttme-•s.n 760 2 80 Also r•n -Knlgllt of Glory, Plloebes Golimtl, 01· D•n. Petty Larceny. Slngulne's Jet Scratclled -ICleberg"s Intent, Noor Moon. Seamfte, Mutller Wiiiow Rell.er ass1'gnments Mlnntsot•n.<>11iosiat•6' SMU 17. Hov,lon 1S 'll'Tlf RACE -440 yards. 3 .,...r will be handled by Jim Tt .. sA&.M81,Rlce11 01osa.up.Cl•1mlng.Purse"'soo M " 11 t TCU 7l, Tues 70 J"111ke P• I sap, a re Urnee; • AfrForce63,Denver60 (Rfc lllnls) 16.00 6.20 3.80 Bruce Ahlberg, a junior c.110. s1. Marv·u1 Reigning Ster <AOairl 4.20 2.90 CM Pol P 18 U f S DI Myrt's Chlr~r ICerdoll) l .00 NINTH "ACE -JSO yards. 3 Y'tlr ofOS a. up Cl•lml"9 Filltes & mares. Pvrw'3200 v •00. 0.bOI Poo !Werdl 6.00 3.60 7 90 Pride N' Joy ICltrlsse > 5.20 •.20 Leo Vandy Girl ((1100111 3.60 Time 11 '11 Also ran Min Jet On, ~Slant Mtrlall, Oldie's Gem, Cora1·s Runawey. Tre•I Me F11r. Pam"s Rocket, Lerk 'N Folly Scra1ched -Miss Five Prv, Burgundy Lece, Go Anniversary, Oulncy•s Killen College transfer from 'f omoni ' O 111 t90 Tirne-21.'11 Worthington, Minn., and 70 L.oyoll68, Portl•nd61 Aho ren -Dlclleys Fire Rl\I\, Go-u t!uct• -•Y•llN O•lllWI ...... f h Ge e °'ll9Gn"Se•t11e6s Jet.EasyJens.oe.c111ceommen0. 1.,., .. ,..,,.,,,.1e1suuo 19. C1nclnn111 1'. Centenary IJ.l 13 f(>.J I ~ 20. West Tuu St. t•eVa. Tec11 I) 1 II 1).) II HYIN ADYANtAGIS OUI ltAGD onns that yours may natl I 1 COMrLITt ORANGE COUNTY COYHAGE lllCllldi119: i..,... ... •. 51111 C._..,.., MieS.. ¥1.f•. D-P.1 ... • well • Le..., leod 9ICI,.... ef L.A .... 2 MONTH TO MONTH RENTAL IA$1S 3 NO DEPOSIT H QUiH D ON A,,ROYED CH Dn 4 ONLY 517 10 PH MONTH TOTAL COST luli1111fed ft09"I 5 NEW COMPACT UNIT SIZE 11' • r 4 1 111) 6 VOICE MESSAGE PAGE' ALSO ARE AVAIL.AILE 7 RILL Faff MAINTENANfl ORANGf COUN7Y RADI07ELEPHONE SERVICE INC 1714) 835-3305 t 4'I SO. SANTA f'E, SANTA AN' ,,.,,. L....... lff<tl, Mill.... Ville, 0.... ~•I, S.o Cl-It. S.o , ... C•••tfr•... IEI Ttre, call 1911 tw 4t4•JJ1J I Mitt's Coc>y rcr .. oer> 122 Included in the list of P_., Btue Boy (Brooks) 112 Rick Peters. a power hitter who p layed the outfield for UC Irvine three years ago as a starter, is the Vanguards third baseman after a stint in the Army. r e s m a n n , P11<111c u: u1111 s161 c.11 Me Buddy Att•nd•nc• -•t1S Mccarley. ;=:========================================================================i=::... Superfine <C1r0o111 m returning starters are Rlc ... sOuestTowtn 1c.11> 112217 two pitchers, a long with w_,i.rWlnch <C1er1ss9l d bas Flfwll Mlulon CMy1es1 m secon e m an Bobby Clllfomle S..llSlllM (Lll)flam) 111 JOhnSOO ar\d the entire StNmCl\lf99r 1"1'"''0'1 122 Vanguards outfield. Women's GoH Ml SllOM VIEJO F1111 flencllcep tourn•menl ClhrM wont tlotes rewr1 lo par I-A F111jht: I. K.ay MotrllOll, '1; 2. Georgie Hiii, '°· Johnson is a s enior who batted .313 to lead the team last year a nd was chosen most valua· ble player. B Fllgllt-1. (tie> Jen• Redmond, (ilencllGuy,42; l . 111•1 Editll K/lllley, ... _ .... _ .... _ .... _._._._._ RutllJenlllM. Clrol Vutilcll, .:lo C FllQllt-1 Clere H...nmon0, 6'; 2.. Florence O•rdlner, 6t. SMALL BUSINESS LOAMS $ 50,000·' 400,000 5-15 Years COYT. GUAWITEED Steve Grief & .......... QIAM61 COUMfY O"'CI IJS-3117 ........ ·M•MY ~UN-0# H1W YOf'IC ...... • ... w., ....... ,.., .............. ~ ... LEASE · FORDs.clllYSURS IWUI. IOTOIS-AIC -FOIEllll CAIS & TIUCIS mmAJtOEl.WElf lfJST llOllfLS OPEN& CLOS'D LEASES THEODORE . ROlllS WSl•C CO. 2096 HaftMw Blvd. COSTA MESA .all s.121 Dann y White , a transfer from Cal State (Long Beach I and a left· handed power hitter, has taken over at first base. J o hn M cGill , a Randy Cole, a let- tern\an, will be used in the outfield and as a de· signaled runner for the catcher. Tom Villalobos, a freshman from Escon- dido, is the utility in· fielder on the 20-man roster that includes nine pitchers. NEW 13,117 -so.-rtt BUILDING WITH RAIL, DOCK·BIGH LOADING, EXPANSION LAND, PROTECTED ENVIRONMENT. EASY.ii£EiiY ACCESS AND MORE. For inf0f'mot1on on this or other building attemahves. call your broker or Craig Lyon. Manager of Sale5 &nd Leasing. at (213) 628-4204, (714) 83J·1010 BL IRVJNE INDUSTRIAL COMPleX Daily Sunjet service from n~arby Orange County Airport. Package tours and economy fares for families and groups, too. So call Air California first. If there's an easier way to get you there, we'll be the first to tell you. Coll Easy Information in Orange County, (714) 752-1000; Downey, (213) 924-3313; Laguna. (7141496-6000; Los Angela, (213) 627~5401. CTDLISNA-1 . ' I ' i ' I I I I i AIR I I CALIFORNIA We're easy to take. .• J DAILY PILOT' Lltl. Bogd Some Fish Catch ~ Birds If you get hurl LD car that was in an un· sale condition when you bought ll from the de· aler. can you s ue said dealer! So inquires a client You can sue anybody for anything, what? Still, it looks as though judges both in Oklahoma and New Jersey recently set up a new bonania for the attorneys. They've ruled that car dealers are legally responsible if the machines they peddle are proved unsafe. You've seen birds catch fish. But have you ever seen fish catch bir~? A lot or fish do so. Muskies, pike. European catfish. When the birds skim close to the surface, zap, the fish get them. Happens frequently QUERIES FROM CLIENTS Keep on Trainin'? State S.tudy Arab Imports To Increase SACRAMENTO CUPI> -The d~Unlnc supply of domntic crude oil refined in Callfornla will cause a hue• 83 SH!rcenl increase ln imports rrom Arab C:OUD• tries by July, the Sta~ Energy Commission has. predicted. ln a report proJed.lng energy reaou fces and needs based on 1975 figures, the com mission 1a1d total oil imports lo California from all foreign sources will in· crease 25 percent. · .. ALTHOUGH ""l•ltlti.t• California's energy needs wlll be met throuch June 1976, de· pendence on foreign oil is greater than during the oil embar10 of two years ago and the need to de- velop alternate energy sources and to conser ve energy is greater than ever before," it uid. Q. "What's a 'Navajo convertible'?" A. A pickup truck Pritnear every family on the Nava10 r eservation dnves one of same. Q. "Was Annie Oakley her reaJ name?" You can meet JUSt about anything on today's highways including at least a portion of a train. This box car was being trucked west on Htghv. ay 183 near Fort Worth. Tex. when photographed. Coal Mine Leasing Ban Ends THE PROJECTIONS, based on actual figures from October, 1974 through June, 1975, showed Californfa's de· pendence upon oil from Arab members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, would in· crease 83 percent by the end of June, 1976. A. Yes. but her first name was Phoebe and her last name was Mozee. Q. "Gp;e m e the price of vodka in .Russia')" A The equivalent of about $5 a pint. Used Car Dealerships Was a time in China once when only a woman's hus band was allowed to see her bare feet ... That ai lm e nt known a s rheumatoid arthritis af. mets women, mostly. In four out of five cases, ·Facing New FTC· DENVER (AP> -In· R I terior Secretary Thomas u es s. Kleppe has announced his decision to end a four- ye ar moratorium on The projections showed California re· fineries will receive ap· proximately 25 per cent more domestic oil than foreign in June. By con· trast, in June of 1975 re- .fineries received more than twice as much domestic oil as foreign. specifically ... If that tomato is labeled by th9'1>rocessor as ''vine ripened," it was picked when the green was just barely s tarting to turn pink ... Most car rental companies won't put out a vehi cle to anybody under 25 years old ... Possibl y the reason there ar~ no telephone directory service operators in Russia 1s there are no telephone directories. WEDDING PRESENTS Wh en H L. Mencken quoted the line about it being more blessed to give than to receive, he said he meant wedding presents. You'll re- call the cynical Mr. Mencken was the fellow who advised , "Never overestimate the decen· cy or the human race." It was aJso he who said, "When women kiss, it always r eminds me or prizefighter s shaking hands.'' Wh y does the cooing or a dove upset a crow? It d oes, evidently. A Georgia birdwatcher says every time he uses his dove call. all the crows within earshot start to chat- ter in some irritation. The money that horse bettors channel through the bookies exceeds by 10 times the money they put out at the tracks. Maybe you didn't realize that the Academy Award"s Oscar is 92.5percenttm. L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1560, By the Associated PTess The Federal Tr ade Commission is trying to take some of the risk out of buying a used car . but plenty of pitfalls remain for unwary consumers. Industry and govern· ment experts generally agree that the best way of getting your money's worth 1s to r ead all the fin e pnnt and know a fair amount about cars or take a friend who does. Sales of used cars have increased a s th e economy s uffered and franc hised deale rs r e· ported that they sold 12 used cars for every 10 new cars during the first 10 months of 1975. THAT DOESN'T count the cars sold by indepen· dent dealers. Nor does it include used cars that change hands in private transactions. It is difficult to fi gure out exactly how many people are buy ing second -hand a utos . because the same used car may be s old and re· sold during the course of the year. (CONSUMER] proposed rules, still sub· ject to public comment and hearings. that would require dealers to dis· close whatever they know about things such as a ctual mileage, the nature of prior use and any maj o r r e p a irs performed in recondi· tioning. THE RULES also would prohjbit a dealer from making unsubstan· tiated c laims. "You can't say, "This car just had a motor job,·· if you know it didn't," the FTC spo~esman explained. Violations of the pro- posed rules -which could tak e up to 18 months to implement -· could bring fines of up to $10.000 a day. ---------------------An FTC spokesman But the proposed rules apply only to dea ler saJes. not to the millions of private transactions. And the FTC spokesmau, wfile agreeing that "de· feels are a frequent pro· blem." said the rules would not nece ssanly re· quire even a dealer to disclose all defects in a car. I Liquidity I said that an estimated 12.5 million used car sales by dealer s are re· ported every year . Estimates of used car sales on a private basis range from 12 to 38 million, the spokesman .---------------------------------------------.said. An ITC staff recom· mendation, not issued as a proposed rule, but sub- ject to public comment and possible inclusion in the final regulations, would give buyers the right to have a used car inspected by an outside mechanic. The staff re· commended that dealers have the right to send an emp l oy e with th e customer for the inspec· ti on. I I I ts money tight for you right now? Want to buy a new piece of equipment for your business • or invest in a desirable piece of real estate -but temporarily lack the cash? The loan department at Newport Equity Funds may be able to help you unlock the door to your assets through an Equity Loan on your home or a Collateral Loan on a Trust Deed you hold. Call Linda Blue or Doug Bulley at 644 ·8824 to di scuss your liquidity. Real Estate Brokers AVCO FINANCIAL TOWER 620 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE SUITE211 NEWPORT BEACH CALIFORNIA 92660 7141644-8824 Sever a l states have thei r own laws to protect used car buyer s, but the only federal legislation in effect, cccording to the FTC, is a statute re~ quiring dealer s to give an odometer statement, providing the mileage or the car 1f the~ know 1t and the fact that it is un· available if they don 't know 1t. The commission has "THOSE WHO wanted it <i nformation on de· feels l would pay for it,: the FTC spokesman Irvine Co. Project Gateway Plaza's Final Phase Due The Irvine Company has announced it will com· plete the last two phases of its Gateway Plaza office building park in Newport Center as a single project, according to Charles L. Buchanan, manager of real estate in the company's commercial division. The first two low-rise office buildings in the $5 million project, located in late J an u a r y, near the P acific Coast Buchanan s aid. Hi ghway entrance to Newport Center, are MATWW-KENNEDY over 70 percent leased. Corp. is the exclus ive The final four two-story leasing agent for the ================~~ buildings are scheduled 17,000·square-foot build· .__ ___ .: to be under construction in g a which Prov l de _______________________________ nexible office sizes from r.==============:::::=ic::==============~ 500 to 4.000 square feet. Free adjacent parking in Free Income Tax the site accommodates 500 automobiles. Design of the office park. by architect R. M. Thomas AI A & As· s ociates, 'presents a formal expression of concrete and glass eon- trastlng with large and co lorful use or graphics. Swinerton and Walberg Company is the general contractor. Preparation or .11 .1 m11d1·•I c "'I 111 mml A11.1hP1111 ... 1v1·" save substantial fees wilh vi 111r nwn .1ppo11'1hllf'nl In h,1v1• rnlf' 111 our rr.1inf'Cf T Jic Prtlll"''""'11, pr1>p,ur 'r'"" ( ,1l1fmm.1 .ll'c1 r 1'fit•1 .11 inc on)(' lJlC rl'turn .. service since 1971 ," ttV('f ., ilkl GATEWAY PLAZA also includes three add.i· honal low-rise buHdjnp, a headquarters building prl'ln rrd l ""'"°'<.'" • for the architectural ANAHEIM S~wl NG S ! • ~~d o[ ~:!e~l~ 1A~! • , masterplanned the entire ~. , ' Gateway Plata project ANO LOAN AS~IATION • for the Irvine Company; i\NAHtfM 1~7 w. L~oln Aw tJJllOl/T+4 :·J.1'1'1 FSIJC a Glendalt Federal Sav· 1 H 9261 r 1 --t ngs building ; and a BREA 71 4 C. lmpt"'it1 wy. 1 t szq.4q7l ____ ... headquarters bulldlng l~·~~U:N~Tl~N~C~.T~c.~-B~[~~~··=4·1=1=M=d=ll1=~=1=''·=~=.~=K·n=··=l =~-l=~=h=1=''=1 -=~-~=~-;-~-~-;M:•~tort~arcfil~clural~ of Ladd & Kelsey. said. Dealers generally said such a plan would add to used car costs and they expressed fears about the quality of inspection. "It's totally impractical from an expense view· point," said a dealers' spokesman. What can a consumer do to insure he gets a fair deal? "It's the old r e l a· tionship of a reputable dealer and the guaran· tees he would give," said Charles Neely of the 5,000-member National Indep ende nt Auto Dealers Association. federal coal leases, pledging to allow mining of coal "that is needed but only when it is needed.'' Kleppe said the end of the moratorium , im- posed in 1971, will not "automatically mean that leasing will resume in th e immedia t e future." Assistant Interior Secretary Jack Horton said the first lease would not be approved until at least mid-1977. Kleppe said h e could not estimate such a time, but added that "the moratorium is not lifted until the first lease.'' The report s aid despite the declining supply of domestic oil, prices will increase and oil produc- tion in California will in· crease 1 percent by June. TJUS IS A reversal of annual oil production decrease of 3 percent in past years. But the re· port added California will need to import more low sulfur oil because of increased dem and. Over The Counte r NASO Ustiftgs MUTUAL FUNDS FINANCE Assets Up At Bank Of Newport Bank of Newport Pres ident Ronal4 L . .Rodgers released the bank's year-end finan- cial statement showing total assets of over $48 million, an increase of 14 percent over 1974 figures. In commenting on the statement, Rodgers said, "We continued our solid growth pattern in 1975 with net income increas· ing 15 percent. At the same time, we open«:d a new office in the Lido area and established our Professional Services Division for medical and business professionals.'' Bank of Newport now has three offices in the Harbor Area: Dover at Sixteenth Street, Newport Beach: Pacific Coast . .Highway near MacArthur Boulevard, Corona del Mar; and Thirty-second Street at Lafayette in the Lido area of Newport Beach. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 842-5678 ·---.-·- Tuesday' Afternoon Pricea NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. d::k,...V::;;; K it;llett ""'L.V PILOT •z{ I Improper Food i• Storage 'Waste! -:= YOltl( cu .. 11 -s.-.., w.. ..., .... v::l ~~~.:..Ult N {lid.) 0orA 0t. • '-!-~I 0.. 0., ,.., = u.a.~~ ""~ 'en1. 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SCP8UIS .... .. 2S """ ... ~~~nCIJ: · ~ =~ Vi. ~ ... "' ·'°" • •---Ii NC:'.':" ;00 i ;i 3.,.. + .,.. SIAeols l.S2 10 101 40\lo + Ila ..... -.-p · · - "-Cp.10. II s .... \lo NoCnli;r wt .. IOIS.1': .... =~;2.;sa ~I~~·.~ ~~,:~L':~ ~ ~ .~;:.;,.; l(.etfe< ln .2027 6 1* ... Ntfftut 1.02 7 20 IN ... s.n.Jn R 1(111 7 II t 'h+ y, Uld Gu-Arty IS 40 '"-V. ICAtlogQ .90 It :tM 2> + V. Nottlll fl .601:J 112 l2Vs-.,... s...der "-11 SJ 7V.+ v. Unltlllu 2.32 6 1' 24~ • Kelwood .to,. 2 l4Ya . . • No Ill Ges, 1 ~ 24 ........ -§MF In 1.IO • 7.11 1S • . • untndC .40g • J4 ,, .... +Iii; ! Kenn.amtll • .5 21,.._ \lo NllGsJ!r 1.to .. 1 23'ilt+ .... SFttn pf '° I ~+ 14 Ulllnd pl .42 • t I~+ 'h ~II USCI SI "° 3::1"'-" NolnPS 1.3' t ,.. 1e•..--.... S.Fetntt 0JO •• 40 22\li-~ Utd Inns . 10 9 41 '4-','\ ,_,,...... .,. ....-NoSIPw 1.'4 9 100 21'1r ••· S.vEPw 60 ., 17 t~ \lo I.In NIKIHr 2A ns ~-'ilt Ka~-·· S 31 l~+IW. NOSIPwpf7 .. z110 79\lt+IYI ~Elpfl.21 411214-V. utdf'llCMn 7 IYI 81 SYL\'lA P08T£R ( F'1 rtf o / I wo coltm1"' J Have you round that "perfect" place under the sink to store Cood'? Do you storp foods in the cabinetg that ~<' ~o convenlenUy built in over the stove? Do you automatic ally use the taste test to be sure foods are still good? If your answer is yes to any of these questions , you are throwing away large s ums o f money eac h year m the kllchen -posslbly hundreds of dollars in yolJt own case alone -because o( your improper s torage o f food • "IT 'LL N1'.:VER HAPPEN, but if lhE' Food and Drug J\d ministration were to in· spect every f amily kitchen in the U S. for proper storage o f foods, Money's Worth most of them probably would nunk, • • admits Jane Heenan. or the Food a nd Drug Administration's consumer education and inform a ti on staff To be specific: Under the sink is n ot only far Cro m the "perleC't" place to s tore food ; 1t 's also a dangerous spot. Pipes passin g through the a r e a can leak and provide uns ealable openings to draw bugs as w ell. Avoid this popular spot, the FDA warns. As for storage shelves near your s tove, you 're inviting loss because the foods dry up in these places. Even dry mix· es. which may be held at room temperature, will not keep well near the s tove, rood handling experts e mphasize. AND THE TASTE test is actually a way o( begging for medical bills. You don't h ave to swallow foods that h ave gone bad to be poisoned. IC it's old food and you h ave reasons to doubt its fres hness. don't tas te . Throw it away. Almost always when I have written about saving m o n ey· on food, t have s tressed food shopping hints. But it w e ll may be that more of your food dollars a re lost through improper storage of food than through poor s hopping practices. To assure the safety and quality of the food you ha\•e bought, proper storage Is imperative. So: draw up a checklist to inspect your kitchen; be your own inspector ; make a list of the changes that you discover are needed - and then make them. -THOROUGHLY CHECK the cabinets underneath the . kitchen sink, or any cabinets through which water pipes, • drain pipes or heating pipes pass. This is a favorite spot to store sacks of onions or potatoes. Perhaps you have plaC'ed liquids or canned goods here -but foods n ever should be s tored in thes e cabinets. They attract insects, even rodents , through openings that you'll find almost impossible to seal adequately. Also, leakage from the pipes can 9amage the food products, causing cans , for instance, to become overheated or rusty. -Neve r s tore anything you plan to eat next to potent household chemicals. Bottles of cleaning chemical s can too easily be mistaken for bottles of soft drinks or other roods. Oil and vinegar may make a deliciou s salad dressing -but not oil and a tasteless but dangerou s chemical. -GIVE SPECIAL care to foods that s hould b e refrigerated or frozen, for bacteria in these foods multiply with amazing rapidity under favorable conditions. Cold foods s hould be kept cold. With this guide in mind, look at the open surfaces in your kitchen . Any meat thawing at room t e mperature? Do you put away that carton o r milk or quart of orange juice as soon as you return from the s upermarke t ? -Rethink your ways of kee ping bread. for say FDA ex- perts, unde r normal con ditions, bread keeps fresher lo nger at room t emperatures than m the r efriger ator . In h ot. humid weather. bread is better protected agains t mold m the refrige r ator. -GO OVER YOUR stock of canned goods, reaching all the way to the back of the most inaccessible shelf. Dust o n the cans? It's time to clean the lops. Any foreign matter o n the tops of the cans will be pressed into the food itself dunng the opening. • -Whe n you pick up the can. if it sticks slightly, it could have leakage, the FDA warns. Return the can to the s tore. Ky Ullt 1.10 7 to 12\4' + "" HoN1Gs 1.7' 1 •1 >t•.-.-Ioli $Mv Vllll l '.40 I 24 llYl-lit Uft,ltylt 1.0. 7 1J ICM4t 1 ~r ~0.~1 1•4 ~1 n'~+.1,,_ NoNGtif s.to .. zlo eo ... ~•F ~IE 11 ,.,.__.,.. Uld MM .eo .. 1s 11~+ 11o I ~l~~.U .~ r.: ~!2~ Nt"9At• Ex., 10 3\\ "I S.v A s10., :: 51 .. -.... UnltttnQ .... 4 41 1211'1+ \lo _ ,... •• Nor1hrop Co • 123 Ul't-\lo S.vlne Mell 31 6J 1.,. USP'ldtf2 4112 11 ~· ~ : c l<lnetDS .40 t ~· .,..+ •• NwttAlrl ,d 1S S07 '8Ya +I S.vOnDf .to 1:t 1' I ... +•;,\ m s'.4C1 I llYe-\lo I alif e Lo l<lnKhC .to24 tt ISl't+""" -a... 1.1010 l .. ~ ,,, Suontnd\lt I 1'9 s + v. i.60ii !! 10,~• ~I ormans se I< L M ,_,rl .. 1' 3'\'11+2"'t Hw ENr9Y .. U 21Ya-~ SCA 5trvl<• .. » 2'411 . • Co .... .,.. I =i..: ~ 1: J 3::: ~ -Ef19'1Ct 2 4 • 17"'-Yt Sch981tr Cp . . 1 4~ ~ USlndla .20 3"17 '"' l(oeflr 111 2~ , . 1 JI + ,,,, Nwsl In 1.1S • 147 ~ + Ya Schtrlfll! .M 21 '70 J2"" + Yt ~-.21 7 '1 , ... ~ 1 . .0 t 24t '414-!,(. Nwttlnd WI .. 17 19'4 + ... Schlltz 8 ... 2j 174 13""' .. . U 5 AtAlty M 2~ , Kor•~ In 13 IS J:V. • • • Nwst In pf s.. u 11•\.\. ~ S!Chh•nll .ID 23 lOI llV.-"' us Slwe .tS 10 ti 14 • \lo Pur has. p -t IOJ .. _ ·~ Nwstlpf UO .• II 17Yt + \.\ SCM Cp .10 6 2t0 14¥o+ v. U$.$tee1 2.IO 1102• ~+I~ KrA!tco ... _,.+ .., NwsllnofC S .. I IU...,-2Yt SCOA1"4 .70 I :n 12\l'r .. . US Ta .90 11 ll 1tY,-.... c IDg ower Krt$0t .24 lt 1sn Jl'l/o-..... -Mtl .2Jct n 1S !Oto-.... ~·t. "d .~ s u , .... '"' UICITKJW\I 2 7 1>0 Slll'I+ .... l(l'C*Ntr Ml .. I ,,._ ... ~· -.. 18 7 _,... -.... -JY • UICIT pll II 1~"'· "" I l(""""'r t.•• 7 IOJ 19 -"-nw~I 1 ...... '• "'n• · · · Scott Ft t.Ol 10 .. n~-\lo Kii ...--,.._ -... Nrtn Co 1.70 I '° ,, . . . ScQttFor ,74 7 46 1'Vt • ~ Uni Tel 1.12 10 111 1''"°+ Ila KyMl!'ln .20 .... .v.-.. NortnSi .SO!l 13 '3t 24~-V. ScoctPap .. 1tlm ··~··v. UnlTet WU ., 2 SACRAMEN TO (UPI p 1 · re If ~ i.-• ... NrtSI p11.60 .. S6 s.a • 1"' Sc0C1ys 1. io 19 22 • ..., .. Unt rp1A "" 1s 20•11 .. ) -ersona income o a 1 or· i...ca.s 1"° 7 3 1 v.-"' Nucor(4t .21 s n 11\\-v.. SGov11tMfo 1 n sc u"'+ v. UntTe1pf 1•1 s nv.-.,.. nians duMng July through September last year increasctl h\' umsnsn 19 • 16 13.... • .. NVF Como s 141 10 -~ ScovH pf fVt .. IS lS .. Unllrod .OScl 10 77 ·~· .... • • .....,...,Y n ' 14 ,.__ v. --o o-S<udOerD v u s .. -11o Ur11nr 1 oe • " 311,(o • ~ 8 7 percent from the s ame penod m 1974 to total $138 9 LffrSieV 32 • • 1'S "'-· · · """~ 1~ .40 11 11 l >li • • ,__,., • 1 .,. 1 1-, ..... _ •-UN1r\. T I 12 7 21 'l1 + \lo • h d 1..A..Sp(2•1• .., 2111o+ ~ ~ "" 2 ~..,, -I> ........ '""'tncorp 12 42 11~+ Yt billion,the BoardofEqualizat1on asreporte . IAAJ"'Y .70Q 11 ti' l'2 -V• .,.al .. Pr .92 9 1 1 "'-Ii\ Se.c.onlr .JO • 4 .,...,_ \'t .,.,.... Llt~N ~, ,, 12 + 11o 0cc1ctn~• 1 s ,.. " ··· s..w Alrt s. • ... s • ~ VPloM ·"21 24' .. • .,, However the board s aid purchasing powe r was actual· i.-tonA .60 5 12 ..... "' Occk1Ptpf4 .. 11 SI -1.,.. Se••~nm IDIS It~. Yt USUFE J2' ,. 11"' l h ' I 'be .t d db bo h L<thl Ptc ID 9 24 12"'--v. 0cc1>1pf, 60 .. " s1,,.. .•. SHor•w 11 ,. • • v. u.iHeFct ·" 11 1 •~"" Jy ower t an a year ear 1er • cau se 1 was ero e y t ..... >J•t 1ne1 • 3' 1-v. 0ccP1 pf?.so " " 23 • "'" SN(Jlow .ID 11 " 11"'• :11. ~·i~ 7 ~ ~ + .... highe r prices and higher taxes as increasing income mo\'cd LtN'nn .72b .. 2u 12~ ... OccPtof2 ''" I 27'to-14 SNrlGD .S? 10 17'2' IS"• "' ••·• 1n"'t11• 12 ·-....... ... t . t h ' h t b k ts ,, .... Qc<CI Pott wt . 11 1"° • • • SoMri 1 . .0. U 412 •7"--'-.,_, ...,. ,,.,.. ~ n g er a raC e I.AN*' ~ '' I •v.-()gOtn Clo I ' U7 19"' +I S..tr.in Lin .. 2'"" VIMIPL 2 40 10 74 ~ • ~ ax payers I 0 I X • t;::~n Fct ~~ 1~ u_:; :! =fc, U~ ·to 17~ ~v..: ~ ~.<::\~ ~ 'j~ 2i~ ~v~~...:·: s 1~ ~...:: ~ The board a lso said taxable s a les in California totaled ...... inc .7s. ·· • 12-..-"' °" E .flf 3.to . z20 .s •-... 9 ,, ~"· 111o uvtn pf 1.u 1 21~-1,,_ $18.9 billion during the third quarter rose 7.4 percent Crom I.Awl SCrs ·" • Sl7 4'-llt+ 1°" °" E p14.40 .. 1200 49'h . SMMso .2t 19 41 1 + ~ -v v-Lltvlu Furn .. m s"" ... °" E pf 4 • .u . 110 41\o't-v. ~1r .10 ID ,. l4 -.,.. v.1..,,1n .ID 1 t1 11~+ .,_ the same quarte r m 1974 . LFE Corpn I 2" 4...,._ Yt ~E pf 7.24 140 74\lt • 214 SNllOit UO • 7S 50¥< + -14 Verl.i1 .20 13 ISO IS -Vi L 0 F 1.10 10 ._, 2S .... -\lo OhE pf I0.7• 1IJO 107\.\-\41 SNllT l.llb 4 J 31 _ ~ VMctlr I .ID I 4 llYt-\lo LOF Of 4\1.i · 2 .,._ OflE pf 10.41 . l630 IOSVli-.... ShtOtrG .56 • 111 ll'h v.nCllo C.0 • II 4 -Yo UbftYCp.'10 1 12 ll Oll~l.CM 1100 IOll<+2 5Nllrpf1 . ..0 2 11~ .. V9nlCAln.lOIS SO •-'Al N L k fi Tt t.Jbtr1y U>n • 39 2ll6-..... Ol(C .IO S 10 1~ • Shtllrpf l.l.S . 21 22"'+ 1"t Vest¥ 1.07b • · 46 ll~ V. ew 00 or orio \.lbtr1m \.11'1 ' S • ._. ~ Ottl.c; 1 . .U 12 141 22\l't + 'h SllerWll 2.20 1' SS )t:\11+ Vt VtlCO OtfSll 7 13' 2~ .... Lklcl Y 2V, I lS Ullo · · 01t GEpl .IO 1100 10...., + \4 Sltrr•Pc .tl t ~7 10~ •to VF Cpn 1.10 II 17 21~ .. • • UnyEI 1.201I at ~lV.+ 1" Ottt-"G 1.10 1 '1 2S...., + ~ Sl9MIC .toa 7 160 17~ . . VI.com Int 13 , .. 1~ + ~ UnCHll 1.60 11 '1 1114-~ Olln QI 1.n • 121 JI .... + """ Sl91MICopf l • • I 17 • ''• Vlelr Compt .. 20 s -v. • ULl~~1,.rJ :. : t:"'.·~ Ollnllr•fl 1' 122 "'*• .... Slt(.opf2.20 .. I JtV.+ ~ V•EIKl.11. no~·~ ll b Outlet "-~ 7 ,.... Om8r11tn .to S •1 I~-l(o SlgnodeCp I IS 14 37 . . . V•l!Ppf 2.~ · • ll ,....., • .. Uontl ....... e.. .. ... Ontlo.L .7" • 1 IO'lr. .... SlmPrtn 12 ' 27 ...... + -V•EPpf 4.04 .. tlO 42 ••• I Q»'H u•gi-nr \.lnon 2...., ' 99 ....... Optllu MI I J 14\.\-.... SlmntC ... IS 2 22 •.• V•EI pl 4.IO •. dO S0'4• "' •• ., • I ~ Uttn (V "2 .. 1 18 <>rnoeco 1110 41 IP4-.... S11111P•I .'10 20 492 17'11 • ""' V•Ei.t of s.. 110 UYI+ ,,, ' :::i..=•r 'i I,: ~l/J+. ~ Or Acltl (21 • 36 14V•. .... Sll•r C.o ...... 14 -... Ve El"' ),20 .. 110 73Y, ... LAltWCo 1.20 1 IOI Ullo+ \.\ Olla El 2.20 1 U >I'll. ... Slntt~J.... . 21 ~14 + y, V•El pt 1.n .. 1100 1''11 + Vt i.-1<1.40;nu'° 1 --SM~1.20" s• >1 + "' si. ·'° u '° u11o+ "' ~'~ 1~ 4; 1~~-·y,; Burg.er King Corp. will in- t..ornMQ .JMS T 27 ,1~~ ·14 ~,.;o~ : ~ :i~1 .... tu' c!w~ z~ ~ ~"'• ·v.; VvtcnM uo 1 11 »'4-"' troduce an El Toro franchise ~ · '°" 1 '4 ~ .. + O...rT'm .llO 11 .u 21l't + v. si.y11nc. .14 10 4ll 20"-~ -•-.._ 5 Ind 1 t H ,.,._.,... o.ncF • '' 1s s. + .\jo Srn1 MO .c1 J1 11~ .... WKf1 QI ,, ' "" n ..... v. restaurant with a new look L.onOllLI IYI I llS 1714 ... °"""Ill i ' 72 11 12' "~ °" Sml I ·,. ~ 709 ,,.. -,.. W.Cllt\ll• C , '1 l\lo .. . \.IL pl N,, .• "620 lit • YI °'""" 044116 24 tO\lt-1 s...1::7:,.;.1 u m •211o; ... W.IOrMn 1 II n IS ... Thursday. t:t::J1~::~ t'~~'-. OatorOl" ... :!,.23 ''"• 14 5"'!!111iT .so' 11 ,. ..... .,.. ::~1!i~:~ ~ff~.·~ Set l ow with a gray , LIL ""0 t.•7 . • ,. ,._ + "' _,... -,ll Srnuelltr .to I IO 17Yt-Yt ~ ·~ • _:'0'9 .. 1-21 21 73Vt ... P9cAln l.lO •· J3 11'1 ... Sol• S.J.10 7 )4 13._,-Yt W•llMr .IOI • 141 I ....... + n Weathered board exterior, the L;.-;. CM-7 31 ·-Iii. Pl<Gft 1.• t 156 'i . . . lonttC• Intl 2 JI JYI •.• w .. Mert .Oii :n 12 U\lo-.... '--'--"" 1.fiv ... nv,= 11o =:.~~ 1~ :; ~! ~ t;l~.:=4~ ~~ =-."" =.c~::~~ ~ ~~! : unit bears little r esemblance uPeclfc .2011 * 14"'-" l'kPetr1.to12 n 21'11-11o SOSCll•.40 7 ,, 1o~-"" WAl?ICITl .JO •sis 21.,.." to standard brick Burger ~ 1.• t 40 24-. • "-<Pwr 1.10 • 104 21 .. . s c.E11.• • 212 17-..... ~ 4v. .. 1 11 •' K' l t J t d twttt&f..O •4 l~ m~~ ~ Pot Ta.T 1,20 t 41 lSVt + '.4 SoJ 1"4 1.S.10 IS 1'V. + y, :-~ t;o .1 : 4~_:1¥1 &ng res &Uran S . ns ea • 1 i ,, ...... v. "-<11Tln .to 1 s ,.,.. ... SoudWft 154 s • 11o,i, ... w .. i...m .'1 11 ?tJ l1""'• 11o the building matc hes the ~ .• • 4~-.... P•new •204 4 ,... • • -SdMI,,,. I.to .. 4 ,," ...... ~s 110 • .., 22~+ v. So th t F l ' t lA r ii 41 .,.__ ~ ,...,,..,, 1.>0 .. • 14 • s..11 IHt .to 10 ,. ,,_ + ~ ;.;;<;,; • 7 is ltll'I-~ u wes ron 1er s y .. o i.wt11.,s 12 ''° 1'\4' • 14 P.,m &fl .1S • •s •~ • "' SoMt• '5 71 • 12 S'--"" W•Nt of,.,> . 3 ~ "-the Saddl:fcack Va Hey Mall in LlldlowC .. <12 1"' +. \\ ~!9!.·if, 10 sri ~-· ~ ~~Ed 1.,.~ 11.1,1.~.21~~ ++ ~ W-.11 Sii I• 7 I 14..., •• • hi h it. • l d ~SCI uo • 1131 u~. "'"p""'.......:-.."2.10 'i IOI 3l .. ~ -..... ..... , ...... WAWM 1.56. 1J 10-"" )W c IS oca e . lyl(tt Y11.t I t $S isi.-v. -=~ •.... ' t-1011»+ ..... SolnG 2.40 11 IS UV.-" w i. ,.,,,.;#, • ... '"' Add' . 11 ed b • -• ... ,.... . . ~ ,.,~ + 11o =r-'"' ,.-, ~·, 13,~ SoN"9s us • 103 j(l\'1-.,.. ...... •,._,. 14 " " : ·: ah on a y, prompt y ... ~ '" ,.. • • .. • • • SoHElll!TI > 10 II ,. ... + " ._ ....., &.vndlSY .to is •4 sv.-... Pllr ~m s 10 1•~· "' SoPKlf U 4 14 124 » + \Ii wa.,... o .40 u• 10 ~ .. 1o1. local environmental r egula· __. M-Pwll.Hn 1.12 I IS t•\lo + .... So '"Ill 2 It 1• •1J ..,. + •• wtfNll 1.60 .. J 1' + V. 1..1 b . . th MKA'" ... 14 11 •"-+ \'I ,..,_r,,....., , xs1 1Jl(o-~ " • ~ ~ -"" W1Mt11Jn inc s is i • .... ·" ons annmg s igns, e s tan-..._.......... • • .... • · • -.v• -,.. 10 J it••+ "" SoR•llpf ·50 • • 2' S"41 '· • ....,.. pl 22 52c I 14 ... + "" ;;<k';"":,.,; 54 u;. "~,-;;; 12 ., 11;;_ iZ SoR•llpf J .. s s.-. "" wttttl<W'..o ·1 •13 ,t; .... datd "Burger King" roof sign llNCmlll .JS • 111 SY! t !,\ .......... "•-1r .. IYt + !,\ SoUnGs I.Ji 1 to »..., .. · ~Diii Cp 12 106 4,._ • \It I d th l ' th MKy 1.~ 10 m •"'-v. ~1 .. 2; zt; s1.._ v. ~ncs . .o" t14 u -\Ii w.tiMci. 60n s1 •~-.... an e po e s ign near e McY. ~414 . dO sq + ·tt """DI• IA. 11 n s -"° soW.tFr ·20 t 60 *"" ... WttJM!lt.n • 4 11111+ 14 ·street have b een replaced by Mid. ... .. •1 10" ...... Ct .. ~ .. 1 •"'•I.... =Sows'!;' i:: '! ~ ·:-+. \.; Wlt!I• F• .. • ., 17~ + -11 h. II . . h MM • 10 •---.,.. PtmPl. 1.eo • w 20._ • . • ~· 1 11 ,, ,, .... • .,.. Wll"Me .osci , ·~ ... a sma w 1te w a s ign wit MMk .1u1 ,,, 1-. + "" P~ iuo zt'O 120 • .• > 2 SJ wtscoFn .10 I a u..... . •• r .. 1 .. ed hlte I tter Ml~C:.US 4~ 2S-.+ '141.,P\..tlfl1:.::.1ao10tYt ... SpR• ;1io ,,., .u1to -'i<; WPllPpf•~•·..1. ~ ~Yl+I _,,, w e s. ,... .5'H • H\t+,. ~J1..o 1110 !! ... $tit'...,. .. t.a tit-" WllP\'-0.J >,l'2 4 ....... -.".. Burger King iit the fourth INfllM .61 .. U "'+ "' p K. UO : : 110 , ... + " ~ r. 1i 11 Wft'/1/41 •• ,.,. ._ =i:.1'1 1J ~~+'~ f'Mlw9f,~ '.~ ~ ~----.~ i::o 1:10 ,J ~' 4 ! ·: =:,~.,•:: i a:~ ~!,~ largest f ast food company IMI .te 14 , .. ,,__ ._ 1'i1wt if 'i 29 ... *1:-.. ;,: S .. ~-'°' WWI PIK Ind 11 65 !n •·• Mer: M t M> "'• • -.: ·; .. • • 1.... .. . _.. + ,_ Yllllt\li'W .IO 7 1S 1--lo1i MMC>tl t.•I • '4,.. _ _.~I .. I +1\Ao l~Me o.q ... 1 WUnl-'~· t Jn It + 4' Mlrcw•llC f II t• rm+ "° ~ ~ IM I ... ~ .,aiij a ., .. -" ~ < ·.-. t .. \.';-..... MlrcM. t " ?4 l" + " l"l .. 11Gle J 1 • *'""+ 'Ill OU Gii t •ICU 11\\ ~ ~ Mtcll'tl • 411 ttS 1t ·•· .. j· ': ,f: ,~: ~ =:'~f:=: ~ ~·.,.,~~ :t:l:CJl't:: ==·~ :-c.=1~n·~ "'=-·" II 'tJ -"' ,_t In< l'i'J I • a. . ,. ,_ &JO 41 °" YllllYfMI •• It ,J ~ ·" --------- ;11. 1' I' --,....,.~tt 11 1$ -'\.., t ... :: D t2"'=w. --~1·2· '1°'00 ~· .. .,_ •, S11e1 .... ..... . I .... ·;; Nrdt It 1e ..._" = • f o ~ " ·-.. "" Mlrlttt tJ"' ft!+ -~ t It'.,._....... .... · .... 1 1 , ..... +.... ttStl J IJ 1 YJ ••• Pf~O.. (Ilg MrlflM. t 11 101 -" =c .. a ti + '* ;;:,.11 ; , 4 *' + ~ ~· .. ;m• • • ,.,... --w •-,,,.,,,., ,,,,. 'H' '!l ·-.1 .. u -,..,._... =-' .... I ,, ..... ... IS4 s.. 41'1\+ ..... ...... • ..--,. '' • ...__ ... ~Mt.• 1 I +" "l.»IS 11' R.,._.. ... .. ,.,. .,, .... -.. n UI q:• -........... ,_ .......-... #lit~= 4' ~ " e.!.'!!IP71 .. 'JI r:-"" • ~ ., di 'f~: ~ tC .-As .~ 1't '*-.~ f:i:<l~ll :J 1 : : : I :w. n .~ rm=~ ~Iii==:; 1IJO ~: tk t.OS :· ti--·~ ~ ·· ,!!? : ~ -...... n" • l4'*• ~ 1 , ~ t•\'lo ... EE ~ra ..... •111·.... "':" , '°'"'· ... r!;;.'~-11 ·--... ~_ ......... ,.::;·;'= u::" • .. '1 1•-•"' M4. .. 110 n l " . t m 1 + " _... 1•; I 1:. ~ ,...._ Nrw , y, l~, -6 l!lol-._ "' .. "a:•~+ I .101' 1,_+ '4 .... ~·I ~ ,._ Wl1aiY1.4'11t IJ .. +t t,1 • H,.•-1111,..,.,._ .• , 1013,._"" n M•1.1! ""•~wr"" t '\'lo•'" Wllrltir .• •t t Yt !.C!.1...1.. ,. "° .. + " ""'INiet 1 ~IS» SS ~"' •11 in ""'-~ E'"' I ,.,.._ ... .,.., °"-;( C!-....... -~ f·~~ : ~=: 1· ~:: , J:• ~ 1j1I • ~~:·.-I . ,,. 1 ~.·~ ~ ~ 'l:~llA· ""··-.., n f"!.: II ~jl m .~.~ 11 1. I ~ I~--"W1 ~ ••• ·~ 1$ ,_." I' .. ~+ .. .ltolt : ~ ,,._"' "to • 1 1)4 &l10 .. +I~ Y•1" '" )I 1"" ... it tt + ~ t.40 " 1.-+ Ill t ia ' II li'*+I wtlllf01-.. •JlO .... ,. ~~ ~ ' , ...... 1 • A 1""-" ,. > .:~~" •: " ! ~ ~~ti .,,,:& It-! I 1 ~ • ,11 r--J"'. ~ = ~ m u"!i~ 5-z.:::i·i r,~:~ f'•.=1t:: 1~ ~t!: :?:n; ;t u ;!:-.. I W&~. w 1f\\:t 11M ti Ill lt"°' t -t,.._. _ • s JO*-~ YI .. • t h +2 Wit< ... i . 1 '1 +i" , ... .»ti IOI ,I!~+ • .. with approximately 1,500 stores throug hout the United States and averages 200 new r estaurant openings per year. The corporation, whJch h ad sales of $615,000,000 for the fiscal year e nding May 31, 1975. is a wholly owned sub- sidiary or the Pills bury Com· pany. Burroughs Gets Ford Parts Bid Ford Motor Co. has or. dered $4.2 million or com· puter equipme nt from the Mission Viejo-based Bur· roughs corp. to impro\.e its tractor parts supply system. The order lncludcs a luge· sc:aJe B 1'100 computer which will be installed at Ford's tractor headquarters ln 'I'ro)', ich., and nine s maller 8 m•s ror inslallatton in supply depol.6 around the U.S. • The dala proces~inl equipment ls. i ntende lo provide quick ac • cessibUity to lnve.ntory In.- formation and the locaU.on ot more lban 70,000 tractor pa~ available to 1,700 dealers ln the U.S. and Canada. I J 88 DAIL V PILOT Tuesday January 2'1. 1978 Two Shows Opening at UCI Two new producuons are opening on' the Orange Coast this weekend -both on Thursday and both at UC lrvme. Intermission Tom Titus THE MUSICAL "Gypsy" continues on staee at two theaters. a Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse and the Westminster Communi- ty Theater (the latter t.o be reviewed on Thurs· day). Audrey "Sperling, John Moran and Denise Dales head the cast at Sebastian 's, 140 Avenida Pico, San Clemente, with performances every night but Monday al varying curtain times. Reservations 492-9950. UCl 's fine art::, depart- ment will unvell Ten· nessee Williams' all- time classic "A Street- car Named Desire" in the main Fine Art s Village Theater at the same tim e Berto lt Brecht's "In the Jungle of the Cities" goes on s tage at th e Little Theater in IJ um arutJ~s Hall. Curtam time for both is 8 o'clock ASHLEY CAR R 1s directing "Streetcar," whi c h fealurt:>s Nela Leighton as Hlanche. John Reda e l11 as Stanley, Kimberly Cole as Stella and John S h epard as Mitc h . Others in the UC I cast are Mar k Si~iliani, Christy Dwyer, Cassan- dra Moore. Janic e Arkatov, John Hovannis· t1an. Haydn Kramer, Carole Cooney and Paul Hell an "Streetcar" will be prC'~l'nled Thurs day through Saturday of this week and next P erfo rman ces of "Jungle of the Cities" \\Ill be given Thursday "l DAYS OF THE COHDOlt" llJ "CHIHATOWH" Ill ""DtaTY MAIT, CIAZT LAUV- "Y AMIS HI HG rotHT" "GOME IH 60 SECOHDS" IP'GI .. HU STU" '"THE GAMIL.H" IRJ 4th Annual FESTIVAL OF WHALES 3 Weekends January 30 February 15 Whole Watch Cruises Free Events for the Entire Family Morine Lectures, Exhibits & Movies Amphibious Boot Rides Musical Entertainment See Program of Event~ in Area Businesses Where? San Diego FreewJy "5" meets Pac1 f1c Coast H1ghwdy "l" Informat ion Centers: Marina Inn. Motel & Dana Wharf Sportfishing THE SLIM GOURMET Recipes to add dining pleasure while subtracting calories. Wednesday in the The Devil In Miss Jones • through Saturday only. Tickets for both may be obtained b y calling 833-6617. COMPLETING its two-weekend e ngage- ment at Golden West College is the drama "That Cham p1onship Season." a Joint produc · lion of G WC and the I rv in e Co mmunity Theater Onofre Gutier- rez. Clark Burson , Alan Levy, Randy Keene and Jack Byron com prise the ca~l. Final performances will be gi ven Thursday through Saturday at 8 JO and Sunday at 5 p m. in the main theater on the Huntington Beach cam- pu s. Res ervations 892-7711, extension 545. The Westminster pro- duction plays Friday and Saturday at 8 : 30 with Doris Allen, Sue Pelli- grini and Don George in the principal roles at 7273 Mapl e Ave .. Westminster. Reserva- tions 893·8626. ALSO continuing on Orange Coast stages this week are: -"The National Health" at South Coast Three Television Specials Upcoming LOS ANGELES (A P) -Television specials coming up. Orson Welles and Gene Kelly will appear on "The First 50 Years," NBC 's four-hour salute to its own history. appearing on the network in Nov- ember . Telly Savalas' guests for his Feb. 18 CBS special "Telly ... Who Loves Ya, Baby?" will be Diahann Carroll, Barbara Eden and Cloris Leachman "Life Goes to the Movies," based on the bestselling book will be produced by Jack Haley Jr. and 20th Century.Fox for NBC. an A rated, rather kinky tale of. survival ~ .. ..,,,~,~~ •:-44.~~ .. <ID~ ~m Gua@ ~ rNOONeA~-T'l!A~STAR'TS.-I L rT HAS TO -... N "'"°!" T>-C ~OINN9C> I Plus: 'DEATH RACE 2000' Techn1colorl!l l!i] SURF THEATRE c..t Hwy .. s .. St ............. 536-tlt6 A "RISH GORDON" V(f "CHEHUADRS" Cll THE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE ORANGE •532 6721 1"' CITY CEMTRE CIMEMA!> ... S.A. FRWV !MANCHESTER EX.I G G ,_RWY ICITY OR E><.1 "WILD PARTY" (R) A "REINCARNATION OF y PETER PROUD" {R) "RESH GOIDOH"' llJ -n4E CHHltUADBS• IA9UIEL WELSH '"WTLD PAITl" .,."'''° '1nMCAINATION Of rETEI PROUD" AL.AIM DB.OM "Nit WAY our· lll 4:0S·7:35 "OUTH WISH" (R) 2: 20-S: S0-9 :20 '1H£ BLACK BIRD" (PG) 4:01-7:10 "TAKE THE MONEY & RUN" 2: 1H:00-9:4S 1:10 "Dr.nt WISH" 6 :3S-t:SO "WllO PAITY" (II 7:10 '1!JNCAINATION or r£TEJ PIOUD" 6:00--9:40 • lolmli, STAt-{bEY K!JBRICK RYAN O'NEAL • MARISA BERENSON 'MAONlflClNT lNTUITAINMUfT, IUMrTUOUI, LUIH, 0011oaou•. THlllLLI OIO , HAUNflNO ... T1'A-1'1NO TM< WWIJI llfTO A WOllLO 0' LONO AOO ANO OIEATINO T.-: KlllO fW -RW MO'llll ACCOlllrLISH ANO 'lW OllllCTOlll A HlMl'T IN A Liff TI---_.., .... \~-OtUU:OCDU .... tU EXCITING AOVtNTOREo \W\ll'DISNEY- Wi& CINEMA CENTER ""•IC>e4tAO..._COl1A~ UVHDtc:&ITla f7'-41CI =-DIANA ROSS ~ "'-US ••ll'f ..... ... ...., '~ IN .... -....... , ...... HUNTINGTON CINEM HAC-M Al a.LK tU • .,..... 1474tl7 Repertory. 1827 Newport Blvd .• Costa Mesa. Performances at 8 p.m. Tuesday thro"ah Sunday with a 3 p.m . malil>oe Sunday. Reservatlong 646-1163. -"The Petrified~~!~~~~~~~~ Forest" at the Laguna Moulton Play house. 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach . Performances Tuesday through Saturday at 8:30 through Feb. 7. Reserva- tions 494 -07 43. -"HOW THE Other Half Loves" at the Hunt- ington Beach Playhouse. 2110 Main St., Hunt· ington Beach . Performances Fridays and Saturdays through Feb. 14 at 8:30. Reserva- tions 842-5421. -"The Happiest Millionaire" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, in the Community Center auditori um on the Orange County Fair· grounds. Performances Friday and Saturday at 8 :30. R eser vations 556·5391. -"You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Running" at the San Clemente Theater, 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Clemente . Performances Thursday through Saturday at 8:30 until Feb. 7. Reserva- tions 492-0465. SIS Suflt•tr SO·llSZ "" ""*' JACll MICMOUOM .,. REW om Tll ClllOO'S NESr (I) 1i>e a t:o IAT,..__1~1'4:J .. 7:4 .. lltll .. I 41Ht MJOlll,. &ullta U)l501 '"''"'"" "HWAY our (RI aMIT l>U IATJ'SIM-1:1 .. 1:..-1 '100STB COGBURN" L\&T ,,. .. ,.,JI IAT/SIM-l-....'-1•.lt "SJORY OF O" 00 6:4~•••:.n SAT JMIK-l:J .. J:IS IM4:AS..:•• I ... JI .. * * * * JACK NICHOLSON'S PERFECT TRIUMPH!" ~ ··::,•;('~;~:~~-I Why don't we make re films Hke this? We did. """ .... WALTER MATTHAU GEOflOE BURNS RICHARD BENJAMIN WIHHIEA S OOl.D£H GLOBE HOMIHATIOftS ........... .................... .........., SPECIAL REDUCED FAMILY PRICES FOR THIS GREAT FAMILY .. ROGAAM The We and nmea Of GRIZZLY ADAMS ...... y OlalON•lA Y TOMI.JN ltONllE kAl«.n l1R! DAMM>UTTHING VOUC\llllMW. ~u• ...................... fl') .... ......., ..... _ .......... .,. .. .... _, .. _......,. 'Oiall ... '-• .. .llc.-!'lilf Sisu1N -..1sNM~" '" .. ......_ .... ..... I IOI ~--ft-IDMoe• • _ llOM••,_,. 1m ~---_, ... __ ... , , M,.-IOO Ny Allll,..1911NOONMllVlllll ............. DIOWNH• POOl "" ................. ~ LUCIY UDY"' ua wmt 1NI DIVIL"' ..,.,.,,_ .,_,..CIMS (.-') SNOW W1111 111 IUle TC»OfWOU. NICtO ........ C:.UllO U.-.0 A C:Oi.OIH SOT C:MICAMO T MlllCAMO SO..O S MOYIO S .. LUS "NO WAY OUT'' edwards BRISTOL CINEMA •no.. ., ... c..,.... 40.7~• .--·~---·~ TU!!Cl!y, Januux 'l7. 1978 pllluc NOTIC ' ..ona o• MA llllltAL'UAUI 8At0t O~ llllVIHI'., • C:.lli.rftll hr\kll'lf W'9f11lloll, tJ1al11bff 11t. M. AOll DAVIS •M SHllllllllll OAVIS, DefeflOtl\H No. ttUIO. 8y v1rt"' Of .,. u~ullon l•tll9CI'" J_,., '· 1t1• oy ,.,. svii.r'°' eoun. J~IM'l .. ,.ci; Aprll t4, 1'7S,C-. ,., Ill Ot•1'19'. Stat• of C..llloml' WCIOll • 1~1 emend 111 '""' et 8Mlt., lrvl,,., a ClllfWllla llallklllO Olrslot• PUBLIC N011CE PU BL.IC N011CE WW etO'l"lca o• u u CM" •UL .. ltO .. aaTYAt .. RIVA1'11UL8 ........... 1 W .. aa10..COUaTO~ntl lfATaOll'CA~'°lllll&flOa •Ma COUNTY 0, OaANOC In (lie Mel1ef °' Ole o.. .. ~ •f CHARLOTTI! M, Cl.ARI(, ODrlwfv•tee. PUBLIC NOTICE -- PUBUCNOTICE MOTICIO~MON• lllUP'ONllalLITY •k• Is fla,.tly efwe11 111.tt tN un OtnlQMd wtll 11ot bf rHpoMlble for "'" ~ ., llMlllll .. tolll•act.cl by *""°"' .,..,. lMn mJMll,.,. or~ ""••• 0•"9cl l'NJ ~cl NY ot Jafl_.y, lf7• A l<flltr OV.11•1 WttDllNMtar, Cl Toro, CA f'Wlfat!M °'"'99 Goast 0.ily PllOI, JM . 21, ttMCI Feb.), 1t7• n..76 PUBLIC NO'nCE IYATSMalfTO,Wl'fHDUiliiL frROMllARTN•HMI .. ~llAT1"'0U"'O•lll ,.CTlTIOUI eUllNIU MAIM ,,,. IOllowlttV "''°" has .. .,.,......, u • e•11•rll partner from lb• 11artn•rslllp 01>41ret1no und., II•• flctllio... butllleu naMe or lion " llldtmtl'lt <rlelltor •nd eo-1i.1 M. Rol>O Dl•I• •nd SMrtle 0.111• .. ludeme11t l•l>IOre, t llO•l119 a Mt llit!MIC• of l>O,J7t • •ctu.lly dW on N11tt Mid J\lllG!Mfll Oii \M NW of ltw lio Pvbll"*I Ofa"91t Coast 0.llr fllloe, Hotke Is ...,._t>y 9IW11 1"-4 "' 1111- dw'lleMd wlll .. 11 •1 iw•vete .... ,Ollor llftw IN Utll 4ay Of l'el>rvafy, 191', at Ille offlta Of Miii! ltve. MUMPS A & PUBLIC NOTICE "l'fHI$$ I NTllllPltlHS 0, CAl.lltORNIA 11 '201 MIClll91n A-. Gotta IMM, Calllomfa--. 11'9 ll<tlt'-bllslrwu iwu"' ,..,~ -flt for the partnennlp wu ntM on Jlllyt, lt141ntheGoufltyofOr.,,... l'ull Name and AddrtH of lhe Pltrson WllhdrawlftQ: tAon Oen. Sula, 1°'21l El TOr'O, ,_lain Veile.,, C.lltornle .,,.. iUMn Gt .. kt n•cutlon, I lllw l*Yt.d Jeft. U, 10, f1,anct ... b. a. 1'76 n.Jt HUOt41!S,Att: EA Crery, l11q.mSo. ITATHUINTO, A•ANOOttM&NT ..._SlrMI. Uth Floor., L.A. CA. *71, llOOI\ all the rlQhl, tlU. Ind Int-I OI ~kt Jl!OofMnt deblcws In thf P<OOtrt't In tn. County ot Ot11191, $1flt 01 c;.111ornl•, O.Jcrlbtd •• lohOwt; A l•allthold •"at• In •nd to Ult 71 Of Tract No. 1'4S •• tno'llln en • fMfl ,.. cOfdM In look ~10. pa9es tt-1' In. ch•lw et MIK•ll-us ""-s>s. reGorcb of Of•ne-County, more c-1., •nown as 230 Port Carlltlt Pl•et. ,...wport Batch, Cllllornl• NOTICI! ISHER18V GIVEN that on Friday, llebruery 11, 1'76, el t . U o'cl.ck P.M. at front ot C-i.hOUta, H1..-or Munlcfpal Court • ..ell Jttn- ~ lllvd., City ot Newport e.*'11, C~'t of Oran99, State of C1lll6Mle, I ..cn .. 11 at llllbllc •11ttlon 10 "" N~t bldlltf", tor Uih In l•wt ul "'-Y Of u.. UnlW<I Stetu, all lllt rl911t, 1111• and In- t•'"\ of ukl IUC19ment cltbton In IM •COVot o.~rlb9d PrG9t'IY. °' so rnuc11 111t'90f u may O. ne<•uary to sallsfy wlcl HICutlon, With etetu.ed lnlerHI end<OUL 0.\9d J~llfry 2t, 1976 Dlwltlon· H•rtior Oonf Ahff M11rs11a1, o,.noe County BvEuneM Elder, Deputy GUYV.U11NCER "'ellltlft"tAlt-y P.0 ... •11 .. 4nJ MecArtllw •h•cl. ... _,.,. .. tell, C•llftntle t1'6J Publllllad Oranoe Coalt Dally Piiot, J111. 27, and Feb.), 10, 1'11> .nt-76 PUBLIC NOTICE tount't ol Lot An9•ln, Slal• of 0, US• 01' PUBLIC NOTICE c..tllomla, to"'' lllQhHI a110 i..t lllcl-PUBLIC NOTICE 1'1CTIT'IOUS auSINIU NAMll ------:~~----~Otr,anclM1bJKtto<011flr"1a11onbn•ld TM tollowlno "''°"' "•"" ~ S.l411 ~Cowl, 111 the rl911t, tlllt and PICflTIOUtiUSINl[U =the Ide Of tllt llCUtlous Min9M ITATIMINTOl"AUNDONMIN'I' lfU""t Of .. kl ConMrVllM lfl and to .. _ O•us NAM8STATllMI HT R I! 9 £!'1TE'-PRISES, 1700 r I[ 0, all tlle tartaln ,..., or-rty Jltvate In Tht fOllO'lllfng Ptf'SORS are dolnO busl· Pl'lmtOM, S.el ha<ll, CA. '°7.0 PICTlflOUSaUllNHSNAMS IN City of t.orona Otl Mer, County ot 'nl9 IOllOwl"9 perM>fl "" Oranot, $t•t• OI ~lllornl•, partlcular-""1 as· Tiii flctlllouJ lllnlness NrTM l'tffned the UM Of lht flcttlloui tlutl--lydlterlbednfoll-\, to wit. CORONA COVE PROPERTIES, lollOOV'f westlled Oii May tt, 1'1Slntrw M E 0 I c A L I H s u R A N c E .-.io.~ •I s 19 P099y "-· )01 CMnalloft Av•nut, Cl>'Oll• del Mer, Couftfy of Or•nr· PROCl!$SING COMPANY et 1440 K: Cll>rona dtl Mar, Clllfornl• '261). Ceflfornl•'2'2S Royc;t · llrfd#tll , >700 Slate COll•gt 81¥cl., Anaheim, Clelcrlbedas: Johll E. Jec:UOfl, 'lOI c..r-tloft Prl""-.'"SHl llH<ll, Cllll. 90740 Celllomla. Lot 19 In Bl«.ll S4) 01 Corone dtl "-· t.orone dtl Mar. Callfofnl• This. blnl""' was con1111<1ec10y.., The fl<lltlOvt bu.linen n.me ,.,_red Mer," IMwn on map ther.ol rwc.ordtd 92625 lndlvlcNltl. toel>Olllw•Ullecl In Co~111tyon M·11 111 bOo11 3 ot p,.09, 41 •"If 42 ol Ml~ R~S\' F, Em••Y:.20S ?Sr."-Royce E. 8rl~ll ERNEST A FENNER, 1..0SCStalt cat•-· Maps., Aetords of Oranoe ""'"""· CorONI del ~· .. rnla Tllll U•t-nt WI' llled wClll , .. Col"91 Blvd., An.helm, C.11~• Counly, C.lllornle ~ -County Cl•rtc 01 Oren119 County on Thi ~ Thi• bu,lneu IS COl'IGu<ltG by • J-ry u. 1'16. S. MU WH COl\Ou<led b'f all In Unl"'4>"'vff rtal Pfoperty «If.. QltlWftl PMIMrSlllp ,.._. dlYf«*lal. c.nt thtrttodtKrlbtO es. JOfln E. JaOson Plltllflflacl 0r"'99 Coast Dally ~IOC ERN~TA FENNER Lot 11 In 81oell SO Of CO.-dtl Tlllt itat-nl "'"''filed wilfl Ille >an.20,27,andFtl>.l,I0,1'76 ttl76 This Sl•temant wet llled wltll tl'lt Mer as Ptown Oii a map thereof ,.. Co c Coun1., Cter-. of Oren-C-" on cCK"dtd In 8ooll J, P•-· 41 ~ .., -11nt't ltrll ol Orfn91 COll!'lty °" ,,,. • -· -..... -J_,ytt,197• OtctmOerll, 197S. Mf,call•n•ou' Maps, Record' of FS,... 111'1'4'1 OnnotCounty,(alllomle Publitllecl CKt"9f C:O.sl 0 •11?-Pllol. Plibllthlel CK'flO* C:OHt Dally Piiot, T•nnsot s.i.cesll In 11wtv1 "-Y°' JM. J7and Fet>.J, 10, 11. 1976 124•1• s.tm Jan~rv6. ll.20.27. ,.,, 11-1• .. Unltff Stain on conllrmtllllon OI su .. 1•10R COUlllTO,TM• PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE w•.or-1<HhandbelancttYlclenmd PUBLIC NOTICE STAT I 01' ULI "°""'A llOR b'l'-*wcvrtclDyMortOIQtT1'1410Nd '"• ClOUHTYO,OlllANCM! Oii the 11'09trtY '°sold. Ten Pft' Qrit 01 ---...""====-.,,..,.,~,.,..,,-=--Me. A-1610 SU~ll!llllO• COUlllTOl'THE arnountbld10119~ll•dwllllllicl. PICTITIOUS IUSINESS NOTICI[ o""•AllllMOO, ~ETITION STATEOFCALll'ORHIAFOlll 81clS or Oller1 to be In wrlll1>9 end HAMii! STATEMENT flOtl ~11108ATll! O~ WILL AHO P'Olll l...onG.Skel• l'4SM Pvbll "*I Oran0t Cont O•llY Pl lot. Jan.7, 14,21,17, lt16 it.I• PUBLIC NOTICE ftlCTITIOUS IUSINIH HAM!! STATEMeNT The foll-lnQ parsons ,,. doing bust· ....... , WESTEltN LI FE SA F~TY SYSTEMS, 4507 Trtmonl Lane, Cot- clel Mar. C:.lllornl1 t?62S W.llan lndullrles, • C..llfornla cor· pofetlon, 4$07 T-nt LaM, Cot'ona dtlM.ar, C:.llfornle926JS Tllh builness Is conoucted by• cor poratlon WELLEN IHOUSTAIES Urf'/A Wellen, Pfts'- Thls si11enwnl "'" II ltd wltn me ~ty Cltrk of Or•~ County on January ". 191• l'SIJft ~1"'9<1 Or.,,9' Coa't 0.lly PlloC, Jan.10. 21. end Feb. J. 10. 1'76 tts-76 PUBLJC NOTICE THE COUNTY OF ORANGE ..Cll llt rectlYWd at the ator•wld office The followfng 41er'°" Is dOlng bllsl· L.ETTUts TISfAMINTAlllY C.S.N•.A7MU •tanyllmaaf1trt"'llrt1Publk •tlon flftSH: E'''" ot VI OLA G. AUIE', NOTICETOC!tEOITO'-S NOTICE OF SALE OF AEAt hertofandlltl0'9~1•ofwl• SUPERIOR CARPET SERVICE. Dl<Hted. SU .. IAIORCOURTOl'THE PROPEl'ITVAT PAIVATESALE Oettc!Januaryl~.1'76 Otlst St. No. A, Hunli"9\on 8each, NOTICE IS HEAE8'f GIVEN 11111 SYATEOFCAl.IFO'-HIAFO'- ln Ille matter of THE ESTATE OF FAY M. LAYNE, Con~rv1'°' CA ERIT 8. Mc TERNAN llH llled llffeln THE COUHTYOl'OAAHGE VIOLET M. ASHER, OeceasM. olthH\lll•ols.ld Gary Antl\c>fly Fr111klln, G 2151 • pellllon tor Probe•• {71 Wiii and •or 11-NO. A·l6011 NOTICE IS HERE8V GIVEN thel ConM<vet.. St .. No. A, HunllnQIOll Beach, CA wane• of ulltr\ Tfltemen1ary re-Est1te of JOSEPH A. RICKETTS, the undet~IQned Wiii sell et Prlwile M.ESlltVll!, MUM PE. & HUGHES Tiiis buslnus Is COllC!u<led by an ..... lt'9ne• to which Is m4'd• lor lur1her eki JOS. A RICKETTS, Deceased. w••. to lhe llfghest Md be SI bidder. ly: I .A. Cr•ry. fMt. . dMcl.tll. pankvlars, •nd lllat111t """and place NOTICE IS HER EBY' GI VEN lo Ille subject to conllrma11onot. ulG mS..HopeSL,lStll f'l.or Gary A. Franktln 01 Marino Ille wme llH been Ml for creditor~ of lhe aDOve 11•meclc11u<1en1 Superior court, on or alter tlllt Siii dly "'""""let, CA. 90071 Tiii~ slelement wu filed With 1111 Ftbf'~y I, 1'76, at 10 00 • m., In Ille 1~1 ell perwns 11av1n9 cl alms eoalnsl NOTICI[ OP MA '-SHA L'S SAi.ii! of Ftbrvery, 1'176. at the olllce ol AtterMys fw c.ttwrv1 .. r County Clerk of Oran91 COllnty on courtroom 01 O.parlmtnt N0. 3 Of said Ille wld <!Kedenl are r~ulrf!cl 1o Ille ABRAHAM 8 . HELO, Plalnllll va. LEON ARO O. ll~SINGER, 222 P\lbllslled Orone• Coast Dally Janyery•. tt7'. court,at7000vfcCenterOrhreWut,ln tl'lem, wHh tl'M! necessary vouchers.'" MICHAEL A. GRAMME, JR., O.fen Fulllon Lane, Suite tot, Tustin, C-. Pllot,Ja11. 2', 21,lncl Feb. 2, 197, 2"·76 FS1391 the City Of !Minta Ana, Glllfornl1. the olllce 01 tile clt!rk of tllt abovtt ..,. ci.111No.C100 23'. ly of Orengt, State of talifomle, •II Publlshed Orenge Coast Diiiy Piiot, 0.llCI Jan. 14, 1976. lllltd court, or to PrtHnl them, wllll tlle BY vlrtve ol an uacutlon lswecr on the right, tltlt eno Interest of wld ot-Januery 1l, 20, 21. •ncl Febt~ry l, 1'76 WI LU AM•· StJONN, RKt~ary vouchers. to Ille unders!QMd PUBLIC NOTICE J1CTI TlOVI eUllNHJ MAMa ITAT•M•"'T Tiie ... kiwi ... "''°" h ..... ...., -9' SPIC ~ S .. AN L.AUNO'-Y & OftV <:l.UHING SllllVICE. '"· Mewpon ll'l'd . New-1 h.Cll, CA t2..o J•lln A ... 1, t) '1 81al>y NO c;, ~Gr-.t.' ., .. , Thlt bllillnttt I• (Oft~l.0 "" .... 1 .. clYIGWll. Johll~•· n.I• tUlelNl'll #U fli.cf Wlltl tne ~,., Cl••" Of Of•l'IO* '°"'"' °"" ~ry •• .,,. """' ~·"*' Oren .. co.'t 0.lly PlloC, -'-rt U, 10, 11, end hbt~ry J. 1'7• 111• PUBLIC NOTICE ftf~ITtOUI lll$UllHS "AMI $TATaMINT T"9 IOllowl~ parton 1, dOil'IQ l><nl· nt'UH UNIQUE FLOOR FASHION. 12e12 Garden c:;,.._. lllvo., Suitt J, Gel'Oitn G<ow, CA '2..0 Harlonel Wllll•m ~pear, 21CO N. ~ 81Yd., FullerlOll, CA '1•.35 ™' tlllliMU 1, ~onduclt<I l>Y ... 1 .. dlvlc!IHI, H Wllllem~r This stattment WH llltd W.111 '"' C-ty CltrlC of Or•n9' County on Janueryl, tt16 FU• Pub!IVleG Or•noe CoeSI Dally Piiot J-ry 13, 10, 17, end Fel>ruery 3, 197' 11>7• PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINEU NAME STATl[MENT TM lol lowl ng per son 1, dolft9 bu>I neuM VISUAL COMFORTS, 3n E. IM!t St., Cost• Mts;i, CA 92677 Aono.,. Ol•on 111, 372 E. '""St, Co51• Mtse, CA 91627 Thll Ouslnns Is conducted Dy ,,., In· dlvldU1I Aos\ Oy• OIX041 I I I '1'111, slettment we' llltd w1111 111p County Cler• of Or41nge County on Jenueryt, ,,,, l'S1111 Publlsned Or•nee Coe't O•ll't Piiot, Jan. 13, 20, 17 •nd Feb 3. 1'76 74-7& PUBl.IC NOTICE O.omber 16, "7S by the Superior ceastdalllletlmeotoeatllandellllle PUBLIC NOTICE ~76 CounhC"rtt 1ttheOllluolWILLIAMV.SCHMIOT, Court, County of Los Angtles. JudQ· rlQlht, !Ille and lntnt!St tllal Ille est•I• --"'"='~=,..,,,.,..,..~.,.-------I -------------Elttf 8.MC TlltNAN AllMney 11 u•, l6' S.n Miguel Orlw, 5·1S21 mentalltlf'td. A\;QUSI 21, 197S, Steteol OI said dKHStd !In acquired by l'ICTITIOU58USINESS PUBLIC NOTICE u.ic;...,.._rA,,., SUit• 300, Newport 8ucll, Cal1f0f'nia SUPElllORCOUllTOll'THE ca1l1or11la, upon• l\Ad9mant entered In -retlon of la• or otllerwhe otlltf NAME STATEMEllt .............. CA.MV '2660, •lllCll Is 111e place ol D161neu o1 STATE 01' CALll'OllNIA FOR l1vvr {71 At>rall•m 8. He la as JudQl"ntnl tf\9'I or In acklltlon to lllet said Ot-The fol Jo.I no parson IS dol1'19 bull-l'ICTITIOUS eUSIMEU ""'""' tw; 111...-. 119' tile unotrslgl'led In •II m•lle~ per'laln· THE COUNTY 01' OllANGE creditor end •V•ln$1 MICllHI A. CHHO, •I the time of clHlll, In 9nd lo neuas: NAME ST Tl ENT P\lbllslltcl Oran99 Coast O.lly Piiot, lnci lo.,,..,,, ••• of s•IG decedent, •llllln .... A ... ,,, Gfamm•. Jr •s fud9menl debtor. ell Ille ctrteln rul property situated MA C\' REAL TV, 1171 Conejo A M .Janu,ary20,tt,t1, 1'76 tt•76 '-monlhS alter Ille first pUbllc•tton NOTICE Ol'HEAllllNGOll' .. ETITIOff "'°""no. Ml b8l1nu of ,S,96S Q •<-In Ille County of Los A....ieles. Slateol. Line, Fullerton. CA'1W TM lollowlno~sons aredol11911Ull-Of llllsnollu l'Olll .. lllOaATI Oil' WILL AND l'Olt 1u111y ~on WIG 11Jd9mt nl on lht dete ca111orn11, perliculirly .i.scrfbed as O.O.oe Mettl, 1871 c.on.Jo Lant, neu:':E 8 e NT ER PRISES, 3700 PUBLIC NOTICE O.ted J•nu•ry26. m• Lan1111s TESTAMENTARY AND of tM IUulnu ol said tlltcullon.1 havt lollOws. towll. Fllllerton.CA'26l3 SECURITY PACIFIC: AUTMOllllZATION TO ADMINISTER ltvitcl upon e ll lllt rl9n1. lille and In-LOT 4S of Sll•llot Terri.ce es Pff Tllh business I' COllclu<llCI by .n f,... ::rose Avenue, Seti &Hell, CA Hotf ce Is lltr•l>'t 9 lven th•I NATIONAL BANI( UND•R THE INOE~ENDEHT AO- l•rHI ol said JUCl9rTMnt dtblor In Ille MIP rtcordeG In book 11 paoe 92 Of dlvlcNat R E INTERNATIONAL CENTRAL BANK, Extcutorol ll'l•Wtll of MINISTRATION OF ESTATES ACT propet"lylntl"Counl'tOfOrer>91.Slel1 MIPS In tlle Otllce of Ille County Gtor~Mtnl IP llt•rprlus, Inc' a ~newDanlt,11Hllled,w4ttltl'lt tl'le•DOven•~ddtcedelll E1tattotETHELIRENEIRISHelW1 ofC•llfwnll ,deKrlDtdeslollows: Record .. ol said Cou .. ty. CO\lnty ot ™' , .. ,.,,..nl WH flled with tht g:'~1~"':'atlon, 167SlP•ruidt. Feele r•• Deposit '"'"''•nee WIU.IAMV.SCHMIDT iu-nesETHELI IAISM.O.C••WCI LOI 12, Tract )032 H per rnep re-LJ» ARQt'les. Stett ol Calltornla. County Oerlt Of Orancae County on Otc. ~ os, 1 · 101 Corporation. •n App lie et Ion for Atton1'y •t LI• NOTICE ISHEAE8V GlllENlllll corct.cl In llook '3, Paoe 14 Of MIP5 In More commonly •no•n u ll, 1'7S ~bus MU 1' condU<ted by• cor· F'tdffal Deposit fn~rance, Wlll<h ~ MS-M1911tl Drfve WILLIAM MORLEY IAISH 119\ fllta ti. otllce ol Illa Co11nty Recorder ot 4137~ E•Qlt Rock &oultvaro •no 1'51010 llOfal • pllcellon wu ecctpttcl for llllng on W'9 )00 ht'9ln •petition lor Prob.tit ot Wl11 •na 0rlft99 County and commonly MOwn 2201.2211 LaV•rna Avenue, Los Publllhlel Oranoe Coe" 0.11., pj101, :AP e;T9E~:RISES, INC. OK~n. 197S. Ntw-1 BH<lt, CA n..o for fuuanc•of LAUtrs Test•ment.wy to •s 900 Wutcllll Orin. Newport A119tles, Calllor,.I• Jan. 6, 13, 20, 27, 1976 ll-76 p oy~a · r well, Appllcenl Pf'090MS 10 tng.tge In bu51· Tel: (7141 '44-1212 tht pellll-f •no Autl'IOfiLAllon 10 M- a.acll, California. Terms or Ille WI•, c•sll In litW1ul ..,.1 ffl dtflt 111 wl MU •I 110 Newport c e,.ler or . Attorney for E•Kutor mlnltMtr llnder Ille lnclePtnci.nt M- NOTICE ISHE"EllV GIVENt"•ton '"' Slattmenl wu ed 111 Ille Pu I milll1U•tlonof EllalHAClrele<enctlo " ,,. money of Ille United Stetes ol p• ;BLIC NOTICE c;ou,.1, Clerlt ot Orange County on Newport S.t<ll. Calllor,.I• bl \tied Or•nve Coast 01lly Ptlot ...... kh 1 .... 1 f ,~ 11 1 Friday, F•l>ruery 27, 1t7•, •I 2·00 Amerlc• on confirmation of s;ile, or v · J.,_ry IS 1'76 Any Pft'SO<I wlsllf~ to cornmtnl on J*R. 27 •nd FeD. 3, 10, If, 197& 32S.16 -· s me .... or ur ... r per cu •rs. O'tlOtll P.M. at front ot CourtllOuS<t, PMI cash ind Dal•nce evidenced Dy ' FSISJO ll'lls ~lc•llon may Ille llh comments ~-------------1 -lhat '"' time "'d Pl*<• of ,,.,.,.1"9 H•rbor Munlclpal Court, 4601 Jim· note wcured D't Mor191oe « TNS1 PICTITIOUSeUSIHESS Publlshtd Orancae eoa,1 O.lly Piiot, ln-lllngwltllthe Rt9lone1 OlrK10rOI PUBLIC NOTICE '"" W,.. has t>Mn Ml for Fet>rver.; l. t>orM lllvd., City ol Newport BellCll, Oetcl on Ille pr~rt't lo De sold. Ten NAME STATEMENT Jan 20 2J end Feb 3 lO 1976 210-76 Ille FtGtral Otposfl I nsur•nce 197•. It I0'.00 • m .. In Ille c~,._,. Of Coun!V of Oran09, Slate of CellfOrl\la, I percent (10% 1 01 Ille emo11nt to l>t Ot-TIM fOllowlnv 1>9rMH\ Is o.inQ lluSI. · • • · • • Corporetlon et I" R•elonal Oflkt, 44 Ott»rt,..nt No. i of wld court, at 100 will sell*' publlc 1ucllon 10 the hl(lllnl ~ltedwllh bid. MSJas; Montgomery Street, Suite 3600, Satt 54645 Ovit Center Drive Wut, In the Oty of bk)cler, tor cash In l•wful mOMy of ti. &Ids or ollers to be fn wrltlflll and JENSEN ~ co., 040 campus PUBLIC NOTICE Ft1nc:lsco, Celllornl• t 410•. If 1ny NOTICE OI' TRUSTEE'S SAU: S.01• An•, Cellfoml1.• United Sletes, all'"' rlQht, tlll•.tnd In· wlll be racefwd •t the eforewldofllce Dr1w, Mewport canter, CA. t2...o person OHi res to protest the 9rant1nvot On ,,.. "?· E~~71 2 00 k Oeled J•n. 14, l976. ternt of said Jud9mtnl c1e1>1or In Ille et eny time after Ille fl"t publlcatlon JemtS Vl.-nt Jansen, No. 10 Rue -=ir"°1CT=1"'T""1"'0.,.u:-:s"'a"'u""s""1~,.,.,,E'"'s"'s---i1111s -''<•llon ll4t !las• rlgllttodO so If .-.,.l>rullry '4• 1 6 al · o·cioc WILLIAM E. !HJOHH, 41boW cltscrl~ property. or so much hereohndllel!>'edateofwle. M9t'Mlllt, Htwport lkt<h, CA."'60 NAMIESTATEMIHT . he flt"• wrllltfl notlc• of Ills Intent p.m. •I lf1e WIUl'1 front entranc:• °'Ille County Citric t1Wr90! as m1y ~ ntceuary to \allsfy OATEO: January 7, 1976 Ttils blltiness Is condllcttct by M In. Ti. fol I clOI with Ille Atgfonal Director within 1S old OrenQe County Cour111ouse. l0t•ltd ltOIERTO. HARKE• said uKullon, with 1cc rued lntt<HI Lfff11rd o. 8.slneer clMdllel. . . io. 119 1>«sons .,. no IMSI-cllysot the ate of this puDllutlon. The In "" 200 block 01 West S.nt• Me 4211 N. lr•ftl ''""· andcotts. Atlome.,•t , -~ J-v. J-~ "'""· nonconfld9nlle l portlOfls of tlla ....... ke-Blvd., Ctormerly West Sixth Street), In sui .. a ._.._ -· .. ~ ... _.. 8AILEY·S PARAE 8UILOEAS, ....,.. SantaAna C·•lllornfa Gteftlllt CA ttlOl Diiied Jenu•ry n. 1971> Dorl' Rulll5hlelds T'lllt Jt•t•ment WH fifed with tll9 1601 So. Slnc:lelr S4ill• I(, Anaheim. CA tlon ... on Ille In 111• R•QIOf\al Office H EQUITABLE TRUST COMPANY es AtttnMy'tw: .... tllloMr OMslon: Htrtlor Extc1.1trlxof tllt ~nty Cieri! of oranO* eovnty on ,,_,. part of"'* publlc tilt mtlnt•111td D't Ille dul 1 leO 1 st nde dMd 1 Or 1 Pl Oon E. Rllea Eslateof Jaftu,ery 14, 1"'-Robert M. 8elfey, <I04 39tt1 St., Corporation. Tiii\ file Is avelleble lor OI t~~ed O:."ot..e: 9~ 197~ :!:c. t>v J!:',.;;:'n. 2~~'::7;-oasl Oel y 21~~ • Mlrsnal,OrenotCounty VIOl.ETM.ASHEA M\00 "'*POr't8t.Cll,CA'2663 ::~~tfon durf~ r9911lar l>usl· eovo J. JOVER •ncl JUDITH A. By Eul'll M. Elder LEOHAlllO 0, USINOER Pubtlshtd Orange CO.st o.lly Piiot, Cortlend J. Spar,.., 1S1S Ml..-r PuOllslleO pursue"I 10 SKtlo" JOVER r•corded on Octotltr IS. "74, i" EOWIH~~~OMAN AtaNMratLaw Jan.20,21,aod':'l>.l ,10,1t76 123-76 Or.,e.1t1oa,CA'26'0 lOS.14 Cb) (I) o f Ille Rules a nd boo*.11264,peot721ot0fficl11A<Kords Plallltllf's AttwMy m l'alll6M LIM TNs business Is conducted by an un-Rtgul•llon$ 01 ti" Ftcl•••I Deposit In IN ottke of tllt County RKor'dtr ~ ~ ttot SlllT-!.!'ce' , ...... _....... PUBLIC NOTICE lncoprporettd as!IOCl•llon otbff tllan • Insurance Corpor•llon Oranoe County, Clliforn1•, by rH~ot s-1m 1-w11s111 .. atvc1. T;;~ iJ141.u:;'J01 .. , partnership INTERNATIONALCEHTRAL def.WI In Iha paynwnl or performance SU~ERIO'-COURTOI' THE Iii Att9nlly tw E$tal~ FICTITIOUS IUSIHIESS Robert M. 8•11ty IA ... K llf obl198ll011$ ~ure<l llltrtDy, ~ NOllca STATE OF ULI FO•NIA l'OR ~ "=' ~lllw c' ~t~ II Pil PuDlislled Orenge CoHt 0•111 POot. MAMI STATaMl£NT TNs stattmem wn flied wltll Ille By QltrlH R. 8111men llf OellUll Ind Eltctlorl lo Stll ~ '"f COUNTY 01' ORANGE 11 •11~ OH a Y "'-7i n.. IOlklWI-~son 11 dol-bl.$. County Clerk Of OranQt c-.ly on lb Prtsldtnl OHd of Trust llhlnq l>ffn recordecl u Ne. A·"2:21 .Jen. 27,and ... b. '· 10, "" t27-76 _J_.,.,_._,._._2_1_ •• _no_F_•_b_._2._1_9_16 ___ l2_1_._, --= ..... .... ~?2, 1'76 Publlihtd 0r•R91 Coast Dally Piiot, IW'OV>ded tor b't .... •nd ,,_. ,...... NOTICE 011' HEARINGOI' PETITIOff .. ,. ... E ..... T co 16n Pt--·· ,,, .. .1anue~21 1'76 4'61-15 tllrMmot1lllSMvlt19 .... PMOilncewcn l'OR PROIATE OF WILL AND FOR ........ ...... .. -n .. , Publfstltd 0nnQ9 Coast Diiiy Pl104, • ' • 1'9Cordatlon, ""II 14!11 ,, public IUCtion LETTt:RS TESTAMENTAltY COstaMtsa,CA. ttUl . Jall.27and F•b. l, 10, 17, 1976 JON• to the lll9'1fft bidder for USll, payflH Est•le Of BEAT E, OVER. JR. ------------•------------Big Houw WM1esa" Co., Inc .. • PUBLIC NOTICE ifll Wf f u St Dlcuwcl. MOTICIO,MARSHAL'SSAl..a ·~1112• 11' W'-t. SM."r.e1··~ ~·~11°"• i•n Pl"""'I' Am!rtc:~ ~~001':!1e,".!.'1~11ou1~ NOTICE IS MEAEBY GIVEN 11111 MAX SCHWA ATZ./CONSUI. TING IN norti.r1., llnt ol IN land dMCrlbtcl CM!aMtw, CA. 92u 7 PUBLIC N011CE .. ,., nem or w•rr•nty u11tuse<1or1mp1;.c, JULIA ANN O'fE R II•• fll4'd hrf'tln a ENOI HEE RS, I NC , Plafnllff vs. IS Parcel 18 11'1 Int flnal order Of COii· This busitll's Ii condllcllel by 1 Ccw· WNRIOltCOUlllTOP H totlllt, POS~Sion or encuml>rtnc.fl, petition fof Probete OI Wiii •rid I~ Ltl- OONALO J . SCHOLZ ANO COM-dltfnnallon ...coro.d Jenvery S, 1"5 In llOflllon. 1-tMt CALll'OllNIA ll'lt lr1lt""'t conw)'lld 10 and"°"' lltlG len Testementary reftrence to which PANY, a. Oetewe ra Company, 0.IM-bOOk 7'10pa99 16 ot ofllcl1l '9ClOfdS, I" 8~HouMWholtseleGo., Inc. SU .. ll!alOlllCOUlllTO,ntE COUHTYOl'OltANGE 11Y 11 under selG dffd ol lru$l, In ana to Is medl for fur1"9r par1ku11r1, and dent NO. o:M003 Van Nuys tile office of seld RacorO..: U..-H.L.. Ounltlln, PYHIClenf STATll! OF CALI FOaNIA flOa JllCIYkCHWOrl.,. Wittt 11e property In Ora,.911 County, Slate of t,... Ille time and place OI lle••ll'IQ Ille By vlrtve of an •aecullon lslUed on •lone said prolongation and s•fd This "..,.,'"' wes llllCI WCll'I the '"E COUNTY OP OllAHGE s-t:AA11a,CA'27'11 "AlllDl'nl•. dllscrlDICI 11: :1tm1 Ills l>Mfl w t lor FeD. J, "76, al 10 Jenvary 6, "76 by tile Munlcl1111 Court. northerly lfM south e:i• 01' SO" ealt. County Cllf'• 01 Orencae CO\lnty on A-ISIS1 CASE NUMa .. t A Condominium con$l$tlng of the 1 m., In IN courtroom 01 Depert,..nt Judgment t ntered: October 20, ms 620.t• i..t and nortll 1r 00' 21" .. st. -'-'YI. lt1'. In Ille Mettff ol '"' Est.le of£. D1011M tollowtng: No J(7f Mid court •1100 Ovk Center ~n=1:.'u;!'. f;.:~~i .~~!, r~ :~:'1.'~~ f=~t~.':~"no~~ ~· ~ Publlslltcl Oranoe Coul 0.llyp:: A~k~'~s~~Ngl~,t~~ ~"1 In ,!U:,MO,!~,C,~R:,1A~~:ion.r: t•ln ~inY~ ~:of~~-~~~ .. ~ ~~::.~1, In 111<f City of Santa Ana, t•vor of Mu Schw11rtz/ Conwllfno S9'' east. 20.001.et, tlltnc:e north60" 19' Jan. lJ,20, '1,•nd Ftb.3, "7' 11·7• havfnv clefms a911lnst tile ' ... dee~ OOl.LY CAIRNS SMITH and At~ 1,,_1 ctr1aln Amended condominium OeledJan.16, lt16. P U Bl.IC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE DAILY PILOT 89 P U8LlCNOTICE 11456 PICTITIOUI IUllHUS HAii .. n ATHHHT Ti. fOllow•"O -son " oo.no tloAI IWUll HOLIDAY' HOMES, loot? c;.rt .. ld A-.• HUftll~lon 8•acll, CA~ filftlllp H M<N•""'' IOOl1 c;..1,.ld A...,.., Hunllnqlon U.M;h, CA~ 0•1• $1mlHO, IOOU G•rll•ld ... """'· Munu~ton h•ch. CA.,... Tllll IMnlneu 11 conoucted Dy• 11""1 "'2 pel'IMr\1'11p Plllllp H M<N•""'• Tiii• •le'9rnen1 w•~ Ill.cl '"''" 1,,. (.ounly Cluk ot Orenv• County °" J411~ry '· 1916 PSll71 Publl"'"" Or•l\99 Coe,1 Oofly Piiot J411 21 ll'ld Fel> l, 10, 17, 197' D0-711 PUBLIC NOTICE STATEMENT OF AIANOOHMUfT Oll'UHOI' l'ICTITIOUI IU$1HllSSMAMC n.. lollowt~ person' h• .. eoan. doned lllt us. Of Ille llClltlo"' 1>u$1,_n ...... THe Sl!A TERltAC£ APARTMENTS. •I tJ1ll ~rlft~r Orlw. ~ NIQut'I. CalllorN• m11 1'll4t llcth•Olls bu''""" nemc rer .. nPd IO tbO,,. was. 1114"1 '" Or..,ge Co.Inly on f'ebtyery 2, 1t7l •~o COmmu,.lly OevtlOP!f"), lft( • l6T70 WHI lernerdo OrtV9, Wn Oi990, CA '2021 This Ouslneu WH COllCluCltCI °" .. Celllornl• <Of'POf'll1on Ptul G Zimmer. Vic• Preildenl S.Crel•rv & Gener el Counw• Tllh 'l•t•rnenl wes lllcd With ,,_ County C11trlt of 0••"9' CINftlY on J111111ry16, 1976. l'U10a Pubhslled Oranoe Coast oa11y Piiot. .l«I, 20. 27. •nd Ftb 3, 10, 1916 11'-ll> P UBLIC NOTIC'F. MIHll<lpel co11rtollhe SM! .. rMrclfM Jucllel•I Dlllt11<1 C.11tral Olvhlon, Colllllyof s.11 aernarcllno, Sl41t• of Clllternl• JS1 N. Arrowhead Aw., s.n .. rMrcllno, C:.lllornta PLAINTIFF· ASSOCIATES FINAN CIAL SERVICES COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA. INC .. a ta11lornl• cor- poration. "'· OEFENOANTS SIDNEY LOOSCHEN, ooes ONE l'O FIVE, INCLUSIVE, Crou-Complefnle"t SIONEV LOOSCHEN, vs. Cros,·OefPftdanU SHEILA CHRISTEN, CYNTHIA CHRISTEN, OOES ONE TO FIVE, INCLUSIVE SUMMONS ON CltOSS-COMPLAINT CIM Num-.r: C 56414 NOTICE ! V111 ~"' llHft I0'9cl Tl'9 tMlft m.y de<IN -..111st you wltMllt ~ l>eoll') llNrcl Ufl .. U YOU ,.._.... ""'""" • cllf\ . ._ .... tit• lntemwlloft ·-· AVISOt U1l..O ha Melo .,_,...lldNO El Trt-..1 ~ dt<;dir contr• Ucl. lln ellllleftcla • ""'"°~ 111141 Ud. ,.._... clefttro de JO cllH . Lea la fnf~lon .. lit .... I. TO THE OEFENOANT; A CIVIi COfT'C>l•1nl ,,., Dun filed Dy the plelnllll •lmt You. tSee footnote·> • II you whll 10 o.ielld 1rils taws1111, you must, within JOa~ys Iller llllSsum rnons h served on you, Ille '"''" llllS court a WT"illen pleadlnQ II\ f~ 10 IM compl•lnl (II a Jusllctt<ourt. you must Ille ¥"1111 Ille court o wrlllfll Plead· lnQ or c.use •n oral Pleadlno lo be en- ttrtd In the docket '" ropon"' lo ll1P corrc>lalnl, wl 1111nJOdays alter l/llU11m· mons1uervedonyou1. b. Uni HS you s.o respono, your default will be enltrcd upon •ppllcellon ot lllt! Pl•intllf •nd lllls court may ""'I!< a judgment •Qalnsl you for Iii• rellef de· ..,.ndtd In lllt! complaint, W111ch could result In 9"rn1$11m""t ol waoes. lal<1nq ol mcw>ey or properly or otlltr rtl•ef re ~led1nlllecomp111n1 c It.,... wit.II ta .... '"" MYta of"" afton19'\' I 11 this m.a tte r, '°" lloeuld do so promptly so Illa! your wrltlen ..._ .. ,ii•"'•,..., l>tlll..tontime, 0.te<I. May 14, 191S. VIVIAN G. JONES. Cltr11, B1 Jo "'1n M iro, Oepuly ISEALl 5'1RAGUE,Mll.LIGAN aaESWICK AttorNys lit uw mW. Cewt SI , S..lte 401 5-1 .. rnarcllno, CA tHOf Tel: .. 5141 Alt«My for: Oeltflclant Hd Oni-Coml>f•lna11t Publlsned OranQe Coast oa11., Piiot J111uery 20, 27, end FeDr11ary 3. 10 1971> lll-11> PUBLIC NOTICE ~s. inc., as jlldQmtnt creditor 01" wu t, 112.00feel, thence nortll29" .cl' cttnt to Ille .. Id clalms In the Offke o1 ~t: SCO"CHARLESSMITH Plin racordtO In bOo1t t079I, Pl9e I Of WILLIAM IE. SI JOHN, •nd ee•lnst Oon•ld J. Sclloll and tom-"1' "''· 90.•S Itel, llltnce north 19" 59' PUBLIC NOTICE n. cltf'tl 01 11\t •lores.Id GOllrt or to NOTICE! Yeti "'"' bMfl ....a. TIM Ollkl•I R•cords, In tlle office 04 the SUPE RIOA cou RT peny, a Oel1w•re Company es JudQ-ltt"Hst, n.9Sfeet totlll moslSOlllllerly ~ tl'ltm to tM unckrsigned at IN c..'t -1 ., .. aeaiMl 'f9tl _.._.. Cou"ty Recorder ol Or•noe County CouftlyCltrk OF CALIFORNIA, meM debtor, showing e net balence of llneof Perctl 1 H per map recorded In l'ICTITIOUS8USINIS.S olllc• of RU ST ON, NANCE, ~ .... "!.~~.~:. ~= (SI.Kii plM'I belno nerelnaller rl'ferred RIOtA'-DL..Mc:MECHAN ()()UNTVOF TULARE; '3,47 ... actually clue ons.fd luovmtnt bOolt 33 11809 ., ol parcel maPS. In the NAM• STAfl[MENT McCORMICK. & OICARO-Attomen = -·-.. to as "IM Condominium Plaft"). end M )11J711 Clmh .. C111i1tr•no CASE NUMBER on tilt.daft 01 lllt luua H· office of said Recorder; thence •lonQ Tl!tfollOwlllO persons •rt doi"Obusl· ltt..aw-USS E. 01epm1n A,,.., In the "Vl:...I U ....... M 11 .. .._ ....... l!I dltlllled In that certain 0ec1..-a~loft of s.IWl70 11414 tcuUon, I.,.,,. levllel upon all u. Qlht, llw southerly encl -sterly llnes of last neu as: city of Fullerton, In Orenge COurtly, .. -.... _... eo ..... ants Condlllonu nd Restrictions "-.h1•11 ea.l$lraM, CA. tt67S SUM~S <MAR 11 IAGEI • 111•· --.. ln''•r• .. 01 --Id i•""'-"t ~. ,.,..,.lloned parcel map the IOllOwlng. "RT POT POUR RI, ..... SMdastla ..tllctl latt•r off I<• Is Ille plec• Of l>usl-.,....._ ,_.W<kllrt 9"lre U'-ala-' Tt4: 1114) a1-1121 ,.. -• •• -vv-."~ .....,. .. '" .i..c:la 8 meNt 4IM Uct, ........... for Ntwporl crest Homeo..ners As• In re the marriage ol ~lllt00er tor In the property In the County ol courses: nor Ill 00' 00' 14" -$tL...110.00 Or., Corona del Mer, CA. '1625 NU of Iha undersfQMd In all mat19'S .......... ~H LH la llllomw<l9ll 50elellon, rec:orOed In DOok 103M, peoe AIWM'f for: ... tllltMr MA)( IN E LOU I SE WAT K 1 NS and Orange, Stal• of C..llfornla, dHcrlbed .... $0U1h .,. S?' 31>" •.SI 330.w lffl, S'1aron JHn Klno. '79 ~.. 11W1alnl11Q lo said tsl•te. Such claims • ..3 of Offlcl•I Ae<ords •nd Amendment PUClll"*f 0r ... 99 Coul 0.11., Piiot, fttspondeflt JOHN LEE WATKINS asloltows: and nor1h 26 31' 06" west, 91.llfeet to Or.,Cotvnadel Mar, C-'t2'2S wlttl tN necess.ry vouchers must be -.ie-. to 0tc1..-a11ono1 RulrlclloM~ ...,.,...,..,20,21,27, 1'76 217·76 NOTICE: y 0,. ~·• """ --n.e AsMuor's Parctl No. 111-01~s1, 54 thetrve point of beglonlno.. Jerry A. King, 979 Sandustle Or., 11'9cl or prewnted " •fores.Id within 1. Toltlt Rel4IC>lldent Oclobtr 20. 1972 1n llOOlc tOllM, pege •1 cewt ,.,,., ee<lcs. -..inst you wllllo<lt and SS, Recorded In 8ook • 10651, PIQll PARCEL 3: Coronadel Mer. CA. t2'2S faur months att..-IN tlrsl pUblicatlon •. The 11ttltl«wr ""' 111.0. petition Of Offlcl•I ~ecords. •nd Amt~t PUBLIC NOTICE -............. UftltU you ,._... 01 ... ~I dlscrfpllon: Portion OI Lot TI11t portlori of lot 1n In blocll 1 ot Tllh bll$lntu Is conducttcl by • ol thhnotlce. concern!~ your m•rrl•9"· You mey 1'9Contlel July 10. 1971 In l>Qoll 107'13, ~..,,.,,,..,,..--__, ___________ wfUllll JO clayi, React Ille lnlanNUen 1n II\ Block 1 of lrvlnes Subdivision In lr.,lnes subdivision, In Ille City ol gen9flllpar1n11'$11fp, OttlCIJan. 2, lt76 •1i.a-llten response wlthin »da~ot Ploe Sii OI Offkl•I Rf<ords ol Oranoe SU,..llllOlt COURT OF CALll'OltNIA ........ . ..... Clly of Newport 8HCll, Count; Of Nt•port Be•cll, County ot Orenoe. SIMM'Oll JHn Klnv HAROLD c:. ELOE R ltlt clltt that lllls Mlftlmons Is Wf'ltdon Couftt't. l"llle O.cl•r•llort"I. COUNTY 0 .. ORANGE AVISO! Usted ... sido Mm ....... El 0r...., State Of Calltornla as retorded Stilt of C:.lllornl1 H par ,...P -oecs This slattment wes !fled w4111 ttw Encutor of llltwill 'l'O\I. P•rctl ?. An undlvldod l/UOlhl,.. CASI NUMIElt Aesm lrilMINll pwc1t•cldlrcot1tra Ud. .,,,_ In Ille« I, Pall" M of MIK•ll-lftboc*1P*99•otMlscall-maps c-tty Cltrk of (Kan91 County on otseiOdtcedtfll b, II you lall to flit I wr1tlefl 9rnllnencltolheCommonArtaasdt-0'-0aRTOSHOWCAUSE 4hllcl.eameaas411teUcl.~.,.,._ """" !fl Office of County R•corwr, H In t"-office of llle County RKCH'lttr ol JarMMry •• ,,,.. RUSTOM, MANCE. ""'*' .. within SllCll llm•. V041' del1Ull llntd In Ille Oecllr•llon •nd ~ ll'O'-CHANGE 01' NAME .,.. ... diet. LH II lni.nnac:-... mscrrbtd In •ttacl'lecl Ealllbll A. wlclcounly, dHCriDed 8S follows: F51!"2 MtCOlllMIOC & DICAlllO ,.,..., be*"'"" and"" court mlYtnW '""'' , .. ,.,0 •nd in Ill• OtCIM1llon of In Ille Meller of , ... Appllcetlon Of .... . PARCEL I: Commtn<1"9 •I IM mosi wtstwly P\lbllv..d Orange CO.st Dally Piiot, ""'"'*' .. t·Ll'lll • J~t containing lnfvnttlw or MIWUtlon, Del"9 UI I ot Tr«l No. SEAN PATRICK WILBOURNE Ind I. Toll'le Respondent 1See loot"'11t•I n..t portion of lot 172 In block 1 of corner of Parcel 2; H per map rt-.-...,., U,20,27,and Ftbl'wryJ.1'76 IH51£.~A.,., oCNronlers conc:eml119Glot1Slonof pro. 7152 u ~ ,...P recor11ed In -302, DIAN E RENE WILBOURNE, Minors a. TM pelillOMr 11as 111eoa p.1111on lrvfQts subdivision, In Ill• City of c~ lnbOOk I Pl9t 35of parcel mep<1, T.H6 ,.,...,_,CA lllWtY, 'POUMI S\IPCIOrl, <llllG custody, P1QeS I tt1rou911 '· 11\CIVSlve of Mis-11'1 and th~ 1(11111ttn Mn PW!~. concemino rour mart1•0t. You ITWY Ntwpon eaacll, county ol Oraft9". In ll'le office ol said Recorder, seiG cor-Pvllllllled Or~ toast 01lly Piiot, cNld"""°°rt,ettl>'MY's fHs, costs. and cell•ntoon Mtps, In lllt olllce of Ille tMlr natur•I mo111tr. For °"'19' of lilt •-lltitn rn90t1se w11h1n lO o.~of St.ttOf Cellfornla at per map,_,,.., "'' tielno •ISO or1 Ill• <cnterllM {71 PUBLIC NOTICE Jan.6. 13, 10, 27, 1'71> 1•7• wc1I Olli«,..,., at may be 11<anted b'f County Reco""' of Ot1"9' Cowlly. Hime. the cS.tt tl'lel this wmmoM 1s sen.ecson ln ... 1page•ofmfscell....-me1K SUperlorA,,.nutasil'IOwnonwldtn111>; Ille tour\ wllkll could •Hull In the e..cepllno tMrtfrom ttMll portion Seal! Petrk k Wllbourr>e •nd DI-you ._ In 1"'8 Office ot tllt Count., Rtcordtr OI ltlen<t •lono seld cnterllnt sou1t139" 4S' FICTITIOUS eUSINESS PUBLIC NOTICE Q¥nlSl'lrnenl ol wages, ta•l"9 °' "-Y OI 111111 1nc1uo.<1 •llrlfn Pll'atl t H Atftt WllbOUme 111ve 111~ 1~It'°"1.. I> If you I ail to lilt ,. wr11t~n sakSC'.OIMlty,descrlDICIHfollows. 16"westlUO.S31Hltollleno~~r· NAMllTA'fl[MENT orprap«ty,wo111trrelltf ~on a mep recorded In boo6c •S, this court for•" order •llowl"O "''°°"sewlllllns11e111ome,vourdel~lt Commtnc:lno at '"' most ... si.rty Iv protono111--. of lh•I Ur1*'n c:ourw n. folio.I no penon> are dok'll t.N· s-1..e c. II re-wt"9 t• SHk IM eclvk• a11 P19f 2' of Puce I Mtps In the ottlce of petfll«Mr 10 cll.tnge their neme ,,,,,,., mty tit eflle<M •nd Ille cour1 m1111 tr1tt• cor111r ot Parcel 2; 11 per met> re-clltd es "north 12' 11' 4'" -st. SM ... 11tu•s: NOTICE TOCl'IEOITORS eftlr1M'Y l11lllkmatt ... ,,,.... sMIMIDIO the County AtcOl'detrof 0 r•ft9e eo..nty, Sean Patrk lt WllDourntend 01-R<tne • fUOgment cont•1n1n9 1ft1unc11-. or <ordedlnbOOk I paQtlSOl11trctfmt1K, feet" !or the northerly llnt ot IM llnd STANTON PRESS !T .. l•book SU .. ERIORCOUllTOll'THE ,,.,,...IYMtfllly•vrwrin91'1,...,...., Clllloml• WllllOU"" lo Sffn PetrlC.k Nelton and 041'1eror<1e~concernlncio1vl\1onofpro. In t1•offlc• ot said corner 11elno also on de«rlbtd at Parcel lB in Ille tlnal or· P'llbllll'llngl, JOS Bow lino Gr"" Orlw, STAT• 01' CALI FORNI A'°" lf•Y.-Y•lll"""""· Parcel 3. Exclu,lve HHrrents 81>' OI-Rene Nelson, resotetlvelY. i>er1't. soousat support, clllld custOCly, ti,. Clfll.,llnt ol Superior Aveni. as cit!' ol condemnellon rtcorOed January ColteMsw CA'2626 TMECOUNTYOl'ORANGE Oti.c!AU0-6, 1t75 put'ttNnt lo w•d Unit No. Ill. all as 111\ "'"l>Y orcMrtd tlltl 111 Pf'wrt\ cf>lld $uPPOrl, etlorney's le<!\, costs, \l'lowll on Hid "'-P: 1111nc• •lon9 u ld 5, lt65fn Dook 1370p11oe lllof offklal,.. Edwin Ziii, 305 8o•ll"9 G<een Or., A-1*7 WILLIAME SIJOHN,Clerk more $Ptclllc•llY defined I" the Con-llltet'l'Sted In Ille ,...lier •lorewld IP. and'ucll Olt'4!r rtlltl n may l>l'cir....il'<f cen .. rllne soutll J• o• II>" -st 17'0.SJ cot'ds, In Ille office ot HIG Aecorcler: CMt•MHa, CA 92626 In the M•tter ot Ille e,tatt OI ByMadellneC.ton, Deputy dl>ml,.lum Pl1n Ind Ille O.clarallon. peer b9f!>'e lhl' cour1 I" O.partnwnt by 1119 court Which could resolt 1n th<' .... t to "" nortllWHltrly prolonvetlon llMfte• 1lon9 SllG prolongatlon •rid said !119" B Zllr 30$ BoWll"9 GrMn ELIZABETH 8. HIN es •• ,., llnowtl .. GEOllG• A. Sl,ILLIVAN Parcel •. A non·HCll.ISIWI eesement No. ) •I 700 Civic Ctnltr Orlw WHt, 03rnlsllnwnt Of waQt\, la~ 1n9 of montY of llllt ortalq_ course cflecl as "nor111 nortlltrly tine south a •. 01', w.: Hsi, Or.,Cosl•~sa. CA'162" ELIZABETH 8RUC E H 1 NES •lso 1CtTYaLVO. #EST to u• the Common Area •nd IKllll!fl Santa Ana, C•llfornle, on Febniarv 3, or property, or other relief. a • ti' 49" wot.514.99 IHI" for '"' 620.16 Ifft and norlll 87 00 21 "''· This bu•lnen Is conducted by • known .. ELI ZABETM 8 . MINES, IUIT•m ol Ille prof9Ct •lllcll ...... 1>9tfl or wlll 1'76, It 11 o'clock a.m .• •ncJ '"'"and c. II '°" wllll to SH. Ille NVkt OI nor111ert\I llM of the land de$crlbed ., 1222.43 !Ht to Ille northeast comtr ol 91n1rel part,..rslllp Oe<..WO. OttANO•. CAI.I I' • .,..,. be clewloped on the lollowlno onc:rllltd ,,.,. sl'IOw caus•, II any 1111., ha-., Wiiy *" •ttonley 111 tllh m11ttr, you W\ould Parwt 18 111 tllt tlnal ordtr of cOl'ldtm-said Parcel 18, Mid C!>'ner being on the EdwlnZllz Notice 1, llertbY QI Yen to creditors Tl[L: !114)6J4.1•t rte I prop9rly: selo petition'°' cll•n0t ot name "'°"'d • • Pf'Ol'llP41y to '"'•• your wril1M nattonl't<Of'ClldJar1~ryS, l'l6Jln'-k westerly llne of Parcel 1 of tile land This statement was tiled with"" having tl•lms al)lllrut the wkl Otte-ATTOlllNl[Yl'Olll:,.llTITIONE'-Lots I to 4 Inclusive ol Trtc1 No nottlt9renle<I -.ll a..y,mayMfilectonllnw, 7l70ptgit .. ofofflcl11record$,lnlht{11-descrlb•d In th• dee d to tll• eoun1y Cl••" of oranoe Courrty on Cleflt totllt Mld<lilms '" tMOlfk•of CSEAl.l 1't7as per mep re<ordtd In Booll 008. 111$ lvrtller ordtrltO that 1 cooy OI O.tc<tJen.1•,1916. llcw °' .. .., ltKorotr; lllfll<• •lon9 pro-PrCISbvt•rf•n HoSPftal Of Orange Coun--'-"''· 1t16 • • tlla Ctar'lt of Iha aforesaid Gour1 or lo Publllhtd Or1n119 Coast Oelly Piiot, 1>999133 •nd,. of MIK•ll-M995. ltlls order to $!!OW ceuM be publlVted 1.. JAY c BA Yl ESS. Cler• IOlll9floll and seld noflherly ""'south ty, rte0f'dt4 Ftbruary I, 1'46 In booli • l'Sl2" prHtnt ti.m to tbe underslgntd at"" ,,.,.,,, IJ,20, 27, 1t76 2l-76 r9torGsot Or1nge Coul'lty, C.llloml•. O.lfy PllOI, a M•spaper of oitnet11 8y June Kent, Deputy e:i• 01· 50'' N U,6'10. 16 fffl •nd nor11111• 13'1"99 20 0f ottlclel records In ltleol· P'llbll"'9d Or1n99 co.st O.lly Piiot, Office o1 HARRIS A081SOH -Al· Excepting therefrom, llO_..,.,, clrcutallon, pu1>1lsMO In 11111 county at CSE.All 00' 11,. HSl 4'7.4S IHI to Illa lrvt point ti~• Of sakS Re<orcltr; ltltnc• •lonQ said Jan. u. tO, 27 and Feb. 3. 1tl6 7·76 '°"'9y al Law _ sso So. Fl-St., PUBLIC NOTICE al'IY 1nd 111 .. clusJw easarrenu •P. "*11 once • _,. lor tour consacullve • The re~se and other ~mflled of t19tff'lllfflll. Tl'ltnu c011Unul no •tono .,..'1wly llne IN foll-1119 counes: Sult• "O, In the city of Los Anoeltt. In purtenant lo •II conoc>mlnlum ""'ts••· -ttsprlo< 101,,.ayot salclllNrlno. l)al)9rs must be In wr lll"9 •"" 111 Ille MIG nortMrly llM north e1• 00' 11" nortll 2'0 '1' Ot" -st. 14'.4SfMt In 1119 PUBLIC NOTICE l.a8Allgetes C.GIAl\ty wllkh IMtetofflct opting s1ld Unit NO. 1JJ, now or II 1, 111rti-ordllrlel th.ti tlle Co\lnt'JI lorm prucrtt>ed b't Ille C:.1iforn1a Hsi, 7.0.00 ffft 10 Illa nort11Hs1 corner t199lnnf"O of • l*"Otnt curve concew Is the place of ~$lnfls. of the ~ NOT'ICI[ OP T•USTE E'S SALE l'lentatter n l9'"9d to In "Ille Dlci.r .. o.rti "'911 mall notice ol IM 1>1*<• and Rul11 of Court They must be 111«1 1n o1 uld~mt18, said ccwn« 11t1119 Oii M1Uti-s1er1y l'lavln9 • r1H11111of St4.46 l'ICTITIOUSeUSIHUS derslenM In all m.tters oer1alnlno to T.S ..... M6-7S tlon'' or ··111 • Otclarallon'' es tl"'9 OI ttlls llffrfno 10 Illa netvr•I this.court wllh Ille proper tillnt,1 IMAftll the W8$terty llne of Parc•11 of tna land i..t, norlhwHt.,1y •IOftO ..io <unit NAMl£STATIMENT said utat• Suell clalms •Ith '"' Oft Ftllln'9ry 4, 1t76, at 11:00 A.M. lmtflded. lather, Lyman Peul Wllboumaet prOOI of service 01 a COPY OI eKl'I"' ducrlD•d 111 Ill• d••O to tllt tl•ro1191ucentral•"9 .. of1t0 312'20".., tow! I clolnv bull _,.,,., vOuthers mus.I ... Iii.cl or flTl.E INSURANCE ANO TRUST Alsouc•pUnQlllUtfrom-111.11-Ly1n1n P•ul Wiibourne, )4562 Ill• pelilloner. The time When II svmmon~ ~ffi.n HMPll•I of °''"119 (lluft. arc dis.ta nu ot 112.St fHI to Ille rw!:"a ~ ,.. Plf'SOO s • • prnenttd 91 lforewld •lllllll f-CIOM,.ANV. H dllly llPPO!nl4'd Trvstee dreCI P"'Ctnt C 100 % >of •II rlQhfs to oll, Verde, Cl9lstr1no a.ac11, ca111oma is deefnecl wrvecl on " party mav verv ty, recorOlld Ftoru1ry I, t"'6 In boc* eeolnnlnO of • ,.,,.,.. <u""' conce,,. LA R RV M 0 111 GAN AN _ ~•lterltwffrst put>lfcetlolloftllls under and pursuant to OffO Of Trust,.... 99' and ot"-' ""roe"~ nibstanc.s °*'"" Otcemll*r 11. 1t7S ~1no on Ille melllod ot 5'tl'Vl<e. lltl tOof Offlclel recorlK fnltleof nor1fltftltf'ly ll•VlllO • r9clfus Of .at S1 notk • corded Jvty "· 1'n ... '"''·No nseo. ,.,lno under, 0( 111•1 may De oroc!IKed SAMUELOREIZEN "°" fU"'Plt, Sff CCP •UO ll'll'OUO'\ flce:':ldRacorder; 111enc.t110n9Yid ffft, llOr11'1wHtafly al0ft9 ~ c..:... TIQUES,18'19 Evcllcl StrHI, Fow!taln oa..MIJM t t'76 fft booll 102.0, page 171 of C)fflcl•I from the •bovt clncrll>ecl land, 'JUDGE OF THE 4HIUHROL.eUTT,C~EVENGf'-• •ltlrty tine '"' foll-I no tourws. lhrOllell • CAl"lral anti• of is• Q' w· an Vtl~~ :O~van '"° Cl'lur'Cll SI PAUL.A. HINE'S, JR. lllitconll In "" olfk • ol tlla Councv tootlll., •1111 one llundrlel "'""' • SUPERIOR COURT "°"" ,.. ,,. ot" WHI, ,.,.SIO tl'lt ll'Cdtstanuol11224ffft,nonf1tt•11· C.W1aMs CA m h .• E.cutorottMwlll ltKonlerofOr•nveCoutlty,c.tltorrll• CIOCN) Of •II rlQflls to'"'~ WAYNal.McCt.ASICEY LOtcO&lll lCHMOND °'91Mln9". ~· cu""' (0RU"" 14"•112$2.t SIHt tot.he b99lml1190I• T1ll ~~.Is conducted by .... ltt-Of MIOOKedefll WILL SELL AT PU8LICAUCTION TO INrtlrom •ncl -hundred Plf'Cflll ll»o..11 7t1W.S10lll~St,...t llOUthwleslerly 11.tvlnQ 1 radhn of S",.16 IMIOeftl curw conce11t nortr...ttrty s MARRIS 11108ISON HIGHEST 81DOER FOR CASH IPl8Y• C~I ol fll ...,,ls, bonuSH andf)nllfits .......,. leacll, CA tzwt v1.-11.., Clllff"'le•U17 Itel• nor1hwtsttrly ••one Wiid cvr-. ll•vlnQ • radius of 1000.00 IHI; .i111ciu.1...., Morv-1'1 ,..._.,....uw lll••t1IM1ofsatalfll1•ful-yofll'll a ccn1ln9 111erelorm, prowlcltG, A""'"'9ytw; "'911tltMr T...,...,.. n"1nz.11SJ ~a tantral apglinl 12 w 10" an nortl\Wfftefly a lon9 said c~!""9 u-.otl ™' etat~nt wet flltd with ti• •te ,,_.. Sl. 1Jnlt9d Stain) at Ill• soul II front l'IOMver, that Gra,.tor waives and re-Tlll: 17141 lM-tMS Al""'eyftt: ,.lltltMr 11tc Cllstanta of Ill.St '"I to ,,,. beOI"' •central 1n91t of 00" •r OI M If'<._ G94lftl Clerk of 0 ,.1199 County on ,.._;11 tnlr-• to '"' Old Oranoe Qunly lfnQultflH Ille rlQl'lt 10 ust or occupy or P\lbll"*I Ofanot coast 0.ily Piiot, P\lbll'11ed Otano. C:O.st 0.1ty Poot, nlno of I rtve••• tvn•• COftCI,.., lane• Of 14.00 fett to lht ''"" OOlnt of ~ n tt1• '-"~CA ~ tocat•G In "" 100 block of .,, ll'lttr upon'"" P0'11on of ""-1~ J-ry 6, u. 20, 27, 1t7• •76 Jfll ?0.17. •ncl Feo '· 10, 1t1• 12• ,. nortlleesterfy lllvlng 1 rad his. of o Sl 11e9lnnlno: conlln11lr19 nortll-Nrfy • PJlaJ "'*'~ Oral'IOC CO.st Diiiy Piiot WIHI Santa Ant llulevtrd (!on'ntrly and SOO I Ht below Ill• surl•ct. --------------------------- nortllwftlfflY 11ono uldcul'\lltlv'ouOl'I ••or.o salclcurwtbro1111hac•ntr•let11M Pvbllllllel Or-cot\t Dally Piiot. .Jan 6, n 20 17 1976 • ~16 WHl SI 11th Strnll S•"'' Ane, Measu..O wrtlcally lrom ti. -1ac1t PUBl .. JC N011CE PURLIC NOTICE • c""'81 anvl• Gt u• 42' tS" an arc cl••· o1 11• 01· w· an arc distance of 210.00 ,_ •1 _.. F .. -;.·-10 11 ,.,, 141.7' · · · ' Cllflomla, •II r19111, tit,. and '"'"'"' °' .. 1c1 land, for tti. purpose of dl'llllno tance of 1tt.t•, ,_111 n• 21• 41 .. WHt. fff\, and north 10• 31• 10" WHI, 12.76 _,,. -... •• • • PUBLIC NOTICE corwtyed to and now Mid by 11 lllldltt' for, capturing., Pf"Od11cl119, storlnQ, ----------.s....,-,,-riank-..,,Ho,.-,. t"'•""ir----------- 252.tS to tlla t199lnnfnv of. tlnQ8rn i..t; to'"'""°'' •H lfflY CWMf Of .. ldOMdotTrvstfnthepniperl'oltuat• trtatlnvorotl'Mwlsellanctllnoorulllli· CH .. lfd•l•d Roerl •• C•llclltlOll •• INTIERHATIONAL TlllUST C\11"4 etflCl'llll nortllffsterlf llevlno • Parcel 1 .,.,., mtP rKordad In booll: n PUBLIC NO'l1CE "111 Mid CollntY Ind SL.,• dHcrlbld 1119 sucll 011• "' °" ot...., hydt'OGllrtlon COlllP'OlllATIOH If ~••""1 9"<11 '" ttw su.tt et ~''""''1 aM Domestic rtOhieof 1000,00 tfft; 111d nortllweeter-Ollll" li1 of ,.rut IT'IPS. In Ille off!« of 5-tS. as: or ml...,,, tuO.tancts. tor'"' Plll'POW ~•rlat 1t llll<IH•.C tlllslNSt111 Doctmlll• Jl, 1'1S. , ly lly'Ol.lgll • C9fllral angfaof 00" ... or• '"" caunty rKOnltr ot Mid county; $o,... IU"'"'°" CIOUlllTOPTMI LGC 12 bloek • M(tfOll 2 lal!IO* of Htr<ISl"9 Grantors rlOfll:S t,,.,..o. ASS•TS COUltTTtlUSTS PIUVATE fllUSTS COMllNEO 911 iWt distance Of 14.00 IHI; thtflef tlleftC.f along the sovllltrly encl MUtrly 9'0T'ICI TO C•IDITOM ITATll 0. CAUl"OlllMIA "°" ~I~ :"-":r!......~=~"~ •,.~1 ._.., 111 10dt9d1_ 'r9C06'!"'37 ... Mty 1 1 1•1 Cl)l'l end dw lrom C>Mk• , .. .. .. .. . .. • ....... , •••••••••• 110,llOt 110,IO'I llllUlll '7' H' 54•• welt Ut.to tNt to 11'11 llf\f6 ti sal• parcel t"• follO..iflO liUHatOfltC:OUlllTO,T·MI TNICOUMTYO,OJllANOI ,__.. '" -.wvw• ~ • ...,..,._ ,. n.,...... n , 11'99 ' "'Offk a l•I U.S. T,.atury •urllltsSJC!OM Tot•I wett•rty llN ot Parcel U• per m1p .... ,_,..; toutll ... ,.. M" ..... m.o ITATIO, CM.I l"OlllHIA,..,. ..... A-IU!, "'!'..!!c~ty.111 ..... • but ....... .-.~ ltlCI racordlll Otc.mber 27• lb) Obllvatlorlufl'tcler•I FINftClllQ 8a11k ...... 100,000 100,000 200,000 ~or~"' In ~" JI --A) 01 peroal lffl. •nd touth 00' 00' 24" HSt 112.a f"ICOUMTYOl'O•ANOa NOTICll CM'MIA•t .. OOP ~llTITION _,. .. ,. w -m. • wt.....,.. "61 111 llOOlt 5tS7, PIO' '6S Of Offklal ._.. I I 11 dll • •ana trw u'*I• ' _.. -........ ' " --•f8 o• WI AltD f10a OD-'• lfftrMIY, Hfl"Uor Im. "9cord!. ,_,,.P1'91'1 MS, ur11 ureen 11,ure. o r '"'""In, ... office of,,..d ltt<.nltt': fttt;llltnc:tnorfll67°, '54 H$1UUO ...... , ..,. ,_ ,... LL Pl~,....,."' ttti., ~Or TlwstreetldOretUl'ldothtt()Ol'IWMn ,.,. .... 111111ballk pr9t'lllMS .................................... s.MO tl*\ClllOllOtMHlltrly•ndlOVllltrly IMltotlletn.ttllOlntof 1>99lnnl~ t11111tM1tt.rofU.a.statotfH!U!H &.STT•U TllfAMIHTA•Y AJID ..,..,....., to.,..,"" -lnlno cMftNllon,lf ... y.oftti.,..l~V' Othlr•uell ................................................... 1.11• llMt •f Miid parcel '"' IOllMl'lnt SlfMt acklnss: South ol -., c. SICl(!U. DtcHtM. .wTMOtlllATION fO ADMOftSTWlt prlndotl tlllllef tl'le •lt(t) MCl#'.cltl'f -.Crlll9cletl0w lspurport90tobl· TOTAl.ASSIETS ••.• •• • ......................... 100.000 21e.111 s.m 2.11• 11u11 <°"nett IOlllll 00" 00' t4" Nil 12.n t.anw or SI of 200 Supef'lor ft., tMtt:e It ~ •-• credltDn UtfM• '9fl ••""'"""' Al> •Ill 0..-Of ""*· to-wit; .......... 1 0 0R"I COllrt, N•wPort llMdl. &.IA81&.ITIWl ..... ~ ... ,.. ,. ....... tUO .... HIWJlllPt Baatll, C..111om••· ...,.,,. <lelmt •'"'' IM ulct ... MIMtlTlllAnONOf'8SfAfUACT. "'"" ""'""'IMr-... ~!fl Cllltonlll'2660 Otlllr'llatlllltfn .............................................. )4,076 )A,016 MUVl .... 2A" Mst, 170.00 ..... aod HOTIC! tS Hlltf8Y GIVIHlNtOll ...... flle ..._ Cl~IM Ill Ille~.. • ....... HELIN A. SCHlllOIMlt. ..... f199(J), ad'laMM,, If ....,, .,,,., Tll9 llMlnf9Md Trustee dlscle!ms. TOTALLIAlll.ITIH ....................................... )4,016 )4,07• IOlllll ... ,..,. .. _, UOO!ff(.ltwnn flrlclfy, ... """,.., t?, ""·at r:• .. <..,.of.,. ........ ~ ... ~. ...... ·-,... ..... ...._.. ~ T---....... -11 ....... llly for -y 1~1---• -CA ... TA&.ACCOUNTJ MUff1 at• W St" t. tts.11 '"' r1 !Kii .. M at f,..,,t et C~ flf"9M tflMI ..... VI-~•.. NOTIC• IS Hl•IBY OIVI H tflft ..,. ""'"""' -..._ ., • ...,. ...-. -·• --· ·~ ,_.._.. "' ----· ,.,~· ..... , ••• ~ c ........ :,,..,· I ,,_, ....... I·,__......_! flflct .. 5TIWART. WOOC>ftU"'.1~~ OllOfWMI lit. S0411t080ER ... fl'9cl dllr9M ............ IN TNtlM the"'"' .......... Oll'l9r con-c.n-\MU-4ettl(>«Yah19 ,,__,II_ •• •-· """ .... Ht·-_...c pa ........... --·--l'lllAZll -Anomen at uw _ _, ..,.....•llttltlellfw,,......tfWl119"cl .,..oftM~c,...._._.,....,o..trOI '"'-""lon,11..,Y,t'-"N~ln. !N11m11tr\llart••11t110rtr9dJO,OOOI eo .. tniepolntOf •UIMlflt. 81\1d., CltYOf H•.,.,, ... cfl.CIDVl'IV'4 Tr\lltl. Wei sate 11111 ... made to INY !NOC>-(NwnbertMrOOUUlandlll01.000) .•••••••••••• 100,000 100,000 .. ARCEL I I 0raf191, Slat• Of Cafllomla, I wlllMll Ill ==-~~i110r':":.'~.,~ == :" ~= . ,,.,. ~1-y """" Nici °'9d OI lloettw wcvrecl tly Mid clttcl OI tl'Vll SWP4111... • • ... .. .. •• • . •• ...... .. •••••••••••••. ·-... 60.000 'l'ltM ll0'110n of tot 1~ In blocll l of Pllb4k ~tloll ~Illa lll(lllftt ~.for tllW ofttCl8 I• tM .. i.ca et._._ ef ~ .. llldlpa ..... ,... Trvst ,.,.., • ..,. uecutlel alld Cit lll(ludl"O all <Mts, t••uftlt tlQl8ftMS of Uldhtlcllld flf'Oflts , .......... • • .. " • · 24.tol ff'll'Mt adirlvltlefl, In thf City Of UM Ill lewful l'lltMY of Cllt UnltM 1-.1 llvt .... te tM llndtnlened a wrlblft INQHtftclof!MtrustcrMUtl_,.Wlid T()'rALCA .. ITALACCOUNTS . t00,000 tM,IOI ...,...,, .. Kii, C.OVnly .. Orll\08. S41lK, •U ti. rl(lllt, llU• Hid lfll9t'ftl ol :!! ==.'.i~ .. ~~~=4:: :.:::: IW ,:::: = Ot<lar811onef Default Md De-fer .. Of tMI; •If_, •x!MftdN lllldtr TOTAL LIAatLITIES. ANO (A .. ITALACCOUNn 100,000 ,, ... ,, St.et•• Qlllerftl•" Pit' rna11 ~ ... cl Jlidtm.nt cltbtor Ill tlla ""°""' ~ _,.,.. mufl .. fll9d ., .... tNt .,,. .... -ptace .. ..._ ......... WfMetl Holk• of Cltftuft ... '9rl'r\I of .. Id~ of'"'"· .... .,_ M•MOllANOA 200,0W M .000 l•.IOI *·'°' l1U77 '" .... , ....... ,...,tc••l-mlflt dttetltiH~y.orMirnUdl ..... ,.......,_ .. ato ..... ld •ltlllll M\11' --llnt..n _,tor~*' ..... IJactlon ....... ""-......... reoakl; lllld $SS.)t7 ... ref'MHllllQ Orin. "'""" ..... t.ctwlllt51•1tT,...,...,.. .. ~fytaru .. clw "' .. 9"1a If tN ~f'f ....,_" n ""'•11•<.1-y to .,Utl1ta10u· --.an.rtN 1tratP11"1icatltlltlf !Nt ""at IO;• a.m., Ill the ~"""1-of cautiM Hlct NMl<t ol 0.1111111 fllCI clpalof ttltnott MCll,.....,_.lcl""'°' oflkklcl•r.,,_..,. •.. ··-··" • • • • • 100.000 100,000 100,ooet •lct~t.,,cllncTl ... 1tft1'-: ecllllan,'#llhKCfl*lfmerntfl'clcetb. l'Mke. ~"'*"Ne. a If selct c~ 4111 * EactlOll to Sttl 10 o. rttor'ded 111 the tnnt, wlttlfnl-*f""" JUl\f 1, tttJ• Wt Cllerln 111. 1111man, ""~'· anll Rl(l'lanl A. Dunk•. E14., Stcretarv, Qrftmel'ICJllO II t/lf """ ••ttrty OetMJ_.;t), •• ,. o.tedJan. '· .. ,. Cl'llk QIMr 0r1 ... WHt. Ill lilt 01'1 of '""'" wba,. '"" .... p,..rty Is "' ..... Mt• tlr'IVldect.. .. IN *-Mt• trvfl (ompatW'f. '°"'"'1ly ·-•r '"" 11\1• rePOrt of COl'ldl-~ II ""rcalt," per "'ff~ OhtlJIOtl: .. .,. '1HIT90~I flO._N IAIANIC SeMa AM, (6lltof!lla.. tecMM. Diiied: Janu.f)' 14, 1'76 llOll !lncludl"O Ille lnfor'ft'l*llon Of\ IN r.wne lielt l'ltnOIJ lt true and tortt<I -~-::.·.:r~::.::~:!1:::,:: ~:r:.;:_,.County £_,,.,oftht.-111 OMN"""-16, tt76. OetlM:-'-,.,1,S. tt16. IQUITAl\.llUUST ,,_bKtof-kMWiffllt""'btllet . .._ ........... ~ ........... ~of .. -nor ...... ~ ........... , ., .... ~ WfWAM8.14JOMlll,. TITLUHMJllANC•AHD COMl'AHY. Cbarletl'l.911......,,_,...lde!llt -__ ,..,.,.._ -,...__...,_ ~ ~WDODWVl"ft ft1IAl91I OluntY°"11 Tl'UITCOM-.NV •l,_.. 1M<MNA.~IJQ..Scn1an' Ml!Nt•tf181wne11Mldfftlfll """'9 ~'f ' ' .oelllTM.9UaK at"ldTNSIM, lyl.ewttW.McM~lll\. <SI.AL) • • ......... <eftterllfll Mlltfl ,... w ..... ,,.,,L .. \i'OLCMOtC =~--=.. .... .............. lllfta JU 8y °""""A. COrtllfl VI<• '"'"109!\t ....... Cllllo"''•· (»unty of er-... •1 .... ,. .. twt te tM ll'Vll ....... ., MllUW'IAIWMY ..... -.._.. ....... CA..... ~-"-hire • ""bll"'9• Hl'lllPort HarW "'"" • s...... le 9nd 1\lk<rlt>ecl ..... ,... ""'UN day Of J•1111trv. 1ff6, lllCI' ..._...,..., 111.,.n <efltlnllln, 1'" ...,....,......._ ._ ..-a.a.C.Aft1'1l ~ew1 ,..w-r ~l!Md H"'"rt Hartlor Ntwt Prntconltllntdwltlllllf OtentitCDMI _...,urtlfytllcltlernnot..,ortl(.,erdlrectorotlllftVVJlcompany, ::-.. -:': .::"~.:.::~.... "'!!.tt~·ce=·oe11, flllOt. ,,_..,,,_ °"""' Clltl 010y 1111~. ..... ....... Or .. O.UI Oltty ...... ~ _ ...... wltll .... 0rtft91 ClMtt Delly lllllOC,JM t7. Ind"-.. *' to. My<-'"'°" H lllrH )_.,.., .. 1m. lmlly M, ""'°""'· Hot.sy ftljtjllc. ""91t.lotuf\flltctrt•lfl(ftrtlltf..,.• ,~.=~ .. ~.in• ~ JM,I0,2'1,.,.,., .. ,,,,191• fiW' ,,_,.,.,11,v,m• m1' .-J1y,..1ot.,JM.1a,20.n,m• 14-7• m• JOH• "*'~Oft1101Cot"°'"""'°'·J-ryt1,1m »H• • -~\ I • I j ' I. 11 I ,:! . I I I j I I J I 8)0 DAILY PILOt Tue:-;day. January 27 1976 Johnny Wins a Round Angola Factions Oashing Punch Estancia Students Compete From\\ Ir e Sen·lce!) The U S Court or Appeals ruled m favor of television ·~ "T onight" host Johnny Car. nn In a $22 million libel sull Oi l.llrutt the Chicago.based Na· uonal Insider . Th~ court said Carson und his wife are entitled lo a jury lnnl of their sui t against the magazine The insider reported that Carson forced the movem ent or hi~ show from New York to Cahrorma ·"at a cost of m1lllons of dollars to NBC" so'1e could be close to his present wife, Joanna Holland Carson. Carson's l awyers retorted that the then Miss Holland lived in the New York are a at the time. .. Singer .composer Isaac Hayes' thm.l wife has IUed for d t vorce on grounds of cruel and inhurrrnn treatment . Mignun (;ynlbia Marley Hayes, 26, filf'd suit in Memphis as king for a divorce with alimony a nd child support for t he c ouple 's S·y('ar -old daught er. H eather, and s1x- month old son, Isaac Ill. The llayese" \\ t'rl' marri1.:d 10April1973 in Carson Caty, N('\'. ll was her first m arnag(' Al so, Chancell or Robert Horfman d b m1 ssed n swt fil ed by Hayes' second wife, Emily ~_;. Ruth Hayes, accusing llr1yes of HAYES falling behind in court-ordered alimony and child s upport payments She receives $40,000 a year from Hayes. • President Ford ordered his daughter Susan off the ski slopes and onto Lhc campaign trail, say~ a f''ord family friend. T he friend. who asked to rem a in anonymous. ~aid Susan was to have remai ned at Vail. Colo for skiing a nd t eam racing until Feb. 24. two days before classes resume at Holyoke Coll ege. Instead. she will return to Washington Feb. 6 because her ··Dad wa nb her ho!J>&--'' .. Former M 1ch1gan Go\'. John B. Swainson, his head bow ed and his eyes glistening with emotion, was sentenced to concurrent prison terms of a year and a day on each of three perjury convictions. U.S. Distra ct Court Judge Carl B. Rubin of Dayton. Ohio, ordered Swainson, a World War Il hero, resigned state Supreme ' Cou r t ju s ti c e a n d l as t Democ r ati c g overno r or Michigan, to spend SO days in a minimum se curity prison facili- t y Rubin suspended the rest of the sentence. The Judge said he con- sidered the cas e a tragedy com- pounded by Swainson's military and political r ecord. Swainson lost both· legs in France during World War II. S WAIN SON "His presence this day m this court is punish- ment itself.'· Ru bin said. Two wnters, an archit~. a composer and tour painters were elected to lhe i50·member National lnstttut~ of Arts and Letters, lbe Congress· chartered honor s ociety for the arts. Harrison E. S1Usbury. prC'Sldent of the institute. announced t he ne w members as James T. F1euer, h1storta n a nd biographer : Meyer Scllap.lro, art critic and histonan; CbarleaGwaUlmey, architect , Jack BeeS-On, com poser, and Balcomb Greene. Leonid Be-rm an, Conrad Marca-RelU and Allee Neel, painters. They will be inducted at ceremonies in New By Ute Aas~l ated Press The Soviet·backed P o pul a r Move m e nt (MPLA) h• launched 8' t hree-pro nged a ttack a gains t the Wes tern- • backed Notional Union -UN IT A -ln central Comedian Bob Hope says politics "loused up Angola, B ritis h c:or- things in this co untry and dragged out the Vietnam respondents r eported to- York May 19. war " d ( L 1-tope. in Dallas to speak to the Mid-Wlnter Den· ay rom ua nda, the MPLA capital. .. Ten muaic stude nts at Estancia Htgb School have been chosen to participate In statewide and regional booor bands and orches tras. Mike Dowla n . who plays the baritone, was selected for t he All-State High School Ho11or Band.. tal Clin1t', s aid the war in Southeast Asta· could In Dakar, Sene gal, 80 ··have ended five or six years sooner if il weren't Cor official of the Western-L---------------------poh~~s~ ·~ntert ainer s aid backed forces asserted ••1 don't know, I think I've always preferTed DOWLAN W AS also chosen f o r the All· South em California High S c}lool Ho n o r Band, along with Ann Miller. clarinet , Karen Hulfe , clarinet , and Elizabeth Schroeder , flute. --------....... t hat UNITA h as cap-olds women." an an inte rview he plans ( ) tured 35 Cubans who had -------------------- no active invol vement in PEOPLE been fightin g on the politics this year. _ M p · I d. A '* LA side, lnc u mg S«»ap Opera , ~ Jean Farmer, violin. was selected for the All- Soutbern California High School Hono r Or chestra. Lyle Tuttle we aring ~en h e de scr1.ibed as full-bodied red. blue and black tattoos set ofr only 'torture specia lSts." bya pair ofbriefs wasjudgedthe best tattooed man An M P LA military 'I ..4 N t L • ' in America. The event was staged in Houston. ~r;'~i~h:l~s w_::hf~~~t~ .r._m 0 isa The long-tim e tattoo artist from San Francisco the Times of London as l HEIDI RUBY, flute, Nanc·y Boda, flute , and Brad Kelso , t r umpet, were chosen for the All· Southern Cali fornie Junior H i gh S chool Band. T hey are ninth graders at Estancia. also garnered the award for best t attooed person, . 1 E • z F t edgmg out Val Dale, who says she is the only fem ale saying at east ~ old T34 -.. een U on black tattoo artist in the world. ( ) II Miss Dale, a shapely tattooee dis playing in· I N SH ORT tricate designs ha mpered only by bikini br a and G-_ _ string. won the women's division or the tattoo be au· ty contest. .. Rep. James W. Symington CD-Mo.) announced he will seek the Democratic nom ina tion for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by his • ~ father . Sen. S tuart Symington. , The elder Symington, also a Democrat. has announced he will step down at the end of his fourth term next J anuary. Rep. Sy min~ton. 48 . was elected to the House in 1968 and before that was deputy director t>f the U S. Food for Peace pro- gr am . director of the Pres i- dent 's Committe e on Juvenile SYMINGTON Delinquency, and U.S. chief of protocol. • Revivalist p reacher Arlie "Bad" Chambers, convicted last week in Los Angeles or conspiring to tr ansport stolen cars and trucks across state lines , said he was receiving overwhelming s upport from followers m Oklahoma City and believed bis convic- tion would be overturned. •·1 have received. so many calls from all over the country," t he 43-year·old evangelist a nd songwriter said. He denied in his federal court trial he knew the eight cars and trucks were stolen. Soviet tanks armed with 75 mm c anno n wer e spearheading th'e drive on the towns of Huambo, Silva P orto and Lobito. Ashford added that other s o ur ces s aid con - sider ably mor e tanks were in action. lll11P~t BEIRUT. Lebanon CAP ) -M osle m and Ch ri stia n militiamen evacuated Beirut 's fire- blackened hotel district tod ay as the Syrian- sponsore d disengage- ment program "pro- gressed without serious hitch," police reported. By JOAN HANAUER NEW YORK <UPI> -Eileen Fulton fi gures that U sa, the character she has been playing on "As the World Turns" for almost 16 years, in that time has had four husbands, 32 lovers, two children. ·one or whom was born out of wedlock, Jost one baby and suffered a false pregnancy. "We ought to have a "Sweet 16 party for Lisa, .. she said d uring an interview, her native North Carolina drawl still SQftening her voice. MISS FULTON IS AMBIVALENT about Lisa, Al~ Osborne, violin, .was picked for the All- Sou the rn California Junior High School Orchestra. E a ch or th e honor groups will be g iving concert performances next month. who was such a favorite that CBS even tried, unsuc-'Wr1· 1· m· g· ' cessfully, to spin her oft from the daytime soap opera to make her into nighttime competition for the then-popular ''Peyton Place.'' C On the one ha nd, Miss Fulton says with great OUrSeS e mphasis. "I am not Lisa," indignant that anyone might confuse the mi nister 's daughter from Asheville with the character soap opera fans love to At 0 CC hate. Miss Fulton literal · A variet y of classes )y fell into the role short-.... ranging from newswrit· ly after she g ra~uated ing to songwriting are from_ Sanfo rd Melsner's bei n g offere d thi s N e 1 g h b o r: h o ~ d semest e r durin g th e Playhouse, which with e ve nings b y Or an ge Actors Studi?, was one Coast College. of the top acting schools R egist r ation is cur- io New York. . rently underway for all Platform for President And Palestinian guer- rill~s pledged to respect the Le banese govern- ment 's sovereignty "on every pa rt of its soil without exception. Our revolutiona ry presence in this Arab country is ce rta inly tempo r ary," said an official P alesti- nian publication . Chris- tian leader s r e m ained cautious. She ~as caught in OCC classes in the col- the revolvu~g door of the lege's Admissions aiid the~ter which say~ you Records Office. For reg- can t get a part without is tration i nformation ~ agent, but no age~t phone 556·5735. Sha pp Views Fiscal Reform POll:'er IJpped WASHING TON CUPI> -The Senate has passed a bi ll e xtending p re - sidential power by allow- ing the chief executive to call · up to 50,000 re- servists into active duty for a limited period of time without a declara- tion of war or a national emergency. FULTON will. take you on until The songwritin g cl ass: you ve worked. which will em phasize the "I W AS S O fr us tr a t ed,'' the a c· prodnction of original wo rk s , w i ll m eet Thursdays from 7 p.m. to 10 p. m. in tbe OCC Music Building. HARRISBURG, Pa. <A P > -Gov. Milton J . Shapp is seeking the Democ ratic presidential nomination on a platform calli11,g for investments or htllions of dollars in education, urban renewa l and railroad rebuilding. He does not h ave price tags for most of the pro- posals, but s ays he would pay the bills by increasi ng the federal debt , levying special fees and imposing an income tax s urcharge. THE TWO-TERM, 63·YEAR·OLD governor $aid the cornerstone of his plan is a change in the federal budgeting s ystem. Shapp would have an an- nual operating budget and a separate long-term in- vestment budget. Everyday costs -including welfare, the military, criminal j ustice. unemploy- ment compensation and some government departme nts - would be fin a nced from the operating budget. Other items, including some . now list ed as operating ex- penses, would be financed from ~ "-"' t he l o n g-t e rm invest m ent , , ~ budget. This budget would cover -- items like s lum clearance, t>nergy resear c h. education , railroad modernization, sewer SHAPP <'Onstruclion, land cleanup and housing. Sh app has not said how big either of his budgets would be. But he said the operating budget always would be b alanced because ··many of the present ·outlays contained in our administratio_n's bud~et would be transferred into the long·ter m investment budget.·· THE GOVE R NOR SAID HE COULD not estimate the total investment cost. He proposed two specific pr ograms -a $13 billion railroad modernization plan and a $50 billion·a-year educa· lion project. . Shapp said the initial financing for all the in· vestment programs would have to come from bor- rowing. a plan he s aid would increase the national debt temporarily. He said the programs eventually would pay for themselves through "user fees" and increased tax revenues stemming from the full- empJoyment economy his plan is designed to achieve. He could not say how long it would take for this to happen. Shapp denied that items like an increas~ na- tional debt and special surcharges would be infla- tionary, because he said they are.only a part of his total p rogr a m . He s aid a ny impact must be measured in terms or the whole, but could not pro- vide details because he is still working to complete most of the individual segments. THE $50 BILLION-A-YEAR EDUCATION in- vestment, more than six times what the federal gov~mment s pends now, would cover everything from preschool to graduate s chool, Shapp said . The federal share of the education dollar would rise from the curr ent JO peottent to 50 percent, the state s hare would remnln at 33 percent and the local and private share (including tuition) would dl'Op from S7 to 17 percent. Shapp u'd the cut in lout educ&tion spending would permit lbe ~Umin1tion of property taxes for 1~boo1 1ystem1 -~bly ln seven to 10 year1'. He also uid Increased federal 3id would let colleges cut tu!Uon. ., Th' fed~ral tnve!t- ment wou Id be financed "" •LY / · b)' • l 11"X boost •fleeting '' E IL~ A• l " all Americana bet~n --------- th• •Jet of 25 a nd S4 who 1110rk and pay federal Income l a1es. Sha.pp had no 11.cwu on what part ol lhc populabon would be ln- volved but Census Bureau figures show that as of 1970 , a'bout 44 percent of Ameri cans fell into the specified age group. The increase would take the form of a tax s ur- charge depending on years of schooling. T he more schooling. the greater the surcharge. THE MINIMUM RATE, 3 PERCENT of adjust· ed gross income, would be for a family whos~ mem-. bers averaged less than eight years of schooling. Only those family members between the ages of 25 and 64, covered on a single tax return, would be counted. The maximum rate, 3.6 percent of adjust- ed gross income , would be charged families whose members aver aged five years or more of education beyond high school. Shapp said information on the educational status of all Americans woul d be kept by the In- ternal Revenue Service which would get reports from schools a nd colleges. No break would be given to those who atte nded a private school or college. Shapp's staff estimated that families at the minimum rate would pay $6,400 Jess over the course of a lifetime t han the cost of their education; families paying at the maximum rate would pay 5700 more than t he cost of their education. THE GOVERNOR DENIED THAT ms plan wouJd hurt economic recovery. He said that while the burden would increase for some people, it would drop for others because of lower property taxes and tuition. He had no breakdown of how many people would fall into each category. Shapp said his estimates of revenues and sur· charges were based on Health, Education and Welfare Department figures showing the number of children in kindergarten in 1974 and things like percentages expected to go to college and anticipat- ed earnings. Sbapp said the railroad plan would call for in· itial bor rowin g of $13 b illion. He s aid the modernization would take s ix years and would be financed by a 5 percent surcharge on sKippers, starting as soon as the program began. USING 191<1 RAIL SIDPPJNG R EVENUES, Shapp said the s urcharge would bring in $1.2 billion a year. He estimated it would take $1 .l billion an· nu ally to repay principal and interest over 30 years. Sharp s aid hls programs would put most of the country s eight m illion unemployed persons to wor k ·and provide better jobs for four m illion un· der e mployed Americans. He could not give· specifics on how all the jobs would be created, but said the railroad investment could be used as an ll· lustration. "Put the money there and your U.S. Steels, your Gtmeral Electrics, your Allis-Chalmers' and your Westinghouses could estimate their share of t he $13 billion that would be pumped lnto this modernbatlon in six years Ume , •• Shapp said. .. TREY WILL EXPAND TllElll PA.CILITIES ... so you stimulate the economy. Tbere would be 13>,000 to 125,000 Jobs directly on the rallro•dl. But there would be 250,000 Jobi Ueated in private in· dustry to manufacture the equipment needed for railroad moderniiatiol'I." Shapp said the figures come fr'Qm U .S. Com· m@'rce Department "input-output" tables 1bowin1 how m any job!'! are created by fnveslment ln epedfi~ lndustriea. He u id extra jobs created by all the invest· menu would generate incre&.sed tax revenues and would help pay tor the long-term prou•ma. • .. The bill w as passed 77-0 Monday and was sent to the Hous e. It specifically ba rs the re- servists from being used in cases of insurrection, for the enforcement of federal or s t a te law or r or a ss i s ta n c e i n catastrophf', accident or disaster. Oil TaUc tress said. "It was J uly 3 a nd it was hot and my feet were killing me." !)he was outside the door of a well·known agent and could hear him laughing. "I knocked and I heard him laugh louder,,. s he said. "By then I was paranoid and I was sure he was laughing at me. l pushed with all my might at that door -how was I to know the door was being fixed ? -and the door fell in. I went flying, my portfolio of pictures flying eve ry which way." The a gent, impressed by a would·be actress who literally beat down his door, took her on a nd sent her over to try for, and win, the role of Lisa. "I'VE MADE U SA WORK FOR me ... Miss The n e ws writin g course , l is t e d a s J ournalism 110, is being offered for t he firs t lime at night . T he class meets Mondays from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m . at Estancia High School. 2 Nursing f\Jlton said. "In t he past I quit 'for good' several Students times. The last time 1 quit for good was in 1965, when I started to work on my music. I discovered there was much work to do, changing over from my Get Award classical background." She has cut a number of s ingle records and • several albums -her latest is labeled "Eileen" -N · t d ts ... ::__ ATLANTI C C ITY' ursmg s u en n.nu and made her New York supper club debut last E d K Nft" N . J . c u p 1 > _ New f vans an aren ._ey April at the prestigious Persian Room o the Plaza w i 11 s bare a $U o J ersey Gov. Brendan T. Hotel. . scholarship awar~l)o Byrne today urged the "I love to sing -singing, acting, they'r e the s ddl b k c 11 Inten·or Departm ent to · · h a e ac o ege Y same thing," she said. "The televlSlon s ow gets Bl Cro of So thaf.n begl·n explor1'ng for 01·1 • d h · E · ue ss u~·· people to come m an ear me smg. very song ls California. and gas in the Atlantic another acting role. And I am a n actress -I am not Mr 5 • Ev ans w 111 Ocean immediately. Lisa." Byrne, in a statement graduate this June ~a dra fted for the firs t regist ered nur se 'a6d public hearings on drill-Saf • Offe-rinu plans to seek a position ing in the Atlantic , also arJ. .-. ~ as soon as her studies @fe said t h e Ford Ad· completed. ) ministration should re· °W'~ildlif s • Miss Nadey 'bas eom- vamp its offshore energy W J e eIDJD8rS pteted six months of her program . traln.ing at the college and works at Mission.· A~ Attaek Teachers were invitedtoregister rorone~rsixfree Community Hospitab as -/\RAWA Bougainville .wildlife conservation sef!Unars being offe~ed during anintem. - 1 ta d (UPI> _A b d thecurrent.sem ester atL1onCountrySa!an,lrvine. The Blue Cross award s an . an The semmars are scheduled for the first Saturday was made upon the re-of 800 separatist rebels, of each month through June 5 They are geared to d t• f • arm~d wit h axes , 'at-· commen a ions o nur'S· t ac k ed gov ernm e nt tea~hers al all levels in-ing faculty memt>ers·~t buildings , barricaded terested in presenting in-to be entertaining as well Saddleback College. r oads and airfields and formation about African as educational. wildlife totheir students. took g o vernme nt o r-One seminar partici-DL • • ficials hostage today to BILL RING, educ a· pant ls Pat ~uinn, Uon C Jf,'V1i'f,Cialf, press demands for in-Uonal coordinator at Country's director of 'J""" dependence a nd a $3.4 Lion Country Safari, said zoology, a ve teran of r -ri:'fWd m illion payoff from the seminars are meant three study tours to '-.£ ., Papua-New Guinea. · South and East Africa The rebels overran c o·s ponsored by UC and took control or the Bap11· sm Irvine. towns of Buln a nd Boku on t he lsland. T E A C H E R S ,,,.~. Sftllred Fete Set partlctp atlng in the ~·~ seminar program wm at· Tickets ar e available tend a mor ning session for a party to be held at f eaturink a lecture and the historic Wright's villa q uestion-and· a ns wer lnSanClemente, Feb. 7. period with Quinn and · . Ring , motion pictures The party Is the first and color 1Ude present.a· social event of the season Uona. They wlll lhen tour fol' the La CrlsUa.alta t he SOO·acre African Pa1eaol Asso ciation. wildlife pr~serve. Dr . Richard F. AJtman of Newport Beach com· plete d educa tional re· quirements to retain mem berah i p ln tbe American Academy of Family Phyaiciana. The National Associa- tion of family docton, formerly known u tbe American Academy of Gener al Practice. calls for members t.o com plete 1 a mlnlmum of 150 hours o( accredJted m edical study every three years. LAS V EGAS, Nev. (UPI) -Possible ter· rorl1t in!lltration ot the huse Nevada teat s1t.e - t he cause of r e cent beefed up security pre- cautions inc luding the a ddition o f tanlta - prompted federal of - flclal1 Mond ay to replace at leut 10 handicapped ~ty1uard1. 'llcketl are $5 and may Seminar participants be obla.lned at t.be San wUl be given various Clemeote Ch amber of educat1onal material.I t.o Park Reco-....L. Commerce and the Bank uae In the classroom. rem or San Clemente. There la no cbar'e fOt' T H R E E R l v E R s An Energy Research and Development Ad· minlslrallon apotes.man 1aid the 1treoat hened security meuurn ware only prccauUonary and (£dJtor'• nott. Thu r.1 tM fifth in.a •mn o/ attitl11 that no threat.a or lncl- oppearlng from lime to tfmt on thL'()fmocrolk prufdfn·. dents had OCCUrTcd at the Hal candldolt1.J _ •· nuclear tesUnj ra clUty. · An outdoor drama d~ lhe seminar but reservaA (AP> -Al moat two pictinc the nnt Chris· Uon1 are required. mllllon~le vllltecUie- ti an b apt 11 m In Thos e l n tere1ted quola and Ktnp Ca!\10ft California will be at.a(ed ahould c all l!r7·1200 and natlooal park.I lut )'9ar by t.be association ln the u k for the educaUonll to let a record, of~ summer. department . say. • ·' I - -------·· __ ..__ r The ltUttt ~\JJflCt on the Orqe Cout ~~-~.~ ....... ~:!.~~.~~ ....... 1~~:::.~~~ ....... ~~!!!.~~~ ........ l~~::!f.~~-~'!'.'........ TuMdiry.January27 t97G DAILY PILOT BJ I .. ~ .•........ !~~! ~~ ....... ~ .. !~.~!·!:~ .......... !~~~ ~~ .......... !~~~ ~~ .......... !~.~~ ..... !!.~~~ ........ !~:::.':~~~ ....... ~~!'! .......... ~~~~ DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED GI HO OOWM GtMrol 1002G....,.., 1002 WAt:~c:::URF m t>.n 1a q.t ~ . ADS '(tu Con Stf ti, find It, ftode It With o Wont Ad Priced al 1overnment eJ,,.i, di J:,,{~ appraisal. P rune re- s 1d•nt1 a I beac h oei1hl:>Qrhoud Elegance with u coollnentnl ae cent. Tiied entry. Stately living room with hreplucc . Pub type gourmet kitchen. Pormal dlnc Gracious BAY ANO BEACH 6 7 5-3000 (~42-5678] One Call S.mct f 0$1 Cttdtt Appfovol RHl&tote ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------•I family room with cr ac;kl · Ing far~place. commend· ~l\01 I COl\~l HWY r.::>RONA CCL MAR CORONA DEL MAR $)2,500 Hard to find 3 bdrm. home + 1-bdrm. rental. R-2 Lot. Great estate s tarter in our ~etter rent~l 1.1rea. ~aoRS •d rtl Ing view of ground&. r;;ft : ~ •t Hrt Huge master retreat. BAY & BEACH REAL TY should check their ads Seclud ed children & OUI 27 .. YUi 675-JOOO dally and report er· £ uest suites. Owner ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ron lmm.dlat•ly. The transferred. Anxious! - ••y PILO Call 963-1881. DA ii-T as...,...s Ol'fNr119•11HuNrou1N,,-,, G...,.. 1002 GtMrat t002 Beaut. 4 BR~ fam. rm, Country English atm os ph ere. enclosed patio, established trees, boat slip. $245,000 Being remodeled; custom s· BR, 5 Ba. 6500 Sq. ft. home oo point, pool, dock. Custom, completely f\trnishecf 6 BR,1 41Aa ba., 3 caf gar. On lagoon. $325,000. Custom 5 BR, 4 ba. View, 80 ft. on lagoon. Boat slip. $295,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bny-.1rl•· Or ov .. N 8 b7S · 61 61 _:_:_'"_U_i~_::_:_:_::_i°"·f·l~.s-tly.i~.·I [ ® 111111 ~~:~i~~;;~~~ ... E···s···E···R···T···E~··o·· hbli.&ter's Notice: VA HO DOWN G-.rol I 002 Gmttaf t 002 i\11 real estate advertise<l,__•2-1n-Eo-stb_luf_f_-i What a buy! Don't miss •••••••• ·~··••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••• •••• •• m th\3 newspaper is sub it! Abandoned 2 story. 5 FIXER Ject iU> the 1''edcral Fair A beautaCul decorator's Huge bedrooms with Housing Act or l!JG8 house reduced to $74,500. massive master swte. Lowest Priced •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IT"S A .. IEFUU WITH A llG REAR" Refurbished old Corona del Mar cot- tage with a back yard big enough for a 2nd unit. In the trade, it's a "refurb with a big rear." It also has a new kitchen, a large fireplace, beamed ceil- ing, new carpets and located half a jog from two public tennis. courts. At only $67,000. U,_.lf.JUI: tf()~f:S REALTORS~ 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar LAGUNA PROPERTIES YOU MUST SEE! N ELL Associates • i< ti\ L i <, I /I : I 1~ 1v::s T ~t1t:~ J 1 · CALL 494 • 6594 SUflERI LAGUNA REST AURA HT -IAR One of Laguna's most de- lightful restaurants and cocktail lounges. Offers tremendous investor potential. Fine locallon. Wooderful chentele. The A hard to find single Eve'"" woman's dr"'am whic:h makes 1t illegal to "' " A REAL MESS! Needs story full or charm k1'tchen + + + I m advertise "any pre · · · paint, panehng, tile. ference, hm1tat1on, or $79·500· Century 211 mediate possession +. yard work, an" loads o Pool Home! NEWPORT HEIGHTS Assumable Loan GeMntl I 002 GeMt'al I 002 place to go ID Laguna • •••. ••••• • •••••••••••• ••• ~ •• • • • •• • ••• •••••••• $150,000Term s Profes:,aonal 640-4950 "~s I · t t I '4 d1scrim1nat1on bast•d on """ ume ow in eres oan TLC Private yard over. race: color, religion. sex, or new VA with no down, looking vast meadow. or national ongin, or an YOUR VEHICLE prife below market at Pnced S4,000 under com· antenuon to m.ike .iny TOA S6l,OOO. Ca ll today . parable. $43.950. CALL .. f 646-7171. 962 7788 SUC•l pre erence, hm1t,1 QUICK SALE oPrN11iQ•Hsr 1r11~""'.,'' · ... t1on,ord1scnm1nat1on." ~ K€Y ~~~~~;~af~~e;~11 ann~~ __ c_am_6_7_~_._6_0_~_eO_at_ty __ I ! ~ 1u11n1 '!Ch0€WA~EORRS Ii advertising for real 2 STORY-FAMILY ,... estate which is in viola POOL-$26,950! TRANSFERRED uonofthe law. Two story bargain! Just ARCHITECT STEPS TO GOLF North Costa Mesa. 4 bedrooms. 2 bathi. in Mesa Del Mar Heaullful condition. Shake roor. New on the market. $49,950. Hurry! ! 546-4141 ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. $49,500 "ESLEY N ~YLOR CO REA LTOHS ~11a·e 1H4 DRAMATIC & B.EGAKT-$198,500 Tremendous view from this fantastic 4 Nearly '• acre on a cul de ::.111:. thb 4 bedroom 2 bJth family home h11i. a lovely orchard, room for a pool or two and lots left over. Walk to shopping and schools, frc:,h paint and in clean, mo,ve-in condition. Call for ;in ap BR home. Pool w /oversized patio. Lge pointmcnt now. f am rm, formal DR & bonus room. S26,950 ruu price! Large DESIGNED TAKE ADV AHTAGE hvingroom. VERY large SAN CLEMENTE Custom home on cul-Oe·1·--------• ••••~•••••••••••••••••• Camily-dinang room com· Contemporary Custom sac street. Around lhe H~esForS• BEST Buy Pl~• NEWPORT CENTER H.1. 644-491 O Prap..-t••• . LEADING LAGUNA GAUEAY BUILDING One of Laguna's finest galleries will !iell bldg. and lease back on attrac- tive terms. $175,000 7 .000 FT. BLDG. C&tTER LAGUNA Great access, vis1b11sty. Exceptional park1n~ Suitable for retail store. finance 1n sl1t ut1on. Restaurant, n1te C'lul:i. Call for details. General I 002 bo! Bnght & spacious home on Golr Course corner from Mesa Verde ••••••••••••••••••••••• t1lcdk1t<'hen·slep·inpan· wiOceanview.3Br,2ba. Country Club. Im · lry ! Wrought iron All Cedar exterior. Top macu late condition JUST LISTED s tairway to king size quality features inside. through-out. EnJOY huge , . .Quai~ 2111 Smt Joaquin Hiiis Road 7S2-1920 BIG CANYON •'00 ouaiw Niw 'llACH Ge-neral I 002 General I 002 COMMERCIAL Bt!autifut 3 tx-droom. 31---------•I••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LAGUNA CANYON ~t ES I\ N 0 RT II 4 bt•drooms. Secluded Many trees. Own/Agnt separate par Io r . Bedroom, 2 bath!>, fµk, masterw,bwlt-in vanity. 498-2727 Enormous family room '-'omplete c arpeting Hed .... ood fenced patio ---------w1thf1replace&wetbar ble gar. CoH•red patio epdosed super -pool. BAYSHORE tomorrow+ formaldme bath, Big Canyon Condo EASTSIDE CM VIEW Popu I a r Bordeaux droom horn«.>. big R·2 model. This cul.tom dl'· lot. 60>.130. Hoom to WITH A FUTURE LIVE LIDO STYLE Terrific retail locatmo 3,000 sq. rt. store plus lint rt. contemporary home. Ample parkang. LEASE. ~ruoul. Drapes Ultnl> O\-erlooklJlg wrought iron CHARMIMG Gourmets kitchen of II an very good l'Onda f,ndosedgarage +extra Secluded grounds + on.Reducedlo$44,500. parking. Take advan· COTTAGE loads of pnvacy. Owner RoyMcCardle i tagecallnow752-1700. ONLY$65,900!!! transCerred & must go! --• ,,.,,,.,., fll\•o~''' fl T k d C II ~tor 1810 Newport Mingle with the movie a e a vantage. a Cost_a Mesa 548 77-29 [ ~ • ·• ~ stars only steps from the ~6-2313 coraled home features a build Very good lo<:a Ir\ 1 n e Terr ace secluded patio, fin1sht•d twn Sho\\ n by appoint dramatic, contemporary garage+ many other ex-m!.'nt Asking $37 ,;so deltagn. Featuring ample tras. Owner will finance Call 540-1151 u.'ie or wood & walb of & has reduC'ed pnce to glass. 3 Bdrms . 3 bath!.. S123,000 Owner will also convenient modern S ..1 n <I ) lJ '-' .1 l h J n <l ;'l.cwport s M Jiii t:hJnnel at \our window 2 and 3 LAGUNA CORNER bdrm 1·ondo~1n1um:, COAST HIGHWAY \\Ith den and \\CL bar. 10,000 ft building site. for • prestige of Newport '"'"• ?·• '' ,,. ,., lease. rail for detaab. kitchen. Formal dining f'rom S179,500 pnme l'Ommerc1al. Two 1 Yr \lo arrant) 111c excellent units on proper· waterfront. Rustic cot-[ ~ ~ VA C /\NT · RE ADY · area. separdle hobb) Call 6 75-7225 ty $152.ooo. f BEST BUY IN tage nestled 1n huge 91W...-..i...Wlill, A.'IJXIOUS. 1---------1 rm $88,500 TURTLEROCK trees, pro\-1des once in a 1 =~==~~~~~~ Spacious 4 bl•droom en· $55,900 life time bargain. Home -~- 64 (). 6161 2 OFFERED C. F. Colesworthv COST A MESA REA~1'._~R_s 6~0_-0_01_10 ~ c•u. v\ •n• • '••• t11'•"'•'f t>• "'•\Uf ' ... \ 1.J "' 11~ )' HE:\l :I'Y SAN CLEMENTE MOTEL tertaJnmcnl homt> walh Lovely 3 yr old Mesa is'loaded with personah OCEANA SOUTH valley and night light Verde home. 3 BR, 2 BA ly + +. You musl see to IN v ie w , many unique w/cathedral ceili ngs. believe for this pnce. OCEANSIDE custom features. 