HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-11-16 - Orange Coast Pilot' l
Drug Overdose.
• ' l
SUICIDE FAILS
Gary Mark GHmore
.,. ......... '"
APPARENT OVERDOSE
Nicole Barrett
Condition Unkrwwn
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah CAP)
-Gary Mark Gilmore, under
$entence to die before a firing
squad, attempted t.o taJce his life
with a drug overdose today,
p_!lthorities said. His girlfriend
-1so was found unconscious in
?t!r apartment from an apparent
overdose, police said.
Medics brought Gilmore "back
tQ life," a medical technician at
the Utah State Prison reported.
His condition was not known.
· Gilmore's girlfriend, Nicole
Barrett, was found unconscious
in her apartment, also of an ap.
parent drug overdose, Spr.
ingville Police Chief Leland
Bowers said. Mrs. Barrett, 20,
was in critical condition at Utah
Valley Hospital in Provo, a
spokesman there said.
Gilmore, 35, who bad been sen·
tenced for the killing of a motel
clerk during a robbery, was
found unconscious in his cell,
said the prison medical techni·
cian, Tom Anguay.
"He tried to take his own life.
(See KILLER, Page AZ>
..
,. Su.,iets Pass v.s. · -,...
--'TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 16, 1976
In 1ffilitarg Streftgth?
.. VOL H, HO. !ti, 2 SECTIONS, U PAGES
Fire s
Bilingual Bill
I
jTo Cost User
:$3-4Each
I LOS ANGELES (AP )
Telephone company officials say
,the proposed provision or b1l·
· ingual operators in areas of the
stale where 3 percent of the
eopuJatioo speaks no Engllsh
I would cost each teleohonc user in
California S3 to S4 a vear.
State Public Utilities Co m.
jrnission bearings into state Sen.
Alex Garcia's proposal centered
Ma phone company study of the
Issue.
Pacific T e lepho ne Co .
190kesman Gary Sanderson said
~e utility now s pends more than
$350,000 annually for a service
that trans fers non· Englis h
tl>e&king caJlers to a Spanish·
191eak.ing operator. He said the
euvice now handles up t.o 5,500
calls daHy.
Georgian Charged
DURHAM. N.C. (AP) -A
Georgia man, Reuben Conley. 33,
has been charged with murder in
tbe abduction of a Virginia slate
trooper who died with 14 gunshot
wounds in a hail of gunfire at a
lad~lock near here.
Weather
Warm sunny days and
clear cool nights through
Wednesday. Highs near 80
al the coast, lows to about :;o. Easterly winds.
INSIDET~)'
Reporter William F<:1r1s
legal e/f ort1 lo 1toy out of ;ail
~protecting o new1 «Nrce
continue. Story, AS.
Index
~angerous Shift,
·Soviets Exceed
U.S. Military?
Dall1 Piiot Stell Pltolo
·sov1ETS AHEAD'
Defense Expert Graham
By MICHA EL P ASKEVICl:I OlllleDally,.llotS~ll
Military strength has shifted
dangerously in favor of the Soviet
Union and there is euphoria in
Moscow over the prospect of
achieving a long.range goal of
world communism, according to
Lt. General Daniel 0 . Graham,
former director of the Defense
Intelligence Agency.
Graham, who resigned from
the Army intelligence post in 1975
as a protest to the dismissals of
Defense Secretary James Schles·
inger and CIA Director William
Colby, made the remarks Mon·
day in Newport Beach before a
luncheon gathering of the
Americanism Educational
League, a patriotic, public
education organization based in
Buena Park.
He charged the U.S. with aid·
ing soviet euphoria because or
compromises during SALT talks,
--W.he railure of detente and a
decreased emphasis on building
a stronger national defense.
Graham, who recently re·
-Mom Attacked;
Son, .27, Held
turned from a USSR trip, said the
Soviets are initiating an "iron
fisted" civil defense program
complete with mass evacuation
pra~tice and increased construe·
tion of bomb shelters. In the
event of nuclear warfare Soviet
losses could be as low as 10
million, compared t.o 110 million
Americans, Graham said.
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers jailed a Mission Viejo man
on charges or assault and battery
Monday night •after be allegedly
struck his mother on the back
with a kitchen stool.
Deputies filed the charges
against Stanford Bayton
DeverilJ, 27, or 25911 Corriente
Drive, after being called t.o the
home in response to a reported
disturbance. •
Officers said Deverill used the
stool to strike Mrs. Gina Lewis
Pearson, 54\ of the same address
alter the pair q1uuTeJed. They
sald the •ornan was not seriously
hllrt by the alleged attack. .
Lodge Fire Arson
SONORA (AP) -A fl re that
destroyed the 50·year-old Sugar
Pine Lodge in Tuolumne County
apparently was deliberately set,
authorities reported Monday. t
Considerift"g what Graham
believes is a lowtr Soviet regard
for life -"after all, they killed
five millipn peasants to oollec·
tivize agriculture" -the USSR
could use the difference in the
potential loss or lives as a
weapon to get its way.
While the U.S. still holds an
economic and technological
edge, Graham said the Soviets
have overtaken the U.S. in
mUitapt 1tr ength during the past
10 years because or U.S. em-
phasis on nuclear weape>M as a
deterrent rather than an offense.
By pumping 15·2.0 percent of
the Soviet Gross National
Product into dereme J.he USSR
now bolds a six to one ad·
vanataee ln intercepter aircraft
and bas a superior surface n~t.
GrJaham said.
Durlne SALT talks, Graham
(See SOVIETS, Page AZ)
esa lnvali
D.llly PllOI Sl•ll PholO
POLICE EXPERTS CHECK FIRE SCENE FOR CLUES
Dropped Cigarette Lighter Blamed In Fatal Blaze
Edgy Srww Lovers
A.wait First Storm
By The Associated Press
Mother Nature has turned a
warm shoulder t.o ski }overs and
those waiting for a cold shoulder
· might as well cool it.
That's the word today rrvm the
National Weather Service and
the California Automobile As·
sociation as skiers and resort
owners anxiously wait for the
first heavy snowstorm or the
season.
Weekend flurries managed to
dump nearly an Inch bur AAA
spokesmen who surveyed the ski
resorts said it wasn't cold enough
to freeze ihe ground.
''The ski operators said there
is a warm wind blowing and all
the snow has melted," said
Marvin Parker, ski reporter for
AAA.
"We need one good storm to
get tbe ground frozen and then
another one on top of that to ac-
cumulat<! snow tllat ~ill stay,"
he said.
Ski operators are hopeful that
enough snow will fall in lime for
a successful Thanksgiving
weekend, but the weather
service would only say "it's
possible."
Most resorts need at least
three feet or more or snow before
opening all runs for full opera-
tion.
Last year. the lack or sufficient
snow delayed the opening or the
season and forced, an early clos-ing. I
Warehouse, Gutted
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fire
raced through1 a packaging
warehouse building at the Pabst
Brewing Co. late Monday, caus·
ing $400,000 damage as it CQm·
PleteJy gutted the one·story
structure.
Air .Draft
Ignites
Blast
Costa Mesa lire investigators
are blaming a cigarette lighter in
the fiery death of a 59-year-old in·
valid Monday artemooo.
Mrs. Frances Supple~ 124
Clearbrook Lane, Apt. A, was
pronounced dead al the scene of
the noon lire, a half block from
the city's police department.
The woman, a stroke victim
confined to a wheelchair since
1965, was found near h er
wheelchair on the floor by two
neighbors who failed in their at-
tempts to pull the victim from
the home.
Her husband, JosepbJ. Supple,
60, was away from the home at
the time.
Fire officials set damage of the
names to the Supple home at
about $20,000.
Lois Wendt of 120 Clearbrook
Lane received s econd degree
burns over six percent of her
body while attempting to pull the
victim from the house.
A sudden mixture of air fed a
smouldering couch in th~ house,
said firemen, prompting the
blaze to rush through the living
room, blowing Mrs. Wendt out
the front door.
Fire Analyst Russell Hen·
derson said today the fire "ex-
plosion" wa11 possibly a combina·
tion of a sudden breere from a
broken sliding glass window.
combining with a smouldering
couch and names.
"We found a cigarette lighter
<See FIRE, Page AZ>
Gang Slaying
Suspect Held
TORRANCE CAP) -A 31-
year·old Torrance man bas been
arrested in connection with the
deaths or two other men in what
Riverside. County authorities
described as a rival motorcycle
gang shooting.
Officials identified the arrest-
ed man as Oary Lee Brown. They
said Brown was one of three men
who walked into a Glen Avon bar
Feb. 15 and shot and killed
Wesley Duller. 35, of Rivenide,
and Travis S. Weaver, 26, of
Upland.
Jnveaticators said Brown was
a member of one motorcycle
gang and Dutter and Weaver
members of a rival gane.
I ~
i\2 DAILY PILOT
( s TuHd1y November 16 Hl7((
•
Kiss~ger Meet Set
For~Carter Confab to Follow
•P LAINS. Ga . <AP) -
Pres1de nt·el(.'Ct Jimmy Carter
will meet with Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger here Satur-
day for a briefing on foreign
policy matters and will confer
w ith P res id e nt Ford. In
Washington next week, il was an-
noun<'t-d today.
Ford and Carter agreed tn :1
tele1>hone call Monday rught to
have their staffs work out ar-
raneemeots for lbe1r meeting.
The day for the session ha~ not
been deci<!ed, Whil e House
spokesman John Carlson said.
Carlson said Carter put 1n a
telephone call to Ford as the
President returned aboard Air
Force One on Monday from a
California vacation. Ford re-
turned the call when he arrived
Clipped Wings
'X' to 'R ' for Ki~' Film
NOTTINGHAM, England (AP) -The 10-year:'
olds at the Bentinck primary school caused an in-,
tcrnational flc.ip when they made a film about the
school's pet lovebirds that included a IO-second shot
of the birds mating.
The British Cowical, the government's cultural
i.Jrm. picked the 2112-nunute film to be shown at a Unit-
c·d Nations educationaJ festival in Cairo next week.
But the sex shots will not make the trip. ·
"IL was not offensive to us," said the school's
headmaster. J ohn Dexter. "But I was told by the
Oritish Council that it would be better to cut about 10
seconds of the film as the mating shots might be con-
sidered offensive to Islamic cutsoms and law."
The birds in question are a pair of Budgerigars,
small Australi a n parrots. whkh are more commonly
kno\.\ln in the United States as grass parakeets or lov-
C'b1rds.
..
Bay Crime Spree
Suspect Arrested
SAN JOSE (AP) -A 33 year
old man has been booked in con·
nect100 with a ras h of robberies.
rapes and kidnapings in shopping
centers aC'ross Santa Clara Coun·
ty, the sheriff's office said
John Lee Spinelli of Sant a
Clara was booked for invcstiga
lion an 13 robberies, 9 rnpes and 3
kidnapings spa nning the past
four Io five weeks, said Lt
Ro~rl Bartoo.
The crimes occurred in sc<ll
tered locations. including San
Jose, Santa Clara. Campbell,
~unnyvale and Mountain View.
f 'rom Page A J
FIRE ...
Ill the Opt•I\ JIOSlllOn ncjr the
'-'Oman Ht•ndersonsa1d
'Wl· I h10k -.he may hnve
dropped 11 ;ind 11 ignited her
dothm.: ur thl· eouch. But the fire
rlefrn1tel) originated in t he
couch ·
ll<'nckrson SJ1d there "ere two
po~s1 ble explanations for the sud
lien blast of flames that engulfed
the aparlmt•nt in the triplex in
:.econ1h
··when lh(' back >Aindow let go.
the fin· could have received a
draft. touching off the smoulder
in!{ names and roanng through
lhc houc;f' ·'
He abo said e\ 1dent·e of <•x
1 remely charred carp<.•tin,:: Jn the
Irvin~ room .10d a d1nrni; room
pmnh to a nip1d name spread
mt>r the carpet
"1'ht' broken w1ndnw may have
J!1ven 1t that extra gust of oxygen
1t needl'd to blast throu~h the
apartmt'nl," lfendcrsonsa1d
Df"lta R eviPw On
SA('RAMF.NTO <AP > The
!\late has bel{un a loog sene~ of
hearings that could re~ult m new
wattr quality s tandards for the
Sacramento-San Joaqwn Delta
hearin~s som e local officials
say are premature' in lighl of a
:-late-federal dispute over watfr
rights
ORANGE COAST
Bartoo said most took place
"rn small businesses in shopping
centers which in most cases, had
a single female clerk on duty."
Typically, the establishment
was robbed , the female clerk was
driven blindfolded to a nearby
apartment or motel room wher e
she was sexually assaulted and
was later released, bes ard.
Several victims worked in
photography booths in shopping
center parking lots. he said
Spinelli was arrested Friday
by Santa Clara pohce for in-
vestigation of ~redit card fraud.
Police noted hlS resemblance to
composite s ketches drawn from
descriptions of witnesses in-the
kidnap-rape incide nts and
Spinelli was turned over lo the
sheriff's office, Bartoosaid.
Al"Wlrt .... 1•
',\'ftD Pra• Cla~I
Jddy P o well g rins as he
hears President-elect Jim·
my Carter announce his ap-
po int m c n t as pre ss
secretary. It was the first
uppoi ntment fo r Carter .
who pl ans t o a nnounce
others soon
at the White House.
Carter's staff said K.Ls.singer
wiU be accompanied Saturday by
Lawfence Eagleburger, the U.O·
derse~retary for man~emer)t at
tbe State Departnwnt who is
handling the department liaison
with Carter during the transition
from the Ford administration.
Eagleburger was lo meet later
today at the State Department
with W. Anthony Lake, who has
been designat ed by Carter lo
head his foreign policy transition
team. Lake is expected to see
Kissinger before the secretary
travels to Georgia.
Vice President-elect Walter
Mondale, who will be in Pia.ins on
Friday ror a meeting between
Carter and CIA Director George
Bush, also will attend the Carter
briefing with Kissinger.
The meeting is (he first
b e tw ee n Ca rte r a nd th e
secretary of st ale, whom Carter
a nd Mon d a l e f r eq ue ntl y
criticized during the presidential
campaign . Th e session,
scheduled for 7:30 a .m. PST,
marks the highest-level con-
ference Carter has undertaken in
the transition period.
Carter and Mondale will be ac-
companied. al the Kissinger
briefing by David Aaron, who is
their representative on transition
matters dealing with the Na-
tional Security Council and in-
telligence activities.
Carter is beginning what he
says is a "careful and thorough
and deliberate" process to name
the top officials who will help him
run i.ill?'~overnment.
· Carter m et Saturday for
several hours with Dean Rusk,
secretary of Stale under John F.
Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson
and now a law professor at the
University of Georgia.
p,..,. Page Al
SOVIETS •..
said the U.S. made a serious mis-
take by agreeing not lo use anti-
ballistic missiles , thus cancelling
a 20.year U.S. lead in this depart-
ment.
"Even if we stand equal <in
military strength) we are at a
disadvantage since we must
ceae initiative lo the other side, ..
Graham said. "And the advan-
tage of initiative is worth many
mjssiles, ships and lives."
Despite what Graham termed
a "dreaded scenario ahead," he
said four recent events may help
to point the U.S. towards an ef-
fort to re-est a blis h military
superiority.
-Graham said speeches by
Soviet defec tor Alexander
Solzhenitsyn have reaffirmed the
view that Soviet Government is
oppressive rather than benign.
-The firing or Schlesinger
pointed out the conflict between
detente and the need for an in-
creased defense budget.
-Soviet use of Cuban troops in
Angola has highlighted the US-
SR 's goal of world domination.
-Ronald Reagan 's strong
primary election run against a
reJaUvely conser vative president
informed voters or decreasing
U.S. military strength.
RailMuhap
Suit Settled
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A man
who won $200,000 damages after
turning down a $700,000 settle-
ment in a suil over the loss of his
legs in a railroad accident has ac-
cepted a $600,000 settlement dur-
ing the second trial of his case.
A railroad worker on his second
day on the job, he was injured
March 11. 1971 near Baker, Ore.,
as he walked along the tracks
checking for rail damage.
In 1974, after turning down the
proposed s.etllement, Guy was
awarded $200,000. His attorneys
successfully sought a new trial,
claiming the a mount was too low.
An Orange Coast College class in offshore
sailing ended abruptly Monday afternoon
.::i mile off Newport Harbor wh en the mast
on the class boat snapped. The 10-meter
boat, Sally, was recently donated to the
Coast Community College District. No one
wa s injured in the mis hap and a
spokes man for the sailing program said
two shrouds apparently broke, causing the·
mast to br.eak.
Brothel Query '~ocent?
Big Apple Official Curious About Profits
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) --Churchill County officials The idea of iicens!Jig pr""
A financial aide to the New York sent data showing that its $12,000 stitutes in New York has been
City Councj,l s ays it was just re-in yearly brothel fees make up proposed seriously in lM PB.,~
search, not an interest in legaliz-only a small part of its total re-complete with details for requit
ing prostitution, that made him venues. in& them t o get medic-J.:
ask Nevada of(1cials about their -Storey County sent data checkups.
profits from hcensed ... br: ... o ... t..,bewol~s-----.s~ho..-wj.!'.'..f_ihat brothel operator Schnakenberg'a lnqul rl
Donald Schnakenberg, assis· JOfJ COnTorre;1ne onlyFei\Seeln t0n1ran t'tmrWftl!d'"th81"""--'H
cant director of finance for the that county , provides about proposing a m ajor offen•lve
council, said Monday he was try-$40,000 in annual fees. Conlorte a1ains.t one nest of prostitution bi
ing to find out the cost of enforc.-runs the Mustang Ranch brothel, Ma(lhattan.
ing New York City's laws against where Argentine bOxer Oscar A proposed zoDil\I chanae
prostitution, which nourishes in Borutvena was recently shot lo would ban masu1e parlOl'a
many areas of Midtown Manhat-death. Storey Count.v dfdp't send alto1ether and '?l atrict Umlta oo.
tao. . da copy of its orditnuce, lbouC~· A ~'-.!'umber o 90rno1rapble
But one Nevada official sug. eputy coun Y clerk said UUUtUttores. sex ~e bouse8.
gested that New York, beset by ~hnakenb~rg would have lo peep show pataces and top!•
severe money problems, would send $6 to get it cQpied_ bars in the Times Square area. _
be smart lo consider legalizing
prostitution as a way to pick up
quick cash.
Schnakenberg said he wrote t._o
Nevada's secreta ry of slate, Bill
Swackhamer, for the data, and
was referred to officials In Lyon,
Storey and Churchill counties
where o rdin a nces mak e
bordellos legal. Just after his in -
quiries were sent, residents of
Lincoln County, Nev., also voted
to legalize brothels.
Schnakenberg said he wanted
the data for a study aimed at pin-
pointing "how much it costs to
enforce our laws against pro-
stitution. ·No one really knows
what the cost is." He said he
started the study on his own, not
at the direction of the council.
His questions g ot theso
answers : '
-Lyon County officials sent a
description of their prostitution
ordin ance and .bordello fee·
structure, which nets the county
$42,000 a year -one of its be.~t
sources of income.
Teen Slain
-• I
By Officers
VlSALIA (AP ) -Two
TuJare County sheriff's of-
ficers were wounded and
their teen-age assailant
was s hot to death today,
authorities reported.
Detective Roland Hover,
29, was shot through the
liver and Sgt. Chuck
Ezelle, 44, was hit in the
an kl es when the y
responded lo a report or a
prowler in a r esidential
area east o f here, the
sheri(('s office reported.
Reports indicated that a
youth identified as Mike
Atkins, 16, abducted a
hostage from a house and
was n eeing in a car when
deputies arrived shortly
after dawn.
Kidnap, Assault
, Muslim Sentenced
To. .Li/ e in. ·Prison I
'
Black Muslim sect member
Saladin lbn Khan BismiUah was
aentenced Monday to lifl! in
v>rlson after being found g'!Jilty of
raping, kidnaping and assaulting
a young Hun t ington Beac h
woman who was also forced to
participate in acts of sexual
perversion.
Orange County Su~or Court
Judge Everett Dickey ordered
the maximum term on the multi·
p i e jury con victions fo r
Bismillah, 29, who was known as
Roberl Stanley Woods before he
adopted his Muslim title.
It was estimat ed in court Mon-
day that it will be at least 15
years before Bismillah can seek
parole from sentences imposed
by Judge Dickey.
In any event, it was explained,
Woods faces further criminal ac·
tion for the previous parole on a
rape and a ssault conviction he
violated when he commiUed his
crimes in Oran~e County.
Strike Faces
Union in SF
SAN FRANCISCO (AP>
Unions more accustomed to stag-
ing strikes found themselves~
ing s tru ck b y their own
employes.
"Yes, it's ironic that we're go·
ing on strike against union of·
fices," said Reeva Olson, presi-
dent of Local 3 of the Office and
Professional Employes lnterna·
ti on al.
Sher\Ws offic ers pat~Uiog a
sector of Santa Ana Canyon last
June 14 said they foundJUtmillah
in the act of raping his 18-year·
old victim in the back of his van.
The woman testified that
, Bismillah forced her int-0 the
vehicle as she got out or her car
in Huntington Beach, robbed her
and then repeatedly raped her
after driving her to the remote
location.
Fro11t Page A I
/,
'll
' KILLER .....
He tried to OD," Anguay said.
Anguay said he did not know
what kind or drug was used but •
Gilmore has been on medJcalioo.
He said Gilmore was e<>nscious
after treatm~ot but saJd nothing.
An amt:>u l ance and d
paramedic unit arrived at tho ,
prison gate and a stretcher with 'li
person on it was placed in t~ ,
ambulance. which remained ~
the gale for several minut
while someone inside was bel
treated. It later left for
hospital.
Warden Sam Smith s ai4
Gilmore was not breathing pro-
perly when he was discover~
under a special surveiltancf
system set up to keep watch OJl
him. Smith said medical technI-;
cians were rushed in and gav.e,
h.im resuscitation.
DAILY PILOT
f"4-')t t~ (IM\\ Q4~l't P•liol """"" ._..,,," 1~ IWft
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'Scar On Your Brain'
She said Monday that no talks
are sche duled bu t furth er
negotiations are expected later
in the week.
He said Gilmore was breathing
at the time he left the prisoo.
Asked where he could have got-
ten dr\4.1s, Smith said he might
have obtained them from other
inmates. from visitors or othe~
persons, and hid them under his
tongue while being searched.
Dr. Al Roe, the prison
psychologist, said he had predic~\"· cd Gilmore would attempt
commit suicide. He said he ha
interviewed Gilmore and rouni
him frustrated.
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'
Foster Child Files $500,000. Damage Suit •
SAN F RANCISCO (AP >
Dennis Smith is in hls 17th year
and his 16th foster home. ''It's
Uke a scar on your brain," he
says.
··I want people to reallic
what's h a ppening lo foster
children." he adds.
And he has filed an unusual
lawsuit with that purpose In
mind. •
The suit , filed In Alameda
County Superior Court on Mon-
day. asks damages or ~.ooo
from the county social service
agency and officials of the public
SE'hool !lystem there.
Smith claims the agency told
his mothtr he would be placed
for adoption but !\ent him instead
lo one roster home after another.
He says the schools accepted
what he called a mistaken
d.lagnosls that be was ment.&11.y
retarded and put him in classes
for the harldicapped.
"IC I had known I was going to
spend the first 16 years or my life
this way, I'd rather have been de-
ad. I'd wished my mother could
have aborted me," said Dennis.
Dennis was born in Oakland on
Oct. 5, 1959. His two legal aid
lawyers say county rccorda &re
uncJear where h• apem his Unt
2'h months. He doesn't know who·
h.ia parent.a are or where he •ot.
the name "Smith ."
Euly in 1960 he wu ptaeed
w\th a couple already carin1 ror
one roster chlld. Then came more
homo and a couple or stretches
in public orphana1es.
He was placed last September
\n h1a present foater home. where
his attorneys uy he Is "re-
uonably conlent."
But, bo aald In an lntentew,
"It's not like having parents ...
The relationship was somewhat
distant. When you want lo talk lo
your foster parents, you 're
always afraid that what you say
will go into the book.·• He was re-
ferring to records that are lteplfor
officials on foster children's de·
velopment and behavior.
Dennis, a high (jchool junior
aaid. lf he wins thelawsuilhe will
use most or the money lo lobby
tor lectslatlon to overhaul the
to.ter parent aystem.
In Oakland, AJam~a County
oWciala refused lo c:omment on
speetnca of lhe case, but Ubrado
Perea, director of the Social
Servtcea A•ency, saJd:
··aecardleu of the outcome.
we aro re·eumlnJna our oJ>'ra·
Uon lo determine whclber Im·
pc"Ovemcnta can be made or IC
preventive 1tep1 can be taken."
'
'A SCAR ON YOUR 'BRAIN'
O.nnta Smtth fltff Sult
Smith said earlier that prisoti'
authorities we re aware of .Ji
suicide possibility and were ta~
ing precautions . But he h~
declined to discuss those preca\J;.
tions. ,,
Mrs. Barrett. of Springville,
has been visiting him daily in l~
prison.
Mrs. Barrett was warned Mori-
day before vislt.ini Ciilr.lOl'e thal
s h e was known to h av~·
purchased sleeping pills on pr& ..
scription and must not brlnf
them t o the prison. d eputx'
Warden Leon llatth said Mon·
da)'. ''-
Hatch said ~he was subjectelf
to skin searches by a matrolf
before eacfl other visits and tb~\i
Gilmore wa-s sea.-ched betoiJt
and after eath visit.
Gilmore bad been scheduled ta'
be executed by a firing squad Of\,
Monday, but the exec:utton w"' delayed .
----Tue'Jday. November 16 1978 DAILY PILOT ,4:J
fBus . Chiefs Stumble _ on Audit · Target
Ellorts by Oranfe Cotrnty
Transit Dlstrict di~ to ctve
themselves creater ~ over
dialrict finance. ran into alumhl·
lag block• Monday. ·
While directon did aPPf()ve a eontract hlrlna county Auditor·
CootroUer VJc Helm as OCTD'a
latemal auditor, they put olJ 4e:-
ddina Just what area Helm Jato
ftUdy. .
General Manager Ed Loritz
suggested Heim flrst revie~. in·
ventory c-<:>ntrol, a farebox coUee·
lion and fuel consumption.
But ctirectora referred his aui·
gestion to both Heim and the
OCTD audit coaunlttee for their
review.
Loritz last month had wed directors to pull off starting the
internal audit until he had time to
learn if an additJonal staff
member might be needed to
work with Heim's employes.
But directors follow~ Heim 's
Dally Pilol Slalt Pl!Olo
BURROUGHS MAN'AGER MERRELL WITH COMPUTERS
Community Oriented, But Trying to Keep Low Profile
Burroughs: 'Layoff
A Personal Frlilure'
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of ,,,. D~lly Po!ot Slaff
When the Detroit-based Bur-
roughs Corporation dedicated
its Mission VaeJO plant, the
community t h at has since
mush roomed around it was
scarcely two years old. There
wasn't much in the Saddleback
Valley but scattered farms and
rolling hills.
But according (o Robert D.
Me rrell, curr ent genera l
manager of the south county
facility. that's exaclly what the
corporate managers were look·
ing for . .JI
. "Burroughs n as always tried
'to put its facilities in areas that
are reasonable to live and work iii." said Merrell, who has been
with the corporation for 17
~ears . Most employes live
withjn a half hour dnve or the
51lan t.
"We are com muruty-oriented
but v.e ~ener ally lry to main·
(.ain a low prohle ·•
For the far~t few years, the
firm used its building at 25725
J eronimo Road for fabrication
of electrical componenLc; used at
Jts other plants :icr06S the state
and nation.
Then. almos t overnight. that
fhase or the bUSIOE!SS was COO·
~lidated with another and the
Mission Viejo facahty closed its
CJoors for two years. until a new
use was found for the 300,000
square (eel of office and factory
$pace.
•That new use was a large c~unk of Burroughs' computer
15ystems group, which was
t'noved to Orange County from the City or Industry.
The 750 designers, engineers,
(echnicians, executives and
~lectrical •workers who make up
ft1errell 's work force build elec·
tronic "brain s" from the
around up -the latest in com·
puter technology designed tq
keep banks and other industries
in operation.
' MerTell prefers not to th.ink or ~mputers as brains. He says
tl"ley are jus t cold. lifeless
machines that serve to extend
ahd enhance functions that will
always remain "human."
"It is ridiculous to assume
ahd argue that machines will
r1,place humans." said Merrell,
Y._ho is "fairly outspoken" on t~e subject of computer
a\,ltomatlon.
"They can't perform human
f1,1nclion s because they don 'l
h11ve lhe human faculty or
perception -they can't be
liven the ability to perceive the
unexpected and deal with it."
Merrell said computers will
perform a programmed set or
fnnctions, all of a me<:hanical
noture.
"\ • • AJI they do is remow.e the
drudgery and tedium from ma.ny Jobs done by human be-
,l
ings," be said.
The Burroughs executive said
his firm is "extremely con-
scious" of the effects of rapidly
changing computer technology
on its own employes and makes
every effort to keep the m
trained and useful.
lie noted that it would be im·
possible for Burroughs' com-
puter manufacturing process to
function without using other
computers for such things as in·
venlory and problem-solving at
high speed.
''Computers are a resource
that permits us to expand our
horizons," Merrell said. "Peo-
ple who are not 'Willing to ex·
panrt themselves and grow may
b e tec hnol og i c ally un -
employed."
Merrell said there is a com-
pany policy of making sure
managers are aware of "their
responsibility to provide a good
life for our e mployes. We take
layoffs as personaJ failures."
Burroughs d oes very little
business with the government
or military because, Merrell
said. the corporation "would
rather operate at a profit."
Even with such commer&l
customers as banks, un·
iversities and other industries,
Merrell said competition is so
keen in the computer industry
tha t the profit margin is
"generally pretty smaJI and one
wrong s tep could lead to
bankruptcy."
Burroughs, which had re.
venues of ove $1 billion in 1975,
has been ab • to keep its head
above wat because of sound
decisions, erreU said.
He not that the corporation
b gan leering away from
"""',__.7aoturing electro-
mechanical devices (such as
adding machines) in the 1950s
because of a premonition that
the bottom would drop out of
that market. It did.
The result was a firm that
specializes in computers or all
sizes and ,description, many or
which must be updated each
year or so because or the pre-
s s ure of com petition and
skyrocketing technology.
"But believe it or not. we still
manufacture ·some adding
machines at our factory in
Brazil," Merrell said.
Back in the assembly area of
the Mission Vie)o plant. which
is clean and obviously efficient
despite the: mate or complex
machinery, wiring, circ\lttry
and fl a3hlng ll:f.Eb Merrell II· lustrated the s ed at which
computers are anging.
He pointed to o ne 1973-
vlntage unit obout six by-~i x
reel and noted that it h d a
"memory'' or about 48,000
words. Right next to it wos n
1975 model. The two-by-two foot
boit bas a memory of wcll over
100,000 wbrds, he said.
advice instead, after the auditor
said he performed similar func-
tJons for county departments and
did·not believe extra help would
be needed.
The hiring or Heim was part of
an eigbt·point financial program
suggested by Bqa.rd Chairman
Ralph Clar~. It not only gives
directors a more direct say-so in
finances but· ties OCTD's budget
more closely to county apron str· lngs.
.. --Loritz complained Monday,
however. that the county and
OCTD budaets are not written ahke and he may have lo com-
pletely rework the budget to
avoid problems ln malting cer· ta.in purchases and payments.
But directors.said they doubted
the problems would be so great
that the budget would have to be
completely overhauled.
.. You don't have to re-budget,"
said Director Al Holllnden. "I
think we a re making mountains
out oJ molehills."
Ia a related matter. directors
also put orr the hiring ol a budget
analyst, who t>.-ould heJp OCTD
develop a budget department
and who would work indepen.
denUy and rep0rt to the board.
Director Tom Riley bad sug.
gested OCTD contract ror that
service wltb the county. But
Loritz proposed Monday that an
out.side consultant could be more
rosUy.
ln addition, he said, it could be •
more efficient to train an OCTD
employe for the )><J5itioo than a
consultant. •
But Riley 1ald he believed COO•
tracUng with the courtf.Y would be
more efficient.
And he. added, .. , want to un·
derscore my bope that real
cooperation between the consul·
tant and the staff will produce
valuable results."
Countiall!
Slain ill
Anaheim
.· . • Returns From 'Dead'
Amnesiac Back, BUt Who's in His Grave?
A 31-year-old Garden Grove
man apparently was murdered
Monday evening when he
stopped in an Anaheim com-
mercial complex to change a flat
Ute, police reported today.
James Willis Downs of 12911
Dale St., Garden Grove, had
been struck in the back or the
head with a blunt object, police
said, and was pronounced dead
at the scene.
OCficers said Downs was found
lying behind his car in an in·
dustrial ci:>mplex near East
Street and Orangethorpe Avenue
in north Anaheim.
The trunk of his car was open,
the car lights were turned on and
the car had a flat tire, officers
sai(!.
Police said they believe Downs
was killed shortly before his body
was spotted by a police
helicopter at 8:30 p.m.
They did not know if he had
been robbed or what the motive
may have been in the slaying.
· Police said Downs worked in-the
commercial complex.
Pilot Rule d
Flying Alon e
SEDALIA, Mo. (AP) -Three
years after he disappeared, and
six months after his burial
service, Harold Goldberg wrote
to his wife to say he was alive and
well.
He said a loss of memory was
responsibl e for bis disap-
pearance, but that created a new
mystery that remains unsolved:
Who's the man in Goldberg's
grave?
Irene Goldberg said she had
been reluctant to beUeve her
husband was dead. But last
April, a decomposed body pulled
from the Missouri River was
identified as Goldberg on the
basis of a scar, a bent finge~ and
missing teeth. • "
With that, Mrs. Goldberg ar·
ranged a funeral and resigned
herself to being a widow.
This month, her husband's Jet·
ter arrived. He lost his memory
; while driving home from a busi·
ness trip in January 1974, he said,
and was working under a new
name at ·11 resort in Forsyth, 135
miles away in the Ozarks. He
said his memory had been
refreshed when a visitor re·
cognized him.
Goldberg , a cook and
r estaurant owner, said in a
telephone interview that just
before he Jost his memory "I got
to feeling kind of sleepy. I
slopped along the highway and
went to sleep."
\
,.,.~
BACK FROM 'DEAD'
Harold Goldberg
He said that's the last thing he
remembers, except for vague re·
collections of stops in Ogden,
Utah ; Athens , Ga.; and
Springfield, Mo. He said he aJso
remembered going to work for
Jack Crockett, operator of the
Elks Club in Independence, Kan.,
and at some point adoptin.t; the
In Fatal Crash Man's Las t ·Wish
Orange County coroner's of·
ficers have now determined that
Arthur Jack Kay of San Diego
was alone in his single engine
aircraft Sunday when it crashed
~d disintegrated in Trabuco Ca·
nyon.
Fears that the fl yer's son
might have been with him in the
four-sealer machine were dis·
sipated late Monday when in-
vestigators learned that the
young man was safe and was
staying with his mother in Chino.
Investigators continued their
search of the area today in the
hope of finding more parts of the
aircraft and other human re·
mains.
It is believed at this point that
.Kay, 52, ran out of gas during his
night from Chino to San Diego
and plunged into the south face of
the canyon while circling the
area and looking for a landing
spot.
Driver Struck
By Train, Die s
A Fullerton man died Monday
at UCI Medical Center of injuries
suffered Oct. 27 when his pickup
truck collided with a train in
Brea, police sartt today.
Kenneth Lee Linder, 51, of 3043
Maple SL .. suffered massive head
injuries in the collasion on the
city's east side, officers said.
Police said they had been una·
ble to learn whether Linder-was
attempting to outrun the train to
the Dirch Street crossing or
whether he failed to sec or hear
the fl ashing signal.
Pet Monkey Killed,
Buried With Owner·
BENTON, Ky. CAP) -For 15
years. a spider monkey named
Cheetah was Clifford Wade's
constant companion. After Wade
died last week, the monkey was
killed and buried with him.
"He said he wanted to be
buried with·· the monkey, and
that's what he got," said Earnest
Collins, the administrator of
Wad~'s es tale. ''The monkey was
his best friend, his companion."
Collins said Wade, 75, ex·
pressed t he wish a few days
before he died Friday. Cheetah
was put to s leep by a
veterinarian and placed in
Wade's coffin. The two were
buried t ogether in a loca l
cemetery ..
Collins said Wade had lived in
a tent, then in an•btd car, until
Collins built a cabin on his pro-
perty for his friend.
"He was that kind or fellow
that wanted to be left alone and
didn't ask a lot of others, other
than to be left alone," Collins
said.
He said Wade had about Sl,700
in hls pockets when he died.
"He dido 't die broke," Collins
said.
"I talked lo him just last week,
just a few days before he died,"
Collins said. "I asked him what
he 4.ranted to do with the money,
and he wanted to give it to me. I
told him I didn't want it."
Collins said he suggested that
Wade leave the money to a local
charity and the old man readily
agreed.
Collins said Wade's money will
be given to a home for excep-
tional children. He said Wade
"liked that idea."
Suspect Held
In CB Thefts
A Costa Mesa man was taken
illto custody by Newport Beach
police Monday in connection with •
CB radio thelts in Newport
Heights.
Wayne Jackson Brantley, 30, or
2.64 Cabrillo St., was picked up
with a 14-year-old boy at 2 a.m. at
the intersection of Irvine Avenue
and Beacon· Street by police who
were looking for a car that
matched the ·description or
Brantley's.
According to po'lice, a search of
Brantley's car turned up four
citizen band radios that asserted·
Jy Jlad been stolen.
Foot Was Be ar's
CALISTOGA CAP ) -A
severed foot discovered in a
Nape ~ou dump formerly belonge a bear, not a human
being s firs t reported, sheriff's
deputies said today.
name Harold Gordon.
Wbeg,,Crocltett moved to
ForsYlli to take over a lakeside
lodge and cafe, he took
Goldbers along as hi.a coot.
"We kind of more or less adopt-
ed the oJd boy ... Crockett said.
He added that his three
children "kind of thought the
world of him."
Crockett described Goldberg,
67, as outgoing. He said Goldberg
once sat at a table with Susan
Ford when the President's
daughter visited the lodae~
"He sent the President a loaf of
cinnamon bread,'' Crockett said.
Crockett said a recent visitor to·
the lodge as ked him if his cook's
name was Goldberg. Crockett
said no, but later asked the coo'k
if he was reaUy Harold Goldberg.
The cook paused for a moment
and then said, "Yes, I am,"
Crockett recalled. A short time
later, Goldberg wrote to his Wile.
On Nov. 7, Mrs. Goldberg went
with friends to Forsyth and took
Goldberg back to Sedalia.
"We're going lo bave to work
things out and put the pieces
together again," Mrs .. Goldberg
said. She said Goldberg's
memory was slowly returning
and be bas been recalling bits
and pieces or his life. He suffers
p eriod s of dizziness and
headaches, she said.
Suggestions
Sought by
Transit Unit--
Orange County Transit Dis.
trict directors want their
emplQYes to suggest ways to im-
prove-service and reduce costs.
And they agreed Monday to
pay cash bonuses to encourage
workers 'to come up with
creative ideas.
At the request or OCTD Board
Chairman Ralph Clark, who also
is a county supervisor, directors
decided lo pattern-their employe
suggestion'· program after one
the county has used for the past
year. '
Clark said the program
generated suggestions which
saved the county more than·
$50,000 last year. Employes re-
ceive a 10 pe rcent share of
money saved by their ideas, he
said , and in som e cas es
employes earned bonuses of
more than $1,000.