5-acrc patio kit & corner lol. Hurry owner must go. COM PL ET ELY COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. Lennis :md ·Swim club Low maint. yard w/lge Take advantage. Call furnished. professionally plus your own pool Pnrc patio & fruit trees. Call 540·2313· decorated model! ($4,000-----JUSt $117,000 . wh1ch in us for compl details. ()P(NIUQdl~IUNICIRINlf'I' inventory) 2BR, ll·~BA _________ _ cludes land. Call 546·:>880 singl e s tory condo. Eat ·d J I blJ.8550. Enclosed garage. Patao. s SI e ewe ~HERITAGE Ol'f,.,.,9 .,,HvNroArr-1, r• wath wrought fence & lntnguing 2 bedroom + gate. Adult (over 40) dining rm , built l1kC' ---------•I community.po o I . Gibraltar!! For young or Selling anything walh Daily Pilot Class1f1ed Ad -is a ·sample matter ••. JUSt call 642·5678 • • REALTORS ---------•! YOUNG CONDO Jacuzzi. clubhouse. Nr. retired. For appt. call I 0 d El Camino Plaza shop- NEW LISTING Sea Wind Condo, Npt. Beach. 2 Bdrms .. 2 bath s; upgraded carpels. draperies : washer1dryer. Ne,·e lived in. Spacious & air) corner unit. $57,500 H LDE C M pmg center. Walk-to bus 4-00U~~• FOR AU This spacious 2·story, 2 lane. 30 min . to San C.M.·--HE.&S BR condo has the woodsy D s 3 2 5 o o -.• · -= • ·.a. f I f I e g 0 . • sr . . --ee mg o a mountain COM p LET E. B YI ~!-!•~·:E·!!!•!!~ glen. yet it Is only 2 OWNER 548-3036 ii.; blocks from the ocean! ----------1 _____ ---- 673-3663 642·2253 Eve associated BROKERS-REA l TORS 201S W Balboa b 1 l )HI Priced right at $74,500. Call us now! COMPANY R ~:AI.TO HS S INCE 1944 673-4400 MINI RANCH $36,500 3 BR-GI HO DOWH Tree lined approach. Massive 23' Living room. Formal dining room. Large country kitchen. Huge grounds with cov cred dance pavilion to FEE LOT 63x 115 1530 Serenade Terr. Irvine Terr. 573,9\15 across from Irvine C.C. 2 Bed rm, 2 bath Needs some paint & yrtl work. Price is firm QUINTARD 642·2991 or your Heal tor ---- entertain or just roam.i---------· SPACIOUS& -------•1 Separa t e wing fo r $27 500 GRACIOUS "•BA ..... DO ..... ED" hideaw ay master & , "" ,... ,... childrens suites. First to DUPLEX 4 + POOL BEACH CLASSIC c a I I g e t s t h i s Exclusive Mesa North Owners have packed-up SACRIFlc.;E BARGAIN! Older home converted to locallon. Tot al front and moved out! They Call 963·7881. 3 BR & 1 BR units. l>n vacy with gated entry have vacated this 4 year ONN '" 9 ·" ~ ru"' 10~1 N•rr-. Professionally zoned lot and sun·filled pool on young beauty and have ! • 50xl59 in the heart of grounds in front. Par· put a "sell-it·qu1ck" ., County act1v1ty. Nec>d~ quetentry. Sunken living price on it! Child-safe some fix 'an but look at room . 4 Spacious cul-de-sac! Executive the pnce-$27,500. Call bedrooms. Dining area. en l r y to soar in g ~========~J 962-77il. story mammoth recrea-ankle deep carpet . II Sweeping stairs to 2nd cathedral ceilings. lush JJ • hon room. New carpets, squeaky clean paint. sun· _' '· , _. _• paint, paper lhru·out. shine kitchen with walls ~-_ be t yet! Assume $43.000 of glass• Party.patio and VA loan. Minimum expansive rear yard' ------ down. No·qualifymg. No T 0 a s t . y 0 u r. t 0 es new loan costs. Owner fireplace! Sweeping bought another. Must master bedroom retreat sell fast. Bargain priced. with separate dressing Calltoday.842·2535. . area! 2 Ch1ldrens rum oPfNr•t'l ·H~•vNIOllfN'rr• pus sized bdrms! Bail , .. ~ ~1.9501 or assu 5 me exist· Pric• Reduced • 4714 CORTLAND DR. i--------• toS83.SOO Choice Cameo Highlands 4 bedroom home or 3 & den with private beach. Jn beautiful condilaon- ready for quick move-m. "BIRD STREET" 3 Bedrooms, 2 bath. neat, clean. sharp home on Crane Circle. Full price S45,500. 3-Bedroom $39,900 /\ssumablc lo:in:-., ont> <Jvail1.1ble at 10''<· do\\n, thl' other VA or FHA. Treelint>d streets, large yards, boat or trailer ac· Cl':-.~. l'asy terms. For an appointment to l>Ce these and other newly listed properties call for an ap po1nlmenl now l"Quail ~ liilPlac• . Prap•rti•• I 7Sl•1920 1400 OUAIL ST. HlW..0.T HACH SUPER BUY OML Y S25,500 Low, low down lo V<·ts or otht•r:. Great area of II B This fantastic 2 bd, I 1 ~ bu townhouse could be you r starter or retire· mcnl home :'>45·9491. MESA VERDE Just Listed POOL HOME $59.950 Beautiful 18x36 pool, boat and trailer access, two fireplaces. patio doors from bedrooms, masonry fence, and lots more 1n this lovely 3 bedroom, family home Please t all for appomt ment l"Quail l liiiiillPlac• . Praperti•• • 7S2-1920 1400 OUAll Sf. NlWl'OltT lllACH is a good day to advertise in the Dally Pilot Classified Section. !~ ~ himoulataconservatave • 1ng oan at 25 1 per ==~_..;_;....;::_1 mon~h ! Act fast, we need HELP! Call 847·6010. Classified ads sell big QP!N r11 9 .,151vNrowNirr• items, small items or any l ~ item. Just call ~-5678. t&f: MOW IS T-HE-Tl_M_E_ .,.'1';:i OPJ::N DAILY 1·5 COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. Coast Hwy. 675-5511 • ~i,.\tf; RUSTIC CHARMER ANYTIME $38. 750 1----------•I Eucalyptus tree shaded for job seekers to check ~-============= CORONA DEL MAR the Daily Pilot Help INVESTMENT Wanted classafacation. H TIU·LEVEL/POOL PROPERTY COSTA MESA .~~=r!oybo~~Jg~~~~~i~:: Huntington Be a c h Multiple unit in the heart CHARMER OHL Y I offering your services Pacific Sands. Pool ofCoronadelMar.Justa $42,500 chalet. Un i que Townhouse des ign by architect/owner Aban· doned-must sacrifice. Call 645-0303 FOREST OLSON INC ••111•1 with an ad in the J ob H ome b Y De an e block from the beach. 3 Massive bedrooms. 642-5678 Wanted category. Phone Brothers. This lovely 31 One of the_ most unusual Super clean famaly home 1---------• 642.5678 bedrm, 3 bath home of-properties on the with large country OCEAM fers comfort an la ving. market. On an R3, over-kitchen. Huge double SllK & FIND. HAWAIIAN ISLANDS A L A 0 U N A N A L 0 I D 0 I L 0 M N L M 0 A A U L U L 0 N 0 H A W A H I 0 0 H A K A U A 0 N I N N U I A I ~ l J A 0 A H I 0 A B N L U H H 'N H I L 0 A L A I C H 0 A N 0 A M·U MAL A IC H 0 0 KR 0 L·U A·O H HK A l EA KA P AP AN L' U H 0 N 0 W W U N E U E H 0 H A W I A W I C L A I K 0 A H l L H S L 0 N A M 0 0 H H I J C H 0 L U E 0 I H A 0 H I N N L N N A 0 C 0 A O'l CKAIOA MUHLUKH HI M N H I A H U L 0 N A H M E W N A N R.C .K ~ E DA N E C K K E R A H I N K •.....a-· n.11 ...................... ,,., ......... c .......... -. • .._,.., 1i.c-1l1 la.._,....,._. •ell ~ ....... --HI ... II la H •"9-1 :; Hawa11 Kaula Necker • Kapa pa Lana 1 NI 1hau ~ooltwe Maui Nthoa ka~a1 Molokaf Oahu Tomorrow: Ho~ay lnjor 1udl ler1er "8.;k 6 Plnd" punltt with nvtr 60 ~rift,,., S*'•l In '" •ll·MW ••* ~ u.,.., boolaleu. To Of'ltw "°'1111111 I, II and UI . ..,,.. 11 lbr tech. m&kln1 chKILa ,.,. ... to "8"11 6 ,Ind" In ttM Of thi. fttwl!Ml»f , I ed I t H P 1 2 Block · best rental Formal dining room. saz o · as a!' exce · garage. Assumable tow Large family rm w/wet t1onally good income, interest loan. Pri ced area Deluxe duplex. J d d bel e e l·t can be BR , 2 baths + 2 BR .. 11"2 bar overlooks pool an a n we 1 v below market at $42,500. terraced yard . Compl 1mprov~. ~t;'re excited CallS46·7l71today. ba~hs Frplc. each un1l landscpd front a nd rear. about this hs tmg. Call us Ont~'" 9 . '' iu"' •l ~1" '' $113,000' Workshop and storage and let us give ycu more [ i Balboa Bay Prop. cubinests in oversized 2 in for m a t 1 on· C a 11 ~ Realtors car garage. Blocks to 673-8550. * 675-7060 • ocean. Offered at $13,500. CJPfN "19 ·" ~ ruN m~r N.rf' i---------ffi ~~S [•IRtdff I ~~! .......... !~~~ ·-~-.~-.. -~-~!-.. -.-.. -.. -.-.. -~~-~-.~ USS W. laker N .. t to Morttet la•k•t 549-8655 Charmine) Spaniah Stvl• HOIM ..._ .......... _ ..... , Enter through lhe ,. wrought Iron gates in C~Pmil POOLHOMI Beautiful 3 bedrm. 2 ba com er home. Compl with large family room, fireplace, oversized kitchen and very pnvate 'POOi area. Vacunl, ready lor your lnspcclaon. JUJl listed. Hurry! I Priced o nly $53,000. Call 546-$880. .-~~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS the ceramic tile entry. The decor ls In warm earth tones. New• paint, new carpe~. wallpaper . 4 Bedrooms, eictra 11 ramlly rm, 15x30 covet' patio. Frull lrees. ho me with love. Offer at u 10..-$64,900. ~LI PERB HOME 1SUW.laker Neat to Morfilet lalket 5•9-8655 macnab I Irvine realty CORONA Da MAl DUPLEX Darling 2 bedroom w/fireplace. lg. .kitchen w /brkfs t. area & patio. Also l bedroom separate apt. w /s mall yard & patio. 2·car J{arage. Just a few blocks to beach. $84,500. Mary Lou Marion 642·8235 CS68>. • A BERG ENTERPRISES CO. C h oice l ocation El Camino Real near fr eeway. l :! unit s. MESA VERDE WITH *Cozy Cottage• SJS.S.ooo. u BAY & C>CE/\!'f stcpi. CAMPER SPACE and then some. /\ well maintain e d J BR paces!.'tler on a corner \\Ith 2 BOAT G.\TES and a 19"50 + parking slab ror camper, boat. motor home. etc. :-.ow being used for a rnllcy ball court. Plus ..1 '-llable rl'ar yard in aJtl1taon. C<J II 6+t-72ll awuy. Newly remodeled SAN DIEGO 1 BR /ct l' n . S82 ,500 A.REA MOTfL TEHMStTHADE 34 great units plus 3 br. HAL PINCHIN owner apt. 3 acres for RJ::AL TOR~ growth. $100,000 plus gr. tiiS 4392 SALESMEN o r BR OK E RS, s h a re off t ce .. ~.-C=-::-:-::--:-:-:::-:":'":'I & receive 72•,.so·~.90·; ~ ALL NOW comm .. it's the way to ~""-. 752 7315 ~o Call Sam or Gene._._. ... ~~-~~ PILOT REAL EST/\TJ::, 540·0555 OONALDM. BIRD S©RJU1A-LG£trs 8 That Intriguing W orcl Game with a Chuckle O Reorronoe leffen of rite lour 1<rombled _.,,d• be. low to fo.,,. four .,,..pl<! wo<ds I RAGC IL l I !2 I I I I ~ABEK I ' _ I I I' I . I M E E Y N I u Mixed emotions is hearing " 1$ I I I . . your reenager, who hlls never wo1ked 11 day •n his life. lell I I you aboul 1i'le -of the sun. ,__~L_O._W~H_Y_..;L~-1 , l 1 I I I I I~ C) Complete the chYC~le ouoted . . . _ _ _ . br 1.11,nq '" •he ""u.no ...,,d __ _.___. __ ..._~ V"" develop """' •~ No. 3 belOw e P~··;T NUMBfn O lETIER~ IN I l>•E SE SOUA PES 6 UNSCR,t,MalE ABOVE ll TIU~ 10 GEi ANSWU I I I SCRAM-LETS Answ..-s in Classificati0tt 8080 I GeMt"GI I 002 Getteral I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rt~ALTOKS 644-7270 • SJ0,000 DOWN BUYS THIS LARGE COLONIAL HOME in DOVER SHORES for the bi g family that likes to entertain. 7 Bedrooms, 6 baths. family r oom, large billiard room with wet bar. Master suite has HIS AND HER baths + a steam bath. Gym. Private study. 2828 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mor p , ... ........ .. '" .. '*-., ( .. .,,, ... '" 1111. •• , .... A•,-,UU I• I• •All .. TEN UNIT 10 UNIT OFFICE & APARTMENT BUILDING . Prime loca- tion Coast Hwy. Laguna. No vacancies. Xlnt invcst-- ment. $215,000. LUXUR I OUS CON - DOMINIUM in old village. Near town. beach. Two spacious bedrooms. 2112 baths. Separate dmmg room. Dream kitchen. Great View. Very private. THIS WON 'T W/\JT $85,000 . OCEANSIDE VILLI\ South Laguna. Charmine house and guest houM'- Very Large lot. Steps to private Beach. Owner finance. $106,000 OCEANFRONT -l.4 acres spectacular view property 5 rental uniL<1. Tremendous developmt>nl potential. $375,000. LAGUNA CHAR\f 3 bedroom home. Cliff Drive with lari;ee lot qual.Jfied for 2 additional unJts. $106,000. LAGUNA RENTALS Our office offers a com· plete residential and com- merci a I rental service. LHder in Laauna rentals since 1946 , J 8 J2 OAILY PILOT HOKHI Fo! Sde • Honn For s. lHOUSH For s• a.come ,,.,,.rty 2000 ....... U•fwtlllsllllld ....... U11fw ...... d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '".... l 044 Mtwport leach I 06' M.wport leoc• f 06' MuJU tenant 1ndustrtaJ • C..te W... 3224 I luJU11gt011 leec .. 32.40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• office bldg Orao1e Co ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••··~:.!••• S IR-$6 I 900 Alrpott LoCat.ion Prln FOR LEASE 3BR 2 BA FY~c. a br, 2 t>a, tnd'n.9 ed UNI•. PARK CJ l /) onty.5'9-1480. . . Lrt. lncd. yard. ~/~ ::.l~~~ :.rp9t9•{4~:: / NO QUALJFYING ~EAR 0 C C Pool! Gorgtous s bedroom, __)'Pee acU{al' UOMS ESTATES G3J .l.830 963·1786 • • L..oan A!l-.umpllun ,... • • • like T le h •tory' Pn me cul·~e-s!l 8ullder/8roker telUl\I BeauUtul S.BR, Z.ba Coo· No Rental Fee Tuesday, January 27. 1976 Ho.tlH For Sale Hom.a For S. Houses Fw Sc* ···••••···•·····•······ ............................................. . Gf'Mf'Ot I 002 Coata MH a I 024 Hunt1D9on leach I 040 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ONt-; OI" A fdNU 3BR. 0 ac locution. 2 .Patios. Tai Ba ''U Ill pA>pcrty 3 To 11 unlta In do. All xtra, pool. clllb-Village 1\eal E1tate J lir, 2 liu, corner lot 2UA lur.i,: 111 F pool , cor Unbelie•ab.. ~ntry MasMve red bnck • I I I prime areH in Hunl· hae. $325/mo. 845.3717 ' Mill\'rOr Tu~tan ner lot with boat !(ate, "Shor:el·rcst " 2 s lory, firep lace, gourme u teW••• lniton Beach New & 2Story.1.!Plc, 4 BR~BA, SM!.~. gu:s bllni., f1rcpla<'c, Ira gorgeous In detail, ru11 of kit c h en with garde " near new · Sharp, new decor. 3 BR, 2 ow . ~5/mo. 569 * <1dded Cam1ly room. Only ufc & color. Ne<ar bike view. II1dt'away ma~te 536-2 it St Ba. pool. No pela. $395. 963-1786. No renlal ee. J Br, l Bu, n •111114.l,•lt•tl kit, $.'Jiti.900 Call PHBSTIGE trails. not rur from the on iround level. W1nd1ng Spacious family bayfront. Pier & slip 5 2·50 I 0 first, last & cleaoloj Village Real Estate., onMoran/W,·:-.tmSJ9,900.!_l~MES,64~664G beach.t;ntryhulltostep· ll~1rcase t o 4 huge for largeboat.48R,41h ba.,dlningrm. n es.a.•ES d4p.S48·8797 • -----1 down living room over bedrooms. Separat &fam. rm. 50 fo't . lot, VtaLlaoNord -""' lrYm 1244 2 Br. I Ba , lg • .1 a<'re ('lg 999 lcKikcd by meandering laundry room Perfect IEDUCED FOR ACTION! $375,000 START THE Elsl$1do 4 br, l~ ba, $38S ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOHSl-:S, t.-:lholtS A. .,.., , • staircase. Unght modern b 1 g fa mi I Y home NEW YEAR per mo. 1st, last + $100. BEAUT. San Joaquin $42,9'.)ll Roomy 4 bdrm + 2-bath kitchen & full dining SELLER ANXIOUS! LIDO REALTY 8krS44Hl814 Twnbn\e Large 2 Bt, 2~ * home w /2 car garage. room overlook the pool. Hurry, call now. 752·1700. RIGHT! s. A. u .. hta 3 BR, 1~ ba, Ba, 2 sty. View ot 1oU :J Hr, 2 llli, Sharpes t Choice corner location· Xtra big family room <.>PtN"•9 ·"\'0"''0 MN•i• 3 l 77YlaUdo,H.I. 673-7300 StllHonMS lplc,·$3so. mb. 1st, tast course & lake. $$50.: tiorne on Stella, Anah Veler~.111s welcome. Low with a fireplace an rock & I'• ~ Leant lnn1t1Mftfs +$100. Bkr546--0814 547-7044 l SSJ,900. down & l,ow monthly. s urrounded by wood · ' ...,. More S39 1710 ~xclus1vc Will not last. pnnehng. Olant muster ' · LGCJUfta a.ach I 048 Hewporl leach I 069 Lux Dplx 3 Br 2~ Ba, Din Univ Park Terrace a Br 2 Pl~a!le <'ull . suite with u full wt•ll or . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• <?ur residenthal division Rni. frplc. pvt yd. dbl Ba Twnh.se. frplc,' $360. 1 540-3666 clo~ets. 2~~ buths. Owner Oy owner Deerfield 2· llARBORVIEW ~~,::n~ ;:~::erti:~~h~n~ ...:g;...a_r.;.., $4;.__2S_._637_·_709_l_a_ft_6_,_552_·7_S96_&_586-_8-9-55--.,....'-.... anxious for sale. ca.II to sty 3 Br iY.i ba fam.'rm OCEAN VIEW PORTO FINO most investment ofClces. Mesa... Vecde Pool House Turtlerock 3 BR. 2 '}a. 1 • POOL TABLE day,J3KR,S42 t18S4 . lHOO ioq.'lt. (;()1;,m pool: Jhgh on a hillside: 3 $99,000owner644-2839 Per s~nal Training! (~rentorlease,3bd,2~ blk to pool. $440, mo. J Can be .H·tomnwd.1tcl1 in Unaque pallo/sundck. bdrms .. 2 bathrooms; Pres.t1.g~ Otc\ces, Ful ~. $500. mo., incl pool lease. 646·11MM> .. the s u!)\.·r Jgc to'H 111 th1!> TARllLL Prine. only. S61,950. nearly new! Open beam WATERFRONT Fac1l1t1es, Property ma'"l.,640·4737. * R:ENTALS • 1 ""'" 4027 <'Cil's., fenced yard with p b Pl F · ... , Lmmac & 11fo.11ly luc:.it ,,_,. . urc ase an, rmae 1----'-------,'() home With tovcl> tk A "Hou:.e-sold"namc ---------1 cedar decking. A buy at West Newport. 2AOO sq Benefits, Superior Com-4BR. 3ba, F/R. frplc, len-UNIVERSJTY PARK ,0r&fastldtous~ardens, "#linCallfornia" SPACIOUS S69T~HERASSOC. rt home on the wuler. mission, D y namic nis,pool,gardener,$400. 4BR,2YJba,furn ..• $500 1 h1~ h~lln~ with GI termi. 1----------i SHORT TER-M LE •se 2 BR 1 tud E . Pier & sll~. ~t. cond.. Organization, Learning 640-0008 3 BR, ram rm, 2 ba .. $4.50 -.h o uld go immt>d . C OLLEGE PARK "" ·pus 5 y. nJOY 1105N.Cst,Laguna J.lrg bdrms, 3·baths, 2· Environment, Full Ume THETERRACE 1...i6 77ll. ~1et· J l>drm., 2 bath LE.ASE OPTION rarks, ~1j· Jacbuz~~!1n&d 494· I I 77 frplcs Priced to sell rast. licensees who will work JdBbRI twnbse.$P3oo251. Encl. 3 BR, 2 Ba ...... $420/435 lam1ly home: corner tot PURCHASE enms. a c ose y. al:. ----------1 $129,000. Xlnt terms. for earnings in excess or gar. · mo. TURTLE ROCK TERR. Uftert.'dat$49,750 RENT Iler garages . Only L09"'aHllls 1050 $10,000.down,ownerwill $25,000 per year are en· 549·3S98or540-1722 4BR,4Ba,Poolmaint& ., Vacant roomy 4 BR, 3 Ba $.57,500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• carry. 7' 2'lr 1st TD may cou:aged ~ apply for a Back Bay Condo, 4 Br. 3 gardener paid I 833·2906 1n c lud1 n ~ IN -LAW LE RAISOR Town home. 3 bd, 2 ba, be assumed·Hurry. Call position with ou~ Jnv~st· Ba, new cpts, drps, ., ................ $1000 UjflfV!tA~INASSOCIA~~ QUARTERS . Formal Central air & heat. ~~~J'JGE HOMES, m.en.ts. or Residential paint.$42Smo.545.2241 DEERFIELD Wflli _ 1l li4ii o · ( I REALTY $39,900 . Prrn only. D1 v1s1ons. Call Don 2BR,2'h Ba ........ $350 • • t:LI-~G ANT Alway• ining, ami y room. 645 2957 co,. 9865 l ---+------Berm a P s 'd t M V rd 3B I FR 3BR 2 B .,,...., ., t l R d r ·· or...,.,. app s WESTCLIFF n, re 1 en . esa e e r, ge , • a .......... ~ ll'llll·d It\\' unit~. II H .. ---------~ qwe stree · ca Y or 4523Campus Or . Irvine only. Q U AIL PL AC E bled back yd, $350 mo. WALNUT SQUARE 5 1ilol·ks to hl•at h, 2 )rs occupancy. Campus ValleyShopCLr. L i I 1052 4 bd, 3 ba. faro.rm .. crt PROPERTIES, INC. 752·8ml 2BR,2Ba ........... $32S , o u n ~. S 1-1 5 . u o u. REPOSSESSION $76,000. CALL 813-8600 aguna H gue yd entry, hvy shk roof. 752·1920. GREENTREE H o W A H l> JI • I Ur. s.15.000 Lo dn. Agt. Call 644·7211 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Agt, 646·1456. $89,500. ---------Nice 3 BR, 2 BA, Costa 2 BR, 1 Ba ........... $340 • 1 /.i\liHODZKY, Hc altor. l'~ti 3013 . 546·7739 --1---------•2-BEDROOM. 2·balh Con· 14 unit apt bldg, in Dana Mesa hom e. Quiet st. Rancho SanJoaquin l~t!6lt V•/fH•ou , • BEAUTIFUL VIEW do. Immediate occupan $5 000 pt, 1 yr old. 2 blks bch. Close to Schools. Call 2eR 2 Ba $550 "" A "' t • ... of the atrium from the cy. i\IC, refng. Close to 1 Oen vu. 493-5616. Aldine, 546·5880 2 BR: 2 ba: d~~ $460i5oo ' C«onodelMor 1022 295 8Croftdon ~ b h & tr o I REDUCTIO~ ETCLUP. 1 _ masler swte.3Bdrms .. 2 eac go · n Y " OCEANVIEW. 6 un its3 BR family rm pool RACQU • ·•••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR. added family rm, ------b ths · k. h ou 1 900 o •·-h h ' • • 3 BR 2 B •A"" 1 a . spacious 1tc en ;n • wncr .... ug l new ome, H.B. priced to sell at encl. garage, frpls. $375. , a.········· -~'Al lJuplu Pnn· rcdUl'l•d t1 v.it10, 2 haths, ('ompl re BUILDERS and family room with , BOND REALTY will help f1nunce . See Sll0,000 prin only After6,646.5911 NEWPORT BEACH j 579,800. Coron:.. tll'I Mar f~rbi shed in and out PRE-COHSTR. SALE Solanan·floor. An excit· 8 3 1-9411 anytime. Beautifully UP· 752·8710 eves & wknds 3BR,2Ba ........... $37S For salc ln 11\\0l'r i-;, l::lecgaropener.$-12,000 32·l Bedroom homes in ing home with a little graded Baycrest pool 752.8595 Deluxetriplex.3Br.2ba, 4BR,2~Ba ........ ~. tl'llent nm~I S1•c owrll'r Pr1n l'. onl y . Call II t n h, somelhmg extra to use home; 3 bdrms., formal R.E.INVESTMENT frp lc, bllns, ds hwhr. I l 42"'. I . ·k ''dM 548·7711 alter6 644·0ll72 untini:: on c ur 2 la N' 1 • ..,. .1 v ~ ~~1 .. "pur, .... • · . Blocks to O('ean Now as you choose. Covered guna 1gue d 1 n 1 n g . j a c u z z 1. CONSULTANTS patio. No pets. 549·0812 552•7500 "rNll V.M 73.!l> _ [<i> -~?! 4 ~ t.ikmg homcsit c re~cna pallo. Super landscaping he cho' . EVERYTHING' ----------1 after5631·201B to·ourpll.'\ Pr H l' n•duced ;~U't' lions .ind spnnklers. S67.500 t ice community LE RAISOR OCEAN VU UNITS E·SIDE 2 br, wooded d h' I I lo SHil :100 Cnronj dcl JDm LIONS ESTATES ;P~Cl ~L~YR 8 Jy1~:: ~AGUHA BEAC~ cabin with fenced yard. re I \J ar f or -.Jll' I>} owner 536-2579 <213 1592-5010 552-7500 New c us tom built 3 REALTY This near new office $195. mo. 548·6680 t-~i.nlll·nt tond. See~ ESA \'ER DE 3. BR.·--------· bldg. has a spectacular ---------Bdrm home, very c th L 11wnerat4211'~Larkspur, fam. 2 ba. 2·car gar d h'll pnvate and on a bluff. 452.JCampusDr.,lrvme view o e aguna l8R,yd,utilpd$18S 1·dM11r c.il1&14 7326. S47.9SO T1:.idesOK . LARGE'.'·'· re I situated on .,'2 acre With Campus Valley Shop Ctr. coastline . Fully asr-2B R duplx. Cncd yd, 1 •AND .. CALL 833-8600 cond .. with on-site park· frplc, garage, $235. CHARMING DUPLEX 5 BH North Mesa. onh Corner lot w1lh lots of reellt.y fantastic ocean "iew ing. Asking only $160,000 2BR condo. yd, gar S295 :558.750 t\ b<'auty. Trad~· frwt trcl's, lu,·cly Sol Vis ~· Sl39,950. ARST TIME . this property can't be 3BR yd, children ok $275 O K PILOT RE \L ta ho me \\Ith an ex LagunaNiguelRealty duplicated under exist-3BR,fncd~d.frplc,pool A ... <'Ute :..-. a bu~. thil> • · . r eel le nt floor plJ11 ·' 83n5050 496-4040 OH MARKET · · o h I I h b ESTATE 540 0555 .. v-mg zoning. wner as $395. t111a111t <up ex as e.im . . n~droon~"'. "ith an 1"". 18 '-.--------•I One of a kind Westcliff ds . I uo: ·~ " o.-•• moved North, nee 1m-HOMEFINDERS ',., in ,;:. knotty pine ~lesa Verde By Owner . panelled bonus room in L-a a-ac h 0 8 home with custom addi-med sale' 642 9900 "'•d i:.. "'ood burning p 1 4 bd 2 b hm ,, d ,. --:.--· uc I 4 lion mcl formal DR. 2 · · · 1 r •pl . , .i d . oo . . a e garage ... ovt"re l at10. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Realonomics, Corp. 1 l J l c n i.unn ~ f ormdmrm. Cam .rm. neareverythmgandonly ---------frplcs.lovelypool&lge ••675-6700•• Mesa Verde 4br, 2ba, 2 patio l'ocar Carnation S77 500. 549.2072. · S49 ooo. •OCEANFRONT• Newport Beach I 069 FR, that will accom · ----------• car gar, patio. $490 mo. park & bcdl'h. ' l',Rl£ , Rare al $199,500. By ....................... modate pool table. Never TRl-PLEX 540-4734 $86,0 00. ~1ESA VERDE West, for 11Uwf!.{:J1mPIJiflJlg owner. 752·1171/499-4384. DUPLEX w /SLIP been on the market. One Neat, clean 2 BR Duplex ---.------.- With pm .ilc assumable sale by owner. Open llse 962·4471(~m)546·8103 CONDOMINIUM Bill Carroll 640·5560 owner, prid e or PLUS 2 BR. l'h Ba hom e East Side 3 Br, l Ba. dtn loan. Sal & Sun l ·SPtd. 1865 Has tings &Co. Realtor. ownersh ip. 646-771 l. on large lol. Well main· rm, frplc, huge yd, $395. Call&14 n 11 Rhodes Dr. CM . 4 Hr, LIVIMG Open Eves. tained. Jn xlnt rental aft6,646·1514 Den, 3 Ba . 3 frplc 's . RARE 2 Br Beauty. AT ITS BEST! 1111 0 game room.+ huge Sccludcd 3 •~yr old.l'UI area. wn er may oanaPoint 1226 F:.im . Rm. w wd ba r de sac s-1 6.500. Owner CHREICVKIETR~ESE . . . finanSc0e.UATsHkicng0$5AS9T.ooo. ••••••••••••••••••p•••I •• Walk lo schools Prine 581 2306. "" Close lo Dana o nt Only S95.000 Owner will -EXCLUSIVES INVESTMENT Manna, 3 br, 2 ba, $285. hclpf1nanl'e 979·3!W9 I Br 3 Ba . 3 car g:.i r, 3000 3 Bdrms .. 2 baths. Xlnt ____ 54_9_·08_12 ___ -1 mo. lease. (714)493-8879 s q fl . huge lol. brJat locatton. close to shop· BREN SPYGLASS ~on· S·UNITS -Good Costa Fount · Vall 3234 .. • I 0 realty ~ UNIV Pk Terr. 2 Br, Cf'R, frplc, patios, pool, eib· lease 5 mos. $350. fl'h: 552·3016 • RENTALS • 2BR, 1Ba ..•••••••• ks 2BR,2Ba .•.....•••. Es 2 BR, 2 Ba. (furn) .. 00 2 BR, den, 2 ba • • • • . . 2S 3 BR, 2 Ba .••••.. $45q/500 3 BR, 2V2 Ba ••• $4251' 100 4 BR, 21h Ba ......... ,$500, LE RAISOR • REALTY 4523 Campus Dr .. Irvine Campus Valley Shop Ctr ,,. CALL8l3-8600 Weltone&Company .. ' .. ~ ' 3 Ill ' storage A beJut hou:.c pang&beach.$59,soo tego ·Top locat1on, M a Jocat'on ALL .2 aen ey b f . 4 es 1 • • •••••• • • • •• ••• ••••••• •• •----------Fountain Va lley 1034 ) o wner. S8 2 .500. MEWLISTIMG! orever v i ew. · bedrm w/encld gar. All University Parknew2bd, • I DUPLEXES ••••••••••••••••••••••• 968_7_44_4 ______ Big ocean view. Lge. 1· Bedroom, 2·bath, cozy pnv. yards. YEAGER 4Br2Ba,fncdbkyd,very 2 ba, frplc, Cncd yd., -;-11 IRIS. 2·2 BR + guest JACKIE 0 . 6 BLOCKS TO BE •cH bdrm., with many extras Harbor View Homes frplc. Near pool & rec REALTY 556·6171 clean. Childre n & pets crpts, drps, pool. teruus, J ~1-1 .!'MIO A mcl. elevator. $47 ,500 PHASE Ill area ... i92.ooo. 1 OK. S375. 581·4852 Avail. 3/1/76. $495. mo .. Would t!O\Y your .Plfl 4 -I Br . + Pool + SOMERSET PLAN /? (}/ ~ lots for scae 2200 llll.i I' 1-;R:-.:LEAF'. 2 D + b drm h o m c. Yo ur Jacuzzi 's pa. lluge gar 2 Bdrms. 2 baths. Beaut. 5-BR 3-ba, fam rm, wet -.I// Y ett// ~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Huntinc)tOft leach 3240 714-640-0476 before 9am. · 1 l ,xlnt cond S82.000. superior neighborhood \\iboat gate.$63,900.C:all garden setting. Close to bar. Profess1onally REAL ESTATE 644·6397 Choice R -1 lot, 2 10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _or_S5_l_·l_O_l2_. ____ _ \\here your l'hildren CK 968·5403 everythmg.$52,500 landscaped&decorated. Magn olia St, C .M . VACA.MT Univ. Pk.gardenhome.3 l"4' I (_...,,, Hol!.hw.n • lorrni.1 clrl ~.11 '" <. 1111111 VIEW IRVIHE TERRACE F ronL R ow C us tom I lome on Dolphin Tt>r· ra<'e w 4 BR, seclurlt>d "w1mming pool . newly 1 emodeled kitchen and l'ANORAMIC, NIGIIT l.IGllT, BAY . OCEAN & ISLAND VIEWS TRADE for other re-..dence. in • o mc pro perty Roll'> floyce, Bcnllry o r .,., !--ELI. S 199,500. fee. CJll &I I i211 CORONA HLDS. 'OU ('.In Still !.l'(' the r ;it lie i::ra z1n J.! from lh1-. 111\t.'d & ll\ed tn home ~I f\d rrns . filled v.1th ~ood lhlnJ!' Only S79.51JO University Realty thru 8th I h:n e a short & ------Vacant. Beautiful home. NPT HGTS/ 50x125' Asking $22,500. 3 BR, huge corner l~t. all Br. 21r.z ba, tennis. pool safe walk to their school BIG OLE BEACH Large I· bdrm. on ground OPEN SAT./SUN. 10·5 OCEAN VIEW By owner Saunderson bltns, newly painted jacuzzi. $425. 644·4157 As )OU e nJ OY your Home. 4 Bedrm. 2 bath, lloor. with patio area. ZJOlPORT LERWJCK Lg 4br, pool. $98,500. By days 642~0212, night~ iside/out. Cov patio, i privacy, yko u ~ill be added de n with huge $36,900 673•7601 owner.548·5556. 546-2277. sKh~rp. $350F ./mo. A 250 sk for lacJunaleach ~ 48 ~ecure 10 nowang you fplc , lgc kitchen & big -...----------1 e1thor aye,960-1or •••••••••••••••••• ...... ••• have an outstanding in din. rm . Bltns , t•pts. Ocean v·iew 2 Bdrms 1 anythne Beftauhtoifmuel CoonloGnioalfl 3600courssqe. By Owner, Res. Lot in 962-4471 Brkr RENTALS •2 H~slment. Deep lof on alley Ocean · · ·• . · Laguna Beach, Cyn .i----------1 -. bath , with lge. view . m Santa Ana Hts. $82,000. Ocean Vi'ew. $29,500. HUGE LAGUNA BEACH $49 900 view fr o m ups tairs. deck. Priced right at For .Hi g Canyon pro· B O 640 4082 S lin 4 BDRM & • Zoned ror 5 units. 7 ~A2 500 pert1es, Call Big Canyon Y wner. · 494-2905 Prestige 2 story 4 bedrm, FpArMaw ., gM h L. 18709 San Antonio St Bl k t ~. 9 00 "" • R It DA• 1193 San Cl t I 076 for al d' . g 2',_ . n . ome. ge. By owner.Callforappt. Bk~<·~~:~t·an . ..,.t ,5 · ea y . .,...... ••••••~•~•~••••••••••Mowitain,DeHrt, ba~.up~~~~ed~~oul~ sundeck W /OCEAN 642·8584or 968-53t9 mfi~fiG:lts~ DUPLEX i Rnort 2400 2 Yrs old. Walk to ocean VlEW. Built·in kitchen, Open House Sat/Sun 1-5 BY Owner . P:irk Street 2 TIU@filll~~ 200 Ft. to West Newport's Look ng for a large ocean ••••••••••••••••••• •••• $ 4 5 0 I m o . i n c I d s dbl. garage. $400 mo. blksfromC1v1cC:enter 3 rv view Jot ? Ca ll us ~ • 2 BDRM. & RUM~US X-LARGE 499·2800 best beach! 4 BR. up, 2 Several to choose from OWMrScn:rif1ce! gardener. Ask for Keith RM. home. BuiJ(.in f.Oxl47 Lot enhances de· ~0~'1 5doe~~l~ ~'[.:,'~~~: -------·~0\\8'nooo. Only 3 yrs. old Sl7,500up. Large3 BR.2Bahome 962or 44F7alyBek960-2501 or kitchen, dbl. garage. s r b rt ii bd OCEANVlEW 3 Br 2 Ba, "J.! • ~ on Golf Course in Palm · r. Quiet residential sectlon. 1 a 1 1 v near new · 842 9970 or 536 4729 custom built. Reduced to CAYWOOD REALTY ANCHORAGE Desert area. Crpts, drps, . . ~~:keel ~~le ~au;:1~d~: ---L •GOO ... ---S71 ,900. -199· l 112 aft 5 hrs . * 548-1290 * INVESTMENTS bltns. $54900. 640-7914 Chardmedmg ~Br. Hh1gBhly up-fn85 ~oLaguna. 1 Bdrm. · • "" " 499·1188 ----------1 gra • pnme .. area. & old bn ck frplc. add TOWNHOUSE C714J 496-7711 Ranches, farms, $375 mo. Avail 2·1·76, apt. Located 1 blkJ aoove \\ .irmth & charm to Jge Lease/Option-NB Groves 2700 968··9518 or 962· 7788 Coast Hwy. Walk t.c:\S~OP· LR . custom cpts., drps . Harbour Area Close Lo beach. tennis. ping and beach. A11 )lt1I. hit in \a 1•., inter·com The !Jest of both hvcs-pool. 3Br. FR. open T~~LOSbElufEfSTATE ;:•••1•••1•f •l•f•••1•••d••••~1•1 Super 4 br, 2 ba. cpts, pd. byowner.$200Mo. FV lit & ne ar CH i t• 35 ft. dock + best loca· beams. atrium, sundcck. ..Aean view. .,.,.ve a a a an · wi drps , R /0, $345/mo. MISSION REA.LT¥ Center. Owner trans. out lion on Seagate Lagoon. Lse $450 mo. $.2000 opt 1806 Cahe Los Alamos. lease or sel~. best of 963·4569963·1786 98S S CstH L ·'- f d k C d m 0 n e Y. L' u 11 Pr 1 c c 836 3447 S95,000 terms or consider trade. No rental fee · wy • ag"",a o slate, nee s qu1 c ustom ecoratcd 4 BR, r PhOfte 494 073 t :.al<'. !.<'£' today. 546-1754 3·ba. Asking $92,500 $65 500 M-L 'I H Many ranches in ar ea. Village Real Estate • · · ! uul ~ omes Plenty of water. Call . . or968 3371. Waterfront Homes For SaJe 1100 anyti'me Bkr 546.57 10 3 Br Cam rm 2 ba frplc lmmed. Avail. Unfutn 2 - Half-Acre! Call 631-1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · · bit~. 2 car gar. f~cd yd'. Br. close to Hi Scttool. HI lls1de wonder. fa m . HEW LISTING--S3SOO Costa Mesa location Real Estate Kids ok. No fee. $325. mo. Secluded. $300. 497·19'0 rm , den. hobby rm.. <al $75 mo.). Lots of ex-Wanted 2900 1st Pioneer, 842-4421 La Ch &- . · REAL TY INC. game rm .. 3 BR & a Lovely 3 BR, 2 Ba .. home. tras. Cute Make offer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• gun~ armet 3 · L 714/846-1371 k 1 t c h e n you won' l close lo Harbor •111~h 1.n (714 ) 642·4780 Client wants 8 to 12 units, Beat lhe rush. Pool .home, Ba, 2 !Ill blks to ch, F 5 believe. 5175,000 super cond. Don t lel this unfurnis hed in West J br, 2 ba. 1~ miles to mo. 557-1989 or ,( l) ARTISTIC DESIGN 1---------i one. get away S69,000. Nearly new huge. <24x64), 0 .C.(J must be 2 br un· bch. $425. 962-4471 1_688 __ -7_538 _____ ...__ Prine. only . Agent 2bedroom,2batbin one 't )C·ll DonBake (213) Oc r t t 1 -BE,\CH HOUSE 549-0812 or 645·4203 of the count 's best ad1,1lt 1 s. a r · •4 BR, 2 BA. pool, w /pool ean ron re reat. ~e. l<JOI 1·: <'st I lw ~:l 6510 HIA'ttington Beach I 040 Cos to Mesa I 024 ••• • ••• •••••••••••••••• O ____ ------k F r1 . h 246-4110 or send Info to maint Walk to bch $975Mo. (w1llfurn.q,ge . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Bedroom $38,500 C04.lntry n' Trees 1 nlwl11•vable value' l#ots "' tn·l·~ for Jddt>d charm ,\ pra \ .iq Plenty of room rnr parkinl;( your ho.it or tr,111l'r l\entucky ~t~l 1n.:. L o t s of t h.i ratll'! 1 .1kt• adv a n t.11{1· & -.,1, l'. UK H, call :HO 1720. TARBELL "if I in California " Mt>sa Verde 4 RH, 3 ba. F, R & DI R. C:ho1re cor ~7 .500 Ownr 5-10·4484 EASTSIOE DREAM HOME YOU BE THE JUDGE of this Old fa~hwned, largP 4 bd rm ho m e, 2 full l>ath!i . Today only $49,000. H as Countr)' ktlchen with garden atrium t:xclu!i1ve Please call 540-3666 Byow .... ER ramati c e n try to WESTCLIFF par s. am1.y.roomw1t Baker Realty, 467 West Avail..now. $350. Cati 2BR,2Ba.,4(}ft.li.v.[m. n s pacious entertainment wet bar. dining room, Broadway Glendale & 2 charming studio In 91 52KapaaDr.H :B. room with ma ssive Lovely 4 BR, 2•2 Ba break~astbarand400sq. 91207 ' Ralph at847·6010. aparksetting,walle(iby Rnt time offered... fireplace. & vaulted cc1I-home in choice area of ft. l1V1ng room. A fully Su 3 BR 2 BA C ts b . k to ·v This beaut 2 slory, 3 bd, ings. Serret stairway Newport Beach Walk to I Cind i.c aped beauty B~lderwantslotswitho.r d~~. R /O s2 s si!o'. Ar;f494.7J:1cure pn ,cy. 2 1 ~ b a . bea c h h me leads to art 1st 's stud 10 or all schools. and WestcliH pnccd for qwck sale by w1thoul plans. Sngl fam1· 963•4569 963.1786. No ren--'---------- wtf orm a I din rm. & bunk room . Mas ter , s hopping. Easy living owner.S.J C.,496 -1795. lyordplx.833-8614 tal fee, Village Real WHY RENT? small den. nursery Chef noor plan w /lge <'Ountry Est l famded.rm . highly uoodp· kitchen\\/ gourmet fix kitchen. dual frplc, lge 5~tar.f'amily Park, S. J . Rftltab a e •1200. down could buy gra w/custom w . lures. Loads of "lass for d d b t f I Cap 73 24x60 2 BR 2 Ba 4 B be t Id • t I t g ,., yar. an eau i. u $19500. P :2 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• r au y, cu . e-sac, lovely 2 + den or 3 br s air rai · new crp · view of gardens. approx THIS 2BR. hi·ceihngs, in manicured landscaping n . pty. 496 038 LI----£..-z-L-d lge lot & trlr gate, frplc, bome on Bluebl.Jt. ca. freshly painted & wall 2 hicks to surf In the T h b f ~ rvn11-..1~ $37 ~ papered. elec garage dr 5o·s . YOU OWN THE a "woodsy" setting with . e c s t o Cemetery Loh/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpts, ... .,.., 5. 962-0878 nyon Road. 494-0769 opener. lge red wood LAND Bkr 962·5511 fpeeastk atSSth2e500ocean, will go ~~~h~~~~~. a~7 .~. Crypts 1500 Balboa Island 3 f 06 New 2Br. Duplex. very .... _wport •-ach s-.69 patio cover . Cement --.. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I d ._ -..,.. dnve & side storage a rea DOLL HOUSE En '1oy the Good Lif•' Principals only. Agent Lv 'g area 2 plots Harbor A BR h ... Blk t b spac o~s, garage, pvt Y • •••••••••••••••••••~··• • 549·0812 or 646·6710 . .. ouse. n o ay. 3121 Michael Dr. $210 mo. , for boat or trlr. Wa.lk to New paint, carpeting, 3 32325So Coast Hwy. SOUTH COAST nest Memonal Pk . $300 $345. p/mo. E·Z parking. 1 child OK, no pets. days 36 Dock 3 br cOIHlo Brh & all schools. Highly Br. 1,1,4 ba. frpk , dbl 499-4584 493-25 13 Investment each. 897 3994 aft 6pm 673-1200 (10·4) 847-3541, eves 536-3638 2\.-i ba. Double gar:'67.S. desirable Newporl West garage, med yd w/pat10. 545-764Safter5. I track. Shown daily. Ham-Near EI em en la r y WHY RENT? WEST CLIFF . H b r 2 Cemetery Lots at f'ilewporlleach 1169 Nice3 Br, l~ Ba, ff.Cont.---------- 5pm. $65,000. CPnn. on schools & bch. $12,500 for • Highlands orea. Spac. 4 Harbor Rest S275 ea.••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo . $270. Brad, 4 Br 3 Ba Condo, F.am. ly)714-968·0327. equity & take over gov't $1200. dQwn could buy Br 2•2 Ba. Fam. Rm. rirm 548-9680aft5PM. 'Til June 15. 2br. 503 38th 645-3147orS49·9511 Rm, pool, teMis, many __________ 1 loan of $34.000. Pvt ply. lovely 2 + den or 3 br $ 8 1, 5 O O I o fr . 194 O Conwnercial St. No peu. $275. ()pen WALK to beach bach cot-xtras. $475. 631·0'197 g<JS.4714. home on Bluebird Ca-HI g h I and Owner. Property 1600 House 28, 29th. Call col-tage, util pd. $155. 4 BR, 3 ba, F/R , frplO?ten- Real Estate byMl!VAY %oth CENTURY 0 FOX" penoni!1ed eleganc~ in the closest tract to bea('h, 11des to Newport Beach Xlnt. apprf'cia t1on factor. 4·8R, 3-ba, all the xtras of ao exec. home, compnrably low priced 968·4456 PANORAMA lrviM 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RAREFIMD Ideal home for odive r~· tired or starter home for young couple. One of I rvine 's finest com· munltiea. 2 Bedrm & family room $$0,000. Owner moving out or ~late. Shows like a )J'lodel home. With many extras. CaJI 540 1151 ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS nyon Road. 494·0769 _646--0 __ 1_00 _______ •••••••-•••••••••••••• !eel, 213·377·4640. 2BR condo, frplc $220. nis, pool, gardener.'$400. LESS THAM COST 3BR condo, fncd ~d. 640-0008 · · Newport leach I 069Mewport leach I 069 211 • 2L'.l 62nd St. N.B. HouHs Uftfunti1Md frplc S2SO d t h •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •• •••••••••••••••••••• • · Bluff• Con os • e ses 2500 Sq. ft. block build-• 2 BR condo, gar, bltns, .. • fllCol~~ BIG CANYON- . DEAME HOME Individua l effect created by expanded Versailles. Dramatic indoor·ouldot>r livability. Privacy & view. $260,000 in g . Conta c t M gr. lal:Nta lslGltd 1206 stereo $275 from $390 to $59S , 642·8252 or Owner ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOMEFINDERS A1ent 644-u33 GANGl,(2L'.J)247·2120 Quaint w/l Mstr , 2 lot\ M2·9900 •BLUFFS 4 Br m Ba ---------•Bra. 2bas, FR, Patio" Fam R~ Pvt p.Jt10' VACANT COMMERC. frplc. Quiet i treet ooo 4 bdrm., 2 bth., lmmed. ..15 GM-l48o/ 830-~ x • Good location. llunl-bUC) Yr lu $495. 675-4868 occur.:ncy, k1dl "peta, 22 · • lngton Beach. 1301l290 Sq. &631 -2333. Own/Agnl. nr. Ice " Park $390.1 __ . _____ _.... __ ~. 9C!8-2841. Harbor View 3-BR, 2·ba 4 BR boumo. E-Z park-f.'5.50. mo. No lease rtq'd. · lng.se. Yi B"' to 673-1200 Super 2 bedrm, DW, R /O. Select P rope rl1es. • (l(M) ~·.::.~Taffio 556-2660 • CoroM .. Mw 3222 rtftt.ll lee, Vlllqc Real 2·Sty. A-frame. 3 BR, '2 ba. c .... ,, VI~ ••••••••••••••••••••• ,. Eat.ate. Dlb. aar. Pools, tennis. Co , 3br. 2ba: 1tove, relril. 5 -1 r ~bd $4ZS Agt. 548-1290 mer lot, pnm oca• dsb•,br. Nr bch. 1315. ean pac _,., · "" • ---------- tion, attractive buildlnJJ. Q8 Begonia f7S·7'27 2..,.ba, FR. LR1 DR. NEWPORT HEIGl)Ts All rented Good Income Cl0&etosbo.-/ach11 SS25 LI 2 Br. l Ba, yd, 1ar. Ca 1 l MF.RR£ LL. 3 BR. 2 ba. dplx. Old41r m o . Con tact Rick $3lO.aJU,646-1514 f..saide <t8r, 2b.m, lrplr. aurToondcd by lovehne!ls II 1.,, med yd NI~ in a breny development S/\l .. E BY OWNER. Univ. • ca..DWIU ..... co. qwel nc1ghbrhd. SS1 3 8R Condo nr bea('h, Park II. La Saile 4 Br. byown 642-$299 2·car a•r I Pools I 21, ba Brick S>atlo ------• J a c u i al! Sa u n G ' w /flrepll overlookln1 By0wnt'f',3br.2b11 Aox Club boute! Tc•nnig 1rcenbell Waterfall & ~to sell. Nlct> & clean, Court•! Under $4S,000 fo1&ntaln ln entry way. newcrpt.s 557 0173 968...w.54 ,,,Princ1paJsonl1 ~2·721~ 644-1766 l REALTY.1'7~·1'00 c.bildrea;no...._'175 SUUlvan912 SSBS. Al«Ol840-t000 Cnofee) L~£ OPTION· 5 I R. c 132' x JOO' C2 L.ol on Don't f" up the ahlpl Ba, home on Col/ Courao Newport Blvd.CM. Vac, Cuat 9-room hOme.2'-\ yn "I.bl' It ln claullied. ln Santa An" HU 4$15 prime loc. Prin. only. old.Allxtra.a. l'hbloclta Ship to shore rea1&1tal p /11\o . By ow.er: 648· 1762 heh. 675-1.957 6U·a71. ~ I 1 1 , • ! 1 l I • I . I • I • I • 1 1 . J I • I • 1 AMERICAN PRE ·SCHOOLS ~Offering: •AtltJ..ly..n ............ •Oll.-6:He.a. . d...w1,... ·• ,.... • t •••• c.mc1•• • a-.. ......... .,.,. ....... ta•• ............ ,....w ........ dM. >i .Salutes Ameri~a And ~ . your Child with .. Our Offer of: ONE FREE DAY , AT AHY OF OUI FOLlO'WltG LOC4TI<*S: • .,...._ UI06 .... Aft.-144-1467 ........ _1661 Mh' I •-HZ.7lll • ....._ -I ..... -HJ.JJU Bring This Coupon and .. Your Child -For a Hew ·, Learning Experience .~,.,...hr, ...... c ........ , ... l.ettw _. ~ ,..., -.C.ie. tWw ... c•.,..... lf7U-IJ1Jwwrtta. I JAPAN KARATE FED. ... 325 No. Newport llYcL N.I. Suite #5, Downstairs Days Tel. 637-5904 Mites 642-8387 tAcrou,,.._Heet.._...., j .) NO CONTRACTS NO GIMMICKS $24 PER MONTH Special rates to families. college students & groups. ·1 - ... i t. Rt& DIAL LESSON * l•ale SINto Ry. SWo Im * Aliklo * MecltatN. * Jlldo * Yoga * llapl ido Cll'ea-...., ...... PORCELAIN NAILS .:.HERE IS YOUR ·,OPPORTUNITY TOBE TRAINED ,. IN THE ·~ ARTOF :·:. APPL YING t PORCELAIN NAILS '• For More Information Call: MAGI'S MAGIC COSTA MESA 642-NAiL Hom.. Unfunlished Condomini1m11 '••(•••················· Unfurnlshecl 3425 Newport leach 3269 •• ••••• •• • • • •• • •• • ••• • • .... ••••••• ••••••••••••• Newport Beach .. All new 3 ,JJR, 2 Ba . tge airy 2br, 2ba w/pat10 &. ex- kitchen, frplc in Harbor tras. Super location. V-i-e w a re a . I n c 1 . $350/mo. 673-2749. gHdener & comm. pool Mission Vie j o 2 Br '"IL ~oo. Call . Sam garage, pool. 2 chUd. o1c: 751-4952, no ans. 759-0666 no p e ts. $2'0. mo. s...... 830-8740 c.phtranq 32711-F-or-ls_e_q_w_· e-t _2_B_r _A_dl_t •••••••••••••••••••••••cd F l htd _ ··' 1 b 38 on o . rp c , ea e DIWl Blwfs, Pus r, pool,Nrabops,ref's,Sec. 2,,.~ ba Town~ouse. Fan· Fee. 1·495-6817 / 64$.8053 taatic Wh1tewater1-------- Martna View. $450. (213> Tow.houM • 377.Q608 u..fwwlshed 3525 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '28}, 2ba, fam. rm, cpts, . Cont 2 Br l~ Ba, ten· dh•. dbl 1ar, fncd nil. xtnt lacll. no cb.11d -fr.oat/back yd. tennis, under 18. 8/10'1 ml to , vehicle atouge. Sad-bch. $27S "2·2070 dltbac~-C1phtrano · Duplex. $275 mo. 492$71 Apa hMM• hnlllMd 3210 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..s.ht ~ • ••••••••• lalboa lslmtd 37 06 •••••••• ••• • • •••••••••••••••••••••• Jl\TePlace, aup.r clean 4 Comp. refurbished h.ut0ry br, 2 ba, blto"· erpts, apt. 2 Br, no children/· ~fs:tieJ-~7~5 / m 0 • pets. Ref's rcq'd. $350mo No Rental Fee yrty 973·~. Wlaae.Reat F.atat• .._., ...... ,.... 3707 T ~~ L 3216 •• ... •••••••-••••••••• ..._.._,, :• Y .. OMT .. ................... '" ~ 1111\ eottue ·SO. ·i..t-6 S.chelor: Apt. $225 Yrly a.U l.owMN, Sd Ju.an. UUI pd. 926 E . Balboa. _ •· Ref'a.~ 87~ • Schools and Instruction PIANO . ·INSTRUCTIONS All Ages -Al U.eh Ilse Bliss, M.A. Columbia University, New York For lnfOfmation Call 493-3815 • become confused easily •daydream in school •feel lost ... • feel like a failure •have poor grades • learn slowly WE SPECIALIZE IN DISCOVER ING AND HANDLING THE BASIC BARRIERS TO LEARNING. ~ '----( ... . .. . we can help THE STUDENT IMPROVEMENT CENTER Call 642-9088 901 Dover Drive Newport Beach HW lllMC rGUH nlLD TOOISW ~ Wll .. ea lAMPSlllOl1 i I I • I I t----10)--f5) J ..... l..i.. $21 I . - -·----. . i . Sicjl •= Peech & Co. AllffqYH j 2JJ2 Hewport ll•d.. Costa Mesa 642·2523 Or call: Leodld GCau OriflMh 64Z·4Jl2 BE A MODEL LEARN F"'5HION OR PHOTOORAPHY MODELING . No Previous Experience Necessary . For Fashion Shows, Photography, Cmvention. • SHOil TRAINING •NO OUATION • flEE BROCHURE Wrttr. Calfforwla Cha wa. LTD 1696 II c ...... Cir. #413..c Fotilt11i Yalty. Ca 92701 { This variety of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow Newport Air Associates flight School & Flying Cub LEARN TO FLY $650 lP"'-c"'tAnihMeJ * FAA APPROVED * Co.M llKIMH: 35 Hours flight time in Cessna 150's with 20 hours dual Instruction. Oub membership. Free dues. Individual instruction. tailored to YOUR ability. 20 AlllCRAFT AVAii.AiU AT· LOWEST RATES IN OAAHGE COUNTY ....... fo fly ftOW --Giid hen• t.t! * SpKlal RatH for eon..erclal or Ind; a1oc"' Shtclents. For Complet• Details Call MOW 979-1155 19 7 I I A lrpo.:t. Way Sc!*th HeattottteT.._......_ 0,..... Coaitr Airport CAREER TRAINING for MEN and WOMEN of all AGES! Day...SE•-.. .. Classes Now Forming • • • ' flrol Now for J~ Get CCMllphte Details Todcly PhoH 635-3450 •~AL • DIMJAL ASSISTANT ASSIST AMT 6 Monlh Proqom 7 Monlh Pr0<7om JlfipoYed by AMA-MMA • B BaBICT NIDICAL • ~A.L OfftCI IMflM5IYI Cill MA.MA......-T TICHHICIAH 4 Month Proqom 6 Monlh ~ Proqom • DIMJA.L LAI TICHMICUM 6 Monn. Days °' IS Montns ~ • Accredted Member, Notiord Auociation of Trade & T eclncal Sc+.xil\ • /vi eiqilile imlitutiot1 under the FedsoAy t.Wed Stl.dent l..oai Proqom. Notional DWect Student Loan Proqorn. Basic Educononol Oppcwtl6lity Gant Proqom. Colleqe Work S1udy Proqrom. Supplemental Educolionol ~ G atlt PrOCJ'am. ad CET A • AppoYed for Vetercm • Pkx4lmllnl Au.Slone• for G erl.ates ot no eatro cost. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COLLEGE "" MEDICAL AND DENTAL CAREERS 1717 S. lrt .. ti Sf.. *n• 1• fJI04 MEN--woMEN ""' The world's largest training school is hiring. Where else can you learn the Jobs listed below, and get paid while you learn? Elect ron ics. Food Preparation, law Enforcement, Motion Picture Photogra.phy, Miaslle Repair, Data Processing, Truck Driving, Communications. Construction, Radio R~r. Adminlsttatlon, Personnel. Accounting, Truck Mechanic, Wire Maintenance. and over 300 others. Call Army Opportunities C .... M ... '4'-116J t1w1 .. ,. ..... ,.uau S-.AMl4Mll0 Join the people who'¥e folned the Amr/ Attf:quel~E~ ART CLASSES Ol, ...... Dr ..... ............ Maintaining the same degree of instruction from individual to group and association classes. ,_ ..... I tn. Ctl: 644-5485 ..._,~_, ...... I,,....., EUEN CREELMAN, BA Univ. of AriL For turther Information ~ardlnr placem~t t>f advert.h int in the Dally Pilot Schools and lnatrucUon Direct.or)' CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 Got A Problem? Would A Good Job Hetp? Career Train NOW For: . _ S.Cretwv •~st looldleeper Jr. Accountant Typlat-Steo Special •r...up COSMS Day or Enftlng C101MS 556-8'890 \fR Irvine ~cillege ~ of Business· 1700 East Garry Avenue Santa Ana. Calllornta 92705 (Newport Freeway at Oyer Road) Orange County's most progressive and innovative Career Center. ~ e©tS>e~@~" Annds DAY SOIOOL P.re·School Ages 2 thru 3rd Grade Open 6:30 AM thru 6 PM Hot lmdtn Ir s. •• Clre•fat H ,. .. eel) rtco.ks Stl'111ed Arts &Cr.th Miaic Spom Adi•ffies Cw Visit Ole W ... _., 2110 Thurin Ave., C.Osta Mtsa Phone 646-1444 a11111 ..... Tep JGz llelloom Dtecotheque TUlllllllng lleton Dence&erdM ...... Comedy Sped81 len.tlT•P Co!Mlnallon a CALL FOR FREE BROCHURE 2750 HARBOR BOULEVARD, SUITE 7-B COLLEGE CENTSR.COSTA MESA,CA 92626 Phone: 714-540-5953 DAILY PILOT 8Ji Af I 1•11 ........ d ••••••••••••••••••••••• s.t.AM 3710 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AMIASSADOl l .. MS OF A.MHICA TWO L<>CATIONS WEEKLY RATES FULL SERVICE 2277 Harbor, C.M. 2909 BrUt()I, S.A. 6'S-G40" S.0:2300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bch apt, 2br, gar. Unique & nice. $350 + uUl. Jona Realty, 67J..6210. · lalM>a Ptl!MMIG 3107 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Luxury Apt on Balboa Bay. 3 Br. 2 Ba, w/den, 2 frplcs, a ll bltn fully equipt kit, laundry, 900 E. Balboa, boat space avail. Call for view~ 549-2988; eves 6'2·'"63 · COl'OM def Mer 3822 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CORONA DELMAR 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. Pool, tennis, continental breakfast. Some ocean & Catalina views. Close to shopping & floe beach. 644-2611 2 & 3 Br Twnhse Apts. Encl paUo, blt.o.s, frplc' • 673-7183 JETTY VIEW, a lgc lux· urious 2 BR ground floor unit of Duplex w I jetty & ocean view. SINGLES PREFERRED. $550. p / mo. C all Agent, 644-7211Nigel 3 BR, old CdM. Pri v. d eck , gar , jus t r e · modeled. $400. 640-8007 Costa MHa 3824 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CASA VICTORIA 1,2&3 br, Deluxe Unfur. or Furn. gas/wtr pd. Adults·No pets Sec. gate Pool, rec rm, elevators S2S Victoria, 642-8970 LRG 1 Br, pool, nr. sbops, adlts/no pets. UUI. pd. 1884 Monrovia, 548-0336 Off leatett Path l , 2, & 3 Br. Adults, no pets, dsbws brs, s hag c pts, closed garage, frplc, BBQ. Gas & water pd. Pool. LA MANCHA Ans 778 Scott Place, CM 642·5073 CASA HERMOSA 148 W. Wilson. CM le..tiflll ToWllhouse Apt Just ca.,1.tH Accept Child & ftet AJI AMeftitiH 2BR $33S 2BR w /frplc ~ 3BR ~ Inquire next door : Hacienda De Mesa 160 W. Wilson, Apl #1 Costa Mesa I MO FREE RENT $325. Ne ar new 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, gar , no pets. E. C.M. 642-1603 2 Br l 1h Ba. brand ne'A Twnhse style. Frplc, Lg( pvt patio, gar, $21 5. 2444 Elden 979-1658 $225, 2 Br, drps, crpts, Crplc, pvt patio, adj. shopping. 213-592-5227 NEW 2 BR, 1 'A ba, patJo garden, adlts, no pets. $235. 642-1603 New Dix 2 Br, $225 mo bltns, cpts, d rps, gar, nc pets. 121 Lisa Ln.C~ 644·1869 MESA VERDE VILLAS Largo 1&2 bdrm apts beaut. interiors open le lush water landscaping Every conceivable xtr:> Must see to apprec. $27! to $465. 1555 Mesa Verd• Dri ve E a sl (714)540.a871. J ust W. o Mesa Ve rde Ctr. of Harbor • Blvd, adj. t• C.M. Golf & C. Club. 2 Br. super sharp new in terior, $225. Walk to 17U .,. liMRh fwolllshed Apa lace .......... shed St. Shopping. Open Fri ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• 1-4. Sat. 10-3, 271 l&th Pl lcAooPettlnMlla 3707 Costa Mela 3724 C M . or call Eves ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 540-7086 -------- Bayfront t br apt on $210. Fum. 2 Br. Gar~g_es, 2 Br 1 Ba, bltns .• squeek: yrlylse. $250. m o. incl. green lawns, purified clean, new faint, cp~ util Bkr 673-6880 water. Adults, no pets. drps, $185 mo. No pe~ ' . 2020 Fullerton Ave. 1 786. Apt. 4, Shalimar Ca Costa Mesa 3724 block E. of Newport Ave Ph. 67S-0896or642-8907 ••••••••••••••••••••••• & l block So. of Bay. Wa1k 17th S bo . 5 WEEK & Ur 642-8690 lo t. s ppm, $37. 0 --------1 area from these newt. !TVSt~~M&aildBSeRrAvpAtsvall Hw:IMcjtote leoch 37 40 refurbished 2 Br ap~ • ••••• •• •••• ••• •••• • ••• • $225 mo. 548-4971 •Phone Serv, Htd pool •Children Section BEA\ITIFUL 1 br furn Larle 3 br, 2 ba, lowc •Low monthly rates. apts '170 & $180. Spanish level. No pets. Avai •SS OFF week's rent st,yle bide, pvt encl gar• 2/1116 Ca 11 a fl er 1 w/ad pool, sauna, lodry, adlts, 644-484?oc640-09ll> 17301 Keelsoa Ln, 1 blk 2378NewportBlvd,CM W.ofBeachoffSlater. 2 BR unfU:rn. Westslck 548-97SS « 645·3967 SU· 7848 $200. , 2035 ..... rioll. CM SMALL BEACH HOTEL Agent, G?S-8800 1 BR Fum. 2 Ire cla.et.s, Rooms $23.SO w~k. 3 bd 1 ba home. Crps queenalze bed,· prlv. Apts$110.mo.536-7056 drps basement 4 dresainl rm, xtra lae 9d' S9S w Wil.soo rooms , enc I. I ar . N.wpcri •ec1t 37" iar-e. • w/atorage. Adults ooty, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $290. 83l--0813. no pets. l or 2 Br, adulll. no peta. 2 bd apt. Refrig, atovt II........_._ M $170/$190. 2421 E. 16th St, urpets & drps, laundr: .... ..........., •M N. Ht.s. 646-1801 facU. 1 child ok. no pet.I I llDltOOM .. Located at west end c No cblldren, no pets. 2 Br on Channel. 3S12\t Wllson. $1'7S. 6'2~3687. Pool ls RecttaUon Marcus. $300 mo, tncl1-------- l 95t M ... An, CM uW. m-o578 NEW BREED APTS • •----------1 .. WK UP 1111 Mt 6 Bach. $180. uUl pd. Pool •••••11t• &.ch. Color TV mUd tacu.ul,pr.IG«ll 1 Br unturn $110 mo. eerv, pool. THE MESA. fB'r Condo le UaJt. SD Adults, no peta. 177 E. 415 ~. Newport Bl, NB mo. Pool ••an. D&.J Z2ndSt.&U·3645 6411-9881 aT~naCM-11\t BJ.j DAILY PILOT Tuesd•y January 27 1976 Add it. .. Bu•ld tt •.• Diaper it ... Hammer 1t Carpet It .Cement 1t...Wi r e at .• Hoe it ... Clean 1t...M ove it...Press it ... Pa1nt it.. Nail 1t...Plaster it . i)( at. .. SERVICE DIRECTORY .,..w.a.-e.,..... C.-..t/Ca.cret. GcrdeftllMJ H=•g HcMK...... U••"t ,~/ParperflMJ ......... ················•······•·•·········•·······••· .•..........................................•. ···············"······ •............•......••...•..••••••......................•••••.•.....•••••••.•...•.••••••••... APPLlANCt: RKPAIR Ex pr College Student Frtt Estimates' Pb1U1ps wwn mninlmance, mow· Hal,llinJ aoythJne. garage BIG CANYON ARl::A )l(ASONRY·Tlle, brick, A PRIDE & F1lr Plumber. rep&Jr, replpe, · $JO -~rv\ct'C31l Carpenter . Odd jobs. Cement Co. Patios, mg, edg•n&, lrtmmlog, cleanup. Reliable, '(est Xlntwork·Xlnlre(s blOclc, concrete, •t.ooe. Prices. Lie/Ins. Calleo service lines & iJutaU · (714) $49-2422 genl horn~ improvement dnvewuys Lit-, Bonded. freeeal 962·3408 scrvlce.1163-M52 673·22S7 IJc'd. 968-2504 Pa 1nt1 n g . XI n t . Uoo. G. Gldley &l2·93U . .....__~ 61~9363_ · __ 7M·5&7 alter 6 - - -WlLUAMS .._SONS References. 9'19·333S. Roo~ .._, .... ~ -----MIKE. Clean up• & lawn S 12 o Load! E x p e r J a p a n e s e • .,,_,, ...................... •CarpetSer1ice Contractor care Frecci1tC<1lluf\er· Getridofum a"hlly housekeeper. Has own Muon.ryl Brl ck/Block WALl..PAPERlN C-All ueuuuu••u•uo••• Cbnsti•n Mother wtll stl ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• nooo 548·2049 TRASH & DESRJS transpc>rtaUoo. ~-1029. &St.one. Call 581·7829 Kinds. Work Guaran· REPAIRS.AU.. TYPE$ fo"ncd yrd. hut lunchc~ ~rnpoo & i.tum dean· Altenllons, rm add'ns. Gener~ Senices CoUegeStudenl•S48..0US XI t h k . d 8rick Block Slone Tile t.ced. f)'ee Estimate$. Reu. frecesu, Uc. T L.C. 645-632~---mah. Color bnghtent:~. ::107os.;.,ce64~e;~;rk. Ltc. •••••••••••••••••••••••Fast Dehve"" Hauling b; la~~sew7:::!~ien~~~ Work expertly do~e by ~-;_;0r:iorm. 835-3'705 or Walt83?=~•nyllmo • w t c a t pl s I 0 m 1 n .,.,, • -·" · ' 1 0 Uc contractor 962·6712 CaibiMt Mak.htg bleach. Cleon hv rm. dm -. . I DO IT ALL! moving & c l eanups. Oependab e. wn lraosp --·------------------1 ••••••••••••••0 ••••••• rm & hall $15 Avg rm GEltWU.:K & SON Elctlrac•I Plumbin1 $7up. Free est. 842-4597 847·3637 Moving Plashrjllepalr TIJe Kitch cabinets, cstm wall S7 Cl\ h · h · .,,. A DOITIONS etc Re· s r 'tes 642 4957 ' · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• G ""•col uc $lOod, c 111er~.., REMOOELL1c Bl-310942 · a a · · Sunny.Jer, 2Vets. Fences LandscaplacJ •••••••••••••••••S••d•••• CERAMIC TILE. New & un1ls,laU1ce-patios,bo.t ua~etmpel or. pl 5'9·2170 673·6().41 HAND YMAN·llomes bldgs. trees removed, •••••••••••••••••••••••Moving/Hauling. tu cntVERY NEAT rATCH rmdl. Freeest..Smljobs rmdlg.64&·52t9 n-paar. 15 Y,,rs expr. ~ • Apt s. t:onsc1ent1ous cleanup, free pickup . w/large truclc . Reas. JOBS & RES1'Ut:CO. welcome/536-2426 Carpenhr 53w 0 1 r01k01 mY:se1 f · Refs Bedncal crafts man. 645·6S58. (urn/appliances 557-2005 R.ot.otilUng-$25. Landscap· Ban-y 548·97ZJ/839·5779 Free etit. 893-1439. T-c:~i"'e ••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sod t ,....., ~-· -•••R••E•~;O•D•·E~L·~B·UlL•D Untl"tl CJrpet Steam F.Li-;CTRf('l/\N S mall Muchine & Welding Um HouHc:leClftlftCJ SqingFt, T ·B uegrass 16',.t MOVING? Let 2 expr . PlurnbincJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ,, ~ ........ '>') available for J-Ob sho ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · om 960 2170 men mov~ you. Reas, ••••••••••••••••••••••• • SPECIAL on Insulate Cleaners 1\11 phases or Jo.,.,, mai~t~ n·1>111r\iOO work or hmitt.>d produc refs. 545-8583 or 833·3944 REt'S. LIC 1>4:;.3439 house clcantni: Reas yrs l'xpr 1123 I~ 548 · lt'on work "-ntacl '·d JWIOaUntSaE~EC'AlLl GCLEhAN CUSTOM Dt;SIGNS aWMtg --- s II o c ""' ..., a mg am Sod. lawns, sprklrs . P /P~rKJ MARV'S PLUMBlNG Removals, bmbine. top. •6'G9fl(l7 • pi n g, pruning ., ING e rve a rirnge 0 f'oumiture Sh1pvard 000 Lido Park Gari L'-ee "Sts ~As 51.,.. di' ~·' REMODEL 6'"'5 .. ,..... J c • " '" "" pat1os, covers. rem g •••••••••• • ••••• • •• • •• • " ""uo • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Dr 673 7272 Id d . FIREWOOD $80 cordJ- NO JOB TOO SM~ del. lie /bond/ins. Alterations, r epairs. ---·---1S f h HOUSECLEANING O er yar s, lree re· PETERSPAINTING 642·2624 . slon•s. additions, baths & Carpel Ul~lallations & re KlrliTCpp'1f~~N'.SrDe an'n is le"·~· II and Y man Jn::. l 1t I ;Y rehable cou~le. G~ moval, pruln3ing . i LiHcB'd lnt/Ext·Reas Rates kt h , ·a b n et . pairs. fre~ est, guar "".., · rm::......,. contractor. yrs n . CallG~neat552·0458 p~t~os~n:~m~nl i wor~: labor 64!>·~ & 642·8618. Chem Ch•an. 892·b389. vinyl lite, Linoleum, references. 536-7711 FORD Landscap1ng,1---------- showl'r/wallbrd. 751·1463 * HO USECLEANIN G. 962·7817 Prof. Painter. Int & Ext. <:ontractor does ow We Ca e C'arpelCleaners Gar*niftCJ Qual work & reas. fo~ree work. Palombo. Const. S . r I . h ••••••••••••••••••••••• experienced, H. 8 & est. 751·0684/548·2759. USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT0 SERVICE DIRECTORY For Res ult Service Call General Tree Service & Hauling. Reasonable. 646·5848 or 646·2528 Upholstery Mcm~r B B. B. All work leAal ~cu· chanlorAsll ampook Rel.table, l'Xpt>rl J:arden· Installed 675·9 Westminster area. Call HOW IS THE TIME "Uar 96?8314 so Po . wor . kl & -----beforelOAM,892·0560 P"'l ... Tl,..G SIS/R " -·-~ -guar Hefs Frel' t::st 's. mg Mo r;iarnt, s pr rs, o L o c 0 u NT R for job se~kers lo check A" ,.. m ••••••••••••••••••••••• CUSTOM CAHPt:NTRY Rea::. rales &15 3716 lndSl'P g Pl a nts at CRAt'TSMi\N Gener a Housecleaning Wanted. l the Dally Pilot Help Lic·Xlntwork837·6824 P t od I & who I e i. a I c Pr a c e s. k .iY3 7197 furnis h all cleaning pro-Wanted classir1 cat ion. If aJd:~~:s~~9.~159 jCenwnt/Concrete 6461Cf72 ~or ' dU<'t.:..548-l06l an lpm the job you want is not ~t class Exl/lnt. Paint· ------••••••••••••••••••••••• --Hauling there you might consider m g, Papermg. airless r<OOM Add 1t1on ::..Cus to m Bra ck Work The rc1sk st draw an the •••••••••••••••••••••••Don'tdrop theball!Get a offering your services spray,25yrsexp979·5294 !:Jragt..-s. patio Co\er .'!. PJt1 os &. ~alb our West J D.11ly Pilot •HAU LING • JOb w1tbalow-costDa1ly with an ad 1n the Job l d b1 nets . Mr. 1' ern specialty. FasH ·fhc1ent t:lasi.afi cd Ad. Phone Y1\llD CLl'.:AN UI' Pilot Cl asstfied Ad. Wanted category. Phone HOUSE COATS 547 7334 &i5 8512 642 5678 • • 556·0347 • • Phone 642-S678. 642-5678 By Larry !714 )548·4745 642-5678 bt. 322 Biii's Upholstery Serving Orange Co over 20 yrs. Recovering/ re· pairing/ restylmg. No JOb too s mall. get d\.lr pnce before you dec1r:te. Wm . G. Czykoski, owner. 646-5910/645-6105. Apartments Uftfurrt.. .AporlmHh Unfum. ~nh f'oumished J~nts f'oumished Office R"'tal 4400 Business/Invest/ Lost & Found 5300 He4p Wanted 71 OOHelp Wanted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••• ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• or Unfurnished 3900 or Unfurnished 3900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Finance ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CCKtaMna 382 .. H---.1.·~ n-h 39•0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exe-cuti•e Suites ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. ..,..,,..,,Oft u..-ac ,. F I I . luslMH LOST; S m blk poodle , ·•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HUNTINGTON BEACH'S fl NEST av°aila~I: l~ ~~~po~u ~~:! Opportunity SOOS HREr bWrARVDu Cah mll 645 031r838e a · NEW 3 Br 2 Ba Twnbme. (N.8.) Slarung $200. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · · dbl gar, P\1 patio. or SPANISH COUNTRY ESTATE LIVlHG 833-3640 DRESS shop tor sale. Top Found: Male Shellie. Tri· THE FRIENDLY PLACE Hnlg Jlbr SJSO. 846-5107 Cos M I · Call .i::ves. 2 ac r es· of b eautiful park-like ta esa ocat1on. color.w/rabiestag. Vic: s urroundings. Sunken pool. Sparkling 60< PER Sc;> FT PauJ 83\.1400 or 645-5000 Trubuco/ Marguerite. New OeluxeTnplex 2 &3 1617WESTCLIFfo'·NB apt218 MV.830-7987. · Spanis h fountains . Spacious rooms. AGT. 541·5032 Brs. Nice, quiet. Nr 5. I d D-& w· T FOUND I s I Point Shopping C'ntr ~ Separate ining area. Wa lk-in closets . ----er •ne av~ : 1/26 76 m S250 & uio. 18482 llunt Jlome-like kitc hen & cabinets . 1 MARINERS MILE Nets $2500 Month black & while M. Dog. mgton St. 557·460ll &. Bedroom unfurnished $220. Furnis h ed Sc;>UARE Owner retmng after 13 Halecrest. CM. 54,6-2974 53().5775 $2 40. 2 B edr oom unfurnis h ed $250. 2700 W. COAST HWY. yrs. in l>u s iness. This FO UND: Sml yng tan 'I-in.. 3844 L~urn1·shed $275. Now le asing ground long esl. t avern has been male dog. Meoa del Mar. • y "'" r noor commercial space a winner for years. Good 546.5839 \ pinetree forest w ith ·~·~··••••••••••••••••• ALL UTILITIES FREE 1000' 4500' and upstairs game action. Lols of in ----· ------ streams & waterfalls for '""" Turtte Rock Walk to H untington Center ofCicc space J00'.28()()' in dust. & local trade. Agt. FOUND: Siamese cat, a qwet mountain selling Vista Aph ADULTS HO PETS the beautiful new build· 53H460 lge .. vie. Woolwich Ave., All amen1t1es for the 'ou'll enJOY a rela \ed mg n smg from the ashes INACTIVE ASSOCIATE Laguna Hills 581 3696 BOYS AND GIRLS If you are 12 t o 16 years old and would like to earn $20 to $.50 and more per week , with a c hance to win a trip to Philadelphia . Cap e K e nnedy or Was hington, D.C. and cash awards, bikes and other prizes, I have a job for you. If you a r e willing to work hard, learn r espons ibility and the value of money, call Mr. Scott, 549-8956. Transportation will be furnished. This is not a paper route. Equal Opportunity Employer good hfe. Lifestyle in the exclusl\e LA QUINTA HERMOSA of the old We offer the SSOOO loS15,000 ClubhcM.tse.TVroom& \'illdge or Turtll' Hcl. • best exposure, traffic F\Jllysecured&guaran FShOUNhDdlay·rge blac1k penoftals 5350HeipWCMted 7100 I t bl · I Cho f l l 3 Bd 16211 Parilside L..,. (7 I 4t 147-5441 c1rculauon and parking ep er oung ma e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• poo a es. soc aa ice o o rms m· on WCll. Ready ror oc-24c-;, PROFIT PERY R After 6 pm, 642·2539. t S d cl 2 s tory 2 Bdrm 1 blk. S. of Edin ger; 1 blk W. of Beach 6,.. p ·d 1 ---eve" s, u n a y · · cupa ncy July 4.Call 10 +-aa quarter y h bnnches & parties.. 2 townhomes. $260 tu S430. 544.2lll (1>533-6102 Found Male Beagle puppy The Gentt~ Touc . • I mo. Three Rork new Dr., nr 20th & Tustin C.M. For the little extras ~wtmmi~CJ pools. ClnJe Irvine 833-0400 Apartments Unfw1t. Rooms 4000 EXECUTIVE SUITE Coffe.e Shop lndst 646-7589 in out-call massag~. lacu1u, 2 saunos,L --h 3848 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.._...s$1600.-L--"'hrs. call835·4519 aguno Beoc The ult1 male in ex· nC'l ~ FOUND; red Doberman. •olleyball,BBc;>s. •••••••••••••••••••••••Newport leach 3869 Ro o m s $25 wk u p . e c ul 1 v e s u t le . Closed 'h day Sat., all v· H t Bch WHATSIGNAREYOU? Quality adult apts from 0 b h ••••••••••••••••••••••• w1k1tchen. Apls $37 .50 p · · N t d S If ·t 't f ic. un · · AVON ST ART SA YING AGAIN $220.Customdecorated 1 rop a peb le anl o le Bayfronl 2 BtJ, 2 Ba. Pvt wk up. 548 ·975:> or rest1g1ous ewpor ay un. t wasn or 530-3170 Work s hop formin g . Bdrm 1 Bdrm & den 112 Ocl'an from ~our Apt. Sch & pier S:>50 yrly. 645.3967 Center Location, with owners ill health shop Available to l 2 people. 1 Sell quality products in a • • Lease Luxury. -;ecunly. . --Ocean View. Reserved wouldn 'l be for sale. Re · Found: St Iver Ros a ry from each s ign of Zodaak nearby Territory No ell· bath. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath. Mature adults 3 1755 Csl 979-1935 &644·4510 Now r enlln" S m a les. underground parking. cent heart attack forces Beads. Vic: NB Tennis Das' cussions on crealtvi· per necess. Xlnl earn-Spacious closets & cup • · · --.. ,.., • · t II A"' UBI Cl b 675 3589 · c b d F & Hwy.499-2835 Custom Waterfront kttchencllcs Pools. TV Full qua ltty i.ervi ces. owner o se . ,,... . u . . ly, relat1ons h1p::. & in gs , p /t1me. all oar s . urn1ture --Uaily wkly monthh t:all644-7180 :>314'60, 308 N. Harbor , p ers onal energy . 540-704lor Zenith 7-1359 maid sl.'rv1ce available. 1 Rm Apt In nice home 3BR. 3ba, frplc, bltns, · · · - - -SA Lost ladie::. Diamond / l•---------Small pets accepted Oceamicw. $!19 mo+ beaulnew crptg,dbl i.:ar Adulb only . no pets2&>-1150 i.q ft Deluxe No. Emerald rin g v 1c 644·2223 . . Off1cehours 9to6 ulll.494·4293 & boat shp a\a1i. $595. -~·4170 ------Costa :'Yte s a Ga rden, Sil•er&Turquoise West c ldf S~OPPlnR Employment& BABYSITTER, wanted 2300Fairview.C.M. mo ROOM CM areu w/P\'l Prof.bldg.540 2200 $45,000YrtyHet Center., sentimental Preparation myhome.boy2.8·S wk, 5445-2300 Spectacular View. nearly JACOBS REALTY balh & ~nlrancc'. ore st 188 East 17th St. Costa Hand crafted & sold from .va lue, liber al reward ••••••••••••••••••••••• CM. Aft. 6PM 557 6148 ..J . . new a parts. 2 Br 2 Bti , 675-6670 P d r k 1 n g N o M . l r • r •. II this well located shop. 642·0062 -Jobs Wanted, 7075 BABYSITTER, fem al"'. I Lrg qwel 2br tnplex: 11,2 blk to beach. $280/$290. __ molorc~·clt•s. 548 2720. ~a. su1 e.o '• o <::>. w1. "' ba . Nr every thing. 494·3383or494·2339 NEW Yearly deluxe 1 BR. " d1 v1dt!. Int:! ut1I. A /C , Owner of 2 yrs going into Los t male blk Cocker ••••••••••••••••••••••• my home 6 AM ·4 PM, $2 00 /mo. 645·3554, ---frplc, bll ns. 207 Cedar, Room & Board 4050 xlnL l?arking. Next T!J Mfg .. needs capital. Anx· Spaniel vie Placentia & BACHELORS! CdM. Own lrans /rds. 9-:>.(AI) 2 Br 2 Ra delux~, Ocean· N.B. aft 6 Pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• Security Pac1f1 c Nat I ious lo sell. $15,000 dwn. Wilson Reward. 645·1834 Efficient, intelligent, at· 675-5406 eves, 833·1380 • \1ew. N. End. No pets. 1 Free room & board in ex· Bank. 642 4210 Agt. UBI. 531·4460. 308 N. tractive young womJn days. Vincent A389 Quiel 2 br, 1 1~ ba studio., blk Divers Cove. 494-4060 New units 100 Yds. to change for care of elder-. Harbor, SA. Lost Cali co fem. kitten desires weekly or bt· Dog ok. Patao. Cpls only. Eves. beach. 3 BR S425; 2 BR. 1 N k. XJnt Costa Mesa localH?n wtflea collar, vie 400 weekly housekeeping BEAUTICIANS S200. 610 Joann 548·9573 Newport Beach 3869 ~~ g~~:;!~ · 647C~~; ·· lat~~~~;~ 9a~1~°f: 6~~ ~~PC~x ~~ :~·~\ ~1! ~~~ IALIOA ISLAND ~0~~ R~~a~~~~~74~ ve. f~b; ~~tisJ~c:~~ eg~~r:~. ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~18 Dana Point 38 26 •• • •• •••••• • ••••••••••• --· · · 499-3235 64S·0822 or 642-3623. We 11 e s l a b I 1 s h e d , 61~ UTILITIESP"'ID DUPLEXONTIIE women's snncialty s hop LOST : Black Male ---·-------9r."'UTICI"' .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• "". • Gueit Home 4150 Share Law ofc full or p/t. ...-C k H bo •· ~ """ W TER for sale. Xlnt locat1on! oc er, mi x. ar r °' II · ro.... ocean View 2 Br 2 Ba, lge BLOCK TO OCEAN A ••••••••••••••••••••••• I R V'ct . CM R d w/some fo owing tvr di Bl $239 50 Deluxe Private 2Br. 2ba. 3 Br, 2 Oa. frplc. wet bar, Lovmg cart-for elderly Accnt or awyer. ent SOMERS REALTY 1 ona, · ewar · busy shop serving Hunt.. x. l~96.9387 Lge wa,lk-in closets, patio. boat dock. partly male or fem. Bal. diets, terms nego. Newport * 675-4000 * 646·9234. Selective Household. Harbour area. Call eves bltns. garage, cable TV, furn. No kids/pets. $475 homey, patio. 544-3833 Beach. 833·85 15· LOST vie of Seaward Rd.. Nursing & f3mily Care aft 6pm, ask for Ellen, \.ERV lrg 2·BR 2-ba Adults/no pets. $300 mo. yrly.675-4421 ' Rental t-h 4380 STORE·OFFlCE·SHOP . Cd M , l o vable g r ay Personnel 846-4046 w1terrace. ups trs. no till June 1:>. $375 mo. on ---. s o s are Newport& Bay Center AIR~INE, scheduled air neutered male cat wear-Empioyer Pays Fee ---------- t ~225 675 ·205 l I .,_ t Westchft 2 br 112 ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• taxt. S. Cah L Present 4U\l\C p NB BEAUTY OPERATOR pe s. ,. · ·::i • year Y ease. -=e 0 ap-nhs Ad 1 : !bl 2052NewportBlvd .C.M. ingfleacollar.Hassmall """ ampus nve i · · 675·3824 preciate. Call for appl low e. u ls _o y, no mmate to share lge dplx 646-L252 644.2228 oper:\lor losing money scar on nose. Ans to Call 546·1505 __ exper nr So. C-Oast Plaza --S51-6042after6 PM. peLc;, S300 mo. li28 Be~· 1n CdM. 1 child OK. -----but potential is outstand-H 75 557·3986 l-'rcshly patnted 2 br,2ba.---ford Ln. 548-7533 Avail S56·Jl06,675S535eves. BvsiMssR~ntat 4450 ing. Xlnl terms. Agl. erman. 673· 11 orChauffer. Companion .---------- $225 incl. ut1l. 496-7934 or PARK NEWPORT Marchi. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 837-4200 673-2836. light cook . Bonded. BEAUTY OPERATOtt 960 1142 S Re s P . g a I to s h a re · LOS.,. Germa n Short Hair Helen. 548-7197 Leading CdM salon. Jim. AP ARTMEHT 2 Br. 2 bl ks lo bch, chrmng. Bal. Isl. home 600 SQ IT s tore or orftce I El ' ----------• 644-7321, 552-0943 FountainValley 3834 Bachelorlor2 yrly,$280. w/s ame . 675·8139 / fronl. $155. 646·2130 or ~~~~:.~AY~ Pointer .wearing red ~ol-Combination driver.1---------'-- ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bedrooms and 642-3188 673·2383. 679-3709 lar. Childs companion. house boy, body guard & ar."'UTY OPR Xlnt area. Heavy in Needs MEDICATION ~ lmmac 2 Br, ADULT Con Townhouses cook will travel Chris· F /tim e. No followln~ F $23950 OCE"'"'-'VIEW Male/Fem, furn except LAGUHABEACH bicentenn ial stones. IMMEDI ATELY! . • f 96·34707 b do. air cond, pool, ou cpts r . · "'" o · & ·11 II ~ Lian man 45 re · n"'c Comm/guar antee 0 9 6 D ·1 B d I .. A25 f /I N Shops or Off'ic .. , wner anx1oui. w1 se Please call 645·2754 a il · · · " · • & drps, $225, 968-7437 pen · a1 Y 3 r spt1c1ous up ex""' or yr rm Sl35·1st st. o .. f 1 d 64!>-lOSO Spa·Pools·Tennis mo.645·8964 smoke, Bal Pen in. In Surf & Sand Shopping or on Y Sl5,000 own. 5:30. Mature, ex perie n ced, ________ ..,...._ Huntift41onBeoch 3840 Across from F ashion ---. 675-7564 Village. Ample parking,. Agt.837-4200 ,_L_O_S_T_:_b_l_k-fe-m--c-·a-t-, woman dnver. will take _________ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Island al Jamboree on ~s f'oum1sh~d popular hotel on the D' H c~ you anywhere m So. Cal B & G. I U fu ·-L-d 3900 WANTTOAVOIOTHE lftMf' se/ ans w/whtpa ws&chest.Vic. Ph 542c:c:c:c O~S 1r S Walk to heh $180 & up. No San Joaquin Hills Road. or n nu>ne beach. 175 rooms & 2 GROSS S30.000 MO. Golden West & Mcl''ad-one ·o>VJO Summ"rtncreases.Pool, '71416 .... 1900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RIPOFF •RTIST t t d ---------lOtol yearsofage.rnti-" ' .,,... • "" res au ran s prov1 e 62<"(. Bar. Freestnd bldg. den. H.B. Ans. to "Fial" rec rm, drps, crpt. Adlts. --_# THE EXCITING CALL HOUSE MATES pedestna~ t_rafr1c No 150 car pkg. Seats 250. 898-Sl24 u.....a W-"'-~ ly Pilot delivery routes no pets. 220 121 h M LIVE l'earThe Bead1! PALM MESA APTS. aud rind someone who is common .irea C'xpense. Owners health forces nswp UJ1TirV 7100 may be available in y<>er 536·9505. 219 15th M . Casa d~I Sol \tlNlJTF-c; TO NPT D d bl Annual leases a\"atl. Con· sale Good terms Agt Personals 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• area. Earn profit for de- 536-7031. BeauttfulAdultApts OCH epen G ~ l a <'l . llW. Cronratb SJ;.4200 . "••••••••••••••••••••••·---------•J hvenes&cash,tnpsor r:X l~e. 2 br. 2 ba. dlx pools ide ;ipt nr. bch Adil , no pe ts . Sl95. !'.36-8362 from $ l 90 Oach. 1&2 BR To Share Hnusm~ With <71-1 )491 657'1 -----Onnking problem') JR ACCOUNTANT merchandise fo r selling 2166l Brookhurst, llB 1rom $180 832-4134 J\~k fo~J~ Industrial Rantol 4500 GARDENING ROUTE Call Alcohol Helpline • new subscriptions. 1"9r 962 6653 J\tlults. No Pets "'" for sale Npt. & CdM 24 hrs a day 835·3830 Electronic co. has open· information please cli.11 • 1561 Mesa Dr. Fem. roommate s hare ••••••••••••••••••••••• area.645-3331 -----ing for varied duties in · 642·4321. From sa·n 15 Olk:, East of Newport 3BR oeanrrnt hse N.B. SPIRITUAL READE R eluding cost. payroll. tax Clemente-San Juan YRLY 3 br, 2 ba. by w:2 firemen. $166 + utl AIRPORT Money Wanted 5030 Open lOAM·lO PM Capistrano area. call BllCE TO BEACH beach. Near new. bltns & Blvrl. 1 675-6237 /213 ·634 ·1819 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Advice on all matters, returns. general & sub· 495-0630 and Mission Vie· 1·2-3 Bedroom Apts garage $390. 548·4063 546.9860 --Chuck or Dan ~~~~:~~Ft~~ 312 N. El Camino Real, ~~~~a:!e 1:t~~e~sr.e;{~~~ j o-EI Toro area, call _531-2579 5!2·5010 beach $350 mo •• ;.;:.•••••••••••••••• ample park mg. u R GENT ! par l 0 e r 492·9034 492·9136 helpful. 2 Yrs college Equal Oppor. Employer LIONS ESTATES 3 Br, 2 Ba . yrly 2 blks to RES 0 RT -~forRent 4350 2 Air·cond1t1oned offices. 100% RETURN San Clemente. Fora ppt. manuf . co . ex p e r . 581-6310. 3 Br, $259. 2 Br. $175 F.nl'l 642·3188 Garage for rent . 1959 Ma· Harbor lnnst. Co. needed w1lh Sl0,000 for Lose your cool with your min, \ncludmg account· j?ar, patio bltns, Child 3 BR. 2 ba. gar, patio, . pie Ave, Costa Mesa. $25. Reatton 673-4400 pnme R.E . Investment. children? Help as availa· ing courses. IOAT BUILDElS OK 842 0389 k be h N mo 6 n:ion.lhs payorr secured! ble 24 hrs. 549·8939 Call for appointment S"'lboa' manuC. has the . . bloc lo ac · 0 603pets. . 2 O O O Sq . ft . o r r. & Pnoctpals only. 968-033'7 Industrial Rel a lions .... • Yrly W.Nwpt642·1 LIVI NG ceRental 4400 warehouse spaee direct· today! FOXYGllLS l114)494·9401 foUowingimmed.vac•n· cies for exper. person-HOW REHTIHG Steps to Sand 2 Br 2 Ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly across from OC OtrrCALL·MASSAGE ELQ nel: Meadowlark Golf Course rrplc, de<:k, bltns. $300. 150 I Westcllff Dr. Airport. 549·1480. ~s, Tnait SOlS MODELING T NIC •BonderjDefoller DELUXE 548·3869 &642-0282 Newport Financial Ctr New bldg 2500 sq. ft., M·l ••••••••••••••••••••••• Home·Office·Sludio. ALTAIR •loot Corpeftt.rs <> n e • tw o . I h re " 2BR or 3BR Partly furn. LeasitMJ Office Space w/ft ore. Lge rear dr. 17< 542·3169 Each position req's min 1 bedrooms :l\:ulable. all lHousetoOCean FromSl70 CallonSlle Manager sq.fl. Days 540-5'1LO; LOANS up to 80% PREGNANT? LAGUNA BEACH yr related boat exper. hav e bltn' & dis Cal l 673-71M (714)642-3111ext246 eves.646·0681 lstTDLoC11t..tlf4o;0 Caring confidential EqualOppor.Employer Applicantmusthaveown hwashers. Located in ------Oakwood offero:; t he -counseling & referra1.1---------•1 t ools & trans p. T op presllg1ous area 3 BR. 2 Br duplex. newly dee . finest in resort hvtn~ at a Offtce/lndustraal space, 2nd TD Locms Abortion. adoption & wa ges & x In l c 0 . fplc. 2•, ba, $3'i5 2 BR. frplc. magnificent view pnce you can afford Lag Niguel area 400/3000 Fairest Terms since 1949 keeping. Accounts Receivable Clk benefits. Apply lo Gus&rd encld yard. $290 1 RR, o f ha r ho r. boa l s· S F' Nr Frwy S3l ·l082 Sattler Mtg. Co. APCARE 547·256.1 must have general office at Westsail Corp .• 275 pnv balcony S2J O Will Manner's Mile. $395. mo. There's $1 ma I lion in ;i:;.::•;::::::..-1200 Sq. Fl. M 1 space 64.22171 545-0611 skills. $450 JTIO lo start McCormick Ave, C.M. <"<>M1der .chJldren. See at 64S fl392 days ask for recreation fac1laties. .,1.,.,. w/front office, lge rear•----------Grand OptNIMJ* Will train. Airport area. ·---------1ntersect1on Graham & Ted.or962-9666eves NIGi-IT LIGHTED TEN ./ti.waier d 9 A •"'RI( Call Frank833·0123 lle1l. H 8 . NlSCOURTS A full time ~~~ .. ·':,.:::-"' oor. $189·50 mo. 62 AllnouncetMtlh/ """~ 1----------1 Boat Manufacturing l(eftt ROC)"'S R~alty Spacious 3 br, den. 2 ba. 2 activities director who ~;., _...,. ..... ~erm~~O:~Y· 540-571o P.nottd1/ MASSAGE *CCllblMt As........-S 840-2601 or848·8300 s/decks , frplc, gar. $365 plans parties , BBQ's, I'.....,..,.~..,. ays, evei1. Lost & FoUnd $5. OFF Combo MaHage •Ml ..... ---------•I yrly. Adlts646-1972 trip& & more! F'ree Sun· FOR tease 1665 Placentia ••••.•••••••••.-••••••••• wlthth.lstd. d b h Lostltfouftd 5100 •SAUNA ......... c.,...tera $26.5. LGE Vacant 2 br, 2 YRLY. 2 Br, 11/J ba. frplc, ba , D /W, R&O. cpts , 1 blk to bch. $300 Call drps All util pd. 64~7054. Rrookhurat & Hamilton.--------- A~ No fee. 846·1311 , 846-4938 Sp;ic 3 Br. 2'h ba, frplc, 2 rlOM'd dbl gar's, Xlnt. 10<' nr Hunt. Htbf'. New & v11c. '375 mo. 846-4296. alt 6pm Spac 2 bf', cptt., d~. ut.il pd No pets. Nr bcti 121.5 9fi0.1450 or &n·44 ll 1' £W Ii Spacious 2· Bdrml. P'rplt', dlbwlttr l1r1• pal101 . e n t' e•ra1••· l mi fro ocec. aJ/Up. s.as-eaao ' OCEAMFtlOHT 1 Rdl'm Yearly $32S $TIPS TO IEACH 2 BR, 2 btt. yrly, furn. S375 3 BR, 2 ba. Wntr. S3SO 3 BR. Iv, ba house $375 SU WIND Condo. 2 BR, 2 Ba Un furn Yt-arly . .$400 associated ,_Ii ,..,"'' W •. 11 t t\ t • • :I•, ' . ,.. .. ' '. .. ay nanc . Ave, C.M. 2400 sq Cl $275 • PRIVATE ROOMS Expenenced -=~--------1 648-1164 ••• •••••••••••• • ••••••• Beach For into SM-6330 PlU! beautiful singles, $.140 up store-offices cpts LOST: Diamond Engace· Hours: 11 am-8 pm Mon· · * Tr.r.t111 & S•der1 1&2 bt'droom apts, drpa air bath. 173010FFJCE1uiteapprox.800 mentRing,WalnutSbop· Sa\, ApprenUce-Oen'I Shop 4' ApplylnPeraon fumt.bed&unfumished. BeachBl.H.8 .842·2834 1q. ft. w/encl. patio. plna Ctr, Irvine. Sen· 188S-BParkAvt. Weldio1. Apply at alCISOHYACHTS Rents from $110. Completely hwn , Incl Ument&l value. Substan· Costa Mesa Nartn• FabrtcalOrt, ll09 1931Deere Ave, • FtlEE REHT drartlne table w /plan Ual REW ARO. 83S·9100 646°9944 W.16thSt, N. B. Santa Ana Models Clpf'n 10 to 7. ()(fices as low cis 3Y pc.tr drawers. dra~. crpt.s, Ext. 22 Daye AnlMTIOHt Sorry no pets or children sq n. M1ss1on VieJO & A/C, at.er-co, ideal fo r ---------1 MASSAaE Roommt1tf' ~Hvlc Laguna Nl.-:u<'I 200 to con tractor. Burglar LOS'l'Black&tanfemal FIGURIMODILS l-6Mo'1Won avual 11blt' Month t 2000sqft 8311400 alu m. Ample parklnc. Bloodhound.An~toCleo. llltOYtr IOA TRIP AllMIH Gelcoat ex.,_r necta1. month occupancy. -$325. mo. 2318 Nwpt CallLindy,645-7758. ISCORTS FRF:F. RENT. NpBch at Blvd, C M. 548 2616. Outcall· Appl. only Oakwood Garden Apartments ai rpo rt. Utlll~lu & 1_..._._ w-.1.-~ 4600 NOTICE Hom•·Offlce-Studlo janitor in<"I. c.ardf'n '""uu --6~ I 3111 swll"• fr()m S88. 971) ~ •••••• •••• ••••••••••••• how Dally Piiot Clalll· ~ • ----•Rf'liablt, employMt mar· lf1cd ad1 d isplay lh•lr •l MO f'RF.E RENT• n«.'d couple look.In« lor mrssages with leclblllty 1·2-3 Hm 0Utce1 from tB-R, unfurmahed hff. and unpHt? Ow edt, •• Sl H per mo Near f'ncd. yrd. gar .. peu are proud t.o uy. really airport No leHe req. OK . UOO or under. 1et r uull1. Phone 833-3223 9 Tit noon -.$.Tlh~ 5 pie au eu..51171. • l \ MecGreaor V a.cht COt\'P We w1U. lrain you In our 1631 Placentia. C.M. business. No st.nkcs or Bookkeeper p rr pay~ll ' layo((S, plenty or work. Ir & bill ns 'uto accurlllo you're ambllious & 1 • would llke a potltlon out typ st, 1 year exper. of the ordinary. Call Momlnu Only 20-25 tu-. betwn9:3cu,a p rn . perWftt. t1t·t8800lor11 Have somethln.1 to u\lf llf·lllJ auslllechdtdoltwott. • I ..J !!~!.~~·~ ..... ?~.~~ ~-~~ ..... ?!.~~!~~~ .... ~•••••?!!.~ ~~·!.~~·~•••••~!_~~ ~ .. ~~~ ••••• !~.~~!~!.~.~·~.~ ..... ~!.~~ 1Uftday,January27, 107G • DAILY PILOT BJS Afipt19Cn 1010 ~ 1010~ 1010 Bµsln s man lookln• for part tlme u1ociate. !km~. yr. ~1182 DRIVERY REAL ESJ'ATESAL!:S 't~gl~CW. SALES MANAGER TRAINING ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• --Caf.terio Wotter Sbndally, Mon lhru P'rl S&aftlna pay$3.0Sbr. Call Mon thru l''l'fday •9MSM CAltW4SH HB.PW4MTB> F/Umeonly.20+ METRO CAR WASH ~Harbor Bl, C.M. CASHIER, preferably ROUTE Motor Route delivery route for Daily Pilot in Newport Beach, aftemoons 3:30 to 5 :30 and Saturday and Sunday momlngs. For detai.la phone 642·•321 ask for Mr. SaJaW. 11 :00to12:00 ' Equal~y E~· VNUCENSED, Newspaper promotion company has G.t..,.111E RED openings ror people with vans or station TR~~~~~TI wagons. Earnings Sl.50 to $300 'or more REYRI C ~.RAT O H NEEDED! GAS ONLY. M7·3182 Hotpolnl Elec Dryer SSO. G E. tle<: dryer sz:s. Ktn· more waaber ses . Guar /del 5'6-#72 Wt train you to aell per week. Good chance for botn• wltb an accelerat· advancement. Must be able to work ed coune that st.arta Im· with teenagers. 'lb.is is not a paper med.lal.ely. lt you art In· route.. RCA Whrlpl, washer, 2 tereated la eamlng bia ·c ll M S . t 5 89 6 cyclea, •Int condition money from Lhe atart, a r . cott a 49-S for $125.173-2190. aet ln<11vidualit4.id tree appointment. "- tralnlni on lbt job in one ~ or many top omces locat· Equal Opportunity Employer ••••••••••••••••••••••• ed lbruout Oranae Coun· •PET WORLD• 1040 UNCLAIMED PIRSOMAL PaOPHTY SALE SAT. THIU WED. ALLSPACE w/bkkpe exp. Stuam's t • For Gentlemen. New,POrt tWp W•ted 7100 tWp W..t.ct 7100 Beach. 615·1717 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CASHIER ty, caJJ for further de· ..1. p tt Bu 11 s, pekes , taila. Arl ene, (71') Htt,Waeted 710uHetltW..tecl 710G Chihuahua. Poodlea , ~ 848-87'2 ••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shib·tzu, Maltese, 0 . • IMIMl-SIU STORAGE WillHOUSISJ 1564 HAMILTON ST. (Corner Hamilton & Newland) WBIDAYS 1-7 WfB.84DS 1-5 Exper'd. Mon, Tues & 'fburs 12·9. Sat & Sun 9:30-6.MS.708(), . JUNIOR SALESMAN REAL ESTATE SALES Shepherd, Poma. 100 Mltcell-.ou1 808() Ml&efllGMOUJ 8080 TELEPHONE SALES mixed puppiea. Siud SVI •••••••••••• • • ••••• • • • • •• ••••••••• ••• • • ••• • • • • Kenn Rima Hcrdware 2666 Harbor Bl, CM Jol·n .u.1 most breeds. 2.525 w. 17th ' 1T' MEN WOME~ at Falrview. SA. Open ~ng sbe ~d. new, xlru Kwi; s1.i:l' Bdrm furn. 5olld 10To15 Years Old T.-bell. Realtors " eves S3l·S027 ftrm Sl9S incl del. Usual oak. Gun cabinet Sl50., •Free lS day training OVER 20 · · ly home835 2263 Lam P!t. tu rn tab It•. Ghikl care needed to help Mot.her with 2 toddlers & a babe on the woy. Flex sclledule. Own t rans. Call SS7·3588. course Black & White pups, speakers, 2 Soni TV's, K~ •Cadillac car program Have Cun selling Orange County's Pedigree German Short Cancelled Contract 200Q Skas, Lang,e lioots, C:hun Earn $20-$40 per week working after school & Saturdays. Huntington Beach & Fountain Valley areas only. Leave name, address & phone number on tape •Hawaii,,..apulcotrlpe leading newspaper along with an HairPolnterX.7wks,lat yds carpeting, below del1er & gas Jogs. •lat pla~e -sales In importantcharitydrive. shots, male & female COllt 547-8729 751-0956 OrangeCouoty UCEU.IMT ~IHGS $20.ea. 833-87M dys, or Fender Musll·ma!'>lt•r lwallb~-u-y -,-ou_i_J_u--kl.'-'OO_x_o_r •l.st place· listings taken Two three hour shifts. 7Sl·2204 eves. Bass Guitar Excellent pm ball inachint>. Work Chlf'Ch Baby Nursery Al· tend. Sun AM & PM, Wed Eves. Rev. Martin , recorder. Call 536-4298. · in Orange County I 0·.30-1 ·.30 5:30-8:30 York.ie. Female. 4mos cond1t1on Make o(fer. mg or not. 839 1941; or •l.5t place-ltst1ngs sold ln very small. Call 546·9933 after 6 pm & 63!!·2l62. 556qr87_ . Orange County FULL OR rART TIME 962-8717. weekends. 1--------- •l!lt place-advertising In Come in pref erred, or call Mike Girl's Sch\\1nn 2 ~i><l bike, CITY OF HUHTIHGTON BEACH HelpW-.d 7100 HetpW-.d 7100 California J hn 250 E S S 0 · 8monthlnshSetter USEDUTIL.TRLRS. $25. Wuluul n1f table •1st place-advertising in O son. ' 17th treet, Uite ' $65 AJI sizes• good ('Ond. w/form1t•a wood gram ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••• the U.S.A. ~00, Costa Mesa, Ca. 640-17Zs. 893-2428or531-1426 lop, no-mar. sis. Small •lsl place winner RELO FIREWOOD Maple cof lable. $1 0. • MANPOWER ADMIHISTR.A TION FIELD MAID-PERMANENT MANAGEMENT N e w Po r t a e a c h Position, with National Travelodge, 6208 W. Cst Company. Public rela· Hwy, NB Home Buyer's Contest Siberian Husky, Metal bookcase $10, gd If unlicensed, let us as· HelpW•t•d 7100 HelpWanttd 7100 male4mo's,AKC Euc. s79. Oak, $89. Cord cond l Twin hdboard $6 sl.st you in obtaining your ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 968-7722 Uel. 830•974o. ca 11 act c r 6 pm RealEstatellcense.Call Servl"e Station Alte0n· ALASKAN Malamute weekdays,S45·78S_7_· --.!ju F /time Temporary •Job Openings For: lions & sales backgroundM __ A_l_D_S __ C_o_r_S_m_a_l_I he lpful. Phone Mrs . EXCLUSlV E Motel LEE COLLINS RISTAURAHT .. p KC h · Color TV S69.9s guar 962•5566 NOW HIRING d:rnt, exper 'd. Day & ups. A c amp1on B/WTV S29.95 guar Cust om l amps h ades : .. ELECTRICIANS $1056/Mo Dowell H be . • ed • (714) 540_2929 • 4~~~2;an arrang . Cooks, Waitreaaes & Eves. Full & p/time. Ap· stock . M /Fem. Ph : Vacuums Sl9 95guar need to replace that Kitchen Help. Apply ply, Shell Station, 17th & 751--0956 KJrby Vac· S69.9Sguar lampshade? Call 530·9884 Equal Oppty Employer TAR BEL~ betwn 3 & 5pm, Colony Irvine, NB. Free to You 8045 JAKE'S 6'15 6421 orS94-8206 afters P .M Kitchen, 3211 Harbor Bl , 'HOPPING CENTER ••••••••••••••••••••••• 460NNewportBl,N.B. Mother seeks playmate GEHERALOFC Ma~~~';t~PERSON C.M. ''' mainl. man. Full time. Go o d home , Lab / EVESCALL642·5660 for toddler daughter, P /time. Ex per. pref'd. Exec looking for part· Restaurant Cashlu Repairs, cleanup, light S~epherdll shots. Obe· Mc Lane edger S50. Lg. ages l 'Aito 21/2. 962·8097. 1926-1976 CARPENTERS $952/mo $756/mo Typing 60, filing, phone t ime associate in· REALESTATESALES landscaping. Must have d.1eoce school. Loves off. dsk $60 19 .. Il&W work. Call 714 /"'AO·l301 hol I 1· FuU Forcoffe.eshop.Mustbe owntools&becapableor kids.SS4-0560aft3pm po rt. TV $60. El ... .,.. w . esa. e supp 1es. y RESOLVE o 21 & r 'd · t .. LABORERS SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS In public conslruction ask for Marge. IKL, IJ)c, capataltzed. 673-2223. ver expe m res · working without close ---------ct A I b 4360c D N B T k . cashiering. Apply in s un.rvision. 2 yr. old male typwrtr $75. '45 rblt Jeep proJe s. pp v y J an ampus r. . . ---------o ma e 76 your most ,,_ $100 642 7552 ft b l" M /R t person, to Mrs. Baltazar, LJONS L'<"TATES Beagle Mix. eng. • · a JOI. at Coa~ta Employ. . . anwr n aurOftt successful year. Ask us ~ 5 30 ment Center. 172 11 General Dentist look.1ng M t·-h'7"'. . food Hotel Laguna, 425 S 536.2579 6'5-4587eves. : f t h l us aveexper.an to helpyouplanitandbr· Coast Hwy Laguna . Beach Bl. Huntington or ass ~ 0 a so enJ~ys & beverage & banquets ing 1t to exciting reality' To gd hme Long ha red Arm s t r o n n no wax Bea"h. 842.7751 d. esk duties. Exper w. 1th · Beach. Silk scree n .Prin ~er t.o ho t s· d & 1 linoleum ap"p'roximately -.,..-.. -------1 insurance & collections Oceanfront hotel in C all Dave Cooper, pnnt production signs in use~a . paye very , Garh(' -Baked-· Enemy -Wholly - Laguna Beach. Re ply to 540-9922 ROUTE SALES own shop. p ·ae"e work beautiful. 5 yrs. old. 3 sq. yds. $20. 963-8738 _________ ,helpful. X-Ray cert. Cl ified d 633 / .. ass 1 a no. co Aggressive person for basis. Plenty of work. _846-__ 1254 __ . ______ 14 CLERICAL _n....,ee,...es_sa~· ry....,.._._84_6_-0638 ____ 1 Daily Pilot, PO Box 1560, route truck. Delive ry & •couch $40. Mono Bogan E~EHGY Milted emotions is hear· mg your t eenager , who has never worked a day in hts life, tell you about the ENERGY or lhe sun. Newport Center firm. Gen Ofcjle9QI Sec Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 sales. li:xpr. in fiberglass 1_S48_-8300 __ a_ny_u_·m_e. ___ 13 Mos Old Fem Puppy, amp. $40. Recplayer $20. 5 yrs. A/P & AI R & 10 M09Ccrd/ExSec industry helpful. Taking SfATISTICALTYPIST part Shepl_Siberian Spkrs Sl0.644-0208 ventory ex pr. ProJect I 00010 Fee Paid Marine M.chanic applications Jan 28th on RECEPTIONIST Husky . .Bea utiful, sbots.~~~~:::;;;;:~::;:~-;;-;;-;;;::-~~~~~;;;;~~:i r~P:Onsib11ity & office Immediate employment ly, 9AM to 2PM. 1055 E . For busy Newport 751~ maChine skills. 640·4630, Liz Reinders Agency ( . ht C th S ---------4020 Birch St, Ste 104 or ng person. om· 4 l. Santa Ana C~nter CPA firm. Atlrac-To a loving home. I Yr old •8•tilo•5•w•k•d•ys _____ I Newport Beach 833-8190 pany benefits. Steady _________ 1----------t1 ve ~1rl w /good black male Lab / Call ror appt/Estab '65 worlk. EAxprl. ~nly need ---------1 SALES/CANVAS telepho~e manne r .& Shepherd• 65 J bs. • CLERICAL app y. PP Y in person REAL ESTATE g~ typme skills, wall housetrained. Gd guard GirlFr1day/PartTime Anchor Marine Co. 1171 OPPORJUHITY Hourly wage against tra1.n _good typist on dog, af!ect1onate, ~~~,~~ ,10 ~eyp ~dod~re ~Y 6 hrs per day. N.B. area. Back Bay Dr, NB. Calif. Well located RE office. comm. Selling quality staustical. Call 644.a244 shots/lie. 494·2382 eves. 549·1151. M u t $lO Openi·ng for 2 la'censed producl w/good reputa-foriotervlew. 'I' c I e pr o m Pt e r o f ---------asseuse· P o per ti L . k I t t ---------~. itu 8050 h W l i Salespeople. Your Own o n . 1 n e e r "'"' ff "lcwport Beach. 642·3260 H•tRDRESSER our. e ran. F . b d F d TE.,..OfnCLERK """ Call556·6716 deskandphone.18Years i re r an oo s, " ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'L~RK TYPIST, part With some following, for ---------In same location. Broker1_640-8 __ 71_0 ______ Xlnl work ng conds & Shop & Save · new & .used 11me employment. Large new salon. top percen· MATURE W 0 MAN , advertises your listings SALESCLElK benefits. Good skills re· ft.! r n •. g 1 ft s .. m 1 s c . co. with xlnt benefits tage, Hair at 250 Design p / t 1 me lo we I come & pays for your advertis· For photo store in C.M. q 'd. F /time. Salary ac· Walson s Bargain Nook . worlung cond. Work 2 Plaza640·7870. newcomers & contact Ing. Good walk-ins. call Ideal for homemaker. cording to exp. New S45W.19thSt.C.M. hrs wk. 10AM·2PM Mon.1 _________ merchants. Fiexible hrs. for interview. W.E . Work while the kids are York Li!e lnsuraoce Co. l"ri. H1 schoo l !(rad. re· HOSPlTAL Need car, lite typing. Lachenmyer, Realtor, in school. P/time, nexl· Call Miss Gladstone at quired. 45 + WPM, abl 547·3095. 1860 Newport Blvd., 6441230for appointment lo -handle heavy phone. CREDIT & i---------Costa Mesa, S.6·3928: blehrs.646-236'. EO. E · Good Used Furniture & Apply in person R 30 9· MECHANIC eves,673-4577. 1--· -·-· ------1 Appliances-OR I will Mon-Fri Sufeco Ins. Co COLLECTIO:i\ Lite repair & lube man.1--------1 SALEs.MANAGER TELEPHONE SALES Sell for You. 17S70 Brookhurst, FV IN Born again Christian to Wanted for women's NEB> 20 MASTERS AUCTION I t:: o.E. work in independent Real Estate Career leading figure salon. Will Students 16 & over. Mon 646-8686 & 833-9625 -' CLERK garage. 645·1532. Eves ATTENTION train. Well groomed. M t b tn. f l thru Fri, 5:30·9pm & Sat •ft LCaft 842 1542 t:oncess1on help, must call 548-7976. us ave m gure. """ v-• Some exper. pref'd . ---------Mature women pref'd. AM. Hrly wage +bonus. ---------• have neat appearance. H 1 · ct f Earl Am · D' & F/llme 8-4:30. Cont.act MODELS-MASSEUSES LIC'O HNUC'O Forapptcall00.3630. e Pon proJe or non y en can avan ovtr l8 yrs. old. xlnt posi· Mr. Gorena, 642·2734 . Es -V profit organization. Chair, Jike ou, $200, 11on for student. Apply Figure Models, corts Classes Start Im med. Secretary-Typing 50, sh Work in our of~. Apply, 642·3280 . iflcr 7 :30 PM So. Coast E .O.E. needed. Top money. New Complete Course/2 wks 90. F/time. 11 Mo's year. 10·4pm, 12065 Garden ------. ---1'1 Th t #2 685 Studio. 631·3811 GI / ht /4 aza ea er • •Special, personal & Apply Laguna Beach Grove BJvd, G.G. or call ass wrg aro~ w Sunflower C M lost · Hostesses positions Nursing Attendant ex-individualized help. School Di3trict, Person-art4pm892·2258. cbrs, $160. Chinese -.--a va 'l with Welcome ' Onth ·bl ' · )Off. ""ou" Modm tbl & chrs, $165. COOl<·PfTIME 1 · perienced. Bayview • eJo rauung ne ice.4.,...._.. TOWTRUCKDRIVER Chslofdrwrs$2S,2nite Hunt B"h 536-3012 Wagon. Pleasant, ~ext· Conv. Hospital , 2055 •FREE• 'd G •·WT . ds.,. 0 k r h .. ble hours, car reqwred. Thurin Ave. CM 642·3505. •ManagementOp. SECRETARY exper . "' owing, stn •40 ea. a o cc r COOK. R 8 I e ; g h 11 i 11 s Phone Mrs. Dowell (714 ) portunltles Accurate 60 wpm + typ-1000 Irvine, NB 642·12.52 $65. Oak buffet, $125, ma· l l 50 E 16 h S 540-2929 0 PT IC AL CLE AN ER •Challenging Current ing, some bookkeeping, * •T., •YEL TR .... E• * P&lechrbk$4cs5e. $25. Wood dj!sk os.p., 1 1 · 1 ~ t. TRAJNEE-882 Produc-expanaion program. phone filing. No shthd. ftA " Newport Beach. 645·57o7 · HOUSEKEEPER Uon Place. NB 642·5446 •To 80% commission Must enjoy running of· Busy Newport Beach Call 548-7800 Counter g irl. Quality F/time. Conv. Hospital. PAINTER'S HELPER •Licensepreparation fice & attending to de· ~r~~nefeYd s~:~spe~~~l Desks. chrs, coffee tbls, quick food r estaurant. Park Lido Conv. Center, ed h . Day or night classes. tails. Sense of humor "eager to.learn" person'. end tbls, Jamps. , pictures, Experprer'd.540·3077. 466 Flagship Rd, N.B. need wit somepam_t· •FreelOdaytraining nee. Legal ex p er. ed 79 37 , 642-8044 . ing exper, Call L. VieJo •Top office locations helpful. Salary open. Gd Accurate typing, sal~s er enzas, misc, 9 -.t 3 CREDIT·New Accounts, . . PaintingCo.S8l·3228 NoLkense necess. benefits. Resume t o: oriented. Call Control Dining.Table, 6 Hi back At Rec., Gen'I Ok Part· Hsekpr, hv~ in. mature . to apply. American Trame Health Career Employment chairs, bluegreen vinyl. T1~.$3perhr.540-1SOO, woman.lgirlSyrs.old. P~RTfTIME Fordetails,please Foundation, P.O.Box Agency,556-8505. $45,642-8828 9--tf\i on-Fri. Motherless home. can Galhenng signatures for Call Linda ~.7555 654 CdM Ca 92625 n•tST ------------------1 aft 6 pm. 642·6523. November ballot. $5.00 to •--· --· -·----.-6 cu. ft. Westinghouse -~~~~~~~-1.;;;:;;;;;:;;;;~j;i;i;;;;ii~~ $8.00 per hr. SS1·4407 RECEIYIMG cretary-Must have And General Office refrigerator $125. Oval -DAY COOKS & ISSUE CLERK brokerage exper Prefer 548·2888 pecan dining tbl, 8 chrs. ,,DAY IUSBOYS 1 E. Hydraulics SlSK some cashier or wire~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; $100. 646-6794 Sec/sh/MagU toS825 Perfed Hotel exper desired. room exper Xlnt work·.----------11 Order Desk $700 Leading N · B hotel. ing conds. Contact Heidi, *UTOTEM * For Sale-Dbl bed $30, crib Apply In Person Recept/Type to $600 Work'--E 0. E. Call 644-1700 ext 640-1460 EMPLOYM11:.i..1T $30. dresser $15. Call Mon thru Fri 3-Spm Secretary /Sh $675 H-.:..~ sao. 1---------'"" S48·2030. .... COCO'S P /tGen'IOfc $2.75hr -· SECRETARY OPr<>RTUNITIES -------11 • LGCJUlla Hllli Irvine Personnel Agency 9Clftlt-2:30pm or RECEPT /TYPIST Full or Part-Time s.IKt Ui.d Fum. 244)01 Ave de La Car lota 488 E. 17th Costa Mesa 3:30-9pm Pleasant personality for ADMINISTRATIVE No Exper. Necessary This Week's Specials: E;walOpporEmployer Suite224 642·1470 Earn $4 hr putting your switchboard duties. Experien ced sa les Age21·65EUgible OakPedestalTbl$350. ~~~~~~-~~!~~~~~~~~~personality to work. All F /time . Apply , Roy secretary needed to as· GoToTheNearest OakChina,$425. work done Crom our new Carver Rolls Royce, 234 sist district manager in TIC TOC MARK ET 6 French Oak Cb rs $85 ea Deltverymen over 21, ---------1 Irvine ore. you must E.17th St,C.M. administration & sales ForApplications&lnfo 1635SuperiorUnil4 pet!E_. p /t. Early morn INVENTORY ~sess a ple~sant clear Receptionist, full time & coordination of active OR CALL (714 ) 642·7702 Cost.a Mesa 548·7951 ~-~~~e~2~~1tv~~~~~j vo1ce&aconf1dentman-part time, R ich ard sales office. Require· T1cTocSystems.lnc. OpenMonthruSat 548·1.740 before llAM. CLERKS ner. Perfect for students Ouellette Salons, 200 cmeenntts: b3utso1Sneyesasrserxe: . ATTENTION_· Do you & ~use~ives. No actual Newport Center Dr. C h I t d •DEMONSTRATORS• selling 1nvolved. For NpBch perience. Xlnt typing & Waitress. exper. /time. av.e qua 1 y u s.c more info.833·8098betwn · s horthand. College Sid's Blue Beet. 107 21st furruture you ~ould hke P tlWilltrain,car. 200 9am-5pm. RECEPTIO .... IST ... raduale prefe rred Pl ,NBafter4pm. tosell,butdontwantthe • 847-8727, 543.3504 " & • • bothersome phone calls N d d Phone Order Desk. Gen Want well organized Technical background Wanted someone to come or traffic thru your DtNTAL ASSISTANT 88 8 office skills, gd typist. 1 shaq> person. f?r bu~y extr~ml'.IY helpful. For h.:?lp out in my shop, 2 3 home? Let us sell it for C h.a i .r s id e • ex Per I d• I girl office. No smokers. pos1ll~n. Admitting/ dis· application, please ~all, hrs a day in morn. $2.50 you on consignment. Call n~essary.N.B.644·9211. mme 1318 y 3121 Redhill, CM. Apply charging exper. help.Cul, Raychem Corporation. hr. No exper. nee._~· forinformation.548-7951 DENTAL • ASSISTANT. afternoon only. but not necess. Garfield (714)833·3630. An Equal Mart One Hour Marllmi· --------- Cbairs ide f /t ime. At VOLT Conv. Hospi tal , 7781 Opportunity Employer. ing. S48-6485. HorHs 1060 So PRESSMAN Garfield Ave, H. B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• le~t G mo's exper.,_me Tetnp0r• "t Set"flcn Ex per • d . AB D ick 8'7·9671. S.Cretary/Recept. WE'LL PAY YOU Reg. TB, 17 h, Bay, 10 yrs. Sat.HB.S46-l540. 3848CampusDrive hel ful Loe I · l '---------R.E. ofc. lmmed open· TOLE•Ri..a T 'd h t /· ·~ ' p . a pnn co. RECEPTIONIST . G od t i t d . .-" rn ' un Jump.~. DRIVERSWAHTEO 546-4741 Write Classified ad no. mg. o yps, ic· ASKILL Prpty.646-2668 (Across From 632 c /o Daily Pilot, PO Needed for Newport Bch t.aphone skills, lite bk· Army Opportunities . . ,.f~:tni:;~:."o~~r o.c. Airport) Box 1560, Costa Mesa Ca ~as~ ~ompanyr T>'"':,':1g kpog. o.c. Airport area. Costa Mesa 645-1163 Western Ridmbg LessoS7ns, A ly I P Equal Oppor. Employer 92826. ey pre era e. 833-9093. Huntington Bch 962·8822 $6.50 your . orse, .50 ~ PP n crson 646-5076. Ask !or Sterling Santa Ana 542.4130 my horse p/hr. SS7 .9359 Yeffow Cob PRlu..IR Ball Secretary/Receptionist 11251 Slater Avenue Lady who odJ $500 & up a "' •---------• General office work. J•welry 1070 • Fountain Valley mo. Sales oriented. pb: Expr. Itek/ABOick. A/C E. SALES Duties include, typing, M.rcttc..di'e ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------'---1 Marilyn 968.8378 facil. La1 Hills. 830-0890 '-T'.•RT THE filing, etc. Appointments DRIVERS.PLANTS ~ ,,,_ Moo thru Fri, 8·5. Dri'vers wonted with Laundry Aide, f/time. PRODUCTION/ NEW YEAR 897·7623H.B. knowledge or Indoor Bayview Conv. Hosp, GEM. OFC CLHK RIGHT! AL rau 'YAni.Ms hou,.~planls tor sales & 2055Thurin,CM642-350S. Sailboat manuf. has 11'-*•H-• u~rl'f·1IL! lf'J\nl delivery In O.C. area. f h ~ ---Must o wn rellableLaundry worker wanted vacancy or a arp ag· L.ecinlnYeshMtth f verl~le-van or station CdM Area/ over 18 only, ~';;~~~k~~~~=l:~ Earn More ~V0&.2 Ma™ER .w; wagon. Earn $150+ Wk· exper pre · Hrs, 7:30 lo ll1ures. Poeltion will in· Our residential division ~fPME "f'O TALI(. ly. Apply In person. The S:OO Moo·Frl, $2.SO hr, elude maln\ainlo1 pro· list.9 and sells more in· TO~ /\BOuT YruR Plant Pusher. _ea_ll_Mo-__ 7200 ______ , ductJon records, compll· vestment propertlea than ea:R O.Mc.ou!'JCTION ~ W. 19th St .. C.M. lDI daUy &t wkly rePort.a. moe\ inv atment ortlces. - ~IC. SECRETARY MACHINIST :~.u~:~,e~:rieq~:~ ~:~:~;rr;~~:if;~'~ MaJclrrorplocatednear JURRETLATHE F /tlme, areal co. fic:ea, Full FaoUJUea, O. <.;.Airport. Xlnt com· Setup operator, own beneflu, friendly at· Property Pu.ttbue Plan, ptq~tlon beneflla. Top moapber•. Apply to Lyn Fr I o g e B e n e t it 1 • typlq & fih req'd. C.11 tools Mln•)'ntxper. Balrd,Wesllall Corp,2'15 Superior Commission, CeclUa Law•on, M0-7311 TOOL & McCormick Ave, Colt.a Dynamic Oraanlzatloo, Mesa Learnln& Snvlronment, Faahkm Business needs DIE MA"ER · F\JU lime uc~nsees who s harp 1al1. Sal ea to I\ R .. elow Tech will work for umin11 In manaaement. Full or Exper. on pro1re11lve CRT, ART. Full-time .&xceu of $25,000 ~t P/time. Mra. Caatrop, dlcs. Var1edohr1. Mr. Adams, year aro encouraged to Ml-"TM9. Apply In Person San Clemente Geneul apply for a po1it1on with Female live-In companion ntdSW for eJdtrly lady tn . bnlth tt:4 '""). Ktr4.reUable, own tran1, ref,, 644·'724, l ·lOam onJ~ I • SHUl-1.0K Cotr ffolpltal, 7l•lt96·1122 our Investme nts or uoo £. ~ormandy Pl SA Ruidentla 1 DI vl1lons. (l bl., No. ot M c:Pa~ • Have~cthlnayou want Call Don Berman. Pl'ul ~blkW.olGrand) t.oaell? Claaaified ad1 do dent. QUAIL PLACE Eq111110ppor. Employer ll well -Call NOW, PROPERTIES INC . 84MIT8. 752·1920 ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED A.ntf... 8005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP CASH DOLLAR PAID FOR YOUR •JOHATHANS AMTl9UES• ia having their onnual in· veotory aale. JEWELRY, WATCHES, ART OBJECTS, GOLD, SILVER SERVICE, FINE FURN & AN· TIQUES. 6'S-2200 Upto40%offl ! 42231.5lSt. N.8. 673-6001 Man's ring, 111 JO, Eye of a ----------1 Malachite Slone, custom Lovely Mahogany Reaen· made, driftwood casting cy S tfle Dloloa tbl. valued at $299.50 asking Cl920. SUS. 968~. $200, 64S-«l88 Antlqu~ oak dresser, MllUll-.on 8010 b e veled mirror. ••••••••••••••••••••••• drawer/perf. cond. $17 S86-893S WANTED ---------t TOP CASH DOLLAR ApplC111Cn ••••••••••••••••••••••• Refrig. 2dr $89. Gulla S37. Otloman chr. $25. &45 2896 PA I D fo' 0 R Y 0 U R JEWELRY, WATCllF.S • ART OBJECTS. GOLD SILVER SERVIC E FINE FURN & AN· TIQtJES. 645-2200 R~f'rlg u~ $15. Late F1rewood Org, &uc, S80 mod. 20d FF Xlnt cond cord, del. Oall. CoHt SllS. Cao dellver. Flrewood Supply , 75()...4441 5811\22. •• I Promise her anything, b11t give her BM~e . This Valentine's Day send your love a greeting all the world can share. Express your love in a Daily Pilot Valentine • It's easy. Compose your personalized greeting -a love poem, pretty prose or words your love wi II find special. We can set your message in type to fit the size border you se lect, or your handwritten thoughts may ap- pear in the border of your choice. Your personalized Valentine greeting can be "sent" in any of the border s shown her e. Ads come in· three sizes: $8, $15 and $2 for the special child's size card. (You must' be under 12 to qualify for the littlest greeting). For help with your ad, just call 642·5678. A friendly Daily Pi lot ad-viser will be happy to assist you. And, If you like, YOU can charge your Valentine ad. Your credit is good with us, or you may use your Master Charge .or BankAmerica rd. DAILY PILOT 642-5678 Mail to Daily Pt lot Class1 f 1ed Department, Box iseo. Costa Mesa 92626 \J .Jc DAIL"'-LOt TuNu.a" Jan aN27 19715 Trucks 9560 Autos WGlllltd t5tOJA81oa.. lillpa-W . ..._ lluoried Alltoa, lmpon.d ...... .11~!·.~~~!'.•••••••••••' ~--;;;m..---------------__,_•_:..__u_Z& __ _.... --• e ••• • • e • ee •• ••• • e • e • • • ••• e ••ea e ••I ea• e •I I I I I I I e 1 I I •••• I I I ..... I 1•ee1 •••••••••••• I I I I a I ee e •• • • e I• I I ee e e •••a• ~ 1010 , ltad1o, locm. 'ow~ 9040 ''WAMTTO S&.L Rat tt725 Pon.cM 9750 Vol•o 977 f\wd · 9940 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ttlA, Stereo 1091 • • ••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Chevy \'\ton PU YOUR CAI?.. •• ••••• •• • •••• • ••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••• • •••••••••••• S m o t e rlr e ,burala r ••••••••............... $2,850. &cyl,Sspd, Let u It I "14 914 18 lat re ~spcl OliMGl!COUMTY '75Elitc Wblte onwhlte, alarms lS/20' .. dtsrount PaD1.son1c: c~~ette deck 28' R~trop Cruiser __ Musts II 642·7288 CAS~~ .;: t kc t;; ti:J'~ AM /FM ·ster~o Xlnl VOLVO ~~~· $4850 P • P • oU mtg. Lt~l ~r1cu W/CR02. 2 mikes, hke Chm 6cyl.ba1t tank, '7SCbevy\'l ton tbortbed • n y make 0 r cond. 17M ma. $S,49S. l!:XCLUSIVELY VOLVOI..;.. _______ _ 4 5625 new. $100. 557 g393 .after 8 nu P ml, eng tuned Silvuado Rt'<i compJ.i.o. modcl...cars, trucks. 497·2274. Laraest Volvo Dealer '15 Ford LTD waaon, k>Jr l"u-eplace, rree :.landing pm Anderson'i. 6469000 ly loaded, pan slnpma vans. recr eation al "73 911T. mi.nl cond. Must LDOranieCounty! miles, :i ll pow er, 30", block metal $75AMt t-'M Stt'n~ f>erf~ctly 26' B•yhner Vict oria . wh eels. Real nice V@ h aclea 1mpor u & see.$8898. 8l1YorLE~E AM/FM stereo. Sharp! 494·2417 after.Spm buuhful 6' Oi.rk W11lnut Twin Volvos, dual con c1&mper hcU. Wall take dom~sUca. ~u:st be rn 6T:M489 after 5pm DlRBC'f 846·5039or (213)448,..584 c b 5425 5SG 7874 trots, tnm tabs, full I-' o.. SHOO or t'ar or trut'k & running cond1llon & meet ~ 223 Glori .i M: ri.bJ II 8 anet -bim tnl, carnp •r back, T O.P. $159 mo. 751 -5143 Cahforntu safoty code '57Speeds~e.r ~t ·~· fl~-~f~~I ·~a!~~~. ;;!~ :t~~~- T1eatment.s !or ~J pnt·c P1ont~r SX 939 receiver 2 rull cover, tnilcr. extra ,60 GMC stake n.,,,1 shand•rdis. FACTORY Great cond1t1on • T • b ak -.... Jt Wesl cltlt Salon Arbatu s spea k ers . t k VH F d t h u.:~. V6 EICaminoAutoSales AUTHORIZED $6,000 750-2517 ang,powcr t es • .........,, "1 1 n.•44 _ Pioneer 8track tjjpc ·"dn l>,f '. ep eng,4spd,$600, 498 1400 Dealer Saln •Swvlce (240KLL). ,,.... ""' fm er. ully t"Qwppt.>d to 645·2052 '72 914 blk w/blk ~ 000 2025 S Manchester ThModot Robift1 ~1 _.-1-------player $450 flr m 548·4798 go Pvt party, 1168·9028 Parts• Leoslnca . · • · ~ .-Wacan~~s 8081 an6.A:JkforHenry Bo....&..,or-11 --SEUIMGYOURCAR? 120 W.Warncr at?lain ~~:1&knt cond. $4,500. Anaheim 750-2011 FORD ft"U un -9060 '73FORDF·lOO PICKUP. TO,PRICES,AIO SunlaAna 557·2132 2060HarborBlvd. •••••••••••••••••••••••Mal;n;;vox rolor TV,••••••••••••••,...••••••• V-8. ~uto. trans .. po~er Forlmports 0 73 .914 Appea r a n ce Autos,Uled Cosla Mesa 642·0010 W ~NT El> . Plu rn be.rs r adio, phono • comb. OOLPHIN 24' sloop, S&s steenng, $2999. 00568S). Paid for or Not Honda 9727 Group, AM /F M stereo, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------- Pipe mactune and dies bea u t cab. mk /o!r design. Manulacturer's Theodore Robins D.anLewiilmnorts ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt cond, must sell this AMC 9905 '74. 2 Dr. Brgm. PS/PB. •~"thru2".Call 534·3682. it!l'..!·6422 dis playboat.Brundnew' FORD. 1966 Jlarbor.C.M. New '75 Honda Ci vic wk ,$4000firm,673·7890 .••••••••••••••••••••••• Till str whl! AM /lt'M w ANTE o · pol t er· s Teac A 7030, 10" reello re-Ind 's 2 sails, winches, 2060 Harbor Blvd . 646·9303 Sl!lwgn. 6 mos old, 7,000 673--U109 Balboa. •61 Rambler Wgn depnd· ster e<>. l4ux int. $3675, Wh~t . good <'ond . & r"· .,I Prof. l>'·C k. Must sell. lifelines, galley, h~ad, all Costa Mesa 642·0010 • . ..& l rl d ma., $3,900. 833·2580 or bl 6 <'YI .. spd O /D 554·1412 "" " " ... teak in t. Sl ... eus 5, -os , mpo e ""'5·9710. '74 914/2. Mags, AM/FM_, e · ·•· · . · ---------asonablc. Call alter 5 S425 or· bes t offer " " • "' "'""" 495 5442/831 2412 tra1lerablc Large dis ~ Che''Y l;,a ln PU vry. cln. ••••••••••••••• ••••••• , . . . App. Gr p, 23,000 m~ . ....,.,.,. · · --Uncoln 9945 pm, 1 · 737 · 6449 __ ~~ 5829 ------1 count Pac1f1c Dolph111, nu paint. mags, tares, General 970 I 74 C1v1~ 17,~ rnt. brown Bm/tan. $6200. Call aft 6, .67 Rumbler. ~ood cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SSCASHSSFOR CB Radio Transceiver, tnc. 996-024 l days or brks, etc. $1500 fa rm . aft ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/tun anterior $2500or or-552-0987 air <'Ond. $GOO. 962-8519 ,74 Lincoln Continental R CR 186 499 ...,.,., L• 6 cAo.2426 196!1 M aserau q htbli. fer 548-2497 ' . tiood used furn rt•fngl> egent•y . . never .""'°""'''es ......, -Auto. air, custom paint. ---Rolls Royce 9 756 eves. Town C:a r. Ltke nt;_w. frzn. Sl0\'C~5460768 UM>d.SIOO 49-l ·9~ BAY RESI DENTS' '74 '74 U.U sun PU. AM/FM $10.500. am-898-3500. '7S Honda CVCC.Many •••••••••••••••••-••••Buick 9910 plus h, i nle rao r , fly MusJcal . Hobie l 6 SIM l nwtrat tapl', Cust ant., Cus t pm-968-0327. xtras$2750.Ask forSteve #lDEALERINU.S.A. ••••••••••••••••••••••• equ1pd. full power, IM..._ ___ t • 8083 Boats ,& Manne Ba Ibo~ 55b 5609 or paint Many xtras, must S40-9100ext 55. Bel 8&5. ROY '75 Bwck Convert. Under stereo tape dee~. be_aul ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~..-P"Mft . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Joguar 9710 CARVER warr. A/cond. Full pwr. S l , o O 0 u nd e r I o w ~ • ~.: t &t0-4791 :.ell 552 9524 Alfa Romeo 9705 ~ blue extenor & 1nten or. l'onn Churl'h 0 1 ~31\ •••••••··~··••••••••••• 12'K1teSa1lboat '69 Alfa Spyder. 1750c<.'. ••••:•••••••••~•••••••• ROUS·ROYCE Am /1-'m :.Lereo r ad wholesale blue book at "' Lcshl' Speaker Sl600 Boah, ~Otntenonc:e/ 2 Sa1li. 1181-l Van' 9570 fuel-injected dual over· SJ6. 71. Low mt., beauty, 2,..1.17,hsa. w/tape. Whale, red inter. $4,500. Call 832-7598 or Lo'-'rcy S pinet Organ Sttvic:e CI020 $500 673 5759 ••••••••••••••••••••••• head cams, 5-spd. trans .. fly equip'd ancl s unrf., COSTAMUA Many other extras. 543..8636. S.'.195 Old l·pra~ht Piano ••••••••••••••••••••••• '65 lntr Stepvan :i., Ton, 6 4 .wheel dtsc b r akes, As tier, day·493·6305. 546-«AA 968-0317 --------- S275 all gd cond ~ 7~3 Ho at 1• a 1 n t 1 n g & 12' Koralle w trailer Blue ryl . xlnt. cond .. new Pirelli tires. lug gage Eves, Sat. Sun. 498-4398. ClOSEO SUNDAY~ C_.ittoc 99 15 Mercury 9950 -Refinishing Painting, & white Mam/Jib $450 tires, low miles. w1nddws k T ,~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Office F..miture & \'Jrni:.hmg, & Cleanup. P.P. 493.5505 aft G & lloor perfect. Pre\'lous· ~~l · off~~n~!~r c~;~: '69 XKE Roadster . Rov~ 9757 ••••••••••••••••••••••• STEALJT! Equipment 8085 Also ma:.L \.\Ork. Free :---' ly used for storage, con-&i5.2342 aftcr·5. 675.7300 Sharp. $4500. or bst. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "CADILLAC" Super clean "72 Mere ••••••••••••••••••••••• estimates.675·3175 Boats, Shps/ \er t to camper. t ake al work (John). 637·9755or751 1323. '59TC2,000 Marquis Bro u g h am. Elec tvpc wratcrl> ~<.'Y -Docks 9070 c•arpet w1lh you for m· ----Ghl 9735 Goodcondll ion 0 l'ty & p • Evei:ything power. Gd l'hrs s8 up. l'XC :>\I t'hr:. Boat Builders. Csl m ....................... tenor r1111shmg. $1000 BMW 9712 kcaiikWWi a $1100 494.3775 ua I nee rubber . Xlnl running, lo .,~ t • l •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ••• • • • ----------Sl5 35. :.<'y d:-.k:-.. l'icn:c V\:'Sagn , repair. res ora· Slap avail for 2ts 10al. Call 645·3269. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gh' T ot 9765 O•er 70 mi. Perfect luxury for 867 w l9th CM 645 74 u t 1on Wood · a I u m /-S60 tmo. '60 Karmann 1a, eng oy a small p ri ce. $1695 . · I 1bcrglass. 645·24 l 7 & 545·081·1. '75 Chev 10 Surfer, mags, runs good, body good. ••••••••••••••••••••••• to Choose From 831.9957 IBM TYP EWRIT EH 20" 1>465602. air, icebox, AM /F M newbrks,$450.642·3761. '72 Markllwgn, For lhe best prices. tbe --------- C A R R I AGE . LIKE Need s ide lie slip or can s tl'rco, s wivel chairs. M da 9738 reblteng, $1650 lowest lease r.ates, & de· '71 Capris, tape deck, NE W S295 . 16 79 ah.Marine for 50' Sail boat by 1\luslsell.Ph .. 968·0982 en 492·1643 pendableserv1ce,·sec r adia ls,, red /black, l~LACENT IA 548 34 1-1 -•• ~~~! ...... ~?~.~ ~:~~~t:.1~1i 1:~~board 74 Chev V.in , Cusl. air, LEASE PLAHS ~;;;;~;·~:~;;;·~·n·;.·~~; '69 Corona 2 dr , must see NABERS CADILLAC Sl.595·581.8418 ~ves. o F F I CE DESKS & • ----lape, sunroof 15.000 m1. Flexible lease plans cond, radio, ex t ras. to apprec! 20·24 MPG, 2600 Ha rbor Blvd Mustang 9952 CHA IRS ~t u::.l St•ll Ph EVI NRUDE ~PORTS · Boats, Speed & $4795 644 -1755 l::\'e:,. available from 24 to 48 31,000 mi. Nds a little Sl050/bstofr673·4715 COSTA MESA 540.9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 640·8180 WIN 9' ~ llf'. Completely Ski 9080 months. body work. $1500/bsl ofr. OPEN SUNDAY '66 289 convrt. Mint cond. ~: x {' (' u l l v {' d (' s k & credenza. sull<l .,... al nut SSOO. Ca 11 96H·4 105 O\crhauled Hun~ goo<l, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·75 f<"ORL>SURFER VAN. ""l 6042 71Corona2drHT nu tares. BEST COLOR oN • d ------Rbt eng. Nu top; nu pnt. new prop, nl'Y. s hart.16.Checlah, Be rkt•ly Ji•t. auto trani.,faclory air, eng. replc'd , Ex. con . 70 S e dan d e Ville. b'7S.56S9eve. lnl'ludc::. t.ink . Ph . t'ustomcovcr.lgtan:trlr power steering. power SELECTIOHIH ·13Maula RX2,4spd,xlnt S1625/ofr.968--0290 Equipped. Ori!! owner.---------- 549·1325 __ & all ~ka equip. all perJ brakes, radio, heciter . THE SOUTHL 6 .... D cond, $1300 cash Gd c 0 n d s 1 , 6 5 0 '68 4-spd. Mags, header~. 9040 cond. S2900 b s t ofr. S4855. <Gf.S9IZ) """ 549-8730 '75 CELICA. Gd mileage). """ 4472/675-3561. Sl800. Call 8 t r ack. Pett 8087 oats, Power ,, ,,, """c d 6 2 59 1 Theodore Robins air cond, aulomauc. vny """' S52·8053or 551-1992 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• .....,.uuoN ays, I 4!1 at ·1 1 Mazda RX2 ne w roof, Bst ofr. 586-0386 v II r II 6PM. FORD SADDLEBACK BMW ' '72 Coupe de 1 e, u Y PAR HOT Orange wing J\mazon TAME !H0-6646 631·3214 28' Lt:l lRS ---clutch & exhaust .. runs Triwnph 9767 eqwp, very fine cond. '75 Mustang Ghia, every CABIN CRUISER ransportation Co:.~~!~~rborB!~~_-0010 83 1-2040495-4949 s up e r, $700. f arm .••••••••••••••••••••••• Ong.owner 63! 1570 xtra. Sunroof, air. FM 1 SI0.500 ~-7765 __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ _____ 962·4152. stereo tape, 4 spd. Classy I C wipers Sale/ '67CHEVYVAN108V8. ORANGECOUNTY'S 1969TR6 · Chenolet 9920 car!Must sell.631·3388 Pianos & OnJans 8090 l~ 22· :\laho~any Run-Rent' 91 20 S69S Call aft 6:JO OLDEST Mercedes leH 9740 $2000firm 581·0317 ....................... ---------- •••••••••••••••••••••••bout. P e rlt•cl Bay 675.2132 &' ••••••••••••••••••••••• '65 MustangV-8,4specd, OAK UPRIGHT PIANO Launch f'ull co\'ers & •••••••••••••••••••••• • -----Lease ·62 TR-4, very good cond. CONNELL new paint. Mu st see lo Hei:ond1t1oncd Beautiful b1min1 top Xlnt cond. Factory Da~cct Ca mpcrs Allto Le asi1t9 9580 New bra kes & clutch. apprec. $1250. 546·2455 ___ Call536·8775 &t50'i92or6464131 ~i>cu:S:~e~~1~!~9c~i ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sales-Service-Leasing HeVwER·U 1 t 0 ed 0 Best offer.S48·7294 CHEVROLET Oldsmobi~ 9955 llA MM o No o HG AN Chns Cr.aft cla~sac New 642·8471 H~w 197 6 Volv o Roy Carver , Inc. O Volksw•n 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• model L-100 Top l'ond t·n~s .. n'fttted Xlnt cond. -.----C 1 2-Door Sedan Rolls "Royce BMW MERCEDES ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALES & SEHVICJo: Sales and Servi<'e S700 or offer 556 7280 S ;i c M .i k t· 0 f r · 68 Dodge Van am per, 0 234 E. 17th St. OH DISPLAY • OLDSMOBILE 714 ti-12 JS!'>l. 213 !J26 5858 mt, good conduc:o 1976 Vol\'o, 2 door sedan. Costa l\lesa 546·4444 House of lm~s •7 5 VW 2828 Harbor Blvd. GMC TRUCKS ANTl~UE piano. ap 557.1...,., incl /\M 1FM ra1lto. fu el COSTA MESA praised at S800. will :.di is· &iuth <.:oast Bay Boal, --1 n J e c t 1 on. 4 :. Pd . AUTHORIZ D BEETLE 546 1200 HONDA CARS for S600.Call!J62!JG28 alt xlnt concl . new con·rs.Mot5orcycles/ 9 150 :.vnchromcsh trans 1976 BMWS MERCEDESDEALER Deluxe2door ,low m1 les' • UnivenityOlcls 4pm. S2400. 5<\0·3440 days, c ooters Jiear window defo~~er, I 6862 Manchester, (6()5CWB ). --<.:hJrle-; Thoma-; ••••••••••••••••••••••• whl•t.!I d1i.c brakc·s & .stct'l Buena Par k '64 Impala. Gd cond Nu 2850 Harbor Bl vd. Con n Organ, I h eater -1969SUZUKI 120 "C,\T" belled\\ohlleY.allrachab. ARE HERE 523•7250 $3495 carb & wlr pmp. $375/ Costa Mesa 540·9640 style, 2 yro old. lull · Sl l,500 1972SUZUKI l~ rcdinang buC"kct seals, J• SI bslofr.557·4971. rhythm S2150 H4G3792 32.Chn,Cralt Connie BOTll 1..0\\' !\tlLl-:AC;E fullu '""arpt·l ~d . linted On theSantaAnaFwy Im emOnS -----'73Delta88. · b k " ' Monte Carlo. '72. Clean Good cond. Must sell! S_.... G d Twn ,. gs. a it Lan · AND EXCELLENT glass & healer '73, 450SE, 35,000 m i. lm~rts Loaded. brand new tires. 963-7367 a ft. 5 ,..,..tng oo s 8094 VIII" radio. sou nder. CO~DITION J6 Mo open end lease. Sl 0 ,900. Burg u n d y Below whlsle,675-9063. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l> F CALL556-87600AYS, Firlit mo n·nl plus pro-w /saddie br n int . 1970 arbor Blvd Pinto 9957 SKIS. brand new NEV EH Ml cover. fol~co\er~. 642-5769 t-:VENlNGS rate of partial mo. & $ ~. d ays. 675-8876. Costa Mesa ·13 Impala, 9 pass w~n. ••••••••••••••••••••••• t;SED 200mm Comp paante .tune · . 5 K k 400-3 -1 h<·eni.e fee. Cap. J\mt. 1 sr & U OADWA'f eves. 631-1276 PS, PB. air, xlnt cond, , 75 Pi•nto y. 6 540 3894 Anderson's 646·9000 7 awasa t . <.'y. 56435 Lease end re:-.idual SAHTA AHA $2475. 962 9811 -----Like new, low mileage S3594 .25 . Add1t 1onal 835·3171 •73 MBZ '73 VW. 32M mi. Nu tires. -------- A CONvtNIENT SHOPPINC ANO S(WINC CUIOE FOR TH( CAL ON TH( CO. Comfortable Pr in ted Pattern • YOU'RE IN GREAT FORM in this casually cut pants111t with a leaner. longer 1acket. Team 11 up in check$ 'n' solid or all one color. Printed Pattern 9174: Missts' Sim 8. JO. 12. 14. 16, 18. San 12 lbust 341 tor 11 1 yds. &().Inch; pants, scar I V:i. Stnd $1 .00 for nch p.tltrn Add 35¢ for ueh patttm for flm.clu s airmail, lltndllnc. SIM tti ........... ,.... ....... 1 ::=. ..... Sf., .... , ...... , ...... , ..... ....... hi .... -· 11111 ... snu•••• 0t fll ......... llt I Jltkr• he? ..... .. flf .. ""' r• "*"' P'""9 c.--ct,...,.. ,.., .. "' "" -""" ,, ,.. dl*e. S-4111 llWI - Seii + Mn ... ti". • ..... ....., Ctlfb -.1 ~ =r.-......-. ,,: ......... 1 Crochet Twins! 7038 ict~B~ Twin dolls bnng twice 15 much fun to a small th1ld! lovely, low-cost gifts. bauar hits' Crochet f10ppy girl and boy dolls of 3-ply fingering yam. stuff walh washable syn· thetic !Iller. Pattern 7038: dt· retl1ons 12-inch dolls. S t.00 for each pattern. Add 35¢ uch pattern for flrst-clw airmail and handlln1. Std b : Mc.-...... Mn Aw ... o.,it. I H ........ ._ ,,i,owa...s... ..... ,.-, "' '""· ..... .._,~I.Ip. , ..... ....... MORE than ever before' 200 clesl111s plus 3 frtt printed in· side NEW 1976 NErDlECRAFT CATALOG! Has mryth1ng, 75c. Crldl«t wl1ta S"-.s S1.00 Cf'Kkt I W•'*tlle SUIO llltfty f1fty Qellta ~· S 1.00 ll,,it CrKlltt ii.DO St• + l!Mt ... It S1.25 Ntfftt,.tl'lt .... s t.00 Flnw Cl"Khtltelt $1 .00 IWf)fl Cr.dtt 8'" St.00 lntatt C'9CW .._ 11.00 f•dllt Mlcirl9t .... 1.00 t.m.t...... .. 1.00 c-,tltt llft .... $1.00 C..,e.t. Alps 114 S1.00 1t Mn Aft\nt 112 50' ... ff 1t hllt1 11 50, .,..,.. a.11t a..-n 50, 11 Witt flf teday IS so, ..... 11 llff1 llfl' !Gf Must sell. Take O\ er pay-c h a r g e f o r ea r I y THE uLT1Mul 0R1v1No MACHINE $2,175. 1 owner. Yellow. '73 Impala Wagon. Full Stati~ftWGCJ~n - menls &i5·7424 terminatio n . Serial 220 D 4-spd.548-5219 power. 40,000 mi . Xlnt. Automatic transm1ss1on, HONDA- -VC24245E065l68. HAL GREE.._.E rond. Hlgh book. 552·7852 factor y a ir, radio. L~•sE ME FOR " D1"esel ·71 vw Bug . Gd cond. P M. heater, less than 15,000 '73CL350hke nu. ~ Very lo mi. $1,850/bsl of· ---------SSOO 548 1235 BMW Automatic transmission, f 83 2985 '"c: 1 I ssa27 Auto miles. <238MIE ). · · $l Jg.54 er. 1· . ..., mpa a . . --------& air conditiomng, raruo, PS/PB, Pwr window, air $3995 Suzuki 125. Dart bake '72, heater. Great economy! ·74 VW Bus. 7 passenger, cond. $450/bst. 837-8880 gd., cond .. $285. MO (16'i76) s unroof. stereo AM /FM. --------Jim Slemons ___ 84_2 4186. • Sales &service $. 7695 20,000 mi. Perfect cond. •74 CHEVY '73 GT 550 Suzuk1. Xlnt 1\ le.url.A "LA. Area's $4500. 675-5757 cond. St. bike Faring & 5tcut Newest Dealer!" Jim Slemons 1975 Le Grande VW, 4 mo. Monte Carlo Imports sissy bar, $695. See al 7707 Firestone Blvd. I rf ld 1 d d c h + Beautiful green w ith 2860 Harbor MI ke . VOL VO Downey (213)927·6635 m~ s ~.0:P.0t:n~37i9 b:1ore 5 swivel bucket seats. COO· 540-0170,!>40-7046. 3 MilesWest of 605 1970 HarborBlvd. pm sole, a ir, a utom a ti c 1-.---------- 1970 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 631-1276 Honda CL360. 1975, lo m i, l'lb6 Hnrbor C M 6469303 CostaMesa trans m ission. power 72 P I NT O S Q U IRE apri 971 S 631 1276 ·71 VW Bus. Jm mac cond. steering, elc. (658KK E>. WAGON., auto .. ~ra!ls., s uper cond, $850. 551-4816 Auten Wanfe d 9590 aft 6 PM. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Motor Home~. Sale/Rent 9160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rent 25' 1975 Open Road, fully self-cont. sips 6·8. Winter Rates. 644 8385 •••••••••••••••• •••••• • See to believe. Rbll eng, 54 49 S factory air cond1l1onang, 74 Capn VG. auto trans. '68 250 SE Seda n . New nutires.675·7729. radio, heater. $1495. AC. s unroof, AM/FM, eng, Micbelins, shocks, .71> vw CAMPER Pop. J ·im Slemons <006GJU>. deluxe ant. very clean. ru r. etc. 1 Owner, cmplte . · Theodore Robins S3900 Pvtpty. 631·2136 records . S4900 FIRM. ~~f.' heater. $2 195 lm~rts FORD ·73 CAPRI, 4 speed, fac. 642·2917• Thteodore Robins 1970 Harbor Blvd. 2060 Harbor Blvd. r~ M Costa Mesa 642·0010 tory air <'Ond1t ionmg, Assume lease at $400.50 FORD ~ta esa AMffM stereo r adio. per mo, 35 mo. remain· 2060 Harbor Blvd. 631-1276 '72 Pinto. 2dr gm sedan. $2995. <040GNP>. mg, or buy car , Signal Costa Mesa 642-0010 d 2000cc eng., new eng, RENT· Titan 28' Sips 8. all xtras. By day or "eek 645-3370 aft 6 TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS CALL OR COME IM TO SEE US TheodoreRobins Red Mercedes 450 SL. '72CHEVYNOVA,4 oor, newpaint,cleaninterior. 1 FORD 1976. 645-3236 '71 VW Van. Nu engine. 6 cyl., 3 speed. $1899. Bst ofr. Call 646-3727 H bo Bl d ---540-6646 (275HJQ). HALL MOTORHOME Wanted to buy 963 1337 NEWPORT IMPORTS I . 2060 ar r v · 1'70280 SL. Very rare, both 631·3241 Theodor e Robins Costa Mesa 642-0010 to p s • am I f m • new FORD 9960 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·----------1975 Toyota Chinook, Mam Motor Home. for info. phone 714-.i92 9688. art 6PM PP For Sale Mani Motor Home. 4 Star, 21 ', Dodge chassis. 145" whl base. Lo mi's, approx. 17,500 Good cond. $8500. Call 979 3571 Trailers. Travel 91 70 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3100 W Co.1st Hwy. N.8. 642·9405 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR l:'OR TOP USED CAHS FOHElGN. DOMESTIC or CLASSICS tr your car as extra clean see us first. BAUER BUICK '73 Car dinal. ice box, 2925 Harbor Blvd. stove & oven, port a · Costa Mesa 979.2500 crtsun 9720 radials. Xlnt cond. $8250. •'70 Pop Top Camper. 2060 Harbor Blvd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-7194. Virtually brand new. ATLAS WlLL BUY YOUP. DATSUN, TOYOTA, OR VOLKSWAGEN PAID Jo'OR OR NOT. TOP DOLLAR CALL SAL BERNADENE 540·0442 Private Party -----1 ~., 500 646 0680 Costa Mesa 642·0010 MGI 9744 ""' . . pm. -------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 Bug. Yelloww/blk '67 Chev Wagon, Lo mi, '68 MGB GT radio, hlt ., interior , am/fm. Gd: ~ond & gd tires. $550. overdrive wire wheels $2,000. 962-1489. _!'h._6_7_5_·27_04 _____ _ 46,000 m i. mk . off .. 73 VW Conv. Super Bee· '66 Impala 2 dr. 327, rwr, 847-0012. Ue, AM/FM, A/C, new auto, runs good, looks 74 MGB, xlnt cond, all tires. $2700. 640·6497 aft good. $395. 645-2437, Chrysl~ /Plymouth Open Daily & Sun. 'til 10 PM 2929 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1934 xtras. lo m i. $4899. Gpm '57 Chev 4 dr. Needs a Jit. '69 Roadrunner. Wrecked. 830·6797 aft6PM tie wor k. $300 Cirm. 383 w/440 heads, hi prof. '73VW 548-6419 ltans. 3.23 Positraction ----------·rear end. $450 or best of· Comet 9927 fer. 548-4798 aft 6, ask for potty. I m m ac. cond. •--- 768-1227 '74 DATSUN B210 Hatchback, auto. trans., stereo tape, radial tires, 14,000 miles. Call 644-8107 ____ ___, Sacrifice. MGB-GT 1968, new cond. ne w Dunlop ra dials, AM/FM Chrome w ire wheels. 714-642-3872, anytime. CAMPER ••••••••••••••••••••••• Henry. 4 Speed, radio, heater, '73 Com et. Xlnt cond. 1-,-__.-1------9-9-6-5 low miles. (557JLW ). Auto, a/c, p/s , am/fm, lo um ac Late Model 20' Sante Fe loaded w /xtras. $3800. 968-~or 586·7719 Eves. Aft!iques/ Classics 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '66 Alfa Ro meo 2600 original. Sell as is or parts. Besl offer . 1435 N. Coast Hwy, Laguna Bch. Recreational Yefticles 9530 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sa ndr ai l Corva ir p o we r e d . a ll N ea l Produc t s, wa s s ho w model, clean & fast $1200 or best ofr 646-6055 days, 548·2878 aft 6PM . DUNE Buggy, everything new. Must Sell ! $800. 847·2460, Jim. 4WMefDrhH 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Ford 4x4, still on fact wa rr. 4,000 m1 '1. Call 645-9904. TnlClu 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••• '65 tnlr. Slep van, '• ton, fl cyl., xlnt . cond , nc•w Urcs. low miles, window& 4r l1oor perfect. Prevtou1'· ly used for storage, cc>n vert to cam per. take urpet w1lh you for an ten or rlnl!ihlnR. $1000, Call 845-3269 TOP $ Paid FOR Used VW's Paid for or Mot "l;fLM"' llunt. Bch. 842.4435 TOPIUYER See us first. & last ! Top dollar paid for impnrt11. COSTA MESA DATSUN 284' Harbor Blvd. Cost.a M o ~0-6410 ORANGE COUNTY'S HIGHEST s BUYER OM IMPORTS Bill MAXEY TOYOTA I. I. I, • ' II•.. • • • •. HuNltf•H_.1QNll• ~ .. \ I · 7 2 D a l s u n 2 4 O Z • Pantera 9 7 4 7 Desperate. New car ar· ••••••••••• •••• •••••••• rived, must sell fast ! 1974 While, Pantera. 6,000 $4,000. 552-5222 mi. lik new, custom cov· ·71 Datsun 510, 4 dr, xlnt _e_r_640-__ S95_7 ______ 1 <.'ond. 68,000 mi, $1600/bst Porsche 9750 ofr 646.Q)SS days, 548-2878 ••••• • • •••• ••• •• • • • • • •• mJ. $2,695. 