Four Mental
Patiems A id
Baby's Birth
NAPA (AP) -Four mental pa.:
lients helped a woman patient
give tPrth in an acute psychiatric
ward while the hospital staff was
supervising the dining hall.
Dr. Abraham S. Unn, medical
direetor·at Napa State Hospital,
confirmed Monday that the pa-
tients apparently were the only
people present when the woman
gave birth during the Saturday
dinner hour.
.. The mother, who was not Iden-.
tifled, and daughter were later:
admitted to Queen of the Valley:
· Hospital where both were report·:
Orange County 'l'rnnsit District directors
may be in the market for buses like this
General Motors prototype brought into the
count) for them to see recently. It has a
special su,.pcnsion system that enables it
to "kneel" to take on passengers. The
windows are acrylic and the body is
fiberglass tor easy maintenance and re-
sistance to vandalism. Buses HJ·~ this one
will co~ between $76.000 and f.!'6.000 per
copy . depending on h ow they arc
equipped.
ed doing fine. :
Linn said a staff member e11:-~
amined the pregnant woman an.
hour earlier and decided she was:
nQt in labor. A hospital lmploye.
sajd it would have been difficult;
to tell whether the woman was in·
labor because she w~ "obese,
and quite psychotic."
But patients in interviews said
the staff ignored the signs or iln·:
minent birth, went to dinner and:
left them in the ward, which LiM
said is connected to the dining
hall by open doorways.
Linn said a chronic shortage of·
starr at the hospital leaves only•
two staff members in the ward
during evening shllts. and both:
were busy in the d.inlng room:
during the dell very.
He said he is inv~tlgating the· inc~cm. :
Linn said the hospital nonnaJJY.
doea not admit women tn their'
eilhth month 0£ pregnancy but:
made an ucepUon lq.lh13 cue.
1
DAILY PIL6T Tuetday, November 19, ltTa
J .. t Separ8tionist Wi.Ds
-.
:::.:~·~ 'tt'ICJa
Quebec Secession Appears UnJ,ikely
1"('1 Tom
· arplllae .. , .. ~....,..._1 ~·
MIDNIGHT OIL: Phll An·
thony, the former mayor and
counciJperaon from
Westminster, sits today as the
new Orange County supervilor
for tbe First District. ff• hu
vowed to do a lot ol atudy1n1.
Anthony comes to the first dis-
trict chair early. Normally. afler
the el~~tlon,. hi• tour-year term
wouldn't have started until
January.
After he defuted Santa Ana
Councilman Harry Yamamoto,
·however, Governor Brown de-
cided to appoint blm to the poet
forthwith. This was becau.se the
Finl District ch1ir was vacant,
empty and otherwise unat-
tended.
THE SEAT Wl\8 HJU body
because the former First District
supervisor, Robert Battin, got
dispatched from It with his con-
viction for mhrnsing hls cowity.
paid staff in an ill-fated run for
the Democratic nom!nation (or
lieutenant governor. So now An·
thony haa the Job.'
Shortly after the swearing-in
_ bit which occurred only yester.
day, the new aupervisor said he
will be1in study in ea.meat on the
so·called ''noise footprint" on
open land sut"rounding El Toro ~ Marine Corps Air Station.
On this issue, he may have to
burn some midnight 1J1hts
because he Is going to be .a
pivotal vote.
The issue is more home con-
struction In the El Toro area. The
land In question Is assertedly im-
pacted by racket from El Toro
Marine jets.
Thus we have reports that
homes shouldn't be built in the
noise area and other opinion that
it would be bkay.
The county board, down one
member with the aforemen-
tioned Battin 's departure, kept
locking up in 2 lo 2 tie votes on the
issue.
FURTHER THUS, lo suggest
that Anthony's vote on the issue
MONTREAL (AP)-The Partl Que~ota. wbicb advocat.tl the inde~end•nc• of French·
•peak.int Quebec troqi En&Uah·
dominated Canada, bu won con-
trol of the provlnclal iovemm~t.
But tbt vote for a new provincJal
le1ialature lndlcated voter dlaap·
prov al o! sece111ion.
Party Leader Rene Levesque.
who wlU become pre\ltr oftl\e
J)l'OVinc., ti..• promJMd a nler#I·
dum oa HCtHlon within two Year•.
ANT181PAaAT18T PAlt11BS
1ot ~ perceat of th• vote Monday,
and opinion Polll before U.. elec·
tlon tndJcat-4 that only about IO
per~ent of tbe voters wuo
cUehard separatists.
Court May RevieW
Med School Policy
WASHINGTON CAP) -Cao a medical 1cbool reject a white 1tudent
with teat acorea hl~er than minortty 1tudent1 admitted under a
apecial procram? Or la that racial dlscrtmlnaUon In reverse! .
The Supreme Court may .. ree to wrJaUe with that quutlon. Jr it
doea, its answer could cll'I')' sreat conaequencea for affirmative ac·
tlon pro1rama In education and .. 1• business throughoutlbenaUoo. He charted that he wu ...,... criminat.ed atainst becauae UC·
THE JUSTICES temporarily Dam admltled 1~ lower-rated
set uide Monday an order by the students, all minority members.
Calllornia Supreme Court atrik· The Supreme Cowt aave ·the
lnl down a pro1ram at the uc UC re1enl~ 30 d~ya to appeal tht
Davis Medical School that Jlves state court a ruhnJ, aayin,g it will
admlsslon preference to mlnorl· hold ln abeyance the order di&·
(" ty students. manUln1 the aWrmatfve acUon
The stale court ruled la1l proaram pendln& the appetll.
month that the tchool'a "1peclaJ atudentt •• proaram dll· MANY CIVIL RIGBT8 IJ"OU,ps
crlmlnate;a againat whJtes -including the NAACP Legal
becauae it take• into con1ldera· Defense and Education Fund, the
tlonanappUcant'arace. Mexican American Le1al
Wblle not denrlni· the racial Defenae Fund and tho National
and ethnic aspect of itl proaratn Conterence of Black Lawyen -
at Davia and other UC campuaes, have ur1ed the regenta to drop
. the university's reeeots said they the caae.
were attempUna •'to bring his· Those organilatfons, noting
torically under.represented that the California court lndlcat-
minorities and ethnic groups into ed that special proarama for the
the mainstream of our country's diaadvantaged mi1ht be ruled
educational and professional conatltutlonal if poor whites were
life " Included, apparently feel the
• t Bakke case ii not the beat teat t&
THE CHARGE OF "revene gpn a Supreme Court"41nc that discrimin~" was mJlde by Al· such programs are valid.
Ian Bakke · a 36·year-old white They fear •n adverse rullng
civil en eer who twice was couJd Jeopardize afflrmative ac·
turned down for adrnis8ion to the tJon programs in acboola u well
medical school. as in working places.
Peacekeepers Move
will be pivotal is act1Jally un-. f'"ITI_ __ h
derstating the case. It won't just ,1 .I_ TfTOUg
be pivotal. It will be deciding.
lt has been largely hinted that
Lebanon
Anthony drew hefty support from BEIRUT Lebanon (AP) -Wlth 8eirut under it.I undiaputed con·
construction interests in his suc-trol the Sy~ian army Pftp&red today to extend it• peacemaki.nt grip cessful supervisorial campaign. to the rest of Lebanon.
Additionally it _has been The capital, occupied in a swirt aod peaceful invasion Monday,
rnmored that ~ertatn b~ildlni spent its first night wtlhoul a 1ingle sbol or exploaion after 19 months people are most interested tn see-of civil war.
ing that any hoise impact curbs An .Arab Leaaue spokesman
a1ainst residential con.struction said plans were belnc made ror
be lifted around El Toro's jet other Syrian units of the Arab
aerodrome. peacekeeping force to occupy
. Through it all, you can bet that Tripoli and Sidon, Lebanon's
Anthony's vote on this key Issue second and third lareest cities
w 11 1 be scrutinized with and both Moslem •lr'onlbolds,
enormous Interest. He says he before the end of the week.
will be studylne nol&e footprints.
He m ay be hearing noisy
footsteps, too.
IT ALL GOES to 1how how
much our reaion has chanaed In
ret'ent years. ll seerm like only
yesterday th'at El Toro was
n oU\in1 more than vost
farmlands with a county store at
the crO.sroada.
The only footprints you ever
saw around El Toro were bare
ones leading into somebody's
watermelot1 patch.
Those footprints were always
made as no1 ele11sly as PoSSible
Now the stomping around In
the place takes to the air arid can
be heard everywhere And A11·.
thony sets to grapple with ll
before he even gets the F1rst Di11·
trkt seat warm
You have to wish him luck.
\lleC £tlort Betrfle•
UNITED NATIONS', N .Y.
CAP) -Vietnam began cam·
palgnlng today tor General As-
sembly pre11ure on the United
States to reverse the S.Curtty
Council veto it cast a1atnat Vlet-
name.e membership in the Unit·
ed Nations. But noth.ini the as-
sembly did was expected to have
any etf ect on the Americana.
U.S. Ambasaador William W.
Scranton told the council the
failure of the Hanoi eovemment
to account satisfactorily" for IOO
American servicemen miuiot ln
action in the Vietnam war ralaed
doubts about Vietnam's
humanitarianism and conse-
quently about its fitness lo join
the United Nationa.
( IN SHORT J
TOKYO CAP) -Activity in
Pekt1h1 was normal today and there was no vi1ible damaee
trom ao earthquake that sent re·
aldents of the Chinese capital
screaming Into the streets Mon-
day hllht, foteignera reported by
telephone from the Chinese
capital.
There were no reports of
caauaJtJea.
110 to Prelle'Deai ..
WASHINGTON CAP) -Tbe
Houae Committee on Aasuaina-
Uons will hire 170 investisators
tor its probe of the aasulnaUons
or President John F. Kennedy
and Martin Luttrer King.
Committee counsel Richard
Spi:ague aald Monday 110 "is a
small fi1ure" for investi11tlng
two murdera.
~
Skies Clear Over U.S.
Flori""' Rockie• FefJl Tou,ch of Cold, Fog
T~p~rai ur~•
Mltll Idiot Atbtny 0 " "'· AllluQuer~ ,. ,.
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G<"Hn 8•¥ 'l " Ho"°tu•u _, '° . 01
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J<l{UOt,.111~ ,, .. t<enwa' City .. ,,
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HAllONal WUIMU UtYtfl
NOAA Ut Ot•• ef (e•••ut
CaUtorala
Duriq lh• campalp, Leva·
que hlmHlf •oft.peclalM Ills
party•a tradlUo"al IOa1 ot ln· CSepenclenee. Ina toad, TM attacked Prtmler Robert Bouruaa and his
IJbtral party admlDlatraUoo for
the province's 10.1 percent un·
employment rate and predicted a
billlon-dollar deficit and the
hl&beat tu•• in Canada,
Whueount1a11toDNSMonday
night, the Parli Quebecois, or Pe-
quistes, had won 66 of the UO aeals
ln the UHmbly and WU .. ad.lng
Cor t.h.-.o ~era. The lJbetal• h&a
Z7 seats and were leading for one
other. In the last assembly, there
were 102 Liberals and six Pe-quiltea. '
'nlE ELECTION SAW a re·
IW'Jence of th• Union NaUonaJe
party. which won 11 teata. It wu
the province's rull~ party for 20
of the 26 years between 19" and
1970, butloet all ltHeatl in 1973.
Tbe CrediU1te and Popular Na-
Uonal parties won one aeat each;
In the last auembly the
Credlliltea bad two.
Tbe Parti Quebecoll won about
41 percent of the poput'ar vote; the
Uberal,a got :W percent; Union
National• took 18 percent; and
ID.inor parties 1ot thereat.
BOURASSA LOM' ms own
seal to Gerald Godin of tbe Parti
Quebeoow, and Pequlat• ousted
10 other membera ot Bourassa'a
cabinet. Leveaq ue, who lost int wo
previous tries for the leglatatW'e.
WOil hil district.
Leveeque, a M-year-old former
radio-television Joun\alist who
quit the Liberal party in 1967 to
fl1ht for tbe independence of
Quebec, told Canadians "who
fear that they have somelhinl to
fear becau:ae of our victory''"that
his party'• goal waa to .. make
Quebec a nation .Jor a ll
Que.beckers without e~ption."
BUT IN OTTAWA, Prlme
Minister Pierre EWotl Trudeau
and other political leader1 said
the election was not a vote for
separation. Trudeau, the leader
of the national Liberal party,
said, " .•• the people of Quebec
did not vote on con1Ututlonal but
on economic and administrative
tasuu.
••t..evNque and b11 party have
been If anted a mandate to torn\ a
provincial aovernment! not lo
aeparate that province rrom the
fflt of Canada. I am conttdent
that Quebeckers wUI cooUnue to
reject 1eparall11m becauae they
•till believe their destiny 1• Jinked
with an lndlvillble Canada.''
.,, __ _
JUBILANT PARTI QUDECOll IU'9'0RTIRI CILllRAft" On• C•n1•• auebeo ,..., Up......, nroueh..,.... :.;
~ New Car S.ales Fall~·
Strike, A.MC Cite~~
1''
DETROIT (AP) -l.Jnlerini effec:tl of a atrlke a1alnst Ford andla
cqntlnuin1 •lump at American Moton are two reaaona wby the utc
industry la failiDI to make a 1tton11tart in the new·model 1alea ye~.
anaJyataaay.
DomeaUc 1ale1 for the fint 10 day1 of November, reported Mon4ay, were down by l.S pen:ent from
the same period last year: 2',489
vehicles per day compared with
24,869. It waa the third alraiaht
lo.day period with alower aalea
than a year earlier.
8MALL·CAR SPECIALIST
AMC, which cut the bale price CJD
its Gremlin by $253 Nov. I. •bowed the 1teepe1tdecline. Sil# in the first 10 days ot the moqt.11
·BUT INDUSTaY ANALYSTS were off Jl percent from a f_.
said that even takina the Ford aao. . •l• strlke into account, sales were A spokesman said It ls too ear-
below expectation• for this ly to tell whether the cut from
normally robust time of year. $3,248 to $2,99S helped sales.
"We expected sprightlier "W~'ll have a better indication
sales, but they were flat, just Uke during ~~e sec~nd 10 days of Nov·
the economy," said one analyst. ember, he said. ,
"We didn't have the immediate . General Motors sales w~nl up
jump at the start ot the model 5 percent. wilh Oldamoblle and
year that we bad anticipated." Gadlllac reporting records for
Ford, which reported a 13 per· the period. Chrysler sales were
cent decline, uid it is still feeling up 4 percei:it· .
the effect. ot a four-week strike DomesU(: car sales for ~
by the United Auto Workers, calendar year reached 7,Ul,'144,
which ended in October. The firm up 23 pe~cent from a ye.ar ago.
said the impact 11 lessenln1. Cbryaler 11 up 33 percent. GM~
however, and product.ion ia near-percent a~d Ford 16 percent.
ly back to normal. while AMC is down 25 percent.
-
Kitchen Help for the Holidays
..
Look t'O the food pages of the Daily Pilot for timely tips on
menu pl•nnlna, especially during the holidays.
Food Editor Barbara Gius orrers a host of Ideas and
recipes to help you add sparkle to your holiday menus for
famUy or friends.
Alona with &uldance to the best food values or the season,
you '11 fJnd holiday bargains among the advertisements
placed by the OrWlge Coast's leading grocery markets.
For extra kitchen help during the holidays, tum to the
food pa1e1 ln the People ~~Uon of the Wednesday
,.
DAILY PILOT
642·4lJ21
I
• I
rittle's
ot Over
or Farr
OS AN'GELES (AP) -The
e -year •old legal battle
tween Charles Manson trial
dge Charles H. Older and
wsman William Farr is not
er.
Jder, ordered by an appeals
· urt to show why Farr 's case
o ud not be dismissed im·
!!]edfately, filed papers Monday
~isting the reporter should go
to jaU.
f THE JUDGE, represented in
;Uie dispute by Deputy County
.Co~el Willi am Stewart, con-
tended be has the right to send
Farr back to Jail for five days as punishment for failing to re-
:"al a news source.
· •Farr, now a reporter for the
~ Angeles Times, served 46
fd)ys behind bars before he was
·~leased pending appeals
•• Older said that the 46 days
were not "punitive." Thal term.
he said , was "designed to
coerce a recalcitraot witness in·
lo testifying."
OLDER H AD vowed to keep
Farr in jail indefinitely, claim·
ing the reporter would eventual-
ly be coerced into talking. nut
another judge ruled that 'further
incarcerati o n would be
"punitive,'' not "coercive,'' and
must be limited to five days.
The California 2nd district
Court of Appeals, which sug-
gested on Nov. 2 that the case
·be dismissed, has scheduled a
Nov. 23 hearing for arguments
from both sides.
Farr was covering the
Manson trial for the Los
Angeles Herald Examiner when
he wrote a s tory aeta1!1ng
Manson Family plans to kill
numerous celebrities. Older cre-
trlanded to know the source of
·the story which he said v10lated
his publicity gag order. .Farr.
invoking an ethical responsibili·
ty to a source. refused.to tell.
A NEW LEGAL wrinkle in
the case was noted recently in a
"friend of the court" hrief from
the Reporters Committee for
Freedom of the Press They
argued that Oldc r"s gag order
in the Manson trial lapsed once
the jury was sequestered.
Farr's story appearc.'<i after
.. e jury was locked up at a
M>tel, and his attorney has
a rgued repeatedly that Jurors
~mid not have seen the story
111'fhe new aq~ument was based
on a U S Supreme Court de
cision str1k10~ down a Nebraska
gag order. Th<' high court held
that a no-pubhc1ty ordl•r «1p
plies only lo pre·tnal prubhcJty
a nd terminates "hen lhe jury 1s
empaneled lo try the ca..-.e
Son In Prison
&l'W11'9Qiooto
SENTENCED TO DIE
Douglas Gretzler, 25 ..
Murderer . •
Sentenced
To Death
TUCSON , Ariz. (AP )
Douglas Gretzler, convicted last
year of killing a University of
Arizona couple in their Tucson
apartment, r eceived the dt>ath
sentence Monday but the order
may not be carried out ror
years because of appeals.
Gretzler, 25, of New York
city was convicted in Yavapai
County just over a year ago for
the 1973 murders of Michael and
Patricia Sandberg. He joins
Willie Steelman, 31, of Lodi,
Cahf., on death row. Both men
also have been comicted for kill·
ings m Califor nia and sentenced
to nine life lerms there.
THE SENTENCE was handed
down by Pima County Superior
Gaiurt Judge William E. Dru.ke,
who said it was difficult to pass
the sent ence. Defense attorney
David S. Hoffman, who sought
a life term for his chent, had
argued it was easy to send a
'convicted murderer to death.
But Hoffm an said Monday
.Judge Druke told him he was
"willfully and woefully mis-
taken."
ACCOMPANYING the death
sentence was a 25·to-50 year
term in prison for burglary a11d
robbery ~harges relatM to the
Sandberg killings. "
Gretzler and Steelman also
have been accused in four other
Arizona killings bu t Depul)
<.:o,unty Attorney Randolph W
Stevens said it was unclear
whether those prosecutions
would be pressed in the wake of
the death sentences.
Mom's Last Wi-sh
Ended With Death
ALAM EbA C t\P) Isabel ~t1llard d1<'d of cancer today wi thout
having her last wish fulfilled Mexican offi.c1als refused lo let her
son out of prison to see her one last time
1 A spokesman at AJameda County Hospital said Mrs. Millard 's
, husband and other chJldren were with her~ hen she died at 3 45 a m
Gov Edmund G. nrnwn Jr had asked President Ford to 111
t tervene with Mt>ir1can authorit1ec; lo let Philhp Mtflard. 32. v1s1l his
mother. Appeals from C.Ahfom1<1. including an orrcr to send the
pnsoner·s brother as J hostage had been unsu<'Cl"~sful
Court Cuts .. tward ht Half
LOS ANGELES IAP> A stak Court of i\ppeul has halved the
SS million awarded b\ a lo~cr court to a Pomona roofer from an in·
surance compan}. l~·,nin.: thl· man \\1th a $2!i million pun1t1ve
damage judgment
'
1
( J The ca!>c involv('(I S ta l e Michael Egan. 61. who fell
from a ladder six years ago
"'-------------and inJured his back. lie sued
his Ins ur ::inc.e company ,
Mutual or Omaha, claiming 1t reneged on a d1 .,.ability policy which
would have paid him S200 monthly for life.
Oll•hore Lea•lng Opposed
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Directors of the Comprehensive Planning
Organization. composed or the county and 13 city governments. op·
I pose new Offshore Oil leasing by the redera) government.
A resolution against further least,> sales was adopted by the
group Monday after Its staff presented a report citing adverse
economic and environmental impacts Crom near-shore oil develop·
ment act1v1ty
BrolDft \/bit• Menral Unit~
SACRAMENTO (AP) California's troubled state mental
hospitals wlll be getting an unannounced vis itor soon -Gov. Ed-
mund Brown Jr.
1 Brown paid a surpnsl' visit of nearly four hours Sunday to
Metropolitan Stale Hospital 10 Los Angeles, where two patients'
deaths have been attributed by coroner's inquests to treatment or
lack of treatment.
Se% Charge Dl••'-•al Denfed
LOS ANGELES A Municipal Court judge has refused to dis-
miss charges or unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor which
have been brought against fi ve Los Angeles poJicemen.
Defense at\orneys argued to Judge Jack B. Tso fhat the Ram·
part and Hollywood Division oHicers, also charged with contribut·
ing to the delinquency of a minor . should be prosecuted by thr dis-
trict attorney's omce, rather than the city attorney.
1IMcl 1D you Rll All
n val'.!··· If US ..
Camarillo Prohe
Patient Died
Of 'Stran,gling'
..
VENTURA (AP) -A man who died only hours after entermg
Ctmilrlllo State Hospital for a drug and alcohol detoxificatJon pro·
gram was given a heavy dose or tranquiliiers,shortly alter he arrlved,
a gra nd jury has been told. .. _
The grand jury today continued its investigation of The death of
Thomas Lee Riddle, 37. of Long
Beach. He died last Feb. 4, only
hours after he entered the
hospital.
The look at Riddle's death is
part o( an investigation, now in
its second week, by the Ventura
County grand jury into a series of
55 deaths or patie nts during the
pastseveralyears.
Hughes Inks
UnWnPact
SAN MATEO <AV> -A
tentativ e set cnt
between Hugh Airwest
and a me ch ics' union
has averted threatened
strike aga· the airline.
The
B annou n ced the
agreement Monday roUow-
ing a day.Jong bargaining
session in Washington,
D.C. Union officials for the '
Aircraft M echjlnics
Fraternal Assoeiation had
called for a strike at mid-
rught Monday if a setUe-
ment could not be reached.
Details of the pact were
not r e leased, p endin g
r a tJfi c!tion by 586
mechanics and aircraft
cleaners wl)o currently
earn $10,608 t o $17,971 an-
nually.
The distriet attorney's office
has termed the deaths "eiamples
of negligence and nustreatment
of patients."
ON MONDAY, grand jurors
were , told that Riddle beeame
violent shortly after he entered
the hospital. He became involved
in a scuffle with three male
-.technicians and was given the
tranquilize:~ s hot..
Acco rc11ng t o the d eath
certificate, Riddle died from
s phyxia due to compression or
the neck, or s trangling. Drug
overdose was listed as a con-
tributing cause.
Riddle's brother, Larry,
testified that Thomas Riddle had
purchased a pint of vodka on the
way to the hospital and had
drunk most of it before he ar-
rived bes ides taking som e
methadone.
HE WAS DRUNK when he got
to Camarillo and was sent to
another ward for observation.
according to Dr. Jack Borel, the
admitting phys ician. But he
became violent when he saw a
girl with her arms s.hacld~lo .•
her sides. Larry Riddle safif.""·
Borel. the doctor who ordered
that Riddle be given the shot,
testified that he did so because he
was worried that Riddle m ight
hurt himself or someone on the
siaer.
First Grandchild
Singer P at Boone and wife, Shirley. pose with their
. daughter and her husband. Doug and Lindy Corbin.
Monday with their first grandchild, Ryan Patrick
Corbin, born Friday.
Telephone Firm Sued Again
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
General T e l e phone Co. of
California has been sued again
for allegedly releasing lists of its
customers' unlisted telephone
numbers.
The suit, the second in five
months. was filed Monday in
Superior Court on behalf of a Ben
Gam l\'b.9111.!!!e 3.ui!~s__ai!1 h~ )>afd lof unlJstea nurnoers<Jor u
years.
The lawyer -who prepared the
suit, Chris tophe r Wilson of
Oakland. refused to say whether
his client was the television ac·
tor.
Gazzara 's class action suit
seeks unspecified general and
punitjve dumages .
A similar suit Sl'eking $9.3
millio n was d1s m1sscd two
months ago.
Sf!~e Blocks 199
GASQUET. Calif. (AP) -A
mud slide which occurred on U.S.
199 near this northern California
town Monday night closed one
lane of the two-lane highway.
Clearing was expected by today.
You get all these services
FREE in your~wn corner of
Keystone Kountry •
I
•w.1n S'SOO mon•mum
..With :. tOOO min.mum .. ·w.111 S500 rn.n.mum.
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Kountry, a wealth'of free services Is always
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around the corner, at your nearest
Keystone office.
St.art with some 1ervJces. you'd
pay plenty for othe,r placei: Like notary
or CQP._ylng rervlce. Or money orders.
They re all yours, all 'absolutely free,
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And what are you payln& tiow
for travelers checks? Safe deposit box?
Note collectlon~ They all add up. But with
a minimum account at Keystone, they
don't cost you a penny.
On top of It all, Keystone pays
you the ibsolute top lnte,..lt on all savings
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your re1ular passbook to a generous
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Only Keystone gives you so many
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Assets over"'S88 rnllhon .
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,D AILY PILO T EDITO RIAL PAGE
A Difficult Goal
Our schools have been under a fairly
steady barrage of criticu;m in recent times.
Academic quality, or lack of it, is the m ost
popular target.
But in O range Cowity at le~t. someone must be doing something right.
The recent Calilooiia Assessment Pro·
gram, which tested youogster-s in the
second, third, sixth and twelfth grades in
s uch basic skills as reading, spelling, writ·
ten expression and mathematics, found
county students ranking well above state
averages in m ost areas:·
Unfortunately, the scores also confirm
a painful fact of educational life: Students
in more affluent communities a lmost in-
variably do better than those living in
poorer areas.
For example, high schoolers in well·to-
do Tustin and Irvine schools scored in the
top 10 percent in the state in most tests,
some in the lop three or four percent.
·By comparison, Santa Ana tfigh echool
students were below average in all subjects
tested, with scores in the bottom one-third
of the entire s tate.
This, says the commissioMr, is because
of the late passage ol the Tax Reform Act of
1976, which was s upposed lo add up to con-
gressional help for the nation's taxpayers .. ,
Tqere are lots of changes in the new
Form '040, we are advised, including a need
for advanced math s kills to figure taxabJe
income instead of using tax tables.
The only beneficiaries will be the coun-
try's growing army of tax preparation ex-
perts. t
With Uncle Sam seeking e.ver-
increasi.ng chunks of our pay checks. the
prospect of an even more complicated tax
form becomes even harder to s wallow.
Surely in the vast r ecesses of the IRS the re
is a hidden genius who could have devised a
less, rather than more, painful extraction
method.
Terms I .imited
• ~ •
This is no reflection on the teaching ef-
fort. Jn fact, teachers in the less afflu ent
areas undoubtedly have to work harder to
com pensate for the frequent absence of
A baJlot proposition passed by the
voters of San Diego County will be closely
watched in .other parts of the state as it pro-
gresses to almost-certain testing in the
courts.
Our neighbors to the south agreed, by a
3-2 margin , to limit elected county of --
ficeholders to three successive four·year
terms or two s uccessive six-xear terms.
Cold S houlder for Congressmen
home encouragement. . ·
On the whole, the county scores are en-
couraging, especially in reflecting an over-
all improvem ent over last year. But the
goal of equal education for all seems to re-
main an impossible dream.
Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger proclaim ed Post-Helsinki Shutout
' Gloomy Promise
the resulting 12-year limit unconstitution~ '\
but San Diego County supervisors decided WASHINGTON -The federal
to put it on the ballot anyway. And the commission that left for Europe
voters liked it. at dawn Nov. s aboard a U.S. Air Force jet to monitor Communist Among e lected ofCicials affected by the compliance with the Helsinki
meas ure wou Id be county supervisors, agreement will not set foot in Sov-
sheriffs, assessors, district attorneys, coun-iet·dominated natiom thanks to
The Internal Revenue Service has ty auditors and tax collectors. an unholy partnership between -~ ;;-;,;~~ =-~\·..&o.----1o.¥c""~___._.; b.:u>--_:/-·· -. -~ ~ .J;Qllc;J Qf th.esa. catagai;j~~~Or.:wge. c ; _the. )UeJ;Qlin_ a nd the Stat~
headache for the taxpayer. County. too, has from time to time;en of. DepartuienL
:.,.
"Completing your tax return this year ficeholders e ntrenched for lar fon~ than The com.mission, composed of
couJd be m ore difficult," says IRS Com-12 years. 12 members ~r Congress plus
rrussioner Donald C. Alexander, introduc-While Younger's assessment of the ~ ~r: ~ i evx ~
.iug the new and disimproved Form 1040. legality of the new San Diego law may be b r-an c h 0 r.
Not only will the forms be more dif · valid, its ready acceptance by the voters ficials will be
ficult, they '11 also be about two weeks late. reflects both a desire for new faces in gov-l i mi i e d to
probably arriving around the middle of ernment and s uspicion of over-extended we s t e r n
January. termsinpublico{fice. Europe and
What's Ahea~-for Ford?
'Former Pres,ident.' Role Wastes Talent
WASHINGTON -People running for election in 1976.
Yugo'S~via during three
week in
Europe
because Com-
munist countries refused to issue
visas. Not only did Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger fail to prod
the Soviet, but there is evidence
that he concurred with this ob·
struclion from the East.
• \W>nder what President Ford will
do when he's no longer President
Ford. c THl~CH) But after he was in office
a few months, he realized that bis
would indeed be a lame-duck
Presidency i( he did nOl declare
his intention lo run, and that be
The reason tor Dr. Kissinger's
negative attitude toward the com·
mission is the same as the reasons
for its extstence: the Ford·
Kissinger policy of using "quiet
diplomacy" l9 band.le cbfQni~
Soviet abuses -or the 'Helsinkl
agreement on human rights and
thus avoid public criticism that
might damage detente. That
policy is widely opposed by both
parties in Congress, so mucb so
that it invited the congressional
They don't want to let this good
man go, and it's remarkable that
some who voled for Carter say
they're sorry about Mr Ford.
But for Gerald R. Ford life will
never be the s ame fk soon takes
on lhc role of ·•former Presa·
dent.··
Former Presidents are hardly
private ci11 zcns. Wherever they
go. people
poi nt and
s tare or take
pi c tures o r
ask for auto·
graph i..
S l' c r ~ l
Scrvact.• men
• w 111 lurk
about and the
pres adto>ntl :tl
uu r .i "'" linger
For this reason. l 5USpecl lhal
President Ford will have lo move
fr o m ha ~ madd l e ·class
ne1~hborhood in :.uburban Alex·
<.andri a. \' .i , to some type of
retreat rcsadl'ncc Otherwise, the
tour buse~ which traffic Uus area
will ~ called on for a President
fo"ord stop, and that wlll certainly
clutter the s treet.
Mr. Ford says that he does
not intend to vegetate after he
leaves office. He shouldn 'l worry
about that. There will be so many
demands on his time that he'll
spend hours turning down re·
quests.
He'll be invited to give
speeches to all manner or groups,
front for a variety or causes,
participate in schemes to save
the human race. travel to foreign
nations anxious to host a former
President.
MR. FORD will also h ave
two tons of mail and telegrams to
respond to, and mull over the
possibility of writing memoirs.
though his remembrances of the
Presidency will span only 30
months.
The President's friends say
that he does not want to gel in·
volved in any undertaking or job
where he ls tjed down.
did •
Consequently. he worked
hard al his Presidency, incurred
the anger of congressional
Democrats with a string of
vetoes whi c h he saw as
necessary lo hold down inflation.
One result is tha~talces pride
in what he was abl do in the 30
months fate gav m ·as Presi·
dent.
He will grow increasingly
proud of that record, and his in·
timates feel that he will gain
more respect and admiration for
what he accomplished in a very
difficult lime, indeed. "
Jnteresti~y enough, the late
campaign 'SJrveys showed that
people liked knd trusted Mr. Ford
more than they did Mr. Carter.
The closeness or the election al·
tests to that, and the fact that Mr.
Carter benefited from highly
committed regional and minority
voling -Southerners of both
races, and blacks everywhere.
Admiration and commitment. are
two different feelings.
Dear
Gloon1y
Gus
San Clemente, Pacific
Palisades, and now, ap-
parently, Palm Springs.
Do you suppose Southern
California is becoming the
legendary elephants'
graveyard?
V.R.
Gloomy GU• comm•nh u • submottttl by
rf'•dt" Jtto do not n•<•Uilrtlt rttlt<l t~ "'·~ OI '"'" ., •• ,p.per S.nO YCMW °" -····Gloomy Cut. o ••• , PllOI
( EV ANS-NOV AK )
intervention in foreign policy
abhorrent to any President -and
most particularly to Kissinger.
mE FEDERAL commission.,
was spawned by congressional
discontent with President Ford's
refusal to condemn Soviet
violations of commitments to
human r ights made at Helsinki P1
return for legitimatizing poS\-
World War II boundaries. Follow·
Ing Kissinger's line, Mr. Ford
first igo~fed Soviet violations,
then praised Helsinki as a Soviet
defeat.
The inevitable result was the
congressional commission to do
what the State Department would
not do. Although the Department
urged a veto of the commission
bill, that would have been
suicidal for a President fighting
for his life against Ronald
Reagan. Mr. Ford signed the bill
June 3 witboul comment.
But that only began a cold war
waged bJ' lba State Department
with grater 'guile anti lenacity
than it often shows in in-
temationaJ 'relations. }Yith.. Kiss·
ii,cer carupg lhe t~. ~e Presi·
dent at first refused to name the
commission's three executive
branch members. After months of
• delay, be complied by selecting
members below the assistant
secretary level normal for such a
commission.
MOREOVER, one of those
three appointments proved to be a
Trojan horse: Washington lawyer
Monroe Leigh. who is now State
Department legal adviser. Leigh,
an exper&rat legalese, drove the
commission staff to distraction
with tendentiously phrased ob-
jections. "When Leigh brought up
the commission's lack of con-
stitutionality for the nth time,"
one staffer told us, "we had to re-
mind him that, after all, the Presi·
dent had signed the bill."
Leigh played bis trump card the
week of Sept. 27, with Congress
rushing madly for adjournment.
He informed Spencer Oliver, the
commissldn 's executive director,
that the original bill probably
failed to authorize funds for
foreign travel and suggested he
chick the General Accounting Of·
fice (GAO). Oliver did so and
foundtheGAO,obviouslyprimed,
had a ready f nswer; sorry, but
there is no way to finance any
travel.
That would have endedthefact· finding trip, to the State Depart-
ment's delight, were it not for
Rep Dante.i:a:srell of f'odAa. the
commission chairman. On the
night of Oct. 1 with Congress
about to adjourn until January,
Fascell accomplished the nearly
impossible by getting a clean bill
authorizing travel pay through
both Houses (telling a great deal
about their lntensesenUment).
AT THAT point, the State
Department barred the three eit-
ecutive branch members rroni
going into Eastern Europe. In
ract, nobody was going. E"cept
for Yugoslavia, the Soviet Union
and all oth e r Communist
embassies in Washington (includ-
ing Poland and Rumania} turned
down vlsa requests in nearly
identical language.
The State Dep~rtment did not
illt a finger to Jet vis¥. What's
more; commis~on-members and
· adml'nistration -officials told us
the Stale Department privately
concqrred tn··'f..he~viet ob-
struction. Com mission officials
were informed by apologetic
Polish and Rumanian embassy
officials that Dr. Kissinger and
Soviet Ambassador Anatoliy
Dobrynin were in the same ooat
on this one.
Even while limited to western
Europe and Yugoslavia, the com-
mission will produce evidence of
Soviet violations. To balance it,
State Department officials have
been busy documenting U.S.
violations (such as refusihg~isas
~Soviet "labor union" officials)
to further the spirit of clet.ente.
President·elect Carter, iD the
second debate, declared "we
have failed to enforce" the part of
the Helsinki treaty •'which in-
sures the right of people to mi·
grate, to join their families, to be
free. to speak out." Whether he
will do something as President is
pure speculation, but critics say
he cannot do worse than Mr. Ford.
That explains wby many foreign
policy hardliners, appalled by
administration sabotage of the
Fascell commission, shed few
tears over the election returns.
MORf:OVER, tf former Presi·
<frnt F ord remained ln the
Washington , D.C • area, his
public appearances here would
While there were reports that
he wol.lld like to teach at a un·
iversity, such a program would
likely be in the form or a lecture
series. He would like lo be as·
sociated with a universit y,
however.
A\ 63 , Mr. Ford is younger
than his years. He does daily
calisthenics, and swims and skis
a lot. He is in excellent physical
condition. He is also a work·
driven man who likes job
challenges. Given his vitality, be
is going to be active in something
arter he leaves office.
THE LATE Harry S Truman
once suggested that formN
Presidents be given a certain
status in the U.S. Senate so their
experience and knowledge could
be lapped in crucial situations.
AIM: Indians ' False Prophet
.. be a bore after a whale and, right·
ly or wrongly. he would become a
has·l>een in the very city where
he spent nearly all his working
hfe.
:. There should be something
~pecial about a former Presi·
dent's coming to Washington,
and Mr. Ford will selll!e that, I
believe. . ..
When he succeeded Richard
Nixon in the extraordinary
circumstances of · August, 1974,
Mr. Ford was not interested in
Glimpses of Nature
A SEASON OF BIRDS. By
Dion Henderson. Illustrated by
Chuck Ripper. Tamarack Press
87 Pages. SS.95
This lovely llLUe book 1s an
evocation of the seasons and of -
nature. While basically a book
about birds, it is nOl a guidebook
nor, indeed. very descrlpUve in
telling what they look like. But
that is one of the beauUes of it.
Dion Henderson has observed
.. lhe birds as they come and go
1 lh.roughoul lhe year to the acre
around his s uburban home.
Chuck Ripper Is a wildllle ii·
lustrator. whose beaoll!ul line
drawings are jull:taposed wtlh
Henderson's page-length essays.
THE BOOK is not only about
troblns, bluejays. shrikes, owls.
~u.ncos, wart,lers. crows, starl·
ings, spnrrows and other birds, it
also has ~•UY~ nbout the mouse
and the rabbit and e!lpeclally de·
lightluJ essays about the spider
and the arasshoppcr.
rt •• phllosop-bical and
( THE BOOKMAN )
personal, warm and human~ u
Henderson records his ob6erva-
tions and his thoughts about pre-
dators and their prey and the In·
terdependence of the varioua
tormsot life.
The book is genUe and leisure·
ly and s hould appeaJ not only to
aent~e adults but lo older
children as well. It also tthould bo
noted the p-ublishera have sel~t
ed a dear, open type which adda '° lbc over.all altr"t.h~ncss or
this volume
In one of his esa&y8, Hende:raon
writ.ts, "When a rucker spreads
his wtngs , he put. a n .. ,h ol sun·
shine In a gray November day."