581·1983. ••••••••••••••••••••••• J • 55 4 1 49 S Cofttinetttal 9910 ·~~~~~~cp~~~~~~·~~~ Im emOftS ••••••••••••••••••••••• cont rol, AM /FM, a ulo lm~rts Beautiful '64 Lincoln trans. 644-4147 aft 6. Conlrnental. $1,150•---------- 1970 arbor Blvd 675-8465 '72 Lemans convt. 4 sp<I, Costa Mesa ----------1 Hurst shift, 6 3 I· 127 6 1971 Immaculate 552-0259 · 1970 P orsc h e 911 T • thruout. l·Owner Con· '72 F. b.rd S'I /blk sportamatic, 9lM, $S,200. Vol•o 9772 tinental sedan, loaded. ire 1. · 1 ver · 646-5807 Porsche Slra.sse ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lo mi's, non-s m oker . Fully eqwp. Xlnt cood. .aft6PM. Fiat 9725 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Fjai: Before you buy .. aeet MlatllOn Vlelo lmPOrt• '72 FlAT 128. Sport Coupo. 4 S p e ed . $2 65 5. (°'60AJJJ. T'Madoreloltlea FOlD 20llOH arbor BJvd. Costa Mn a 842·0010 Ask for Sta n. 1963 P -1800. Good condi· Golden w/brown leather. $3,200. S42·l991. SELL 1a1e ite ms with a Uon. $1200 Firm. Call 673-6377 anytime. '69 Ventura. 2 dr .• HT, Daily Pilot Classified Ad. 645-2132. Corvett. 99l2 Auto, air, PB, ~S. Vin ••••••••••••••••••••••• roof, etc. new t1resXlnt •TOP CASH, cond., $850. 536·4436 aft 5 For Corvettes a nd other or weekends. used cars & trucks ! '64 Pontiac Lehman.New HOW AR 0 Che vrole l , paint, Xlnt cond. Dove & Quall St.s. Near $500. 642-4336 Jambor ee, Bristol, &•---------- MacArthur. Ne wport 'TlGrandPrlx,26,500 ml., Beacb. 833..osss l owner, $2450. or make Dodge 9915 orrer. 640-9663. ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Thundet bird 9970 '72 DODGE SCAMP. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Door, •uto. trans .. rac· '71 FORD T-BIRO. Auto. t.ory air, powcr s teering, trans., (actory air, rull radio. vinyl root $2195. pcwer, power window•. (937ESF). · pe>wet seals, vinyl roof. Tlwtodore lobfat AM/FM stereo. $2188. fOID (131EOX). 2060 II arbor Blvd. Theodore Robins Cost.a Mesa 642·0UlO fOIO ao&oHarbcw Btv4. r.d ltff Coeta Mesa 6'2·0010 ........•••............ ~~-~-~~--~ 81 Rancbcro, 71 Maverick '65 T·Bird Classic, vuy EnJ. A/0, aood cood. clean, needs lltUe work. $800. 675·626& $1~.4.!n·lW r 7 l I l Laguna/South £oas t VOL. 69, NO. 27, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T oday's (;lo lag N.Y.Stoeks J TUESDAY, J ANUARY 27, 1976 TEN CENTS Battin's Attorney Blasts County DA ... - • \By WILLIAM SCHREIBER ' OI Ille O.lly ...... SIMf 'The attorney tor indicted Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin continued bis at· tempt Monday lo prove the coun- ty District Attorney's Office is engaged in "selective political prosecution." ravel the procedures used by the county prosecutor in probing al- legations of political wrong- doing. ly Democratic group backed by Cr. Louis Cella and millionaire rancher Richard O'Neill. The other group, be claims, is com- prised of those backed by' the Republican Lincoln Club. court centered on Kurilich's at- tempt to get the DA to admit the names of politicians kept in in· vesligatory files. often by objections from Ryan, Kurilich got Hayes to admit that the DA maintains records on cer- tain political figures but doesn't keep them in a special file. would permit Hayes to reveal\ Despite repeated objections by Deputy District Attorney Jack Ryan. Kurilich attempted to un- Kurilicb presented Ryan and Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae with 20 documents support- ing his claim that two distinct groups of politicans exist in the minds of DA 's investigators. He repeated bis prior allega- tion that Battin is part of a large- Kurilich said the Cella·O'Neill group is prosecuted for its ac- tivities while the DA ignores re- ports of illegalities by the other camp. Monday's activity in Lae's Kurilich questioned DA 's In·. vestigator Joel Hayes and Depu· ty DA Michael Capizzi, trying to establish that while politicians from both groups may appear in files, only the Cella-O'Neill group are investigated and prosecuted. Under questioning interrupted He said most would be kept in the DA 's "Alpha File" on general investigations. But Hayes did say that some politician's names are on index cards in the DA 's organized crime file. The only names Lae were Batlin's and that of former Supervisor David Baker. When Capizzi took the stand, Kurilich continued his complex questioning pattern, trying to work around Ryan's objections. Kurilich asked Capizzi if an in· vestigation bad been launched in· to charges that campaign workers for Congressman Jerry (See BA T'rlN, Page A2) Marines · Tentatively Accept SC Fire Blame 383Perc ent Lawyers Facing Insurance Hike SACRAMENTO (AP> -The same company that boosted medical malpractice insurance to strike-triggering levels is giv-inJ California's lawyers a similar boost, says the State Bar. William Shannon Parrish of Oakland, the acting president of Laguna's La Vigne Deadat50 ¥aurice "Moe" LaVigne, well kn.own Laguna Beach public services inspector, died Monday night at his Laguna Niguel borne in the swimming pool installed for his exercise following a re- cent heart attack. LaVigne, 50, had been married Saturday to Janet Crawford. It was his second marriage. Cause of death is under in· vestigation by the Orange County Coroner's office. An autopsy was scheduled·for today. Mr. LaVigne was found in an enclosed swimming pool by neighbor Ann Moyes. He had the pool built to enable him to ex· ercise following a heart attack three months ago. Funeral services are pending at McCormick Laguna Beach Mortuary . Mr. LaVigne had been a city employe for 11 years advancing from public works dispatcher to public services inspector. Previous ly , he was the manager of the Black Panther Bar in Laguna Beach and prior to that he was an office equipment salesman. He resided at 25171 Armagosa Drive, Laguna Niguel and was in- volved in Little League activities. Clyde Sweetser, public works superintendent, said he had known the deceast:d for more than 20 years. He said Mr. LaVigne was in the habit of swimming laps in the pool morn- ing and evening. A spokesman for the coroner's offi<:e said Mrs. La Vigne had re· turned home about 7:45 p.m. and was unable to find her husband at first. Then a pile of clot.bing was found near the pool and Mr. (SeeLaVIGNE,PageA2) . the State Bar, said Monday the lawyers' professional liability in· surance, also called "errors and omissions policies," is to go up 383 percent March 16. A number of doctors in Southern California have walked off the job because 9,500 received BROWN GIVING UP ON MALPRACTICE? AS increases of 327 percent. This had been cut by the state insurance commissioner from a requested increase of 486 percent. In both cases, it's the Travelers Insurance Co., Parrish said in an interview. The State Bar is investigating at least two alternatives. One would be a bar·sponsored group insurance plan, which would require permission of the Legislature, Parrish said. The other would be a com· pulsory "pay-as.you-go" plan in which all the claims a~ainst all lawyers would be added up each year, and each of the 50,000 mem- bers assessed equally to pay them. Unlike many states, California has an "integrated bar," mean- ing that all practicing lawyers are required to belong. And unlike the doctors, Parrish said he doubted if the lawyers would suggest that the taxpayers contribute to a solution. (See LAWYERS, Page A2> Boy Rescued From Coyote WESTFIELD, N.J. <AP) -A 12·year-old boy on his way to school was attacked by a runaway coyote which bit him several times before it was beaten away by a is.year-old friend with one arm in a sUng. "He was going right for my neck when Brendan hit him. I'm sure glad I've got a friend like Brendan," Bradley Baise said. Bradley told police he was walking to school Monday with his friend Brendan Shea when they saw what they thought was a large tan and white 1<iog. But as they got closer, they realized it was not a dog. "We watch Disney and Animal Kingdpm and all those shows and we were sure it was a coyote,'' said Bradley. OailJ Piiot S!Mf PMto Baba Q..eseio ... Is our system of civil law costing us more than its worth? Don E~ Burns, California's secretary of business and transportation, raised that question and others Monday during a talk to the Friends of UC Irvine. Se story, Page AS. Want a Job Jumping Nude Out, of Cake? By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OftM Dally PilotSUff Student job opportunities come in many different ways. Consider this ad, tacked up on the Sad· dleback College bulletin board: "Wanted: A young man to jump aut of a birthday cake at wife's birthday party. Time: Approximately 9 p.m. Feb. 7. Pay: $25 for one hour's time. This offer is strictly on the uµ and up. I'm serious. Call Bill or Pam Gross at xrr-xrr.r by Jan. 29." The ad, placed by a Mission Viejo couple to add some zest to the wife's 30th birthday, has found no takers so far. A possible drawback: The assignment calls for a nude appearance. Mrs. Gross. wife of a security analyst. said her husband originally intended the cake- popping as a surprise but that she got onto him. So they're planning to spring the surprise on 15 couples who have been invited to the party. "We looked inJo a theatrical agency in Los Angeles that of- fered this kind or service but they charge $125 which is a little steep,'' she reports. (See CAKE, Page A2) Welding Machine Sparks?· By FREDERICK SCHOEMERL Of I"-Dally Piiat Stall Preliminary investigation shows that a 2,400-acre brush fire that destroyed 14 San Clemente homes was caused by a spark from welding equipment being used on Camp Pendleton last Wednesday morning, Marine Corps officials said today. In a brief statement, officials said a further investigation has been ordered that will take at least a month to complete. "The cause or the rire was shown to be a spark from elec- trical welding equipment which was being operated by a Marine al an abandoned pistol range," the statement said. The land where the fire erupt- ed is leased to the state by the Marine Corps for eventual use as a state park. In the investigation, the state- ment said, a senior Marine of- ficial "will probe all matters con- nected with the fire, including the matter of why electrical welding equipment was being used on the state land. "Formal investigation of the type ordered involves· acquiring sworn testimony. interrogation of witnesses and the collection of all pertinent documents," the statement said. Marine officials said they wou ld be unable to make any further comment on the fire un.tit the formal mvestigation is com- pleted. * * * What's He Doing Here? Actor Paul Newman, well known for his penchant for auto racing, is competing in a different sort of contest at UC Irvine. To find out what he's doing and why> see Page A3. SC Policeman Rice Back in City Race ByFREDERICKSCHOEMERL Of~°""'~ .... S&aft San Clemente Police Patrolman Russel K. "Rusty" Rice announced today that he is re-entering the March 2 City Council election race. Rice, 26, had been disqualified from running for council two weeks ago when it was learned that he was not a registered voter at the time he filed nomination papers with City Clerk Max Berg. 14 Clemente Homes At the time, Rice charged that he was not informed by person- nel in the clerk's office that he was required to be a registered voter at the lime papers were filed. Not Disaster Area The portion of San Clemente ravaged by a fire that destroyed 14 homes last week will not be declared a disaster area by Gov . Edmund G. Brown Jr. That was the word Monday af. ternoon from stale As - semblyman Robert E. Badham <R·Newport Beach) who said the governor's staff determined that a disaster area declaration would do nothing to aid victims who Jost homes in the 2,400.acre blaze. Badham said the state Office of Emergency Services (OF.5) is free to assist victims with low in- teres t reconstruction loans with a disaster area declaration. San Clemente City Manaier Kenneth Carr said today that OES still is investigating the city's request for loan as - sistance, but that no decision has been rendered. The loans actually are offered by the federal Small Business Administration, but ad- ministered by OES. Interest rate is 6.5 percent with a term .of 30 years. OES officials have said the Joans would cover that cost of re· construction not covered by fire insurance covered by the vic- tims. Carr said he was attempting lo set up a Friday meeting between fire victims and OES and SBA of· ficials to go over the details of the loan program. <See FIRE, Page A%) "I have made previous public comments and statements in- dicating my strong distaste for the political environment in San Clemente. I cannot work to al- leviate the city of this condition effectively from any other posi- tion other than councilman," Rice said in a statement issued this morning. Contacted later today, Rice said he plans to launch legal ac- tion against the city to force (See RICE, Page A2) Coas t Weat her . :~~~p~i~~!~~.~~w~o~ana!o~~~~m~ 1!,!loc!~m~t ~~~ ottlMCMllyf't........ was introduced In alphabetical He also objected to the city's Fair through Wednesday with continued warm and sunny days. Patchy fog near the coast. Lows tonight in the 40s. Highs 65 to 75 from the coast inland. INSIDE TODAY • Pring~'' u in t>i. chips, and competitors .are being crunched in their t0ar, ogair.1t the "nttD·fangled" potato chips that come in. a CGn. and have chomped up 16 ~ of the potato chip rDOTkd. ~e P.age A7. lR e s p 0 n s i v e n e 5 s t 0 order, was allowOO. to speak 10 sign ordinance. homeowners the need for minutes to the audience of about recreation, p;essures for de-1~ persons. There was no ques- velopment and growth and the lion and answer period. propoaed agriculture and open '"ace preservation program were among the iJsues discussed by the nine candidates for San Juan Capistrano's City Council Monday. T h e candidates nigh t, sponsored by t.M Otambtt of Commer~e. wu the first public forum to bo held In the race for two seats on the council. Under rulea eatabll&hed by the EDWIN CLARK, who served eight years on a City Council In M.lchlaan and moved to San Juan four years aao to retira, objected to the rising cost of city govern- ment. "It's aetUng too big and too...cmtly for i>eople to afford," be said. Rather than having Ute city purchase land for agrtculture preservatlon, be satd taxes abould be .kept down so Carmera L O U I S C O NTER, who moved to the city in 1970, also op- posed the agriculture and open space preservation program, termed Proposition A on tbe March 2 ballot. The propoul ls "no way close to belng livable, fundabte or practical,'' he said. The cost or the _program, which d~ not in· elude a new city cemer or parkll, would be hi&her than estimated it "Just compensation" is given to the land owner~. he said. He also objected to the size and ROBERT DA VIES. a resident of San Juan since 1971 and a plan- ning commissioner for two years, proposed that a clty, homeowners' commission be e1tabll1bed to work wllh the council on l••ou ol COOCetD. to the bomeownen: . He supported ProposiUOQ A -.. enllal to preaervin1 th4l city's charm and character. Bectuse se'tier taxes are decreasma and thcttncned vatuU.istnems" in~t he Hid, this OU be dol>e wltoout an lncreu• lD tax.ea. He also atrpported prt:Servation or the city's cultural and hil· '· KENNETH FRI~, who has also served on the planning com· mission since 1974, said he is run- ning because "I'm tired ol run· nioi. Tired of runnina from mls- d lr e ct e d a nd rampant dev9'opment." He nid tbe clty should late time In developing to the ~al Ptu'1 projected population of '2,000 peo]>le and protect the standards and qualities oow ln ~elt)'. ;Jte alao spoke in f awr of pre- ...vatlon of the ell.Y's heritage and development of a recreation (See CANDIDATES, Pa~ Al) .,,\ \ .. \ A2 DAILY PILOT 4 L/SC Tunday, January 27. 1fT6 • D.tlty ~let StMt ~-· B~ding Problems MUiied Problems with two campus buildings, the college library and the mat.h-sclence building, were brought tq the attention ol Sad- dleback Community Collefe Dis- trict trustees Monday nigh . The library broke out in blisters recently and college of- ficials traced the problem to the applicatlon ot interior paint to exterjor surfaces. Estimated repair costs range up to $30,000 and trustees have been advised by the County Counsel to recover the damages from the architect and the general contractor. O.lly ...... tw, ...... BACK IN THE RACE Pollce Officer Rice Hinshaw I • .."! Trial#~ March I By TOM BARLEY Of tM O.lly l'I• ~ Orange County Congressman Andrew Hinshaw faced still another trial and an uncertain political future today following his conviction Monday on bribery charges. The Orange County District At· torney's office said it does not in- tend to drop a second set of charges against the SJ-year-old Newport Beach Republican that are contained in a separate Grand Jury indictment. DOGS ON 'DEATH ROW' IN LAGUNA BEACH-VICTIMS OF PET OVERPOPULATION Board members, however, balked at the County Council's suggestion that they hire an at· torney at district cost to file and prosecute the case. It was ex- plained earlier that the County Coansel 's office does not have the manpower to handle the claim. E',....Page Al Several hours of talks in and out of the district attorney's of- fice ended late Monday with Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland-the presiding jurist in Hinshaw's bribery trial~etting March 1 as the date the con- gressman will be tried on con- Laguna Group Attempting to Cut Down Number of Destroyed Animals RICE ••. Fro.P~Al CAKE ..• "So we picked Saddle back College which is the closest place to advertise. We thought there might be a kid around who'd want to do something cr azy like that." To date the Grosses have re- ceived only one call from a stu- dent who said he'd have to "think about it" upon learning that the cake pop was to be performed in the nude. The Gross es a r e anxious to hear from qua'lif1ed applicants but they don 't w a nt th e ir telephon e number kno wn because of the possibility of crank calls. Just who will make the final selection from all the c an- didates-if there are any brave enough to step forward-has n't been determined. "I hadn't thought about that," Mrs. Gross CDr;if ess ed. One thing's sure though. Mrs. Gross has had so much fun or- ganizing the party that she says "I haven't had a chance to think about turning 30." E'rom Pllflf! Al BATI'IN .•• Patterson and Assemblyman Richard Robin s on, both Democrats, had filed fraudulent voter registrations. Capizzi s aid such an investiga- tion was conducted and resulted in court action. But when a sked about similar eharges agains t Republican Congressman Charles Wiggins, Capizzi said he talked to Wiggins and was satisfied with his ex- planation. No probe or prosecu- tion was undertaken. The long questioning sessions were part of Kurilich's ''dis- covery motion." which is aimed at turning up any evidence of dis- criminatory prosecution that could result in dismissal of the Battin indictment. Lae has been ruling on the mo- tion in pieces and testimony was due to continue through the week. '· E'r091Poge Al LAWYERS. • Some California doctors' groups are suggesting state in· ~urance plans toward which their own contributions would be voluntary, with the taxpayers backstopping. Parrish. who practices law alone in a "high-risk" field or personal injury work for plain- tiffs, said his own insurance now costs $425 a year. Some doctors in high.risk fields such as neurosurgery say their insurance bilJs have gone ·from $8,000 to $40,000 a year. ORAN GE COAST L/SC DAILY PILOT no.Or-CO.\! Dolly 1'1lol wllhwhklllHom- btnt'd OW Nf'*' Ptf'\\. I\ pvbhYwr<f t>1rtw>0t ·~ (.cw1.I Publ1\oh1f\9 Comp•ny ~ll .. f'CJ1h0f'i' ,.., .. pul>lt\Md "'°NldV lllrouqh fr'°"' tor C°'t• ~ .. N•w-t ll<4Kll. H"nll"Qton lll'<Kh f °"" tatn V•ttty lt\flrtt. S.•Odlt~tt V•Ht'y •nd ~ 8e11<111Sov111 Coht A \<nQ .. t"910ft<tl ~do I-t\ pVl>ll-d ~l .. •OIY\ ....., ~Y' !hr prtr><op,el .,...,.,.,..,no pt1nt " .. J:IO w,.,1 B•Y Soeet. (.o\I• ~w. C11ilornl1 ~ Robert N. Weed ,.rt\IO.nt INI PUIMI- Jack R. Curlev Vtee P. .. ldent 1ncl C..-•1 W~ • Thomas Keevll feltlor Thomas A. Murphlne MAMQ1n9 lO•lor QNlrles H. Loos Richard P. Nall AUht•nt M• ... 9lno E•4ton u •una B«ach OfflU Ti .. c; .. nnor• StrMI -·lino°'""'"' ,. o .._ .... flHt OfflCft C•t•~ .. .uow .. 1 e..,~ .. ...,.tnQteft&H<h 11tljlle<Kll....,..•lrd • ~~ Vello U 201 u ""••A-• , SoMI Ot.90 Ft-.., TeNphofte (714) 642~1 ausHled Ad ver11dng 642·5'71 &.....-. 8H<h All o.,itrtmems: TeteP"OM4MM66 • f rems...c .. ,....... o~• ~ ,.,. Or-, .. ., -i~ c-. ......... -........ lllV"'"' ................. ,..all tr er ..... , llt•t,,..1111 ,...,.,,. ..,., .. r•.,-HIKN wllM"I ... tlal _..,, .. -•I ....,.,...,.._. setefMI cteu .. ,, ..... ,. •I GMI• Mt••. c;..i,,....,.._ SWM•"'4 .... IW <•Mt SJ tt "'9fto WY •y,....IM Ul!lffl'l"IY, '"'lil•y-11"*1-U.tf,,_.,.,,. Laguna Pet Group Cites Death Rate Just how the paint blistering problem is to be resolved will be considered at a future trustee meeting. Trustees did, however, go along with a "home cure" pro- posal by Supt. Robert Lombardi and Division Chairman Frank Sciarotla for defective vents in the math-science building. publishing or his name on election ballot. the . spiracy allegations contained in the separate indictment. He said the action probably will be in the form of a writ of mandate sought in Orange Coun- ty Superior Court. Rice said he would run as a write-in candidate if the legal challenge fails. Speculation late Monday that the new trial date may have led Hinshaw to decide on his resigna- tion seemed unfounded in the light of comments he made to newsmen in the district at- torney's office. By JACK CHAPPELL Oftlle Oally rltet~" During an eight-hour working day, an average of one dog or cat is humanely destroyed every s even minutes in Laguna Beach. Many more are hit by cars or are allowed to starve. These are the effects of pet overpopulation. Thes e are the things the Laguna Beach P et Responsibili- ty is fighting. "The burden of responsibility for animal control lies with the average pet-owning citizen. The city and the SPCA can only do so much," said Cynthia Fuller, one of three members or the commit- tee interviewed Monday. With Dr. Fuller, a college pro- fessor; were Jim Howard, an agronomy student and Suzanne Howard, an artist. It is the aim of the Pet Responsibility Committee to cut down the numbers of animals be· ing destroyed or abandoned in the Laguna area. The committee initiated steps for a low cost spaying and neuter- ing program in coordination with the city of Laguna Beach which is giving two years Cree license worth $20 to owners of bitches spayed since Jan. 1. (Information about the low cost spaying is available by call- ing the ONCORPS o!Cice at 494-7848 from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. weekdays.> Aside from the moral questions surrounding the destruction or large numbers or animals. there are financial and physical con- siderations, Dr. Fuller said. Animal control costs money and in Laguna Beach the SPCA acts as the city's agent, citing pet owners who allow their dogs to run loose. catchin2 and holding animals and destroying those which are not picked up or adopted. According to the SPCA, as many as 70 kittens and dogs will be destroyed daily during the spring and summer, Dr. Fuller said. Nationall y. 13 .3 million animals w e re humanely destroyed last year at private and public shelters at a cost of $100 million. Loose dogs on beaches are res ponsible for bites and for waste which carries disease. "It is a real conflict. You have people who say a dog needs his freedom ,-h~ should be allowed to run free on the beach. Well, I don't know how many dogs I've picked off the streets," Howard said. "You can't tell a dog to cross the street only with the light," Mrs. Howard added. Much of the committee's work is devoted to preventing the birth of more animals. A speakers bureau is available and talks are given al schools. "Peer group pressures are powerful and though education we would like to get act"OSS the idea tttat it is now uncool to let y~ animal have puppies or kit· tens," Howard said. "Every kitten and puppy born at the present time is a part of a serious pet surplus in our town. For the vast majority of them, homes are not available. They are born only to face death in the decompression chamber or though abandonment," Dr. Fuller said. The fume hoods in six laboratories of the building, it was discovered, are not properly exhausting toxic vapors. College officials believe the problem can be corrected by in- stalling fans in the hoods to help dra·w the bad air out of the labs. · Fire Victims May Collect Tax Benefits Benefits in the form of tax re· appraisals and tax refunds may be collected by victims of the de- vastating San Clemente fire. Wes Wilson, acting appraisal supervisor for the Orange County Assessor's office, said action has been initiated to revalue pro- perties where homes were lost or damaged by fire. The net effect of the reap- praisal will be reduced property valuations, and, thus, a tax break for owners. He said some victims who have paid the first installment of their current property taxes may re- ceive cash refunds. F,....P8,,e AJ FIRE .••. Don Hodgson, city fire marshal!, said the loans will be a boon for many of the victims who Rice said he was the apparent victim of a new state law which requires that all candidates for City Council be registered voters at the time they file nomination papers. The old law stipulated that a person be registered by the time of the election, Rice said. Rice charged that the city clerk's office personnel never ad- vised him of the change in the law. George Jackson, the city clerk's office aide who handled Rice's nomination papers, has said that Rice was informed of the statute change. Rice said that if he had been advised of the change, he would · have registered to vote at the time he filed nominaUon papers. "lt is contrary to my prin· ciples, to accept the errors of others, be those errors inten- tional or unintentional, which have such significant impact on me," Rice said. Rice has been a patrolman in San Clemente for three years. He has said that he would re- sign from the department ir he is elected to the council to avoid any conflict of interest. Eight other candidates are in the running for two council seats. They are Carlo Bocci, Earl Cludy, Arthur Holmes, Richard Lents, Wade Lower, Marion Moon, William Walker and Don· na Wilkinson. 2Mammoth Siders Die lostNthebodir home:. d f' . MAMMOTH <UPI> - ''This was just the first round,•• Hinshaw commented while de- fense attorney Marshall Morgan nodded approval. "I have no intention or stepping down or making any other de- cision than the one I have already made-fighting and winning this bribery battle in the appellate court." * * * Jeffrey Asks Hinshaw to 'Resign Now' Harry Jeffrey, a candidate for the GOP nomination to the 40th Congressional District seat now held by Andrew Hinshaw, called on his political rival today to re- sign immediately because of his bribery conviction Monday. In a letter to Hinshaw, Jeffrey acknowledged that Hinshaw's re- signation is not legally required. ''The personal reputation and integrity of our elected officials is the cornerstone of our gov· ernmental system," Jeffrey said. "When government officials are found guilty of malfeasance in office, the electorate has the right to demand their immediate resignation even though it is not required by law," Jeffrey said. Jeffrey is a Laguna Beach resi- dent and a political newcomer. The congressional campaign Is his first effort at seeking elected office. " 0 Y ha a equate ire m· Two skiers were thrown off surance, ''said Hodgson. MeanwhileL the total damage balance on thin, patchy Fr .. Page Al "The voters of this district are fed up with what seems to be a never·ending series of scandals involving politicians in this area and they are strongly demanding an immediate change in this sad state of affairs,•• Jeffrey said. figure for the fire was revised snow in separate incidents· upward to $1.45 million from a on Mammoth Mountain previous $1.3 million estimate. and crashed to their death CANDIDATES' FORUM. • • program. GARY HAUSDORFER, a resi· dent since 1973, proposed the creation of councilmanic dis- tricts. Since the city is develop- ing in pockets, h e said . this would be a mor e r e presentative system. He spoke in favor or slow, or- d~rly growth and the agriculture preservation program Once the land is gone, he said, it is "gone forever.'' He also favored development of a self-suppor ting recreation program. CECILIA HERMAN opposed Proposition A and said the costs are so high that a responsive gov- ernment would not even have put it on the ballot. But a recreation program is "a necessity, not a luxury," she said. She proposed that the city rent space in a shopping center for a community center and also a municipal equestnan center in Cook Park. She also s uggested the city in- stitute a mini-bus service. Her program, she said, could be ac- complished by cutting the budget )"other areas. RICHARD McDOWELL, a former Norwalk city manager, s aid the city money could be bet- ter spent. One area where money is wasted, he said, is in hiring consultants, "ivory tower people who cannot communicate, who cannot relate to a community.·· He objected to the gign or· dinance as an invasion of personal property. He alRo doubt· ed whether Proposition A is legal. If it is legal, he said, it ta still, "bad business." MUR I EL SU R LES, who served on the city parks and recreation committee from mo to the first of the year, spoke in favor of the city staff and the pro- posed agriculture and apen spa~ preservation program. AJtbougb some criticism bas been made about the lack of a large central park, she uld, there are smaller parks which are being used by the people. She said she doesn't want a "gran- diose'' recreation program. The new figure is based on in· on rocks. formation collected in a door-to-Daryl Gordon, 16, of Ha- door survey of homeowners in cienda Heiahts fell after the fire area. starting down Dave's Run, Privacy Bill 0 K ' d Hod · d th fi the steepest and one or the gson sai e igure may most difficult at Mam-SACR JAMES WEATHERS, the only still be low, because some occu-th Cal AMENTO (UPI) -pants were not home when fire mo · ifornians would be allowed to incumbent running in the elec-science students conducted the George C. Smith Jr., 23, obtain for $5 or less a copy of con • . tion, said he is seeking reelection house-to-house check. of La Canada, s uffered fidential information about them ~C:X:~~.l~an up what's left to be The final figure also does not multiple injuries including stored in business and govern- He said the ci"ty's General include minor damage to roofs a fredactu r ed skull and rup-mhe.nth computers under a bill 'rom hot embers from the sky tur spleen. w 1c has won easy Assembly Plan. hillside grading ordinance 1 • and preservation issues have _th~e~f~ir~e~m~a~rs~h~a~l~l s~ai~d.:... _____ ...::==========~-~p'.:..:a::s=s.:a.!g:.e·:_ __ ~-------: been dealt with but there are other issues left unfinished. In his four years in office, he said, he has dealt with everyone equally. At least once, he said, "I've made everybody madder than hell al me." RICHARD HAMILTON, who has declared himself a write-in candidate, was not at the meet- ing. Sites Urged For Purchase SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The Comprehensive Planning Organization voted Monday to recommend state purchase of 26 areas along San Diego County's coastline through a proposed statewide bond issue. The property, valued at $16.6 million. Included the Tijuana· Estuary at the Mexican border and San Onofre State Park at the Orange County line. E'rem P"fll! AJ LaVIGNE ••• LaVlpe was dl1coverod In tbe water. Mouth-to-mouth re- auscltation f alled to restore him. Sweet.er said Mr. LaVl1ne wu liked and respected by tbe other city employes. He had Hrved H treesurer of the employ es• credit union for rlx yean and was active ln other emplO)'e m atterw. • THE PRICE IS RIGHT (or is it?) HAVE YOU EVER GOME IMT APPROACHED YOU, RIED T MAUID? A STORE. AMD IEFORE A SALE5t.4AN DETERMINE PRICES ON GOODS MOT MAMY CAIPIT STORES D MOT HAVE PllCES IMDICATID ON THiii SAMPLIS. THI THEOIY IS THAT THIS WAY THU CAN CHAIC5E ''WHAT THI TRAFAC WILL IEAI. .. AT ALDEN'S PRICES AIE POSTED ON ALL OF OUR SAMPLES SO THAT CUSTOMERS CAM IROUSE THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND KMOW WHAT THIY ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THEii IS ALWAYS THE POSSlllLITY OF A LOWH PRICE IF COHDmOMS WAIRANT ... DEN'S : iiisiiilitiaii: ·custom draperies . 1663 '1.AC!NTIA AVENUE • CO.STA M!SA, CALIP. 92617 • PHONE 6_.6 • .4838 -~6·23.55 '--. I t I I t Tuetd1y. J1nu1ry 27. 1976 l /SC DAILY PILOT Bf Tuesday's Clo&iug Price&. NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. Ole k l'our Kitchen 1 i Improper Food ·, HEW ~·IC CUllll> -"'9llOWl1111 ,,. frjc ....... Ntw Y•lt 11.oek UCMftOll M uo.. !!'" NM ""' ':1!!2-oio. Allbott L .10 1! 1• (llh '61 ACFtncU • .O J03 47 + 2 A.tmtCh1 .$0 • » tflo-~ MaMOt CM t SJ >to \lo Adf1141f 414 •• a 1~ ... ~'"'"" •• ,. 4111+ .... 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P1.. ~· tO •• rno • ·· Htlnl Ht Jt 11 ) SI -~ Mlrn~tn< t I 224 -\Ill ==~R' 4.10 •• tlO JO.,.+ "' HtlnlJll 1 fO ., 10 ,.._ .. Me,,;., el t . 17 61 :tt 't" II ~ t;°"-IV. ...... Cllrt 6 US llli-\oft Ml'9m!1 .SD1$ '6 21 + Yi; ......... UO ·• '6 b~ HtllttlM ... 10 l)t tt~+ ~ MlrMldl IO t 111 12'-' + "-tilltnn t 1 ·;o 'j lltO U--+ ;, Htlm&P H I ,, Jl~I MlrlonL n 10 ,.,, "'' "' ~ lilt ., "'1 P l \116ol Cw {N I' I .,.,., ("*° ("'I P'Mlljlf t.S3 .. 2 ~ .,-Eel'd ,76 10 .. , .,...., 11'4 ....... Of·'° 116 t $'-. 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StMIWlt I 04 12 22 ,4'"' • 11\ PtlEI pl I IO • ,,_ ,...,_+I Slenrey .60 . 30 71'> • 'Jo Phi! $\Ill IO 1 10 u ... .-"11 Sterrtlt I 6 21 18Yt + .,., ~ttr, Mor 1 ts, .. , """-SIMutu•I Iv.. • 1'111 •• th~ Ind • , 99 S'4 + "' StMtl!i< 1 OS . 40 11 :i;,, , •• lnOf lSt . • tv. • !iltulfer 2 40 10 10'I 10114 • ll'ftllllltt I 60 IS 41) " -... Slt,Clli 41 'I S 1 • 'to PNllfH 40e 24 41 f Yt , , Stt<IOrg 70 14 ,., It~+ "' Plt.ltwlt IMI • 31 11~ !itarlPrec SI ' 1:14 S'-+ Ila PledNG I olO • If I~·~ I'll S1tro.nt .40 11 '1 14Ya-• 1 Pieri 1"11>'1 • 21 sv. • \\ SttveM .eo u 611 12'-\ + '"" Plll...,.yC I IS 11126 .. , .... t .... 51...Wri I .. t ,, 211o ...... Pl-re I 20 ' '1 32 .... StOlllyV 1 20 1 so ?O -..... ,.,lney 8 60 9 371 I~-'.4 SIOMCln .0 4 • IS"'• '• PtlForg .IOg 6 S ~ 14 51onW 2 131> t 22 5' .. l,. Plttsi.on .eoa ' '" .n .... + "'" s100t.s 1 10 1 11 22\4 • "" PtruHI Old u 311 27V. f\ S1or•r 8 rd I II 11 II\• -~. PIM'I Resrcll t JO J "' StrldtRll 10 • 129 12"4 • ', Pl•1b01 12 44 l'-lit SluwW I n I 8 .,.,.,_ \, ~~:n: 1: ~1 ';:.:--· .... ~~':i ffJ 1i H.,. :2 .• Polaroid .'2 24 1120 ,...,.,_ ~ Sue"!! snoe 9 t~• '" '• Poneltrow S 41 !SJ 11.,.,_ '" Siii> Proon I 1 ,.1) llft • ~ ~ T 600 I• • I~-14 Sucrttt )Oa S 4 ''• • ~~~~a ~ ;~ :~: ~ t: g:r ~ ·t Tr n~= :,; PGE pl II 50 1JOO 101~-1 "'-S;ill()llpf ii.. . 51 lS o • • o Potl.tch IV. 12 22 S.~-'" Sunt>tom 1 1• 101 22'•-"• Pot EIP 1 1• 11 212 13\le • '• SuM1rnd 10 6 160 19'--'lo PotEI pf sv. d?O S6 • ~ Sutlstrol l"" . J co • '·• F>ote1p1 s,.. 1100 54~ S4irisnlrit ~ 16 JO 1111, • •. PGIEJ pt 4111 1110 41"'1 +I Siio Otl I 10 10 66 1•1111 2~t PPGlnd I 80 11 l04 31\i:i Suc>erGn 20 19 1'7 ~ '• Premlno » I 14 lllh-'l't Supr1<011e 9 l'IO ?a , "'' Ptem pf '°. 6 IS'lo 11\ SuprV•I I 10 I 60 21\.t • ~ PrOC1 &0.222 )()() ., -2 Sulro Mt9I• 9 ,.,., PtodRes 40 14 8 10'1< + 'I• Swank 60e ' 81> ll '• Proter I I "° l I• ll'tt • '• Sybron a. 10 187 19'• • o p s A Inc 19 .~. .... Sybrnpl 2 40 9 38 I ' I PuS Col I JO 8 179 lo'• 'to Sntron Don a 12 611 -l o PSE&G I 12 ' 2SI 20 -T T- PSEGc:ll s OS llO s. • I ToltBcst IO 10 as 21'1·-Ill PSEGpf s 11 • ISO SS • "' T ••coll Nat JO l -I . PSE(ij)f 7 10 t?OO IO Tellt'f In 60 6 91 • PSEGpl 9 ., . ISO 10? • 'It Tdll•y pt I •2 tO!o<. PSEG&>I 2 44 • 22 26"-• • T •mpE I 04 ' 198 18'11 Storage 'Waste' By. VLV1A PORTl-:R ( 1''1r$t <>/two columnsJ Have you found that ''perfect" plac·e under the smll to store tood., Do you store foods m the cabrnels that are so conveniently bu1lt in over the i,lOVl'? Oo you automatically use the taste lest to be sure foods are still good'! H your answer 1s yes to any ot the:.c questions. you are throwing away large sums o! mont'y each year in the kitchen -pos!)ibly hundreds of dollars rn your own case alone -because of your 1mpropC'r i,toragc of food. " J T ' L L N E \' •: R HAPPEN, but tf tht> Foo d and Drug Ad ministration wt:re to in s pect every famtly kitchen In the ll s ror proper s torage of foods. Money's Worth • most of them probably would nunk," a dmits J ane Heenan, of the Food a nd Drug Admtnts lrataon's consumer education and information staff. To be spec1f1c: Under lhe sink is not only far from the "perfect" place to store food . 1t 's also a dangerous spot. Pipes passing through the area can le.tk and provide uns ealablt: openings to draw bug~ as \\ell Avotd th1i, popular s pot, the FDA warns. As for storage shelves near your stove, you 're inviting loss because the foods dry up 10 these places. Even dry mix- t>s. which may be held al room temperature, wtll not keep well near the stove. food handhng experts emphasize. PSE pt 12 2S hndy Corp n IOIS 3•\<o-1 •• 1540 117 >2 T•lldvcr•I 11 64S t9 -2''' I Pus lnd 2 n 12 tes 41'4 T~•nC 20 10 •~ • '" PSlnd pf 311> 120 40'1>-1 Ttcnlctr IO?S 62S 31'--11< AND TllE TASTE test is ac•tually a way of begging for medical bills You don't have to swallow foods lhe1t have gone bad to be poisoned. If it's old food and you have reasons to doubt its fres hness. don't taste. Throw 1t away Almost a lways when I have wntten about Sa\•tng money• on food. l have stressed food shopping hints. But it well may be that more of your food dollars are lost through improper storage of food than through poor shopping practices. PS NH• I IO I •J5 20 • ''• Te<nnco1or J 18 sv. -1111 PSNH pl 2>4 JUt20 ,,,,, •• ' Tt<hnlcori " Sl? I)'. -, • PSNMJC I 36 9 69 20'1• 'lo ftklronA ?• 16 2S9 SI • .... Publl<kr SIC 17 II~ •'•• 1'> Ttlecor JO e 70 614 -v. Pueblo Intl u ,.,. 11• Ttltdvrit )ii 9 6SS 30\. • '• PR CY"tnl • 4'• • 1" Teledyll pl 4 8 69 +IV. PuotSP 2 llo • 43 2'~ + ~. Tel•P<omp • 1454 71.., • '" PuRmn 110 '1 xllO JI"'°+ "\\ Tele• Corp 9 74 2'"' • "" Pure•Cp '6 9 111 It\, ~. Tene<o I 7• 1 8'11 2•V. • PurllMI Fiii IO S '"' T•~c pf sv. ' I IO~o + "" I Purlalr I 04 IS I 41~ "'i Tesoro~! I • 1'17 16~ • -0 0-T1tsor pll 16 S71 2' -'• To assure the safely and quahty of the food you have bought. proper storage 1s 1mperat1ve So· draw up a checklist to ins pect your kitchen ; be your own inspector; make a list of th<: changes that you discover are needed - and then make them. 0..kOtl M 14 274 21 • '• Te:oco 2 '1841 26'°11 • '• 0...0 pit~ . 1400 106'1> ToCBrish I 11 91 38 O..kSOI n II 71 ,,,.._ ... TuETr I 10 1 IS1 2'1'o -1 ... =: ~1~ ·: 3! ,t~ .. '•11 ~:~t?:; 9 1~ ~~~+ lo __. R-Tw~Tpl IV. . 4 32~ t I''• Rolston P I 16 ,.312 4' '' Te•9ull 1 20 a 171 101.la-~. RamaOt '" 1a •70 •~· '• Te'ltulnd IQ 10 i. u Ranco In fO • 'I '''• • Ila To tristr 1 '1 l80 ltS\'2-2"l R-d A,.., 72 &' • • • • Tua~ln1 Co 1 IOU 1 • ... IUy'*to "' s 2S lO'"'. .... Tu 011 010 • 111 IS\., • .,, ReY'Cllnll .41 6 31 1• -~. TuPtLd Tr 17 12 t9 -•1, IUVI_,, t II 334 411ft + 11• TuUlll I 24 II 4'7 21'"' • \I> RCA Corp I II 7081 J4'"l-"> Tull lllCl11SI •I "" • 1111 RCA CV pt4 • JO o1"'4 "" lHlron I tO 10 144 24 • '. RCA pf 3V> • 1100 43 • • · Tn1rpl 2 01 • 4 29V. + 1111 qR~ Co ·· 10 I"• ·•· Tnlrpf I 40 31 12'1• .. '-qRtaoQ lpl · 10 14• · Tlllokol 70 1 101 16 R.41d&.8t .40 • 110 llV• t 'I• Tllme.tl 76 21 S6 Jo•... 'I• Redman Ind . IOJ 3\ta • TllOmln 40Q 23 S ''" Reeu 7•• 15 .. 14'1·-'h ThomJW 50lS IOS a~. .,. RM11u l.IO I 20 27~-14 ThrlflyO .40 13 168 7\'11 + •12 Relcllold .,. s .. ll'lo • . . TICorptln I 1• 2S9 13"-. 11. R.IStort 1>4 I S l 'h-V. TldtMlir 70 6 12 JOYe + '111 Rtlltnc El I 8 243 JO.V.-\IJ Tll)4trtll 10d IJ 30tt lS\'11-11• Rl>IEltc pf 3 20 5' Ttrne Inc 2 1S 161 67 , llellence Gr 79 ' Times M so 1S JU 21'h -'"' RelncG pf8 1 16h flmkn ? 10• 8 171 •6''• • -4• =~ti?ilt~ :; '~~:I~ Tlsll,.,..n RI • • 6S 13 ...... II. RtpFlnS 80 18 ll'lt+ 14 TObnPk .1Sb •• 4 S RtllMot Inv I& I""'+ Vo TOOd Slllpyd 8 9 "• RepSlll&O 119 32 -~ ToltE0112 1 H H'h-•• ResrvOU II> 1 ll20 a•r, + I/• TonUCp 40 10 92 12~ -"o RevcoOS 4021 74' 441/J +l'h ToolsRI 40c:llS a &\\-'• Rtwre Cop ?• ..,, + "" TraneCo '6 9 16 2S -\. Revlon I 40 19 103 11"o Vt i~~~~.!:m ~ ~ S~~ ~g:~ -1' Reari.m 20 I • IOO 4va + '" Tranico ., II 112 91'1 '• Re•nrd I JO t. 2:M 14 + YI TrnlcLln o 11 91 '11. + •1, R<-•n pf1'1 .. l 4H••" Tronot>F 20 6 726 91•~ S., R4t•n pt J 36 14 3S'I•-~ Tr•nUn I &O 1' n 'll~-1'11 Rev Ind) 09 ~ 43S 63~ "' T I •O 1 2)'1 20' I Re11n pf 2' • 11 7l'h-I..., r;~~~t,. Air 331 '1': + 1~ Revn<!Mel I 9 S21 J l'/o-~ TrMsWA pt • ' lll/J ••• AfYMlpf 4'h • S 61\to-'lo Trilvlrs I 08 15 29• 27 • =~~ti"~ 1 1~ ~~ -~ Tmlr~ pl 2.. a 3'V•-v. Ricri.rct.n I 14 2S IO'e. Vt TRE Cp SI • 1I t"o-... R•Cl\AM# .64 12 Ill JJ'tt ~ Tri Con 46d ·• 61 20Y.-'I• Rchmnd 80 11 140 121/t-''-TrlCll pf 2''> I 31 •. -THOROUGHLY CHECK the cabinets underneath the kitchen sink. or any cabinets through "hich water pipes,. dram pipes or heating pipes pass. This 1s a favorite spot to store sacks of onion!> or potatoes Perhaps you have pla<:'ed ltqu1ds or canned goods here -but foods never s hould be stored in these cabinets. They attract insects. even rodents. throug h openings that you'll find almost 1mposs1ble to !>eal adequately. Also. leakage from the pipes can da mage the food products, causmg cans, for instance, to become overheated or rusty. -· Never s tor e anything you plan to eat next to potent household chemicals. Bottles of cleanmg che micals can too easily be mis taken for bottles of soft drinks or other foods . 0 11 and vinegar may make a dehc1ous salad dressmg -but not 011 and a tasteless but dangerous chem1c~I. -G IVE SPECIAL care to foods that should be refrigerated or frozen, for bacteria in these foods multiply with amazing rapidity under favorable cond1t1ons. Gold foods should be kept cold With this guide m mind, look at the open surfaces tn your kitchen Any meat thawing at room temperature? Do you put away that carton of milk or quart of oran ge jwce as soon as you return from the supermarket? :~1 1~ ~~ ~ 1~! r:~ + :~ i;~ni~ci:?:. s 4g ·~~-V. Trlnltylnd I S •8 26~-"' j RRltoG<I• r pld ·'°,6 II .!~ 11~,.. .. . TrplcaN .2010 60 28~-'• -Rethink your ways of keeping bread, for say FDA e>.· perts, under normal cond1t1ons. bread keeps fresher longer at room temperatures than m the refrigerator. In hot, humid weather, bread 1s better protected agamst mold m the r efrigerator. AJd - -TltW In I 20 1 61S 29 -1o I R1111..-. .'1611 2' 7211>+ 1• TRW pl 4.,. •. 14 62\4+ I''• ~w .10 2l 62 11'• + lo\ TRW pr 4 40 401 69.,,-''• -GO OVER YOUR stock of canned goods. reaching all the way to the back of the mo!.t me1cccss1ble shelf. Dust on the cans? It's lime lo clean the tops Any foreign matter on the tops of the cans will be pressed into the food itself dunng the opening. :::r: ~I~ t~ m~=I~ lU<!iOllG .91> I JOS IJ' • RCKllG I ~ 1 31 ltlh-'" TwCFo• 40 4 108 1211>-'" TycoLAb 20 10 14 14 • '• Roell Tel . 11 J3 12"--~ fyltr Cp • .0 .S 1>1 2&1/• + .\\ Aoc-r MIS 65 13 -'II -4J U- Rockwllln 2 7 Joe 71 V. + '"' UALlnc .o. n 40.I 20 -1111 Rock pl ·"" •• 4 ... /). ,.... u· tel 0 J 2··'" ·~I Roe~ r: t •s .. 22 241/o+ I "L A.• .. ""-" " • UAR tJO S JS 71\1.-1 Rohm I 2137 212 IMoll•-Yo UGI Cp 1 32 7 41 H + v, =~ris.\?, 17 ~ 2!i:-· ~ u G 1 pf2 1s •. mo 28 -h Ronson Cr~ SJ ' 51(, • • UMC lndu I 9 67 Ill!.+ 'I• -When you pick up the can, if 1t sticks slightly. it could have leakage, the FDA warns. H<>turn the can to the stor<'. n C 1 1, S'l It"+ ,, UMET Trst.. 2 l'h • I noper • •• .. Un•rco 50 4 16 '"' + 'I• I Aortf A .'4 II IM 21'tt-'141 Un Bncp .114 8 110 871• • Californians Lose Ao!Mlo .«Ill 12 31 24~-.... Un camp 2 15 239 86V. , .,. I Row•n .26 4 IOS 21>~+ ~ 1,. RoyalCC 72 14 IO'I 11"-V• ~~~~~:~ 1~ 9~! 1r" +\~I RoylD S 2~ 4 1112 ~ + V. uri1on Corp II 1' s~-'"' Roytl I .ISb ' JOS 6~ . • • Un Elec I 28 8 120 1• ..... '.I :J~ .~ 26 ~: 2~ ! 1 ~ UnEI pt212 • • • S3 28'111 • ~ RuOerC .10 s '1 t7'11o + ~ Un El pl 31/1 •• z60 38 +I Un Etec pl 4 .• zSO 42 • Purchasing Power RuuTO\ 76 2' Ill 12""-'h Un El pt 41.i, •• 1200 47 + '-• Rydtr ~ ~ 10V. •" Un El pf 6 40 .. zlO t.311' ~ 1•1, Soblne R '°II I 3'*-'\\ UnEI fc11 •• tlOO 7S + ,,, Sofl>lfd Ind IS 104 3 • • ~~~:i-:·~ 1: 1 ~~ 4m-:"' 1 Seftwa'(St J 'I t1S 43~ ~ Un0tr..1 ,,.., tS S9'"l • 'I'> SACRAMENTO <UPI> -P ersonal income of Califor· mans during July through September la~t year increased by 8 7 percent from the· same period in 1974 to total Sl 38 9 billion, the Board of Equalization has r eported. . Slot Corpln t 1J0 11 -14 ._.,, StJMnrl 110 t 170 ,,...,_, Un Pac 2 80 IS 11S 71 • '>1_ SUOUP I n • • n ..... -'" ~:~.~ ., .. t 1~:.,: + ""• ~~t ~ 11. ~ ri~: :; Unlroyill .SO 8 7'0 I"'-'I• SIReg<s 1 S2 10 129 401 .. \.\ ~~~rol::0: '. 1": ~ ... _. "• S..lentC 24Q t4 ~ l>.t. + 'It UIO Brnd pl • IJ 11 > , • StnOG' I 20 IJ ~ ll t 'It UflCorp nb 37 8•• ~A,..~: 1; ~ ;~~ ~ UldFncll JO 5 42 1-.. !ianF In I IO • JSO lS • U(;tsPL n 1 351 16' ~. "· SFeln pf SO I ·~ + ''-~~~lt~;:a{~ I~ :~ ,:~. :~ However. the board satd purchasing power was actual· Iv lower than a vear earlier "because It was eroded by bot h htgher pnces and higher ta\c<., as increasmg mcomc mov(•(S taxpayers into h igher t ••' brac:kN!> " S.Felnll .30 t SI 22"'-~ UnlndC 40Q 6 ll 11 ~ '"' Soarg Wtl 40 a 2s 11•11 -"\\ Un Ind pf 4) 10 1\o\ • .., !.ilulBF RIE · · ~ J~-"• UICI ln"s 10 9 Sl .... ''-, SavEPw 60 l> •1 '' •-V. o ... The board a lso said tc.1\able s<ilt's in California totaled S18 9 billion during thl' third quartPr rose 7.4 percent from the same qu ... rtt>r in l !ri I S.YEI pfl 71 .. 72 12'1\-"' UnJ$yB I CM 1 18 I ~ • '• • SavEJA I ~ . • l lf -1/o Uld MM 90 • 101 11 -If• Sa'f A SI~ . 6l ' -Vt Un NUCIHr 24 90'I 2011•-I"' N L k fi ,,.,., !:~%:2:~/ 2U ::: ~ ~0~rr72~,i '* i~i ·:~ ew oo or .1. oro SCA Senti ct .. 45 2'n-'"-USFOIS< S4d • • II Ill/• •• Sclloltf.., Cp •. 2• 4'1•-'4 U~Gyp' '°21 119 20lfll + 'I• Scllerlng .1811 SS2 SJ V ypf I IO .. J 2•"4-'" Sch•'" B .. 2. 211 23'1> ·~ v Home~ .. 71 ... _"" .8 b O tl t ~~·~; ~ n~·.~ ~srt~.:~~ i ~ 2i3~=rev.~ 1 am urger u e Scot Lad 36 S 84 7Vt • 'I• US Shoe 9S tO 178 .. • !i<ottF1 I 01 10 /3 22'111 'll US$1ttl 2 IO 1 1349 """° 1 111, ScOllFor 1• 1 '3 16~ • "• US lob 90 11 33 1•1n ·~ ScotlP•P 6o8 It .. 34 19,. • I.,. Uldlechnl 2 1 201 SJl/J + Vt ScottYI I .10 19 3' '"" .... UldTecll pfl . 10 126"1o-V• ScovlllMlg I 38 65 13~+ 11> Uni Tel I 12 tO lJ6 1•\\ t V. Scovil pf 2''1 , 11> 31'• + 'I• Uni Tel wlS • SI 2 ScvdOtrO V 13 S''o-11\ ~TpfA I' t • 2S 21 + Vt SbdCLn I 40 7 I .. ?4'11.-~ UnlTtlpf 1~1 . S 21'11-'"' SttContr lO 6 5 11 ,._ • Unltrod 050 10 17 •'Ill+ 'lo SNW Alrl SI 8 •• 4.\<o-'"-Uni"°' I 68 6 1 l 71.lo • ~ SttQrttn IO IS 19 30'11!+ 111 Unl11L T I 12 1 22 1t + 1i't SNOr•vt II JS • + Vt P lncorp 11 S9 11 -•t. SMfPow .IO 11 Jl 18 + ~ UploM t421 311 4S'l1t+ V. Set<'IGO st 101106 ISV.'" •to USLIFE .32 • 128 IHe •• Sttri I 60a 7' 700 '11)-'"o UsllftFd ,. II • IOV. • SHtrtln Lin . 94 2"--\o USMCp I 20 7 22 2' SEOCO 11 6 131 11'\ • \o USM pt I' 1 • lSIO 29 + "' StrvlceC .11 S 38 6 Ul•h Intl I• 12 fM SO"+ V. Servomn 6' 9 .. IJll, UWllPL 2 olO 10 •4 ~Vr+ ~ SNUIO ?tto 44 1'•• ~ Ut PLpf2IO . 40 31 SNPtlf 10 9 36 13' I "' UV Indus lg s 149 ll'n-.... W flOll 2 tO 6 191 SO UVln pl I 26 I 21~-1\111 sntllT 1 Ill> 4 6 31 "" -V V- $MlltrG S6 • !JI ll"•-.,. 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SllY1l11C8 .• 14" 417 ""'-~ wrnaoo tnc 11 SS 6.,. ••• SmllllA '° 1' 3' 11 V. • VSI Ollr9 61 1 t IO'o •• 51'1\ltlllnt ,)6 t 719 '214-1"' V\lfcnM 1 IO I U 3SV•-V. SmlthkllM t 14 ,,. 41\i't V. -'II W-SmllM T .SO t U j4'"' . . . Wt(!\ Qt .76 t alt 21.,... • ll't Smuclttf' .IO I t I ,,.._ V. Wlldlpf 2.10 , •I 4'l'o+ 1 SOI• 9.t• .70 ' 42 Ullo-'Ill w.tctlovla C . 73 3\-\lo SoMst• Intl , J1 JV. . . . WolgrMn I 11 .. t5 Sony~ 0'9 41 25' 10\to . Wtl~H 1 ..0. II J7 321 ._ Soo Ln I too 1 iS '°"' + .... w.11 9 \IS to 10 t Jl'lll + -.. SOS Cnt 40 1 10 10~ -. WtllMr IOA • 11' IS + '"' s eer1111:44 a 2n 11111 -wetJNn OI n u 14"-y, SoJ 11111 I S6 10 ~ 16~ + .,., W~ UI 10 t• '4 14--'• $oudwn .151 S I 11 -"' W•nt<O .90 • 110 10• + ll! SOww1 f/f 1.fO U~ WllM(Of I" . I 20lll + -.. ~tt Ill .eo io ,. 11-. • .-•,,..cm so 1 ,,. 201'1 •.• SM.at,.,~ t U S'11 Vt s4\• .. 2 11 +I S (All• l 1 219 21" • \\ I I'• • S 41 +I s.AllC.t I. , att21 U I.<-.... W ~ 1 10 t: ~ Sein()! t~ II 11 :u-. .,., 'tllllllrl.A!" '2 11 Jn ~ \oft SoN ... , 1 t lit ~14 "' WIWN'S l.f6 I 1• 129'+ ... ~lntfl 10 1• 16" • .,.. w.7IOt 1. ) 11 ,..,.._ \'t SNfTP!) 1 4, W.Nt f/f l Yt J ,,__ ~ SoPtclf 114 14 , .. '3 t IA Wiii\ Sii le 7 t II._ tt lttll J If \J <ICM Jt\4-Vt W. Wiii l.S. t 30 ~ allllf SO ft Siii Wtfle ""'Ill ' $1 ~ , lttll Of ) S Jt'-t IA W.CllnJ .'IClb 14 11 Vt-YI ""°' 1 1t 1 ,. »-• "' wa""" o • ue 1 • "' lll,,0 .0 II JOI U 111 Wlll'ftlllf I '° '1 + 'h tflf .. ' ,. • -"' WMll~ lftC ~ ti + ~ •Df ,...., l 1t1A Wlln,. J nc , 141111+ ~ !PS .. ,; t4t U-• ·~ '#lttCIWf .'II I lttl 6'' ... $cWor1en ,... 4 10 8 + V. WtbllOtl Cl? II 1JI 1\11 + - Sciwf"IHlll 111 u 1t ... ~l1~~L1 .ton n, 6•' .~-"" *'ryHpt l 4 ttl'I + .... ..., _,~ • • Burger King Corp, will tn· troduce an El Toro franchise restaurant "ith a new look Thursday. Set low \\ith a g ray. weathered board ('xtcrior . th<' unit bears little resemblanc(' to s tandard brick Burger King restaurants. lnstead. the butlding matches the Southwest Frontier style of the Saddle back Valley Mall m which it is located The corporation~ which had sales of $615.000,000 for the fiscal year endmg May 31, 1975. is a wholly owned sub· ~1d1ary of the Pills bury Com· p.in}. 15,000 Seeking 2,000 Park Jobs Additionally, prompted by local environmental regula· hons bannmg signs. the stan· dard "Burge r King" roof sign and the pole sign near the street have been replaced by a small whit(' wall sign with raised white letters. SANTA CLA RA (AP> - Some 15,000 people seekin~ 2.000 seasonal jobs snarled traffic Mon day around a theme park scheduled to open here m March. Burger King is the fourth largest fast food company with approximately 1,500 stores throughout the United tates and averages 200 new restaurant openings per year. Officials at Marriott's Great Amenca reported that 6,000 or the Job seekers had re· <.'e1ved applications by mtd· morning and would be called back for tntervlews during lhe next two weeks . ~ .... ~ ... I' I ll'ter\I 0-Ctio ,. I lllO>I tw Ci.q ---·-I -.W W-17'A + "" Wllrtooet .ao n 17' ,. + " ..... . . WN1t(al .tO • 2fCI :IO "' Ult.-V. 'Miit( pf A J • I JI U 'h +I WNtt MolOr 11.4 ~ • ,. --WNttaltr C4I n 1.a 3~. ~ .-.-"11 WICk.n JIM t lot 11~ •• ~·"'w1e~•'I ',~."" ,~ • '"' wt1111-E i .. ~ • ilo't WllW't .Old !IS 6~ • -. u.-.-\lo WlnnD• I 44 14 201 1' -~ t• + -WI~ 411 6" • ~ • W1$flft fti ll •Ii. " + • ~--.. Wl1!1pl "'° . ••* 102 +lloto -\.41 Whtl p4 1-. 11.110 II•+"' I 'II \.41 WhcO. 1 ,. I 62 It ~ \41 ·~... .. Wl.O pl J s' . r• ""'... ... St'--\'°I WIKl'l I lf 10 t3 11-. '4 tOl4 --. ¥111t<O C I 20 II 4' U + \lo 1•v. • ¥\ll~Olll'I 2 U • • I 61 + 1 SI +I~ Wo4""'1 OSll 1• 11 4'-~ 41\o'I + 1._ Wumtco tO • •$ 0 111 + "' -·-'MiofaCD A 2 11 o + ,. WbOO\ ilttf1 ) ~ U\11 • WM!.,. I IO \o't • WbOI Pl ,-ft ,. aA 11v.+ WOtl• ,..,_ 1 ,. - Wl'l§yJ -" 11 .... W\ifltrT -• 11 w. . . Wyly c.r, .. U2 •'h+ -88 DAILY PILOT Tu.eday, January 27, 1976 Two Shows Opening at U~I Two new productions are openine on• the Orange Coast this weekend -b oth on Thursday and both at UC Irvine. Intermission Tom Titus TH E M US I C AL "Gypsy" continues on stage at two theaters, a Sebastian's West Dinner Playho u se a n d t h e West minster Communi- ty T heater (the latter to be reviewed on T hurs- day>. Audrey Sperling, John Moran and Denise Dales bead the cast at Sebastian's, 140 Avenida Pico, San Clemente, with performances every nigh t but Monday at varying cu rtain times. Reservations 492-9950. UCI 's fine arts depart· ment will unveil Ten· nessee Williams' all- t1me classic "A Street· car Named Desire" in the main Fine Arts \'1llage Theater at the :,ame time Bertolt Brecht's "In the Jungle of the Cities" goes on s tage at the Little Theater in llumamties H all Curtain time for both 1s 8 o'clock ASHLEY C'A RR 1s d1rel'lin~ "Streetcar." "h1ch ft>aturl'S Nela Leighton a~ Blanche, John Redaellt as Stanley, Kimberly Cole as Stella and John Shepard as Mitch . Others in the UCI cast are Mark Siciliani, Christy Dwyer. Cassan- dra Moore , Jan ice Arkatov. John Hovannis- tian, Haydn Kramer, Carole Cooney and Paul Hell an. "Streetcar" will be presented Thurs day through Saturday of this week a nd next . Performances of "Jungle of the Cities" will be given Thursday through Saturday only. Tickets for both may be obt a i ned by c ailing 833-6617. COMPLETING its two-weekend e n gage- ment at Golden West College is the drama "That Championship Season." a joint produc- tion or G WC and t he Irvine Community Theater. Onofre Gutier· rez, Clark Burson, Alan Levy, Randy Keene and Jack Byron comprise the cast. Final performances will be given Thursday through Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at 5 p.m. in the main theater on the Huntington Beach cam- pus. Reservations 892-7711, extension 545. The Westminster pro- duction plays Friday and Saturday at 8:30 with Doris Allen, Sue Pelli- grini and Don George in the principal roles at 7272 Maple Ave ., Westminster . Reserva - tions 893-8626. ALSO continuing on Orange Coast stages this week are: -"The National Health" at South Coast Three Television· , Specials Upcoming "l DAYS OF THI COM>Or Ill "'CHIMA TOWN" lllJ .,,...,.., MAIY, curr 1.At.1v- -VAM1~1MG rotNT"' "GOHl IM 60 SlCOHDS" U'Gt 4th Annual FESTIVAL OF WHALES 3 Weekends J..muary 30 Febru..iry 15 "HUS TU" --ntl GAMILlr Ill Whole Watch Cruises Free Events for the En tire Family Morine l ectures, Exh1b1ts & M ovies Amphibious Boot Rides Musical Entertainment See Program of Events in Area Businesses LOS ANGELES (AP) -Television specials coming up: Orson Well es and Gene Kelly will appear on "The First 50 Years," NBC's four-hour s alute to its own history, appearing on the network in Nov· ember. Telly Savalas' guests for his Feb. 18 CBS special "Telly ... Who Loves Ya, Baby?" will ~e Diahann Carroll, Barbara Eden and Cloris Leachman. "Life Goes to the Movies," based on the bestselling book will be produced by Jack Haley Jr. and 20th Century-Fox for NBC. Pltn! •DEATH RACE 2000• Tectinicolon ~ SURF THEATRE e..t Hwy .. HI St I WI --IMdl IJ6-tlH A "RISH Ci.OlDOtf' "'#' -CHIEHLUDHS· nu A. "'WILD PAITY" cat V "'lllHCdMATIOM OF PITB PIO~D" tit alllnd" Repertory. 1827 Newport B l v d ., Costa M Ha. Performances at 8 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday wllb a 3 p.m . matlnee Sunday. Res ervations 646-1363. Forest" at the Lagy.n'h · -"The Petrified ~~~~~!!~!~ Moulton Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach . Performances Tuesday through Saturday at 8 :30 through Feb. 7. Reserva- tions 494-0743. -"H OW TH E Other Half Loves" at the Hunt- ington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main St.. Hunt- ington Bea c h . Performances Fridays and Saturdays through Feb. 14 at 8:30. Reserva- tions 842·5421. -"The Happiest Millionaire" at the Costa Mes a Civic Playhouse, in the Community Center auditorium on the Orange County Fair- grounds. Performances Friday and Saturday at 8 :30. Reservations 556-5391. -"You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Ru nning" at th e San Clemente Theater, 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Clemente. Performances Thursday through Saturday at 8:30 until Feb. 7. R eserva- tions 492·0465. 1414 NIIMI• hlllt• 5.JHiOI 1111 PUllM' .,.~ WAY our (I) Mll\' M6 t.AT/SUM-1:1 ....... '100STEI CotilUIN" N.&T6:41-1Nt U.T~:41-ll:H 141Ht ""'" '"'~'""US liOI lfll PU"M' "DOG DAY AFTEINOON" LU /SUM-4-1 t:ll IAT/MM-lllM'*"l t :ll "UIOWNING POOL" N.&T l:ltUT/SUM-l:lf..l:tt "SfORY Of O" IX) 6:4~) ...... .u IA T JW"---1 :J._J: II 1,.._.>45-a:l._l .. .lS •• * * * * JACK NICHOLSON'S PERFECT TRIUMPH!". ": ..... ~I~-.~:.·,,, THE CITY SHOf'PING CE NTRE ORANGE •532·6721 STANJ:EY J<.YBRICK••i----..~~ Where' San Diego Freeway "S" meets Pacrfrc Coast Highway "l" Information Centers: Marina Inn. Motel & Dana Wharf Sportfishing THE SL IM GOURMET Recipes to add dining pleasure while subtracting calories. Wednesday i n the DAILY PILOT ~ The Dev111n ~ MmJones t I S.A. FRWY CMANCHHTER EX.I G.G. FRWY (CITY DA. EX.I "WILD PARTY" (R) "REINCARNATION OF PETER PROUD" (R) SADDLEBACK PLAZA r 1Nld ilo1 A I n lit ll fO•O •o •O•t•f'l<'•l•fl' \•1 \II IA9UILWILSH "WILD PAITY" ...... 7:41 ,!JNCAINATION Of PtTEI PIGUD" l :IM:l .. t:Jt A.LAIM DB.ON '1Ut WAY OUT" (I) 4:0S.7 :35 "OUTlt WISH" (I) 2:20-5:50-9:20 4:n-7:10 "TAKE THE MONEY & RUN'' 2: 1W:OO-t :4S 1:10 18T11 WISH" 6:35-t:SO 6WlD PUTT" Ill 7:10 ,_MMATIOM Of Pm.I 1'1111" 6:0CM :ot0 ATAN O'NEAI. • MARISA BEAEN90H llAONIP°ICENT INTlllTA-NT, 8Ulll'TUOU8, LUSH. OOllOLOUS, TMlllLLl ll O , HAUNTI NG ••• --THC -lltTO A WOllLO 0~ LONO AGO. AllD CNATIND TMI IONO Of --OIC)Yltl ACCOll .. LISM ANO n w OllllCTOlll Anflll'T Ill A L"l ntm: .. --. ...... , .... OtCAH..0Cl)LUMM1' EllCITIHG ADVENTURE t WJUJ'DISNEV -~;1~~~ CINEMA CENTER K~I-AT-C°'TA..U U YUMCINT'M '7t-4UI The MHterpleoeof LOY• •l'ld 8ubml11lon Tilet llunn•d 'r•nc• I I ' WA.LTEA MATTHAU OEOROE BURNS A!Ct44RO HHJAMIN WINNER 5 OOUlEN OLOBE NOMINATIONS ,_,. --·-·~ edwards BRISTOL CINEMA SPECIAL REDUCED 'AMLY PRICES FOR THIS GAEAT FAMILY PROGRAM The Ufe ....anme. of GRl.ZZIY ADAMS HDMY C»9ION•ULY l'OlllUN MMtla kAKl.IY lMll DNIOIDQTTlllNG YOCl!Y£8MW. llWI ........................ If') .......... _ ................. ...... ...-.. . ........ ~ •. .. ~ .. ~·nt ~ .. ~~ 3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR "Ol!IERT REDFORD ,AYE DUNAWAY INEMA EH El MA-AT ..... \.COP4'""6 IA YliOIC'"'9 tJt -4141 _, ··-·-,-· ......... ..... . .__ -· ... ·--· ............. ~ LUCll'Y &MY"' ua wme 1111 llft"' _.,, . ..- PMQO ...... CAHO U8tO ACOLOHS SOT CMICAllO T MDICAHO tOMOSNO'ltOS _ .. ,., .... A B?tue.....m"' .......... UIXl9IT?GN"' PLUS "NO WAY OUT" ards BalSTOl CINEMA 7 - 7 Saddlebaek .. T oday'8 Cl~ l•g. N .Y. Seeks ' VOL. 69, NO. 27, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ·~ ~ , .. _O RANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA I TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1976 TEN.CENTS ··Lake Mission Viejo: Just Add Water , ,.. By RuDI NJEDZIF.LSKI ,. Of .. Dallyf't•M..w Water will begin flowinf Into Lake Mission Viejo thia June, creating one of the largest fresh- water recreational lakes in California, it was disclosed Mon- day night by officials of the Mis- sion Viejo Company. The lake project and other de- velopments were outlined for members of the Municipal Ad- visory Council (MAC) by Van Stevens, director of advanced Planning and eqineeri.ng for the Mission Viejo Company. and .Jack Raub, environmental plan· ning consultant. Surrounded by residential de· velopment and a commercial complex, the 125-acre lake will feature sail boa Ung, fishin1, swimming, and a beach with an adjoining parking lot. ln their oveniew of projects both in the planning stage and those about to ao under con- struction, Raub and Stevens also diseloeed plans tor a regional .sboppinf center at the southern tip OI the planned community. The shopping center, Stevens said, ts in the process of being negotiated and will be bounded roughly by Crown Valley Parkway, Marguerite Parkway, and the San Diego Freeway. Although no construction timetable was presented, Stevens noted that it would take between two to five years to de· sign the commercial complex. Responding to a question of concern by Preston Howell, a trustee of the former San Joa- quin School District, of bow the shopping center would affect the tax base of the Saddleback Marines Tentatively ~Accept SC Fire Blame 383Percent Lawyers Facing Insurance Hike SACRAMENTO (AP) -The same company that boosted medical malpractice insurance to strike-triggering levels is giv- ing California's lawyers a similar boost, says the State Bar. William Shannon Parrish of Oakland, the acting president of the State Bar, said Monday the lawyers' professional liability in- s urance. also called "errors and omissions policies," is to go up 383 percent March 16. A number of doctors in Southern California have walked off the job because 9,500 received ing that all practicing lawyers are required to belong. And unlike the doctors, Parrish said he doubted if the lawyers would suggest that the taxpayers contribute to a solution. Some California doctor s' groups are suggesting state in· surance plans toward which their own contributions would ·be voluntary, wlth the1 taxpayers backstopping. "" 2Mammoth Skiers Die MAMMOTH (UPI) - Two skiers were thrown off balance on thin, patchy snow in separate incidents' on Mam moth ..Mountain and crashed to their death onrocks. ' Daryl Gordon, 16, of Ha- cienda Heights fell after starting down Dave's Run, the steepest and one of the most difficult at Mam- moth. George C. Smith Jr., 23. of La Canada, suffered multiple injuries including a fractured skull and rup- tured spleen. BROWN GIVING UP ON MALPRACTICE? AS increases of 327 percent. This had been cut by the state insurance commissioner from a requested increase of 486 percent. In both cases, it's the Travelers Insurance Co., Parrish said in an interview. Battin Lawyer Raps DA 'Political Bi~' The State Bar is investigating at least two alternatives. One would be a bar-sponsored group insurance plan, which would require permission of the Legislature, Parrish said. The other would be a com- pulsory "pay-as-you-go" plan in · which all the claims against all lawyers would be added up each year, and each of the 50,000 mem- bers assessed equally to pay them. Unlike many states, California has an "integrated bar," mean- H e arst T rial Begins With Jury P icking SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) Patty Hearst went on trial today, def ended by a top criminal lawyer who will argue that she was a poor little rich girl who joined a bank robbery because she thought she was dead if she didn't . By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of ... O.Jly ...... 