So, too, when.the P•lles ol "A
Stason of Birds·• lll'C! ~ad1 sun·
shine emttges.
C G. McOAN"IEL
Aaaoci1led Pr
\
Thus, former Presidents would
have the privilege or visiting the
Senate, perhaps even to give
speeches. The Constitution does
not provide any voting right for
such distinguished visitors, and
lt wasn't Truman"s idea that
there should be one.
Somehow, we should be able to
call on former Presidents for
guidance and assistance in situa-
tions whkb try the republic. How
to do it, without making the
former President an awkward
presence, is a real problem.
Wl~k•
'S.ty, IM 't tJ>.t 0.,,.., Ford
coming t#ang th• bffChl'
Conscientiou s custodians o( lhe
Fourth E slale ar c trying to r e·
member that it's our job to "re·
port'" the n ews, not to "make"
the news.
By focusing attention on an up·
coming event , we can righUy be
acc u sed of "promot i ng "
participation or attendance in
lhat cvent
Si milarly, by limeligt1Ung
some organized group. however
unworthy it
may be, we
tend to sollci t
support for
I.hat group.
From t.imc
to lim e w e
h ave hud lo
r efer to the
AIM. the
"American
Indian Move·
ment.
I( our frequent mention or that
high.sounding design"Uon has
tended to dignify it -we should
opologiic.
IT W i\S In 1972 that Uie so-
called "Amerlcun Indi~n Mov~
mcnr:• fust communded atten· tlon with its violent rrud.-ofl the
Bureau of lndiao Alfeirs b\llldintl
in Wuh.ln1ton. They did $2
million d am ace ol'\d rt'moved flle
cabln~u d record$ ...
Tho rollowln1 ye11r the urne
organtullon or11nl1~ tbe · OC·
cueatJon ol Wounded Knee. South
Dakota, for l 1 wttkS. rauUJga In
mojor damqet to \be town ilM
( PAUL HARVEY)
the deaths of two Indians and the
wounding of tw o feder(l) agents.
Extemsive media publicity lell
lhe public impression that this
AIM spoke for the masses oC In·
di an people . lt never dM nnd docs not. • AN EXHAUSTIVE inveslign-
lion by the Senate Jud1ciary
Committee has established that.
The AIM is a revolutionary or·
ganization committe d tn
violence : arming I ndia!'\~.
-,tockpiling guns and explo~ves,
pl anni n g kidnapings und
eliminating opposition in the
manner of the M atia.
Some of the Aird leaders con·
sider themselves Marxists, have
vi siled Castro Cuba and have Ues
with the outlaw IRA in Ireland
nnd with the PLO ln the Middle
East.
In lhc United Stat.cs the AlM
h.u received support ftom \he in·
ramous Weather Undergroutfd,
tha Com.munisl Porty, the Dltick
Panther ~nrty and the Sym·
blone.'le Uber aUon Army.
Yet ou.r m ed.in coverage or
AIM ae!liY)tlu has generally
been sympathetic -assuming
thl• oatliC to teprcscnt the best
lnt•"lll of Amcrlcn.o l n.dians.
Evell some chu.rchu were
iuckend Into supporting thetic fen~ade redmen -ll.lld some of·
flees of I.ht federal aovcrnment
'
allocated money to support
them. Most such money wus used
to stage confrontations and to
keep AIM leaders "comforla·
ble."
For I.he r ecord, lhe onl,y proper
spokesperson~ for U1e American
Indians arc the elected tribal
councils -and the councils have
expressed shume over the overl
and covt>rt subversive-~lh1ties
of thi s unw orthy handful calling
themselves the "American In·
diun Movement."
ORANGBCOMT
DAILY PILOT
l(()/x'rl N Weed, PabUsJlff
ThomoJ Kttull. Edllor
Borboro Krriblch,
J.;dltonal Page Editor
Thr t•<htorrnl p:igc: of lhc Dnily
Pilot st•eks t o Inf orm and
stimulate reade~ by presenting
on th1i1 IHllH' d1n·r~l' commcntnry on tupt('ll of inJ¥rClsl by !l)'.ltdirul·
ed colutnnliits nnd cartcionists. by
·r•nw1<hn1t n forum for rt·6ders'
vlewa nm.I hy l)ff'~enling thlfl
newspapcr·s 01>l11lons and tdeas on current lopic• .. 1be l'ditorlal
J)f)i11io11, <1( t h~ Dully PiloUpfl('nr only In tht' editorial column at the
lnp of thl' pugr, Qpjnlons ex·
prea!li'd tiy \h1: \'Olumnlst:s nnd
rartoonisL,and leltf'r wrtlt'1"5 11r1:
lhelr d\\11 and no ~ndol"lltment or
tht>1r 'lcw• by the Dllll)' Pilol
°'hould ~ 1nfcrrrd,
Tuesday, Nov.16, 1976
L •
r Doctors Can Predict
r Heart Attack Risks
I
J
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -ll is ( ) ~sible to predict which patients MEDICINE . l boipltalized with chest. pains will t later have heart attacks, California _
researchers say. -------------
Stanford University cardie&ogists
said Monday they have put together
eight variables that doctors can use in
determinint which oC these patients
should get special care.
DR. JOHN S. SCHROEDER, in a
Teport to an American Heart Associa·
lion scientific meeting, said 211 pa-
tients admitted to Stanford's medical
center coronary care unit were
evaluated« to d etermine the eight
••significant indicators."
Of that number . 150 were de -.
termloed not to have had heart at-
tacks when admitted. but 30 had at-
tacks four to 74 hours later.
mission to the hospital.
If doctors determine that a patient
is at risk of a heart attack Schroeder
said, they can take "aggressive pre-
ventive measures" such as usln1
powerful drugs to stave off the attack
or least reduce tissue damage.
THE INDICATORS ALSO give doc-
tors a way to determine what level of
care a patient s hould get, the re·
searchers s aid. A patient with chest
pain may need only minimal care,
perhaps at less expense, if it is de-
termined he probabJy won't have a
heart attack.
I THE RESEARCHERS SAID the in-
dicators doctors should ch(!(:k are:
t c)lange in electrocardiogram waves;
'The researchers used statistical
analysis to estimate three types or
risk groups using 132 patients.
OF 60 PATIENTS Pur in the lowest
risk group, none later bad a heart at·
tack. or another 60 placed in the
medium risk group. 18 had attacks
within four to 78 hours after being ad-
mitted.
I cholesterol blood level; blood levels of
l triglycerides, othec fats; blood pre-'°' ssure; heart attack history; presence
of typical cardiac pain; nausea with
pain and continued pain after .l'.ld·
Lltl. Boyd
Measuring
Pulchritude
l"-"'1'f'•~~~.~l·~calli.t,~~~-~~~ or ~ele~ ~~ -----.,, •-··-·~•-• ,.,.""'''-'n:u ._,OVV~, ""tOlll-...--
"
'I
engineering students at the' University or
Michigan deviJed the renowned milliHelen
scale to rate feminine beauty. One milllHelen
is equal lo that amount of pulchritude needed
to launch one ship. Angie Dickinson has been
~•ted at 800 miUiHelens, Katharine Ross at
700. Farah Fawcett-Majors at 600 with an ex-
tra 100 each for hair and figure. Client asks the
milliHelen rating of Rosalyn Carter. Would be
beneath the dignity of the next First Lady to
enter her into a whimsical beauty contest, no
doubt. Can r eport, however, that the
milliHelen rating of the Carters' daughter
Amy is an exact 1,000 in the toy boat category.
MALE AND FEMALE
When a man washes his hands, waxes a
car. or runs a va cuum cleaner. he tends to use
Tuesday November t6 tm ?AIL Y PILOT
Gag Sa•d 'Not Violation'-
Scltoof Se;r
.Al'WlrepMIO
C hris tie H e fner ,
daughter of Playboy
publis h e r Hu g h
He fne r , s ays she
favors required sex
education in the na-
tion's schools , start-
ing as early as first
grade. ·
TI-.tow-
II Wlll'tll •••
RIUU:tlUS
By JAY SBAllBlJ'IT
LOS ANGELES <AP) -NBC
doesn't let its entertainment
shows interrupt themselves to
announce sudden. dramatic but
bogus "bulletins." even 1f such
are jests, put-ons t\d obviously
not the McCoy. ~ "Such introductory term as
'Flash' or 'Bulletin' and ate-
ments such as 'We interru this
program to bring you. . . ' are re·
served e xclus ively for news
broadcasting ,·' NBC tells its
show-makers.
BVT THURSDAY,
switchboards at newspapers, and
TV stations across the nation lit
up when viewers thought they
heard a major sports bulletin in-
terrupt NBC's Dick Van Dyke
show.
Its announcer , Stu Nahan, a
sportscast-er here. came on and
intoned: "Major sports news was
made just moments ago when the
Los Angeles Rams completed the
biggest trade in their history.•'
• He said the Rams sent six of
their best backs, including
quarterbacks James Harris and
SYLVANIA
Ron Jaworski, "to Notre Dame
for hunc hba c k: Quasimodo.
Details at 11." Then the show re-
sumed.
WHAMMO, THE CALLS
flooded in , obvfously Crom
viewers who either :
-Didn't listen closely to the
Quas unodo part (Quas is the bell·
ringer in Victor Hugo's novel,
"The Hunchback of Notre
Dame.''). ·
-Didn't r e alize the Rams
aren't about to trade anybocb' to
Notre Dame. UCLA. maybe., but
n'ever Notre Dame.
lt was all a joke, or course. But
did it viola te NBC rules again.st
bogus news bulletins'?
NOPE. SAY NBC and Byron
Paul, executive producer of Van
Dyke's show.
"We've adhered to lhe letter of
the rules." says Paul, noting the
interruption t o report the
"'trade " wasn 't billed as a
bulletin. It began with a card that
just said:' .. Please Stand By ... "
Then came the gag announce-
ment which, h e said, even
brought b1m calls of inquiry the
next day from oddsma.kers in
Lu Vegas.
J~&&Y STANLEY, HEAD or
NBC proaru:n practices b~re,
said NBC didn't teel the show -
which interrupts itself on an ir·
regular basis for such skits -
violated NBC policy Agaiast
bogus bulletins.
.He said restrictions on tl\e
method of presentinC the gag
"int~ruptions" were set for the
entire series Jut year, when a
pilot for the series was being
made~ ~
The program had an "interrup-
tion" for a spoof golf tournament
that disturbed NBC brass. he
said: •·we were worried about
the effect it might have on people
thinking this was a legitimate in-
terruption."
AFTER MUCH HAGGLING,
agreement was reached on pre-
sentation or such skits in a way
that NBC fell wouldn't mislead
viewers and make them think
they were seeing an actual news
report or sports event.
.SYLVANIA
straight, piston-like, back-
and-forth motion. But when
a woman does these things,
s he 's inclined to use a
c urv e d , ca m -like,
s pherical motion. Or so the
s tud e nts o r human
behavior contend. Interest-
ing, irtrue. And if true, how
do you account for this dif .
rerencc?
SYUIANIA C~~R j
diagonal ·__J
. 19'' ldiQCJOllalJ
PORTABLE COlOR sn
... .....
....
II
, ..
I!
... ,, ., , ,
f
i
I
' I I
I
"
..
Medical investigators have checked out
enough blood pressures by now to claim
they've proved that a man who loses his
temper 1s far more hkely than a woman who
does likewise to .£uffer as a result thereof
either a s troke or heart attack. But they don't
explain the why or it.
Pretty nifty, lh<>se Japanese inventors.
Tbef've come forth with a little rig that will
jack up your car in 30 seconds when you attacb
one end of it lo your exhaust pipe.
TOMATOES
List tomatoes, too. among those various
fruits and vegetables that people finally were
persuaded to eat with the claim that said com-
estibles were sex stimulants. Before 1834 in
this country, hardly anybody woulCI even con-
sider eating a tomato. But some bright boy,
who knew a m arket when he saw one , referred
to tomatMs as "love apples, .. and sneaky
citizens fried them out behind closed doors. In-
ridentally. the footnotes indicate that savvy
seller was an i mmigrant from Italy where the
merchandisers long had known how to work
up romantic appeal to peddle their wares.
Certainly not every man. woman and
child nationwide each spends $8 a year on golf
balls. but that 's what the national golf ball cos-
ts break down to
You 'II spend 21 i years of your life wait-
ing for m eals . 'sir, probably. That's an
average.
. Penalties for drunken dn ving in South
Africa can ~o up to 10 years in prison. In
Turkey, as previously reported. said driver is
taken 20 miles away and forced to walk home
under armed escort. But San Salvador is
where it really gets rough. The convicted
dl'W\ken driver there can be executed by a fir-
ing squad .
Addrtu mail lo L.M. Boyd, P.O. Bo::r: 1560,
Costa Mt1a 92626.
Fashion Shoek
Nude Dances on TV
VANCOUVER. Canada CAP) -The Cashion
show featuring creations by local designer
Christopher Ryan on independent television station
CKVU shocked some viewers -and delighted
others.
Midway through a dance number, a model un-
tied the straps of her blue knee-length evening
gown. let lt drop to the noor and danc~ in the nude
under flashing colored lights.
CKVU TELEPHONE OPERATORS SAID that
alter the show about 30 people called to complain.
Moat objected becau:tQ they had children watcbing
tbeahow.
Producer Clem Chapple said the nude dance
• .. not tntended to shock people.
''THE I DEA OF THE NUDE DANCER came
I up wfth bla (Ryan's) style ol f&1hioos, which don't
1 J1"d underwear.·• Chapple aald.
: ,,...~1•n'1 cJotbff take bit not.ice ol a ptraoo's l "My experience la tbat Vancouver vtewen are
'\.. i.ased to thla type of thing,•• Chapple aald .
.,....... .J
COLOR TY This model features the Chroma-Line "' Dark-Lite""
picture tube and 100%
sohd·St<'le chassis for high performance and reliability. Standopt1onal e xtra.
NOW ONLY
39995 Has a 17" (diagonal) Sylva nia
Chroma-line"' picture tube. AFC and
the cabinet is of Walnut grain finish
on 'high-impact plastic. Sta nd is
available as an optional extra
SYLVANIA GT-MA TIC™
25" {diagonal} COLOR
SET
Contempo1ary slyi1ng in a cabinet of
Walnut grain vinyl on WOOd comoos11ton Features Syivan ia GT-200'· chassis . .
100% solid sta le ano ti1e Syl11an1a GT-Metre co1or tuning system
59995
Makes life a lot nicer
CALORIC®
PILOilESS
IGNITION
GAS RANGE
This 30" gas range has automatic
p11011ess 19n1t1on continuous
clean ove~. separate broiler.
automalic limed oven. roast guide. bake guide and tr1-se1
bu me rs
SAVE MOW
SYL~YAlllA . .
GT ·MA TIC TM II ·
21 '' (diagonal) '..:} ONLY
The first true self-ad1usting color set. Has
2 1" (diagonal) Sylvania Dark-Lile"' 50 color
Picture tube Sylvania GT-200• chassis ....
100% sohd state ano Sylvania GT-MatlC"' fl
color tuning system Stand available as an 5499'5 optional extra ·
Makes lite a lot nicer
CALORIC®
ELECTRIC
RANGE WITH
MICROWAVE
OVEN
Everythrng you've always wanted 1n
a range. High speed microwave
cooking, energy s avings. self
cleaning oven. automatic timed
cooking. S mooth top cooking
s urface ehminates messy burner bowls and dirty coils.
SAVE MOW·
• TELEVISION • APPLIANCES
luesaay. November 16, 1976 ·
r--------8...;.y_P_h_u _rn_,._,_ia_nd_,i Speakers NfllRed
Land· Seminar
At UC Irvine
Community coot.rol over undeveloped lands
will be the focus of a confereoce at UC Irvine Satur-day. I
"Land Banking: A Bridge Between Urban and
Environmental Needs?'' is the theme of lbe one-day
conference to be held in the lhlrd·Ooor lounge of
GatewQy Commons from 8:30 a.m. l.Q t;30'p.m.
Conference s peakers will review a proposal by
the Trust for PubU.c Lands to apply land-ban.ting
concepts to Irvine lands. Other sessions will ex-
amine techniques designed to prevent urban
sprawl, control land speculation, preserve lands
with unique s cenic and natural values and protect
prime food production lands.
''You do the barking. I'll do the peeping."
ARCHITECT RON YEO. former Oraoge Coun-
ty planning commissioner, will join other ~akers
and panelists in discussions of how land ban.king
has been applied in Colonial Williamsburg,
Wiscons in, Michigan, Canada and Stockholm,
Sweden, as well as on the Stanford University cam-
p~. •
For the Record·
Other s peakers will be Huey 0 . Joll'nSOn, presi-
dent of the Trust for Public Land; William Wilcox-
en, president of the Planning and Conservation
League; UCI social ecology faculty members and
members of local city councils.
f'll•ll OcloMr ti
I( ESLER. Linda K end O"vld M ;
WAMAC K. Ralpll 41n<1 Brllv;
TAR AB I LOA, Sl\arlot M -nd E.qlll!
A.· C-'SEY. Doane L. •nd l al~ S :
LINOWEOELL, Cll•r l•s R. dnd Ac,.
M.: PEARCE. P•trlc1" Lvnn and J•f· trey Stanhoe>4: JEFflCO'IT, (,<>~roe
E end Audrfy 0nPtld OILACRT,
Kathy Re e and Aoont J M'"'':
KRAJNIK. K1thryn Jan• ~nd Frank
Antho.,v; JONES. Goldie ~II ar.d
Eme•I C
STO NE. Nancy ... d Clla•IP\:
RODRIGUEZ. Juan Cantu and 'IM
Mar•a. PAGE Ma rianne and JoM
Ao.,..rt; RODRIGUEZ, Atiti4 and
Aodollo: STENGE. AonalCI 0 <tnd
Ol<tne M.; LEWIS, 1(41t1tle<1n N a'ld
JoM S.: DELOYE. Cecil A •nd
, J•rllvn A.; M'IG AN'I. A41fMI a...t
PatrtC•• A : MILLS. P1ty1/1, A. -
John J.; DAVIS. Erne\! r and Oortn·
daV
TOWNSEND C"ert•\ R.cl>i!rtl "no
F'an<e\Mo\t-tlf! KING y,.,lff'iulttn
-"'°'"hall Erl• HER RICI( J•·nn P •nO Rota R JON ES O•rdldo"" M
•nd lllch M C! N ; STOCRMFll
~•r qa rt tf\;11 M e nd Lotn"'·
LADEWIG Tont •"f'l W•t114m J
WHITE NE TT J ue!.tn Holda """
RaytftOl'\d E vi t-41S$ M1ch~fl P t;ntt
Arf~n• L C.AAEY / Fr.'"""-. M At\d
SloVol) c . BRAZELTO N. Hel•11
Jov<eand AU\\tll Worll\
TODD, Betty Goan &rid P1ul:
BROOME. Lutllfr N and AM C.; uwe n1. Allred o .• ,,a D<>bOroill L • DAWSON KA!hryr1 AM M<'.I Jol\I)
Err."\t Mc""'-''"\, tc HVn liMr ''""
Robt-rt !.fO'.lf"' J0t-4ANSEN (AthlN•f't
M M'I TMma\ G · SOUTHWICK
Ltnl'f\•'V L' dt\0 T hOtnt\\ Paul;
IAl!Vlf<; Suler M d Jun• Ca•lltro,,.. Mont ;.
·r AITANO "(t<"l tl ' /\nil l,tirf
~Q''lf• T : CLARI( H1•IPn Cl11"!> 11\
oln tt R ob P t f L'>u 1 -.
HOOPlf'l,f(,ARN r R ~h-H -.n l••Jl tn.(1
G.Jr., Li•wt!t DALY L'''•'•lott H i11vt Ja~\ C.: WHI TINC, Pdola LOU•\f'
dnd GMV Georqo: DEVI( .. Pa••'>
Jonn d'ld M•rlon•; HOPPER,
FrAnC~\ E ~nd Joi\" t•Aoy ·
WATKIN'>. SllMon I< ,1nrt llnt>•rt 0
M cNe,..,..,.. Judith f. dr\d
\Aur•·no•W
PADILLA. P!ltrtcoo\ A and Vincrnt
Thom._ WEB8 M•"lor~I ~"d
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B.Vb1tr l A t-tro c,fq O~rbd'l 1n.t
......... rd w IARVIS O· ... ) ...,,,
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dnd 8 1.-tM• 1 L VALDEl Pa,..,..1• '>
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41n.fj 11( .. ,"n t I "0¥ qAF F(ATY
Roe>· rt f '"'" l "l'1 1 ~n\•
tr.i.,d October 1•
LfTTlr" •0-1,., 1 f\n ,n.., f• l'bol' 1
Anl'\ PAQSO~'> o.-,,n·~, tn 1"'111
Kf'ftnPt" P • Qtl EY' P•tr•t '""~~
llM Ja"" , ~ RAY.\41)'110 J( I•·~ Ee
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"llARY H OOHrRT'1 r~•O.-l nl
CO't"' AA-14 r _. ,,.,.,,..'1 .wt1t't' Nov
f'•b-' t t '• ' ._, Jrw •Y•O P)y hflf
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ULn.1HGllON
FUNHAL HOMI
Corona del Mar 673·9450
Costa Mesa 646·2424
HLLlltOADWAY
MOltTU41tY
1 10 Broadway
Costa Me'\a
642-9150
McCOltMICIC
MOltTUAlllS
Laguna Beach
-494-9415
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495·1776
'ACIFIC VllW
NIMOIUAL rAU
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Oriw
Newport,
California
844.-2700
NB FAMILY
COlOH14L fUttUAL
HO ... I
780~Bolsa Ave.
WMtmlnster
893·3525
SMITHS' MOHU41tf
627 Main S1.
Huntington Beach
53&-6539
IMITM TUTHIU. U.MI
OUR
WISTCll,., CHAN.
t.iottuary • • 648-4888 .. n E. t7th St .
Cotta Meta
J•ne; BllUERMAUN B<1rb<lt• An,...
andRlcha-dW · KROENING.Anhur
W\ltf'r Jr &nd F i'V S
STllAUSS, S1tor1ey M ;in1 John
E<1qar· ~'ING5rER 1!1 1~ M.1rv ""d
RocnMd IO'l; HELfZEL NO'""'" E
''"" Au\l1n Y GOOOl!ICH C.ov"' S ''"° Ptttr1r 1" L PRATHER P~tnc•a G _,d C,..,,.;.,, W : F f KE Roo1n -lMt!
Dllvl<IL..,., DAHL. Calhy J andLdny
A • HICM;S Thoma• V Md M.lf93re1
A • LAPI E AS l •'>n.t P and 0111 A
YORK Vlnc•nt K~lltV ~M L•,,do
Af\ti"' GqAHiAM Joyce M .1no C,,.Ar1•11
l , WI TT. Brvetty Ann •nd D1t't1d R
BROWN Rt( f\lrtt W Jlt~r .tl'\0 RP'>'"
ca At'ln; MEOEH~05 Donal'1 M1'""'"'"'
IMd l(AlhPy G•n• l("PELLfll. P•lrfro~ """ •nd Rol>"rt L . ACOST .... Oel•nO•M a ... o oon.11ov ,ii.., Novemt..r t
IC.ARP, Alan David and ICall•I•
M•v• NU"llMEOAL, Susan v. and
ICi•ll BEEBE, Patrocoa an.-bonalCI
W ESCHER Nanc v Ma rip a"'1
R•cllard l(•nl· VICI(, Nancv \.ef! ""'
J•C". DONOV•N. E••.1nor M. MMI
N llOllS A • CAMPOS. Joi.n and
Mary HOl•n. MATHER. S..'lClra 0
•nd J.,, Al1>er1 CAMOU, ~l>O<dl\
Kav and Martin Au9u•I: HAR·
RINGTON.LondaM a"d Aoch.ardN
WILSON Glory S and J,.lfry L;
COMMENT, V1roo1ca to:. Mid K•1>-
neth Jr : BENOUN, O alre C. and
.,....,..,., M : MAA".VEL, Prirn.ttivo
ar'ICI Palrocla; l(OPF, Cllr~al ancl
Han>, BRAZIEL, Marvin Lynn and
Norma Ju n · SlOCl<WELL, Edw>n.t
Suella a..O Wallpr E•rl GROSZ.EK.
Oorotny J and AIUAnder F ; JEB·
BtA. tca1n•v Ln and Paut D .
WEI ERS, Kalhl•"n Elaln,. ar.d Vtttor
Fral"l<i\
LOPE l , JO\,.Dhin,. and C"Arl,.\ R ,
SMEE TS Jimm"' Wavn• tlnO D1c.tni."l
lv\Ar1,., K A HN t..rnclrt «lnd Oouqt.1~
COLLIN S, SlrPh•n CIM~ •ncJ
MICh•llo Lvnn GAAUX. J . Kor~ M"1
9 df'bAtA A nni> HANGOS Sha nor.
KtlY •nd W!llittm ~orgr; RACINE.
t<e t,,rvn Ann and Jon" Th<HnA~·
RAMOS, r r.1nr"'c-. J and Hl"'n,.v A .
FRANZ, Tomnlh'( '>. and Chari..,..
8Al(ER, Jana Su u n and Ronald
Eq ne
Deaths
Elsewhere
EDISON. N.J . CAP) -
John P . Stevens Jr .• 79,
retired chairman or J.P.
Stevens & Co. and son of
the founder of the text.lie
company bear ing his
name, died at his horoe
here Sunday.
FAIRFAX (AP) -Dr.
Leo L. Stanley, 90, head
physician for nearly four
decades nt San Quentin
Prison. d ied Saturday. '
He was the prison's en-
tire medical staff when
he was hired in 1913 after
g r a du a tin g fr o m
medical school.
LOS ANGELES (AP )
-Funeral services were
scbeduled today for Lyle
Eugene Jones, v1ce pres·
1d e nt o f Teld y ne
Syst ems. Northridge.
Jones. 48. died Sunday
alter suffering a stroke
last week.
China Talk Set
Dr . Eu g ene R .
The conferepce was coordinated by Wesley
Marx, visiting ledurer in social e~ology at UCL
CAMPUS SPONSOR IS THE UCI Environmen-
tal Council of Campus Organizations. Cosponso~
include Irvine Tomorrow, Laguna Greenbelt,
Nature Conservancy, Orange County Housing
Coalition. Orange County League of Women Voters.
Plannfag and Conservation League and Trust for
Public Land.
Registration for the conference at $5 may be ar-
ranged through the UCI Campus Orcanization
Services office, UC Irvine. A buffet lunch. also will
be available al SJ.SO per person.
Further information on the land-banking con-
ference may be obtained by calling Campus
Organf'zation Services, 833·5181.
UCI Grad Pens Novel
Richard Ford, a graduate of the UC Irvine
master's program in creative writing, is the author ·
of a novel, "A Piece Of My Heart," published by
Harper and Row in October. He has been asked by
Paramount Pictures to prepare a film script from
the book.
.4~~~iiiiiiiiiiiii~~
o.4eRwelGHr? ;
Learn What Makes '
The Lindora Me thod
So Effectiv~
A complete program to instruc t patients
how to lose weight ea sily. then how to
maintain their lean weight.
Daily therapy. with audio and sub-limlnal
visual aid s to p romote motivation and
encouragement .
H C G a tot mobilizing substonce. makes
it easier for patrents to lose weight without
fatigue or exces$ive hunger.
Lindora's very special d iet. designed for
rapd weiGf'I m md rrpoved eathg hcti!s
Behavior modification techniques to learn
weight control
L1ndo ra·s easy-to-follow maintenance
program to prevent regaining.
The entire program 1s under the strict
supervision of medical doctors. specialists
in barlatdc medicine.
Coll for inlo1mollon
Mondov lhru fndoy
OA M TO 1 PM -:?P M t0 6PM
NEWPOftl BEACH
640·6831
I t J l '.fl ! ' J '(j
COSTA MESA
557-1893
• •• Q\.··· l·
I '• r J j I
San Bemardino · E long Beac h • M1ss1on Hills
~owthorne • Orange • Newp ort Beach
Garden Grove • long Beach · Pasadena
lo Habra • Woodland Hills • Sherman Ool<s
West Covino· Fullerton· R1vers1de ·Sonia Monico
Arcadia • Torrance
Cosio Mesa • Pomona • Cemlos • Hollywood (
Berterma nn . executive
director of the Far East
Broadcasting Company,
will present slides of
mainland China during a 1 spe e<'h o n ''Inside
China" Wednesday at 10
a .m. at Christ College
Irvine. 153-0 Concordia,
Irvine.
f 4~~':;~Al CLINK: ·j
nnd od!Tton;ilated bv Modicol Ooc;lors
thr:il re~111ct tno<I orut'"hCC' ro BQflotric--.
ALL Cllruc Personnol Oocloo nno Nu·~·~s
0te heensod by lhe 51ole 0 1 Cohlr.i<n•J
You ·can·100!
Call: 714·834~-·
What you hear naay change your lifa!
-------
• ' Archery Program &it
A youth archery program tor
youngsters 10 to 18 will be held Sal.u.r·
day at"ldlle Squaro Park in Fountalo
Valley, Ora nge County r~reation of-
ficials have;umounced.
elude an lnsU-Ucllonal clln.lc, ardlery
akUla 1hootln1 exblb6tion and youth
tourn•meot. Tbere ta no te. for participation.
ORANGE COUNTY
Registration and required parental
consent forms may be obtained at the
park.
The 9 a.m . to 3 p .m. proeram will in--
The tournament. will be dMded 1Dto
three a1e dlvlslona. Flnt place win-
ners wUI receive turkeys aDd ribbons
will co to second and third placo win·
4 Divorce
Tdlks Set
At College
-ners.
• HOUSI ,UKTS.
24" BOX TREES
15 GAL. TREES & SHRUBS
5 GAL. TREES & SHRUBS
WHOLESALE BOOK PRICES
·FRUIT-SHADE -AVOCADO· CITRUS-ETG.
Lecturer Charles
Leviton will talk about
wbal to expect from
divorce in a series or four
lectures at Golden West
College starting Friday.
I I -........ w"""" .... RN.-E=-R-S.D. Wholesale Growers
The lecture series,
titled "Divorce Is What
You Make It," will be
held in the college center
at 7:30 p.m . There is no
admission charge.
11622 WARNERAVE.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
PHONE 546-3429
DAILY 9 AM·S PM
Legal. linancial ·and
emotional expectations
will be discussed Nov.
19; children and divorce,
Dee. 3; loneliness and
lbe singles scene, Dec.
10; reqa,arriage, Dec. 17.
JC Penney
GARDEN CENTER
Leviton is an jnstruc.
tor in marriage and
family life at Orange
Coast Collere.
4 INCH HOUSE PLANTS
Injured Jewelry?
* SCHEFFLERA
* FALSE ARAUA
Yo.-Clloice
SJ 06 Fine Jewelry healed by gentle jewe le r s -
Jewelry 11p.praisals by
graduate gemologist
C usto m d es i g n ed jewelry.
Five M Gems
270 E. I 7ffl St. c ................... ,
645-1909
~ .. 1.79 WMtc..,_
''Sometimes the little reasons
to stop smofiing seem more
important than the big ones.
'l'hanlts to Schich, little
Stacy will never see ·
qs smohing
again.''
\
The true story of Jim
Jim:
"The big numbers are cancer, emphy-
sema and heart disease. We all know
that. But sometimes it's the little ones
who give us the emotional impetus to
take that first serious step towards giv·
ing u~ smoking. For us, the little one ·
was our 21/2 year old daughter, Stacy.
We both smoked heavily and in spite of
repeated attempts to quit cold turkey,
we were st ill smoking when our little girl
had her first birthday. Then we went to
Sc hick Center and broke the habit com·
pletely in just five days. It was easy and
it was comfortable. We even got the
special discount for married couples.
We always had good reasons to quit but
Stacy added the emotional push we
needed to ca ll Schick Center and get
some help.''
'
nd Barbara de Boom
Barbara:
"I thought we could never break the
habit. We both smoked quite heavy and
c igarettes wer e a part of our life. I
couldn't imagine how I could survive
without my cigarettes. But then I
thought about how impressionable and
innocent our young daughter was and
how she soon would be old enough to
associate cigarettes with being GROWN
UP. We had read about how smoke can
harm children physically even as in·
fant s. Thank God Schick made it possi-
ble to quit smoking. We may have done
it for Stacy but we feel so much better
now that we ca n truthfully say it's the
best thing we ever did for ourselves."
In Orange, call
558·8404
f ,
..
Tuesday November 16 1976 DAIL 'f PILOT A 9
High Court Upholtb
T own's Curfew Rules
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S.
Supreme Court bas rdused lo review
a case in wbicb the mot.her of a 12·
1ear·old boy claimed ber town's
Juvenile curfew ~Ci005titutional.J,y in~
terfered with the ri&ht to raise her
family as 1be sees fit.
By a 6·to·3 vote, the court let stand
Mooday a decision by the 3rd U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals upholding
the curfew ordinance of Middletown, Pa:
• JO-ANN BVKOFSKY, IN a suit on
curfew aimed at all citizens could not
survive constitutional scrutiny.
''THE QUESTION SQUARELY
presented by this case, then, is
whether tJre due process rights of
juveniles are entitled to lesser protec-
tion than those of adults.•·
Middletown officials argued that
,the curfew is an effective means "of
decreasing juvenile noctural crime.'"
r . . . . ,
I lki 11111111/1 East. I
I Four days. three nights from $53.00 1cr:,xJ11Y«rAJJ .; ....J
Send to<lily for a new full color brochure.de·
I ~1b1ng An C,,hforola's three to seven night
~un)et Tours to Amen~·, largest ski resort.
Your pbckage to Lake Tohoe's fabulous )-leavenly
V.>lley lnclud_.s line lodging and dally lift tickets
I v.11h ll'~sons and rentol gear avallAble. Prices start
at just $53.00 for four days, three nights, per
person, double occuptincy (not 111cludlng
atrlan:). Gre111t pocko\,J~S for
non ~kiers, too. Economlcill c1l r·
_.,.Wi,.111\0to beb.alf of herself and her son Shaw, rr..tl119 Brother challenged the ordinance, which was
Mrs. Bykofsky argued that ·Mid-·
dJetown, a community of about 10,000
residents, ''has no unusually serious
juvenile crime problem and has never
experienced· any kind of rioting or
civil disturbance.••
I f,m:~ for lc1mllies ilnd groups. Use the
hrochure to sl'lcct your tour, then arrange It all wfth one
Cdll to Air C.ihfomla or your trawl agent.And take It easy! • .. • f
. , passed in 1975. She charged that such 'J'.he President-elect s nonemergency ordinances unlawfuJly
sister. Ruth Carter restrict the rights or y~g people to
.Stapleton, says her move free ly about • for wholly
brother trusts people legitimate and peaceful purposes."
SHE SAID THAT MOST crime in
Middletown, which recorded 134 ar-r~ts forllll of 1974, was committed by
persons over 18 and not subject to the
curfew.
I -.. ~'
she wouldn't, but they
perform for him
because of his high
expectations, she
adds.
About 3,000 American cities and
villages have similar juvenile
curfews.
Justice Thurgood Marshall, joined
by the court's other leading liberal,
Justice William J. Brennan Jr., said
In dissent, "I have little doubt but that
absent a genuine emergency, a
The curfew prohibits anyone under
18 from being out on city streets from
10 or 11 p.m ., depending on their age,
to6a.m.
I 1 :~·---' (
11l= Liy ~~• :p '
~IR
C.ALIFORN I.A.
Post Office
Repor i s
Black I nk
WASHINGTON (AP)
-The Postal Service
says it had a surplus of
$15 million in the last
quarter and Postmaster
General Benjamin F.
Ballar called it "a
milestone in terms of
getting our finances in
. ~c!«r."'----
Ballar cautioned Mon-
day that "one swallow
doesn't make a summer.
We're not out of the
woods yet. Nevertheless.
this is a major ac-
~mplisbment."
THE POSTAL Service bu been a consistent
money loser since it was
reorganized from the old
Post Orrice Department
in 1971. The new agency has bad a deficit in each
of the five complete
years since.
• The postmaster
general attributed the
improving financial pie·
ture principally to reduc-
tions i n the Postal
Service w ork' force
through attrition.
THE MAIL senice
employs 664,080 workers,
compared to 728,911 at
the time of reorganiza-
tion.
Ballar said be has set
no goal on further reduc-
tions in the work force.
"l'M GOING to rely on
our people in the field to
r educe the "payroll
wherever they think they
can do so wit.boQt reduc·
ing service.•• he told a
news confereace.
A smaller factor in the
surplus was a slight up-
turn in the use of the
mail, he said.
NEVERTBELE~. he
predicted that mall
volume in years to come
will decline because of
increasin& use of elec·
trooic technology to
communicate al the ex·
pense of lelten.
Bailar said postal of·
ficiaJs have not de·
termined whether a 15-
state strike against the
United Parcel Service
will help the Postal
Service in the long run.
FIREHOUSE
'IACKING'
CINCINNATI (AP) -
Suburban Lincoln
H eights Fi r e Chie f
Ernest Mccowen
stopped short of totaJ
praise for the city's re·
modeled firehouse.
The new garage is
three feet shorter than he
expected and two fire
trucks must be kept out·
side.
However, the chier
said, "It's better than
what we bad."
r • i ACME
AM ,..VtJ ITION co.
Brot h er Miffed
Provisions of the curfew were never
applied against Shaw Bykofsky or his
mother.
11 roAtr Co/1/ornkJ Sun1e1 Tour!f>. Dept 8. :>. • \
3636 Birch ~1ree1. ,'\.:v. port Beach. CA Ylo60-...: we·re easy to take.
Serling Book
Draws Yawns 1 1
From AP Disuatches
Robert J. Serling, brother of the late, award·
winning tele.ion writer, says be has a great idea
for a book. What be can't understand is why every
major publisher disagrees with him .
He has an outline for a biography about brotl)er
Rod Serling entitled '1'wilight·l.one Man." Serling
died in June 1975 after open-heart s urgery and aft5
"smoking four packs a day for 30 years," his older
brother said.
Serbng, 58, an author, says he is bothered by
the rejection of the idea. ·
"After all, I know things about him that nobody
else does." ·
* Christina Onassis bought out her stepmother
Jacqueline's share of a family-owned is land and a
luxury yacht willed to them by
Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle
Onassis, a source close lo the
farnily said in Athens.
The sflurce declined lo con-
firm reports Mrs. Onassis got $8
million instead or the $15 million
. she originally demanded as part
of the J>et.tlemen l.
Scorpios Island in Greece's
.. Ionian Sea and the 325-foot yacht
cw111sT1H~ "Christina'' were left jointly to
Christina, Onassis' only s urviVing child, and Jae·
queline, his widow.
* Joseph Tramonbna was 10 when be threw out
the first ball of the seventh game of the 1975 World
Series between the Boston Red Sox and the Cincin·
nati Reds. lie was only 11 whenhediedofleukemia.
Joey, who died at
ChiJdren·s Hospital in ( )
Boston. rated hockey and PEOPLE baseball on the top of his
bst of loves. and played --------
both with determination.
"Joey did a lot of thing~ in his_ life that kids
never will do." his mother, Betty Tramontana, said
from her home.
·''He plilyed hockey and he played it well ... tr
he didn't play weU, they wouldn't have used him,"
she said.
* Singer Maureen McGovern sued her former
personal m?nager for $49.054 which she says he re·
~ fused to pay despite a ruling by
an arbitrator.
Miss McGovern filed the
suit against Patrick PaduJa and
Dest my Inc .. a firm he heads.
The suit says he was or.
dered Oct. 22 to pay her the
money as an arbitration award
under two 1972 pers onal
management agreements.
M<GOV&•N •
A Nevada judge agreed to let lawyers for Noah
Dietrich withdraw a request to unseal records of
Howard Hughes' 1971 divorce
from actre~s Jean Peters.
A spokesman for Mineral
County District Court Judge Bill
Beko said Dietrich's lawyers felt
the record would probably not
help in determining the legal re·
sidcnce of the late billionaire.
Dietrich was named ex·
ecutor of II ugh es'. estate in the
disputed "Mormon will," one of
dozen purported wills filed artcr
Hughes' death this year. PU£1t$
Sen. Edward W. Brooke CR-Mass.) won the
latest rDund in bis fight to avoid turning over his
confidential diaries to his wife's attorneys in a
divorre suit. \
State Supreme· Court Justice Benjamin Kaplan
denied a request to force lhe senator to turn over the
diaries.
The ruJing upholds an order by Middlesex
Probate Judge Lawrenc:e T. Perera, who said last
month the records are confidential.
I ~ maktsJ I
··833.a0555
pf.ase ask for
"RA y,, ,;:::;,,,,
Wt offer to bw
your old vehicle .•
HOWARD Chevrolet
0 O ·
STEEL BELTED
IALTIRE
SALE!
Shop 'N Compare
I 9S
size BR78-13
tubeless
whitewall,
plus $2.11
Federal
Excise Tax
The value priced General Dual-Steel Radial. Sulit
for long mileage with radial ply construction and
two steel belts. Featuring a polyester oord body
for smooth riding comfort!
&
• SALE ENDS NOV. 20, 1976
BR78·13 ER78-14 FR78-14 GR78-14
TUBELESS WHITEWALL TUBELESS WHITEWALL TUBELESS WHITEWALL • TUBELESS WHITEWALL 1121s i4oas Ill's ;s5as
p1us $2.11
Fed.Ex.Tax
plus S2 49
Fed. Ex. Tax
plus $2.69
Fed.Ex. Tax
plus $2.89
Fed. Ex. Tu
HR78-14 GR70·15/GR78-15 HR78·15 JA78·15/LR78·15
TUBELESS WHITEWALL TUBELESS WHITEWALL TUBELESS WHITEWALL TUBELESS WHITEWALL
f/IS iS!M fJ!J5 101f~S
plus $3.07 plus from $2.97 10 $3.13 Fed. plus $3.15 plus from S3.3t to $3.47 Fed:
Fed. Ex. Tax Ex. Tax depending on size. Fed. Ex. Tax Ei<. Tax depending on size.
Drum Brake Reline
This Week Oo•1't take chances wtth 1'l laully brakes' Our Spec;ral-Only! ,,,, ... u 11\Slall new Ot /CO m 111. .
$369 Brue l •n•llQSc on all four '-5 ""heels, repack be111ngs. , •
and 1nsprc1 w1>eel Cylon· .... • • 1
oers, grease seals brake • ./Ir)/
arums, master cyhndttr, , 'Ir. :-"'-1 '· D<tt 11••\H Eo111 b11ktt hoses alld road 11111 ~-·~~.A '
!.Iott l11••111can Compaclt your"'·
We adrust caster. camber.
1~·n. and loe-<>ul settings to
ca man u fa ctorer ·s
spec1 ations.
Don Swedlund Inc. COAST
GENERAL TIRE Priced 11 ellown et a-rat Tirt SIOres.
Compelll!V91 y priced
1t lnd1pendtnl dtat.
•rt dleptaylng Ille
OtntraJ Sign
lttwetll ·-...... , •
2855 Harbor llvd. Costa Mesa
-..
. . .
Phonf 540.57 10
646·5011
,
\
J
t
..
•
I AJO CAil V PILOT' ~uu1day. November US. 1976
IOOMER by Wm. F. lrown and Mel Casson
A flcXING ,, INSTrWCTO~. ·•
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
f\lO ™ANK5 I I OON'T WANT
ANC..> BAND CAN()(,) ! I OON'T
WANT ffK) KID& lO GET
OON&ENSE.! CAVITIES
ARE GOOD ffiR QOOK 1E£TH I
CAVITIES J
TANK McNAMARA
~I H£? Nat: .t6 QUICK AS it'
US£0 TO~. BlJf 'OJ tX>tJ'T PLAY 1-td<~'( THAT LO~ ...
NANCY
II·~
by Jeff Millerlr Gltt ...... ryinQi--'
. .. wrrnour P100Nb VP A F~w t..rrm 1RIC:KS. TAAT COM(; I~ l-IANDY
IOWARD 1H~ a.JD OF A 6U'r'~ CA~fR. ..
by Emie Bushmiller
/ ,.~ // I THINK I WAS ;; / d# I I /1/ TORPEDOEP
f / ~U0MARINE JI
SANDWICHES /. / ....._ ______ _..
I
I I
__,... ..... 1...,,_ -·· ::::r::::
TDQY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ·PEANUTS
UNITED Feature SyndicatB MonaaysPun1tSotved
.-.cROSS • 4 Friend
,5 Pieces In 'Hern'lg·hke Cll9CkefS 1'~11 46 Gas lor 5 Treasury ol hgllhng
d 5lale '7 Reference ') Cantato.ipe, books
'c• e11e •9 vrt "'e
t 4 Window • .. • lone •
d•V•l •.:ll' SJ Torned UP •~Pin s r•ver 5 7 B•t>y grand 16 Amrron•a 58 • 1 COITtoound
11 Currter s
cone1911e
18lunCl'lllOJI,
gene1ally
19 us
""'"'" 20 Oocune
22 lnlreQuenl
rngdect·
S•Oll 2
words
2' Cao1u1e and
hold 25 Certain
t>rtads
27 Gofl1ng
11111rd
29 Mongrel Oog
30 Mall drying
klln
33 Pterc1rs
37 Entreaty
38 F11grenc11
39 Br111111111
m111ey
40 Rest period
41 Some
91Mnb1ck1
•2 TulW'te·s •ii• 2 words
mangtf
Oon•ng room
59 · ·even 11eer
61 Emt>a nkmlnl
62 S1tutants ·
63 Bone Prel11
64 Single
65 ln,augurele
66 ll"gel Piii*
67 Femtnlnt
n1m1
DOWN
1 In ..... of
RegerdltH
2 Senctuery
3Regard1ng
'Army crlml·
nils
5 Ardent
deYOtH
6M1gnetlc
mt I al
7 Overly
cur10U1
per eon
8Ml.wlurt
9 A pereon'a
MntYlor
10 S..da lorlh
----II A p s ~ ~ I F T ~.Q ~! p A 0 R E ~ E AN
A L I £ N N ,._ ~s OA N A
II E IC. DE S• S H 0 II l N f,
n I~ IN T ~ 111110 PI N f S
I "' ,. O ll T ,._ •N AN
S I A M-N A PIO l E il N S
AN 1 11 rlJ t lf lR ~ . T 0 E
R E ~ E ARIS ED-IC I ~ f
... f ·-• 0 " ... N C £ 0
C II I S 11 ·• I 1 t
II £ T I NU f £ N t E R E 0
A T I 'f !;a! t l r• • t
~{ 1 i I' 'l ~
0 ~ 1• " I(
11 B~ •2Nearest111
12 Ke~s com· Space
OOS•llons •3 Primary col·
13 ····egg Of
21 Ballery •5 "By the
prodYc11
23 S11om1 m11g111"
25 Birdie plua 4 7 Old Ger·
one manic coin
28 Feet ot •8 That whleh
being a Is aound
pap1 50 Hispaniola
30 Olive genus native of old
3 1 Noted 5 1 Chou •• --··
32 "Llghla out" Chine ..
33 Ship VIP
superatruc· 52 Girls· Slang
ture 53 Employs
3' Miss Ferber 54 Amer. Cir·
35 Mr. Coward tOO\ill
38 ··-55 Wagner &rw•_. heroine
37 Not r11e 56 Fruil
•OS1lhngboel 60Mr.l11sh
JUDGE PARKER
AAEN'T YOU HAVING
DINNER HERE AT TME CW~ WITH US. GAftf?
TUMBLEWEEDS
~ ON1HE:
ALE:RI, 'WE:EOS!
OOR VEf{'( EXISIENCE
IS Al S1AK.E!
I •-·
MISS PEACH
• A fl TtiV~'.S
AOvt'f fo~
(;l~LS WtTM
rrzoiLEM' W1TW
'iov.r ->--
THE VIRTUE OF VERA VALIANT
DOOLEY'S WORLD
l
HlrlH NI OIWCIAI. IJllOCllld.
WITH FlOC:W ~. Pll!C'9, AID
Ill 42'11ST'9 /lf..,.JllMG OF THI
Pll'GFO!EC1 N!W ~~.
• Hf~f:lfl~ STMnM'&f $CNllililW/ ~~=..;..;;...~ 924c "Elf 5 \\:
by Rodger lrocffi.tld
f z z z
I
DR. SMOCK . we:i..i...,
"'f"HA'T'" WAS
YOUR F IRS,-
F E:E:Plr-JG, PAL..'
Yf:Ar-1,
YOUR NEW MOMIS
5,-11,..L.. PRE:,-"'f"Y'"'
SHY!
GORDO~ --. by Gus Arriola
MOON MULLINS
by Harold Le Doux
nus IS GAAY FAVOR!
MAY J !>eEAI< TO MISS
FRANKLIN, PLEASE?
b·y Tom K. Ryan
YES!-HAlt.S
NOSS•ACJM : 'THE FAS'Tl:SISCENf-S'Tl?ALER
IN "™E WESI!
J by MtH
! DON'T kNOW,
9LAT Wt'LI.. HAVE
•10 ~fOP M~l1'tNG
&..llCl 1Htf . .,.
OR. RAzz~r=RJ<V1N'
A SMARMY .SPARROW/
''I'll 1lcfini1cly lake 11 -my hu,band 'trained hi~ voice at the
roo1hall i;:imc IN 111gh1 and the doctor has ordered him not to
\flC>lk above r1 whi,ricr."
DENNIS tHE MENACE
~tG>
'1 ~ rr lHREE llMES A'JlEAW WHEN
!XIS rr STOJ &1N' MY NEW SUIT 2 • 4 . ' .
.•
-·~More Tuesday. November 1e. 1078 D~IL y PILOT A I. I
I
.'1VSlwws
anceled
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-Three more weekly
televi&loo shaws offlcial·
.)y WeN dropped Mc:mday
-NBC's "Wednesday
Movie" and CBS' "The
ENTERTAINMENT
l' Blue Knicht'' and ''The
Tony Orlando and Dawn nlabt schedule. atarting
t BatDbowlfour." Dec.1.
It brought to nine tho The abows are "CPO
TtDO ~d Hot .Lo.,ers'
4 Shows Lift Curtairis
NeU Simon'• ''Wl ot the Red Hot Lovera" 11 a
red bot ltero thla wett, o-sientnc at two communl\y
theaters only two duya apart.
The Lido la le Players w11! put .. 'Lovera" on tho
board.I tonllht, with tho San Cltmenw CommWllty
ThHter tollowlo1 on Thunday with aootbtr
vtr11o0. MeanwhUe, "Cat oa a Hot Tln Roof'' ar·
rtves •t Saddlet>ack CoJ1e1e Wedneaday and the
Colt. Me11 Civic Playhouae ralaea ita cW'taln Fri·
day on .. l'uttortue. Ji.re Free."
Intermission "
Tom Titus
1
Joanne Appte1ett. ~ormances ~ scheduled ror
ThW'Sdays tbrouch Sat\irda.)'s lor four weekends at
8:30 in the Cabrllto Playhouse, 2dl .1henida
CabriUo, SlD Clemente. ReservaUp.na •92-tM65.
SADDLEBACK COLLEGE'S ''Cat on a Jlot
t1J\ Roof" will feature d.lreetor W)'Dll Pearee in
the role of Blg Dadd.Y, with Jim Ryan u Brick,
Catherine Gash u Maggie, Laura Chambers as
number of programs Sharlru," starring Don
c a n c e le d b y t be Rickles as a chief pellf
nelworb since the new officer at a Navy t.rain·
season b ecan in Sep· Ing center in San Diego;
tember. ' ' T h e M a c L e a n
· NBC said its Wednes· Stevenson Show," with
day aeries of made-C~r· Stevenson aa a amall-
TV movies will en(l Nov. town h ardware store
24. The network said owner , and .. Slrotta'a
three new h alf-h our Court," with Michael
situation comedies will Conatantlne playing a
THE TIT LE llOLE OF the mldcll•·••ed reataurateur Jookln1 tor an afternooo of ex··
ttamarltal romance is bein~ taken on 1.Jdo l•l• by
Martin Fuchs, with Beth Titus, Laura lllack and
Denne Soderliol( playtna his three intended con·
queats. Ron FtUan dlreat.a the comedy whJch plays
tonJ&h.i through Saturday only with a 8:30 curtain In
the Lido Isle Clubhouse, 701 Via Lido Soud, Newport
Beach. Reservations are bein1 taken at three num·
ben-673·8336, 675-2.fJ71or673·6170.
Mae and Ectie Baird as Big ¥ama. F ive--;================:::;..-pel'formances wlll be given, Wedoesday tt\rougb
At San Clemente, Tony Brandt plays the luck·
Jess lotharlo attempt.in& to seduce Cory Cumla.
carol Jo and Gloria Briuidt under the direction of
,_be_p_ut_i_n _its_w_ed_nes_da_Y _ni_lh_t_c_ou_rt_Ju_d_se_. --New Pinter play
lnBroadway Debut
By WILLIAM (iLOVER almost become parody.
NEW YORK CAP) -And that's extra fun for
John Gielgud and Ralph close listeners. ·
Richardson s tar Th&story, which keeps
Sunday at 8 o'clock at the MlssJori Viejo c0Ue1e.
Reservations 831·9700, extension 203.
Pati ;ambellini is directing ".Butterrues Are
Free" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse wlth
Stan Wlasick playing the blind youth. Linda Put·
nam as bis friendly neighbor, Annabelle Quigley
as his protective mother and Hu1h Berkley at an
act-Broadway director. Tho Leonard Gerabe com·
edy plays three weekend!, Fridays and Saturdays
at 8: 30, in the Community Cent~r auditorium on
the Oranae County Fairarounds. ReservaUoos
556-5391.
t ' f
. superbly 011 Broadway at slipping off at weirdly
Jast in "No Man's Land," oblique angles, concerns
Harold Pinter's slyest, an elderly gentleman
funniestpuzzleplay. who invites a seedy
Wlf!IJDING UP A TllllEE-week engagement at
the Laguna Moulton l?layhouse with performances
tooigbf through Saturday ls "?'iorman, ls That
You?" under the dJrectlon ot Jan Arvan. Walter
Dudek, Gregg Barnette and Tom Sandler head the
cast of the ~medy, which plays at 8:30 at the
theater, 606 L~una Can!l()n Road, La1una Beach. -------------------Reservations 4~·0743.
ftnanuell ~~
A Morlln lllogmon PIOductlon
Sean Cormery Comella Sharpe
"'Ole Next Man"
The production started chap; whom he met dur·
in London two seas<>M ing 1l '!tr-oil. in for a
ago and has cut an SRO drink.
Also closlng with final performances Friday
and Saturday evening1 is the Neil Si mon comedy
"Come Blow Your Horn" at the lnUmate Dinner
Theater in the Holiday Inn. 3131 Bristol St. at the
San Diego Freeway in Costa Mesa. Curtain Ume is
8:30 preceded by a 7 p.m. burtet dinner. Reserva·
tiODI 557-3000,
swatch since en route to For quite a while, he
its · arrival a t the llsteos in a kind of (le-
Longacre Theater. The nant daze while the ap-
v i s it is sch e du I ed pal'ent stranger prattles CONTINUING THEIR respective runs at
• ~ .thr.ti.I~ -~:~~·~"'8e=-~~;-~~~---~!~tcm;-are: .
-·. ·tho s e w h o s a v o r don. -"Saturday SWlday Monday" at South Coast
dramatic elegance ~1 - ---Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
have to hurry. BY THE second act. Performances tonight through Sunday at 8 o'clock
As interesting as the topsy-Lurvey reunion ·and Sunday afternoon at3. Reservations 646·1363.
fine pe rforma nce is gets them talking about -''l Do, l Po" at SebllI!\lan's West Dinner
which Director Peter a long ago when each Playhouse, 140 A venlda Pico, San Clem ente.
Hallhascreatedwithhis knew all about the Peformances tonight through Sunday at varying
two senior knights and a other ' s a m or o us curtain times following a buffet dinner. Reserva·
pair ot formidably pro-escapades. To keep the tions 492·9950.
mislng aides, the event trapeze drama flying, a -"The Mousetrap" at the Westminster Com.
also intrigues becauseo! couple of dubious un-munity T heater, 7772 Maple St .. Westminster.
a shift in the Pint.er aervile servants scuttle Peform ances Fr iday and Saturday at 8:30.
-------------------creative thrust. aboul. Reservations 893·8626.
What it all adds up lo is -------------------
THER E 'S STILL plen-
ty of cryptic ambiguity
in plotting and menacing
suspence in characters,
but on tnis occasion the
author appears lo be
amusing himsetr with
tinges of seH-mockery
too. The word games
JllOlmttl St ~51111 1111 t1•u••
LH MA.ltVIM
"SHOUT AT
THI! DEVIL" lRJ ,,, .... u
SAT,--''""''''"'•0·' ''""" SO. COAST PLAZA
J'10 '11Jl1UI ~'/It I fftf '""°' "MARATHON
MAN" lRJ , ........
SAT/tlM-t:J .. J'4M""4'° , .... , ....
CINE MALAND
u1ue.Mn.. httlt•m 1M11
"SHOUT AT
THE DEVIL''
1t1·9-Jt
UT /ti/fl J:t .. Ut ..... , ........
CINEMALAND wu ••• .., ..,~,,. m 1111 lllCI'._""
"MARATHOM
MAN11 (RJ
1 ..... .. ,,.,,__ .. , .. ,.. ... _, ll-10)0
~ matter for individual
solution. Event the title
turns out to be an odd
metaphor.
The best approach is
just take each scene as it
comes.savor it fully, and
never mind how it fits in·
to the jigsaw.
A "NH W~IEUMG" IS.I V "UGIHD OF llG '°OT'
4'-. "HOtMAH IS TttA T YOU?"
,., "SUHSHIHI IOYS" INI
'.
THE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE
Oii.ANGE •532.5721 •
"SHOUT A.T THI DEVIL"
"$TWAMGt~ •HD THI
GUMFfGHTH" (PG)
"IUGSY MA.LOMI"
"THI llG IUS"
4'-. "ND WHEILJHG"
,., "'UGIHD OF llG'°OT"
"f XHllrTIOH"
''iMMAHUILLI" IXI
To place :your mcssoi.:e
berorolhe
rc11dln6I public.
phone
Vally P1lol
Cto~lflcd, &t2·SIJ78
MARATHM MAN a i:a'c:=· t«n KMIDll ~lll'IUll MMTMllCl!U9
.'MAIUITMOH MAK .. ~ • ...__.---@
SOUTH COAST rLAU c .... MHCI S49·JJSZ
C ... EMALAMD TIUATH
~ 635·7601
STADIUM DIUVIJN
Oronge • Ut-1770
SELL Idle ll~ms with 3
Dolly Pllot Classified Ad.
CHARLTON HESTON ~
JOHN CASSAVms ~~
•tWO·llNUTE WARNING" ~· ~ ...........
, MARTIN BALSAM • BEAU BRIDGES
MARILYN HASSETI ·DAVID JANSSEN
JACK KLUGMAN· W~LTER PIDH
GENA ROWLANDS mrmn·OAllD GIOl •MTIIOllT DAVIS
JOE Wt•A FILMWAYS PRODUCTION/A LARRY PEERCE ·EDWARD
S.FUOMAN FILM ·Screenplay by EOWARO HUME• 8aMCt Of\ 11'1
novel by GEORGE LafOUNT At NE~ Music by CHARLES FOX
Directed by LARRY PEERCE •Produced by EDWARD S .FELDMAN
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE fiiTiiiiiiiiiiPfti-:;;J
TECHNICOLOR9 • PANAVISION9 E::auan~=.1
~·,~·11•.aro
.. ~I
,,.,.....,........,
nllWMllLIN'cet NIJ
llOI .. tf .. fOOTtet
--·Ut---_. IMOUT AT 1MI DIYll CNt ""' IMAU TOWN IN TUAllMI
,_,....,~
PlllWNllUN' ... -LIOI• Oii atO fOOT tel
"~OOll IMO 1MI -· lOOAN'I IUN(llllf twt
fUTUll WOILOCNI
_ ..... Ut...-
IHOU'f AT ntl DIW"' -SMAU 10WN IN 11Wt"1
ftWU "'"' 1.(AI WASH 1N1 2-ln'I 1MI IUWT" WUIMI &.1"1 NANC"1
_ _.eUIMMYIM
1-SHOUT AT lMI DIVIL1N1
2·TAlf OllYll 111
~'"11C1t•l .,_.Wl,fWl.91
1-ITAT HUNOIY ttl
2 MANION MASIACll (I ) --·Wl'"""
--·&It-..,, ATM llYll.,..
"""' ~m:.l!ilMIW.L..:.:...:....::.:.:..:.J IMMl 10WN IN 11W N
..
~i.--------~ .· -;,,. ...
•
Tuesday. November 18. 1978
oun•~llng O,,etu
A free counseling service for tba Southern.
Orange County small business community bas
begun operation in San Juan Capistrano on a twice-
wttk.ly ba,sis.
The service is provided by the Service Corps of
Retired Executives (SCORE), a volunteer or-
ganization composed of retired business executives
who donate their tjme counseling small business
persons on small businessquesUons and problems.
Sponsored by the U.S. Small Business
Administration, the service i s quartered in the San
Juan Capistrano Counseling Center, 32141 Alipaz.
Hours are 9:30 a.m . to 2.30 p.m. Tuesdays and
Thut-sdays.
Stewart L . Rollins. Los Angeles district director
for the SBA, said the service provides a new tool for
southern Orange CoWllY small busin esses needing
assistance in solving their business problems and
questions. · _
Isadore Schneider, chairman ot the Orange
County SCORE chapter, asked those who wish to use
the free service to make appotnlm ents by c;illing
831-0616or 493· 7333.
Assigned to San Juan Capistr ano center wiU be
two senior SCORE counselors. They are Sam
Thacher of San Juan Capistrano and Harvey Brew-
ington of Laguna Niguel.
Tax Litigation Re•ol11ed
National Systems Corp., Newport Beach, says
litigation r elatin g. to payroll tax deficiencies pro-
posed by the Internal Revenue Service has been r e-
solved without recourse to court. action, and that the
IRS has withdrawn its claim for deficiency.
The favorable action r esolving the matter. ac-
cording to John Jay Corley, National Systems' presi-
dent, relieves the company of a potential claim of
more than $430,000.
Corley said lhe alleged tax deficiency related lo
payroll tax treatment by f(he company or com-
missions paid to lndependent sales representatives.
Air Fl,...t• Ear#l"fl• Cu•fl
Air California, Newport Beach, has announced
net earnin gs of $521,028, or 59 cents a share, for the
third quarter ended Sept. 30, compared with $634,188,
or 72 cents a share, in the like quarter of 1975. Total
revenues for the third quarter were $12,732,675 vs.
$10,589,405 a year earlier.
Earnings for the nine months were Sl,697,'73, or
$1.92 a share, on total revenues of $35,037 ,z.« com·
pared with n et earningsofSl,089,474, or$1.24 a share,
on total r evenues of $27,587,063 for lhe nine months
ended Sept. 30, 1975.
WTC Report• Lo••
wrc. lnc., Newport Beach, has reported a slight
loss for the first three quarters of 1976 on higher re-
venues. For the nine months ended Sept. 30, re-
venues increased to $166,305,000 from $57,875,000 in
the corresponding period of 1975. Net loss this year
was $49,000, or 2 cents a share, compared with net in-
come of $8,000 in the first nine mont.hsoflast year.
Third-quarter revenues increased t o $22,697,000
from $21,023,000 in the like period a year ago. Netloss
in the quarter was SU0,000. or 5 cents a share, com-
pared with $192,000, or 9 cents a share, in the third
quarter of 1975.
Record Earning• E%pected
Preliminary results indicate that Amcord, Inc.,
Newport Beach, achieved record revenue and earn·
ings for the third quarter and first nine months; ac-
cording to William T . Pascoe Ill, chairman and cbief
executive officer.
Net income in the third quarter ended Sept. 30
rose 33 percent to $3,486,000, or 48 cents a share fo~
$2,627,000, or 38 cents a share during the-third
quarter of 1975.
~ .-__ .• Rev_eoue r.ose . ..26..nercent tQ $54.7.ZSJlOO from Y·-$41,89'1,000cfuffngfhelfiiiaq·uanefortastyear-:-
a
"' · Revenue for the nine-month period ended Sept. ~ 30 ros~ 19 percent to $156,789,000, compared with
$131 ,608,000 during the first nine months of 1975.
Earnings for the nine-month period rose 45 percent to
$8,452,000. or $1.16 a share, compared with 1975 nlne-
month earnings of $5,836,000, or83 cents a share.
Bank Adds Teller 1t'lndote•
Two new walk-up teller stations have been in-
stalled at the Bank of Newport's main office, Six-
teenth and Dover, foratolaloffourwalk-upwindows
and two drive-lhru facilities.
The windows are open Mondays through Thurs~ 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturdays;Jra.m .·lp.m.
Serrice Report• Calb
A one-call underground service alert CUSA)
center in Orange County reports it receives 15 to 2S
calls a day from contractors working near under-
ground facilities.
LOCAL DEALERS GET READY FOR SHOW
Lett, G. Olson (AMC), P. Connell (Chevrolet)
The USA single telephone system is sponsored
by the Southern Califomia~as. Pacific Telephone
and General Telephone. Atlantic Richfield, the
Anaheim electric department and the Cost a Mesa
County Water District also are members. The toll-
freenumber is 1-800-422-4133.
:1977 Autos Due
111 Plaza Displ~y
Mariner•' Earning• CU•IJ
Mariners Financial Corp., Newport Beach,
owner of Mariners Savings and Loan Association,
has announced nine·month earnings of $1 ,129,1~.
compared with $707,523 during the same period in
1975.
:-.e\\ 1971 automobiles valued at over $400,000
will be dt!iplJyed on the mall of the South Coast
Plaz:.. shopi)mg center beginrung Thursday, accord-
ing tu Pal Connell. general sales manager of Con-
uell Chevrol('t in Costa Mesa.
Earnings per share for the period, were 81 cents,
compared with 52 cents for the 1975 period. Per share
earnings were computed on common shares, assum-
ing full dilution. or 1,400,958and1,358,368, for the nine
months ended Sept. 30, 1976and 1975 respectively.
Alln-9an Increases Df1'1d~d Tht> four day auto show. hosted by the Harbor
BoUll'V:lrd or Cars Auto Assoctation, will be
represent('d by nearly all foreign and domestic
JDodels. accnrdin~ lo Connell. who is president of
the local dealer l(roup
Allergan Pharmaceuticals, Irvine, h as an-
nounced an increase in its annual dividend to 20 cents
a share on a quarterly basis. Previously the com-
pany paid an annual dividend of 10 cents a share
semi-annually in March and September. The first
quarterl y dividend of5cents a share will be paid Dec.
15 to shareholders ofrecord N~S..>
Gorctou Obon. general manager of Costa Mesa
AMl and sccreta~ or the dealer associat1on. is
icnt'ral <:h;iirman for the show
:--
,,,._
I
Now Open
in Newport Beach ,-
1
. ~·~ ~1' YO BODY CONTROL CENTER
!t7;0f1 3961 MacArihw llvd., Slllte I 01-103
DYNAMIC CONDttiONING FOR MEN
' I ,,
GRA YfTY EXERCISE MACHIME
IT'S A FACT
The MAYO METHOD of ohyslcal condlhonlng for men Is the flrst
of its kind developed exclusively for men lt"'Comb1nes 1he most
effective of isometric and aerobic NON-STRENUOUS exercise with nutrittonal guidance to build muscle 1oni1, Increase
c1rculatton. ellmlnate un-wanted inches, Improve posture and
control weight.
IT WORKS
The MAYO METHOD of physical conditioning la personalized
requiring ONLY three 20-00 minu1e sessions per week. There 1s
per30nal 1ns1ructlon at each session, and the number of weeks is
determined by 1nd1v1dual requiremen1s. the MAYO METHOD has
proven eflect1veness It has been medically tested and clinlcally
llPproved Fu II docu men1atton 1s avatlable uponreQuHt.
IT'S GUARANTEB>
The MAYO METHOD guarantees resul1s' Goats are established
and achieved within the pre50r1bed program time.
THE MA YO METHOD· -
Rec_i.u1re1 no dlsrobrnq shots. oills or strenuou1 exercise and
that s a matter ol FACTI
Ceff Hew Pw A"'" Dt..ttttNtlM
~ SPECIAL IMT'RODUCTORY OFFU
(Now Thrv Sal • Nov 6)
PHO~E: 752-5155
•
\ ,_
A .. Wlrtpllolo
ftualre Revisited?
Curved glass wall of modern mirrored
building makes it look as if an older art de-
co structure is ready to fall. New York city
skyline shows many such contrasts in style
and age of architecture.
Chapter to Hear
UCLA Analysi
Organization analyst Samuel Culbert will ad-
dress a meeting of the Orange Coast chapter of the
National Association.or Accountants to be held at
the South Coast Plaza Hotel on Wednesday night.
Dr. Gulbert is associate professor of human
systems development at UCLA's Graduate School
of.)lanagement. Prior t.o taking this position in 1969,
he spent two year s in Wasrungton, D .C .. working for
the NTL Institute of Applied Behavior al Science
and teaching part-time at George W ashington
University.
-
Firms Report II
Promotions
MJke Manaban, community relations manaeer
at the Irvine Company, bu been elected prealdtot
of the OrHlt Counl)' lndustr)'·EduuUon Coan cU
for 1976-77. John Sbalfer SmlU., Oranae County
Department of Education, has been elected Vice
~dent: Don Avertll, Huntington Beach Unllitd
School District, secretary and James Garmon,
Orange Coast College, treasurer. ...
William Mosely Joaes, Cororta del Mar, has
been named vice chairman of the board or directors·
of First Lincoln Financial Corp. and its principal
subsidiary, Lincoln Savings ind Loan AssoclaUoD.
Jones was president of Pacific Savlngs and Loan
Assoi:iation of California until its saJe to California
Federal Savings and Loan Association In 1975 and
has pursued personal investment interests since
lben. ·
* Stuart R. Ross has joined the Newport B each
ofrice or Merrill Lynch. Pierce, Eenaer & Smltb,
Inc., as an account executive.
* Gray A. Nesbit hns been named gener al
manager for Pacific Telephone's South Coast area,
replacing David W. Carroll, who , -
has been named dis trict
manager for the Beach inslalla·
tion and repair district, head·
quartered in Tustin.
The company also has an-
nounced a new district office for
installation and r epairs in the
Newport Beach area. It will be
headed by A.L. Knox and be
based in Costa Mesa.
Replacing Knox as district NISllT
manager for special services will 'be James F.
Barnes. •
Nesbit will be r esponsible -for business office
and customer r elations operations for an area that
includes u sers of 200,000 phones in residences in
Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Mission Viejo,
Laguna Hills, Capistrano Valley and San Clemente.
* Jo Ellen Scott has been appointed vice pre·
sident-administraUon at Keystone Sav\ncs and
loan, Westmin ster. She is responsible for corporate
communications and policy liaison, continuing to
serve on the executive committee and retaining her
former title of corporate secretary.
* -"•~es W. Ivey, 'Mission Viejo, has been ap·
pointed vice president and portfolio manager of
Charles Neal Flnanciat Services, Inc., San Juan
Capistrano. He is a former officer or the Trust Com-
pany of California.
()\'er l 'h e Counter
NASO Ustinqs
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MUTUAL FUNDS
llp• and Do"'"'
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il('. Olh 10 • II u Poun • 01 NL HO'dQ Tt I ti<) Nl "'''"""""It c. MilQ '" ~-• 47 5'IO s • 0 10 )0 w.lllfl t 10 21 ~ Int I .. NL Orwin • " • °" • ..,. M;ft .... ·~ " , ·~ , •• ':JS ,..,. \1 10 •f' NI. T~h • .,, 1.54 Wt\I 9 '· 10 •' Iii\ Inv • S6 NI. '""°"' > t~ •At ISi Gro111> 1110-p 109 ,JS .. _, f'ul)1. Sii i;qt'/ t 4) NL Wll!Oo: l 10 2\ k••tt ~ii t 1' NL *'I St• 'fll G""'lfl 4" • llQ Mt\\ 10 Sl 11.JO ltunO 1111 14.U 'S& ta.~ 11 ., NL V.,lf\ It JI J.., ... (ft Ill t.U HL, Slocll • 01 • ,, lllUm 'u J .. M•U , lll•lltl: II 1UI I] .. SoOeft '" 10 i 11.0~ lfeltSt G ... 6.tt
f
Tuesday's , ·
Afternoon Prices
NYSE COMPOSITE T RANSACTIONS
• •
s DAIL V PILOf A I J
P an A111 Pro fit
Politics' Harm I
May Be Offset
By MIL1'<5N MOSKOWITZ
lt Jooks as It Pan American WorJd Airways wlll mllka
money this year for the first time since 1988, which should
give It something to celebrate ln 1977 when it's 50 years old.
lt won't be mucbo! apJl)fit, but lbeblack ink may provide
Money
Tree
a psychological lift the
airline badl y needs.
Once the nll~ oft.he in·
ternatlonal airways,
Pan Am bas seeo its
power diminish as the il'I·
ternational marke t
grew.
Al the root of Pan Am's trouble is politics, not economics.
An airline can't cross the national border without becoming
enmeshed in politics. Pan Am crosses more bordel's than any
other aU"line, hence it bas more political problems.
. CONSIDER, IF YOU WlLL, THREE or its cU1Tent
problems, iovo1 v ing Brita.in, Japan and the Soviet Union ..
British Airways bas tlecided it wants a larger share of the
air traffic over the Atlantie. The Bntfsb government, which
bQpebs to own this airline, naturally supports the bid.
U so happens that the United States originates about two-
•. thirds of the passengers flying between the two countries.
British Airways is now carrying about one-third ortbe ltllUle.
Wbatdoes 1t want as its proper share? It wants 50 percent.
U.S. AND BRl11SH GOVERNMENT officials have
begun negotiations to setUe this problem. H schedules are re-
jiggered to enable British Airways to capture a bigger chunk
of the market, the gain is likeJytocomeoutof Pan Am's hide.
Over Lhe Pacific it's a similar problem. Japan Air Lines
feelsit'snotgetting a "fair" shake in theJapan-U.S. matkeL
What's fair in these matters is not eas~ to decide. The
Japanese point out that they are now onginatlng 60 percent of
the passengers between the two countries. Americans make
up only 30percentoflhetra!Cic. Yet the U.S. carriers, which
include Pan Am, have 48 percent of the market. Japan Aic
Lines has36 percent. Japan cries, 0 unfair."
J APANESE AND U.S. GOVERNMENT officials have
begnnnegotiationstosettletheproblem.lftheJapanesegain
a largersbare,PanAmlsllkelytoloseagain.
Then there ar~ the Russians. Pan Am rues to Moscow via:
a r~iprocal agreement that allows"'AeroitO?, i.ll~-vr.r~
airline. to fly to New York. Aeroflot does mucb better on th.ts
route than Pan Am. One major reason lS the way tickets art
sold.
In the Soviet Union the only way to buy a seat on a Pan A4
plane is to go to an Aeroflot office, and you can well imagi.Qe
the reception a Soviet citizen would get if be or she did that. In
this country Aeroflotseats were available through any travel
agent.
BUT NO MOJlE. THE CIVIL Aeronautics Board (CA= ~cted last month to designate Pan Am as the sole ticket ag
in this country ror Aerollot. Th;lt was ln retaliation for
way the Russians have acted. Chalk one up for Pan Am. ·:
Frustrated abroad, Pan Am has tried to wangle so1*1
routes at home, and the CAB bas now given the beleaguerei
airlineitsfirstdomesticroute. ~:
It's not much of a route but it's something. Pan Am b~
been carrying European.bound passengers from Detro\(;
stopp10g off in Boston before going over the Allantic. Jl nciJlc
has the right to sell seats on the plane to passengers flying oQ:
JytoBoston. ,•
The Detroit· Boston service will not add much to P@i
Am's coffers, at the most $1 million a year. But it is ano!
psychological lift. It's the first time Pan American base
been allowed to sell tickets for a flight within the continen
United States. :
Buy a .Town?
1939 Price Still Holds
BANKHEAD SPIUNGS (AP) -The asking price 1
hasn't changed a penny since 1970. The Alvan Millers
still want $239,000 for this isolated mountain'town they
bought m 1939. ,
The package includes seven houses, a hotel anct
restaurant and about 212 acres near Jacumba and
Boulevard roads.
Bankhead Springs was nearly sold twice before -
first to the Gay Liberation Movement and then as a
school for construction workers The gay group found
the price tag too steep, and the construction workers
backed out after a dynamiting permit request was de-
nied.
Mrs. Miller, now m her 80s, and her husband live
quietly in the two-story hotel. Miller operates a repair
garage. About 20 people live in the town, named for
former Alabama Sen. John Hollis Bankhead.
Talks on Inflation
Set at Golden West
Some "plain talk" about lnfiaUon will kick off a series of
lectures on money, investing and Cmancial planning at
Golden West College, Friday at 7:30p m.
Jnvestment counselor Edward McNary will conduct tHc
lecture series in Forum 1. There is no admission-charge
McNary, who' holds an advanced degree in finance, h"5
been working with and teaching investors Cor more than 25
years.
The stock market will be his subject Dec. 3: stocki,
bond1, options, Dec.10; retirement planning, Dec.17; invest-
ments, tax shelters and wnte-otfs, Jan. 7.
Sales E xecs to Meet
L.G. "Boo" Bue, owner and director or the Dale
Carnegie franchise of Northern California, will be the gueitt
speaker at the November meeting or Sales and MarketmJ
Executives of Orange County.
His topic, "Succeas Comes ln Cans" wlll cover thi
various aspects of how to be successful in your job.
The meeting will beheld Wednesday at 6:30 p.m., In th~
Trabuco Room of the Saddleback Inn m Santa An!\
.Reservations m ay be made through Mattie Wilson at (71411
828-3131 by Monday, Nov.15. • •
Cpunty _Reaity Loans .
The western home omce or the Prudential. Josu("ance
Co. reports it Sovcstcd $1,501,360 in Oranac County re'1 estate loans during the r\rsl 10 months of 1976. '
George A. Bremer, Southern California cencral
man1ge,r for the company's real estate Investment depart,
rnent. said th~ en Ure amount was for city loans.
ln Cali!ornj,, real estate loan di.tbursernenu amounted
to M ,Mi, 1•. . ·
f A J 4 DAILY PILOT Tue.day. November 16, 197& '
·Your Doroseope THEFAMILYC1Rcus· Dy Bil Keane
Cot a problem? Then write to Pat !Suttn. Pat will
cut red tape, getting the answers and acUon you
need to solue mequttt~• in 90t>e"'"'enf and btm·
ness. Mail your questions to Pat Dunn At Your
Service, Orange Coast Dady Pilot, P.O. Bo:r 15ro,
Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Include uour telephone
number. The column appears daUJI ezc<s>t
Saturdaus.