5'9ff The attorney for indicted Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin continued his al· t~mpt Monday to prove the cou.n· ty District Attorney's Office is engaged in "selective political prosecution.•' Despite repeated objections by Deputy District Attorney Jack Ryan, Kurilich attempted to un- ravel the procedures used by the county prosecutor in probing al· legations of political wrong- doing. Kurilicb presented Ryan and Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae with 20 documents support- ing his claim that tllt'O distinct groups of politicans exist in the minds of DA 's investigators. He repeated his prior allega- tion that Battin is part of a large- ly Democratic group backed by Dr. Louis Cella and millionaire rancher Richard O'Neill. The other group, be claims, is com· prised of those backed by the Republican Lincoln Club. Kurilich said the Cella-O'Neill group is prosecuted for its ac- tivities while the DA ignores re· ports of illegalities by the other camp. Monday's activity in Lae's court centered on Kurilicb's at· tempt to get the DA to admit the nam~ of politicians kept in in- vestigatory flies. Kurilich questioned DA's In-. vestigator Joel Hayes and Depu- ty DA Michael Capizzi, trying to establish that while politicians from both groups may appear in files, only the Cella-O'Neill group are investigated and prosecuted. Under questioning interrupted often by objections from Ryan, Kurilich got Hayes to admit that the DA maintains records oncer- tain political figures but doesn't keep them in a special me. He said most would be kept in the DA 's "Alpha File" on general investigations. But Hayes did say that some politician's names are on index cards in the DA's organized crime file. The only names Lae would permit Hayes to reveal were Battin's and that of former <See BAT l'IN, PB1e A2) Welding Machine Sparks? By F REDERICK SCHOEMEHL Oftlle D• llY Pll•Utttt Preliminary investigation shows that a 2,400·acre brush fire that destroyed 14 San Clemente homes was caused by a spark from welding equipment being used on Camp Pendleton last Wednesday morning, Marine Corps officials said today. In a brief statement, officials said a further investigation has been ordered that will take at least a month to complete. "The cause of the fire was shown to be a spark from elec· trical welding equipment which was being operated by a Marine at an abandoned pistol range," the statement said. The land where the fire erupt· ed is leased to the state by the Marine Corps ror eventual use as a state park. In the investigation, the state- ment said, a senior Marine of· ficial "will probe all matters con- nected with the fire, including the matter of why electrical welding equipment was being used on the state land. "Formal investigation of the type ordered involves acquiring sworn testimony, interrogation of witnesses and the collection of all pertinent documents," the statement said. Marine officials said they would be unable to make any further comment on the fire until the formal investigation is com- pleted. MS. HEARST'S CREDIT GOOD? SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The mountain of mail sent, to Patricia Hearst in jail includes at least one application for a credit card. The a pplication, apparently one of many form letters sent out by American Express, was ad· dressed '.'Dear Ms. Hearst" and said in part: " ... You will always have money without carrying sizable amounts of cash that can easily be lost or stolen. You can buy gifts, send flowers, cable money, host a dinner, even if you can't be there " Valley Unified School District Stevens said the impact would be"none." He did say, however, that the impact on the Capistrano Unified School District within .wbose boundaries the shopping center will be located will be both "significant and positive." Projects currently under con· struction in Mission Viejo will raise the community's popula- !ion by approximately 3,700, us. mg life formula of 3.15 residents for each of the 1,200 bohles schedu!ed to be completed I Future tracts outlined by I Stevens include 347 Barcelona or Cordova-type homes near Los Alisos Boulevard and Wilde~ ness Glen, 610 Castille or Madrid · homes west of Lake Mission Vie· jo, 254.500 Madrids or Castilles (See LAKE, Page AZ) • OtllJ ,. ... "'" ...... ~a.t's lie Doing Here'! • Actor Paul Newman, well known for his penchant for auto racing, is competing in a different sort of contest at UC Irvine. To fin9 out what he's doing and why see Page A3. ' ,. Sweet Streak NuJe Cake Popper Neetkd Student job oP'Portunities come in many different ways. Consider this ad, tacked up on the Sad· dleback College bulletin board: "Wanted: A 11oung man to jump out of.a birthday cake.a1 wife's birthday party. Time: Approximately 9 p.m. • Feb. 7. P.ay: $25 /or one hoor's time. ThU offer is 8trictly cm the up and up. I'm sertotu. Call Bill or Pam Cross at IXX·tt:tz by Jan. 29." The ad, placed by a Mission Viejo couple to add some zest to the wife's 30th birthday, has found no takers so far. A possible drawback: The assignment calls for a nude appearance. Mrs. Gross, wife of a security analyst, said her hus band originally intended the cake- popping as a s urprise but that she got onto him. So they're planning to spring the surprise on 15 couples who have been invited to the party. "We looked into a theatricf) agency in Los Angeles that of· fered this kind or service but they charge $125 which is a little. steep," she reports. . "So we picked Saddleback College which is the closest place to advertise. We thought ther~ might be a kid around who'd want to do something crazy like that." To date the Grosses have re• ceived only one call from a stu- dent who said he'd have to "think about it" upon learning that thp cake pop was to be performed ln the nude. The Grosses are anxious to hear from qualified appij_cants but they don't want their telephone number known because of the possibility of crank calls. I Just who will make the fins! selection from all the can· <See CAKE, Page AZ> Jury selection was the fU'Sl or- der or business in the federal courtroom, and a panel of 250 citizens was called for the bizarre case of a kidnap victim who seemed to have joined her abductors. Thirty-six were ex· eluded this mornin~. Hospital Ups Services Weather Fair through Wednesday with continued warm and sunny days. Patchy fog near the coast. Lows tonight in the •os. Highs 65 to 75 from the coast Uiland. Picking the jury was expected to take at least two days. As is customary In federal trials, the judge interrogated jurors about their bias or other drcumstances which would bar them from serving. The prosecution had 50 eyewit· nesses and 40 photographs to pro- ve that the 21-year-old heiress stood in the bank lobby with a carbine in her hands two months alter she was kidnaped by the Symblonese Llberauon Army. A key question in Patty's favor wuwhy? Randolph and Catherine ffearst arrived in the courthouse about 30 minutes before th• trial got under way and were met. ln a corridor by defense attomet F. Lee Batley who embracod Mrs. Hearst and aave tho parents • words of encoura1ement. . (See PATl'Y, PaieA2) .... • • • Otfty..._ ............ .............. ls our system of civil law costing us more than its worth? Don E . Burns · Californ1a•s secretary of business and tr ansport.ation raised that question and others Monday during a talk to the Friends of UC Irvine. Se story. P.age A&. I Sadtlleback Facility Ce'lebraleB 2nd Birthday By ANNE COOPER Of .. Dlllly ...... Mt Aa Saddle back Community Hospital celebrates its second a n niveraary today, ad · mlnimator Harold Gano, has an- novncecl percentage increases in all boepltal services. ''Operationally we have done very welli" Gano said. "We have recoverea our l.nJUal losses and are breakla• even at the present time.'' The bfllett JU'11P ln ll'lS Clll\.O ln emer1ency car~ 0...0 siid,; up bY 111 percent orir 1974. He attributed the rise to two f actota, lleavy use or the hospit.al by older penons residing in the adjacent Leisure World retirement com- munity and lncreaslPg uae or the hospital by residents Of El Toro. "Saddleback Hospital ls closer t h an Mission Com munity Hospital for people in El Toro," Gano pointed out. •'Traditionally they have tended to drive to Mis- sion, but in an. emergency they come here.'' Gano said the average age of paU~nts has 1one down from 74 years of age in 1974. "At the end of 1974 a> to 8S per· cent of our patients were on Medicare," be said. "At the end ol 19'15 this fleure wu down by 10 percent. Still, plans for tbe OOrnlDJ( year are tor exyansio'l ot 1ervices Wblch wm benefit older patlenLi pprnatily. When Saddlcb1<1'k Hospital had only oqe baby bOrn in lt.s f\r.Ulx months or operations, 'ts ob- stetrical facilities were transformed into a coronal')' care unit. "Because It was a modifica- . tion. the unit doe.Jn 't benefit from the most effective. design," Gano said. "Additionally. construction ol our inten8've care unit wu in- terrupted by lack of fundine. These h•o units will receive priority as we look ahead toward construction in the comlne year." Other senlces wtiich .are beint HDUded include an ln·seririce rehabdit.atlon unit and. portable ur\fices which can be tUcn lat.o pattents' homes, -portable x.- ray, blood ·\Jab and physical therapy. Gano sai d s'a ct d t e b I ck CSee BOSP11' AL, Pa1e A.2) OAlL Y ftlLOT ' Day Qf ~eckon:i.ng, r . n,~!~=.:leback Awai~ I~=~~~:h~hool work r ··---wlth elementary students. San Saddleback Valley elementary Joaquin employs 8 "prescrip· :sthools with Early Childhood Uon" learning technique. Gates f11ucation <ECE> programs are relies on a number of Leisure applying oil to all the squeaks World retired lolks as volunteer this month to be at their best for aldea. mspectlon. Only two 1cbools, Ollvewood and Gates schools in El Toro, wUl r~eive visits from the state de· partment of education. Their days of reckoning are set tor Feb. 24and2S. The other tour Saddleback schools with ECE programs will be subjected to a simulated ln· s pection, perrormed by Sad· dleback di.strict administrators. Early Childhood Education is an individualized instruction pro- gram, which involves communi· lY adults in the school as aides, thereby reducing the child/adult ratio. The program has ex· panded to one·third of all California public elementary schools in three years. .. We are subjecting the four schools to a mock monitor and review because we see the in· s pection as an OPPortunity for growth," said Steve Bender, dis· trict ECE coordinator. "Actually all six ECE schools will have a district review," Bender said. "Olivewood and Gates are using theirs as a re· hears al Cor the state inspection." Each ECE school has a com· mlttee of concerned com- ~ ,,....PageAJ HOSPITAL •• Hospital's malpractice in· surance increased in September by 100to150 percent. ''The increase is partially due to our increase in activity," he explained. As for physicians on the staff, Gano said the larger proportion will no longer carry malpractice insurance. · "I'd say at least half of the staff, mostly surgeons, have de· cided not to carry it," he said. "Tbe malpractice controversy has had no measurable effect here. The medical stair shows no appearance of slowing down." In conclusion Gano said he ex· pect5 no major changes in the hospital's administration. .. We anticipate no real changes, but we do have conf. ineency plans available," be said. "We are as ready as we can be for the unknown." Quigley Talk Set for GOP Candidate Henry Quigley, run· ning for the California .As- sembly's 74th District, will ad· dress the Saddleback Republican Assembly Wednesday, according to Chet Briner, presidenL Quigley, who is running Cort.be seat that will be vacated by Robert Badham , is a two-term member of the Irvine City Coun- cil. Wednesday's meeting will begin at 8 p.m. in the Laguna Hills omce of Crowell, Weedon and Company, 23521 Paseo de Valencia (the Taj Mahal build· ing). Additional information is available by calting Chet Briner 837-8900. • Guilty Plea Filed LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A 19 -year-old man called the •·parking lot bandit" by Police because of a series of crimes he' allegedly committed in downtown parking lots pleaded guilty Monday to two counts of robbery. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed PtOIOtnl ...i ,._tMr Jack R. Curley Vl<t ..... IOtlll t"410.-el ~ ThOmn Keevll ...... Thomas A. Murphlne MeN$1fl9 IEdlW Q\lrles H. Loos Rld'\ard P. Nall ............. -....... 1! .... ~II V1l1tYOHlcl9 .... Le Ptl "._.Ms.ft"'-~,_., . Offtc.I ~-w »0_'4._..._ ~lffcll 11'1t ...... ......_.. ~It~; l*G.._,..IWM Telepl\OM (714)600Z1 ClnaKt.d M••r1lsillMW'71 Dally,. ... Staff ...... ECE COORDINATOR Steve Be ndef munities, people responsible for designing a program within ECE guidelnes, specifically geared to the needs of children at that particular school. Consequently, each school's program varies from the rest, Bender pointed out. At Valencia and Lomarena students rrom 0 The Idea is to draw on com- mu"Uy r esources," Bender ex plained. "'Different communities have difterenl resources. In an area where many mothers work we find retired people or older students to work as aides." Community response has been enthusiastic, Bender reported. Parents contributed thousands or volunteer hours last year al · Cordillera Elementary School in ·Mlssion Viejo, many more hours t.ban required for ECE. Pat McDaniel, principal at Valencia Elementary School in Laguna Hills, said that there arc at times more than 100 adults on campus. Valencia's enrollment is 500 students. Teachers, administrators and parents who have worked with the program claim the results are tremendous. "Some of the positive feedback comes in the form of test scores." Bender said , "but that's not real· ly the important thing. "'Adults working with the pro· gram see kids who learn to like themselves and suddenly like to learn," he said. "They see r eal growth taking place " Luggage Screening System Proposed WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Federal Aviation Administration said today it is considering a lug. gage screening security program that could force travelers to ar· rive at airports up to three hours ahead of their flight departure time. John McLucas, the new chief or the FAA, said. the Pf9gram to screen all luggage is one of many proposals growing out or the -bombing that killed 11 persons at New York City's La Guardia Airport Dec. 29. The La Guardia bomb was placed in a public, coin-operated luggage locker. MclAlcas said be believes the security problem with that kind of locker bas been solved by moving locker racks into secure areas or closing them completely. But. he said, the FAA must still consider security measures to deal with the approximately Fr.o.PflfleAJ LAKE ••• near the Mission Viejo stables, 77 two car.garage homes io the Casta del Sol retirement com- munity, and 470 homes south of Casta del Sol bordering Jeronimo Road. It was also noted by Stevens that the Mission Viejo Company. intends to build 317 La Mancha homes near the golf course, along with several smaller tracts in the generalfacillty. Further, Stevens pointed out, the company intends to build a 360·bome tract east of Lake Mis· sion Viejo and an 877·unit pro- j e ct between Los Alisos Boulevard and Marguerite Parkway. The latter project will feature four different types of lots within the same tract, a departure from the company's present planning policy. Stevens said the tract will in- clude patio homes, lake-oriented homes, Cordova-type homes, a nd several ridge-oriented homes, Cordova-type homes, and several ridge-oriented "Laguna lots" where the Mis· sion Viejo Company may experi- ment with stilt·constructlon techniques. He also pointed out that 64 lots adjacent to Lake Mission Viejo have been designated a s "custom lots" and will be marketed as such. HePaUlBil& And Not Taxes TRENTON. N.J . <UPI) _:. Warren Wllenb has been sus- pended from law prac:tJce tor a year becau.H be = bl.I wlfe'• cloUUna bill• of ,000 rather than ht.a federal income taxes. Wlllenti, a former MJddlesex County proeee11tor, arped that the p1ycblatrl1t for hta wife. Rhoda, told hlm to pay her bUls instead of the taxea because she waa borderin1 on a nervous breakdown. million pieces of luggage placed aboard U .S airliners everyday "When you start taJking about checking every piece of luggage or cargo that goes into an airport. you're dealing with a formidable problem," McLucas told a news conference ··-xcknowledging that long pre· flight delays might discourage air travel and encourage bus or rail travel, particularly on trips oC only a few hundred miles. McLucas said the FAA is concen· trating efforts on security measures primarily for luggage going aboard planes, rather than just into terminal buildings. "Nonetheless," be said ... you are stuck with procedures that slow planes significanUy. The de· lays we have been talking about may take from one to three ~urs." McLucas said the FAA will start within a Cew months testing luggage X·ray devices at two or three U.S. airports. If the full-scale security measures are installed at all of the nation's 60 major airports, McLucas said, the increased operating costs of about $100 million a year would add a new ticket surcharge of 50 to 75 cents. In the meantime, he said; airlines are being urged to take less drastic steps such as careful· ly matching passengers with their tickets and their luggage to make sure no one slipped a bomb into the cargo system and leaves. He also said a new system of security seminars is planned to make airport personnel more security conscious, and sus- picious looking pieces of luggage are being searched by band. 'Fro..Pag~AI PATTY ••• Bailey then chatted with re· Porters jammed in the hall out- side the courtroom and shot back a number of one·liners to ques· lions about the trial. One newsman asked how long Bailey thought the trial would take. "A bank robbery should be tried in two or three days, but this has a tew extra wrinkles," Balley said. He said the pros~ution case apparently would take a little over a week and so would the de· fen1e and that he expected the trial might go to a jury by the end of February. Another reporter asked whether Miss Hearst would take the witness stand. ••That would be an unwise de· claion to make before Mr. Brown· ·1n1 (the U.S . attorney) presents hil scenario," be said. Balley said he planned to can seven to 10 witnesses tor the cie· fense. The lawyer was asked lfhe bid eny 1urprlaes ln st.ore for the \rial. ''111 told you, they wouldn't be 1urprise1, would they?'' he said. "Yes, J thlnlt we have a couple." • Trend ~iianges Pot, Boose Yietm Revened .. · NEW YORK CAP) -Since 1969, Americans have reversed their attitudes about the seriousness of smoking marijuana and drinking alcohol, a Harris poll shows. (Related stories, A4, All) A survey of 1,394 adults showed that ·11 percent view the problem of "heavy drinking'' as very serious, while only ~percent feel that way about marijuana. · "This is a complete 1eversal of public attitudes sin£e 1969, when 73 percent viewed pot smoking as very serious' compared to 53 percent who felt the same way about heavy drinking," the polling or- ganiiation said Monday. · . Most Americans sWl oppose legalizine the sale or use of marijuana but increasingly believe that possession of small amounts.should not be a criminal offense, Harris said. The survey showed that 69 percent opposed legalization of sale or use of pot, about the same as in a similar p<>U in 1974. Twenty-five percent favored legalization. SadJ,leback College May Shorten Term Saddleback Community College District trustees voled Monday night to participate in an experimental program to pare the district's calendar from the present 178 instructional days to 160. The Saddleback campus was one of six colleges in the state sel~ted for the "'flexible calen· dar plan" by chancellor's ofCice of the California Community Colleges. Although student classroom E'romPGfleAJ BATTIN ••. Supervisor David Baker. When Capizzi took the stand, Kurilich continued his complex questioning pattern, trying to work around Ry an 's objections. Kurilich asked Capizzi if an in- vestigation had been launched in- t o charges that campaign workers for Congressman Jerry Patterson and Assemblyman Richard Robinson, both Democrats, had filed fraudulent voter registrations. Capizzi said such an investiga- tion was conducted and resulted in court action. Two Hospitals Unaffected By Slowdown Saddleback and Mission Com- munity Hospitals rePort they are experiencing no change in pa· tient census directly attributable to medical slowdown elsewhere in Orange County. Doctors at some Orange Coun· ty hospitals have lightened their surgery loads to protest soaring malpractice insurance rates. ·saddleback Hospital in Laguna Hills has had a steady increase in patient load since Jan. 1, but Harold Gano, hospital ad· ministrator, said today the rise may be due to a higher incidence of respiratory illness during the winter months. The patient census at Mission Community in Mission Viejo is reported remaining steady. time would be r educed below the Legislature-mandated 175 days, instructors will be required to re- main on campus fer 178 days, us- ing the additional time for various professional activities. The shortened calendar coin· cides with the Saddleback Dis· lrict 's decision earlier this month to switch from the quarter system to the "early semester .. system beginning this fall. Trustee Frank Greinke, Tustin, was the only member of the seven-man board to vote against the shortened calendar because he was opposed to .. cut· ting down" classroom time. • The starting and ending dates of the new semesters have not yet been determined but college of. ficials predict that the school year will begin toward the latter part of August and end in late May. Jeffrey Asks Hinshaw to 'Resign Now' Harry Jeffrey. a candidate for the GOP nomination to the 4oth Qmgressional District seat now held by Andrew Hinshaw, called on his political rival today to re- sign immediately because of hi s bribery conviction Monday. In a letter to Hinshaw, Jeffrey acknowledged that Hinshaw's re· signation is not legally required. "The personal reputation and integrity of our elected officials is the cornerstone of our gov- ernmental system," Jeffrey said. •'When government officials are found guilty of malfeasance in office, the electorate has the right to demand their immediate resignation even though it is not required by law," J eftrey said. Jeffrey is a Laguna Beach resi- dent and a political newcomer. The congressional campaign is his first effort at seeking elected office. "The voters of this district are fed up with 'Yhat seems to be a never-ending series of scandals involving politicians in this area and they are strongly demanding an immediate change in this sad state of affairs,., Jeffrey sald. llfusbaw Trial #2 March I By TOM BARLEY Oftllit ~llY ... NISWf Orange County Congressman Andrew HJnshaw faced stlll another trial and an uncertain Political future today following his conviction Monday on bribery charges. · The Orange County District Al· torney's omce said it does not in· tend to drop a second set of charges against the 53-year-old NeWport Beach Republican that. are contained ln a separate Grand Jury indictment. Several hours of talks 1n and out of the district attorney's of· fice ended late· Monday with Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland-the presiding Jurist ln Hinshaw's bribery trial-setting March 1 as the date the con· gressman will be tried on con- spiracy allegations contained in the separate indictmenL Speculation late Monday that the new trial date may have led Hinshaw to decide on his restina· tlon seemed unfounded in the light of comments he made to newsmen in the district at· torney's office. "This was just the first round," Hinshaw commented while de- fense attorney Marshall Morgan nodded approval. "I have no intention of stepping down or making any other de· clsion than the one I have already made-fighting and winning this bribery battle in the appellate court." Realignment Given Okay In Saddleback Trustees of the Saddleback Community College District have approved a resolution which could result in a boundary rearrangement ot the district's seven trustee areas. The resolution, adopted by 5-0 vote Monday with two board members absent, calls for a study to determine whether an imbalance exists in the trustee areas. Voter registration for the general election in November is to be used as a bench mark in the study. It the study does find an imbalance, the County Commit· tee on School District Organlza. tion will be petitioned to make the required boundary changes before the March 1977 trustee election. The resolution was offered jointly by Trustees Larry Taylor, Laguna Beach, and Patrick Backus, Dana Point. out of con· cern that present population pat- terns no longer justify two trustees from the Tustin area. FromPageAJ C·AKE. ·'· didates-if there are any brave enough to step forward-hasn't been determined ... I hadn't thought about that," Mrs. Gross confessed. One thing's sure though. Mrs. Gross has bad so much fun or- ganizing the party that she says , "I haven't had a chance to think about turning 30." THE PRICE IS RIGHT (or is it?) HAVI YOU IVH GONE IMTO A STOIE. AND IEFOIE A SALESMAN APPROACHED YOU. nllD TO DmlMIME PllCIS OM GOODS MOT MARKED? MANY CARPET STORIS DO NOT HAVE PRICES INDICATED OM THiii SAMPLES. THE 1HIOIY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN CHAIGE "WHAT THE TRAFFIC WIU. llAL .. AT ALDIN'S PRICIS All POSTED OM ALL Of OUR SAMPLES SO THAT CUSTOMEIS CAN llOUSI THROUGH THE SILICTIOMS AND KNOW WHAT THEY All LOOllMS AT. TOO, THiii IS ALWAYS THI! POSSlllLITY OF A LOWB PRICI IP COMDmOMs WAlllAHT. Th• New Jersey Su})rem• Court handed do~n the one-year t\dpelllon Monday. Wllents lt a former candldlte. f« the U.S. Senal• and bll father ls a former attorney general of thellate. Miu Heant was kldnaped , , from ber S.rkeley apartment Feb. 4, 1"74. Later, on at-ape l'e"· ~dJn1, 1h" uld she had Joined DEN'S :iiiiiiilition:·custom drapsriss ' ber caplfrs, denounced bet raml· ly and aald she bad ta.Hen tn love with one Of U~e terrorbt.s. 1663•PU.ClNTIA AV!NUI! • COSlA MESA, CAUi'. 92627 • 'HONE 6.C6·.C838 -6.C6·2355 -• I I f 7 ' ? f \ - • Irvine EOlTlON To day's Cl0&l•g .. • Y. Stoe VOL. 69, NO. 27, 2 SECTIONS, 30 P AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1976 TEN CENTS Lawyers' Insurance Next to Skyrocket: SACRAMENTO (AP> -The s•me company that boosted medical malpractice insurance to strike-triggering levels is gi\lo- iq g California's. lawyers a similar boost, says the State Bar. William Shannon Parrish of Oakland. the acting president of the State Bar, said Monday the lawyers' professional liability in- surance, a lso called "err<ys and omissions policies," is tp go up 38.1 percent March 16. A number of doctors in Southern California have walked of.I the job because 9,500 received BROWN GIVING UP ON MALPRACTICE? AS increases of 3-27 percent. This bad been cut by the state insurance commissioner from a requested increase of "86 percent. What's He Doing Here? ·Actor Paul Newman, well known for his penchant for auto racing, is competing in a different sort of contest at UC Irvine . To find out what he•s doing and why, see 1Page A3. San Clemente Fire Caused by Marines? By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of IM Oally P'flot SUtt Preliminary inves liga\ion shows that a 2,400-acre brush fire that destroyed 14 San Clemente homes ~as caused by a spark Boy R escued From Coyote ·WESTFIELD, N.J . <A P ) -A 12-year-old boy on his way to school was at tacked by a runaway coyote which bit him several times before it was beaten away by a 15-year-old friend with one arm in a sling. "He was going right for my neck when Brendan hit him. I'm ~ure glad I've got a friend like Brendan," Bradley Baise said. Bradley told police he was walking to school Monday with tris friend Brendan Shea when they saw what they thought was a large tan and white dog. But as they got closer, they realized it was not a dog. ··w e watch Disney and Animal Kingdom and all those shows and we were sure it was a coyote," said Bradley. 2Mammoth Skiers Die MAMMOTH (UPI) - Two skiers were thrown off balance on thin, patchy J snow in separate lncldents' on Mammoth Mountain and crashed to their death on rocks. Daryl Gordon, 16, or Ha· cienda Heights rell after starttne down Dave's Run, the steepest and one ot the most diffJcull at Mam·· moth. George C. Smith J'r., 23, or La Canada,-s uffered mulllple lnJurles including a fractured skull and rup- tured spleen. from welding equipment being used on Camp Pendleton last Wednesday morning, Marine Corps officials said today. In a brief s tatement, officials said a further investigation has been ordered that will take at least a month to complete. "The cause of the fire was shown to be a spark from elec- trical welding equipment which was being operated by a Marine at an abandoned pistol range," the statement said. The land where the fire erupt- ed is leased to the state by the Marine Corps for eventual use as a state park. In the investigation, the state· ment said, a senior Marine of- ficial "will probe all matters con· nected with the fire, including the matter of why electrical welding equipment was being used on the state land. "Formal investigation or the type ordered involves acquiring sworn testimony, interrogation of witnesses and the collection of au pertinent documents,.. the statements aid. Marine officials said they would be unable to make any further comment on the fire until the formal investigation is com- pleted. House Nixes· Ford's ¥eto WASHINGTON <UPI ) -The House today voted to override President Ford's veto ot a tts billion health, welfare and labor1 money bUI in the first election year test of GOP support for Ford's economy drive. The vote was 31~113, 28 more than wu needed for the tw~ thJrd.s m.;ority or those vottn1 to override A 1uhlcient number of Republicans def ccted from the Admtnlstratlo n to balp Democrats gather the necessary strength to overturn tho veto. The Senate wea also expected to override when a vote comes up ln that body. ' 1 In both cases, it's the Travelers Insurance Co., Parrish said in an interview. The State Bar is investigating atleast two alternatives. One would be a bar-sponsored group ins urance plan, which would require permission or the Legislature, Parrish said. The other would be a com- pulsory "pay-as-you-go" plan in which all the claims against all lawyers would be added up each year, and each of the 50,000 mem- bers assessed equally to pay them. Unlike many s tates, California has an "integrated bar," mean- ing that all practicing lawyers are required to belong. And unlike the doctors, Parrish said he doubted if the lawyers would suggest that the taxpayers contribute to a solution. Some California doctors• groups are suggesting state in- surance plans toward which their own contributions would be voluntary, with the taxpayers back.stopping. Parris h, who practices law alone in a ''high-risk" field or personal injury work for plain- tlffs, said his own insurance now costs $425 a year. Some doctors in high-risk fields such as neurosurgery say< their insurance bills have gone from $8,000 to $40,000 a year. Parrish said the State Bar dis- putes the figures on which Travelers bases the increase. He said the State Bar is about two years through a five-year contract with Travelers. He said the ~ontract permits Travelers to increase rates after two years to <See LAWYERS, Page AZ> Hinshaw BlastS Hicks ~ Called 'Vengeful' By TOM BARLEY estranged wife, Thais Hinshaw, 0tt11eoa11,P11etSUtt before the grand jury and as a Convicted Congressman An-prosecution witness in the drew J . Hinshaw labeled Orange bribery trial. County District Attorney Cecil Hins haw will be sentenced Hi cks today as "the vengeful Feb. 17 to what could be state architect" or an investigation prison terms of one lo 14 years on and prosecution that led to his be-each bribery count. ing found guilty Monday on Defense attorney Marshall bribery charges Morgan, who joined Hinshaw at Hinshaw. 53, told a press con-the press conference, will argue ference in Santa Ana that he is a motion for a new trial on that one of a number of legislators date. d 0 C t offi ·al h Hinshaw firmly repeated his an range oun Y ici s w 0 earlier declarations that he has have been or are being probed by Hicks "from motives of revenge no intention of resigning bis 40th held by a paranoid district at-District seat. torney." ''If we don't get a new trial we Hinshaw said Hicks pla ns will go to every appeals court in vengence "1'ecause he was once the count r Y , " h e s a id· investigated himself and very "Meanwhile. I 'm working on nearly indicted by the Grand plans for my June primary cam - J ft ·d t · paign. . ury a er a car acci en 10 "And I have no doubt that cer-Garde n Grove in which two children were killed." tain political figures in this coun- Hinshaw said a woman he ty will seize on m y present pre- described as "Hicks' girlfriend" dictment and attempt to remove was involved in that collislon. me from office," Hinshaw s aid "The incident has never been indignantly· s atisfactorialy explained and Hinshaw and Morgan predict· certainly not by Hicks ,.. the ed success a t the appellate court N B h R bll level and a reversal of the con-ewport eac epu C\f\ U· gressman's bribery conviction. serted. H i n s b a w i d e n t i f i e d "We will not have the emotion Congreasmen Jerry PaUerson generated at the appellate level and Charles Wiggins, state that was all?,wed full reign. in ~e Senator Dennis Carpenter, state local trial, Mo~gan sel!d. I Controller Ken Cory , As-hay~ every conf1~ence .m ,!11Y semblymen Robert Bad.ham of f ab1bty to change this verdict. Newport Beach and' Richard DellY ...... IUft .. _ CONVICTED CONGRESSMAN TALKS TO NEWSMEN With Attorney Marshall Morgan at His Side Robinson and Orange County supervisors Laurence Schmit and Ralph Diedrich as other of· ficials under investigation at various times by Hicks' office. "But I am the crux or moves deliberately des igned to take the heat off the DA," Hinshaw said. "If they can keep me convicted, they're going to keep the atten- tion of Orange County citizens away from them .'· Irvine Hopefuls Frugal. It's Nickels and Dimes Campaign So Far Hinshaw said a jury in Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland's courtroom convicted of two felony counts of bribery Monday "because there is a lot of evidence held by the district at- torney that we were not allowed to obtain." Hinshaw a lso conde mned Hicks for what he said was the district atttirney's use of his Heroin Seized BURBANK CUPI) -Three persons were arrested and near- ly ..Sl.5 million in cocaine and heroin seized Monday by un· dercover s tat e narcotics officers in two separate raids. The first campaign fmance re- port in the Irvine City Council campaign indicates potential big contributors haven't been con- tributing. The campaign was kicked off with pleas for res traint in cam- paign spending and contributions with the first such calls coming from candidates Robert Martin, Mary Ann Gaido and David Sills. Ironically, Martin, Gaido and Sills r eported that the largest level of conlri butions received a mong the 16 council candidates by the Jan. 20 contribution and expenditur e reporting date. Four of the 16 candidates re- ported contributions or more than $200. Candidates who have received less than $200 do not need to itemize their e xpen· ditures a nd contributions under state campaign financing laws. But of the four who reported In lrl'ine Srlaools more than $200 , most of the money came out or the can· didates' own pockets. Mary Ann Gaido topped the lii;t with contributions totaling $1,000 and expenditures of $848.67. But her list of financial sources shows that $700 of the contribu- tions came from her own money. Other contri butions. totaled $300. The bulk or the expenditures she reported, ~89, went to South Coast Repertory Theater for tickets to a theater fund raiser. Robert Martin reported con- tributions of $510, of which $400 came from his personal finances. He reported spending $346.10 so rar. Martin was the only can· didate to r eport contributions or $50 or more, the legal Ii mit al which contributors must be named. He received $50 from Hank Adler, an accountant for Martin's law firm, and $50 from At Last-Enough Room Ir vine school administrators expect to have classroom space next fall for about 2,000 more stu· dents than wlll be enrolled in the district. But qespite the overall surplus, crowding is expected at El Camino Real School, Venado School and University Hi gh School unless changes in atten- dance areas are made. The preliminary enrollment projectlon, along with estimates of available classroom space, were unveiled Monday by sch'>Ol officials. The figures indicate this year's fall enrollment of 10,745 students In ldndercarten through high acbool will riH to ll.785 by June. Al ol Dec. 8, 11~ •Wdents were enrolled in Irvin•· Meanwhile. the clil\ilct ..tit have 16 schools next laJl. com· ~ to 1 t schools when school closed last spring. The schools have a espacity of 13,700 stud•nts. th• ad- minlstratora 1'4'P0rt, With excess · capacity at all levels. Tbe la(IC$t excess Is in Uae ht ac1*>Js. When the new Irvine High School opens next fall, there will be room for 4,040 students, while 2,965 are expected to enroll. Nonetheless, administrators e xpect a s queeze at three schools, indicating some atten- dance areas may be shifted. El Camino Real School has space * * * Viet Course Funda Sought Irvine school trustees have ap· plied for a $2,559 federal grant lo off er Eneliah as a second laniuaie class this spring to an estimated ts lndocblbea& re· f ugeesll¥lnt ln th district. The class. whlcb beclna tonlaht and continues tbrou&h ·May 27. will ioclud~ American history. sod9',y, customs. nuttttlon and post!bly dr(ver e.h1cW!on. Tbe mO,Qey ia available through the lndo·Chlna Mteratlon and ~Alllstanee Ac!ol ms. ,, for 1,010 students, counting the space provided by portable build· ings, and 1,020 are expected to enroll. To lighten the El Camino Real. load, the district is considering moving the Greentree Instant Stbool to a site north of the Santa Ana Freeway for students In the Racquet Club and other Northwood tracts scheduled. for development soon. The Instant school will have to be moved this summer t o make way for the balance of comtructlon or the Greentree permanent school, ac- con:Ung to district planner Dave Kins. Venado School, with a capacity · for 100 students, is proJected to b•ve 938. Uaivenity Riltb School, with a c~paclty fOI' 119'0 stu· · dents, counting the space pro- vided by portable build.lngs, ts expected to have2 011 sb,tdentl. Tb la sprlna, the dlatrlct trus'"' wilt wreaUe with tho ttuesllon of bow attendan~ arus should be c:haneed to rellc,vo lhc overloads. Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor. David Sills r eported contri bu- t ions of $449, with expenditures of $157.96 for a newspaper ad. Candidate Basil "Bill" T. Vardoulis reported $439.18 in con~ tributions with $329.06 in expen- ditures, large ly for campaign printing. E. Ray Quigley, who drew fire for his spending in an unsuc· cessful council campaign two years ago, itemrzed his cam· paign finances. even though not required to by law. He reported $42.64 in contributions and $32.64 in expenditures. Patrick Bonner also reported his finances at $115 in contribu· lions and $73.87 in expenditures. Candidate George Kossler also filed the long form. His report in~ dicated he didn't receive any money and he dido 'l spend any. Short forms indicating less than $200 io contributions re- ceived were filed by John B. <See SPENDING, Pa,geA2) Co ast Weathe r Fair through Wednesday with continued warm and sunny days . Patchy fog n ear the coast. Lows tonight in the 40s. Highs 6S to 75 from the coast inland. I NSIDE TODA W Pringle's fs tn the chips, ,and competitors ,are being cnmch«I in their war.agoir..3t the ··new-fangled" potato chip$ tho1 come in.a con.end have chom~ up 16 pncmt of the potato chip marled. See Page A 7. l•dex ,. .. li Trend Changes Pot, Boose Viera &mened NEW YORK CAP) -Since 196'9, Americans have reversed their attitudes about the serlou.snes~ of. smoking marijuana and drinklng alcohol, a Harris poll shows. <Related stories, A4, All) A survey of 1,394 adults showed that 71 perc~nt view the problem of"heavydrinking" as very serious, whUe only 58 percent f eeJ that way about marijuana. · "Tbls is a complete reversal of public attitudes since 1969, when 73 J)f;lr cent viewed pot smoking as 'very serious' compared to 53 percent who felt the same way about heav~ drinking,'' .the polling or. ganization said Monday. Most Americans still oppose legalizing the sale or use of marijuana but increasingly believe that possession of small amounts should not be a criminal offense, Harris said. The survey showed that 69 percent opposed legalization of sale or use of pot, about the same as in a similar poll in 1974. Twenty-five percent favored legalization. Charges Purge Battin Laieyer Raps DA 'Political Bias' By MLLIAM SCHREIBER Of ti.e O•lly ,., ... SUit The attorney for indicted Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin continued his at- tempt Monday to prove the coun- ty District Attorney's Office is 3MenGrah $1 Million In Securities LOS ANGELES (AP> -An estimated $1 million in negotia· ble securities were stolen by three men in a robbery from a Century City firm today, authorities said. "We're not sure of the exact tigure yet but that's ($1 million) the figure we're kicking around," said Lt. Richard Pooler The securities, which can be cashed by anyone, were taken from the M unlci Corp. of California in the fashionable business district by the trio who then fled in an old model com- pact-car, authorities said. Pooler said the securities were taken from emplRyes in the firm but he was not i~mediately cer· lain If weapons were used. Further details were not im· mediately available. Pooler said. The firm deals in municipal bonds,, debt obligations issued by cities and other governmental agencies. Such securities are fre· quently issued in "bearer" form, meaning that whoever has physical possession of them can cash them. Eggs Follow TwtionHike NEW BRUNSWICK. N .H . (UPI> -New Jersey Chancellor Qf Higher Education RaJph A. Dungan was hit in the head with two eggs as he announced higher tuition next year for students at state colleges. Dungan said Monday tuition will go up $25 per credit hour for undergr aduale students and $50 per credit hour for graduate stu- dents. · After Dungan made his an. nouncement at a news con· ference at Douglass College, two eggs were hurled at him from a crowd of students standing behind a banner saying, "If there is a tuiUoo hike . . . we will strike." ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Tl>P ()r_,., to.SI 0.11, PllOI, .,.,,, ....,,., •Hom- bl-thf' ~-.. P<ns, 1u,..Dll>hfcl1>y1 ... a.- t ... ,1 P\,b!IW.0119 '°""'·""· S._ .. , tel•!~••• DIA>ll•~ -.,,, • ., ""-" Fno.y IOI' Co••~ Mt\e. N••-1 BtKll, HUflllnq!Ofl 9t<t<" F...,,, '•'" v., .. ,. trwtl\t, !.•clcl .. t.Kli V•H•v a"" l."9...,. O.eO/Sc!lllllCNtl A >•"0'*•"9>«•·11~1 l•O'\ I\ poAMI-S.t\HdU\ -~ ... Tf\t' "'"'"'"' "''""~ .. ,.,., •• ti J30 w.~ !My it...C.C.t.e Mew, t..11f0<1'l• ~ RoMrt N. Weed "•otdenl •nd P11b11111oe< Jeck R. Curley YIU -.1c1en1 •nd Ge-.ol Me- Thom&S Keevll l:d1tor Thomas A. Murptilne ~MOlftt l!dltot Qlrles H. Loos Rlc"9rd P. Nell Auh(41!14 ..... .....,,., ...... Offkft c.w~, .... ,a.y ...... =~· ,,..0-...,..,...,... ·-.. edl. ll'JPJ ..... ~ . .. ....... ,, ......... _ _.._o .... ,._ . TeteO •• C714) MMnt Oaulllell Mwrtl .. 60<5'11 S.....-C• "''""' .... Ofllc.e .. ,.,.~~ 4....,. ( engaged in "selective political prosecution.'' Despite repeated objections by Deputy District Attorney Jack Ryan, Kurilich attempted to un- ravel the procedures used by the county prosecutor in probing al· legations of political wrong- doing. Kurilich presented Ryan and Superior Court Judge KeMeth Lae with 20 documents support- ing rus claim that two distinct groups of politicans exist in the minds of DA 's investigators. He repeated his prior allega- tion that Battin is part of a large· ly Democratic group backed by Dr. Louis Cella and millionaire rancher Richard O'Neill. The other group, he claims, is com· prised of those backed by the Republican Lincoln Club. Kurilich said the Cella·O'Neill group is prosecuted for its ac. tivities while the DA ignores re- ports of illegalities by the other camp. Monday's activity in Lae's court centered on Kurilich's at. tempt to get the DA to admit the names of politicians kept in in· vestigatory files. Kurilich questioned DA's Jn. vestigator Joel Hayes and Depu- ty DA Michael Capizzi, trying to establish that while politicians from both groups may appear in files, only the Cella-O'Neill group are investigated and prosecuted. Under questioning interrupted often by objections from Ryan, Kurilich got Hayes to admit that the DA maintains records on cer- tain political figures but doesn't keep them in a special file. He said most would be kept in the DA 's "Alpha File" on general investigations. But Hayes did say that some Politician's names are on index cards in the DA 's organized crime me. The only names Lae would permit Hayes to reveal were Batlin's and that of former Supervisor David Baker. When Capizzi took the stand. Kurilich continued rus complex questioning pattern, trying to work around Ryan's objections. Kurillch asked Capizzi if an in· vestigation had been launched in- to charges that campaign workers for Congressman Jerry Patterson and Assemblyman Richard Robinson, both Democrats, had filed fraudulent voter registrations. Capizzi said such an fovestiga. tion was conducted and resulted in court action. Mexico Jail Tour Taken By Goldwater TIJUANA, Mexico CAP) -Ap· parently for the first time, a U.S. congressman has toured a Mex- ican prison, talking with prisoners, authorities say. The hosts invited Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. <R-CaJif.), to talk . with anyone Monday in the Baja California state penitentiary and the Tijuana municipal jaU. He heard many complalnu. American prisoners told Goldwater about a Jack of hot water and cooking f acillUee and that Joe al 1ttoroey1 tailed to help t.bem. "I intend to pursue this further to be 1ure Americans~ 1.wn1 tbelt eivil riptt under Ma.lean law and humane tte.alcnent dur- lnc arrest and ln~aUoa." Goldwater said. . Go•. Mllton Eutellanos Effr'U'do told Goldwater tn Mex· h:!all that work wlll beJln t.hls year 01D a ts-mUUon llate prison IOUt.hwest of Tecatt ln Valle Lu Palma. SAld CatelJanos: ''I am one ol tbe tint to reaJlie the pr•ent PGlitmUl.l'J ll not edeqUt& We hHe bHn workh>I four 1Hn to bldtr' CGDdJtJona. School Usage Defined Irvine school trust...-.es have ap- proved a new district policy on who may use district facilities after 1chool hours and how much they must pay. The 12-page policy clarifies de· !initions of which groups fall into each of thr~e user categories- rree use. groups required to pay maintenance costs, nnd com· mercial groups. It also raises the fees previously <'harged by the district. The matter came up two months ago when three residents accused the district of giving special privileges to a dance group. The policy allows free use of district fa cilities to a long list of non-profit. comm unity-oriented · organizations The chief d1stincl1on between free users and those which must pay maintenance costs is what use is made of money collected by the groups. Costs must be paid by groups· which use the schools "for a meeting where admission is charged, or where a donation or contnbution is solicited and the net proceeds are not expended for welfare purposes or benefit of the pupils in the district," ac- cording to the policy. Costs also must be paid by ~roups that are closed to the general public. . Church groups meeting in the schools also must pay costs as re· quired by stale law. Fees range from $20 for "cost '' groups using a classroom to $140 minimum for a "commercial" group using a theater. Santa Anan ·Held in Irvine Burglary Case Tipped off b y an alert neighbor, Irvine police Monday arrested a Santa Ana man on charges that he was fleeing the Ranch area of the city after burglarizing a garage. Officers arrested Manuel H. Garcia, 30, of Santa Ana on charges or stealing a lawnmower and toolbox worth S280 from the garaie of Ruth Nimeh, 5052 Bordeaux Avenue. · Police said they are question- ing Garcia in connection with 22 other burglaries in Irvine plus additional cases in Costa Mesa and Santa Ana. Police allege Garcia backed his car up to the open garage at the Nimeh home al 8:45 a .m. Mrs. Nimeh and a neighbor. Sharon Jopling. told police they saw a man fitting Garcia's description enter the garage When the man realized he had been seen, he drove away at a high rate of speed, they told police. Minutes later, an Irvine officer stopped Garcia to cite rum for running a stop sign and speeding in a school zone. Garcia was ar- rested after the officer heard a broadcast report describing the man, car and missing items. D•llY ,. .. iUM ...... Rci&a Q..ntlotu Is our system of civil law costing us more than its worth ? Don E. Burns. California's secretary of business and transportation, ·raised that question and others Monday during a talk to the Friends of UC Irvine. Se story, Page A8. Wanta Job Jumping Nutk OulofC~? Student job opportunities c?me in many different ways. Consider this ad. tacked up on the Sad· dleback College bulletin board: "Wanted: A young man to jump out of a birthday cake.at wi/e'a birthday parlJI. Time: Approximately 9 p.m. Feb. 7. P.ay : $25 for one hour's time. Thu offer i8 atrictly on the up and up. I'm serious. Call Bill or P.am Gross at :UI·II.II by Jan. 29." The ad. placed by a Mission Viejo couple to add some zest to the wife's 30th birthday, has found no takers so far. A possible drawback : The assignment calls for a nude appearance. . Mrs. Gross, wife of a secunty analyst. said her husband originally intended the cake- popping as a surprise but that she got onto him. So they're planning to spring the surprise on 15 couples who have been invited to the party. "We looked into a theatrical agency in Los Angeles that of· fered this kind of service but they charge $125 which is a little steep." s he reports. "So we picked Saddleback College which is the closest place to advertise. We thought there might be a kid around who'd want to do something crazy like that." To date the Grosses have re- ceived only one call from a stu- dent who said he'd have to ''think about it" upon learning that the cake pop was to be performed in the nude. The Grosses are anxious to hear from qualified applicants but they don't want their tel eph one number known because of the possibility of crank calls. Just who will make the final selection from all the can- didates-if there are any brave enough to step forward-hasn't been determined. "I hadn't thought about that," Mrs. Gross confessed. One thing's sure though. Mrs. Gross has had so much fun or- ganizing the party that she says "1 haven't had a chance to think Bllilding Problems Mulled Problems with two campui> buildings, the college libraf'Y and- the math·scienc~ building, were br()\lgbt to the attention of Sad- dle~ack Community College Dia· trict trustees Monday night. The library broke out in blisters r ecentJy a nd college or. ficials traced the problem to the application of interior paint lo exterior surf aces. Estimated repair costs range up to $30,000 and trustees have been advised by the County Counsel to recover the damages from the architect and the general contractor, Board members, tiowcver, balked at the County Council's suggestion that they hire an at- torney at district cost to file and prosecute the case. It was ex· plained earl!er that the County Counsel's office does not have the manpower to handle the claim. Just how the paint blistering problem is to be resolved wlll be considered at a future trustee meeting. Trustees did, however, go along with a "home cure" pro- posal by Supt. Robert Lombardi and Di vision ·Chairman Frank Sciarotta for defective vents in the math-science building. The fume hoods in six laboratories of the building, it was discovered, are not properly exhausting toxic vapors. College officials believe the problem can be corrected by in- stalling fans in the hoods to help draw the bad air out of the labs. E',....PageAJ LAWYERS. • whatever it needs to be "on the basis of experience." During the first two years, Travelers collected $6. 7 million but paid only $52,000 in claims, Parrish said. Parrish agrees· that many claims based on legal actions during the two years could -turn up many years later. t. CREDIT G(}()D? SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tho mountain ot maU Hnt ~ P4&.ridt Hearst in jail includ at ~astone appllcatfon for a credit card. The application, apparenUy one of many form letttts aenl out I by American E"preu, was •d· dresaed "Dear M s. Heant'' and s aid ln part: 1 " ... You wilt always have money. without carrying isizablc t amounts of cash that can easily be I lost or stolen. You can buy gltt.•, send nowers. cable money, hoata' dinner, even if you can't be there · .. - Jeffrey Asks I • 'Resign Now' Harrr J eHrey. a candidate for the GOP nomination to the .ot.b Congressional District seat now held by Andrew Hinshaw, called on his political rival today t4 re- sign immediately because of bis bribery conviction Monday. In a letter to Hinshaw, Jeffrey acknowledged that Hinshaw's.re. , signation is not legally required. "The personal reputation and integrity of our elected officials is the cornerstone of our gov- ern men ta I system," Jeffrey said. "When government officials are found guilty of malfeasance in office, the electorate has the right to demand their immediate ·resignation even though it is not required by law," Jeffrey said. jeffrey is a Laguna Beach resi· dent and a political newcomer. The congressional campaign is his first effort at seeking elected office. j "The voters or this dis}rict are fed up with what seems to be a never.ending series of scandals ; involving politicians in this area , and they are strongly demanding an immediate change in this sad state of affairs," Jeffrey said. Saddleback College May Shorten Tenn Saddleback Community College District trustees voted Monday night to participate in an experimental program to pare the district's calendar from the present 178 instructional days to 160. The Saddleback campus was one of six colleges in the. state selected for the "flexible calen- dar plan" by chancellor's office of the California Community .Colleges. Although student classroom tim€! would be reduced below the Legislature-mandated 175 days , instructors will be required to re-1 main on campus for 178 days, us.- ing the additional time for I S E various pr ofessional activities. enale yes The shortened calendar coin- cides with the Saddleback Dis- • trict's decision earlier this month FBI Charoes lo switch from the quarter e system to the "early semester" SAN DIEGO (AP> _ 'fhc system beginning this fall. . I Trustee Frank Grernke. Senate Intelligence Committee is Tustin, was the only member of sending two investigators to the seven-man board to vote study charges that the FBI pro-against the shortened calendar moted guerrilla warfare against because he was opposed to "cut- left-wing groups and individuals ting down•• classroom time. I in San Diego, tbe San lliego The starting and ending dates Evening Tribune reports. of the new s'emesters have not yet The paper said Monday that been determined but college o!- tbe investigators would spend up ficials predict that the school to two weeks interviewing onetime radical leaders and pre· year will begin toward the latter sent and former law enforcement part of August and end in late Realignment Given Okay In Saddleback officers. ___________ M_a.:...y_. -----------~---------',...;......;...----~ about turning 30." Trustees of the Saddleback Communit y College District have approved a resolution which could result in a boundary rearrangement of the district's seven trustee areas. The resolution. adopted by 5-0 vole Monday with two board members absent, calls for a study to determine whether an imbalance exists in the trustee areas. Voter registration for the general election in November is to be used as a bench mark in the study. If the study does find ~ imbalance, the County Commit- tee on School District Organiza· Uon will be petitioned to make the required boundary changes before the March 1977 trustee election. The resolution was orrercd jointly by Trustees Larry Taylor, Laguna Beach, and Patrick Backus, Dana Point, out of con- cern that present populaUon pat- tern1 no longer justify two lnlltea from the Tustin area. p,...petJeAJ SPENDING "J1ck" Ad• ms. Bobert o. WhJtson, Bruce Ramer, Wllllam M. CmeU, Robert M. MUter,, Maureen S~cer, carol 111Grii1. ~f:ia W. McClure and Gary Gl1 , . THE PRICE IS RIGHT (or is it?) HA. VIE YOU IVER GOME IMTO A STOIE. AND IEFORE A SA.USMAN APPROACHED YOU, TltlED TO DETllMIME PRICES OM GOODS MOT MARKED? MA.MY CARPET STORES DO MOT HAVE PRICES IMDICA TED OM THiii SAMPLIS. THE THEORY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN CHARGI! "WHAT THE TRAFFIC WILL IEAR." AT ALDIN'S PRICIS ~IE POSTID OM ALL OF OUR SAMPLES SO THAT CUSTOMRS CAM llOUSE THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND KNOW WHAT THEY AU LOOICIM(i AT. TOO. THERE IS ALWAYS THE POSSlllLITY OF A L()WI! PllCE IF COMDmONS WAIRAHT. DEN'S : iiiiiiiilatiiin: ·custom draperi1so;c~--- tlC. NO. 230422 1663 PLACINTIA AVENV! • COSTA M!SA, CAUP. 92627 • PHONE 6 .. 6·4838 -646~23S5 .. ' f> , I I ( ' ' I .1 ) I 1 I r Huntington Beach· Fountain Valley ED I TION Af ternoon N.Y.Stoeks T U ESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1976 TEN CENTS l{owlands Report Hits Council Actions By ROBERT BARKER Of.,.. 