Tauvis' Vital
Signs Strong
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Lie low -wait for
others to send signals, tot.Ake initiative. Accent on
reflection, contracts, legal affairs, partnersbiJ.?,
marriage. Learn valuable lesson that being alone 1s
not same as being lonely. •
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You get work or·
ders, align priorities, gain physical strength; vitall·
ty makes a comeback. Member of opposite sex
finds you more attractive. Business associates
r espect your judgment.
GEMINI (May 2l·JWle 20): Finish what you
start. Reali%e that emotional responses now are
sharply honed. Be r:eady ror change, travel. varie·
ty, Wlique associatims.
. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Slick to facts.
Insist on verification, solid material. Discard
rumors, get rid of the flimsy. New deal is in order.
Be more independent in thought, action. Create and
illuminate.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Short trip, evaluation or
idea, consultation with "teacher" -these could be
on agenda. A void trying too much simultaneously.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You could learn
m eanin g of inflation. Mon ey, valuables,
possessions are very much in picture. Element of
luck -or timing -is on your s ide.
LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Lunar cycle is such
that you make friends, influence people and find
yourself being wined, dined. Personality, judg-
ment, timing are spotlighted -you.could be center·
of.attention.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You gain "inside"
information. You 're privilged to peek backstage.
You detect who is pulling strings. Aura of mystery,
glamour prevails. Talce advantage of it. Be dis·
creet.
SAG¥TARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Emphasis on
what yoi!'aesire, what you require. You make gains
as result of business investment. You gain coopera-
tion orramily. .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on
runding, prestige, ability to communicate with one
in authority. Define terms -see clearly, avoid self·
deception. Aura of mystery or glamour prevails.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Journey, com-
munication, education, organization are featured.
What seems out-oreach actually is attainable -
and you are closer tftln might be s upposed.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You feel what is,
what to do, perceive costs, potential -and you re-
alize the power or Jove. Money of partner, mate is
very much in picture.
If November 17th is your birthday you are an or-
ganizer, an execuli vein sense that you are willing to
accept responsibility. You are dynamic, stubborn,
creative, passionate and capable of winning over
what spposedly might be overwhelming odds. In two
years you could be rich!
High Court Nixes
Suit by 43 Narcs
WASHINGTON (AP)-TheU.S.SupremeCourt
has refused to review claims by 43 California un·
dercover narcotics •nts that the former publisher
and editor of the LO--.geles Free Press should ba ve
to pay them for an invasion of privacy.
The court let stand Monday a d~ision by the 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that Arthur Kunkin,
former owner of the Free Press, does not have to pay
a previously agreed-on $43,000in damages.
THE LEGAL CONTROVERSY began in 1969
when the newspaper purchased a list stolen from the
California Department of Justice giving the names,
home addresses and telephone numbers of 80
narcotics officers. The Free Press ran the list under
a headline "Know Your Neighborhood Narc."
Forty-three agents sued Kun.kin for invasion of
privacy, a nd Kunkin agreed to pay a $43,000 settle·
ment. But he later declared bankruptcy and asked a
bankruptcy court to absolve his obligation to pay orr
the debt
FEDERAL BANKRUPTCY laws dictate that
· such a debt dismissal cannot be made ifa "malicious
and wilful" act had been committed. But the
bankruptcy judge ruled t.f)a\ the Tree Press publica-
tion of the Ust was not a sufficient show of malice
toward the well-betng and privacy or the undercover
agents.
The bankruptcy judges' decision was upheld by
a distnct court and by a 2-1 vote or the circuit court of
appeals.
APPEALING TO THE Supreme Court, the
narcotics officers said the justices should rule lhat
the newspaper's action was malicious and that the
debt should not be dismissed.
-89~ ..,...·--"::;.
itttlrtun 's
BOOKS
• HAIDIACKS
• "ANllACICS
• CHILDHMS IOotCS
•GIFTS
WESTPORT SQUARE
JHL17MIST.
COSTAMIS4
lAcrea ,,._ .......... 6tJ
~ ...... OOKS
0,.. 7 D9fl
. .
00 YOU KNOW YOUll OIA...c>NO'S VAlUE llECENfl.Y INCA\AsEO? We
-tl\al ....,.,. IMU•anc:e _. ...... ~a del-6"Cftoti0t\of lfle ~ .... i!lloMtnl o"'1toil""' In,.,.,_ to -nno or--t,,.,.lnq
IM -' eNM'tC19fl•t~ Ot ~lhtt In I "-Al '-l\ell !1-Vlllie ol 11!1 -.>!• ._.., .. ~.._ In Int ltlet UM ol tllel -••to -I< tne ,..,...,., IOr
<11-ve °' 10 ....,,.,, lne l(lenhly. ~or conttn.ct.,., ol IM -on 1ne -ol loa.
-
nttt
PROFESSIONAL AWEL&RS INC.
-..... J{Wll.l"t -GfMOH>Gl\fS -DDlc;HUtS
714/963-5626
20902 Brookhurst Sttttl, Suitt 201
Huntington Stach, CA 92646
"My turn neJ<t!" C..1
This Machine Foils
Any I azy Pupils
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -"I don'( have any,"
won't work any more as an excuse for not doing
homework for Mifflin Junior High School pupils.
The "homework· machine" goes into operation
this week. P arents will be able to check on assign-
ments for various classes before an errant pupil
runs out to play by calling the school ror a recorded
message.
Many parents told teachers "if I knew what he
had to do, I'd help," said Asst. Principal J .T.
Landes, who came up with the Idea of installing the
tape recorder. •'Now there won't be any doubt.''
Flotar Saeb Duappeari119 .
DEAR P AT: I would like to find out where I
could purchase some old-fashioned cotton flour
sacks. 1 've searched all the fabric shops an<l other
retail material sales sources to no avail. l have an
interior deeoration project und~r way at home and 1
would like to use these sacks to cover one of the
walls. Am I out of luck?
A.J ., Costa Mesa
Sewer al or the ribric stoTeS A YS contacted say
that aJtboqlb the Roar ud feed sacks yoe waat can·
not be obtatDed. a very 1ooct sabstltute ls available.
Abbot Fabrics sells HO percent eottoa mU$lln
panels prlD'ed with sis dlffereat aatbentlc sack de·
sJgns. A panel m~aaures 45 inches selvage lo
selvage and Is ZS lncbes wide. Contact Abbott
Fabrics, 141% Broadway. New York, NY 19118, al·
teetloa: Vicki Lennard. for retail outlets that now
have this new fabric.
Milked tor AU It's Werth
DEAR PAT: I'd like to know if there is any
scientific proof that sweet acidophilus milk benefits
th..e digestive system. When are the live organisms
added to this milk and is there any chance that they
can multiply?
V.N., San Clemente
Althoqgb there are many testlmonlaJ claims to
the contrary, information from tbe Agricultural Ex·
tension's heme advisor's office states that there ls
no published scientific evidence that demonstrates
a public health benefit due to the Ingestion of lac:
tobacillus acldopbllus.
Tbe culture concentration ln the milk can
range from 50,000 to 500,000 Uve organisms per
mllllllter of mUk. Tbe culture ls added to the milk
after pasteurization. and UDder 1M>rmal market and
home storage conditions, the lactobaclOus
~ addoplllllu doe• Ml· •.itlpl)r ud • MW!I are
fOOlled •
If .,.e milk were lleld at a warm t.mpenat•re,
the becteria wouhl pvw la the milk, ell..., milk
auiar lo acid ud ea...., tbe milk ,,..... &o
-eoaplate. tberebJ ~a eou milk atltlt llke
ba&termllll. Sweet aclclopllUH milk 11 aalQae
beeaate it 11 a •••milk ceataJ.a.laC ... paQlioeealc orgul.ams wblcb lau u acceptable retrt,_aa.t
alaelfll(e.
GN. DeDeerw 6-r••teetl
DEAR PAT: I bad occasion t.o send a Western
Union night letter to a business associate receDU)'. I
sent it at 4 p.m. on Monday and it was not received
until early the following Wednesday momln•· Isn't
there some kind or time limit ob deJlvery ol nl,lbt
letters? A.R .• Fountain Valley
AltJtoap It Is Mt pnerally bewa, w..aer.
UD.ioa offers moaey~badl puutee oa telvery
time fer all typea ol domllUe tervket. NlPt. Wten
are nppo1e4 to be deUvered wttlala 1 ~ to Z ltRn by
pbooe. or within 5 boa.n If clellvered b)' laud. Mall·
grama alloaJd be expected to arrive .. tlae Ont bul• ~ mall delivery the day aftu ~' teat. 11 1od do aot _, service wttbla these time Umltl, )'Oii are
entitled to a full refund or you may lane yoGJ'
message reunl at no cltarge. Contact yoar local
Weaena Union customer aemc:e operator to rue•
claJm.
If you've got $1,000
we've got three good r.easons
Ott1• ""' "'""• t01e
you should change banks.
1 You'll get a checking
• account free of service
charges when you open a
Grand Account.
2 You'll get. pai~ QUr m axi-
• mum savings interest
rate allowed by law.
3 You'll h ave your savings
• and your ch ecking
accounts in one· secure and
convenient place. Security
Pacific Bank.
If you have $1,000 or
more sitting in another
Bara k or Savings and Lonn,
bring it to us :md let us put
it to work. We'll give you a
checking account and pay
you up ro 7J.1% annual
interest o n·ynur savings. ,
<le.pending upon the matu-
T~'Y you select in ~nc of
.. our special Ptcfcrrcd
Pnssbook Sa11ing:-Account~.
Thar's morC1 than you can ·
earn in any rcgubr
!><Wings account /Jlus you
gee your checking account
free of service charges.
That's what we mean
by "security in numbers"
at Security Pacific Bank.
SEClJRITY PACIFIC BANK
There's Security in Numbers .,
/
' ..
..
..
, . . -
..
. t
Grime Out of Hand ( ~nn Landers ·~·
''
•.
·.
Sweepstakes
A Ooral headdress titled Madame Butterfly,
mode led by Me Me Chen of Laguna Niguel,
won the Sweepstakes Award at the first
Asian I lcaddrcss Ball. The event, originat-
ed by Mrs. Ruth Ding of Newport Beach
took place in t he Los Angeles Biltmor~
Bowl. Designer of Madame Butterfly was
Showers of Flowers, Anaheim. .... --.r-
DEAR ANN LANDERS1 I have been mar-
ried for nine years to an auto mechanic whose
bands get covered with &rime. When we were co·
ing toe ether he often ahowed up with cracked and
~eeding ban~ because be bu seosltive skin and
the cleaning aaenta were very bard on him. Now
be uses ordinary soap and b.la bands never look
clean.
The problem ls actually mine, not his, slnce
I'm the one who la embarrassed when we eo out
socially. I imacine everyone is looldne at. my
1 husband's hands (especially bis fineernailsf
wonderine wby be doesn't do somet.hine about
them. He ls an elder in the church and I just
about dle when be passes the collection basket.
It's becoming more and more difficult. to get.
our ei&bt.year-old son to wub his bands before
meals. He says, "Daddy's hands are dirtier than
mine." I would appreciate any help-you can give
me.-THENAG (IUSNAMEFORME>
DEAR WIFE: Cu yoar bubud work ln
nbber clove•, Ute type IAll'leGU wearf hy b.lm
a pair ud ask ltlm to try It. Aaodler al&enaaUve
la a Mmewbat. new product -a Uqald wb.lcll
fonu aa lDvlalble "glove." After applylal tb.ls
eoatlq tile &rease ud oU wull off wtU. oJ'dlaary
eoapaadwater. ~
You migbt abo check tbe dra1nore for a
llypo.allergenlc mecbulc'• 10ap. O.e of tlleae
tuft 1aggestloa1 sbould work. Ld me kllow, will
yM?
DEAR ANN: I was interested in your
response to "Shafted in flint." You said, "The
ex who alings mud tells more about himself than
be tella about his former s pouse." I'm not sure
you are right.
My ex blabbed lo everyone who would listen
-made me out to be a money-grubbing shrew.
His entire family bought the story and sided with
him. So did most or our neighbors and friends.
Each or us remarried this past year. The
children have become terribly insecure. Their
paternal grandparents, aunts and uncles are f>n
their father 's side and have made it clear to lbe
kids.
I now reel I made a big mistake. I should
have told MY side of the story instead or being
such a lady and keeping my mouth s hut.
J>OP~l'i~ WHOP.AI? ••
.
.= Lost Found Logica.lly
By ERMA BOMBECK
I have just fi gured out
that I have spent a total
or 23 years, four months,
, s ix days, 12 hours and 17
minutes looking for
having a husband who
sits in a chair and yells,
"Don't get up. J ust tell
me wh ere my d ischarge
from the Army is."
"Whatever," be said.
"You really should do a
column about it."
He's proba bly right .
rouo~ng IS most orten
lost items in the follow-
ing places.
School shoe!i: In a pair
of tight boots.
Tight boots: In the
school Lost and Found. .
Baby's pacifier: In the
dog bed. ··
I r
AT
WIT'S
END
Umbre lla : In the
school Lost and Fowld.
Title to the car: In the
DEA& POLLY: 11M part)' la a failed mar-
ria&e wbo bad-moadt.s a formu spouse comes
oat looldDC foutb-ra&e ud coavlacea DO oae of
uaytlLl.q. People bue &IMl.r Jademeots Oil Uaelr
own esperteocea wlttl l..thlduala. So -my ad·
l'lee 1tuda. I woaldlll't doge a word ol lt.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our next-door
neighbor owns a St. Bernard dog -th~r lbird ln
three years.
Their first dog was kept. on a choke chain. He aooo became loo large ffW the chaln which was
never adjusted. Eventually lt rubbed the dog's
skin raw and his neck became bloody. When the
neck began to heal it grew over the chain and the
chain was actually embedded in the dog's neck.
He died a few months after.
Their second dog died of worm' or starvation
-we don't. know which. Now"they have another
dog. She is get.Ung weak and-bony.
· Thia dog barks at night and lnterferes wllh
our sleep. Recently the smell from tht! dog's re·
ruse became so disgusting we called the Health
Department. Soon after our house w•s splattered
with doiens or eggs. Whal can we do? -ANGRY
DEAR A: Notify the Society for the Prevett·
tlollil of Cr•elt.y to Aalmals at eace. Yoar
oeigbMn sbouJd not be peraltted to oW1l a dog.
Get buy ud do some animal a biJt favor.
Can drugs be a friend in time or stress! If
you keep your bead together can they be or help?
Ann Landers's n ew booklet "Straight Dope on
Drugs" separate the fact Crom the fiction. Get it
today. For each booklet ordered, send a dollar
bill, plus a long, self-addressed, stamped en-
velope (24 cents postage) to Ann Landers. P.O.
Box 1400, Elgin, Ill. 60120.
...,....,.w ... ....... 1922 H_..,. ltwd.
Cotte M.-541.025'
·THE·
Pl.UMllHG
HIATIMG
All COHD.' m...-.. ,_~,
s.Nlce In Your ~,..i.c.n
Superb
INTERIOR DESIGN ·
for your Home or Offke •••••• $30. •
I
lnclUdlng a remarttable rnercun-
dlsll19 plan making rt possible tor
you to own the finest furnishings available.
D~IGN FRCTORq
MISSION Vlf.JO
?1912 c;. .... ftO ~ ... "'.,,., r.-°""" i..., r ,. .. ,.,.. ...
49S.0411
COSTA MESA
1!111 N-1 8 1\ld ••
642·1753
KITCHEN & IA TH
REMODELING
FREE ESTIMATES
You can·toO!
Call: 714~834•8811
I•• Ol.tf Ol1pteya ••
ANAHEIM•MAIN O•F1C( ·,.~~'::. ~:r:e~',n '-.. le What you hear may change your life! 772•3470 •)HW
· things around the hbuse
.. , that are not really lost.
. , {If I had spent that much
time lakin~ care of my
, face and body I could be·
.. a love goddess by now.)
This is my formula for
finding things around the
house before t hey get
lost. Her e is how i t
works. Fi rst, you must
ask yourself, "U I were
an iced tea spoon wbo
wanted to gel away for a
few days, where would I
hide?" Then you call on.
experience. Sm a ll boys
hate to take medicine.
Right? They often drink
their orange j uice from
an old fashioned glass
JUSt to be different. Thus.
they h ave p r oba bly
taken their cold syrup
from an iced lea spoon.
The iced tea spoon then
1s in the medicine chest.
Pencil: (without lead)
By the telephone. (With
le a d) Under the
refrigerator .
attic in a box marked, .11111 .. lm!! .. !!!!!!!!Blll9!J ...... .._ ____________________________ ~
, The other morning as I
hun g by my h eels
retrieving the innards of
Lhe coffee pot from lhe
gar b age ca n , m y
• husband in one of his
rare moments of senti-
ment said. "You have
the instincts of a water
buffalo. You evcntuaJly
find everything I don't
know how you do tl."
"I'll tell you how t do
It." I pantt'd. "ll comes
from having stupid kids
. who have thrown away
the insi de'> of thc coffee
pot every day for the last
three }ears and from
Us ing this k ind of
logic, the odds are very
good for finding the
~· Topics .Varied
•• t(
ORA SG E CO t:NT\'
UPl S C'HAPTt:R: /\
olouo dono1 prORram
... ,11 [){' d1scu'\!'t•d dun nJ(
.l , 311 11 m ml•et1n g
Thursda;.. :'\01.. 18, in the
• ropt1m1sl Clubhouse.
a n l a A 11 .1 G u l's t
Anaheim. Tickets. at $6
and SJ. may be reserved
by calling 956·3600.
CLIPPED WINGS: .
Founders Day will be
celebrated with a dinner
dance at El Adobe
restaurant, Sa n Juan
Capistrano. beginning at
Car keys: In the .
mailbox.
Marriage license: In
the bookshelf under fic-tion.
Screwdriver: In a
raincoat pocket.
Phone directory : ln
the bathroom.
Comb : Anywhe r e
where it is surrounded
by food.
The hamst er : Jn a
bedroom slipper.
\ FROM 8-1
"Nativity Scene and
Yearbooks."
Scissors : In the
shoeshine kit in the utili-
ty room.
Yardstick: 12 inches of
il is in the h all cl~. 8
inches in the tackle box
in the garage and 16 in:
ches supporting a tomato
plant in the side yard.
Now, let's see, if I were
an envelope and a stamp
wbo baled crowds ,
where would I go?
On Guard
Ortenlimes Carolan will stay al his post
longer than is required, waiting for latecomers .
"Oh, I know who the stragglers are,•· be says.
The job is a part-time one. But because or the
stageered working hours and having to drive
back and forth to the school, he rarely is out or
uniform during the day.
"Nothing can take precedence," says his
wife, Catherine. "The children make the job and
we enjoy the children. It gives Joe incentive to
get up every morning.''
Carolan agrees.
"It gets m e on the move," he said. "Like I
say. I'm not ready for the rocking chair.·' !~peakt'r ~111 bl' Dan
!:G w 1 n n o f 11 y I a n d
:t,.aborat or1c:., Costa ~csa
7p.m. Friday. Nov.19. --------------------
C'OMM UNIC' A TIONS
~ORKSllOP: Sex Talk
1s the theme of a seminar
for parents and lovers to
.Jtakl' place Friday, Nov.
19. under sponsorsbipl'oJ
• <>range Coast Colle1e. \
Teachers will be Mona
A. Coat es. an OCC
sociology professor, and
ayne D. Lamont. co-"~9un'1er of t he Birth Con·
Lrol Institute.
The workshop will take
place fro m 7 :30-10:30
p.m. at the Quality Inn,
BOWERS M USEUM :
Shop t he World is the
theme of a gift. sbop par-
ty to take place at 7 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 19.
Sp onsor ed by the
Bells, the party will
benefit the girt shop's
enlargement fund.
In c lud e d in lbe
merchandise will be
ivory, jade and silver
jewe lry . to ys , dolls ,
sculptures and rugs.
Tickets information for
the party may be ob-
tained by c alling the
museum. 834-4024.
COSMmc SURGERY
·MEN-WOMEN
r •'
~
LOOK YOUNGER! IMPROVE
YOUR APPEARANCE!
• Eyes • Nose • Ears • Facellrt • Breasts
• Stomach • Hai r Transplants •
Dermabras1on • Sktn Peet
Call For Free Brochure · Free Cot\Sulttng
Easy financing arranged. ·
AMERICAN COSMETIC SURGERY CfNTER INC. nu -.. ... ,... .. , .......... .._ .. HM70S
Member American Medical A11'n
OPEM HC>USE!
Sunshine Inn·. Professional Interior ond
Exterior Hortlculturollm . onnounces the
opening of Its first Contolnrer Gardening
Center ot 466 Eost 17th Street (at ltvine)
1n Costa Meso.
Open House Fridoy November 12
through Sunday November 21. Come 1n.
Hove o cup of coffee. ond chot with our
skilled plont d~corotors. See mony of the
beautiful specimen trees. plonts and
·succulents which ore used In our profes-
slonol decqratlng ond maintenance ser·
vices. Decoroting and maintenance setvlce
for commercial or i'esldentiol clients Is
ovolloble. Ten percent off on retoll pur·
chos-es during Open House w ith this
advertisement.
SUNSHINE IMN's
Container Gardening Center
"486 Eost 17th Street (ot lrvlne)
In Costo M•so
(71') 631·1282
You
in
can lose
tiDle for
HOW? To IMcJht with YCMI wiU
recefq a cOtllpif IMfttcry •isit and ..__,,. ..,..... •afris mtd shown
wW -•••••nts ere for yom-a.octrstr.ctwe.
one
the
size
holidays
•THEN yo. wiU be shoWlt how our
IMthod can he4p you occpiire yow
lo•ety proporffotts wtttto.t shots.
pill or weight llftilMJ.
Nothing quite contpares to ffflHMJ totaffy
attroctin, Clllcl achlrecl H yOll/re llk1 most
WOIMft, you need some help to adll1n .lt. It c• happen the day you 1M9n with Lllflan
laltcrd. What coulr bl nicer to look forwcrd
to?
2 for the price of 1
~<%3~ ~
C/B SAVE
~~~ ~
0' 1n,. UMITED
~cS~_. TIMEOFFER
'
I No Strenuous Exercise
I No Shots or Pills
I Nutritional Guidance
./No Disrobing
./ Improved Posture
I 1 O years experience
SALON HOURS:
Mon.·Fri. 8 a.m.·B p.m.
Sat 9 a .m.-3 p.m.
CALL NOW FOR
Your Co~imentary
Figure Analysis
631-2444
Ltlt«ue €~
FIGURE CONTOURING SALON
369 E. 17th • Westport Squar~
Aoro11 from Ralphs Market ,
Costa Mesa • 6.31 -2444 Jl.11~,_~.._-,
-.
I
OJ
le
pc
. • f • TueSday November 16 1976 DAIL v PILOT 112 ~_...;. ........ _...;._;;._;...:;..;~..;..____;_...;.~~~~-
rTyler May Not Play Against USC
LOS ANGELES (AP) -0 Jamea Owens ia highly inex·
perienced, be has bad three ma·
jor roles on our team this year
-and be mdn't have any spring
'-practice,•• said UCLA coach
'>'. Terry Donahue, yet Owens could ~ start Saturday in Loe Angeles'
• biggest football game in a de-~ cade.
: Wendell Tyler. the Bruins' all-
time leading r.usber, may oot ! ~~J~cL'la~t~~e~~~~~!i
} USC in a game that will decide the t ·Rose Bowl berth.
t _~TmnpaBay
~May Sign
Ex-SC Star
• _ TORONTO CA P) -The Cana-
• dian Football League career or
l running back Anthony Davis
has come to an unceremonious
end. ~· Davis. the he,ralded USC t: s upe r star who arrived in ~. Canada six months ago with a
five-year, $1-million contract.
bought the contrac~ from
. the Toronto Argonauts Monday
.:. and said he hoped to pursue a
career ln the National Football
League.
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
coached by John McKay, hold
his NFL rights. McKay coached
Davis when the running back
starred at USC.
Argos owner Bill Hodgson,
''At lbis llme. I'd say he's
doubtful," said Donahue. "He tn·
jurecl hts left shoulder against
Oregon State last Saturday. U he
plays he'll have hi~ shoulder
strapped down. Thal might hurt
bis pa.as catching ability, but pro-
bably not his running. He could
play, but right nQtV 1~·s wait 'n'
~ee."
U'l)'ler can't play, Owens will.
despiLe the fact he started the
season as a defensive back, was
switched to wide receiver and
kept bugging the coaches to try
him at halfback.
Owens, second in ~ NCAA game is packed with tension. but
tugh hurdles championship the so was the ~ymplcs wtd James
last two years, 1s averaging 5.3 handled that well enoogh."
yards per carry for the Bruins. Owens made it through ail the
Donahue said, "He hasn't pfayed heats to the tension-ridden ftnaJ ,
running back since high school, of the llO·meter high hurdles ln
and we know he's inexperienced, ··Moot.real. !re ran well but faded
and we also know we've got· on the last two hurdles and
James Brown on the squad. finished eighth.
"And , yes., we've talked about Only five weeks ago Owens
using Brown because or his ex-was listed as the No. 4 rUMmg
perience. T hat plays on -your back at· UCLA. But he has
mind, but Owens is our No. 2 worked ha rd, Donahue said .
halfback now a nd it Wendell Owens gained 104 yards Jast
can'tstart, Owens will. week 11\ a-45·14 v~ctory over
:·Yes, I know the SC-UCLA Oregon State.
Donahue satd Brwn.s pc:acllees
would be closed this wedt. "Oh,
we'll have u few new wrinkles.
but nothing major. It's too late to
chanJe anything drastically ·•
Donahue said he felt "the two
best football teams in the nation
will be playing out there Satur-
day, but I know that the people
who vote in the polls don't reel
that way.
"Pittsburgh will be No. J no
matter what happens •ln our
game with SC, and Pitt will win
the national cham pionship unless
they're beaten." ·
Big Ten Showdown
~ayes P:tedicts
Defensive Battle ....
COLUMBOS, Ohio CAP) -The
Ohio State-Michigan showdown
for the Rose Bowl berth Saturday
will be low-scoring, close-to-the
vest football.
At least, that's one man's opi-
nion -Buckeyes' coach Woody
Hayes~o is preparing his 26th
Ohio State team for the national·
ly televised clash.
"We'll treat it about the same
as any other week," he said. "We
don't take any game lightly. We
d o n't knock off early for
anylbiDg. We work 14-16 hours a
day, seven days a week and we'll
do it again this week."
The first clue on Hayes• work
week came Sunday night when
he passed up a chance to see the
televised movie, '•Patton," to
huddle with his assistant
coaches. Hayes idolizes the late
World War II American general.
Pe arson
Sparks
Cowboys
DALLAS tAP) Wlde re-
ceiver Drew Pearson of 1lbe
Dallas-Cowboys bad ju.st caught
~e passes for 135 yards, but be
displayed a hang dog look' on the
sldetinea as the final seconds
ticked away in Jl. 17·10 victory
Monday night ov~r the Buffalo
Bills. .
"Bov. he's going to chew us out
this time," Pearson did to a
teammate. The other player
nodded.
•'He'• is Dallas coach Tom Lan·
dry, who has a 9-1 team that is
playing bad and winning. lolacl,
the-Cowboys are orrto their finest start in their 16-year history in
the National Football League.
Pearson sa1d tater, "We are
orofessionah and if we don't play
up to our tevel 'we should ex-
pect to be chewed out."
He was told that Landry says
he never chews out players.
Pearson a n s wer ed with s
s mile, "If be says he doesn 'l
chew us out -then he doesn't.•·
Landry did not sound like thl'
Cowboys were in for too severe of
a tongue-lashing.
"We are not playing real good,
but I remember las t year we got
beat three or four times when we
didn't play-well,,. 11aid-Landry -
''It shows you something when
you don't play well and still can
win."
Dallas is playing well enough
to lead St. Louis by one game in
:-... ~Q)Wt bo~Jl<}: the._~:Ye&r:9l<l •. ''""''bavt~Wbllld l>e ttte -uright, new
Hayes told bis weelsJy press
luncheon Monday there are two
reasons for the low-scoring
rivalry. Neither s ide h as
mustered more U\a n three
touchdowns since the Buckeyes'
50·14 rout in 1968.
.. We . wanted him to go home
and 1~ ~ (the movie) so we
could go home early, too. He kept
us pretty late." said Ralph
Staub, one of Hayes' offensive
lieutenants.
the National Conference Eastern
Division. The teams meet in a
Tbanksg~ving D·3.l£...sDOWJamm...aL.._.
Texas Stadium.
superstar the Toronto team
needed to win the Grey Cup,
made the announcement of
Davis' departure just one week
after the Argos lost their final
2ame or the regular season to
Hamilton and rinished ouf of the
playoCfs.
Mike Trope, Davis's agent
.who took part in the dis-
cussions, indicated his desire to
return to the United States and
be close to a possible acting
career and an opportunity to
play in the NFL.
There also were reports of a
rift between Davis and Argos
coach Russ Jackson. Davis. in·
• jured early in the season. com-
. plained that the Argos were not
using him e n ough, a fa ct
brought out by his season r. statistics. ~ The Argos failed to l et
) Jackson kftow or the running
back's departure. "It's the first
\news I've heard or it ... J ackson
!" said when informed by a re·
: porter Monday. "I have no com·
ment to make abOut the situa-
tion at this time ."
"A.D. is a great athlete."
said Dick Shatto, the Argos
managing director. "But if you
have someone in your organiza.
tJon who is not completely hap-
~ p y. then it's best for both
parties that he have the op·
portunity to try his skills
elsewhere." 1 "Argos management acted as
.. gentlemen." said Trope. "We
: wanted to part on friendly
t e rms, with the firm un ·
derstanding that A.O. acted
likewise a s a gentleman by
purchasing bis release. lie likes
Canadian people, the city of
\ Toronto and the CFL. but felt t. that a return to the NFL would
be in the best interest or his
• ovenll carttr."
Hodgson, Davis and Trope
siJ01ed the necessary papers to
'free Davis from blS rootract In
\ return for the release. Toronto
received an undisclosed cash
settlem e nt ..
\ Grid Ratings
Carmen Cozza, the win·
ningest coach ln Yale. root·
ball history. resigned Mon·
day to concentrate on bis
duties as athletic director.
He had a 77-30-1 record In 12
years at Yale.
• I
1
APWlr-10
WOOD)' HAYES WILL BE IN ACTION SATURDAY.
Sports in Brief
Connors Breezes;
Ex-Rustler Lauded
WEMBLEY. England -Jim-
my Connors took another step
toward assuring himself or a
place in the Masters t ennis
tournament. wb1le bis major
rival; Bjorn Borg, apparently
stepped out.
Wh1le Connors was easing to a
6·1, 6·3 victory over fellow
American Mike Estep Monday
in a first round match of the
$125,000 Grand Prix tournament
and enhancing his chance lo
compete in the Masters event, to
be played in Houston next
month. Borg might have lost his
opportunity by withdrawing.
The young Swede, in a battle
with America's Roscoe Tanner
for eighth place in the eight-man
Masters tourney for the top com
petitors on the Grand Prix
circuit, was entered here, but in·
stead went to the United States
and join ed his Romania n
fiancee, Marian.a Simionescu.
Shrout Shi•e•
DA VlS -Quarterback Rich
Shrout. who e ngin eer e d
Sacramento State's 19-7 win
over Chico State last weekend. is
the Far Western Conference of·
fensive playel' or the week.
University athletic director
Milton "Dubby" Holt said Mon-
day.
Baralaan fi'if t h
GLENDALE HEIGHTS. 1Jt.-
R1ch Weber held a sllm two pin
lead over Rich Carrubba follow-
ing the first round Monday or the
$100.000 World Open bowling
tournament.
Weber knocked down 1,930
pins in eight games for a 241
average. Carrubba totaled 1.928.
Rounding out the lop five were
Wayne Zahn , 1,927: Mike
Durbin, 1,896 and Tim Harahan.
Capistrano Beach. 1.882.
E...er•on Sign•
BOSTON -Australian-born
Roy Emerson who now lives in
Newport Beach, and has won
about every m ajor singles and
doubles title in tennis, has signed
as player-coach or the Boston
Lobsters for the 1977 World Team ·
Tennis season.
/tl(J(!lteUe Win•
MANILA -Mike Mac'hette up.
set Corrado Baraziutti of Italy,
6-3, 6-3 today in the second round
of the $75,000 Philippine Grand
Prix tennis championship.
··Both teams over the years
have traditionally good derensive
teams," said Hayes. ••plus we get
to see all of their films over the
season and they see ours.
"The element or surprise is
.;ust not there,'' added Hayes. His
teams have not lost to Michigan
since 1971, tying 10-10 in 1973 and
winning the other three.
Hayes conceded he likely will
play it conservatively, trying to
wrap up the Big Ten spot in the
Rose Bowl for a record fifth
straight year.
.. You don't play a wide open
game against a real good football
team," he said, "'or you're going
to end up without the footbflll."
Hayes seemed d.Jsturbed that
one questioner wanted to know ir
he retains the same zeal at age 63
as he's always had in racing the
Wolverines,
• ·1 certainly do -even at my
age," replied Hayes, drawing
snickers from his interviewers.
.. Goodness gracious. l'almost re·
gard that as an insult. '\
"You've been out there on the
field," he kept one .. and see me
get charged up. Matter of fact, I
have more trouble controlling
my emotions now than when I
was a young relta in my 50s."
Hayes said there would be little
change in Ohio State's practic~
routine \his week except the
Buckeyes will go behind locked
doors in Ohio Stadium, their
normal habit in working toward
Michigan.
Pitt, Georgia
In Sugar Bowl?
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -lt
looks like No. 1 Pitt might meet
Georgia in the Sugar Bowl on
New Year's Day in New Orleans .
The top-r ated Pitt Panthers
h ave a team meeting today. and
they could vote then on which
bowl they prefer . A source close
to the team said the obvious choice is the Sugar Bowl, where
Pitt would meet Georgia, the
Souj.beast.ern Conference cham·
pion which has a 9-1 record.
Georgia, automatically in the
Sugar as the SEC representative,
is favored to win its last game or
the season -Georgia Tech on
Nov. 27. Pitt still faces Penn
State Nov. 26.
The rules prevent Sugar of-
ficials from officially inviting
Pitt until Saturday. However, the
team can vote earlier and decide
what they would do il they got the
invitation.
And there is little doubt they
will get a Sugar invitation, if they
want it.
Georgia was No. 7 in last
week's ratings and should finish
higher if it beats Georgia Tech.
"It still all comes down to that
game." said Landey.
Dallas played good defense but
had an almost non-existe.n1
~g game. Virtually the onl)
o ffe n se was passes fro m
quarterback Roger Staubacb tt
his favorite receiver, Pearson.
The duo clicked for 61 yards iri n seconds on two _passes jus•
before the end of the Jirst half for
the go-ahead touchdown afte1
Buffalo had tied the score 7.7 on 11
29-yard touchdown pass from
Gary Marangi to Reuben Gant.
Dallas led briefly 7-0 in tb1
second q uarter on Preston
Pearson's two.yard touchdown
run.
.. That was the big drive of the
game," said La~dry. "We score<
with 13 seconds to play in the tial
and that takes something out o
the other team.''
Boll~ 0 l 11 l I
toWboy\ 0 u 0 ) '
Oat P Pt·a•\0"7 run IHerrtr.H•<~I
But -Gani 11 ~n from Mar_. CJ..,_,
l"t-1
0.1 -0. PHr\Oft 2t oau from Sl•Ulleeh C Hr•
rerrltctckl
Dal -FG Herrer• 43
But -FG Jlkowenlto 2?
.... ~ GfW!ley
F1"C CIO"'"'i 19 I
Ru~• Ydrd\ •1·161 ,_.._
Pa\ •no YM"\ 1Cll 16
r(ttl.lf'n Y•"d'· l '1
Pa'"'' t0.29·1 IS.3"-
l'llnl\ 11·« 10.J
Fumbtt•·l<KI • O 3
P!on.all•~~yard\ • 2t 7·6
INOIVtOUALLEAOElll
RUSHING Butf•to. SI..-2•·18, 1(1....,..,
I\ 11 O~ll<t'i P Pear'IOn 7°t9, Lai<ltil'# 1·11.
RECEl\/ING Buffalo. OillnOIC< S.63, c;...,
1 St, S•m~n 7·10. Dalla~. O. "4!1lf\Ofl 9•1l '
L••dlaw 7 11.
PASSING -Outf•lo. Mareno! 10.21-1. 13Zyard>. Oallo\, Sl~uba(I\ 1 S·l•·O 102
Al"Wlr .....
DALLAS RECEIVER DREW PEARSON (88), MARIO CLARK EXCHANGE LEFTS. . Shrout. who played at Los ,
Amigos High and Golden West
College, fought through the ra,ln \
to complete eight of 18 tosses for 1
141 yards and two touchdowns as
Sacramento State gained its
first victory or the season.
Seifert Out·
Freak Injury. t~ Grldder Stops Game I ·
JTHACA.i N .Y . -Georae
Seifert has' been removed as
Cornell's bead football coach
after leading the Big Red to only
three victories in two years.
P~aleFfrftl
POCATELLO. Idaho -Idaho
State University 'a head football
1 coach J oe Pascale has been fired
after ending his first season
Saturday with a 1·9 record.
ELCAJON (AP>-As h~layin
El CaJ9n botpitah paralyzed with a broken neck, Kip Hayes'
acbooJmates were praying for
him.
Among bis visiton wa.s the
quarterback of the other tea°'
with whom Hayea colUded on the
football field Friday nl&bL '
"It "as just a freak accident."
said his coach. Brian SCllith. But
tua Mount Miguel team and lb
boys of Granite Hilb High
..
stopped play ing with t he
hatrtime Intermission still a
minute away.
Team doctors ran to fftyes,
whose heart had stopped. With
masuse and moulb-to.moulh
rescusitaUon they got the hea.rt pump~g. .
Jn the ambulance KJp'a heart
stopped again brteny.
A apectalitt said Hayu'
vt!Wbra waa broken and lM
sp{nal cord stretched. a condition
• J
too tenuous to operate on.
. The 6·1, 21S·pound youn.Jster:
was put on a resD· rator and "ho
is conscioils and aware of the ~le around hi , " Smith said. ·•A1J he can do is whisper and
lbakt hia bead.'•
A defeQSive llnernan playing
bis final football came, }(ayes
wu ru1hiog Granite ltnts
quarterback Aaron Graham and
hit Graham ln the shoulder with
hit head. snapping the neck. Hia
condition remained critlcal.
Kl.p's scHoollbates organizf.
fund·ralslng t elethon to he•p
the bills for the injured youth
his divorced mother, who is t
of work. By Monday, they h;d
$3,000. ;.
.. We went into the aame hop-
to make the playoffs but, eve1J°il
we had won, 1 'm s ure the le.,
wouldn t have been able to ~Unu~ arttr this." Smith said.
"Our season ended with a
mlnute lo play in the balf." -·
PiusXShows
One-two Punch Coaches et Each Aree Schoof Sefect Playera of the Week
SC Foe
\Enjoys
Streak DOWNEY-Edison High of Huntington Beach
bas bad its quarterback-tailback punch pacing the
annexation of the Swlset League crown-but the
Chargers' first round CIF 4-A football opponent bas
a pretty fair comboitseJ/.
Pius X High of Downey, third place finisher in
the Anaelus League, is lbe opposiUon Friday night
(8) at Huntington Beach High and leading coach
Gene Zeller's Warriors is quarterback George
Ponce and tailback Darrin Nelson.
Zeller says his quarterback hasn't much ln the
way of personal statistics-flome thlng like 40 of 90
for 515 yards. Personal viewing from the Daily Pilot
found Ponce clicking on three touchdown passes to
beat Mater Dei, 20·14, rutting seven of 13 passes for
124yards.
But Nelson is another matter in the stats de-
partment. The fl eet 5-8, 165-pound senior has scored
17 touchdowns and in nine games has accounted for
over 1 300 yards and 6.3 yards per carry. Z~Uer says it's a matchup of the state's second
largest school against Pius X, the CIF 4-A's
smallest school in the playoffs.
"We have 400 boys for the four classes,'' says
Zeller. "Edilon has more cbttrleaders than we do
students."
It's one thing how many students attend each
school.~ 's another matter how the Warrio~ line up •
on the football field.
There is an offensive line lhal consists of tight
eod James Forge (64, 22()), tackles J eff Coppinger
(200) and Brian Doyle (210 ), guards Clark Bruner
(220) and Mav Figueira (190) and center Jerry
Person (220). There's fullback Tony Giles (190) and
a defense keyed by m.iddJe guard Darrell Jordan
(230).
Pius X is ranked No. 11 in the Cl F poll and
among its opponents this year is highly regarded
Bell High of Los Angeles, a 49-14 victim.
Coppinger, Person and Forge rotate at de-
fensive tackle and ends Guy Bredesen (185) and
SCOTT M ERRY
Corona del Mer
KIRK LANGDALE
Estancia
DAN DUDORIOGE
Costa Mesa
MIKE MUSSO
Fountain Valley
John Pace (190) round outthe front.
Edison is a tough first-round opponent for the All le~ers Pace Warriors, but Zeller says: ''We're just thrilled to be • .
here. Bishop Amat beat Pius X , 80-9, a few years
MIKE KEDDINGTON
Dana Hitt•
PETE COLIN
Huntington Beach
HECTOR AVELLA
El Toro
CHUCt< THOMAS
Edison
COVlNA-NortbYle•
Hip ScbQol •• ·~ an a four-•ame wlnnlq
ttreak but footbaJJ coecb
Richard DeRoaa lan'tex·
actly pleased to have
drawn San Clemente Hlab'• Tritou aa a llnt • round, CIF Z.A playoll
Cpponent.
nae two wUI clalb Fri·
day night at West Covina
High School with an ti
o'clock startin.ctime. "We'd '1•dl..Y trade op. .,
pe>nents with Rowland," ,.
DeRosa says. Rowland
meetsCathedr&l.
Tbe Northvtew'Vlldngs '
are co-champions ol lbe i ~ Montview Lea1ue with
Rowland, a team they ' should have beat.en ac-cordlna to their coach.
.. Rowlamt scored
twice on us in the Jut
two mlnules of the game I and the winning score
came oo a deflected pass
with 22 seconds to go."
Rowland added a two-pomt conversion to win, #
2J6..25. #
The Villines operate I with a Cull-h ouse
backfield' with two '
halfbacks and a pair ol
alternating fullbacks do-
ing nwst of tbe ball car· rylng for the ruo-
onentated team.
agoandwefeelwe'vecome a longway." M o -~-~~~~n":: ~~ ~~~~~~~~~-i:.~·-~-----r~'ill:-. -P9QA~llt. ---·:--·~~~=~ (26-14) in league and Bishop Amat (7-6), Mater De1 . . .
Tim Carrico Cs-6. 140) 1 is the leading ball car-
rier with close to 800
yards and nine
touchdowns. He is!
described as quick but ~
not fut by bis cOJlcb. His~
.rushing average is better j
than nlne per try In more
than 80 carries.
(20-14) and St. Anthony (28-6). Servile and St. Paul Sonora High or La for the Raid~rs and this
beat Pius x 17-13 and n.o. Habra. with a bundle of Is Switzer s second
' all-league and two-way season at the helm
los Al . Gets Shot
To Settle a Score
Los Alamitos High's
Griffins received a jolt
last year when they lost
a vote lo gain the CIF 4-A
touchdowns a nd has run
for a 6.6 average while
Snyde r 's s tats reflect
seven TDs and a 7.0
football playoff:;, now average.
they have a chance to And when the Griffins
avenge the snub. don't run-they turn to
The Griffins meet the kicking game where
Sunset League runnerup Rick Sims has hit eight
Fountain Valley Satur· field goals this year, in-
day night (8) at Cerritos cludfrlg boots of 43, 42
College in the first round and 41 yards. In three
of the playoffs -the hrst years he's missed one
time si'nce 1969 that the 1 PAT a ttempt. and that
Griffins have quahftcd was a bad center snap.
fortheelimin:1tions As fo r the pass ing
Los Alam1lo~ coach game there's not much
Jim Rodarte recalls last on the stat charts. but
year·s "?.te. al Fo~tam with a running game like V~llc•y : \\ e taed Foun Los Al's. it doesn't leave
tam Valley in our i::ame much tame or inclination ~d "."e ended up with to~oto theaar.
1dent1 cal 3 3 I le<i~ue Roda r te has been
marks Bui there "'ere pleased with hi s team's
four Huntington Bt>al•h defens ive effo rt a unit
schools m the lea~ue ~d that has allowed 'no more
we lost the \Ole . \\e than one touchdown in
· wanted a c?.1n flap or a any of ats la!.t six cncoun·
tie-breaker . . ters with the exception or
F o untain \a llt.>v theloss toLoara l28-24 1.
should haq• a A?<>d book Pacing the defensive
on the Lol> Alamitos cont· unit ;ire line men Pete
ingent, wath Los Al e:ot Gregor <5·10 185) and in~ lhe Sunset LeaB:'lc Pat Collins '(6·2. 195).
thia•year for the Empire I in e b a c k e r st eve
League. wh~re 1t shares Shadwick (6-0. 190) and
the crown wath Loara strong safety Bill Resh, a
Many or the same ServtteHightransfer. players that bothered
players, invades Orange Payne says this is a
Coast College Friday typical Sonora eleven-
night (8) lo battle the small but quick The dif-
Costa Mesa Mustangs in f e rence is that -the
the firs t round of the CIF Orange League has been
2-A football playoffs. beefed up with the addi-
It's a contrast between tion of La Habra and
team s with varied Payne says , "We feel
philosophies and playoff fortunate to wind up in
experience. third place and in the
The Raiders of Sonora playoffs." 1
coaches Frank Hicks "Costa Mesa," con·
and Wayne Payne use a tinues Payne. "causes us
multiple · offense, going some· concern in that
after the opposition with we're not s ure of its de·
every imaginable tool. fense at all. Against El
Mesa, by contrast. is Toro the Costa Mesa de-
conserv alive in com-fense seemed like an
parison, using two light overshifled 5-2~ . .;thnost
ends, and the tailback-like a 5-4 a'K-6 the
quarterback combina-linebackers aren't11in lbe
lion for its bread and but· usual guard position ..
ter. "Mesa's offense, with
And as for cxperien-the two tight ends,
ce this is Sonora's annual creates a few problems
post-season host1li t y because we do a lot of
while Mesa girds for the stunting. But it helps.
playoffs for the first tame loo. because ~l brin.~s
in 17 seasons. everyone an tighter.
O n e o f Son ora's Sonora (7 ·%)
mainstays il) 6·1. 205· 28 Lowell
pound fullback Bra an ~5 Sunny Hills
Greer, who has earned 14 Canyon
for 650 yards 1n 138 car-24 Fullerton
ries, in addition to o La Habra
catching 20 passes for 138 7 Brea
yards coming out of the 28 Valencia
backfield. 20 F.l Dorado
Payne says Matt 7 Esperanza
Calendar
Wt<tn••day IHov. 111
0
7
6
14
13
0
7
12
25 Swit zer , a r o ll -out
quarterback, will start.
He's completed ~O of 70
for 427 yards and s ix
touchdowns. But if the
Raiders want another of-
fense. they bring in
sophomore Dave Stivers,
a dropback passer who
has completed 22 of 49for
31 9 ya rd s and a
W11t.r Polo -Hunttnqt"n BH<h ~
Ell•'IOn .i E•t•ncta Founl•ln V•ll'1Y
"' W•\"""l""',.' at Gold,.,,, W~\t '""*11" M•rtM ., NowDOr1 .... -.
f \f .. nt1a 1'f Tv"ll•n C•ll et J• \SJ
touchdown.
""'' 8&>~••~a11 -s~"'• ""• at OrAn<J" COd\I Coll@'I". C.01.,.., w .... 1
(f)ltltO" "' ~ull1tfton fftOth •t 1 ,.,, c. "' r 1ftld H'>c~•Y -E\la"'C1a :u "'"'w"'°"' t-tt'lrbOr tlJ LO\ Alt<K c\f F<kl'\ldln V•ll•v 11 JOI
BRAD CHACE
Mater Del
JIM MEADOWS
San Clem ente ..
DAVID LANGMADE
University
CdM -Playoff Foe
Has Hot Offense
' SAN BERNARDINO -When tbe Cajon. Hi~h
School Cowboys tangle with Carona del Mar High an
a CIF 2-A first round playoff game Friday night (8)
at Newport Harbor High. an outstanding offensive
battle could develop.
Cajon, tied for second place in the San Andreas
League, is a high-scoring ou:lfLt that goes to the air
about 40 percent of the time. .
Quarterback Craig Gerber (6-0, 170, senior) has
pulled for 1,643 yards this season and has 23
touchdown aerials. He operates out of the pro-I
formation with split backs and a strong set to either
side. h .. "We average about 25 passes eac game,
coach Chuck Pettersen says. ''We get about 60 lo 70
plays each game, usually." '
The Cowboys have scored 279 points this
season, an average of 31.0 per game for a 7-2 overall
record. The opposition has been held to 145 points,
16.1 per tilt. . Primary targets of Gerber include tight end
Tony Goolsby (6-2, 180.J who ~as caught , 15
touchdown aerials and split end Mike Savage with
28 receptions. including five for scores. .
Pettersen is high in his praise of running back
Freddie Washington. The 5-11, 160-pounder h~s
picked up 859 yards this season and runs the 100 an
10.2
"I think the best teams in our league are as
good as the best teams in their league," he says.
"I'm impressed with the Corona del Mar team ef·
fort. They have good average size and I like the way
they block. .
At right halfback isl Bobby Sin1h (5-6, 140)
with Gerardo A vilucea
(5-8, 170) and Ml~o
Robertson (5·5, 1~)'
alternating at fullback.:
Singh baa pJcked up bet·~
ter than 520 yards i~ almost 50 carries and"
has scored eight times. ·
"We have been a little ·
disappointed to our de/
fense this aeaaon bu~
lbey have played a cou-:
pie of prelly good games~· especially agalos
Baldwin Park last w
when we had to win,'
DeRosa says.
"l know very lllUe,:
about San Clemente ex·•
cept for what we have '
seen on the. films.-I~m i
impressed wttb their Sl.U\
and quickness and they
look like they play well
oo defense." .
North view leaves only:
one player in on both of-~
fense and defense buti
De Rosa s ays: "ThatC
doesn't mean to say If
won't panic and put a lot
of the others back in if we:
are in trouble."
The Northview scores,
this season (Northview
first): Covina, 27-15;
South Hills, 0-34; Charter
Oak, 34-15; Nogales,
14-26; Rowland, 25·26;
Workman, 15·14;.
Bassett, 28·0: Azusa.~
34-13; Baldwin Park,;
19-17 . -Fountain Vall ey last
year are back again
1nclud1ng th e Bq~
Three q uart e rbac k
Bruce Heiser , fullback
Steve Fogel and tailback
Sam Snyder.
.. We'r e looking
forward to playing Foun-
tain Valley ," says
Rod'arte "We 're not
awed we ·ve pl ayed
Fountain Valley before.··
Combined they have Lot Alamitos <7-2)
Other threats out orthe
backfield are sophomore
Pat Hagedorn (S-6, 130)
and slotback Jim
Calcagne, a 6-2, 190·
Newport Rated No. I
''They have a defense that I feel is their str~ng
point. They tackle well and are usuaJly swarming
all over the opposition.4 '
The Cowboys have been able to come from
behind this season with authority. They trailed
Moreno Valley 14-10 at halftime. then held their foes
scoreless in the second half to T>ost a 44-14 victory.
JC B88k etball
WOMllH'S IASKt!TIALL
Or• .... Conl CUI till Cy-s
accounted for 2.347 yards 10 SA Valley
in nine games and 2S 42 Tustin 16 pounder who is the
21 team's leading receiver
14 with 22 catches for 284
Undefeated Newport
Harbor High rounded out
the final CJF water polo
poll in ats customary posi-
tion-fi rst-as the prep
teams gird for the up-
coming CIF playoffs,
which begin Nov. 24.
touchdowns. 27 Marina
Fbgel holds a narrow 28 Hunt. Beach
margin over the other 31 Saddleback
two with 10 TDs and 895 24 Kennedy
yards in 112 carries for 24 Loara
7 yards. Calcagnc is also
6 the punt and kickoff rc-
7 turner, having ran back
28 one kickoff for an 85·
1 yard TO. He·s also tough
8 on defense, playing
an8.0average. -14 Cypress
Hei s er h a s e i g h l 34 {<alella
Fox Is Foxiest
Pickeroo Winner
George Fox of Costa
Mesa and Mi c hael
Hockman of Huntlngtoo
Beach deadlocked (or
first place on the
weekend Dally Pilot
Pigskin Pickeroo foot-
ball guessing contest.
But in the final tabula-
tion Fox was the foXtl'Sl
as he was declared the
winner via the tit>·
breaker rule.
•· His prowess, he had 27
correct picks on a JG.
game schedule, earns IUm a year 's mem -
birshlp In the Nautilus
Newport physical fitness
center.
• Hoc km an rel! dW.tr
for two at the Moonra.ker
Restaurant Jn lnlne or
at either of the Reuben's
<Costa Mesa or Newport
Beach>. Two other contestanui
tied foe lb.lrd with four . .
misses and agam the tie-
brea~er settled the issue
with M.K. Lent of Hunt-
ington Beach getting the
nod.
He wins free car
washes with Metro Car Wash Systems of Costa
Mes a and Huntingto~
Beach.
Pe rhaps the e ntrant
who had the mos t
ttUmber of upsets is
Grace McGee of Costa
Mesa. She bucked the
odds and tabbed New
Eneland over Baltimore.
the -NY Giants over
Washington and Notre
Dame over Alabama.
.But she stumbled on
th~ Rn~. Chugers:
Nebraska, Washington
Slate and Mlaslsalppl.
This is the final week
of the contest and entry
blanks appear In today's
and Wednesday's edl·
ti005 or the Daily Pilot.
linebacker.
Greer and Calcagne
are three-year starten
Other area polo forces
placing high in the final
pol l are Irvine 's
University and Corona
del Ma't in 4-A with No. 4
IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANC:Y
101,388 SQ. FT.
NEW BUlllDING
PLUS BAIL SERVICE,
DOCK·BIGH LOADING,
·EXPANSION LAND,
PROTECTED ENVIRONMENT,
EASY FREEWAY ACCESS & MORE.
I Fot inlormattOn on this or other hu1Jd1ng alternaltves, call
your Qroker or Crmg Lyon. Manager of Sales & Leasing.
at (213) 6?8 4204, (714J 833 tOlO.
AVAl·LABLE
NOWAT:~,~
COMPlEX
. .
and7placement.s.
4·A W_..• ~olo
I N-1 Ha•bo• ? Sunnv H•ll•
) M'"" COi\ti• 4 U"1vrf'"-1tv S L8 Po
ty ~ LB Wlf\0" ' Co•Of'• <IP! MM
8 l.o\ AllO\ 'I Bt>nrlv Hill\ •O CMI
l·A Wlltr ""lo 1 LO\ AmlQO\ ? 1'001~111 J 61
<>o-..so •. ll•U S U1>l•nd • Cr•<.e,.n .
•• \/ail~Y l Indio ~ Atv .. \l<IP Pllly
q Mnnlt Vl\lft 10. Vlll11 P8•-
The Cowboys are 7-2. Scores of their games
<Cajon score first) are: Bassett, 34-12; Pacific.
26-16; Hemet, 30-36; La Sierra, 44-8; Moreno Valley,
49-14 ; Yucaipa, 31-7; Norte Vista, 20-7; Bloom-
ington, 32-13 ; and Norco, 12-29 .
WATCH EXCITING •.••
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
FOOTBALL .
THIS SATURDAY NIGHT-HOY. 20th
HONORING OCC 1956 CHAMPS
occ
vs.
GROSSMOMT
at Lelcrd Stadium Oft The OCC Campus
Game Time 7:30 P.M.
,, " pl "' F"""'lre 6 0 3 17
ltt>\otdo ' 7 J • Erl<\Ol'I \ O 7 10 '
Bolt• O t 7 '
Tom&\\I 0 1 •
WOlll' 0 3 7
C,u1U'lfllA 1 ) 1 ..
Hul•l..,lttr l " ·
8urrt\ • t Q
Tolal\ U b 10 S.
H•llllme>Orano• Coa\l, Jl 70
TICKIT Pl.ICES:
ADULTS $1 .50
CHILDREN S 1.00
STUDIHl'S Sl.00
IOXOFACI
~SAT
6:30 P:M-
FREE PARKING
GOOD P.RIQS
GREAT FOOTBAlL
1
Tuesday November 16. 1978 DAILY PILOT •S
Defensive Aees of Week Tonight's
~TV ffighlights , CoaehH et Eech Are• School Select Playera of th• Week.
'Sponsored by
Weekly Pigskin Pickeroo '76 winners
will share prizes worth more than $330
by selecting their choices of the win·
ners of 30 weekend football contests.
The Daily Pilot reader best predicting
the outcomes of' Pigskin Pickeroo '76
games will win a one-year membership
at the Nautilus Newport physical fitness
center, 4220 Von Karman Avenue,
Newport Beach.
Second place winners will enjoy a din·
ner for two at the Moonraker Restaurant
in Irvine, Reuben's Newport Beach or
Reuben's Costa Mesa.
Third place winners will be awarded
free car washes by Metro Car Wash
Systems at Harbor near Baker Street in
. Costa Mesa and Beach at Ellis Avenue
in Huntington Beach.
P.~lf(ft Pie""'",,~ r••uliJ,. ft:ttur,-ot tht Dilly Pr lot Soorh ~<llQll ••c~ Mf~a•v. Tue\Ct•v •no-cs.iv
I
RULES
1. Swbmtl '"• .,.,,., btanll ~1..-w or ~''''°"'.,'' fiu .. •m•I~ ol 1t 10
"''•' '""' tOf'lf'\1 •· Rf .. \Ott~btf' •-'< ''""''" '"°"''""'d oili\ •n ••.t<t d~ohc1t1 •• Erttr1t\ mu\t M un1hwm 1n ,,,. Ind'"'"'~ to 1.1c1ht•t•
1.-clq.1fto9 Tf\o\e wf\1<t\ don t contorm w•lt bP d•\Qu•l•t•\:d
1 s.nd 11 lo PIG\Ol tN PICOIEllOO, 1' \-h O.P1rtnwnl P 0.
Bot u ... C•\U ""-•• CA •1Ut
J. Only CMW '""Y Ptr ,,.,,on p('rrn1ttf'ld fM:" ........ 11: Contt\lit'h ~'"
.14•1\.f"d tr-,at COl'ltf''\f Off•< ••h· rn4y 1f'llw .. \hQ.atfl mult1plr ""'""'
tr-om • '"'''• •dCh"#\\ or \1nql• rnwlopf' .tnd mAY d1\au 11tty tlnv ~u\oe<t ,.,,,.,,Oun dt\Covt r."d °"''''o" ot JUdqt~ on"''' point mu\'~ ta< tept~ ~\ f1~.tf b't .. u contr\L•ttU
f Etttt1f\ """'' tM tMn tm.-r"-o not l.lh r tf'\.oln Frtdav Of' mu\l bf df• hW"11 IO tM o •••• P ilot C0\1.t ltltt\..tOU1c• C)y. p M
S o,,,., Pilot ent•loyt\ .and tPM°•' '~'''f' ''""'h'' ,,."'no' •l1tJtbtt 10..,.tf'r
' '~JlllE.AIC ER lllAHI( M Vn ee FILLED I N 011 E.NTAY Ii
KEVIN RANDOL
Edison
JOHN BROTHERTON
Laguna Beach
DAVEJERANKO
Estancia
SHAUN MEHAFFEY
Marina
Ediso~ FV Remain
In Same Positions
Sunset League cham·
pion Edis on of Hunt·
ington Beach and run·
nerup Fountain Valley
remain in the exact pos1.
tioo of last week in the
final CIF 4·A football poll
of 1976.
Th e C harge r s o f
Edison are No. 10 and
F ou n tai n Va ll ey 's
Barons are No. S.
Edison's firs t -round
foe -Pius X -droppcd
from 11th to 14th despite
last weeic 's victor y,
however. St Paul re
Coachella Valley. The
4·A was blanked in that
category.
•·A Fooibatl
I <,t Paul II 11 1"'1
7 \oull> '1111\ II 0 It
l W•~' CO••M 19 ti
• Y<••I• 18 II s Fovnl11nV•1tn 11·11
6 W~I To,.,anr"' tfl.t •
I t,..f)\ Altl)\ f1 1 It
8 \l f'ranc>< 19 ti 11
o ~, .. Mftn1ta Cl t)
10 Ed•>M 17 11 1'
01,_,.\ S.\n Marco' Cl'\atf~v Fon
hn~ P 1U\ X E t\,.,,hOW"'f'
J A Football
1 ..... Pl\ldfoM l•·Ol ,.,.,
1 Cro<•t•I-' Vall~y I' 01 11•
l C:~llnnlt 11 t\O
• Pa<•tlta tOJ.01 11R
s SA Vallo 19.11 110
6 Viii• Pork 11· 11 '1'
1, Rlvenlcte Poly (1.1\ Ml
• LomDOC II I) 61 1 • • • ••• •• • •• •• • • •• • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • ••• • ••••: mains No 1 as the season
: heads into the first round • . . . . • . • . • • .
ENTRY BLANK .
N~m~ ...................................•
Addr~ss . . . . . . . • . . ...•................
City . .. . . .•.•......•.... Zip ........ .
Phone .•.................................
: Circle ••~ms you think Wttl win this week's games • • • . . • . . • . . • . . • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • •
Rems vs San Francisco
Chicago vs Detroit
Cincinnati vs Kansas City
Cleveland vs Tampa Bay
Dallas vs Atlanta
Houston vs Pittsburgh
Minnesota vs Green Bay
New England vs NY Jets
New Orleans vs Seattle
• oftheCIFplayofCs. .
: Thre e South Coast
: League teams-Corona
: del Mar. Costa Mesa and
: San Cle mente -picked
: up voles in the 2-A poll.
• but none got enough to
: pick up a spot in the Top
: 10 : Corona del Mar is 11th.
• Costa Mesa 13th and San
: Clemente 18th. Corona
: del Mar 's first round Op·
: ponent a1on -is rated
: 15th, San Clemente and
• Costa M esa 's fo e.
: Sonora, is No. 10 • • San Clemente's first
: round a dv e r sary,
: Northview of Covina. did
• not pick up any votes.
: S outh Pa sad en a,
: Cresceota Valley and
: Garden Grove's Pacifi ca
: were the only 3·A teams
• to finish 9·0 and in the2-A
: the only 9·0 t eam is • •
q MOnlo~llo 19-tl .jtJ
10 An•"•"" (1.1.11 J7
01 ... r\' GJr•V T•,,,ple Olv. ();) •
m1tn, Monrovl'°'· North RfVf'r\lde.
1·A Football , 'lnt••nP" VAll•Y 19·0 ti ,.~
1 h v!A11nf"t fA 0 1 J. 1fl0
l CCMl<h•tla V•li.y I• 0 1SJ
• SAn Ot""" <9 II 117 s la liab•• t9· t 1 111
6 ICennedy 8ar•tow 11. HI ••
I E•l>"••n•• (I I 11 es ~ CMnllOl l>l•M• ti 11 St
• Norle Vl•l• 16·1 1) 7i 10 Sonora (111 11
Othtlr'-CO<eM''la df'I Mar, W,..lnut •
("'"''" Mt\" ta S1Prra c .. ton. Rio
M,,..,fl Vrrhum 0•1~ SJn Oefnlll'nC~.
n-.1lfl">w~r l"'f'\nO'i
Girls Net
Pairings
Newport Harbor, win-
ner of the Sunset League
tiUe. is the No . 2 seeded
team in the 4-A girls ten-
nis playoffs beginning
Thursday when the Tars
play host to Long Beach
Wilson.
In 3-A action, Corona
TIM BIENEK
Fountain Valley
fl
DAVID GONZALES
Mater Del
M. deLANCELLOTTl
Newport Harbor
Racquetball
Tourney Set
Orange Coast College
will host the fourth an-
nual state outdoor three·
wall smgles racquetball
championship Dec. 4·5.
Entry fee is $10 and de·
adline for filing entnes is
Nov. 27. Six competitive
brackets will comprise
this year's tourney.
'Competition will be
ne1a m men's A, Band C
categories and women's
A, Band C divisions .
Trophies will be
awarded to the first .
second and third place
finishers and the con
solation winners in each
bracket.
For inform a tion ,
phone 557 -3 162 or
556-5904 .
Pro Hockey
Httlonal Hodo Lug.,.
"'<>~•·e•I •,!>I l.Ouil 1
ABC fJ 8:00 -.Hhppy Days. Faced
with getting a crew cut if he loses a
marathon dance contest, Fonzie arrives
exhausted after pushing his bike 12
miles. Henry WinkJer stars. ·
KHJ 0 8: 00 -"What's the Matter
With Helen?'' Debbie Reynolds and
Shelley Winters star in this 1971 sus·
pense drama about two women ha unted
by· their children's misdeeds. Dennis
Weaver is featured.
KCET .0 8:00 -"The Rivalry."
..
. d
Arthur HHJ plays Abraham Lincoln and
Charles Durning is Stephen Douglas in
this dramatization of their famous de-· t.
bates on Bicentennial Hall of Fame. '/
(TV DAILY LOG)
. I TUESDAY I whteh b1outhl l1ncolA out ol pohllul
Ob$Cunty and mnt~lly ltd him lo
the Pie"dency.
ALAN PETERSON
Huntington Beach
JAY HATTER
Mission Viejo
PONDO VLEI SIDES
San Clemente
DAVID AXLINE
University
GG Forfeits
Santa Ana Valley
High 's first round Cl F
3-A footba ll opponent
Friday night is unknown
today following the dis-
c I os u rc tha t Ga rden
Grove High, th ird in the
GG League, must forfeit
all of its wins due to an
i neli g·i bl e-. p I ayer-a
violation of the 19.year-
old rule .
NOYDlllEI 15
fOf -aiftt ... •It-liltiltcs. pluse ~e DAYTIME l'aOGJAMS.
Below, for ywr CMWllitMI. Ill Ult
dly's moties..
DAYTIME MOVIES
10:00 U (CJ "Upsl1irs & Down·
• st1 irs" (com) '6 l-M1chael
Cra111. Anne Heywood.C.C.) "A
Son& Is Born" (mus) '48-0anny
llaye, V11gin1a Mayo.
(2f) "Dar• Passap" (dra) '47-
Humphtty Bo1art, Lauren
Bacall.
11:00 O CC) "fair W'111d to Jt¥a''
(adv) '52-fred MacMu11ay,
Vera Ralston.
12:00 m "The hminiae Touch"
(com) '41-Rosahnd Ru»tll,
Don Amtcht, Van Hellm.
J;OO ~ (-'! "W11p1IJI" (wcs)
'51-Edmond O'B11en, Polly
Bercen. 2:00 0 ~ "V1Wu Is COl!tillt .. rwesrn:.'1Jllrr tfll?"flr;'"
Susan Clark, John Cypher.
3:00 Ml Ct) "lliu in' CHsins"
(mt/$) '64-Elns P1tsfey, P1mtll
_ l11f1n
3:30 U ct) "Girls! Cltli! Ci1lsl"
(mus) 62-llvtS Presley, Slella
Srevens, lauiel Goodwin, Jttemy
Slate.
EVENING
6:00
Q U m (1Q) Oll 01 Ol llews
D l.»J m ((2i) CJ) m 11m
U Star Trek
l6) Gomer Pyle
0 Gllnsmoh m Partridce f1mily OJ Adam-12
'26! S•r Trd
ft) fltctric Com~ny
Il l) Oi111h! m Liltlt Rasuls
-6:30-
0 Dinah! Cuut include hc1ll1
BaU, Carol 8111nttt, Yaltne Harper.
Gale Conlon and G1ry Mortoft,
CG) Wy Criflitll
110 MerY Griff111 Sllow m family Atf11r
(171 Q) Gvt1smalt
ft)Z-!
7:00
0 U ~ll ({) m Ntws
U Lilrs Clull
6J My Three Sons
1 a·, To Ttll tht Truth
O Conuf11r1tion m I love IJKy OJ The FBI m Ameiiu/lsm l Jewish Hour
1261 Andy Griffith
ft) Matlle~/lellrtr lleport
C 291 ca i) Bona nu
€9 Or1malic Senes m Addams famtly
-7:30-0 Andy Willi1ms Show Wayne
Ne..ton guesls.
g Bowline lor Oollm
t 6 J The Odd Couple
U M l ~)) [6) Hollywood Squares
, aJ The Cons Show
O The Jolltr's Wild m Brady BulKh
1.l1.l m lbslrrillt on Ille II.ad
1261 Hotan's HHOH m ClllnMI 21 Tonicfit
bll Ctlebfity SweepsUtu m F11s11 CofdOll
8:00
fJ C1J) CD (a) Tony Orlndo &.
D1wn Johnny Ca$h guests
0 ~ll ({) m Bu Bu lluk
Sllttp 'Up IOI Grabs" l1p1n~t com
m1ndos take tht BQCk Sheep by
•urpuse and-Jarbed tn M1r1~e
unilorms-altempt lo s1ue Gene1al
Oou~las MacAr1hur who 1s scheduled
lo v1s1I lhe camp.
U Movie: fC) (2hr) "This Vanish-
ll'IJ Lind" A documenta1y on Alaskan
wlldllle and bk1mo cullore
r 6 1 Movit: (2hr) "Good Ntithbo<
Sim" (com) 64-Jack Lemmon
O> Cllespifite m l'Jydlic PllellOllMu
(f'":(:30-u Cl2tfi.tJ) -OtJ llvtrnt ~
Shirley "look Belore You leap'
hvtine blinks out afttr i brtwery
pJ1ly and the question IS ••• did she °'
didn't she,
m Cnm-Wlb
m C1MntM """'• O> SJt111tlelt c:.iw,
9:00
Q (J?) 00 Cl) M•A•S•H falher
Mulahy hnds himself at a loss lor
words wllen a P11vate w11h an admit·
led self inlhcted wound won't liS1en
to Mulcahy's counsel bec1use the
ptitsl ha.111°1 shared his traumatic
e.pe11ence ol fronl hnt duty, 01s·
turbtd by t11e wounded man·s lotic,
Mulc.ihy ash Col Potter to send him
to the llont knu., POiter rtlllSCS. ancl
Mulahy 1111pulsivtly tlkts Nllert
1nlo his own llandl. ~ ~Jl:)/jlJ(I, ..Jl.Qll.\I ...... -"B11inwasll"Wilen stwerar Titnarers
art lound dud, S&t Ptppe. Alldtt·
iOn pOStS as a news repoiitt lo
investigate lhe lmtd1n1 sdlool lhey
dlltnded
u 112111 a)) t1•) llich ""' Poot· Man Rudt racu 1111ns1 Eslep's
h'nchnten to New Orluns 111 st1rcll
ol s.irah Hunt-the key lo unlockmc
lhe b1lltonaue's myste11ous pasL '
0) Tony Randall, Dionne * Warwick And Wayne
llorers Join Merv At 9 m Mtn Criffi" SllOW OJ TIM Yir1llll111
fB ClliMM l'11>111ms m Championship Wresllinc
-9:30-
Q CU) (J) (I) Ont D1y al A Time
Conti. On the eve ol 1m mama&e 10
David, Ann is more lhan just a
nervous b11de as she comes to g11ps
w11h what may be one of the most •
painful decisions of her life. m Chilltse Ora1111
fD Mut fcedertt~ Wiseman's latesl
document.ry. m u,maailar .,,
10:00
Q (i7) m (t) S4ntdl Pete joins
Ille arnival en~11onment GI the mid'
11ray alltr a f11(S adminis1111we U •
ecut1ve is ~1dnapped.
0 123) C&J O!it ID Polict Storr
Ch~~ Conlt()(s slars as an 1nveshga·
live l1eu1en1nt, Wllh Robert foiscer
and G11y Lockwood as a lum ol bis
rnme i.olvm, i.llo slop at •oth1ng-
tntlud1ng lrashcan Analysis' -to eel
1ntoimatron.
U Olltws
!6J Bonanu
OFAMILY·llATE * JUROR ON RAPE CASE U (~ m l ~~ family Kale is
/. the onlr 111r0t who believes Iha!
accused rape murderer Rudy Coitel
1s mnoctnt and she must bear lhff
pre~ure Qf lhe other eleven 1uro1s •
ti6J Cunsmolie
0) 11.lrata de Primavm
-10:30-m OJ m lltws
11:00 oumotJ 11ews o m (1 OJ a~ m 11tws
9 ~I lowt Americll" Style a Cltellfity •eYue m Mary Cooks Annie's * Goose ' Charlie Turns
To Jody For Bil MOMy
I •
m Mary Hlrt111111, Mary 111111Mn ...
Q) T alts of the Blur re fD Moone: HA Run for Yowr Mo!tey"
-11:30-0 (f'rJ ())_{!)CBS late Mo.it:
"lloj1k: Oie ~'' 01t;''
(CJ "Ot1th Rau" o ~3l ( e > 11 ct m Jalwiy c...
(II J The P'Tl Club U ('2tl (I)) l)fl TulMay Mwit of f
the WHk "S1ste1s" mNewi (2f\ The 700 Club
0> Newi!Mcwit
NY Giants vs Denver
Oakland vs Philadelphia
San Diego vs Buffalo
Washington vs St. Louis
USC vs UCLA
Michigan .vs Ohio State
Wyoming vs Air Force
Mesa First del Mar's Sea Kings,~-----------~--------.
U (129) I t)) tU) Happy 01rs
.. lhPY Shool Fon11es Oon'I lhey•~· !
ronz•e aerees lo be Joanie's partn"·
1n a mmlhon dance contest. bul
arrives exhausted after pushma his
cmk~d up bike 12 miles And if he
loses the contest, ind a bet tie made
011 lh, ourcomt, he'll have lo e•t a
12:00
U 8m of Croucllo 0 Morie: (CJ "I'll ll1m F011d
WMt's lsllamc" (com) '68-0llver
Reed, Orlon Welles, Carol While
• • • • • • • • • • ... • • • • ... • • • • ~
:i • ' . • &
SMU vs Arkansas .,,.
Botton College vs Massachusetts
Kentucky vs Tennessee
Tulane vs LSU
Stanford vs Cal
Miami (F1a) vs Notre Dame
Maryland va Virginia
Kanaas vs Missouri
Oklahoma vs Nebraska
Colorado va Kansas State
Ml11l1slppl va Mississippi State
Rice vs F1orlda
TCU vs Tex• A&M
Northwestern vs llllnols
t
TIE BREAKER -My guess on tht tot.al.
"""'ber of points scor9d in .all 30 games Is 1
Top cross countrr team
in the CIF's 3·A division
is Costa Mesa while the
Huntington Beach dis-
trict schools -Manna,
Fountain Valley, Edison
and Huntington Beach -
• rate~·7·8·9in4-A . • • • 4-A c.-.n Covnlry _,.
1 C••«•nt• Vallo 1 Voll• Pa"' l
• 8utb4nllt • S11"'I V4t1ry \ M.ar•n1t •
• "'>01~111 1 Founta•n Voltn I Ed•"'"
: • liunlinol on Gt.tel\ 10 • w·ntm1"''jll' • J.A Crou Cnnfry
e I Cod& M~•• 7 '1a•ll>o""' j Mt•·
\lon Vlf'fG .t V~lf'f\(11 i Urri~'•h
6. Uo1.,nd 1 9u•"" P1trlt. I lo' AmlQO\ q R ·Qh•tt1 ti) h1•' (t't')n.I
del "W• •n<I Lomo<>c t·A c, .. , Covnlfy _
l S'°'ttrm.tn 1 A.rt,."• l S11tt"'''"" A
l.A C:\M<11 ~ S~ P•..adtn~ ~ '>"" Marino 1 w111nul I Ila.v ii •
Bellttnwtr 10 (t••I All~ l.orN and Mountain vi ....
Rustlers Win
WOMIN'S a.tiSICITaALL OelMWesl ... , (~I S..11ta.ti11o1
winners of the South
Coast League crown, are
the lop seeded team but
must travel to ,Bell!Iower
High for a first round
match Thursday.
Wilson won the Moore
League chRmpionship
while Bellflower is the
Suburban League title
holder .
01111.S TaNN IS PL.A YO'FS
C"•·A ~· 911f-• et W••Uak• .
Art IOI• al Hoover. . 0ot Pw!llOUI T ,,....,.,,., 0.U •
M<r•lflt• •I wv ren .
FoothlH el Pkllt<.
111 ....... Moll!OO-r•al LNf• s.nt• ""°""' at Patm !>Pt"•"'I\ 0< Rl .. r1lde Poly
Lono llHCl't Wltson .i He~r1·
H••DO< c.,,.,.
Gor-det M<l••l 8tlt110-c11rtmont 1t L• p_,.nte
WlttllHlr al Sthwrr
"'"'' t' Olarler 0•• ot Sunnv Hlllt • Trov et P1lmoa1e. Rtqll~U 11 LA C•nM11.
loultv111•41 Mir• Costa or~. ConMlly at u Ou ll'lll. . ~ " ~ ~ • Clml)belt • , 1 10 -----------
• Brown ' I I t lllll .... !1111 • M<l.un I t 2 tt
DAILY PILOT
• Gl .. s t 1 O l
: OMeelll I 0 , 1
I ,...,..._II , 0 I •
• ..... \ 0 , 10 1 .,.,,,.,.., I 0 7 7
: L-I 0 t t • • scr~ 0 , 0 t
•, ·~ 1001 • • TOl•tt t1 IS 1) U
•• • oee • ••• ••• eeeee•• • •• • •• • •••• • e • ••••••••.. 11111\lt'M Col<HftWl\l U It
, . . . .. . --"' -..
~·LOOll'I'
IM'-OVI YOUI AMAUHCI . ..,.. ........... .-1.....-.-,..,_....,., _.......,,._, =:m==. nu-A .. -.-.....,...
THE PRESTIGE
HIGH·RISE.
Newport Center's prestigious
Wells Fargo Building.
Sixteen elegant stories
of steel, stone and glass
·· with a roster of quality tenants.
16,000 square feet per floor.
Maximum design flexibility,
from 375 to 12..,000
square feet available.
24·hour security.
Ample parking.