0.lly ...... S..tt ity Administrator Dave R6wlautds, ordered to report on cr\tical problem areas in Hunt- ington Beach, submitted a 23- page report to City Council mem- bers Monday night. Ranking as a major problem area in the findings that Rowlands said represented the consensus or his top department heads was the behavior of city council members therQ.Selves. The city council has 101t credibility in the community beCause of the lack of council meeting procedures and control, Rowlands and bis executive management team said. A top official, who declined to have his name used, said today that certain council members • ~,.,.. SlaH ...... ' ·~ CANDIDATE ARNOLD MODELS ONE OF HIS SHIRTS They're Even Popular With Bur~lara, He Says R111nan Posters i HB Candidate a 'Shin-in' f By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ol ttlt Dally P'llot Statt Confident Huntington Beach Ci(}' Council candidate George Arnold won't give you the shirt of£ his back, but for $5, he'll put one on it, complete with his photo portrait. · The city whose governing agehcy he hopes to join April 13 may have strict ordinance con- trols over too-exuberant political campaign sign practices, but the native oiltown citizen has shrewdly beaten them. He has hum an .billboards walk-i"' the streets today. His campaign headquarters at 218 Fifth St., in the downtown ar~a where he has been known for decades is selling George Arnold T -shirts, Navy blue models with a striking portrait of the self-employed landscaper Valley's All-star Cager Tryouts S e t Boys age 11 to 13 are invited to try out Wednesday and Thursday fo( the Fountain Valley Boys' Clob All-Star Basketball Team. Tryouts will be from 3 to 6 p.m . at the club , 9840 Talbert Ave. The club is seeking boys with pre- vious basketball experience, ac- cording to executive director, Ch1is Torres. Questions may be ref erred to the club at 968-5252. and tree-trimmer on the back. "They're selling like hot- cakes." says the four-time coun- cil candidate, claiming they are especially popular among oilfield workers and city firemen - working guys like him. Arnold, 47 . who has com- plained of too many women two. on the seven-member city council -has nonetheless also captured a share of the distaff side's support in his campaign for public office. George Arnold T-shirts are re- gulation uniform for girls on the women's softball team sponsored by the Sugar Shack, a Huntington Beach beanery. They are also popular with burglars. "Somebody stole a dozen a week ago -$60 worth," Arnold says. Nearly 700 shirts bearing his likeness have been sold since production of an original version a few years agQ, taken from Arnold's photo which appeared in Surfer Magazine in a docu mentary feature article about Huntington Beach. "We'll have some more in about a week," he says. Arnold, injured a few months ago when he inadvertently sawed off the limb of a tree on which he was sitting and plunged lo the ground, landing atop his power saw, is well known in town. "I've lived here 47 years last Wednesday," he says. "J was born here.'' are becoming laughing stocks. ''Their bickering and failure to work together causes them to be laughed at throughout the ci- ty," he sajd. The Rowlands report was or- dered Jan. 12 when the council placed him on probation for six months for "crisis oriented management" of city affairs. The report also was critical of the council's relations with various commiasions. Other problems attributed to the city coun cil in the report in· eluded: -The city council often ab- dicates major policy making is- sues to city boards and com- missions. -Commissions are setting policy for city council. -Commissions should work for the city council, not as an ad· venary. -Council fails to establish goals and objectives for various boards and commissions. Areas of responsibility require further clarification. -Lack of confidence between city council, boards and com- missions and staff. -No adherence to formal lines or communication. Bean· Convicted HB Killer HB Killer Awaits Hugh Daniel Bean was found guilty of first degree murder late Monday in the gunshot slaying of Orange Coast College scholar- athlete Stephen "Mike" Finklea of Fountain Valley. The same Orange County Superior Court jury which found Bean guilty m ust now determine if Finklea's killer should be ex- ecuted or given a life sentence. The guilty verdict. for Bean ended nearly three days of jury deli ber a lions. Finklea, 19, was shot and killed by two men who attacked and Huntington Doctors Reta~ to Hospital Surgeons and anesthe - siologists who voted a work slowdown 10 days ago at Hunt- ington Intercom m unity Hospital to·protest malpractice insurance fees and got little support are back at work today. · Discouraged at lack of support within the local medical com· munit y, operating room specialists-who are most often hit with lawsuits-voted to re- sume service. The decision was reached this morning. according to Dick Grundy, H1H administrator. He said a meeting with the hospital's prior chief of ~tarr and surgeons and aneslbes1olog'ists resulted in a vote to resume the elective surgery rate. Doctors had not ceased or slowed down emergency services and laboratory radiology work continued without interru ption since a week ago Friday. "It's obvious we're not getting any support, even from our local hospitals,'' Grundy said today. Patients facing so-called elec- tive surgery, that which may be needed but is not life threaten- ing, were notified last week that their impending admission dates Firm Hiking Insurance For Lawyers SACRAMENTO <AP> -The same company that boosted medical malpractice insurance to strike-triggering levels is giv- ing California 's lawyers a similar boost, says the State Bar. William Sh annon Parrish of Oakland, the acting president of the State Bar, said Monday the lawyers' professional liability in- surance, also called "errors and omissions policies," is to go up 383 percent March 16. A num t1er of doctors in Southern California have walked off the job because 9,500 received increases of 327 percent. This had been cut by the state insurance commissioner from a requested increase of 486 percent. I n bot h cases, it's the Travelers Insurance Co., Parrish said in a n interview. The State Bar is investigating at least two alternatives. <See LAWYERS, Page Al) were canceled. Grundy added that a few personnel layoffs among sur- gery-related employes other than those w h o wield the scalpels and control anesthesia procedures did result. During the HIH strike, Pacific Hospital continued with all emergency care and some elec- tive surgery, while Fountain Valley Community Hospital con- tinued business as usual. Patty Hearst's - Trial Begins In Bank Heist SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Patricia Hearst's long-awaited trial for bank robbery began to- day under tight security, with jury selection likely to focus on attitudes toward kidnap victims, radicals and the wealthy. The newspaper heiress' father, Randolph Hearst, told rePOrters as be left his apartment for the courthouse, "If she hadn't been kidnaped by a bunch of terrorists . we wouldn't be holding a trial today • • The only reason she would be in a courthouse would be for a marriage license or to pay a parking ticket," Hearst, president of the San Francisco Examiner, said as he stepped from his Nob Hill apartment with his wife, Catherine. and. daughters Anne and Vicki. In response to a question, Hearst said he felt optimistic about the trial and felt the jury would take into account the fact that Miss Hearst had initially been kidnaped. "I think 12 people can un· derstand th at,'• he said. Patricia had a fashionable new outfit for her first day or trial, and it was selected by her mother. The 21-year-old Miss Hearst made her first appearance in the outfit Monday -a tailored navy blue gabardine pants suit with white silk blouse accented by a soft bow at the neckline. She wore navy sling-back high- heeled shoes. Attorney Albert Johnson said Catherine Hearst went shopping· after t he Hearst attorneys en- countered problems finding size five clothes for a 93-pound . (See P ATTY, Page Ai> robbed him Oct. 31, 1974, while he was working as a 7·Eleven market clerk at the Fountain Valley store at Euclid Street and Warner Avenue. Bean, impassive throughout the trial, remained that way as Judge William L. Murray's clerk read the verdict. Bean, 2A, was additionaJly found guilty or first degree armed robbery. Judge Murray ordered the jury to return to his courtroom Feb. 2 for the opening or the trial's final phase-the recommendation or rejection or the death penalty. Later today he will set the date for opening arguments in the murder trial of the convicted killer's brother, Charles Dennis Bean, 22, who faces identical charges. The brothers were arrested by Santa Ana police 24 hours after the Finklea killing on Oct. 31, lll74, on the basis of information supplied by a clerk who was about to relieve Finklea from his counter duties. Finklea, a highly regarded athlete who was captain of the Orange Coast College wrestling team, was shot through the mouth as he confronted his two assailants. The Fountain Valley youth was shot five more times as he sought refuge from bis killet"s ln a rear storeroom at the market. Santa Ana police recovered what they said were the two guns used in the killing and the $133 taken from Finklea during a search of the Bean brothers' car. Valley Council Set,s Meeting With Firemen The Fountain Valley City Council will hold a special meet· ing at 8 o'clock tonight to discuss its "impasse" in contract talks with the city's 34 firemen. The meeting will be an ex· ecutive session, closed to the public, at city hall, 10200 Slater Ave. Firemen, represented by the Teamsters Union. responded to the city's "last and final " con- tract offer late Monday with a plea that the city return to the negotiating table. But Mayor Bernie Svalstad said today the city is at an "im· passe" and has discussed every matter in the contract package. He said he met personaJly with a member of the firemen's bargaining team on Saturday and "I had hoped that there might be some positive points come out of my discussions." Instead Svalstad said "it ap- pears to me that the teamsters and or the firemen have no sin· cere interest in negotiating but only an interest in creating ill feelings toward the city council which isn't helping matters." Larry Drake, president of the firemen's association, said firemen would like to resolve the issue privately. '\2M~th J Skiers Die Battin's Attorney Blasts DA MAMMOTH (UPI> - o skiers were thrown off lance on thin, patchy ow in separate incidents" · Mammoth Mountain and crashed to their death .on rocks. Daryl Gordon, 16, of Ha- ienda Helght.s fell after .,.tarting down Dave's Run, the ateepe$t and one of the most dUficult at ftfam- moth. Georse C. Smith Jr., 23, ' of La Canad a, aufforcd multiple Injuries including a fractured akuU and rup· turedaple4m. By WILLIAM SCHREIBER oi-. Oa llf f'll .. IUff The attorney for indicted Orange County Supervisor Robert Battin continued his at- tempt Monday to prove the coun- ty District Attorne)' .. s Office ls engaged ln "selective political prosecutlon." Despite repeated objections by Deputy District Attorney Jock Ryan, Kurillcb atter.npted to Ul'I· ravel the procedures iliscd by the ~ounl)'--J>J'OSflCUlOt:. in problni al- teaauona of poHilcal wrons· doing.· Kurillcb pretented Ryan and Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae with 20 documents support-court centered on Kurilich's at· ing his claim that two distinct. tempt to get the DA to admit the groups of pollticans exist in the names of politicians kept in in- mlndl of l>A'1 lovestigaton. vesUgatory files. He reptated h i.s prior allega-KuriUch questioned DA'1 In· tlon that Battin is part ot a large· vestisator Joel Hayes and Depu- ty DemocraUc group backed by • ty DA Michael Capiul, trying to Dr. 1..ou.11 Cella and millionaire atabllah that wbUe Politlci~ rancher Richard O'Neill. The from both 1roups m ay appear m olber 1roup, he clahna is com· flies, only the Cella-O'Neill frOUP prlsed of those back b~ the are lnvesUgat~ and prosecuted. Republican Llnco . Vndet' quenl~tnc lntlettulaltd Kur1Ucb said the ~ • ciftlllo by obJectlbn.1 from Ryan. (roup it-arosecuttd fOC" t.a ~c:h~ Hayes tQ ~ti that tJvlU._ wbll• \be t>A ignoret te· -4he DA maintain• recc>rW oncer- ports of lllegalitl• ~ U. oU.r W~S>OliUcal rft_..rN but 4oellfl camp. 1' the~ ln aapec:latfile. Monday's actMJ;J ln Lacis aaUl mOlt would be.kept ln . • t.heDA 's "Alpha File" on general investigations. But Hayes did say that some politician's names are on index cards in the DA 's organized crime file. The only names Lae would permit Hayes to reveal were Battin 's and that of former Supervisor David Baker. When Caplzd took the stand, Kurilkh continued his complex questiontng pattern, lr)'ina to woa1c around Ryan'5obJections. K-vrttich ask~d Capiul if an ln- •tlaatlon h ad been launched in- to charges th.a\ campat1n workers for Congressman Jerry <See BATTIN. Page A2) • •• Other problem areas spelled out in the report inclU<te depen- dence on federal money, lack of a viable six-year plan, manage- ment relations with cit y employes, lack or maintenance funds for park s, streets, he liport, library. trees, civi<' center and water facilities. Other problems include in- <See REPORT, Page A2> 0.11, Pilot Staff ,._,. 'SHOULD BE ACTIVE' Candid ate Fred Voss Candidate .Questions lncunilients Editor's Note: Nine candidates are vying for two seats on the Fountam Valley City Council. This story rs .about one of the candidates. The election is March 2. Fred Voss, one of nine can· didates in Fountain Valley's March 2 City Council race, said citizens should look at current council members to see if they have shown active leadership. "If they haven't been as active as you would like to see you definitely s hould look for new faces ," said Voss, an ad· ministrator with the county General Services Department. The former Fountain Valley school trustee also said "a his- tory of community involve- ment," which Voss feels he can demonstrate, should be a pre- requisite lo council duty. '"I have been interested in city government for a long time," he continued, •'but I have been in· volved in school affairs." Voss served one term on the Fount a in Valley Board or Trustees before being defeated for re-election last year. If elected to the council, Voss said , he would hope to hold periodic community forum meet- ings, improve communications and keep a light hold on city ex- penses. Voss, of 18578 Cottonwood St.. said Fountain Valley "has been a well-run city" in general, but the tax rate is the ninth highest i.1 Orange County. In addition, he said, the city will have to keep close tabs on ex- penses. particularly as federal revenue sharing and other funds <See VOSS, Page A2) Coast Weather Fair through Wednesday with continued warm and sunny days. Patchy fog near the coast. Lows tonight in the 40s. Highs 65 to 75 from the coast inland. INSIDE TODAV Pringle's is in the· chip!, and competitors .are being crunched in their war.againat the "'new-fangled" potato chip! that come in .a can and haw chom~d up 16 percftlt of the potato chip marled. See Page A1. ladex , • • 1· --· ----.... ' .. "'' DAILY PILOT H /F Unif·. ~ ,Proposals Reviewed The Orange County Committee on ~hoot Distr1cl Organization wi11 consider three more unifica- tiOh proposals for West Orange County Wednesday night. The meeting will be at 7:30 p.1n. at orrices of the North Oran ge County Community College District, 1000 N. Lemon Sl.. Fullerl(>n. The three proposals include a lluntington Beach cityYlide ··un. ified system, creation of a Seal &ach·Los Alamitos district and cai-ving up the Huntington Beach linion High School District and at least part of the Garden Grove Unified District into four or five unified systems. In addition to those proposals, the committee will discuss a re· quest from trustees of the Foun- tain Valley School District to con· sider forming geographic trustee areas within their district. But Hal Ma son, director of fis- cal services for the Orange Coun- ty Department of Education, said all four matters may take a low priority with committee ·members because they are pre- paring to s tudy other ite ms. He said the other items include a study of community college trustee areas for t he Garden Grove Unified School District. ln addition, he said, the com- mittee is studying a possible re- organization of the entire county master plan for unification. ··1 would hope they would give us time to work out some or the things we are working on now," .Jlrtason commented. The three unificaton proposals include: -Seal Beach-Los Alamitos, a ' proposal submitted by t.rusteeg of the Seal Beach and Los Alamitos e lementary districts. It "-'Ou ld take Los Alamitos l-ligh School from the Anaheim Union High School District. -Citizens' Plan for Unifica· lion of Huntington Beach, sub- mitted by Barbara Milkovich. spokesperson for a group called ltuntington Beach Citizens for .Huntington Beach Schools. Jt would create a unified district within city limits. including a portion of the Westminter and Fountain Va lley (elementary) School Districts. • l . nges . . Pot, Boozer~ Reienet.l -; ' ' " ., l ' NEW YORK (Al(Q.-Slo :i.Mli:.Amerlcw ba\'i! . reversed their altitudes about the seriousness ot s moking marijuana and drinking alcohol, a Harris poll shows. (Related stories, A~. All) A survey or 1,394 adults showed that 71 perecnt view the problem of "heavy drinking'' as very serious. while only 58 percent feel tbat way about marijuana. ''This is a complete reversal of public attitudes since 1969, when 73 percent viewed pot s moking as ·very serious' (.'Om pared to 53 percent who felt the same way about heavy drinking," the polling or· ganization said Monday. · Most Americans still oppose legali zi ng the sale or use or marijuana but increasingly beli eve that possession of small amounts should not be a criminal offense, Harris said. The survey showed that 69 percent opposed legalization of sale or use of pot, about the same as in a similar poJJ in 1974. Twenty-five percent favored legalization. Shorj:age of Money Stalls Restoration Plans to remodel and r e- habilitate the Newland J.louse as a Huntington Beach historical . site and museum have been hit by lack or money. City Council members voted 1\1onday night not to authorize an additional $68.000 to make the old structure safe for paying vis· itors. City officials, expressing em- barrassment at (ailing lo come up with the necessary money, said HB Council Hits Tangles On Golf Plan When plans for the develop- ment of sprawling Central Park have been offered in the past, they've nearly always included a golf course favored by some Hun- tington Beach City Council mem- bers and adamantly opposed by others. Iunds s t ill possfbly could bE: raiSed by a public subscription drive or proceeds from the Bicentennial Ball. Idelle Jungblut of the His- torical Society said her group had planned to open the facility to the public by Flag Day on Jun<.> 14 . She s aid a lot of lime and work had gone into her projeet and lhe decision not t o approve the money was a disappointment." Remodeling on the building to date consists or a new roof and new glass in the windows. If installation or r est rooms is removed from the plans, the total cost to the city would drop to $13,000, officials said. "There should be some way we could raise that much," Mayor Norma Gibbs s aid. "~l's going to be embarrascting if we don't ." Council members, none the less, voted to remove it rrom their plans this fiscal year. Cast- ing the only negative vote was Ted Bartlett who said, "We shouldn't let it go down the drain." f'roa Page Al VOSS ••• Monday night was no different. Prentice Taylor, the park con- cessionaire who operates Huck's Hangout and Tom's Place food stands. unveiled a concept for a compact, 4,000-yard golf course that would be tied in with tennis -Another. proposal to ca~ve courts and an equestrian center. u~ the Huntinton Beach Union Al Coen, the most determined now financinr some areai' are· eli minated. High and at least part of the oflhe crtics warned "No matter G;3rd.en _Grove Unifi.ed Sc~?Ol (how good yo'ur plans,' you 'll never Distncl into fou! to five un1f1ed get them past my vote." s ystems, submitted by R. E. He said he was unalterably op· Person_s or Fountain. Valley. It posed to taking a way 100 acres oC would include a combined Ocean park land and committing them View-Seal B each -Fountain toagolfcourse. · Valley system and a south Hunt· Another critic and an ardent in,gton Beach unified district. golfer, 1-larriett Wieder, ques- Two Men Rob Receptionist In Mortuary A pair o f s neak thieves emptied a Huntington Beach mortuary receptionist 's purse of $27 Monday night. "Jtlvestigators said the men, about 60 and 40 years old and believed to be father and son, en· t1ered Dilday Brothers' r,Jortuary. 17911 Beach Rlvd., about 5 p.m . posing as bereaved relatives. They questioned Mrs. Stella Wright ab out funeral and mortuary costs but were inter· nspted wben she was called away from her desk momentarily. Police said they then emptied her purse or $27 and fled out the dbor, roaring away in an older model four-door seda~"-· ---.... ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT RObert N. Weed p,.....-n1 •not Pulll•- Jac k R. Curley Vic• Pfn-1 -C...ne•.ol -""""" • Thomas KeevU fOIU"' ThOmas A . Murpttlne '*""."""' lCh"" Charin H. Loos Ak hitrd P. Nall .... .i ..... 1 -... -f."''""' ... Robert Barker -•I Or-c-~• l!GI• HUlltlnaton l•adtOftke 1,ti11 ee.c" --1111 -111,.. -·-· ".0 .... no.,... Oftke ~""""·••Ci--5''"1 t.tw --.1 ,,..,.,.,, ""• S(rw< ~ v., .. ,, tm• u,.., ,_. •• ,..oi..o'·- i T• .. P'*'' (714) MZ-4321 CJnltfl• Adftrtlsti .. M2·M11 ,,_ ........ Or ..... (Mlfl!Y~°*' • Mt-1:ll0 I~ ""°'""" ~ _,.,,.,. c-. ,..· -\Witt, II---· ..-...1411 -., •r M-.•HW_,.,. .,.,.,., "''' " f::-.,.._ .... u ...... ,..., .. , ""'"'"'It!\ .. --· II~~ .. .-•"',.,, ..... t.o.lil Mtw. I ~ ~•i.t'-_.,.......,_..,K_ ...,,..,,.-.,M1J-l:llfJl""lll•T---...... _....,. ' --• tioned the wisdom of approving a new course that would fu rnish opposi ti on to t h e .city 's Meadowlarks links. She also questioned the need of a third course in addition to A1eadowlark and Seaclif£. Mayor Norma Gibbs says she thinks it is a "fantastic idea" to have the course and greenbelt and to have it developed by private capital. "We should listen," she told fellow council members. "The ci- ty can't afford to develop it." Council members gave ap- proval for fu rther study into tbe golf course concept. Other. plans for the park out- lined Monday night include 12 tennis courts, equestrian stalls, an archeological museum and a miniature railroad to be built around the waler tower northeast of the new library. An ar boretum is reporte(fly still in the Central Park plans. Marina High Seniors 'Take Over'P~ Five seniors at Marina High School in Huntington Beach took campus parking problems into their own hands Sunday night - by repainting the "faculty'' spaces into "senior" parking st alls. One of the pranksters, who anonymously called the Daily Pilot today, said the painting was designed to call attentloo to cam- pus parking problems. Principal Charles Weaver called the m atter "a senior prank,'' probably designed to call attention to the mid-year gradua- tion lut week or 80 studen\8. He s aid lhe stalls will be repainted. Weaver s aid theresometimesia a minor parking problem and atu- deint• are encouraged to rorm carpool• or ride bic)'cles. Pro8ecution Ends LOS ~OELES CAP> -The proi&ecution was to conclude Its case today Jn the lewd conduct trial of Deputy Mayor Maurice Wtlne:r. He 5Uli6""1 trying l>indJD& larbttratioh ln labor dl11putft, saying lh&t without it "pubUc employes have no recourse" ex~ cept to go on strike. In addition, he lauded Gov~ ernor Brown's proposal to· give acr05s-the-board dollar co5t-of- ·1i ving pay hikes instead of percentages, noting that the $10,000·a-year employe may lose out by getting a percent pay raise. Voss said if the percent raise Ui six percent and the cost of living . has increased 10 percent, the $10,000-a -year employe falls behind. The administr3tor earn· ing $30,000 a year, however, isn 't as badly hit by inflation, Voss con- tended. · Voss, a former teacher and former aerospace administrator, said he hopes to walk door-to- door to 1,000 homes during his campaign and has vlsited 200 so far. He said taxes have been resi· · dents' chi ef concern. along with some neighborhood-type pro- blems. If elected, Voss pledged to "challenge. the police depart· ment'' try and r educe burglary rates. In addition, he bopes to re- vitalize the Youth Commission, which he believes isn't "afforded the same status as other com- missions.'' And he would hope to work with the Oran11:e County Transit District to improve bus routes in Fountain Valley. Voss also termed a s a · "political cheap shot" a char&e by candidate Joe Schloss that bl=, Councilman Georee Scott and. Mayor Bernie Svalstad are part or a three-man "monopoly" tr)"· ing to c:ontrol the council. He said the only thing the three have in common ls a long record or community involvement. ,.,,_ Pflfle Al PA'ITY ••• heiress . Johnson s aid he selected Mis1 1rearat'5 rirst courtroom ault months ago and partner F. Lee Bailey shopped for another one. "But we don't know much about shopping for women's clothes,·· John1on o1ald. "The sales1irls kept a.skln1 If I was buying this for my daqht«, '"' Miss Hearft, meanwhile, wu dmcrtbed by Johnson u "ap. prehen1lve as anyone in her posi- tion would be" as the Lr1al ap- proached. Authorltl•• uldlll ape<totOn would be required to p111 throu&b a metal detect« almllu to lhote u1ed at alrpolU.. ----- f C·ampus: . . Smoking . Mulled Trustees of the Huntinrton Beach Union HIRh School l>ill· trlc\ are expected to decide Whether or not to allow 1mokln1 on samput at their 7:30 mt>tlini IOOIChl. In addllj,on, the board Is ex- Pffted to discuss the construc- tion delay on the new Ocean View HJgh School and where lo house lhe ocean View student body UD · til their campus la completed. The board wlll meet at district offices, 5201 Bolsa Ave., Hunt- ington Beach. Two weeka ago trustees put off a final vote on the s moking issue to await compilation of a random community survey on lhe ques- tion. But at that meeting Board Bresident Ralph Bauer and Trustees Ron Shenkman and Helen Ditte said they opposed smoking on campus. Trustees Bob Knox and Don MacAllister said they favored establishing smoking areas at least on a pilot program. The board tonight also will con· sider a staff recommendation to place students who would ha ve attended the new Ocean Vi ew campus at Huntington Beach High School. The new school, at Golden West Street and Warner Avenue, was to have been finished in Sep· tember. But because of various delays, district officials are now predicting an opening date for January 1977. The administration, however, is recommending that trustees not make a final decision on housing Ufe. Ocean View students until Feb. 10. In the meantime, the starr can hold community meetings on the matter; officials explained. ,.,,_ p_,,., A I LAWYERS • • One would be a bar-sponsored group Insurance . plan, wh ich would require permission of the Legislature, Parrish said. The other would be a com- pulsory "pay-as-you-go" plan in which aU the claims a11:ainst all BROWN GIVING UP ON MALPRACTICE? A5 lawyers would be added up each year, and each oftheS0,000 mem- bers assessed equally to pay them. Unlike many states, California baa an "integrated bar," mean- ing that all praetlcing lawyers are required to belong. And unlike the doctors, Parrish said he doubted 1r the lawyers would suggest that the taxpayers contribute to a solution. Some Calirornia doctors' groups are suggesting state in· surance plans toward which their own contri butjons would be voluntary, with the taxpayers backstopping. f'roaPageAI REPORT ••• creased costs for public safety departments, Jack or money to carry out public works projects, inadequate guidelines and fund- ing for human servic es pro· grams, lack of money for capital replacements, the stalemated condition or downtown develop- ment and the conOict. over Bolsa Chica annexation. 0.11, ...... Sl.llH ,.,.... Ralaes QNfttlolU Is our System or civil law costing us more than its worth? Don E. Burns, Californi a'/ secretary Of business and transportation raised th at question and others Monday during a talk to the Friends of UC Irvine. Se story, Page AS. FV Residents S11ing Over Street Plans ltesidents of a southeast Foun- tain Valley housing developf{lent have filed suit in Orange County Superior Court to block construc- tion or a street. The suit was filed Friday by Charles Wert, a resident or Classic Homes, near Ellis Avenue and Ward Street. It names the City of Fountain Valley as defendant. The s uit includes a petition signed by 79 other residents op- posed to the street construction. Wert and other Classic r esi- dents have told both the city council and planning commission that construction of a street to connect with Kingbird Avenue, now a cul de sac, would create a hazard in their neighborhood. The new street \l.'OUld be one of three serving a new 60-home tract behind Ellis Park, 1,1,·hich lies between the Classic develop - ment and a Greenbrook develop· ment. Wert said Classic residents are not opposed to the new housing development but believe the two other streets would be sufficient to carry tra!Cic without Kingbird. He also said residents do not want to delay construction or the homes. Wert's a ttorney, David \Var- ren, said a Feb. 10 court hearing has been set. E'roM Page Al BATTIN ••• Patte rson and Assemblyman Ri c hard Robin son , both Democrats, had filed fraudulent- voter registrations. Capizzi said such an investiga. tion was conducted and resulted in court action. But when asked about similar charges against Republi can Congressman Charles Wiggins, Capizzi said he talked to Wiggins and Weis satisfied with his eX · planation. No probe or prosecu- tion was undertaken. Hinshaw l Trial. #2 1 .. March I By TOM BARLEY OttMlkUrP'Otl:,..... Co n gressman Andrew Hinshaw was eicpected to discuss his political future today at a ·Santa Ana press conference or· gani:ted in the aftermath or his conviclion Monday on bribery charges. Hins haw, 53, CR-Newport Beacht scheduled the conference immediately a fter lt became,. clear from day-long discusslona that lhe· Orange County District Attorney's of[ice is not prepared . to drop a se'cond set of charges ' contained in a separate grand jury indictment. · Several hours or talks in and out of the district attorney's of- fice ended late Monday with Superior Court J udge Robert P. Kneeland-the presiding jurist in Hinshaw's bribery trial-setting March 1 as the date lhe con· gressman will be tried on con- spiracy allegations contained lo lhe separate indictment. Speculation Jate Monday that the new trial date may have led Hinshaw to decide on his resigna- tion seemed unfounded in the light or comments he made to news m en in the district at- torney's orrice. ''This was just the first round,'' Hinshaw commented while de- fense attorney Marshall Morgan nodded approval. ''I have no intention or stepping down or making any other de- cision than the one I have already made-fighting and winning this bribery battle in the appellate court.'' It was successfully alleged in the former county assessor's first trial that he accepted free stereo equipment and a $1,000 campaign contribution from the Tandy Corporation in return for assessment fa vors granted the electronics firm . It will be alleged in Hinshaw's seeond trial that he knowingly al- lowed county employes a nd materials to be used on county time for the campaign that won him the 40th District seat once I held by John Birch Society member John Schmitz. Judge Kneeland set Feb. 17 as the date h e will sentence Hinshaw to what could be one to 14 years in state prison on each or two bribery convictions if the judge rejects a motion for a new trial that will be argued on that date. * * * Rep. Himhaw 19th Solon Corwiction I Congressman Andrew Hinshaw's conviction Monday made him the third Calirornia r epresentative and the 19th con-• gressman in the nation's history to be convicted of a felony while holding office. Hinshaw's predecessors from Californi a were John H. Oeppel tD·Ar cadia), who was convicted in 1936, and Ernest K. Bramblett tR·Fresno), who was tried and found guilty in 1954 . Oeppel's crime was that he tried to sell an appointment to West Point. Bramblett was found gui lty of taking kickbacks from his office employes. THE PRICE IS RIGHT • I (or is it?) H4VE YOU l!VER GONE INTO 4 STORE. AND IEFORE A SALESMAN APPR04CHED YOU, TRIED TO DOERMIHE PRICES OH GOODS HOT M4RKED? M4HV CAllPET STORES DO HOT HAVE PRICES INDICATED OH THEIR SAMPLES. THE THEORY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN CHARGE "WHAT THE TRAFFIC WILL BEAR." AT ALDEN'S n.cES ARE POSTED OH ALL OF OUR SAMPLES SO THAT CUSTOM!RS CAN IROUSE THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND. ' KNOW WHAT THEY ARE LOOKING AT. TOO, THERE IS ALWAYS THE POSSlllLITY OF A LOWER PRICE IF CONDITIONS WARRANT. *•••••• carpe DEN'S : iiisiailation: ·custom draperies OC.ll0.~1! 1663 1'1.ACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • ,HONE 64~·4il38 -646-2355 ' 17 I ' I I I ~ I I I l I J ~ .. Orange Coast Today' N.Y. EDITION ,. VOL 69, NO. 27, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1976 • 'J •• '1 N TEN CENTS I • f Lawyers' Insurance Next to SkyrOcket1 1 ' SACRAMENTO <AP) -The same company that boosted medical malpractice insurance to strike-triggering levels ls giv· ing California's lawyers a similar boost, says the State Bar. William Shannon Parrish or Oakland, the acting president of the Slate Bar, sald Mood~ the lawyers' professional liability in· surance, also called "errors and omissions policies," is to go up 383percent March 16. A number of doctors in Southern Calilornia have walked off the job because 9,500 received BROWN GIVING UP ON MALPRACTICE? AS increases of 327 percent. This had been cut by the state insurance commissioner from a requested increase ot 486 percenL o.lly f'li.t S\MI PllOt• JOANNE KENT ARRIVES TO FINO HOME BURNING Newport Woman Reacts to Shocking Scene $115;000 Fire Set ' "J;ly Lighter Fluid Lfghter fluid accidentally sp1lled by the owner's 18-year-old son apparently triggered a tire that caused an estimated $115,000 damage to a Newport Beach· home Monday afternoon, firemen said today. rfhe blaze gutted the home of Roy and Joanne Kent at 1811 Newport Hills Drive East in the Harbor View Homessectionofthe city. Firemen said that, when they got to the scene of the 2:30 p.m. blaze, the flames were burning through the roof of the single· story structure. Mr. and Mrs. Kent were not at home when the fire broke out, ac· cording to firemen, who said the couple's 18-year-old son escaped with a singed arm. No other in· . juries were reported. In reconstructing the cause of the blaze, firemen said the youth told them he was trying to fill a cigaret lighter when he spilled the fluid and a spark from the lighter ignited the fluid. Fire investigators estimated the structural damage at $40,000 and the dam age to contents of the home at $75,000. A neighboring home sustained about $500 worth of smoke damage, investigators added. Sweet Streak Nuik Cake Popper Needed ·Student job opportunities come in many different ways. Consider this ad, tacked up on the Sad- dleback College bulletin board: ''Wanted: A young man to jump oot of. a birthday cake. at wife's birlhday party. Time: Appro:dmately 9 p.m. Feb. 7. Pay: $25 /or~ hour's time. Thi& offer is strictly on the up and up. I'm aerimu. Call Bill or Pam Gross at t:r.r·ZZU by Jan. 29." The ad, placed by a Mission Viejo couple to add some zest to the wife's 30th birthday, has found no takers so far. A possible dz:awback: The assignment calls tpr a nude appearance. Mrs. Gross. wife of a security analyst, said h er husband originally intended the cake- Poppint as a 1urprtse but that she 4ot onto him. . So they're planning to spring the 1urprise on 15 couples who M4RKET GOl:S VP A.ND DOWN have been invited to the party. "We looked into a theatrical agency in Los Angeles that of· fered this kind of service but they charge $125 which is a little steep," she reports. .. So we picked Saddleback College which is tbe closest place to advertise. We thought there might be a kid around who'd want to do something crazy like that.'' To~te the Grosses have re· ceiv n call from a stu· dent ho said he'd have to "think about it" upon learning that the cake PoP was to be performed in tbenude. The Grosses are anxious to hear from qualified applicants but they don't want their telephone number known because of the possibility of crank calls. Just who will make the final selectfoo from all the can- didates--U there are any brave enough to step forward-hasn't been determined. "l hadn't thought about that," Mrs. Gross confessed. One thing's sure though. Mrs. . NEW YORK (AP) -The stock ·market bounced around er· r tic ally today, encountering ptriodic waves of profit taking. TradJng remained heavy. ' Gross bas bad so much fun or- ganWng the party that she says "I haven't bad a chance to think about tumlntc so.·· Prices started out oh a weak note, came on strong at mid· esslon and then fell back again profit taker-s and buyers vied for dominance. The Dow Jones induatrlel average of 30 atoclcs lost 3.07 polnt.to9~7.81 . (Tables, 87). \ • ... Toddler Killed EL MONTE (UPI) -An 18· month-old toddler Monday was accldtntally run over and killed by a car driven by his uncle. Sherlfl'I MPUtieJ IAJd. In both cases, it's the Travelers lnsuram:e Co .. Parrish said in an intenriew. The State Bar is investigating at least two alternatives. One would be a bar-sponsored grpup insurance .plan, which would require permission of the Legislature, Parrish said. The other would be a ~m ­ pulsory "pay-as-you-go" plan in which all the claims a~ainst all lawyers would be added up each Some California doctors' fields such as neurosur'ery sa)'1 1 year, and each of the 50,000 mem-groups are suggesting state in· their insurance bills have gone bers assessed equally to pay surance plans toward which their from $8,000 to $40,000 a year. · ·them. own contributions wq_uld be Parrish said the State Bar dis. Unlike many states, California voluntary, with the trutpayers pules the figures on which has an "integrated bar," mean-backstopping. Travelers bases the increase. ing that all practicing lawyers Parrish, who practices law He said the State Bar is about are required to belong. alone in a "high.risk" field of two years through a five.year And unlike the doctors, Parrish personal injury work for plain-contract with Travelers. He said J said he doubted if the lawyers tiffs, said his own insurance now the contract permits Travelers to would suggest that the taxpayers costs $425 a year. increase rates after two years to;J conlri bute lo a solution. Some doctors in high.risk <See LAW Y EBS, Page All J 'HinShaw Blasts Hicks: Called 'Vengeful' By TOM BARLEY OIU.. D•llr PllCllSQ" Convicted Congressman An· drew J . Hinshaw labeled Orange County District Attorney Cecil Hicks today as "the vengeful architect" of an investigation and prosecution that led to his be· ing found guilty Monday on bribery charges. Hinshaw, SJ, told a press con- ference in Santa Ana that he is one of a number of legislators and Orange County officials who have been or are being probed by Hicks ''from motives of revenge held by a paranoi,d district at· torney.'' Hinshaw said Hicks plans vengence "because he was once investigated himself and very nearly indicted by the Grand Jury after a car accident in Garden Grove in which two children were killed." Hinshaw said a woman he described as "Hick~' girlfriend" was involved in that collision. "The incident has never been saUsfactorialy explained and certainly· not by Hicks," the Newport Beach Republican as· serted. Hinshaw identified Congressmen Jerry Patterson and Charles Wiggins, state Senator Dennis Carpenter, state Controller Ken Cory, As- semblymen Robert Badham of Newport Beach and Richard Robinson and Orange County supervisors Laurence Schmit and Ralph Diedrich as other of- ficials under investigation at various times by Hicks' office. "But I am the crux of moves deliberately designed to take the heat off the DA," Hinshaw said. "If they can keep me convicted, they're going to keep the atten· lion of Orange County citizens awaf from them." Hrnshaw said a jury in Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland's courtroom convicted him of two felony counts of bribery Monday "because there is a lot of evidence held by the district attorney that we were not allowed to obtain." Hinshaw also condemned Hicks for what he said was the district attorney's use of his No Angola Aid WASHINGTON (AP> -Re· jecting a last·minute plea from President Ford, the House com· pleted congressional action this afternoon to cut off U.S. aid to Western-backed factions in Angola. The ·vote .was 323 to 99. estranged wife, Thais Hinshaw, before the grand jury and as a prosecution witness in the bribery trial. Hinshaw will be sentenced Feb. 17 to what could be state prison terms of one to 14 years on each bribery count. Defense attorney Marshall Morgan, who joined Hinshaw at the press conference, will argue a motion for a new trial on that date. Hinshaw firmly repeated bis earlier declarations that he has no intention of resigning his 40th District seat. "If we don't get a new trial we will go to every appeals court in the country," he said . "Meanwhile, I'm working on plans for my June primary cam- paign. "And I have no doubt th~t cer- tain political figures in this coun- ty will seize on my present pre- dicament and attempt to remove me from office," Hinshaw said indignantly. Hinshaw and Morgan predict· ed success at the appellate court level and a reversal of the con- gressman's bribery conviction. ''We will not have the emotion generated at the appellate level that was allowed full reJgn in the local trial," Morgan said. "I have every confidence in my ability to change this verdict." • Dally "'"" 5laff ,._. CONVtCTED CONGRESSMAN TALKS TO NEWSMEN With Attorney Marshall Morgan at His Side 'Political Prosecµtion' .. Battin Attorney Presents 20 Documems By WILLIAM SCHREIBER OI ~Dally Ptl« SCMf The attorney for indicted Orange County Supenisor Robert Battin continued his at- tempt Monday to prove the coun- ty District Attorney's Office is engaged in "selective political prosecution.•• Despite repeated objections by Deputy District Attorney Jack Ryan. Kurilich attempted to un· ravel the procedures used by the county prosecutor in probing al- legations of political wrong-I doing. Kurilich presented Ryan and Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae with 20 documents support· ing his claim that two distinct groups of politicans exist in the minds of DA 's investigators. Dog Lovers Score Newport 'Victory' He repeated his prior allega- tion that Battin is part of a large- ly Democratic group backed by Dr. Louis Cella and millionaire rancher Richard O'Neill. The other group. he claims, is com- prised of those backed by the Republican Lincoln Club. Kurilich said the Cella.O'Neill group is prosecuted for its ac- tivities while the DA ignores re- ports of illegalities by the other camp. By HILARY KAYE Ol llle D•lly Piiot Staff Armed with an assortment of "doggie scooper" devices, dog lovers packed the Newport Beach City Council Chambers Monday night and convinced the council to table an ordinance that would have banned dogs from the beaches. Councilmen rejected the or· dinance with a 5·1 vote and agreed to give SCOOP -Society of Concerned Owners of Pets -a chance lo try its new animal con- trol program. It was clearly a victory for Newport Beach do~ lovers. However, Mayor Donald Mrln· nis, an ocean front resid ent, made it equally clear he does not intend to drop the matter. Mcinnis, who was one or the five who voted against the or· dinance, said the council would reconsider the matter in 60 days. ''At this point we have only words on paper from SCOOP. I want to see if they'll really imple· menttheir program ," said Mein- nis. <See DOG• Page AZ> Monday's activity in Lac's court centered on Kurilich's at· tempt to get the DA to admit the names of politicians kept in iD· I vestigatory files. 1 Kurilich questioned DA's In· vestigator Joel Hayes and Depu- <See BATTIN, Page A2) , Coast Weather . • . ,. Fog Blimls Harbor Boatsmen Off Coast l Orange County Harbor larger ones until •.he harbor patrolmen had their hands full patrol came to their aid Fair through Wednesday with continued warm and sunny days. Patchy fog near the coast. Lows tonight in the 40s. Highs 65 • to 75 from the coast inland. INSIDE TODAY ..._ Dillty ...... Sloeft P_.• Baba fl11e9• ..... Is our systC?m of civil law costing us more Ulan its worth? Don E . Butns , Caltrorrua'a se~retary of business lnd transportaUon1 raised that questio11 ana others Monday during a tJlk to the l<'riends of C ine Se ~t.ory. Paa• A8. Monday afternoon when a sud-"We'd respond lo a call for den thick blanket of fog caught help and find six boats instead of boaters by · s urprise near the juot one.'' Wright said. Newport Harbor channel en-When the fog first rolled in al 3 tran<:e. p.m., Harbor Patrolman Terry Sgt. Harry Wright said today Woodhull, was lost, too that patrolmen rescued about 15 Woodhull was issuing a citation boats between 3 p .m. and 6 p.m. to a boat owner off Corona dcl AJl were lost ln the fog in the en· Mar Main Beach when the vas· trance channel to the harbor, lbility suddenly dropped to less with visibility less than 15 feet, than 1S feet. . Wriahl a.id. He was not in a boat <;<\Ulpped 11\e boats nntf'4 In 5ile from with radar, but by u~ing his com 10 feet to 45 feet. and included pass. he got both hi~ boat and the both power and sail boats. other boat back to the dock. Only a few o( the w1er boat~ Wright said. w re eq,Ulpped with marine "Alltnall.wehadatotofboats radios and the 9lMf. smaller in the horbor that really weren't boats cluslerecl around the comlna here. but wound up here · anyway," Wright sold Pringle'i if in the chips, and competitors .ore being crunched in their wor. ogoin.st the "new·fangled" potato chip.! that come in. a can and have chomPf!d up 16 pemmt of the potato chip mar~t. See Page A1. l•dex AtY-~~ ........ l'fttlK. L..M .. yet c..ti+er11oa O•ulflN C...,k1 CrMJWM'411 l>itatllNfllcel ltllt9i'UllWMllt l'IMIM• flllrtMlleun ...... SC..- ··"'""' ''*' N • ,,... ..... Al BATTIN ••• • ...... ,. ...... , 'DOGS •.•• Finklea: Hos p i tal Workers Get Cuts ty DA M lcllHI C1plal, tl')'lll• lo est1bll1h that while poUUclan1 rrom boll! '""""" m11YaPPfttli> -met,~ t!>• Cella·O'NOW- are lnvesltrt1ted andproteculed~ Under Qt.tes tlont:ns interrupted olten ·by objections from Ryan Kurilicb got llayes to admit thai Trend Changes Poff BocJ:zse Vi.eim~evened NEW YORK (AP) -Since 19$9, Americans have reversed their atUtudes about Ute seriousness o!· smoking marijuana and drinking-alcohol, a Harris p0ll shows. (Related stories, A4, All) The mayor said heJ15oRlAAS to by to ralu tile ,lllMe for dor -owitffl"Wfio violate lea.sti aftdllt· t t•t laws. Finn ere curnnUy $15, already an increase over the old leeol$5. Sus~pect Guilty The doctors s lowdown w as still the DA maintains rtt'Orel! on cf!r. i~ eCfect today at lloag Memorial tain political Naur~ but doesn't llo&pital in Newport Beach aod keep them ln a special file. employes there are now on a He said most wouJd be kept In rour-day work week, n hospital the DA's "Alpha File" on eeneral spokeswoman said. investigations. Management employcs · ure But Hayes did say that some still on a fiv e-day work w~k. but politician's names are on index are taking a 20 percent cut in cards in the DA's organited pay, according to Linda Mottin, a crime file. The only names L,_e hospital official. would permit Hayes to reveal "l'he premise is that if every. were Battin 's and that o{ rormer one here takes a 20 percent cut Supervisor David Baker. --either by working four days or When Capiz21 took the stand, by taking the actual pay cut -Kurilich continued his complex we'll make up our reduct.ion in questioning pattern, trying to 'revenue,·· she said. ·· work around Ryan's objections. . Surgery at the hospital was . Kurilich asked Capiz:ti if an in· still down SO percent today and vestigation had been launched in· the surgery schedule for next to charges that campaign Week looks no better, Mrs. Mot tin "''orkers for Congressman Jerry said. Related stor:y /\5. . Patterson and Assemblyman However, becauseof1ncreased Rich a rd Robin s on b o th medical admissions, partly due Democrats. had filed rr~udulent to the l.arge number or flu cases, p voter registrations. the patient _cens us was normal to· Capizzi said such an investiga· day, she said. . lion was conducted and resulted On Monday, the patient census in court action. was down 10 percent . \ While doctors at lluntington ln- tef'community 1-fospital voted to- day to return to a full work schedule, Mrs. Matlin said there is no sign yet that the Hoag doc · tors will follow suit. "We just don't know how long this will continue. The employes ·here. however, have been just super about the reduced pay," Mrs. Mottin said. "Morale is ""'>'good ... * * * Huntington's IJocwrs Back On the Job Surgeons and anest h e· siologists who voted a work slowdown 10 days ago at Hunt· ington lntercommunity Hospital to-protest malpractice insurance fees and got little support are back at work today. · Discouraged al lack of support within the local medical com· munity _. operating ro om specialists-who are most often hit with lawsuits-votj?d to r e- sume service. The decision was reached this morning. according to Di ck Grundy, HIH administrator. He said a meeting with the hospital's prior chier of staff and surgeons and anesthesiologi.o;ts resulted in a vote to r esume the elective surgery rate. Doctors had not ceased or s lowed down emergency services a:nd laborator y radiology work continued 1.11\thout interruption since a week ago Friday. ··Jt's obvious ....,.e're not getting any support, even from our local hospitals," Grundy said today. Patients facing so-called elec- tive s urgery, th al which may be needed but is not life threaten· ing, were noti£ied Jast week that !Jieir impending admission dates were canceled. Grundy added that a few personnel layoffs among sur- gery-related e mployes other than those wh o wield the scalpels and control anesthesia procedures did·res ult. During the Jill{ strike, Pacific J{ospital continued with a ll emergency care and some elec· tive s urger y, while Fountai n Valley Community Hospital con- tinued business as usual. OPEC Aid Joined PARIS CUPI) -Venez.uela said today it will comlribute $100 million toward a special $1 billion rund the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 1s setting up lo help poor nations . ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT IJW Oo•"V" '""" O••lf f'•"''· ... 1n ""''" " <-•""<I ,,.. ,..,,.,Po••'•, •\ l)l;llh'-"'·~ IJ, Uo Rep . Hinshaw 19th Sown · Corw iction Congressman Andrew Hinshaw's conviction Monday made him the third California representative and the 19th con·· gressman in the nation's history to be convicted or a felony while holding ofrice. Hinshaw's predecessors from California were John H. Oeppel (0-Arcadia), ~·ho was convicted in 1936. and Ernest K. Bramblett (R-Fresnoi. who was tried and found guilty in 1954 . Oeppe1 ·s crime was that he tried to sell an appointment to West Point. Bramblett was found guilty of taking kickbacks from his office e mployes. 3 MenGr ab $1 Million In Securities LOS ANGELES (AP) -An estimated $1 million in negotia- ble securitie~ were stolen by three men in a robbery from a Century City firm today, authorities said. "We're not sure of the exact figure yet but that's ($1 million) the figure we're kicking around ," said Lt. Richard Pooler. The securities, which can be cashed by a nyone, were taken from the l\.1unici Corp. of California in the fa shionable business district by the trio who then ned in an old model com- pact car, authorities said. Pooler said the seeurities were taken from employes in the Cirm but he was not immediately cer· lain if weapons were used. Further details were not im· mediately available, Pooler said. 2 Mammoth Skiers Die MAMMOTH (UP() - Two skiers were thrown orf balance on thin, patchy snow in separate incidents" on Mammoth Mountain and crashed to their death on rocks. Daryl Gordon, 16, or Ha- cienda Heights fell after starting down Dave's Run, the steepest and one of the most difricult . at Mam-· moth. George C. Smith Jr,, 23, of La Canada, suffered multiple injuries including a fractured skull and rup- tured spleen. A survey of 1,394 adults s howed that 71 percent view the problem oC''heavy drinking'' as very serious, while onlif 58 percent feel that way about marijuana. · "This is a complete reversal or public attitudes since 1969, when 73 percent vlewed pot smoking as 'very serious' compared to 53 pe rcent who felt the same way about heav>' drinking," the polling or· ''I'm golnglb trytomakevery, .very sUfr fines for the first or. rense and a real humdlngar for the second offenso.~· Mcinnis said. When uked what he meant by very sutf, Mcinnis replied, "Oh, maybe $50 ror the first offense and much higher for the second." ganization said Monday. · · · · He said the city could use the fine moqey to pay for ext.re dog catchers to enforce the laws. Most Americans still oppase lt:galizing the sale or use of marijuana but increasingly believe that possession of small amounts should not be a criminal offense, Harris said . About 50 dog loven attended thti councll meetln1, With most or them comlng from tho newly formed SCOOP. . The survey showed that 69 percent opposed legalization of sale or use of pot, about the same as in .. a similar poll in 1974. Twenty-five percent favored legalization. A hJndful of people opposing dogs on the beaches were there, too. · SCOOP· speakers outlined the proposed program for controlling dog~. San Clemente Fire Caused by Marines? The seven·Poinl program in· eludes: -Handing out pamphlets that explain the city's animal control laws whe n dog licenses ar. purchased. . -Posting s igns at.J;treet·ends detailing animal control rules. By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of IM O.llr P'HM w.tf Preliminary investigation shows that a 2,400-acre brush fire that destroyed 14 San Clemente homes was caused bv a sp11rk from welding equipment being used on Camp Pendleton last Wednesday morning, Marine Corps officials said today. In a brief statement, officials said a further investigation has been ordered that will lake al Jeast a month to complete. "The cause or the fire was shown to be a s park from elec- trical welding equipment which Blandi Files Papers for NB Council Race Tom Blandi returned his nomination papers t o the Newport Beach city clerk on Monday, adding his name to the list or candidates running for John Store's seat in District 7. Blandi. a Spyglass Hill r esi· dent, join!! Duncan Mcintosh and Ray Williams as declared can· didatea in the Corona det MAr district. Store does not plan to run again. Two iilher1 ~~ave t~•" qvt nomlnl.tion p8pers in l)istrict 7, but have not returned them yet. They are Per Tre bler and Archibald Scott Ill. They have until Feb. 10. Two other seats are up for elec· tion, including the ones held by/) Mayor Donald Mcinnis and Paul Rycko{f. Ryckoff, whose district in· eludes Eastbluff, Park Newport, Promontory Point, Beacon Bay and Balboa Island, has returned · his papers. Mcinnis, whose district is West Newport, has not yet r eturned his papers. Neither one has any op· position. was being operated by a l\.fatine at an abandoned pistol range," the statement said. The land where the fire erupt- ed is leased to the state by ttie Marine Corps for eventual use as a state park. In the investigation, the state· menl said. a senior Marine of- ficial "will probe all matters con- nected with the fire, including the matter of why electrical welding equipment was being used on the state land. "Formal investigation oC the t.ype ordered involves acquiring s worn testimony. interrogation of witnesses and the collection or a ll pertinent documents," the statement said . Ma rin e officials s aid they would be unable to make any further comment on the fire until the formal investigation is com- pleted. J effr ey Asks Hinshaw to 'Resign Now' -Passing out small cards to violators seen on beaches, thal ask lbem to "clean up their act." -Asking youth groups to help design "scoopers" to.aid beach cleanup. -Creating essay and poster contests ror youths. -Asking realtors to distribute animal control information to renters. -Circulating periodic remin-- ders with utility bills. The only councilman to vote In favor or the ban was Paul Ryckoff, who said the ordinance ''might be worth a try. Jury Pick In Hearst Case Begun SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) - Patty Hearst went on tzial today, derended by a top criminal lawyer who will argue that she was a poor little rich girl who joined a bank robbery because she thought she was dead if s he Harry Jerrrey, a candidate ror didn't. the GOP nomination to the 40th Jury selection was tile first or· Cona:ressional District seat now der or business in the federal ·held by Andrew Hinshaw, called courtroom, and a panel of 250 on his political rival today to re~ citizens was called lot the s ign immediately because of his bizarre case of a kidnap victim bribery conviction Monday. who seemed to have joined her Jn a letter to Hinshaw, Jeffrey abductors. Thirty-six were ex· acknowledged that Hinshaw's re-eluded this mornin2. signation is not legally required. Picking the jury was expected "The personal reputation and to take al least two days. · integrity o{ our elected officials As is customary in federal is the cornerstone or our gov· trials, the judge interrogated ernmental system," Jeffrey jurors about their bias or other said. circumstances which would bar "When government officials them from serving. are found guilty of malfeasance The prosecution had SO eyewit· in office, the electorate has~the nessesand40photographstopro- right to demand their immediate ve that the 21-year~ld heiress resignation even though it is not stood in the bank lobby with a requ.ired by law," Jeffrey said, carbine in her hands two months Jeffrey is a Laguna Beach resi· after she was kidnaped by the Hugh Daniel Bean was found guilty of first degree murder latti; Monday in the 1u.asho.t slaying or Oran~e Coast College 1chol1r-- athlett1 Stephen ••Mtke .. Finklea-I or Fountain Valley. • The 1ame Orange County S\lperlor Court jury which found Bean guJlty must now determine: if Finklea'a killer should be ex·' ecuted or given• lifer;entence. The 9uilly verdict for Bean · ended nearly three days of jury deliberations. F1nkloa, 19, was shot and killed by two men who atiac~ed and robbed him Oct. 31, 1974, white be. was workinc aa a 7·Eleven: market clerk at the Fountain} Valley store at Euclid Street and Warner Avenue. eean. Impassive thrOllgbout the trtaJ, remained that way as J udge Wl111am L. Murray's clerk read the verdict. Bean, 24, was additionally found guilty or {irst degree armed robbery . Judge Murray ordered the jury to return to his· courtroom Feb. z for the opening of the trial's fmaJ phase-the recommendation or. rejection o( lbe death penaJty. ' Later today he will set the dato for opening arf uments in the. murder trial o the convicted. killer's brother, Charles Denni!f,. Bean, 22, who faces idenUcal charges. The brothers were arrested by Santa Ana police 24 hours afler;o the Finklea killing on Oct. 3J, 1974, on the basis of luformaUon supplied by a clerk who wa1 about to relieve Finklea from b1a counter duties. Finklea, a highly regarde4 athlete who was captain of the Orange Coast College wresWng team, was shot through the· mouth as he confronted bis two assailants. The Fountain Valley yooth was shot live more times as he s·ougbt refuge from his killers tn a tear storeroom at the market. Santa Ana police recovered what they said were the twO gWlS med in the killing and the $133 taken from Finklea during • search of the Be an broth~rs· car. Newport Man ~~:::~!~::~~. I Newport Beach restaurant was found dead in his apartmeot Monday night, police reported to- day, Par:amedics were called to the apartment of Mark James Dichtclmiller, 218 62nd St., but they were unable to revive him, The coroner is still investigat- ing the cause of death but police believe it may be a drug overp dose. Di.chteJmiller, who )"as found by his roommate, was reportedly manager or Hank's Ocean Ftont Cafe, 2300 W. Ocean Ftont, o well-known fishhouse near lbe Newport Pier. dent and a political newcomer. --5ymbionese LiberaUon Army. The congressional campaign is A key question in Patty's favor Train Rammed his rarst ertort at seeking elected was why? office. Randolph and Catherine NEW MARTINSVILLE, W. ''The voters or this district are J{earst arrived in the courthouse Va. (UPI> -Two crewmen were · fed up with what seems to be a about 30 minutes berore the trial killed and two others were in- never-ending series or scandals got under way and were met in a jured today wh en a freight train LAWYERS. • involving politicians in this area corridor by d efense attorney F. rammed into a line of box cars nt whatever it needs lo be ··on the and they are strongly demanding Lee Bailey who embraced Mrs. Brooklyn StaUon in this northern basis or experJence." an immediate change in this sad llearst and gave the parents West Virginia toWn, authorities During the first two years, state of affairs,'' Jerfrey said. words of encouragement. said. Travelers collected $6 .7 million ·-;:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::===========================~ ·but paid only $52,000 in claims, 11 Parrish said. Parrish agrees 'that many claims based on legal actions during the two years could turn up many years later . "But when we ask them where . they get their numbers, they say from other insurance companies' experience," Parrish said. "We just don't think the num· bers add up to what we think they should be," he added. In legislative hearings on medical malpract ice insurance, some doctors blam ed trial lawyers for bringing cosUy suits. and some trial lawyers blamed what they caUed faulty practices of doctors. THE PRICE IS RIGHT (or is it?) HAVl YOU lVER GONE INTO A STORE. AND iEFoRE A SALESMAN Al'f'ROACHED YOU. TRIED TO DETERMINE PRICES ON GOODS NOT MARKED? 0•-· (o••I PuOll\11•°"' (<>'""'"" "'"'''~" I'd!•-· •.• ""~"' .... (! -y , ... _. ......... ID< (Mt• .......... N••I00•1 ""'"'"· Hunllnqt"" ~·'"'"ounl•tll V•""'· ''''""· ~~''"'"""'~ v .. 