THE
WELLS FARGO
BUILDING
--·-.. ~ ......... ~ . . -. .,_.
cr,wcut '
O Morie: ct) (2hr) "What's l1lt
Matter With Htlenl" (susp) '71
Oebbie Rtynolds, Shelley Winters,
Dtnn•s Weavtr ,,~, Moillt: (lh1) "Tit• Ottmm··
ldral 68-F•ank S1naha, lee
Remd m The Instinct To Kill * Means Surm11 To
Earles And Vu"uru m 1.as1 ot 1111 Wild OJ l'tny MaJOll
fl) Nns/~ Altai"
~ M0t11: Ct) (2hr) "Chmd11~
(SUSI>) '64-Alldm Hepbvra, Cary
Giant. Waller Matthau
Sil llctlltt111111I Haft of flfllt "Tilt
-
CD Movl•: "They Orin by lli&M"_
(dra) '40-llumphrer Boaut.
-12:30-0 All·llicltt Show: "Slloot ltud,
louder, I Don't Ulld1r1bnd," "Cua
Up," "As You Were" ·
OJ Mofic: 1 CJ "It Ha,,.ntd Ont •
Suf!lllltf" (mus) '45-Junne Cuin. \
1:00
0 !2tl m OOl Tomonow m Tk m ci•
2:00
O Mn l1 Dnblelut•re: "Tht
Third lier.'' "Wllbtlt Dowo th•
'lflftd''
..
CD All lliflll 51-: "f1111kensttl11's ..
D1w1hltr," "Cario to Capett11111" • ...
R1nlry" Arthur Hill POllrfYl Abrallim 3:00
l1ncoln and Charles Ou1n1n1 is fJ Mn lt: "Operation Setrtl"
Stephen Ooullas in this abS01bin1 (m~) ·~2-Coinel Wilde. • ,
drama about the dtbates of 18S8,
~!;?.£~~!!'~~~-yision (50)~
t:30 'ltl!IHAMD lltt:TCHINO 'l'entllflt Tilk-Mtt'" 1~ ~;ui:,.uEcu~~~\ '"C>Otl"''" •
4·00 lOOM 4· JO ELEct•1t COMP'ANY 1:00 MtSTait aOOl!ltS NllOt(M>ltHOOO t:JO IHl'IHlf'I' P'ACTO"Y 4:0I M.&N ANO a NVlltO"MlflHT "-1•'-1 I_..,._... ...
,,.. ,.l!tlNAIU> SIC ITCHING "~"' Tilkmeu" MO RIAL UTl.T• AND YOU. ,._ h Alt Otftr 10 P'vrt llHI ~•tu '-r • oo 1r vou•sar..' "•~• r ·"' "'''· · • • 1:00 CONTSM,O•ARY c:At.lfOltMtA 1uu1s "Crime .... 0 1 ........ . ':':t~=r~,~-~SI '•
•.• ""'STliltPt•c• TNIAtl• '-W.W Ol"Hft WH My Valley" ll•OI WAITING ,Olt ,.OIL
11·00 THI M.cNllL/LIEHltl!lt ltll'Ot'T
...... ~ ..... -....... _ --.......... --···-·
I•
88 DAILY PILOT
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI IUSlltllSS
NAME'1AT•MaHT
Tl>o tol-1119 O.r"" I• OOol'Q ~· "-"-' .,
THE l"'OllSCHE STOiie, 1-s
Sl.ctll Sun'41 lke<ll CA '0712 Biiiy Hwf Lo•ln91r. 1•141 h'fV-
Ot .,~1~11,CA'Oen
T"'' tt.l•ll•U I> CO..Clu<led by .i\ lt>o
OIV•du•I
Biiiy N L•von~t
Tiiis ,. ... _nt ••• 111" wttll "" C:O-ty Cler' Of Oran., c;..,..,.,., Nov ~~1~ ' ,_
Publl"'-d Or•nte Gout O.lly "'1q1· "°" •. t•.,, 30, ttl• .,., ,.
PUBUC NOTICE
, Cl'.JOU
HOTIGI TO Clll OITOllS
SUPl!ltlOll COUlllT 01" THE
STA'tll 01' CALIPOlllftA llOlt
THIE ~UHTY 01' OllAHGI!
lfo, A·O OU
E•t••e ol !'LORENCE c CL
LSWORTH, 0..<"•Ud
Tuesday. November 18. 1975
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU5 euStNUS
HAMlllTAT•MIEHT r
Tll010110•1"9 "''°'"ore oolnq~ -··· AMOllE CHAIN CO., 106 t2nd Si, Ne_.. ao-<11. C• J~ P !(.,,._,, IC» nna '1 ..
-otf' s .. cn CA
C•" w Ach•m•n, t10 IA9-
RO , l'utlerton. C4
fl\I\ 11•1\l"°n "~on<Ju<\ecl lllY • tlmll·
tel pot1"""'"0 TllOmf\ P Ko•,..,
Tiil\ •l•l•-nt WH lllt4 wlllt lf>e ~IY Gttrk of Or•n<1e Cov111von Nov-_, ,o, tt1•
l'...m
Pub41\hed Oflfl9t Coo« Oally PllOt,
Nov 1•. n JO, and OK. 1. 1976 4133-7'
PUBLIC NOTICE
P lJBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
PlCTtTIOUI IVllllUI C~
MAMllSTAT8M8•T PICTtT10Ut•U••••u n.ttollOWlnQ .,.,_,.,.clllllno....i llAllACIT.t.T•MSWT -d Ti. ... leWl119--•••-..no.....i. 1~.':~·z.~.:::~~ ... --SOUTMWOOO LI OU01t.'iu o
w111i.m T W•ll•. un -a..tll HUIM• l o.i1evaro. C.011• -••. Oriw. _,.,.._. .. .Cll. ~· c.t1..,,.i....-1 .,._, "-'° "'-'-· Mt Colckfte•W Jay M. S<lllh••ll. ,.,, SeoAll EHi• O<lve, ............. C.lllotnl• t'11D6
Wav.Oenver,c;.1or-.10n1 l'e r11 •11•• Co P•••o . ••n Oofo111y Wtlll. •1>1 ,_.. ON<ll Coloc llttlt• Or h o, All•ll••M,
Orlvt. MVnllft91an lloe<ll, ~tlOtlll• Ct411Mlllat190f .,.., .......... 1011....,nto-~
Thi' ~., ... " ,, <•..Or-a, • llM .......... I H Cll. Golll ....... 9H6) ~fMIM,_rtlllp A .... llerlollno, UIO Wttl ~
Wllll-T.Wellt 1-.Ne-t1SH<h,C.ll'°""-9M6)
Tiii' '1•i.inet11 -· lllff wll!> \... Thi\ bUllMH It COftChKleO ll't 0 Oluntl' Oorti of Oo'•"9"' eo-ty on Ou. ...... •• .,.,, ... ~Ip.
17, 1'16 Aft99IO Cop ... ro, P•-
... ,_ Tht\ st•tt ...... t WU filed "'4tll t ...
PubllSMd °''"99 COHI °'"" Pilot County C.Mrll Ol Otnoe C:O..My on NOV. NOV. t t. 14, '3, lt14 ), 1'7•.
Cl"·Jl11 "4S.I• IOltO .. HSION.t.L •ICltOW
SUl"lilUOlt COUllTOl'THI! H llYICH n ATIEOl'CALll'OltNIAf'Olt --------------I tt2U .. t1llTW\lh•Ave.,
THE COUNTYOl'OllANOI[ PUBUC NOTICE SMl•A .... CA.•'7t1
Ho. A·lffll --------------! aKre• .... 7 .. 11'14·M~ NS'61
1"111111\Mcl Or•n90 CN•I 0.lly Piiot, H 0 Tl C • 0 I' H IE A II I H 0 0 I' Cl"•MM
PETITION l'Olt l"ltOIATI! 01' WILL NOTtCaTOCllllDITOn
AHO l'Olt LETfEllS TUTAMl!H· SUIOElllOltCOUltTOl'r.411
TAllY AlfOACITMOltlliTIONTOA~ STATI! Ol'CALlll'OltHIA l'Olt
MIHISTEll UNOElt THI! TMllCIOUN'tYOl'OltANO•
INDEl'INDIHT ADMIHISTllATION W•.A·"I ..
0 1' ISTATISACT Estele 01 GRACE J. Pl!l(Altfl(.
Estate ol CLAIRE E RUNGE.·~· 0ec .. sec1 CLAIRE WILHELMINA RUNGE. NOTICE ISHERE8VGIYENIOthP Oot<•• .. O cre<mor\ of Ille ebo .... namod cHadont
Novemlllot t. t•. n. )0. "" *S-7'
PUBLIC NOTICE
s.wm
5Ul'l!lt101t CDUltTOllTMf'
STATI! 01' CALI l'OllHIA l'Olt
THf' COUNTY Ol'OllAHOE .... A_.,
NOTIC• 01' Hl!AlttNG•OI'
l'llTITION l'Olt IOltOIATE OF WILi..
PUBLIC N<mCE
fltCTmou1eus1No.s
NAMAI '~ATllM••T
T"-lollo•1119 llf,_ Is 001<'Q -· _,.,.
MAOIC 5CULl"TUlt" "NAILS"W
llllANO. ?Ui Gr•""· s.Mo ..... C4. 9tlOS
Loh et•111e Powell, 10U 6
Sroeow.., l ""9 &.•a<". c..-. ~ 'flli~ lllvMnns I• c~1-e4 OY.,. In
dlvtw.I
Lel5"-lt Tiiis ttal-nt WH llltd wltll II•
Oiutll, Ciera Ol Qr•"" C911ntl'on .. .,,. ~tG.m•. ......,
P\IOllShed OrA"91t C.N SI Ollty Piiot
Nov.16. u. JO,o nO Oo<. 7. 1'7' C lt-76
P UBU C NOTICE
PICTITIOUS eUStNHS
NAlltltl UATEMIEHT
Tiie foll-lnia penon Is dOlnv lllutl~
,,..)S~~SHllte MOVING, l07e Y4!11
8Uttft. QKte Mn•. GA t1U6
S iiiy Miiion Buttum, J071 Vtn
9"~ QKt• Mo\O, Ct., '2424
Tiiis 111111,,.u Is conductM Ill' tn 111· dtlllWal. Siil Bllttram
Tlllt it•le-"!t WH Ill~ with tM
County Clerk Ol'Or•noo County on iwv ~10,tt1'. ....,,,
P\iOllSlltd Or•llO-c .. st 0.llY POOi
Nov 16. U , 30. end Oec 7, HI• •1i1.1•
PUBUCNOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo Ille
cr-M11tors 01 the •bOvtt r\ttnwa Ot<.fl'otnt
1twit "" ~oon' h~v.nQ tto•tn\ AQ.a1n\t
I,,., ~ljl d•ltllent ••• r9qu1teft to lilt
Owm with '"' NC•"\d'V vouc~n. •n
'"" otllu ot I~ <I~'' ot 11\t 61.lO,,.."" tttteo <f>ll'1. or 10 o•• ... nl lhem, "''" tn.e N<"'~•rv vOu' l'lrr'\, to tnt' un
C!Hl•Qned di 1)HI P••r'O de V•l•nt••·
Suit~ 113. L•Qun• HtllS. C .. Morn10
mSJ wlloCll Is l"" pie<~ ol ~ ...... , o4
tM undeif"\tftMd Ht c1U tn4Uf"r\ l)tftd'"
lftQ lo,.,. \141t OI \Aid°"'-'" Wol~·n '°"' rnontn~ alter tr.e llf\1 OUOllOt•Oft
o111101 not•ct
NOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN tt\31 llWI •" OOnoft\ 1Mv1n9 CIAlrm t9f1MI
NORMA J AN £ HOOE LL hes llled '"" wlo ooceoent ••• required to II~ -e•napelltionlorProbet•olW•lland !Mm wltll lllO neces .. ,., vovtntn. •n
1., hw...ceot Vtters TMtamont•ryto trw otflce of Ille <ltrll ol ttto .tJo¥P en
Ille "9tllloner •nd eutllof'hatlon to M· t•lle<I U>u•1. or lo "'""'"I tMm ""''" tl'W mlnl\t., IM est•tt .,._, ttto ll>OPOM· nKnwry vouchers to tllf -~-" oe<ll ·-lnostret1on ot E•l•IM A<1 r•· ., ........ oltlce ot THOMAS L. LORD,
tetfn<e lo .,11•<1"1 o\ m•de tor turt ... r 1lS11 Paseo do V••enC••. Suite 111.
o.vt•culfrs. •nO that Ille """'-place L<tQUN Hills. CAhtornlo '1•SJ who<ll i•
ot ,,..,,,119 the -.-hH -wt tor tne placeol buslrwu oltho ~oneG No~mt>er lO. 1'76. at 10 00 • m .. In t,,. In all ma Hers perttlnlnq to Ille e<t•l•ot
courvoom ot O..e>artmenl No. 3 of ,.,.,, W•O dtcedl'nt, w11111n tour"'°"'"' •II••
court, •t 700 CIVIC Center Or Ive wes1.1n to.the ltnt publl<•loOn o• tllil notl<t.
A H 0 I' 0 It L IE T T E It S 1-------------
0.ttd O<toller 7&, n 7t
lH0MASL LORD
E ceculOf' of"'' Witt of
'""' ttbOv~ NMtd 0--(t:dMI 'n!OMAS L. LOltO
Att-\•t ~ .. 1Ull P4lH ... ll•l•n<IA, SuotU I)
1..i19...W Hll". CA •nn
£ •f'CUtOf' lft Pto '1'er
11141 )II ))40
Pvl>il\111'<1 Onnq~ Coa\t oa11v Piiot,
Nov 1 'J, I• 7J t•I&
PUBLIC NOTICE
S·JOl ll
NOTICl!TOCRf'OITOllS.
NO.A·t,11'
Sur>trior Court ot Ille
Sl•I• of C•tlforno• tor
th• County ot Or•nCJ9
'" 11\f' MMter of ltto E\l•l• ot INEZ LORRAINE HUTCHISON • ., ... INEZ
l HUTC><•!>ON. Dor.a\Od
Notice 1\ hereov 91vr., to (re<fltt)n
t\avfnQ tta1m\ AQ·l\n\t '"' \Airt fie<"
O"'f"lf tn t11 .. !liittd c1,.1m-. '" '",.otfltf o'
t~ ''"'" ,,, trw "',,.,,.'"'d COIJrt or to 0'"'~"' tn••m tot~ . .md"'''1on~ .tt t~ otllt•OI MARVIN flN(HER All"'""•
4\ U.•, ,,. W (kran Rlvd. No +ol in
'"" Cth' ol lonq Br•cn •f'I LO\ A"')t>I,.\ C.ouf'ltv, wn1<n I Uh.'' otJ1rf' 1\ In--plft<~ o• ~~•¥\\ ot In ... undPr\tQned 1n t1ll
m •ttt''\ pPrta•n•"Q tn '••O """14lltt 54,,( h
(l.\1tn<\ With 1r\e Mtt>"Jry 'f'tU(htof"I mu\I bro Iii~ or ort Ynt,.,1 ,v, A•ona"" o
w•th1n lt)1Jr m,,"'"'-"""' lhr llr\t
tM.KMICahinot t~ ,,011r~
0 .. 1"<1 Nqv~mf)l•r Ill 1'1~
Aa1 F '"""' E•••r..,.,,, O' '"' w II nr '·••f'l O•,.,.ttrnt
MAltVIN TINCHER
Anoni•f·•• uw
«011 Ocunllvd
Ho 401
1..0fW1 lluch. C•lotornl• t0107
Publt\.nf!d 0,.,1no" C'>tt\f O·t•IJ' P•'"'
No• ·~· 1l. l0. al\O Ot< I 1~16 •Atl& 16
PUBLIC NOTICE
s )0117
SUPElllOll COUATOFTHE
STATEOl'CALl FOllHIA l'Ofl
THE COUNTY OFOllANGI!
Ho A0tt4CM
NOTICE 01' HEAltfNG 01' PUITION
FOii Plt08ATE 0 1' WILL AHO l'Olt
1..ETTEltS TESTAMEN TARY ANO
AUTHOlllZ.-TIOH TO .-OMIHISTf.A
UNOEll Tl:IE tHDEPE)jOENT AD-
MINISTllATIONOI' f'ST ATES ACT
E•l·••~~t "'l•CE ~ ~ANCl~MI Ll.( I>
~r"'"'"'a NOTICE I~ H~RE8Y (;lllEN 1"'11
NAN(V ANN Mill ER II•\ t1ledh<'0•1t\
•• ~htlon lnr Pr'obdt,. Of W•f1 al"ld •ttf 1\
,u.-,t:ll? ot L"'Htr\ T"''' 1mMt"1rY •nd
•vtMr11at1on tn Adm1n l••r unttr·r ""'"
tndf·Df-"'°'""' •f1m1n1\ltAt1nl\ -.I E\t .~ .. ,
,,.,.. CllY<tf San la Ane, ca111orn1a. 1..._0.t.c!Octowr ?•. lt7'
O.tedNOY'tfnt>er 10. tO• ROBERT C . P EK.-REK
WILLIAM E. St JOHN E•e<11torot tlleWlllol
County Cle•ll lho •bovo named dee_,,.
l'AUL AUGUSTIHE.Jlt.anO T"OMASL. LOllO JOHN I(, GAUSTAD W t1PuooO.Y•l•ncl.t,Sult•11J
$41 s.~ NicolH Dr 'SulletOI u.. ..... Hiit .. CA tun
Newport tin< 11, CA tlUO 11141 511 ·»Ml
17141 "44MJOI Anomey lot l!xec11ttf'
Altff,..o tor: l'etttloM• PubllShed Ora119e Coul Dally Piiot
Pul>llstted Or•noe Co•st Oelly PilOI, NOY. l . 9, 16, 13, ttl&
Nov. IS, 16, l?, 191•
PUBLIC NOTICE
S.J07H
NOTICE TOClllE OITOllS
No.A0m11
Supierjor Court ot th•
~t•lt: at C•llfornt• tor
ti.. County 01 Oun~
In th• M•lt•r of ftt~ Estate <tf IOLA
STEPHENS ROBERTS. a1so i..nowna~ tOLA S ROBERTS, OP<ulo<'d
NOltt.e t\ M<•by 9 1ven to creditors
"'1•1f>Q <lalm\ •O•ln<t tne W•O ~e-
0-nt to file '•td c l•lmtt tn tl\e ottKe of
1ne <'~'' 01 t~ •lo•~wlo c0U<1 or to
Pl•~nt u~m to tM und~\lqned at t~
ot11co o• HOLMES E HOBAIH. Al·
IOfMy af L ...... )OSI) Wll\llor~ B•.m No nor In thip (1ly OI Lo .. Anq.-1~. '"UK
An•1~ Cooruv ""ICh fatl~f oft1Cf" t\ ·~ Df·l<~Of OU\lnf"\\.Of '""" u~s..~
"' ,11 m.tttf"<\ o-"tl011''-"<l to '\o<'hO t"!.ldl,.
'\1J h c • t•m\. w 1tn '"~ n~c:f'."s.sary
.;011~,.,,., mu\f t>I" '•h•d or or~Y.,,tecl .-\
t•l')f'~t.4•0 #1trun f0'-1,. month\ alter t~
l1r'.I oubl·(•lt,,,,01 tl'u\.not1te.
D•tM NO•~ml><'r ll l~I•
Howard St~ollens Robef"ts
E (t<ulor Of lllt Woll
ol \•10 l><>t•den\
H~ES f' HOIART
30 0 Wll\111-. lllVO.
No UOI
LO> A...,.fo, CA tOO!O
Pubthh,.d OrAnQ"' Cot1\f 0~1fy Pilot
NQY II> 71 JO ar>d O<t I 1416 "801·76
PUBUC NOTICE
CP JOIS
NOTICE TO CRf'OITOllS
SUP IE RIOlt COURT 01' THE
STATE 01' CAL•l'ORNIA FOR
THf' COUNTY 0 1' ORANGE
Ho A 9'1173
(,I••• 1)1 HELEN L RUTH.
()ri.C~A\"O
NOTICE IS ><El>EBY GIVEN to'""
t t-f'G1tor' ot t~ Ab0¥• ftA"""d dorotr!de-nl
l~t •It Of"f\Of"I\ fHJVlf .. 9 ''fl'""" ~1"1\t
tl\r · -t•rt ~ i>(tfl'tU Af• rf'oQu•r-Pd to tit~
PUBLIC NOTICE
U4U
NOTICE TO PEllSOHS IHTEltESTEO
IN THE. IESTATI! 01'
MAilllY c. IOAULSON, O.ceaHll
Noll<-e l\ ~rt'by qlv•n
To a11 ptr\Of\\ lntere\ted, w.,,.t~r •s
ct~t1ors he•r\ ••Q1,.f"f'-. or c:kn,IY"P\
1n tM e\lete ot HARRY C PAULSON O-ce.t~ wttow t•st •ddrl'\s w.t• .,.
Ctt1m11er 1•111. G••~•1>u•9. ltlonols
••~t. tMI l•tlen te•l•m<'nl<l'Y or of
,Mm1n l\\rat•on hevt t>etn '\'\Vf'fl to
Harry Sto•~\ OY tllo C"cuol Couft ot
thie Ninth Jud1tl•I Circu1f 6 c()U(1 04
c-l•nl 1ur•Sd•ctoon ol ttte S1111ol II·
l11"10•\
T""' UW tollow1f')g ~r~n •'\ •ndt'-btfl'd
fo or "O•d•"Q ~'\Qnal proMrty ot th•
Ytd ~~,,t 4,..d f"·U i••tj °""t)t 0#
~r"°"'•' oroot,.rv con''''' ot "\.IVtnQ\ 1t<(ot1nt or ct< count'
Sdnta B•rtwrct S.t1111\t'H •l'WS Lft6n A\
'\OC•ctl1on ?lO Ea\t Chao"'•" AYenUll"
C•IY"1 O<anQf' County ot Or4"9"
lt\.Ot tM vndef\lqnrd de-1Jrfl' to r~· ,,.,w the .,_.Id oer\On•t orooit.-ty or co•
lttl t~ <.taim anio to ,.flmove lh.tlt to4· •~<•I'd or roulvod from tfle St•t~ O'
Ohlorni• to IM ia•d \ft)1~ wt'W'r" trt
t,.r'S ''t,''°'"""'"''"" Or' ot 11tdm1n1\tr6tl?f"I
l\ave ~ t\'u~d
All ~'\On\ n.&V"•nQ cl.l~m~ tq.)ln~t Ow
dt-c.edt!nt Of' an ln"rf''\C •n 'tl'Ud ("~1«Ht
11"-Cf w•\h1nq to obit"< t to \VC::" r~mo".;'
mu~t Q•Ye wri1ten nottce ot 'v"" 001PC
t1on to '""" Df"r\on or Ot'f\On\ ·~bff"d
to or holrtinn o-0''\0nAt nrooN'tv 01 thf>
aecedoent ~V'h noticr mu\t ~ Q1\#Pn ttt
th•• oer~on "OldlnQ rn11 per\OMI OOl)Otlr
'V or ,,q,lln\t whom lt'lft c ld1m f~ '"""Ck.·"'
·~ .. c'tdr•'"'' t1• ,, .. ,,..,, ttbOV" WHhln )0
DAYS MIM lor\I oubfl<dflOn ot llllS
~le-•
OATEO Orfot>-r18 1q16
HARRY STOIC ES
A• E ••Cutor Ot 1ne E\IAI•
nl Harry C Ptlul-.on
10<>cu v o1
PuOtl•llMl ~""Q" Cont Oallv Piiot
NOW'ml>H OJ 16 !ti~ •Sit.I~
PUBLIC NOTICE
TESTAMEHTAllY
E\tete Of IR\llNG HABERMAIN.
DKe•M!d NOTICE IS HEREBY' GIVEN l!Wt
llE RTHA .. ASERMAN llU tlled
l)efel" • Pftfllon IOt Protwtt ol Witt And
tor lnwnct ol Lttte•s Te•t•'Mflt•rv to
the 1>11tlli0ft!'•. •-*••en<e 10 wl1kfl I•
,_ tor lvrtl'lfr e>arhculan. -t!WI
ll'lf ti-'"° Dl•ce ot llo••ln9 Ille......,..
110\ l>eon u t tor Nonmlller )0, "7•. at 10·00 a .m , In 111.-courtroom ot
OeoM•,...,n• No 3 ot uid co .. 11, at 100
Civic Cenltr Orove west. In ti... Clty of
~14 ""•·California.
O.ted November~. 191~ .•
WILLIAM.E. SI JOHN,
C.nunty Clerk
MAUlllCE H. DOLMAN Dol .... n. Wolle• Linden
A ,.,.lenlonol Cor,.ratlllft 1• C.fttury l'•rk Eul, ., • .,,.
L.osA...,.ie .. cA.-1
AttOf"" tor: l"elltloM• Pul>li\lled OranQe Coast Dally Pilot,
Nov. u. ll. ll, 1976 47'11J.16
, ... ,..,
NOTI« TOCltEOITOltS
SUl"EltlOlt COUltT Ol'TMll
STATIE 01' CALI l'OltNIA l"Olt
THaCOUHTYOllOllANO•
.... A-71
E\lat•ofWYME ll H OONALDSOH,
... W H. DONALDSON, Oo<oow<J
NOTICE IS HERES Y' Gt \/EN 10 I~ creditor. ot Ille obov• ,..,,..d _,
"'"' on pet\OllS llhln9 c1al"" ~lnit
IM said deudent ••• r.ciul..O to Ille lllem, wltlO Ille nece\ .. ry voucller\. In
'"" otfict 01 •~• <ftrlt ol lllO ol>0\19.., tltle<I court, or to pruont tllem, with IM
nec.ssary vou<llo•5, to tlle ulldt•\lgned
•l Ille I•"' Olll(U of PRENNE,_ &
BUNT, 101 Eo\t l'Ourtll Str~. S..lto
121. ~nl• Ana. Calllornla fl/01. whk ll
Is tllo pl<Ke 01 buSln~u of ,,,. un·
atr\•Qned ltt all matter\ penalntng to
the estala ot said dtUOent, Within lour
1no11tM •ll•r ttte llrst oubllcatlooof thl,
no11ce
O.t•d Novetnt>er 1. 1'1•.
Gabrlell•,.,. Donald"""
E ucut<I• ol Ille Will
of lt\t at>ove 118 med de<edent.
l'Rf'NHEll 6 llUNT
--------------11u1 E. """""· St"lo ttt Cl"·>OU ~t.t Ano, CA. tt70t
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO ClllEDITOllS r.1: f1141 Sst-etn
5Ul'ElllOll COUllTOl'THE A-'f'f0tE•ec:11trla
STATIE 01' CALIPOllHIA "°" Publl!.hed ~an90 CO.>! 0.llY Pilot.
l'Ott THE COUNTY 0 1' OllAlfGE No.-m-•. "· n . JO."" -1• ..... A·"f20 (\Ule o t ED WA RD W .
BONICOSKY Oec .. sed
NOTICE •S >iERE8Y GIVEN to Ill!!
(ff"dltor-\ ot tht dbOY~ n•~O de<r~1
ttt.ll •II otr\Ot'I\ rwv1nq ct~•r'T'K aQM"st
tf'lt \.i•d cH<-fl>Ot"t •re '~quired to hit
tnitm with the MC.,'\'i•ry 'IOU(.~ 1n
tM OHtCf" o• thf' (ltrk Of tM ab0'4' ~·
11Ued cour• or H> pr'e\ent them .... tn
ttw ne<~\\U v ¥OU< hers. \O •~ un
Oier\•Clf'itO JI '""' lnw otttcf' of J•rne" E Wil.,,.lm ol Kindel & An<M!r'>Of"I. U)10
NOrttt 8roadwa\t Bo• lH. Sdnla AM
C..lllOtl\la Cl'l70'I, whotll IS Ill!! pfa<e o4
1>us1,..s of tho unot•\•Q"td 1 .. au ma•·
ttr\ oo•ta•n•nq to ttto •\tale ol ""'d .,.. <"°'"'"' wlttun tou,. tnof\th'\ dUff' IF'e
.,,,, out>t1catlon of tnl\ nottce.
D.11ed Oc towr 7•. 1'16
JESSIE W BON~OSICY E ic.~cutna ot tnf' W1U of
tP'leabov~ named oe-c.f\11t
J AMES IE. WILHELM
of ICIHDEL 6 AHDIEllSON
1010 H. llroadw•Y. 1101 lU
SMll A"• CA •7701
Ttl: 17141 SS..1111
A11or"''f' tor E•tcutrt a
PublSf\h'd OrJnq~ (Od\t D11,1v
P1101. Nov l . 9, 16, ?J ,.16 oo~l·I•
PUBLIC NOTICE
CP.Jltt
SUl'l!l!JDll COUllTOl'THf' STATl!-6F CALI FO'tNl~FOll
THE COUNTY DFOllAHOf'
H•. t.·t•Sll
NOTICE 01' NE All ING 01' l'ETITIOH
"011 l'llOIATI! OF WILL AND
PUBLl<l NOTICE
HOTI Cf; TOCllf OITOllS
SUPEltlOll COUltT OFT"IE
STATE Ol'CALll'OltHIA FOii
THECOUNTYOFORAHGE
N• A H ilt
E\f•I~ ot GORDON E ..... GNU\
.. ,. EUGEN G MA(;Nll!>. ()lorea~
NOTICE I~ HEREBY GIVEN to llt'
creditor\ ot thf' abOvl" """""0 Of'<('O"'nt
tM• aU IJl'l'f\O"\ "dY•nC) C lftltn\ M>'lflrt~t
~ Y id d4!<.f'denl ar~ , .. QutrOd to htt
ttwm w 1tfl' '",. "~C~\~•rv vouchflirJ tn
•~ otf•Cf' of thfl <'"'" of the ab0¥t -.,. o11f!dtourt ortoore)ent ,.,.tn.w•t"'~
'1t6(M\itrv vou(.~rs to'"'"' undflnlQnf'd ~It~ otllto nt JACK G M'IGNUS Al
tOfMV at L1tw 1\10 w11u,.r~ niwt 81h
F100< lo\ '-rw:t'"'"" Cdl+torn•" QH
wn1rh 1\ the ofdCt! 01 flu\•nt-.~ ot •~ vn
dPr\tQnf'd ,,, ,11 rn~ltf'rc. o~rt,l•n•nq to
,,.... f'\t,•I" ot \.Jl'1 rt~rttd.-nt, w•lhtn tour
rN'll'\th\dfHH th<' f1r\t OubllCdtU)t"IOt thtf
noltc~ Oa10Mktn.,.., 21 101~
LA VE LLE R MA(;"U~
E•H.ulttcf1• th-f!Wtll
o• 'hP aonvt: ""'™ o 0.1ctdftl"lt
JACIC G MAGNUS
Att-y •IL•w
IS10 Wll•llore lll•d. ., .... ,_
L.n .-nqeles CA • ..01 P
T•f: uu1..-.1>01
AttOf'MY ffM' E att utrl C
P\ll>lo,h'!I O•~nCI" Co"t Dally Pltof
()rl 1• NOV 1 ~ 16 t•l6 0 17 II;
PUBLIC NOTICE Ai.ct ,_.,,.,..M. 10 Nf''h'"' f m lttr' ,,.., '"""'" N;lf\ '"' "' (• '"rv YOUC'°"'' ... ,,
fl.lf't,..,.r Odfflruhr' •t"ttt '" .. ' '""" t•fni"' lhfo oH ,,, "'"' rh•'' nf tf\t' ~lh"t<lf' M ~ Dldt,.ot tvt•t1nl) tfl• ',,.,.. """'' ,,,...n l•I'• •1 ,.,rt ,., ti\ Dtf'\.flnt thforn wtth
...,., ,~Nov 1l 14''\ 14t 10 f)() t "'' "',_,. '"'" n• t ,,., v,,u ""''" to\~ vn t'K.!rtr~ "lf 0.-n.rWrnfl"nt 11.1•1 t ·•' • i't > • 'YI• 1' tf If\•· t.\w ,,,., ,. ttt f~ E ,.,,...,"1 "' mor.. ,._..,,,.., Ot rt' Nt ,, , ... W11r, .. 1m ,,, 1f"'tntl• 4 l•Ht Ar'ld•·r'°" 101f)
--------------1 COOi Ci LS THElll!TO AHO l'Olt Ll!T· l'ICTITIOUS euSINl!SS
NAME STATEMENT
f'°l"'C•tfnt\.,,,t ••""' "'"' ·1•1•n·' •1 ••1' ht • .,,,.,...~" p,,,, OUtr,. An• .'7\
:> .. t~Nov • ''"" 1.,,, 4,,, (4tlth>r"''"' •>1fJ1 w+'l•"."t\ ,~
WtLLIAME StJOHH, ,,,. o••t ot bu' n .. \\ ot th .. un '°"~h'C••"• ¥<1LLIAM~H E t't'IELO
nu,..1111 Ito\\"
"""'• ""• C•hl 0101 T•I Ul 1100
•ttOf'MYfOt P~Uhofll~r
C>untt,n· o 0,. t"CJ-Co.Ht O"''' ~•of
,,..~. Jf\rd 1n ,, I tn U•o'\ Of'r1(••n1"') ro
'• ,., • .r"' "' .. ,,, "°' '"'d~nt W•ltun '®"
JY,f'Wh\ •'f•,. lt'v ''"'t OUDl•C lltC>fi: Of
" 1"\fUll' 0..-.l•d "lc.10.,,.., 14 •• ,.,
P,,tJI A PP'Ql>f"')t'\.I'
F •• <1•tO" nt '""' Wtll M ,....,",.ml)lorl f') II\'''"' """'' '" '"" ,.bov• n.Jrt'tf'l'd <h Cfl'dilm~ ------·1J,m4"\ E W1l9'ifl"' PUBLIC NOTIC E •I ICINDIOL .1 ANOEllSON IOlON llr .. Owav.11•< JU
___ N_O_T_l_C_E_T_O_C_ll_IE_D_l_T_O_lt_~---S""'" ""• Clo •1102
\UP[RIO>I COUltT 0" TH' l•' llltl n• /t11
HAT[ Ot' CALll'ORHfA l'-Olt ""0""'' lo• f ~t<Ullt• '"E COUNTY 0' OM4J.tGE "11t>I ,,, .. ft 0, 1no• c.o.-"t 01t1 .. / Plfot
No A IM\t "'it" l q I• 1\ tOI\
1 ,,.,,. '•' H ~ q v l '' """'"' rn~ U. • I
"4r)1 ct •*t H~ qro, r.1vr~ 1, '"""
t .. '11lnl 1f '" 1r'tl#' n~I,,,_ 1 hY• '111·•\1 ,~ .... I I "' , ,, ., t. "t If ••...-r. ' • ., ,
n t I t t fl!i1 •' ' It .,.,. I 1 f t
Pl'Rl.IC' NOTl<.'E
SUl'f'lttOR COUltT Of THE
ST.-TEOF CALIFOllNIAl'Oll
THf'COUNTYOl'OllANGE
Ho A·~ll
NOTICE 01' Hl!AllfH G OP
PETlTIOlf 1'0 11 1'1109ATE 01' lll'llLL
AND 1'011 Ll!TTf'RS TESTAMIH·
TAllV' AND 1'011 AUTHOlllZATIOH
TO AOMINISTEll UNDEtt THE
IHOEl'f'HOIENT AOMIHISTllATIOH
O" ES"fATIS ACT 11'1101.-TIE COOE
fft l!TSl!Ol
E\l•teot GENE ORANl' 01!ctA~
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tMI
!>VONEY S l'tNSTON II~' lllN:l hl'rrln
'oirt•t•on '"' Prot>atQ ot WiH •rwt tOt' ,,.
\IJaNf' f)f L,,ttfr'\ '""'""'~n••"V to Ike>
PAtltton"' and tor .iuthoru4ltlon lo itd·
m1(U\\l'tr ft"tP "~rat~ \jn(Snr t"P l~l)"n•
dont Admtnl\trAt1on nt E lfll1f.t\ Act
(ProOdtt Code s•1-• 'fl"Q) r11,erencf' ,0
which I\ m~~ for turth,., M'1lr-01"'''
"'nd that tt\t> tlmt" itnd OlitCe of n-ttrlnq
tn,. ~.,m,. P\cH l*M1 '"'tor NOVf'mt)l"r lO.
t117& "' 10 00' m "'th,. rm1r1room o~
Oe1>11rtmont NU J ot •••d c0<.1rt .11 1()11
Clvor (Ml•• O"v" We\I In tit\! City of
S-il"ltll ""• t•fltornttl D~lffl Nnv~m~r 10 •tt• WILLIAM E St JOHN,
County,,,.,.,.
WEISMAN AHO Ollf'l5EH
A-yut L•,.
, .. , C..ntury ~••k IE•"
Su•t• 1740
Lo• A-It\. CA t00t7 AttetfttY\fot' 1"•11tloM r
Pu"41\""d OranQI' C0<11\I 0611y P••nt
No• •• 11 1J IOI• 4• ''
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU5 euStHllSS
NAME 5T ATt!MENT
Trw-•OllO••tWJ ~rwn' .,, doi"O bu\1 ,...."'" LAGUNA Hll..L~ REAL ESTATE
u~ Hilt\ V•ll•q<> s11ono111q ""''"'
7S760 L .. P•• RNd. L lQUM Hiii\. (A
"7tS3
~ara" Et110ottlt H•ll. lll•t
Syc.tmo••. Sllv~••tlo Calltornl• Aolllln Lout.. M•c l..OQtl"n, JJ44
Fro••m<111 St S•11 Dleqo, C•lllornie
9710&
Ellr•beth O~n,. Mtt<Oon&ld. )llS
Wllro•SI . $•n O•~o:io CotllornlA.,10& T"•' bu\fnt!\\ I\ condu<tttd nv "
~nefll0trlner~.,ID
S.rah E Hall
Thi• \lltement Wft\ filed wllll IM
COllntv C•er• ot 0••"0" Counw °"No•· '"'""'' ,.,. .. .,,,..