11., •ft<I L•Ou<W 6""'-llhoU!n C<M,1 A »~Q'• "11"''"'1•d<I-1' P.,bO\""d .... ,..,..,., .. ......, ~w~ ... ,,. ,,,. P'"'''""' -""''""' P' ..... •l lJI) ...... ~ S.l' S!IHI, (D>I• Mtlo". C...lolO<"'• ftoo,., ' MANY CARPET STORES DO NOT HAVE PRICES IMDICATl.O ON THEIR SAMPLES. THE THIORY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN CHARGE ''WHAT THE TRAFFIC WILL IE.AR." Robert N , Weed P•••-•11 •ncl Pub!,,,._., Jack R. Curley \lie."''"°""' .ne c.. .... oo1 ""°N9N' ThOmas Kttvil Tr.cm.1i A. Murpti.lne -.... "'ft ........ Chlrlfl H:0Loos Richard P, Niii Mol"-' ....... [~ ... , I Co11n~il Action In action Monday niaht the Newport Beach City Coun-<il : . . DOG BAN: Tabled an ordinance that would have banned dog& from city beaches at all tlmtis, but vowed to re- open the i..saue in &O days, unJest a dogowners group sue· ce11fully f0Uow1 through on its self-policing plans. ANNEXATION: Approved an ordlnanc(! that will re- quire voter ,appr.oval fOf' anne1taUons in excess or 100 acres to the city. , • UCENSE t'EES: Refused to cut in half the fees senior citiiens pay for doc and cat Ucen.sa. MAJllNAPARK: Approved a tease until 1985 between Marinapark trailer residents and the city. AP POINTMENTS: Appointed Merritt Skilling, Curt 00.h and Robert CUrci to tho city'11 Trantportation Plan auuns Advl1<>1')' Comm111 .... TRVCK BAN: Moved tot~d readln1 on Feb. 9 an or· d.lnance thet would l)l'Ohlbf.t 111 tnN:U wei,hln1 more than three t.ont Crom ualng aevttal raldenU1l 1trut. In Corona del M1:r. The law would exempt city street tWeepers and truh trucks. I 1 - I • AT ALDEN'S PRICIS ARE POSTID OM ALL OF OUR SAMPLES SO THAT CUSTOMIRS CAM IROUSE 'JHROUGH THE SEl.ECTIOMS AMD KNOW WHAT THIY ARI! LOOICIMG AT. TOO. THHI IS ALWAYS THI POSSlllLITY OF A LOWD PRICI IF C:OMDmONS WARllAHT. *•••••• carpe DEN'S ..J • : iiisiiilatioii: "custom draperies 16'3 /'LACfNllA AVENUE • COSTA M!SA. CAllf. 92627 ' PHONf -~~'838 -646·23SS I I I .. . . . . . . . . ... . '• . . . .. ,. .. 27. 1976 N DAILY PILOT Tue day' " Clo ing Prices NEW .YORK STOCK EXCHANGE-Oaeck Your Kitelaen lmpi-oper Food Y ear'e HI b-Lowt Appur Evuy aturday ,.. ... $oltt ._. ~ "" Solt'l "'' $nit' Nt4 HEW 't'ORIC CU .. 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Ill -•• I ,,,.._ "' Mlfley '° 1~ II JS\oa h ....... _ 1 » 1 ""'. 1 tp ,, IMO 121 16 + " Hef<!Mt .IO 44 3'4 S311t-" Mlrcrtt G ' 10 10 + ~-"'9ool Or 1011. 1 ~ awo 1 tO t u 46 -~ Htrtlly l'ct 1 t >4 ttllt-"' Marlott tY>r. U IM W lo ,._..U.. J ' tO + ~ et-l\o\ t "S 1 U'H I.. HtUWll MU '2 1"' + \o\ MnllM I to )1 110 l9'e ~. l'WllalC.. I t0 11 20fl "--1 , .. , 1 44 •1 24 Ut\-1i41 .,... '1 ''~-~ INnh~ 1h12 )6 2J~ -"" ~lnlJ l0l4 Jtt 1 + t'e Ol'wh -" •• ,._ ' '" '",. 192 S4...-.. Min M I ~ • 211 It • "' ...,, Inc ·~ • 10 , ~ "' Dull . ...., 1 «1 IJ '" "'-+ \o\ n p 36 • 109 ... -I'-Mil c.., 60 • u u • 1,. """"'P' eo 1 1 ~ \11 Duh pt 1·~, SS tt + 't ~ Vc111 1111 t6 Sh '"' Miscoe,, 20 tt It 11 •~ PwterPI toll 12 2' I '"' Ouae Of I 1100 9S + 1 T• 1 Ide 11\oa Yo MAtonlle S4 i2 117 lHe "-'niSI eo. 1' le •1"-1~. Duh pf, • &.UO '""' + v. !!!'"··-'140 ' .. .,. -\It .tMu•rFo I \ ... 1011 '• ,..lrOIN '° t 215 2Jl'I . ~. OullP ,,, • • I •H4 --.. ...... l'IW$ • • s . . . MsCpln .tOd u ,... • \1 "-trlC, Ud n ~ "" =II~' It U4 2'-.-1-. ~rl C to 11 U Ulli MstnV I 02b 91 ''"" + • • flflrer 7w 14• 6SI 29 .,., lift Ct Ut 4 \.\ Hott,...f IO ' '1 1114 + II\ MMll11 1 lib II '1 10\lt \, Pl>tlp D 2 20 U 1• ~'"•-~ t 4141> U 741 IS. + .. Holl 1119'~ IJ 13 I MtttuE 14d 11 1 1'V. PIWltEI 1 M t 'ZOS t•~ v. Cluf'll\ pf 4\'J 4 .OV. Mal IM• SU 461 11.-..-'A M/fy OS 1 66 U 321 0 '1• \• PNIEJpl t11) &200 """ ''I Pn pf,..._, S 4111'1 -lh Holld A , I> I 211-9+ V. Meyer~c I t t H\\ '• PNIEtpl IV. 12.0 M V. \. I H • 2<M !t'I• • Yo Holl'($uQ l 49 "~ 'A Mays JW In I 3'tlo 'It Pll&I pf 7 t0 110 IS•t. + V. U>1 ? 11 , 11 llO tt•t. 1-V. Horl'ltl•~ lt IS IU ~HH '/\ MevtQ I ~ 20 '1 341,.. PllEI pl 4 .lo 110 4S DyMO In 40 11> It f~ HOllywl 1«It•11'2 49 +I MBPXI 40a 4 It 12'• •, PllEI pf l IO llOO '911'1 +I __. •-HO(Wfr I .M 9 JI 21,..+ IV• MCA In I 60 7 111 73 •, PN1 Sub IO 1 10 lHo Yo l:IY.ll•m• 1 t ~ 2f ~ Hori'°" CD • S1 2 McCordCO I • 11 11\\ 1 " Plllllp Mtlr I 1 S 1'42 ~J'lt -4 eOlll' I 04Q e 116 31\4 1-'It H<>tol11A14k I 1S 1~ McCrory Cp 1t l~ 1\ Pll lllP' Ind 9' S't. • \lo .scoCp .60 1 111 1e1o1. V. HONlllC&> 24 11 IOS 24~-Yt McOerm IO 6 411 '214 • ~ Pllllnpf 2SC 8 9'1• EHt .. n Air alt 4"-V. Holl IMI ,,M 11 IJO UYt + 11. McOonld CO 2' S21 .014 ~ PllllPtl 1 oO lS 41S S8 "'• l!HlGI" to I 1... t•\\ -'"' Houdlle ec>. • 2JI 12~ Mc0on0 40 9 Ill II '1 PNIVH 40ol 24 41 9111 EHIUtll l'h e 6 IS'lt ~ M .0 6 ll 14~ • Vii M<Gr E I 20 13 143 74' • t ._ PIOwi.. 1'° I ll 11\. Eull( I SW )0 .,, 111-.-1\. HOutF•O 24 I) ..., 1114 ..... McGr HI SI> 11 11 IS '. PifONG 1 tO • 11 1'l-. ..... 1!•111Cp 1IO10 , ... 32 .. -.... HouMF I 10 7 32' l'V•• .... Mcl(ff A I• • aJS 24..... • Pieri •mpn ,. s• •• E•1Clfltlf I " l 33 I II'> HouM pl 2" .. 41 • ~ Mcl..el!R IO 11 ISi SI•~. I'. PllltOuryC I 1S. 116 .,.,.. • "" EchllnM 41 " n 14"4, + .... ~Fpf 2• 1 I 3>'111 McLlhS I 60 10 13' n •.. . . Plone1C I 20 • 11 J2 ~. Eckd Jll ,. >O I~ 27~-It. HoinLP 1 .S.10 311 l4V.. McN~ll IO 1 9 10-., '• Pitney 8 M> e 313 ,... '• Eckd NC n 11 u 11f\. 'Al HouNIGM I ., 111 S4~ v. Meed c I 20 • ., ... 131/'t. I . PllFi>rO a . s 2o>o. 'I• IWllll I 4 t 13 41\f) , It. How"dJ 14 14 7SS ISV.-l'l Meadpf 180 •4 O , 11. PHUIO<\ • Stt 31' • • " EG .. ('; 14 I. 1JS ····-" ~I 20 2l 11"11 Meltl)f81 eo ltlg 4J • '• Plu•Ht 0 14 311 21•.-•• l!l«t A\SO( .. l ''• HWk A 80 • I 111• Mot4uw I 40 12 2 19~. PIM\ Revch ' )() lh-Yo EDS S'( SOo 11 tO Uh -'h HugtltlH 40 IS J S•I•-II\ M E I Corp 1 30S 4 •• Pl•yboy 12 44 l ' 1-'• Elect Memo ' 4S lllt HugtltlT <IO 14 301 .. .-..._ ~ ,.., 5'lot 6116 ~ 23"·. '. PPINHBMIMY 4,!!? ,! ,", "s'• ·~ Ele<M pf le 1 6 + \,\ Humana tO 10 U u -II\ Menne 20I 4 49 11Y> ·~ 11 YU • -. 1!1Ql11 H•ll 1' JO I"' • "' Hunt 0i liO n xll ll¥t Mere Sir 10 u • S9'11 -'11 Pol•r<Hd n 74 1110 :U'" ~ Elf•lr ln<I is 209 ''"' _ ~ Huuon E .o s JOO n~ t Vt Merell 1 .eon 111' 7011). •, Ponelerow S 4 Ul 11\fJ II. EIP<nC I 10 I S06 1311. t \<. HuyOCp ..010 l4 16 -I Mltr~lth 70 4 13 ""' '• Pocle T 609 16 6 II"<.-V. ~:::.er,' n 2, 2:: ~~: ~ HyOfoml ~ ,.!!_ m-. lo\ =:1:.1tUf 1: •m ~;, • ol~ ~~tnn1 ~ :~ ::::;:-~ E~yAlr I JI 100 •e\.\-l'l'a IC Ind I lO 7 101 17.,,-Yo ,._,pp1 I 60 at'2 27h • 1 ~1E1•p<t~11;io11, l~l 10)~::=·~ E~yln ~ 1• 1'S 12 + \.\ IC Ind pfA • l'2600 1' -~ Mtw~a 1>0 10''" 1 • rv It" • • Ein1vt 1 JOe 1o i21 11~ •c Ind p1J111 20 •~-,.., Mtn• , • 11 • • • "°' e1P116 11 n2 n 1 ...... •. l!MI LI 01d 1' tS S IOI l'Ntrm 103 4 • M G 2 1 16' 14''> -'Ill PotEI pf S'I• 010 st .. ~ EmpDt 111 10 l 14~. "• to.no p 2 C» II ., ,.\'. + .... Metrom 60 I .so ""' PotElpf s 46 ' Z 100 }4"11 ErnpO.ts ,10 6 3' 14~ + .,., lclfflS..lc I ' 21 1S11o-.... Me1Epf. 12 llO " +I ' PolEI pl 4... 1110 •7'••• I En;ethard 1 I 11' '7•1 • .. 1dt•l8pt 4~. I 1>S'-MIEpf I 31J 110 IQ•I) • .,, PPG1nd 1 90 11 204 38~ En;el pf .v. ' &100 170 ...,,.,, ldHI foy 4lt 6 us 8\• Ml Epl. 12F llO 11>'1). I Pt em Ind ,. I 14 11'' "' Ennl$8F 12 s 49 .-.-. " IOS'RHlty .... ''""-'-.... MGIC In 10 240 12• ••• PrPrf/moc• p1G:!"2 ..... 300, !.?'• .. ,. En$rCh I .0 7 106 25'/• -V. Ill Pwr 110 9 16' 24-l'w-V• MlchG~ 1 10 11 12 • • '• & • •• •• • £11il\pf 10 Jl lllPw pf 2 04 rt SO 22'/r-I Mich STub 1 SO 19.11, + \'. PrOdRn tO 14 8 10'• • '• tlOO 109 • 1 111Pw pf 2 13 1UO 231,-i + ,., M<llWpt 2'111 29 18'1) •, Proler 11 40 l lh 33' • + '• Ent .. ln I lO 7 " 2S • .... lllPw pf 4 12 1100 411'1-111> Microdot I I 7 ll.IOS. 21'"' I ., p s A Inc 79 61" '. Envirotech 12 2n "'"' " lllToolW SO 11 22 2S~• + Vol Mlcrowevo 11 14 1& • • PllS COi 1 lO 8 119 1&~• '• Equfulnc 2 10 9 2S ''• lfl'C)erllC 20 • 114 ,,,,... 'le Mldcont I 08 9 •• ,... • • PSE&G In 9 258 70 Equlmrll. .. t. S 10', + 'I• INA Cp 2 10 IS 103 371/• + I/, MtdSoU I 3? 9 1308 IS~• •, PSEGPI >OS 180 )4 • 1 EquGH 2 60 ' 18 '2 V• INA 111 I"• 1S 19\1• + 'lo Mldlllnd Ml Sl 1..._ PSEGpf S 28 dO SS + '' EqutLll 11111 11 ... ,...... Income C•P I s•. Mldld R 1 JO " 62 20~ •• PS EC.pl 1 10 1200 90 E~tnar'-1 U a 210 38'1• + 'h lncCln~ ~d ) 9'1•-1/o MllHLb I 28 8 71 73"' PSEGpf 9 62 l\0 10, • '• E~ulre 32 11 st S'I• " lndlenGlls 1 9 S 22~ 'lo MlltnBr 36a 9 124 12' • , • PSEC.PI 2 44 21 16 .. , Eslerll" yz a 69 l 'lt + 'Ill lndMlc pf 12 1180 109 -V. MM&M 1 JS 26 UIJ ~9l, '• PSE pf 12 2~ Elllyl CHO S 62 )0•1• v. lndM p(I,.. rlO 12V.+ IV. MlnnPL I S4 1 22 19~> '• d40 11/ '1 Elllylpl)40 9 41i, •11 lndPwLln 9 ,, 21 + ''• Ml•roAI,.. I 13 ... '• PuStnd11212 18S .,.. EYans PrOd • OJ •'41 \.\ lnd~ll I 20 1 1• IJ'll. + 'I'll MlnnEQ 28 S 19 8'e '• PSlnd pt 3 > t70 40'" I ExC.10 1 10 7 , .. l1+. ''II lneaco 011 •S1 IV. t V1 MloR11 l 30 1 111 11 PS NHo 1 llO 7 xJS 10 • 1• Excisr 1 1'° 10 lt'l-0 • •r. •no And 2 4 13 lll 14\lt + 14'o Mo P.K pf 1 • 26 w , ~~~:',';; 9 •r:~o JJ,'; • ;~ EXJtGrl so. tot 92'·• '• 1,nnodRConpf~I035 I :; ss21~:'~ MoPrlCl eO 5 20 .... P\lOl•<~r s .. 11 119 ''•• •• ~ ,._ nr:is , ~ Mol't>S 849 1 11 11'. ~ 2 '• "''-'V-40 14 101 1 • Int 112 40ol 10 180 46 /'J-Mobile Horn 1&9 4... '• PR ~1;:: '! 4~, '• =::~f.9,::j : ,1 : ~~ 4 : -;2~ :: 1 c ~~ ~ ''i1:i 1~"'= ';! =~~o3 :g 2: ·m ~~ .. : : ; ~~~ ~ ~ ; 'I~ m:: ~ Felrmtf' 6' e 31 12''" • \It lnsllcvpf I 1 • 9 lS'lr-~ MoNlwk DI 414 H . , '" P\l-.•Cp 96 9 128 It', _ , • "•••mlFpl I I ""·.I lntCoppr IO 7S J2 21 • 2 Mohwk Rb 1 s 24 18" -'• Purol.,. Fsll 90 s '. F.,.SIHI 40 U 4S 1111, t '• 1111991>" 32 I 33 91/o-''• Mol•crp 60 7 61 21~• , Far Wsl Fct 3 •"• _ 11, lnlerco I S2 10 112 4S1 • • V. MolyCpl 2•1; 1 33 Purt•lr ~ o-!-41\9-.ft Far•ti MIO SI ffi 12'" • .,_ ln1rcont Div 3 14 •to+ ''°" Monmt 1 20 4 1 11• • -'• Qualt041 ... 14 214 28 • '• Feodet's Cp 4 t • :"'e:~~~J i: 7~ 2~~;=.~ ~~mA '! ·'1 111002s •'o• ' :~ c;au.o pt9 s. 1400 106'' FedrlCol.O 4 •lt U _,.. ....... '""""~ •v• • "QuakSOI n11 11 tt•~-'• Fed Mooul 1 n S2 14~-~ lntFI..,, V JI lJS 27 -1 Mons.<>1.010 Ml 17'• '• OuHtor Oll 32 I> • FdNllMf to 1 >tt 1St\-'-\ lnlH"v I 10 • '412 2.Sll'J • • NrfHls pf 2-" 4 .. I FedP•p 1 60 6 11 21'--V. lnll MlnOI l 4 •10 J1..,._ "' Mon!Olt 2 01 7 10 21 + 1, OuHlor pf 2 • 1011 + V> FdPpfl 110 10 11.,.._ 14 11111 Mlnlne 7 " ,,,.._ ~ MonPw I 80 I SO 21V.-'• Ral"on ~ ~31749 ,.., FedSh I 40 • t 11 lntMllllf Ill) 7 <IO 1'~ • Mlll9S I eo. S4 ?2h • •, ~or.\ 24 IS 701 lnlN<k 1,«lol 10 111 2~-MrH!yM 1111111 7S 8''•-'• Rem41CMI I" 18 410 4>., '• ~rro CI 10 ' IS nYt 71~ Intl PeP9r 114 573 .,.,,,_ V. Mt¥>r M<. 10 S 310 J1~ + 1~ RllllCo In 40 1>1 9~, t '•lo FlbreO<d(ft 1S 1111.-11. lnllReclf IS 11 ~-v. Mo~Pl8012 •04 sav.-'• ~~pldA'":'r s 1,2s 30·:· ' F'~1Fcl •• b .. 's •• lnl T .. T I 60 10 3011 77'h + v. Mor<snl(n I • J2 22 • ...,ybslO I 1 ,. • • F"'u ,. •9 4"' • ·~ I T &t!H 4 • S3 + 'II. Mone El Pr 9 31;, ,,.. Rayc11n11 48 6 31 1' -'" Id Be 2 fO 1 19'• I 0 14111 16 S41~ • 'h MoneSh JO • 11S 10'• I\\ Raytr..on 1 11 l34 .. , .. '• "lelclerMl I 2J SI 19'1• I ,.. .,.J , 13 "''It >< 1 T A 30 3, 1 RCA Corp 1 18 2091 2•'•-1 > Flllrol Corp s II •• ,.._ \4t I Tl.T ~ .... I(~ • ·s .,.. + • M 91! r m ' •• RCA CY pt• )0 .. -\. Fi11CI se 20 6 , 10~-"' • • • 49V.. ~ MorlNor .. 10 212 IS''-RCA l'~ 100 •• F1nc1F1<1 SIC s 2•0 1 TTf 1v. 60s »~+ ""' Motorola 1040 292 47'19 -•, P' ., • 1 ... • Flr$1M I 10 11 5()'I ~~ + :;; I T.. p«) S 19 SS'IJ + 'I• Ml Fuel I 41 14 97 33\'i -\'> q:e::: f; • :g : ~ • F11Cl\ar1 Sit ' 608 16Vt • • '1nt1'~c:s:' 20s • :u3 ,n~ +I~ MtSllhl I~, 8 '2104 208..... t:d&llt tO 4 110 18 •• 'I• Fst O\lc % 7 2S8 17'1t + -" n •·..-• MUii ores ..., .. -'1• Redm.tn 1na tOJ J¥tt \air> ""' p I •''°' ( ,.. l .. I I so R•no '• 10 .. , ""' 1<. So<~ue El •I tt•• 'a SiltflOMI H t2 I) It~ '• SouarO I 10 11 lt'f ,. t I 11 I SQulDO to 11 111 36"'1 l&o St•ly M 1 to ) J?'f .. , .. _ I~ \I llrnd 1 14 11 U JI > • '• ~:;':.':.'n~ ~ 2S z~ !t "'· 1 • • I Sid Otl C•I 2 • no JI + •• StOllnd 2 )0 I '°' 41'• I SlOll()h 1 ,. 20 49~ ~.~ -1~. I SldOll pf J.11.. t SO • $1Poor 1 tl• •O 2l Std PrStl 40 J &I 7'" • 't Sid Pruv '611 6 •'Ill• '• St•nclex SI> 6 '3 10"' • ~ s1enwk 1 04 12 2l 24'" • 1 • Stt1nro .0 JO 1v1 • '. Starr1tlt 1 (I 71 191~ • "' S1Mu1ual Iv • I~ SIMllSc 1 0) •O I 1 l.> Sttuffer l 40 10 109 1011• Slt"lll 49 l S 7 • '• S1erlOr9 10 I 1'1 19~ • '• ! Sll!rlPre' S1 6 ~ S"4t • '• Slerdenl •O 11 91 u 1, •, Sceve11' tlO 1J 6'1 22·~ • I • Stewwn 1 96 q n 21'<• • ', Slo«lyV 1 20 1 so 20 I • Slo....,Cltt .0 4 6 I~'• • ', SlonW 1 llb I 12 5' • ._ S10P6S 1 10 7 11 n•. • " Sloter Brd 1 11 I I II•• '-SlrldeRll 10 a 12• u • •• •. SlllOeW I 31 I 8 •31 1 " SluotWplS 1 71 +2 SluW pl 1 40 10 37'• • '• S...w Shoe tt U9 4\\ , S..O l'<Ol)n 1 I &IJ ""' • \oo S..Cre,1 l04 S 4 •"'• Sun Chm 40 21 tl • • Sun 011 11 1 ,. 19\11 '• S..n011pf ,.,. S7 JS·~ • I. Sunbeam 1 14 102 22'• -'• SunslrnO IO 6 160 lh1 '11 Sun\lrpl l'"> J 40 • '• SuMhll'\e )6 .. :ro 11 'IJ • • • Sup Oil I IO 10 116 161"•-1 , 5-rGn 20 19 1'1 S"' ', SUl>l '>COpe 9 190 21 • 1' 1 SuprV•I 1 10 I 60 21•• • ~. ~l!~kMIU: 9 .: I~ l '• Syt>ron 84 10 181 19" • '• Syt>rnpl 2 40 9 J8 1 • ' Sys1ron Don 8 17 6 , ', -TT- Tal18c'I 80 10 u 2111. 1• l a1co11 N11 30 J 1. Talley In 60 6 93 8 Talley pf 1 n 10•. l•mpE I 04 9 198 lH', Tandy Corp 12 101S 34~. 1 Tendycral 11 l>H •~ 21 • T ac1>anC 20 70 8>\ • 11• Tecnocar 101\ 625 JP. '• Techncolor J 29 Sl, '• Techn1con 1' SJ'l 13 • '• Teklron• 2• 16 2S9 Sl + ~ Telecor lO II 10 ••· •. Tele<JyM l k 9 6SS :ro~. • I • Teleoyn pl 6 8 69 •I''' T elepromp 14S4 1' • + • + Telex Corp 9 14 2•1 + '' Ttneco I 76 7 811 29'> Tt MC pl S~1 9 110'• + 11 • TuoroPel 1 4 891 16"' lt\Or pU 16 511 79 •. TUoKO 1 9 '"'' 26"'• '• TtaCBnsll 1 12 91 31 ltaElr I 70 1 IS7 291 ... -1 ... • TaET pt 2'• 5' "" + ••I TaGsTr I 89 9 114 ll'• TaGosTpl 1'1) 4 32~•, 1'• Tu9ull I 20 8 111 Jo•,1-• .. Tea.Hind 19 10 6 14 Tu Ins Ir I ,2 J80 11 \'II 2'11 Tonini CO 1 10.J 7 • \oo Tes 011 0111 a 17J •H• • •, Tt1Pf:Ld Tr 17 12 19 I• Te•Ulll 114 11 447 211, • ... T~sfl I ndu\I 6 t 9 ... + , .. ,..,.,,on 1 10 10 146 2• + \, Texlrpf 2 08 , 4 29~ • 't Teslrpl 1 AO Jl 77~• .. 'lo Tnlokol 10 I 101 16 ThmBell 76 21 SO 36 11 -'o Storage 'Waste' lJ> SYJ.\'lA PORTt;R /First of two<olumnsJ Ila' c vou found thnt • pcrf e<:t" pl nee under the sink lo store fool'> Do you store foods in the cabinets thltl nre so <·onven1cntly built m O\ cr the :-.tove·1 Oo you automatically use lhc taste test to bt.· sun· foods are still ~ood '1 H your nni.wcr b yes to uny of these questions. you are throwing aw••Y largl• sums of money each year m the l k1trhen poit~ilJly hundred., of dollar~ in your own case ,Jone bec~usr of your improper !.tor age of food ''IT'LL Nl:Vt:R HAPPf:N, but tf th1· Food ,1n d urul: /\tl Money's mm1strat1on were lo 10 Worth spect ('V(•ry ram1ly kitchen 1rt lhe U S Cor , proper storage of foods ; .. { \ # most of them probably would nunk," admits Jane Heenan, * of the Food and Drug Adm1mstrat1on's consumer education and information staff To be spec1f1c : Under the sank ts not only far from the "perfect" place lo store food. 1t 's also a dangerous spot Pipes passing through the area can leak and provide unsealable openmgs to draw bug" as well. Avoid this popular s pot, the FDA warns • • As for s torng(' shdv<'s near your sto\'e, ~ou're mv1tmg loss because the foods dry up in these places Even dry mix· es, whtt.'h may be held at room temperature. will not keep • we11 nt>ar the stov<'. food handling experts emphasize. ANO Tiit: TASTf: test 1s actually <1 way of begging for medical bills You don't h.ive to s wallow foods that have I gone bad to b1.· µ01 ::;oncd If 1t 'sold food and you have reasons to doubt its fn•s hness, don't taste Throw 1t away. Almost always when t have wnllen about saving money· on food. I have stressed food s hopping hints. But 1t well may be lhal more of your food dollars are lost through improper storage of food than through poor shopping practices To assure the safety and quality of the food you have bought, proper storage 1s 1mperat1ve So. draw up a checklist to inspect your kitchen: be your own inspector: make a hst of the changes that you discover are needed - and then make them · -THOROUGHLY CHECK the cabinets underneath the kitchen sink, or any cabinets through w h1ch water pipes. dram pipes or heating pipes pass. This 1s a favorite s1>9t to s tore sacks of onions or potatoes. Fsll 8U I 10 11 20S 31'111 + 11\ lnlf)lll>t 1 6 4S 19 -.,.. Munfd pf •O IO ""' + '"' Rletct l•a lS 46 1411•-'" "'' MIH 36 10 137 I 1'. 'lo :::i~:it.~ : ~ 2~ 13"' ..... Munsne I 08 2I 2' 19~ + '· Reeves I 80 • 20 17"'6-v. FsN8os 1 M 7 172~ 24"' •11 In" Und 24 7 1S1 1iZ; • "' Mur~11 20 % 3 ~ 2~'11 • ~. Reochold 61> s 81> ll'h FstNS Bnc 2 1 2b 22~+ v. l-eBHI In 3 '3 27¥. + ~. MMur ""601 1 491 16 -~ RetSlore b4 8 S 8'1>-'It FsPaCp I 3' 12 343 16 t ~ l-v"a El 1 ""14 23 • ""Y "'' "> RellMIC El 1 8 '43 2Q.\-•-\l'J FUPennMo S 2"\f '"' "" l4-h Mul0m l32 11 IS-14 -V. Re1Elec:pl3 2058 FstURI E 9' 12 13 10"-'• lowellG I 72 1 92 19'1t + Mytrs L 40 241 41 71, Athanct Gr 19 9 ThOmln 400 13 5 9'1 TllomJW SO JS IOS 8"4-It TllrlllyO fO IJ 11>8 71, • r, TICOr11<1tn 1 16 2S9 13'11. '. TlcleMfr 10 6 11 30'• • " Tlqerlll IOd ll 306 1S1o-~ Time Inc 115 161 67 Perhaps you have placed ltqUJds or canned goods here -but foods never should be stored in these cabinets. They attract insects, even rodents, through openmgs that you'll find almost 1mposs1 ble to seal adequately Also. leakage from the pipes can damage the food products, causing cans , ' for ins tance, lo become overheated or rusty Never store anything you plan to eat next to potent • i household chemicals Bottles of cleaning chemicals can too easily be m1!.taken for bottles of soft drinks or other foods Fs1V8nk 45 9 Sb >'11 , ::::~~IJ ~ l~~ mz! NablK01~ ~"ltv•-'A AelncG pf8 2 11•1• • FsWlsC 1 7' 1 •14 10\oo + '" lpc;o Ho"'ltl 10 19 4~ " N•lco Cll n 21 JS JJ~. • ... Aeln<G plC . 44 13\11• 'I• FIS<llM 110 9 2S 111• •II/• ITE Imp IO II 307 23 ..... + ,., Nerco Sc 60 1 it2S 12 , Ve RepuOllc Cp 7 8S IV>+ Wt Fisher F 40 • 41> 11 ~. '• lltll.COrprtn 71 1l\9-v, NHhlMIC 60IS 10 llV•-'• RepFlnS IO 7 18 111/e+ 1, FISl\erS< 20 I 32 1? I TEL Cp 20 6 ti> 7~ NatAlrln SO 11 IS lJ\I) ~. AepMot Inv ' 16 I~+ V. FIHIEnl l2l1 240 111/i-t \'\ IU lnll IS 4 llM ll"1t , N•l ... 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Tyco1A1> 20 10 1M 14 + '• Tyltr Cp 1>0 s 61 26'.4 + ~ ~u­UALlnc 60a 21 40l> I 26 1'1> UAL pl A 40 l 26'1'1-'• UARCO I 30 s 2S 21 \1. I I UGI Cp 1 32 1 41 lS t "• U G I pf2 IS 1110 28 '" UMC I nOu 1 9 61 11 ~ + ~t !)MET Trsf , 2 Ill} Ll"arco so 4 16 ·~· + .,. r Un 8ncp 84 8 110 81, ~~,~~;:'f 4J 1'l m ~~;~ :~I Un Commrt 6 J~ 1 • '"t 011 and vinegar may make a dellc1ous salad dressing -but not 011 and a taste less but d angerous chemical -G IVE SPECIAL care lo foods thal should t>c refrigerated or frozen, for bactcna m these foods multiply with amazing rap1ruty under favorable cond1t10ns. Cold foods s hould be kept cold. With this guide m mind. look at the open surfaces in your kitchen. Any meat thawing at room temperature? Do you put away that carton of milk or quart of orange JWCC as soon as you return from the supermarket'> -Rethink your W3\S or keeping bread. ror say FDA ex- perts. under normal cond1t1ons, bread keeps fresher longer al room temperatures than in the r efrigerator. In hot, humid weather . bread 1s bcllcr protected against mold in the refrigerator. -GO OVER YOUR stock of canned goods, reaching all the way to the back of the mo~t inaccessible shelf Dust on the cans? ll's time to clean the lops Any foreign matter on the tops of the cans will be pressed into the food itself dunng the opening -When you p ick up the can, 1( 1t s ticks slightly, 1t could hove leakage, the FDA warns Return the can to the store. Californians Lose Union Corpll 19 S\4 '• Pur has• p Un El pl2 n SJ 28' ..... Un EllP' I 29 8 120 1'\oi• 1 • c ll1g ower Un El pl J'it 1t.0 JS + 1 Un Elec pf• 1SO •2 Un Et pl 4111 1200 •7 + '• J Un El pf 6 40 1)0 6)"•. 1 UnEI p! 7 14 l lCO 7S Un Fld,illlf 11 3) S • -'• UnOCal I 98 I 111 •s•, Un()l(pl 2' t IS S9' t • ', Un P.c 'eo IS 11\ ,, •• ' u Pac pl • 1 • 1 l , , • • SACRAMENTO <UPI> -Personal income of Caltfor- ruans during Jul\ through September last year tncr('ascd by 8 7 percent from the same penod tn 1974 lo total Sl38 9 billion. the Rot.trd of l'.:Quahzat1on has reported Un1onam s I ' Unlroyal SO IJ 2~ 8..._-•, un .. 01a•pl • 16'0 811 .. • Uld Br •nd~ t.6 6 • -'• UnCorp 721> 31 8 '' Uld Brno pl 13 B • ' UldFncol 20 s '7 7 ..... U~SPL 12 1 JSl 16l , • l, Uld Gu.trly IS 43 l'"o '• llowe\C•r. the board said purchasing power was actual ly lower than a ~<·ar earlier "because 1t was eroded by both higher prices and higher ta:-.cs as mcreasmg income moved taxpayers into h1~her ta\ bra<'k<'ls " Untllltu? 31 & q4 , ....... '• UnlndC 40Q 1> l 2 11 • Po • Unlnd pt •1 70 '"° + » Uld Inns 10 9 SJ ""' '• The board also s aid t<.1x:1ble s.1les m California t otaled St8 9 btlhon dunn~ the thml qu3rl{'r rose 7 4 percent from thr same quarter in 1971 UnJ,y8 I CM 7 15 10" • •,. Uld MM 10 101 17 -11, Un Nuclear 24 909 20't.-1~ Uld PkC Mn 12 1'1> Un"-lno 41 4 ~ 12\t + •10 USFlt»I 2 4112 119 JS"'-+ V• USFo5< Sold 11 111.4 US Gyp I 60 21 119 20119 + \I• USGypt 1 IO 3 1'"4-V• , USHOme Cp 7J •~-YI Mark~t l11d(-.re11 Due to late transmission today's listing will not appear in the Daily Pilot. USlnduS 10 JIO .v,-V. I d .. ~ us1..e.se 11 1 '° '""'-""' Gainer• an &JO•~• U S Realty 61 2" US ShOe 9S 10 128 2J... ''-Now York iUPI I -The lollowlnq 1151 uss1ee1 2 IO 1 I~ 19.rn. .. n. I ,hows 1114! slotk' lllM havP et•~ most US Tob 'IO 11 lJ 19111 "• and lost 111e mo\I bl~to on 11trcent ol UldTtchnl 2 1 201 "~' t V. ch•nQe on 1ne Ntw 'l'orll Stock UldTec.11 pfl • 10 12'~-v, E•clla1>99 UnlTtl 1 12 10 1J6 ....... v.. Nel and Ptl"P"l•O«" (l\lf\QU are 11\t UnlTtl wls SI 2 dlllertnc!I between T~ prtY•nll' cl°'l"9 UnlTpf" 1'1 25 21 • "' prl" &!Id llw' currtnl (IO'l•"'J price UINTelpfl'> 5 23">-l"t GAINERS Uflltrod 05cl 10 81 ...... .... I Whilltltr Co )\,. ' UP IS 4 Unlv•r 1 68 • 1 S1't• • "'-1 ~tpubllC CD I' • 11 • Up IS l Newl'ork 15 ltlo•t Acdre NEW YORX: IUP11 -Tiie lS .xii~ stocks lr.•ded on Ille Ne"'I SIOCll E •<h•noe T uesoav S•IH Close 30' • ,. Citicorp .. S 11 700 u A L Inc 410 100 Intl T~t& T'I , • JlJ SOO eo.stal St Gs , , )'7 000 std 011 Calll , • 2"9 000 Se•r•~ G 0 .... 230 000 Civlf 011 Corp • 2n 900 R C A Cort>n 220 SOO Arn Tel& Ttl 2~ 000 Honty~ll 20• 900 Pttlllp Morrl~ • 201 700 T .. eco 18' MO K,..~qe S '> 181 400 COii Edison 179 •OO Frsl Na! 8~1n •11 l>OO 11·~ 10'1) 31 lS'~ 2•'• 2•'• ,,.,, •9 S31't 2b..,. J2 11 20• ~t Yori\ ."t _,,, + '· .. '• + ~ .. '. + '' -''• . '. • I -· + ,,., -1'· . '• -\• Unlvl.T 1 11 1 11 27 + 1• 3 L•bfr1V L pt , • • ... 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J SO WlsEIP f.'111 •lt6 1' + " W•lkflJ IGb 1• -~ '°' W..UI ll ,, «I 1CW4 U \'lo Wl'Elpf I... . •1"0 1112· +)\lo W•e:: «>1• I ~· ~ Mlt~o1\l\J I .. •'--""' WbEl"'1-.,U20 ·fi~+1• .,. , eo ~ 1• • ~ Wt.,...b 1 ~ a '' ,,.. \Mt<O. uo If + ~ WNll lt>CS If> •lo't Wt~IO 4'141 '-IMtOpfUS .. , ~·-Wltll pf 2 Sk !OH \t 'WtYr pf t.80 , 147 5' lo\ WIKPS 1•10 lie.-la Wtethef 40 e 1121 '" 11111MF,.r9 A ti IJ• IO'li-14 Wlko CI to tJ • • ._ WtMC»I QI 11 IP ,,. • -W!llt"IH $U j " ""' YlolkOIJf US .. t •l ' + t WttlMtL.6022 •t ·-II\ Wl'llitltl'f•··•IOO • +1Y. WONWI &1• 11 • ~ WeltMlll 1l t acl tlVi • W!IMI llC S • l'O 47~ • ~ Mtfll(O 60 6 ..S Ul4 t • :I \ •• DAILY PILOT TUteday,Janu11ty27, 1976 Two Shows Opening at UCI Two new producUons are open ing on' the Ora n ge Coast t his weeken d -both on Thursday and both at UC Irvine. Intermission Tom Titus T H E MU S I CAL "Gypsy" continues on stage at two theaters, a Sebastian's West Dinner P l ay h o use a nd th e Westminster Communi- ty Theater <the latter to be reviewed on Thurs· day). Audrey Sperling, John Moran and Denise Dales head the cast at Sebastian's, 140 Avenida Pico, San Clemente, with perform a n ces every night but Monday at varying curtain times. Reservations 492-9950. UCl's fine arts depart- ment will unveil Ten- nessee Williams' all- ti me c lassic "A Street· rar Nam ed Desire" in the main Fin e Arts Village Theater at the same time Bertolt Brecht 's .. In the Jungle of the Cities" goes on s tage at the Little Theater 10 Humanilles Hall Curtain time for both is 8 o'clock. AS HL E Y CARR is direrting "Streetcar," which features Neta Leighton as Blanche, Joh n Redaelli as Stanley. Kimberly Cole as Stella and J ohn S h epard as Mitch . Others in the U Cl cast are M ark Sic i liani, Christy Dwyer, Cassan- dra Moore, Janice Arkatov, John Hovannis· ti an, Haydn Kramer. Carole Cooney and Paul Hell an "Streetcar" will be presented Thursday through Saturday of this week and next . Performa n ces of "Jungle of the Cities" will be given T hursday through Saturday only. Tickets for both may be obtained b y calling 833-6617. COMPLET I NG its two-weekend engage- ment al Golden West College is the drama "That Championship Season," a Joint produc- tion of GWC and the I rvine Community Theater Onofre Gutier- rez. Clark Burson, Alan Levy, Randy Keene and Jack Byron comprise the cast. Final performances will be given Thursday through Saturday at 8: 30 and Sunday at 5 p.m m the main theater on the Huntington Beach cam· pus. Reservations 892-7711 , extension 545. The Westminster pro· duction plays Friday and Saturday at 8 :30 with Doris Allen, Sue Pelli- grini and Don George in the priqcipal roles at 7272 Map l e Ave .. Westminster. Reserva- tions 893-8626. ALSO continuing on Orange Coast stages this week are: -·'T h e National Health'· at South Coast Thre e Television I Specials Upcoming '"l DA TS OF THE COM>Ott• llJ -CHINA TOW>r llU ~ MAIY. cun LUIV- '°V AHISHIMG POINr- '"GOHIE IH 60 SECONDS• IP'GI '°HUSTU'" "'TMIE GAMILU'" llU 4th Annu al FESTIVAL OF WHALES 3 Weekends January 30 February 15 W hole Watch Cruises Free Events for the Entire family Morine l ectures, Exhibits & Movies A mphibious Boot Rides M usical Entertainment See Program of Evenfa in Area Businesses Where? San Diego Freeway "5'' meets Pacific COdSt Highway '' 1" Information Centers: Marina Inn. Motel & Dana Wharf Sportfishing THE SLI M GOURMET Recipes to add d ining pleasure while subtracting calories. Wednesday in t he DAILY PILOT LOS ANGELES (AP) -Television specials coming up : Orson Welles and Gene KeJly will appear on "The First 50 Years," NBC's four-hour salute to its own history, appearing on the network in Nov. ember. Telly Savalas' guests for his Feb. 18 CBS speciaJ "Telly ... Who Loves Ya, Baby?" will be Diahann Car roll, Barbara Eden and Cloris Leachman. ''Life Goes to the Movies," based on the bestselling book will be produced by Jack Haley Jr. and 20th Century· Fox for NBC. A -rME llUll IEUTr IP'Gt V "KtUHFOlCIE'" A "'Fl.ESH CiOlDON" Y -CHIHLIADHS• 11) '"WILD PAHY" Ill • "'IBMCAaHA TIOM OF ma ,.OUD" ll t , THE CIT Y SHOPPING CENTRE ORANGE •532.sn1 11-\ CITY CENTRE CINEMA~ ... S.A. FRWY IMANCHESTEA EX.I G.G. FRWY tCITY DR. EX.I "WILD PARTY" (R) A "REI NCARNATION OF y PETER PROUD" (R) "R.ISH CiOll>OK'" Il l "'TMI CHHILUDBS'" "KIUH FOICE• "'STU W DOGS• (IJ S ADDLE BACK PLAZA ( t N • MA I n Jll u •01o•n•D•' •O'!'' no \11• 1•• uqua WB.SH "Wlt.D PAWTY" ..... ,,., '1!'.INCARNATIDN OF PETER PIDUD" l:I ....... ,,,. AUJM DROM '111t WAY OUT" (R) 4:05-7:35 "DfATH WISH" (I) 2:20-S:S0-9 :20 4:01-7:10 "TAKE THE MONEY & RUN" 2: lW :oo-9:45 "OtlTM WISM" 6:J~9 :SO ''Wit.I PAITf' (I) 7:H "lfJHCMNATilf 8f Pml PIOR" 6:00-t :40 • film by STANJ:EY K!JBRICK RYAN O'NEAl. • MARISA BERENSON ~MAOlllFICll'.NT 11'.NTDtTAINMINT, IUMl'TUOUS, LUSH, 001104!0UI • T MlllLLlllO , HAU NTI NG ... ~INO ™I! WM11 HfTO A WOllLD OF LOllQ AOO. AND Olll'.ATilfG TM( CIMO Oii flllAQIC -llll0\1111'.S ACCOlll'LISH ANO f f.W 0 11111'.CfOllS A HEMl'T IN A L"( ,,._ ............... ,.-.o•c••10~\jl!lllJIJ·•• Ma~ Pl.US llWf ,..,.. ... ..., '~.~~, .•• ~ HUNTINGTON CINEMA tl.ACM••&llS._M I 147·'601 147.U 17 The M .. terplec. Of Love end SubmlH lon Thet Stunn•d Frenc. Repertory. 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Performances at 8 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday with a 3 p.m. matinee Sunday. Reservations 646·1363. Forest " at the Laguna · -"Th e Pet r it~ed ~~~~~~!!!~ Moulton Pla yhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Lag un a B eac h . Perform a nces Tuesday through Saturday at 8:30 through Feb. 7. Reserva· lions 494-0743. -"HOW THE Other Ha lf Loves" at the Hunt- ington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Ma in St.. Hunt· i ng t on Beac h . Performan ces Fridays and Saturdays through Feb. 14 at 8 :30. Reserva· lions 842-5421. -"Th e H appiest Mill ionaire" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. in the Community Center . a u d ito r i u m o n the Or ange County Fair- grounds. Perform an ces Friday and Saturday at 8:30 . Rese r vations 556·5391. -"You Know I Can't Hear You Wh en the Water 's Running" at the San Clemente Theater, 202 Aven ida Cabrillo, San C l emente. Perform ances T hursday through Saturday at 8:30 until F eb. 7. Reserva- tions 492-0465. US St1fl1wrr S49·JJS1 "" u1111K '4CSMC~ '11£ FUW OYEI TII CltlDO'S NEST" (I) 1:.>• a,,., S.TJIU"-1-1:1_, .. ,,. .. ,.,, . • I MUT 1:41 IA.T/WM-1:1 ~ '100$1£1 COGBURN" ...... , ....... .). '4T/IUM-i:tM'4a.lt:H CINEMALAND "STORY OF O" (X) 6'41MU .. l•.J1 UTJMM-l:J .. J:ll l'"'4.'4S-a:J .. 1•.u WALT£R MATTHAU GEORGE BURNS RICMAAt> llEH.IAMIN WINNER 5 OOUXH GLOBE NOMINATIONS i--. --....... ....__., edwards BRISTDl CINEMA SPECIAL. REDUCED FAML Y PRICES FOR TIIS GREAT FAMILY PROGRAM The UJe and TIJllh of GRJZZtt ADAMS • - ·~ti ) '°' ~·1-.•••••ocoo•• .. J_ -............ ,,,, _ ......... _, _., •• 11!111 •• .... ___ , ... .. .., .... . -~ ... .... _, ... _ .. , " ... , ... -......... ·-----"-..... . ..... •1•111•· •••r-=.::a.=";·1) .. e!i:L,..••••aMa••. •-11-Mi---.. ----...J. ..... •• llOOl .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...... ,_,llllm_ . 1 •• 1 ....... ~ fun a 'flMIS °' OllULY . \ ~ . ML su::::..w "' , .. , lllTllT ....... IOllT. llO '&SMI • I -:e_~ Jun a '::.. C: OllULT ._ ...... __ ... .__...,..;...;•--._,. ML IUflU IMSllU 111 --·--·~ UDY UDY,_ UGWmlftllDIVI.,. ~.-.- PllQO ...... C.t.110 UMO .\CO\.OHS SOY CMICAMO T MIXICAMO IOMOI MOYIOS _ .. ,.. ..... A p CAN.....m"9 ,.._. IAID9nlOM,. PLUS "NO WAY OUT" ards BRISTOL CINEMA - O"' .. Orange Coast .. • • EDITION T oday's Clo Ing N.Y.Stoeks 1-1~ ...... , .. VOL. 69, NO. 27, 2 SECTIONS, 30 .PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1976 C TEN CENTS Lawyers' hisuranCe Next to Skyrock'et SACRAMENTO (AP) -The same company that boosted medical malpractice insurance to strike-j.rlggering levels is giv- ing California 'a lawyers a similar boost, says the State Bar. William Shannon Parrish of Oakland, the acting president of the State Bar, said Monday the lawyers' professio~al liability in- surance, also called "errors and omissions policies," is to go up 383 percent March 16. A number of doctors in Southern California have walked off the job because 9,500 received BROWN GIVING UP ON MALPRACTICE? ·As increases of 327 percent. This had been cut by the state insurance commissioner from a requested increase of 486 percent. What's Be Doing Bere? Actor Paul Newman, well known for his penchant for auto racing, ls competing in a different sort of contest at UC Irvine. To find out what he's doing and why, see Page A3. San Clemente Fire Caused by Marines? By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL Of Ille D•llY f>lklt 5'9tf Preliminary investigation shows that a 2,400·acre brush rire . that destroyed 14 San Clemente homes was caused bv a sp:trk from welding equipment being used on Camp Pendleton last Wednesday morning, Marine Corps officials said today. In a brief statement, officials said a further investigation has been ordered that will take at least a month to complete. "The cause of the fire was shown to be a spark from elec- trical welding equipment which was being operated by a Marine at an abandoned pistol range," the statement said. The land where the fire erupt- ed is leased to the state by the Marine Corps for eventual use as (See MARINES, Page A2) Sweet Streak . Nude Cake Popper ·Neethd Student job opportunities come in many different ways. Consider this ad, tacked up on the Sad· dleback College bulletin board: ''Wanted: A young man to jilmp out of.a birthday cake.at wife's biTthday party. Time: Approzimotely 9 p .m. Feb. 7. P.ay: $25 for OM hour'• t-ime. T1ril offer iutrfctly on tM up. and up. • l'm serious. Call Bill or P.am Gro.t.s at :r:tr·U%Z by Jan. 29." The ad, placed by a Mission Viejo couple to add some zest 1.o the wife's 30th birthday, has found no takers so far. A possible drawback: The assignment calls for a nude appearaqce. Mrs. Gross, wife of a security analyst, said her h us band MARKET GOES UP AND DOWN NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market bounced around er· ratically today, encountertng ~riodlc waves or profit taking. Tradina remained heavy. Prices started out on a weak note, came on strona at mld- MSsio.n and then fell back again --··'-proflt"taken and blu'ers-vted lor dominance. The Dow Jonu loduatrial averaae. of ao atockl Joet 3.07 polntato957.81. (Tables, Bn, ' ,, originally intended the cake· popping as a surprise but that she got onto him. So they're planning to spring the surprise on 15 couples who have been invited to the party. "We looked into a theatrical agency in Los Angeles that of- fered this kind of service but they charge $125 which is a little steep," she reports. "So we picked Saddleback College which is the closest place to advertise. We thought there might be a kid around who'd want to do something crazy like that." To date the Grosses have re· ceived only one call from a stu- dent who said he•d have to "think about it" upon learning that the cake pop was to be performed in the nude. The Grosses are anxious to hear from qualified applicants but they don't want their telephone n umber known because of the posslblllty or crank calls. J ust who will make the final selection from all the can· didates-lf there a,n, any brave enouab to ste11 forward-hasn't been determined ... , hadn't thouaht about that," Mra. Gross coo.f eaaed.. One thins'• sure t.houlh. Mrs. Gross bas had 10 much run or- aaalsJAa the. party that she sa~ "I haven't had a chaoca to think about tumina 30. ·' In both cases, it's the Travelers Insurance Co., Parrish said in an interview. The State Bar is investigating at least two alternatives. One would be a bar.sponsored. group insurance . plan, which would require permission of the Legislature, Parrish said. The other would be a com- pulsory "pay.'as.you·go" plan in which all the claims a2ainst all lawyers would be added up each year, and each of the 50,000 mem- bers assessed equally to pay them. Unlike many states, California has an "integrated bar," mean- ing that all practicing lawyers are required to belong. And unlike the doctors, Parrish said he doubted if the lawyers would suggest that the taxpayers contribute to a solution. - Some California doctors' groups are suggesting state in- surance plans toward which their own contributions would be voluntary, with the taxpayers backstopping. Parrish, who practices law alone in a "high·risk" field of personal injury work for plain- tiffs, said his own insurance now costs $425 a year. · Some doctors in high.risk fields such as neurosurgery say their insurance bills have gone from $8,000 to $40,000 a.year. Parrish said the State Bar dis- putes the figures on which ·Travelers bases the increase. He said the State Bar is about two years through a five-year contract with Travelers. He said the contract permits Travelers to increase rates after two years to . (See LAWYERS, Page A%) Hinshaw Blasts Hicks i DA Called 'Vengeful' By TOM BARLEY Of~ D•llr Piiot Staff Convicted Congressman An· drew J. Hinshaw labeled Orange County District Attorney Cecil Hicks today as .. the vengeful architect " of an investigation and prosecution that led to his be· ing found guilty Monday on bribery charges. Hinshaw, 53, told a press con- ference in Santa Ana that he is one of a number of legislators and Orange County officials who have been or are being probed by Hicks "from motives of revenge held by a paranoid district at· torney. ·· Hins haw said Hicks plans vengence "because he was once investigated himself and very nearly indicted by the Grand Jury after a car accident in Garden Grove in which two children were killed." Hinshaw said a woman he described as "Hicks' girlfriend" was involved in that collision. "The incident has never been satisfactorialy explained and certainly not by Hicks," the Newport Beach Republican as- serted. Hinshaw identified Congressmen Jerry Patterson and Charle.s Wiggins, state Senator Dennis Carpenter, state Controller Ken Cory, As· semblymen Robert Badham of Newport Beach and Richard Robinson and Orange County supervisors Laurence Schmit and Ralph Diedrich as other of. ficials under investigation at various times by Hicks' office. "But I am the crux of moves deliberately designed to take the heat off the DA," Hinshaw said. "If they can keep me convicted, they're going to keep the atten- tion of Orange County citizens away from them.'' Hinshaw said a jury in Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland's courtroom convicted him of two felony counts of bribery Monday "because there is a lot of evidence held by the district attorney that we were not allowed to obtain.'' Hinshaw also condemned Hicks for what he said was the· district attorney's use of his No Angola Aid WAsHINGTON (AP) -Re- jecting a last-minute plea from President Ford, the House com- pleted congressional action this afternoon to cut off U.S. aid to Western-backed factions in Angola. The vote was323 to99. "' Deity,. ... s.... ....... ~ .... , ..... Is our system or civil law costing us more than its worth? Don E . Burns, Calirorola's secretary of buslne!s and transportation -raised that question and others Monday during a talk to the Friends of UC Irvine. Sc story 1 Page AS. estranged wife, Thais Hinshaw, before the grand jury and as a prosecution witness in the bribery trial. Hinshaw will be sentenced Feb. 17 to what could be state prison terms or one to 14 years on each bribery count. Defense attorney Marshall Morgan, who joined Hinshaw at the press conference, will argue a motion for a new trial on that date. Hinshaw firmly repeated his earlier declarations that he has no intention of resigning his 40th District seat. "If we don't get a new trial we will go to every appeals court in th e co untry ," he said. "Meanwhile, I 'm working on plans for my June primary cam· paign. "And I have no doubt that cer· tain political figures in this coun- ty will seize on my present pre- dicament and attempt to remove me from office," Hinshaw said indignantly. Hinshaw and Morgan predict- ed success at the appellate court level and a reversal of the con· gressman's bribery conviction. Dltfly ~IOt SCMI l'-o "We wilJ not have the emotion generated at the appellate level that was allowed full reign in the local trial," Morgan said. "I have every confidence in my ability to change this verdict." CONVICTED CONGRESSMAN TALKS T:O NEWSMEN With Attorney Marshall Morgan at His Side 'Political Prosecution' 1 Battin Attorney Presems 20 Documems By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of llt9 O.lly f>tl9t Staff The a.ttorney for indicted Orange County Supen·isor Robert Battin continued hls at- tempt Monday to prove the coun· ty District Attorney's Office is engaged in "selective political prosecution." Despite repeated objections by Deputy District Attorney Jack Ryan, Kurilich attempted to un- ravel the procedures used by the county prosecutor in probing al- Bean Found Guilty In Valley Murder Hugh Daniel Bean was found guilty of first degree murder late Monday in the gunshot slaying of Orange Coast College scholar- athlete Stephen "Mike" Finklea of Fountain Valley. The same Orange County Superior Court jury which found Bean guilty must now determine if Finklea's killer should be ex- ecuted or given a life sentence. The guilty verdict for Bean ended nearly three days of jury . deliberations. Finklea, 19, was shot and killed by two men who attacked and robbed him Oct. 31, 1974, while he was working as a 7-Eleven market clerk at the Fountain Valley store at Euclid Street and Warner Avenue. Bean, impassive throughout the trial, remained that way as Judge William L. Murray's clerk read the verdict. Bean, 24, was additionally found guilty of first degree armed robbery. Judge Murray ordered the jury to return to his courtroom Feb. 2 for the opening of the trial's final phase-the recommendation or <See GUILTY, Page A2) Fog Blinds Harbor Boatsmen Off Comt Orange County Harbor patrolmen had their hands full Monday afternoon when a sud- den, thick blanket of fog caught boaters by · surprise near the Newport Harbor channel en· trance. Sgt. Harry Wright said today that patrolmen rescued about 15 boats between 3 p.m. and 6 p m . All were lost in the fo& in the en- tranc~ channel to the harbor, with vlslblllty less Ulan 15 feet. Wrtaht aald. The boats ranged in she from 16 feet to 45 feet, and lnclud~ both power and aail boats. OnlY a few of the larger boats were equipped with marine radios and the other, smaller boats, clus tered oround the larger ones unUl the harbor patrol came to their aid. "We'd respond to a call for help and find six boats instead of juot one," Wright said. When the fog first rolled in at 3 p.m .• Harbor Patrolman Terry Woodhull , was lost, too. Woodhull was issuing acitaUon to a boat owner off Corona del Mar Main Beach' when the vis- ibility suddenly dropped to less than l~ feet. He was not in a boat equipped with radar, but by using bis com- pass, be got both his boat and the other boat back to the dock, Wrtghtaald. · "All In all, we had a lotof boata in the harbor that really weren't coming here, but wound up here anyway," Wri ahl said. legations of political wrong- doing. Kurilich presented Ryan and Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae with 20 documents support- ing his claim that two distinct groups of politicans exist in the minds of DA 's investigators. He repeated bis prior allega. ti on that Battin is part or a large- ly Democratic group backed by Dr. Louis Cella and millionaire rancher Richard O'Neill. The other group, he claims. is com- prised of those backed by the Republican Lincoln Club. Kurilich sajd the Cella·O'Neill group is prosecuted for its ac- tivities while the DA ignores re- ports of illegalities by the other camp. Monday's activity in Lae's court centered on Kurilich's al· tempt to get the DA to admit the names of politicians kept in in· vestigatory files. Kurilicb questioned DA's ln- vestigator Joel Hayes and Depu- (Sf.~ BATTIN, Page A2> Co ast Weather Fair through Wednesday with continued warm and sunny days. Patchy fog near Uie coast. Lows tonight in the 40s. Highs 65 to 75 from the coast inland. I NSIDE TODA 'Y Pringle's u in the chip.!. and com~titors .are bdng crunched in thdr war.OQOiast the '.'new-fangled" potato chips that come in. a can and haw chom~d up 16 percent o/ the potato chip morut. See Page A7. l•dex __ ........ \ A2 OAILY PILOT c \ Hospital Workers Get Cuts The doctors slowdown was still 11' effect today at Hoag Memorial Dospital in Newport Beach and employes there are now on a four·day work week, a hospital spokeswoma n said. Management c mployes ·are still on a fi ve-day work week, but are taking a 20 percent cut in pay, according to Linda Mottin, a hospital official. ''The premise is that if every- one here takes a 20 percent cut either by working four days or by taking the actual pay cut - we'll make up our reduction m revenue,'' she said. . Surgery at the hospital was still down 50 percent today and the surgery s chedule for next week looks n o better, Mrs. Mottin said. Relcttl·d st or~ A S. However. bee a use of increased medical admissions. partly due to the la rge number of flu cases. the patient census was normal to- day, she said. On Monday. the patient census was down 10 per cent. While doctors at Huntington ln- tercommunity Hospital voted to- day to r e turn t o a full work schedule, Mrs. Mottin said there 1s no sign yet that the Hoag doc- tors will follow s tti t. "We just don't know how long this will continue . The employes here. however. ha ve been just super about the reduced pay," Mrs . Mottin s aid. "Morale is very good.·· Al Cos ta Mes a Mem or ial Hospital, employes are still on a regular work week a nd no changes are being considered . administrator Tom Ri chards said today. Howe ver . th e d octor s' slowdown 1s being felt there. too. Things appear t o be picking up at the hospital, although both the s urgery s chedule and the number of patients are still below normal, Richards said. Surgeries were down only 50 percent today. in comparison to the 75 percent reduction Monday. And the number of patients was down by 10 or 15 percent today, in contrast to the 25 percent reduc- tion Monday. TONIGIIT NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD -Regular meeting. Costa Mesa City Council Cham· bers. 7:30 p.m . ''BEHIND THE HEADLI NES" -Dr. Giles T. Bro<An lecturer. OCC Forum, 7 JOp.m . "THE NATIONAL HEALTH" -Sout h Coast Repe rtory Theater. through Sun. 8 p m WEDNESDAY, JAN. 28 C OA S T COMM UN IT Y COLLEGE BOARD -Regular met?ting.1370 Ada ms. 8p.m. BASKETBALL -Mt. San An- tonio at OCC, 7:30 p.m. Estancia at Costa Mesa, 7 p.m. Edi.so n at Newport Harbor, 7 p.m. Guilty Plea Filed LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A J9.year-old man called the ''parking lot bandit" by police because of a series of crimes he a llegedl y c ommitte d in downtown parking lots pleaded guilty Monda y to two counts of robbery. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT. Robert N. Weed P•UIOe<lt ,,,_ P\llllt- JaCk R. Curley Vitt ,.,t!.lOtlll -Ge_ .. ~ Thomas ktevll Editor Thomas A. Murphlne """,...'"9 r ouor CharlH H. Loos Rk hard P. Nall •nhl•l'I ~"'911\0 ldt'- Offices i....,... 9H<'fl ,, .. o•-~ ~· H_,,,,_ k e<" 11t7S !leech...,.. •• ,. ~-· 11'11 .. , JUOI I.A ... ,·-•I~ OlfF '•-ft ~-~Or ..... (Ma """"'"""'a-. _,,, .... -•ltt, lllW ... .UO..~. rdllerl•I in.tl•f •• ... .,ottlMMtlllt .,.,.. .. m•y M "'~" wUl!e4lt •'9tl .. ""'"'''•.._. et ~-· I« .... C.l•U ,..., ....... •I c:.1t ,..,._ c.i-..i ......... "" .. .., «*Tier ... " _... ""' 11\t~lt' Ul'l!OfllNY, Mlll...., ... IN41eM U.H --4f\ly, Tuesday Januuy 27. 1976 F....,P.,,.Al BATTIN ••• ly DA Michael Ca piuJ, trying to establish that while politicians ·from both iroups may appear lo mes. only the Cella·O'Neill group are invesUaated and ~ui.ct. Under qudUonlna tntemrpted often by objections from Ryan, Kunllch got Hayes to admit that the DA maintains records oncer· tain politlcal fagures bul doesn't keep them ln a special file. He s nld most would be kept in the DA 's "Alpha File" on general investigations . But H ayes did say that some politician 's na m es are on index cards in the DA 's organized crime me. The only names Lae would permit Hayes to reveal were Battin's and that of former Supervisor David Baker. When Capizzi took the stand, Kurilich continued his complex questioning pattern. trying. to work around Ryan's objections. Kurilich asked Capizzi il an in- vestigation had been launched in- to c harges that campaign worker s for Congressman Jerry Patterson a nd Assemblyman Ri c h a rd R o bins o n . bo th Democrats. had filed fraudulent voter registrations. Trend CJianges Pot, Boo~ Vieim llevened NEW YORK (AP) -Since 1969, Americans have reversed thclr attitudes about the seriousness or s moking manjuana and drinking alcohol, a Harris poll s hows. <Rela ted stories, A4, All) A survey of 1,394 adults showed that 71 percent view the problem of "heavy drinking'' as very serious, while only 58 percent feel that way about marijuana. · "Thls ts a complete reversal of public attitudes since 1969, when 73 percent viewed pot smoking as 'very serious' compared to 53 percent who felt the same way about heavy drinking," the polling or- ganltation said Monday. · · · ·· . Most Americans still oppose legalizing the sale or use of . marijuana but. increasingly believe that possession of small amounts should not be a criminal offense, Harris said. The survey showed that 69 percent opposed legalization of sale or use of pot, about the same as in a similar poll in 1974. Twenty-five percent favored legalization. . Dog Lovers Score F.,._P.,,.AJ. • whatever lt nHds to be 0 on th~ but.a of eaperlence." Durtng the first two years, Travelers collected $6. 7 m11Uon · but paid only $$2,000 in cla.ims, Parrish said. Parrish agrees ·~hat maay claims based on legal actions during the two yenrs couJd turn up many years later. "But wben w e ask them where they set their numbers, they say from other Insurance companies' experience," Parrish said. ··we just don't think the num· bers add up to what wo think Lbey should be," he added. In legislative hearings on medical malpractice insurance, some doctors blamed trial lawyers for bringing COiUy suits, and some trial lawyers blamed what they called faulty practices of doctors. Jury Pick In Hearst OC·Man C~rged In Theft Noel. D. Land, 36, of Santa Ana Heights has been named in a federal indictment as one of three Southern Calif omia men who allegedly bilked several ma- jor record companies out or $500,000 in sales. Land, of 20332 Bay View Ave., and the two other defendants, Jack Feinberg of Los Angeles and Lawrence Anthony of Santa Monica, have surrendered to the federal district court in Los ·Angeles and have been releas~ :on bond. They were named in a 32·count federal grand jury indicti;nent charging mail fraud and con· siracy. All were a ssociated with the Land O'Mus ic and Audio Marketing Services Corp. of Lo~ .Angeles. Capizzi said such an investiga-N ~ion was c~)Gd and resulted . ewport m court act1on. ) 'Victory' . Case Begun The inructment c harges the al· leged scheme began in Sep- tember, 1973 and continued until the indictment was handed down last week. The sus pects allegedly obtaiped tapes and records on credit from s uch companies RCA, MCA, Capitol, Motown, Warner-Elektra-Atlantic and Phonogram and then sold the From Pllfle A J GUILTY ••. rejection of the death penally. Later today he will set the date for opening arguments in .the murder trial of the convicted killer's brothe r , Charles Dennis Bean, 22, who faces identical charges. The brothers were arrested by Santa Ana police 24 hours after• the Finklea killing on Oct. 31 , 1974. on the basis of information supplied by a clerk who was about to relieve Finklea from his counter duties. Finklea. a highly regarded athlete who w as captain of the Orange Coast College wrestling team. was s hot through the· mouth as he confronted his two assailants. . The Fountain Valley youth was shot five more times as besought refuge from his killers in a rear storeroom at the market . Santa Ana police recovered what they said were the two guns used in the killing and the $133 taken from Finklea during a search of the Bean brothers' car. Train Rammed . NEW MARTINSVILLE, W. Va. (UPI) -Two crewmen were killed and two others were in- jured today when a freight train rammed into a line of box cars at Brooklyn Station in this northern West Virginia town, authorities said. By HILARY KAYE Of tile O.llr PlltlC SUft Armed with an assortment of "doggie scooper.. devices. dog love rs packed the Newport Beach City Council Chambers Monday night and convinced the council to table an ordinance that would have banned dogs from the beaches. Councilmen rejected the or- dinance with a 5·1 vote and agreed to give SCOOP -Society of Concerned Owners of Pets -a chance to try its new animal con- trol program. It was clearly a victory for Newport Beac h dog lovers. However, Mayor. Donald Mel~- °" Rep. Himhaw 19th Solon Convicted Congressman Andrew Hinshaw's conviction Monday made him the third California representative and the 19th con- gressman in the nation's history to be convicted of a felony while holding office. Hinsbaw's predecessors from Califomia were John IL Oeppel CD-Arcadia-), 1'1ho wu convicted in 1936, and Ernest K. Bramblett (R-Fresno), who was tried and found guilty in 1954. Oeppea·s crfme was that he tried to sell an appointment to West Point. Bramblett was found guilty of taking kickbacks from his office employ es. nis, an ocean tront res1aent, made it equally clear he does not intend to drop the matter. Mcinnis. who was one of the five who voted against the or- dinance, said the council would reconsider the matter in 60 days. ''Al this point we have only words on paper from SCOOP. I want to see if they'll really imple- ment their program," said Mcin- nis. The mayor said be also plans to try to raise the fines for dog owners who violate leash and lit· ter laws. Fines are CWTenUy $15, already an increase over the old fee of$5. "I'm going to try to make very. very stilf fines for the first of. fense and a real humdinger for the second offense," Mcinnis said. When asked what he meant by very stiff, Mcinnis replied, "Oh, maybe $50 for the first offense and much higher for the second.'• He said the city could use the fine money to pay for extra dog catchers to enforce the laws. About 50 dog lovers attended the council meeting, with most of them coming from the newly formed SCOOP. A handful of people opposing dogs on the beaches were there, too. SCOOP speakers outlined the proposed progr.am for controlling dogs . The seven-point program in- cludes: SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) - Patty Hearst went on trial today. def ended by a top criminal lawyer who will argue that she was a poor llttle rich girl who joined a bank robbery because she thought sbe was dead if she didn't. Jury selection was the first or· der of business in the federal courtroom, and a panel of 250 citizens was called for the bizarre case of a kidnap victim who seemed to have joined her abductors. Thirty-six were ex- cluded this mornin~. Picking the jury was expected to take at least two days. As is customary in federal trials, the judge interrogated jurors about their bias or other circumstances which would bar them from serving. The prosecution had 50 eyewit· nesses and 40 photographs to pro- ve that the 21-year~ld heiress stood in the bank lobby with a carbine in her hands two months after she was kidoaped by the Symbionese Liberation Army. A key question in Patty's favor was why? Randolph and Catherine Hearst arrived in the courthouse about 30 minutes before the trial got under way and were met in a corridor by defense attorney F. Lee Bailey who embraced Mrs. Hearst and gave lhe parents words of encouragement. -Handing out pamphlets that explain the city's animal control laws when dog licenses are 2 •.1a.n-....,.th purchased. iri.1 ••~•...., merchandise below cost. I The indictment alleges the group first did business as Land O'Music. Token payments al· 1 legedly were made 1-9 keep credit lines open, but when credit to Land O'Music was closed the second business, Audio Market· ing, was created. The U.S. attorney's orrice said bribes were offered and in some instances paid to r ecord com· pany employes to enable the de· fendants to continue to receive merchandise on credit. The trio also allegedly sub- mitted false financial statements to obtain credit and furnished a market analys t with false in- formation. In other instances, the indict- ment said, checks were written to pay for merchandise, but wert? stopped when the records and tapes were received. The indictment said some of the merchandise was sold to Wherehouse Records and Dis- count Records. In a related indictme nt, Howard Hirdler, a form er employe of the now-defunct Beverly Hills National Bank, was jury. Jeffrey Asks Hinshaw to 'Resign Now' .-Postin~ si~ns at street-ends H J ff detailinganl·malcontrolrules. Skie arry e rey, a canrudate for • r8 o.;~ the GOP nomination to the 40th -Passing out small cards to ~ Congressional District seat now Lugg~e Screening System Proposed violators seen on beaches, that 'held by Andrew Hinshaw, called ask them to "clean up their act." MAMMOTH <UPI) -on his political rival today to re· -Asking youth groups to help Two skiers were thrown off sign immediately because of his design "scoopers" to aid beach balance on thin, patchy bribery conviction Monday. cleanup. snow in separate incidents -Creating essay and poster on Mammoth Mountain . In a letter to Hinshaw. J effrey contests for youths. and crashed to their death acknowledged that Hinshaw's re- -Asking realtors to distribute on rocks. signation is not legally required animal control information to Daryl Gordon, 16. of Ha-"The personal reputation and renters. cienda Heights fell after integrity of our elected officials WASHING TON (UPI) -The Federal Aviation Administration said today it is considering a lug- gage screen m g security program that could force travelers to ar-' rive at airports up to three hours ahead of their flight departure time. John McLucas, the new chief or the FAA, said the program to screen all lugga ge is one of many proposals growing out of the ·bombing that k1lled 11 persons at New York City's La Guardia Airport Dec. 29. The La Guardia bomb was placed in a public, coin-operated luggage locker. McLucas said he believes the security problem with that kind of locker has been solved by moving locker racks into secure areas or closing them completely. But, be s aid; the FAA must still consider security me asures to deal with the approximately million pieces of luggage placed aboard U.S. airliners everyday. "When you start talking about checking every piece of luggage or cargo that goes into an airport, you're dealing with a formidable. problem ." McLucas told a news conference. Acknowledging that long pre- flight delays might discourage air travel and encourage bus or rail travel, particularly on trips F,....PageAJ MARINES ••• a stale park. In the anvesti&ation, the at.ale· ment aaid, a senior Marine of. ficial "wlll probe a.11 matters con· nected with the fire, lncludln& tbe maller of why electrical weldina equipment wu being used on lhe stale land.. "Formal lnvesttcalloo of the type ordered involves a~uirtn1 sworn testimony, illterrogation ot wtt.oesees and lhe cotlecllon ot aJJ pertinent documents,'' the statement 1ald. of only a few hundred miles. -Circulating periodic remin· starting down Dave's Run, is the cornerstone of our gov· ders with utillty bills. the steepest and one of the ernmental system," J eff rey McLucas said the FAA is concen-The only councilman to vote in most difficult at Mam-· s aid. trating efforts on security favor of the ban was Paul moth. measures primarily for lu_ggage Ryckoff, who said the ordinance George C. Smith Jr., 23, "When government officials going aboard planes, rather than "might be worth 8 try. of La Canada, suffered are found gttilty of malfeasance just into terminal buildings. When he told the audience that multiple injuries including in office, the electorate bas the "Nonetheless,'' he said, "you the ordinance is "not the end of a fractlired skull and rup-right to demand their immediate are stuck with procedures that th Id " h <1'r'AAte<f ith turedspleen. resignation even though it is not slow planes sa· gn1· f1' cantly. The de-e wor • e was e• """' w groans required by law," Jeffrey said. lays we have been talking about~~:_:::_· __________ _:::::::;:========~--.:....:....:.:::..:...::..:..:::..::..::.=.:..:...:_...::..:::..:._:-_:=::_ may take from one lo three ..---------------------------------------hours." McLucas said the FAA will start within a few months testing luggage X-ray devices at two or three U.S. airports . If the full -s cale security measures are installed at all or the nation's 60 major airports McLucas said, the increased oper ating costs of about $100 million a year would add a new ticket surcharge of 50 to 75 cents. In the m e antime, he said, airlines are being urged to take less drastic steps such as careful- ly matching passengers with their tickets and their luggage to make sure no one slipped a bomb into the cargo system and leaves. He also said a new system of security seminars is planned to make airport personnel more security conscious, and sus· pltious looking pieces of luuage are beinc searched by hand. Services Set For Fireman Services will be conducted Wedneaday for Costa Mesa fireman John H . Kirkpatrick, wbo died Sunday of an apparent heart attack at the age or 41 . Services will be held at 11 a.m. at the Melrose Abbey 0.apet In Anaheim with Capt. Wayne Huston officiating. Entombment will be at the abbey. Mr. Kirkpatrick, a Costa 11 .. fireman ror 1' yean, 1.1 1urvtved by bla wile, Nola, and molbe:r, Mn. Zita KJrkpatrlck of Calta THE PRICE IS RIGHT (or is it?} HAVI YOU EVR GOME INTO A STORE. AND IEFORE A SALESMAN APPROACHID YOU, TRIED TO DmRMIME PRICES ON GOODS HOT MAllKID7 MANY CAIPIT STOIU DO MOT HA VE PRICES INDICATED OM THiii SAMPUS. THE THIOIY IS THAT THIS WAY THEY CAN CHARGE -"WHAT THI TRAFFIC WILL IEAL .. AT ALDIN'S PllCES AIE POSTED ON ALL OF OUR SAMPLES SO THAT CUSTOMRS CAN llOUSI THROUGH THE SELECTIONS AND IMOW WHAT THIY All LOOKIM• AT. TOO, THHI IS ALWAYS THE POSSlllLITY OF A LQWll PllCI IF COMDmOMS WAllAMT. ~EN'S ........ 111~ :iiiitillai)iin:·custom drapsries l1C.. NO. 210422 1663 PlACDmA AVENU! • COSTA M!~ CALIP. 92627 • PHONI! 6~6-.C838 -d,6--235.S Mesa. , .. ..,....., _____________________________________________________________________ ~ • ' I I l 1 I 4 } " t • , ' • • ' I 1 .1 I t • ' c ' I