Publ•s~d O••n<>f' Coe\t Dally P1to1,
Nov 1•, 1l >O. •nO Oec 1, 1'1• a 10 It
PUBLIC NOTICE
5·J07U
SUl't!•IOlt COUllTOl'TMI
STATE 01' CALll'OllHIA FOlt
THI COUlfTYOPOllAHGI He.A-~W ~ -
NOTICE 01' MllAlllMO 0"
IOlTtTIOft l'Oll 1"1101.-Tf; OP WILL
A H O I' 0 II l E T T E II S
Tf'S T AMENTAll Y AHO
AUTHOllllATION TO AOMIHtnllt
UHDl!lt THI IMOl!IO I HOEHT
AOMtHISTltATION 01' HTATH
ACT
E•IAI• ot NEVA M llltOWH •h
NEV4 MYEllS BROWN. ·-~ NEV.-BR O WN, '"~" N M , 8AOlllllN 0.CM-
N()Tl(t! 15 HEREllV GlllEN tllat
LUNSFORD JONES ""d MARGt.RET
HELEN MEllER, co eH<ulor\, ll~v•
flltd 11orel11 • ottlUOll tor Prol>lit~ °' w 111 and lor 1 .. vence ot lelttl\
h\lam•flla•w •M Autll•,,l••tlon to
A0"11ttl•t•• untltf tht lncteotl\dOflt
Alll'lltnlOretlon of l!:•lat~~ A<t
rete•tM• to •111<11 ;, tnlld• tor '"'"""
pltf1l<11le", •nd tll1t Ille tlmt Ml<I Dl41<t ot ...... r~ ,.,. \•tnt hn -.. w, tor
NOvtl'll.,., )I), 1t/6, at tO:OO •.m , In,.,_
covrtroorn ol Oo ••tmtnt No. J Ol tald
\ourt. •I TOO Ctvtc (Inter OrlvtW.,t, 111
, ... Cll'tGf s.<ltt AM , C.lltornla °"''° ~ ... '"""' •. "1• WILLIAM E St JOHN,
(Ouflty(IM'
Ml04AILJ OLD~•N
~"'"'°'"-" "I OeverOl'fn
..._ lo•<ll. CA o ... •"""'"' ,., ... tfl._,. l'ubll•""" Or•n .. Co .. \l 0..11y PllM
Nev I~ t• 11 ltt4 41'1 1•
TIEllS Tl!STAMENTAllY AND
AUTMOllllATIOlf TO ADMINISTf'lt
UHOf'll TH E IHDE .. ENOENT AO-
MINISTllATION 01' l!STATUACT
E\lalt OI MA!tTHA A NICHOLSON,
Oot<HMO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\at
JOHN E BUR ICE ha• 1.1..,, """'"" a otnt•on •OI' Probdt~ or Wtfl and Cod1t1l!J.
t~relo ar>d lor t\w6nc~ 01 Lettun
Tol•me<1tarv lo Ille Pot•lloner ""° <1uf1W>rlt•tl011 to edmlnl<,ter t"" ttM!e
unotr the t nttr~nOf'nt 4'dMlf\1~tr~fl""
of Etitllf!" a..ct. ,,.ferf!nt" to wn1c" 1~
mMte tOI' fu,.fMr r;wJrt•CUlttr~. dfld 1t1a•
the litntt •rwt Dlit<~ of hee,.lnq tho y~
P\4'\ t)!Jttn '~' •or Of~cemC>t>r 1 •~16. at
10 00,. rn • In tt\1-cou,.troom Of ~rt~
m~n' ~o l 01 S>8•d court, ttt 100 Clvlc
Center Drl•e Wo\I In the Citv ot Sa"t4
.. M. C..lltornrn 0,1ttd Nov•m~r 17, 1~16
WILLIAM f;, St JOHlf,
CountyCltr~
JAl,AI S IE. WILHELM
t4,ICIN0El' ANDERSON
1ttl0 Not111 ••Ndway, tlo~ JU
Sloftla A,.., CA. '2702
Ttf• OU ) S"-1171
Att,..n•~ tor• l't11tloft«t
Pul>l••....O 0•6 .. Q(' Co•SI Oa•IV Pilof.
No,,..mber t~. II 7l 1976 <la03 16
P UBLIC NOTICE
CP•J1IO
SUl'llttOlt COUllT 01' THE
STATI 01' CALll'OltHIA l'Oll
TMll COUHTYOl'OllAHOE ... ·-71 NOTIC E 01' H•AlllNO 01'
IOITITIOM l'Olt IOllOIATE 011 WILL
AMO 1'011 LaTTlllS TUTAMEN-
Tt.llY AliO AUTMOltttATION TOAC>-
MIN 11 TE It UMDEll TNI
INOEl'INDEHT AOMIHIST .. ATION
O"lllTATIESACT
Elotalt Of LAWREENA T. EARL,
Oto<ffWf
NOTICE IS HEllEBY GIVEN tll&t
JAMES 0 PLUHl(ETT llH llt•O
"'"''" • pellllon le>• Pro~tt o! Will 11111 '°' luu.on<ool L'-1.,, Teita"*'l••vto
Ille Ptllliofttr 0110 .1ufllorl11ti011 to..,.
mlltl•ler ll\4t t\l•I• uno..r ,.,_ lnlirotn·
_, Adl'lllllf\lfAtlon of Ett•tn Act ••·
'•"net to wt1tc11 1~ f'll•dt for 1....-..
1Mtlkul1-., ..,d thfl tlM """'""" pteco ~ llHfll\Q IM H Me h•l been tel lor
Novtmbtr lO. '"'·ti 10.00•.m .. inllHt <OVf'trOom ot ()foo.rtrMnt No Jot •••<I
<_,,I I 100 (lvlt Cont•• Ortve w.,1, In lftt City ot Stllt• Ana, C11110,nlo.
Daltd No¥tm!Mr 10. lt16
WILLIAM •• SI JOHN
CountyCa.<11
JAMHO. IOLUtU(ITT
&¥A111AN l'LUNKIETT A ....... yo., ....
4llOll"9Ave.,I' O.lt•U•
H-.tt ......... ac h, CA tHO ow ... ..
~·\~Or•-Coot D•llv POOi
Nov n "n """ 41.,.
Tiie lo41ow'lnQ per son\ •r• 00!119 ~I
ness"' l(A LEIOOSCOPE A.-TIST
MANAGEM ENT ~·~ Norlll M<11'1
Slrttl Sant• An•. CA 91701
A•osdat• 'F"rqu,on Ent,.rorlW'\.
In<., " Catiforrua corpor4Uon SU NOrtn M.lln St-.tt. S..nto An•. CA 97101
Tiii, bu\IMU Is tondu<llld by. (Of· _., ....
A•Q\datp tFe,.qu\Oft
Enlerort\.fS tnc,
W1ll1bm W Ff'r9u\Oft, Jr,
Preslde'lt
Tiii\ '14ttmtnt w.u lilf'd wllll 11\f'
County Clerk ot OrMQe County Ofl Oct
16, "'•· WEINFELD& TAYLOlt
Attot,..T1•tuw
8'•'lhl•" Coftlet, Suite 40S
1440 H. Har1'0r 9 1vtl.
,wller1on, CA tlUS
l'om
Publl\htd Oran~ Co.Jst O.llv Piiot.
NOv, '· 16. 73, 30. 1'16 4S'lt 76
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
$-)t111
HOTICf TOClll!OITOllS
5Ul'IElllOll COUllT 0 1' THf'
STATI 01' CALI t'OllMIA l'Olt
THICOUHTYO~OllAHOIE
Ho.A·OU7
E\t•t"'' JOHN MOODIE 0«•_,,
NOTICE IS HE AEBY GIVEN t~ '"" cr•clll0t1o Of lllO Abo.,. n•mlld _.....,,
t,..t ell OO•lOn\ h•vln9 < llltM OQ611\\I
Ille .. Id d&<.,._nt ••• ••flul,..., to 111~
I~ willl lllt MCeUery vOUC .... f\. II\
ttw olfltt ot 111t cle•I< ot tllt -"" 111111<1 court, nr to or•\ltftl lll«m wllll IM
ntct\ury voucher\, to tllt u!1(1fr<l<l'lt<J
SALLIE T. REYHOLOS, Mlmllltr
J.-MES 0 OUNOEASON 1' l1tw Coroo•~tlM. Atto•"'Y' •t y .. U~l• Pa-d4 V81en<IA, 5ull• IOt LAl)UM
Hill\. c.-nn>. •"tell 1, '"" 1>1«" 01 bu\on~<< Of t!M Uft0~•\11)1\f'd lfl •II m••
'"" """"'nlnQ to th• nt•f• Ill ...,,,, ,,,.
c~t. within four monlll• •ll•r Ill<\
lint ovt>1to11.,,.. of"''' no11t~.
Oatl!d Novomb<'r 10. ltl6
LILLI! J MOODIE
"ll"'l"l•tr•t'I• with tr.I
Wiii AMlt•td of lht Wiit
ot '"' •bovt n•moO ~t SAl.UI T. lllYHOlD\. 1111•-JAMISD OUNOallloOH,
A Lo• CW....ttioft
AltotN'f••tLO• lml l'a-•V•lttte .. , S...•m . ~Hllll,CAtU~
T..._._. 17141U M OH
AfWWy * A-l11lslr•trl1
Mtll Wiii •-aeol Pullllt~ 0.1tn90 C .. \t OAll' Piiot
Nev '' U >0,•,_.. Ot< 1, ltt• ~,.
l.l~ STAR GA'ZEK"..;i
AAlll ~CLAY LIOU.A 1l AMA " ~ ,_ 0"'1,..., °""' ~ ~ G ..H. " ..... <Ii ....... """· -· u ~~ lo dftotlc>p -. IOI w..,,....,, ~!1 s. .oocj--~to~ 7'
.,f voo-lodloc b41 alfr\. ~TAIHollt IC---· I y.., Jl-'"' ~·~~ r,-....·..!'~~ ) -· u c... ~ °'"""'" lf: l>CM ~r: ~-·· .JOM\4 • .... l4T•--.. -~·'H~~ • ..,_ P,'...... 6)0..---te=,:r ,1• .. _,..,,_
~w•r •• '..... ~ ,:;;:.':"' :rn:·.i11 ...-n-... .. =: ... t.. t:~ nf:Ji·ll II=-.1..._ 11St.tt
.-oi:· u ~ NC. •• .t~!-"6 CNllCa jJAlr :ira ~c:= CMIKAlllN ~"'"''" Im:.. :; ~,= ... •'t u ''-' .. _,, 11T.,. ~··~ ~~~ g.J>t.!!tll 1 ;:r-"c.o..w n......, . ...~a· .. '.. .,... -uo ;?~ ~~ II~ Aq\IMllll ~,utr u 22r.-ll~ u""' .... '"" "~~ .ou-.11 u -T H~ ,.; .. " ~ r.~ ~~ e= ..!:.~~22 In S4 Do-u si.... vw..a $1To f7Afl«-lo VllOO • NCU ~ .. ~.IJ ,._., ~,.,,., !"'°""" .., "';· ti ~~ ~~ ~ ..... '1~ ·~ ® C)NT,,, -·" !~ If G-' ~ <U<ul ~f
PUBLl.C NOTICE
ft:ICTITIOUS IUSINISS
NAMl 5TATllltltlHT
Tllo fOll-1119 peuons •• <JolnQ bll.ll-11en•s: •
SO UTt4 E S.N COUNTIES PllOPES.nes lTO . H7'1 s-,u....,...
O< , Sltvor.OO. C•lltornlo ttU4
S •r•ll Ellu beth HAii, 1tl61
Svc-• Ot., Sllnr-. c..lftoml• t2t76
lto411n Louise M0<La99011. »t4 ~r:-St~ S.11 Oleqo, C..lltornlo
Ell101>e111 ~ M•<Oc>ftAld ms Wllco• St • San Oleqo, C.lllor'lla'1t0.
Tiiis lll11slneu " conducted 0y o
-r•l Ntl ... r\hlp ~·•11E. H•Y
Tllll 1l•tement wn Iii.cl wl111 tr..
Couftty Cftrl( ot Orenge CoutttY Oii Noy.
-•3,ltl•
l'Htlt
Published O•tf'I~ coot o.i1., Piiot.
Nov. lt,U,JO,aftd Oo<.1 ... ,. •11·16
PUBLIC NOTICE
lllCTITIOUS 9USllfEff
NAME STATIEM~NT
The loll-Ing °"''°"~ ore dOlnQ bu'1·
"t~st•·
CAL 1 FOlt N I A; I N JECTION
MOLOING ~o .. INC .. too B•l99l
Aven.... Co\t• MoH. C.Otlfornlat2617
CIMC.O •• ColltO•'ll• cor-oMlon
?00 8 tlQQ\ Avenue. Cosio Mesa. Qlllomlo tl621
Tttls busineu Is concl\Kteo a.,• CAI·
POtaliOft
CIMCO ~~tlGllbefl
Prnldeftl
Tl>!\ 51Alet'l\Ont was llled witll Ille
Couftty Cieri! ot Or•n91 Coun11>011-tmoer tO, ltlr -Putlti\M<I Ot •nqe CNSl o.lty Piiot.
Nov It· U. JO. •nO Oo<. l. ttl• ..,._,.
·PUBLIC NOTICE
fflCTITIOUS IUSINIESS
NAMIE STATEMENT
TPle f041owonQ oerson 11d01ngbusin"" ...
ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES & ~UPPL.IES, E NVIRONMEN TAL
CARE PRODUCTS, SOS Norttt Euchd. At\&~•rn CAllto'"•••190l
EnvlrOf\mflnt~t\, •~ • a Ca1ttol'rffa
<oroo•dt•on. SOS Norlh Euclid, AMttt-lm, CA•18&01
Th•\. tM.i'HM\\ h conductttd bv a car·
00f'11on
"Env1ronmtnt'1t\ tnc.,
Jo>to,.S. Oortm•n V1<.,· Pr~\tdt'n'
Th1\ ~t11ttome,,t w•~ ftlfld ~th the
Countv Cl~" o• Ora,.Qe County on O<t.
11 1916
"''°" Pul>41\llt'd O<an90 Co.l\I D<Jitv 1>1101.
Nov 1, t, 16, 73. 1916
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTf TIOUS IU511f ESS
NAME STATEMENT n-. toOow1n~ DefiOf\S are OOU'\IQ bus•·
Afl'\\.#S STRUM RIZZO & ASSOCIATE!> •
110 ~f'WOOl't C.C"tpr Or1Yf-Swtt> ?00
++t•OO'' 8fl~n Cahtotn1a9?660 t>nno\ P Roi/') 16U Alorw Street.
$.lnt6 AM Ololorn1a•2•0!>
Ol•l•r H Strum Jr 111 PTormntorv
Orove W.\I. Ne.,oort Be•tll, catot0<ftla
92M>O Th" bu\ones~ Is con<111ctod by <J
9""""''41 partl'W!r\ftlp
Ot'nf\1\P Ai\UO
Tiii\ \l~t•m~nt Wd\ 111~ \Oltll the
(.ounty Cl••I< ot Oran911 C.ounly on Oct.
lS 1'16. ,.,»6
Publl\...,d Oranq• Co•st Dally Ptl<X,
Nov l ••• lb, n. 1976
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUCNOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS eUJINllS
NAMI STAT•M•MT TM lollowlnv person ts Clolnv ~
~s•i•
ALA$CO !AUTO LOCATER AHO
SEllVICE CO I 1tl YOf'1°""" """"'
ln¢on Bee<ll, CA ~Me
Rot>ert l!d••t d T alOSky. 111:)0
tell!-Avt • l'OYflloln Yolltl'. C4 97l'OI ™' bu1.lnou ts cond\Kl-4 l>Y tn '"" 01v10u.i
Aolllett E Totos~Y
Thti '1Ate-nt WH filed '11141'1 IM
County Clorll ot l><tn9t CO\tn4y Oil Noy.
emlllef •• lt16 -11"'1t Publl\l>ed Or-C.O.n 0.lly PilOI,
NOv. t . 1', U . >O. ttl• I IJOS.1'
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU5 e USINEU
HAMI STATEMENT
T"" fo4l0Wln9 1141nont ttl dOl"Q Ml·
MS>\•\:
H·IC TOOL I. CUTT E,_ GAINOING
SERVICE. IS2S M•cAr111ur. BulldlllQ
Ho. 3, Cost• M .. A, C..llfnrnlo 97616
J.tm.s L. Hiii, 207t Arnold, Cl>sto •
Mesa. CA tUl6
Dottne l(lnru , 2SU Fordlltf'll,
Co\ta Mes•. CA tttQ6
Tttt~ 11us1,..eu Is cono11<1ed t>y a l•rnll·
eel -lne•Sllip
J6mt\L. Hill
This st•te,.,.nt We\ t•ted ""''II Ille
'°"'""Cieri< ol O••n941 County Of\ lfov· -4 ... 16 ..... Pu1111-.i o ... _ coou o.u y Piiot.
Nov '· 16. n. '°· "" . •10Jo'•
PUBLIC NOTICE'
l'ICTITIOUS llUSINEU
HAMI! STATEMl!NT
Tloe IOllOWlnQ per\011 ll dOlt'9 blN-N!">s•s·
R. F MAINTENANCE, 415 Mii
Street. Huntlnolon 8e•<ll. C..lltornt• .,..
R<>Oe•l<lt H-ard F..._. e~&
Roc:•y Frum•n. HS ttll Strffl, Hunl·
lnqton Be.ell, CAfllornlo t26At
This buslneu IS COl>du<led by •n ln-
dMau41
Rodft•l(k Frffman
tltfs stetffl'lent WH liled Wllft tfte
Counly Cler~ ot Oron99 C.Ouftly Oft No,..
.-4,1976
l"M01'
Pub41\Md Or anQO Coul Dally Pilot,
Nov •. 16, lJ. lO. 1'16 "°' ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS llUSIHISS
NAME STATE MENT
The IOllOWlllQ otr~n ,, OOlnQ buSI·
ftHSa\0
FtRST NEW YORK COMMODITY
OPTION LTO. 610 N•W-1 Cente• °''~· N-Porl Be .. <h, CA."'"'°
Da•IO L•.,••n<o Jtllrttt. lltut
Jasin•a. Av• .. Corona Oe t MM, C4.
'?6ts
Th•• buSl"'IJS IS COl'lducled Oy on '"' Olvlduol. '-
Oavld l . Jetlrles
TNs statement wo. 111.0 wltll the
Countv ct."'" o• Or•"oe County °" Noveml>oor 10, 1976 ,_
Publlslwtd Or•n90 Ce>.ut 0.loly PolOI.
No• •~. n JO ar>d ~c I. 1•76 4714·1•
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS BUSI HEU NAME STATEMENT
Tiit to41owlng person 1, oolnv Cluil·
MSSa~:
COME ANO GO TRAVEL, 114S S.
Cout Hl9~w1y. La9un• IM<Kll. CA.
'1651
St eptt•n Citrllon Goll. l'4·8
Marg...,lle. GorOl'la d~I Mar, c .-92675
This b<.o\lMU I• conou<ted by dn In·
dlvlcluAI
Stephen c. Gott •
Tiiis \totement wH tltt<t with '"' COllnty Cieri< of Or•n911 County°" Nov·
1---'""".,-,c-,-,-T-1-o u_s_lll"'"u--s1-.. -1ES-S ___ I em>er 4, 1976.
l'UttO NAME STATl!Ml!HT Publl'lhld Or.,..ge Cooll D•llY Piiot. ,...::::~llowln9 1141rsons ••• doln<J bus!· Nowr!IM' •. 16.13. 30. 1'7•. 4531-76
B t. B Depression Gian, 7164 Westminster CA
Rooer1 Jtrold Scl'IUlti. Mn O\a~•
Circle, HunllnQIOl'I Buell. CA. '1~
MM4a<et Ros• Scttullt. 911?
Olano C11c1e. Huntlnoton lle•Ch, C4
'1~1s ll1Jslnen It conau<1'° bY I
~r•t Pi'tr.enhip
Rot>en J $th111u
Tiiis state'"""t WH 111\ld wllll Ille
County c.ierl< of 0••1190 C.OUMy °"
NO~ml>tt 4. lt76
..... II
Put>l11/tet1 OronQt Coosl O•llY Pllol.
NOvemt>e• •. t•. 1J. 30, H/l •!'0416
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHEU
NAMI! STATEMENT
Tl1e tollow1119 .,.,..,.,•re dOlnQ ~I·.
,.\\oll
SOUTH ERN CALIFORNIA
L(ASING, 1000 Ou••• St•ttl. Suite''°·
Nt•oort Beach. C•lltornta'1'60
E•o•I• EQul om •nt Co .. a
C..lilornl• co•oorttlon. llS Nortll Sul·
ter Sl•ffl. Slotklon, C•lllornfa tSlln
Tiiis bu\iMn i\ conOuctlld b'f • (Of•
Dorellon
E•q•t·s Eq11lpmen1 Co.
Wyn DIOlttto,
A)\l\tiJnt l re•iurer
l ttl\ \lol•m<tnl wa. Hied wlt11 11\e
Cou11t1 Cttr' of OrMO~ CO\lntY Oii Oc· '°°"' "· 1'16. l'Ot4t
Put>ll\lltO Oren.,. co .. t Delly Piiot,
Novem""r •. tt n. 30. tt1• '607 76
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'IGTITIOUS IUSllHSS
NAM& STATaMllfT
T1w lollowlf\9 -'°"' ••• dolnQ 11\1\1·
...S\•\• MOS SCALE llfTERNATIONAL.
•UI 5'1ot•lor ,..,.nue, No f ·l, °"'• Mew cam11
St"'' Eno lnter lno. Lid • •
(alllomlo coroor•llon, l~St S.-k>f
""',No A·l.ColleMeH.CA9761l
Tn1s bu\•M\\ 1, <Oftducleo lllv • cor· -·''°" 9..,,, En91~1nv. ltd
"-' w Soni<" PreslOtnt Tl\I\ \letemtrtt w .. Ille<! "'4111 ,,.
(Oumy Clerlt ot 0.•1199 County Oil NOv, ... ,. .....,,
l>ull!I-Or ... 91 C.0.U o.llY Pll04.
Nov •. t•. U. JO. lt16
P UBLIC NOTICE
--~-----~---~--l'ICTITIOUS BUSINf'SS
NAME STATl!MENT
The IOllOWl'IQ person .. llolnq lllu\l·
r.esus·
OAMAR BUOYS UNLIMITED,
7180 H•iird Avt • Wtstmln•tff, CA
92'61J
Oannv Lee Martin 71SSt
Brot>l<llurst :t llS. HuntlnQton 8H<h, c ... ,.46
Trw~ t>usl,..n ll cOllducteo t>y •n 1~
OMOUtl
Denny L Martin
Tiii~ \l•lemtnt wH llled wll" the
Cou"tv Cltrk ot Oranqe County on Nov-em~ to.""· .......,
Put>ll\l\fd Or•"'ae Coost O<ltty Pilot
Nov 16 1l 30. and De< 1 1'16 o:i. /~
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 9USINISS
Ht.ME STATl!MENT
,,,., tollowlno person It ootnq bv\I·
ttl!U ...
R EGE"ICY IN TE.-IORS, 15
l<a'l\iltll Courf, NowPort llot<ll. c .-.
91"61
Anlt• JOYCO Palm.,. IS ICam.>111
Coun. Nownort Ouch, Coll •?"6.l
T~ls Dv\•nen i• <<>ndu<led Oy "" '"' dlvldu•I.
Anlla Joyce Pel mer Tll•~ \l•l~mtnt w•\ tllt'(f wllh 1111'
Co1mty Cl••• ot O••n90 County on Nov· emt>Pr 10, I ?16
F6'oll7
Pul>li\""° Or<1n9" Coe\t 0.llv Pll'll Now. It. 73. JO,ar>d 0"< 7, 1'16 41)<1.16
PUBLIC NOTICE
t'ICTITIOUS 9U51HISS
HAMESTATIMl!HT
TI.e •oll~w•llQ O"«on I< Clo!"'! 1>1111·
~, .. ,
ANDERSON 1'SPH.-LT P"VtNG
CO tU C•rftotlon A ... C&\te Ml>>.t.
'" 91676 • Ml<"*•I P•ul Ana.,..,n •s1 G.t<lla·
llOft Avt (O\I• M~•• CA 91•1'
Tl1f\ bu\l""U I\ <ondu<ltd by..,, 11'-
dovlOUtt.
Mkh1t~I Pewt A~··.,.,
Thi• tllttom•nl wn 1111'<1 wttll ,,.,.
Ci!UntY Cieri! of Of.,.,,.. COUlll'f on Ot L n,1t1~
f'U.m
PVllll'11ed O<•noe COA•I Delly Pllo4,
------------•-5_5'_1_• Oct 7•.Nov 1 • 16 "" u 14,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS BUSINESS
HAMl $TATEMIOHT
•The lollowl"Q De<M>n I• dOlr>g l.t\ISI• """'' .,, CALIFOlllflAN HOl~EATIC
Sl!ltVICll. Malll"O "dd•tH' P 0 . BoK
!ISi, Co<I• Me\" G1' '1676; UO
Cdrl-Ceil•Me<•.CA.'7\2t
Wolfrld L t. Wll~t. tJ•J Corl""°"'·
CP\I• '°"" .. •CA t7Ut
f)M\ ttu\11\0U " tf)llOucttd DY NI 111° Olvl(lll~t
Woltrld L A WllU
r111\ \ttlttntnt we< lllM .. 1111 tl\f
(91/nl v tt-r• of Of an~ '""""' Oii Ck ,_,,. ,.,.
"""' "'"""""d Qt.o""" Co•<t o,,lly 1'1101
Nov 1' U JO end 00< '· ltl4 41114·16
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS 9USINl!SS
lfAMESTATIM.HT
,.,_ toll-1119 ot•wns are dolnQ OOll•
''""°': 8 &AVTY CLllflOVI! t!"TC .. 1'11
W.ttcllff Or1vt, Nt wport tlt"<ll, GA,
l.EREL, t NCOAPOAATEO, •
C•ntornlll coroortllo". 1•31• \/It
Strett•.Hunllnqton&eMh,CA .,W
Tltls llllltM\S I\ COllGU(led by" COi"
ll0<'-110ft
LlltEl.,INCOllPOltATEO
LIMlo,.l.~ltHfll
Tiiis \te1emem wn llltd "'411' '"" Cou11ty Clt<ll or Ofolll)e Cev111, Oii Qd,
lJ, 1'74
llltUlt
Pu"4hhfll Or""°" Cout 0.tlly l'llol
NOV 1 t '' tl, .. ,. ..... I•
TNIUN•~ °" tM er.,. CClllt
DAILY -PllDT
CLASSIFIED
ADS
Yeu Con s.1 It. ftlld II
Troch It With o Wont M
(842•5878)
0... (41 SenflCI
fotl (ltdlt ~vol
J
. •••••••••••••••••••••••
•ROllS: .Ad .. rtlsers
ta.a..ld clwclc their ods
dally -4 Npcri ....
,..._ 1.-cllahty. TM
DAILY '8LOT 011U1M~
HGlblflty for ttM first lrti
cornet IBMrffott only.
P'\Mihtt''s Motie~: ~ All real estate adverlis
in this newspaper Is sub J~<:t to the Federal Fai?"
llous1ng Act of l961'
which makes it illegal lo
adve rtise "any pre·
ference, Ii mltation. or
dJscrimro· atioo baS<!d oil . . t race, co or, religion, sex.!.!
or national origin. or a rr
Intention to make ao~
such pre(erence. ltmil:s ~
llun, or discri minat1on.' ·:
This newspaper will nof
knowingly accept any'
a d vertis ing for r ear
estate which is in viola·'
tion of the law.
••••••••••••••••••••••
Geftft"al '001,: ••••••••••••••••••••••• -
••
HUl'tffnqton Beach
Deane Ho~
Clean. neat. 4 bedrm,
fam rm, recenl)y pamled
in and oul. lioal door 1 pat1u, tic back yard1 Xlnt fa mily home. Of~
fered at a low ~1.soo,
Hurry on lhis one! !
1555 W. Baker. C.M.
Neal to Merkel Bn ket
549·8655
SPANISH VILLA
JIEDROOM.
+POOL
Beautiful ti led entry to
huge living r oo m
Crackling fireplace.
go urm e t kit c h e n
w/breakfasl area. Servt>
thru window to prival~
patio. Space Cor R.V,
parking. Localed near
schools and shoppin~.
Bargl(in price at $54,900.
Hu.try! Call 963·6767. ~N 1110 · 11 ~ fl/N t01!(N•r/•
[ '1 lfillHl1
Ph :S40•3666
840
We're here t o help!
•BLUFFS*
GREAT 4 Rr 3 llu C Plan.
4 yrs new. On t:ul de sac-;
patio & "UndHk, by
o wner. Prine o nl y .
$114,000. GH-6806 orl
8311-11'173 I
I
Classified ads sell bit
Items. s mall itl'ms or
o ny it t·m .. lusi cull
642-5671'1. ---------
Sc<! what's und1•r nur
UAILY PILOT CllRl~n11\.-; Ttn ;i-:
<'Very Thurl'day m the
<...13!>).t(tl'd sect ion
For mfo l0Jll our
<;hrli1lmJ' Ad \.'1~er 1
i;.t2 ~1711
~-~-~ ~----
Oltly lM Oeilr Hot IM"Y tell1 ,.., ""°',. -tn '°"' IOe•I c-""11, ... -rrw
H !iiijj(,)1
~-~.~ ••• , ••• H°!!!!.~~~•~• .. •••• ~:~~!.'!~.~ ....... 1~~!~!.~~~.~~te•••••
Ge .. r.. 1002 Genenl&. I 002 G~.-..a 1002 G al ••••••••••••••••••• ••• ~.~.~. ._..._ .._... I 002
COVl .... GTOH • ••••••• ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••"••••••• .. ••••••
" l .... COM• ----------, ._,LU " _. ~~~~
$123,500 PROPERTY COM -VIEW+ POOL
1700 r . . 2 HOUSES
sq t. owner H !lulte ... l SPYGLASS RIDGE w1Ui f1r_epl;m• J>lu" thruc On A. OT h~ h<.'<irooni~ Three . Two luqw m•w homes on $ 87 500
bedroom, 2 hath apart-a lot l(l('Jl<'d •n pt"1m~ 1 '
ments ~ t ur gar age tfunttn~on 8en<'h rerlhtl •
Best buy 111 thi'I VER :irt•J l::J<'h home ha~ <3J New exctusrvety l1~ted 4 BR 3 BA
popalitr modd. Cati lo thrltl-IJrJ(l' bl·drcwm~ Burlingame hm. pooitionoo on a lrg ir
day.6467171 and doublt-garugc The r eg. c ul·de -~ac lot for m aximum
<JPtN 111v • .,\•i.N11 '"' , mu~:.1vl' k1ll'hl•n' hove . •· . .
I au uw bu.tit 111,, uwn~ 1~ privacy at captures a dramatic view
• IJIJiil~·lJ· w1Jhng to i.ell on .in 10 of both rolling hills. blue Pacific & ,. , JilJH1E terc)>t only 1111111 <.:011 fo !"te Jights. Gar3en setting, pool ar.ea L,~;;~~=~!1-!1!-~·~-~·~·~~, -.hiiwing JP1ioaotmt-nt melds . gas. BB outlet. conversation ...:: ---1711HW2 2$3~ _________ ... rl0f l•••1 \l.tl\I I"•,, .. I ' gas ftre pit, beneath cstm la th over•
SMELL THIS [\:iOI fli head +auto. irrig & garden light!~. :~~1~'':1c~~err;cl h~~t~1~'! :~ lt1ftHj~ !~~~:: ~:;~~1te~~J~~~~9t~tet-c~~~
plush carpet:. & fresh · -laundry r m & shoot. bltn wet bar, ca ~"C:Ot.~q~~u~~rc~~~? ble tv, frml frplc dining, spac. family
baths. F amily room. BACK IAY r m w /brick frplc. 3 c ar garage
fplc. all the t·xtr;.i~! &arce voicant lol 66x300 w/openers. lrg bonus rm & tile entry
G l C t M I ror hon.1· lo11cr:-I Zon•"'' rea os :i esa oca '" & MORE. Truly a fantast1·c opportun1·. •·on h I J A I. fully fc nct>d. nu.'c u near 11c oo s. us ty at $187 ,500. hs ted at $6R,500 Cal nc1g!lborhood Hurry un
S«>-ll.Sl I.Ju:-Ont•. t1)>k111g S~.liOO
Cull540 11~1
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
41EOROOM +
FAMILY ROOM
1/J ACRE
Qwct tree I ml'd ... trC'ct to
private dnvl'. Secluded
entry lo lav1~h ll11inJ:
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
TOUGH CHOICE
$49,900
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
LIDO ISLE MB>ITHRAMEAM
Spacious l Story Home with Tile
Roof 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths. Near
Sandy Beach and Pier. La r ge
Secluded Patio Area. 2 Car Garage.
Street to Street Location . $132,500
111 DOVER DRIV! 631-1800
COM-DUPLEX
$139,500
Sunny patio divides this recently blt,
spac. 2 BR unit w/guest s tudio & bath
+ charming reblt 2 BR, 1 BA frnt unit
w /frplc & huge Elm tree in front.
~
675-2311
llG CANYON IEAUTY-$271,500
Exquisite taste indecorinthis Gorgeous
Versailles by Deane Homes. Luxurious
-from the gliste ning ltal~an white mar·
ble e ntry lhruout the entire 4 bedrm &
den home. Formal DR. 4~ baths, air-
cond. View !!
2111 San.JoacpRHilsRood
NEWPORT CENTER, M.I. 644-4910
Beautiful Deane Home in University
Park. 3 Bd~~oom. C~
lra l air. Fabulous decor, profess.
landscaplng&murhmore.$109,000
A COUJWILL IAMla CO.
644-1766
21'1 SANJOAO\JINHlllS'-0.
IN NEWPORT CtNlEA
HooHS for Sa HCHISH r ors. iuil~ ·r ~o~· , .. , ' •r-1t7.. DAIL~ r'ILOT 87 ••••••••• ·~· ......... ._..... ............................ __ _._ ______________ ;;__~..;_.;;;,.;;._-==-
~~ .......... !~.~~ ~ .......... !~~ =~~··;~;;!=~ ·~··;~; ~-:~;;;. .. iOii
• * •• * ** .... * * * .... * * * .••.•..••.....•••••••.. ····•·••••••·••••···•·· •..•.••.•••••••.•••.••
MANAGER WANTED •••••••••••••••••••
For a well known. expanding reaJ
estate company. Opening a new office
ill Costa Mesa. Must have experience
& integ rity Salary plus+. All ap~licaliC?llS confidential. Apply to
Daily Pllot. Box 791-Classi fied
Advertising. 330 W. Bay, Costa Mesa.
92626.
G....,.ol 1002 IG~al 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··················~···
CUSTOM IUILT
4 bedroom. family room home on one
of Newport's finest streets. Built.ins
everywhere! Outstanding-master
be droom w /adjoining s tudy. 4
fireplaces. ~500. Barbara Aune
642-823.5. (P5~
64U23S 644-4200
901 Dowr DrlYe H•rbor View Center
lrvtM •t Cem11U1 V•ll•Y C..ntec
7S2·H14
New -under construchon, Contemp
Cape Cod Oak f1rs . S BR. 411'.i Ba. 3
frplcs. Lndscpd. Boat shp. $375,000.
BILL GRUNDY , REAlTOR ..
341 Buy\•rl• CJ ·1n• N B bl!i · blbl
IOOZ 1Gttwrof 1002 .................•.............•.•.........•..
PIUVATE
BEACH ACCESS
4IRR~ed
to SI 09,500.
The pnce 1s rll[tit. thl
IVl';lllOfl I!> .1;n•.il, tlw
mi.tr l>drm 1s 1i:rnnl I hl'
rar(l b pool Sill'<!, lhc
.ind I S f l'I.', lht•
bathrootn?-nrc two Jilli
Ult' hft"Ph1ceii urt' loo
644·72 I I
/Jn NIG(l
fil\IU 'f f...
l\55LJ( IA If 5
DON'T.UY
A DUPLEX IH COM
-----------------.. ·~Before you 've lll'\'ll our ocean 11il.'W Each unit
has 3 Br. 2 Ba. wt ulmoist
2000 sq. fl • 2 frplcs. wt-t
btlr. lnd.ry + over:.ize 2
cur garage . All fo r
~49.500. Tolul rent $900
mo $25,000 h:indl<'i. Call
ownt>r 1714 I 4934814 Pnn
only.
Stein) 1032 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IRANDMEW •
LAKEf'RONT HOM E
110 mi l es to 0 C
Ait'J)Ort >. Two-story. •BR + 38A, pool, tennis, etc
$89.000. Tr1 $10.000
down. ALSO . o(( lnke
4 8R , 28A SRSl ,SOO
OWNRtBKR 540 OSSS & sinsw
, ..
....... •4••···. _. ___ --.. . -·---~ -··-------··::-. ..... --..--··· . . . . -. -. . . . . . . . -~ -.. -. -. . -... -......... -... ' .... --. ._ ... -·-.. . -.
.r
lllJ DAILY PILOT TuMday November t&, 1976 Ho..t For Sde ~~Fol' S. COftBllltcJCll Honn FwNIMd ...... U ... J t 1• U....1tr1• H
••• •• •• • •• • • •••• • •• ••• • •• • • •• • •• • • • •••••••• ••• Pr...,.+, f 600 • ••• •• •• •• • • • • • •• ••• •• • •• • •• • •• • • •• ••••• •••••• •••• •• • ••• ........ ....
Ho.MtForW. Hoae-IForU. jw.wtfot-5* H•wpotileach 1069 · __.leoch t069 ....................... H.tlrqow .. •h ll40CottoMeu 1224 ,._.toowleodl Jl41
•••••••••••••••••••• & •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . -....... •••••••••••••••••••••• ....,, Fountaltt Valley I Ol4 tr.IM ' I 044 '"'-l044 ............................................... BA YFRONT 5Mr? ..... Xhtt Area. ····~~·~·~~;;;.····· i<~;~·;·t,~~·;·;~~·~~-=
•••••T••R•r •T••H•l•S•O•:_:• •···. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ofulo _j t C>fhc• bulldans. s~c· ~ Br, l-. be. dlJhwshr. Attract.lvt ' OR ? Ra paint. crpC4, drpa, RIO. J y ,, lacul&r vlow. IUXUliOU-\ bltnis. p11t1 0, beaut p V alone lrplr tncd Ctr IU 134$/m o .. f'OR LUXUHY • • • ~ ex1-euuv omce&. An xlnl landscp. cloH to etumem .. ~e·r yrd ,hullt'rt ~or~l ~Ap.
POOL JACUZZI ;Mic tnve.tment lit S430.000. tary. Jr.llltch. & Edison wallpoper ·S38$. mo ~ Qe ' br Z baUI R/
:.q ft dHorult-d 11 llLLGRUHDY High. I mt to bch monthtomonUlorl~ast'. 0~n. t d • ,_,o.
pt'rfecllon. rislh<'tlroil DOLL HOUSE. m qulet area. 2 Bdrm Rtdtor 675-6161 ~001m1 o . uao 1417 lm~-d occpy call Ail llSO/~g. · 98~~i ....... 0•; eti1hng11, cu,lom Jrui>t>s. & ronvcrt. den $145..000 G M I v• g:.i~ BllQ, .iuto 111ir dr For Sal..t Md oorge ort n lo ac 531~ All
Unbellt-vault'. S!JK.$00 SPACIOUS 2 bd h l b · k c Nd 1 1 N.wpori leac:J1 l 169 ~8&40 Dr . rm. om c. argc n c ommrrt'lal In us ir " ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 3 2 88. oew paJnt •
Ph 9112 77:i1 ONE FOR TUHlllt'f'IVJNG patio w /fountains & o utdoor garden· Bld1. sn~.ooo Aopolnt· • IMM AC. M eso Verdt• cpt,s. cov'd patio, am 1N1"Llt I:. Nl::TWOHK lnMft.lG room. $lGS.OOO mentonly. Udoblc 2 br,2ba.100 t home,3 Br. ,..., 811, Ideal mo.&41-'&U
LR r.·xpene n"e the comfort of th1·s larne Rfcftard D F-.y bar 'Y· gub. tenrus prtv~a lpc. Clo"e to achools. -: ONLY $46.000' • c. .. ,. , • mmno. occpy w Aug sJloc)&, ~uch & fw)"l'. $425 3 Br. fam rm, c])lS, drpj,
t::nd uuct. 3 Jlr, romlc:i, Colonyplan400home.Over22005q.fl.in· COZY brick (rplc . fo r s nuggle time. &A.stoea.Re~ 111t.$46S.ti75·6127orl7l•I> mu.1111. last +s1oodcp fncdyd,nrbc:h.1hop'a.~
huge bonus rm . 2 l'U• cludesformalstep-uplivingroom,s tep· add:> a n inl1mule touch to this 3 bdrm. __ 64o·l700 4J6.:Kl~ ~283S schl1.S3SO.~-&LS$. -
gar. 903·11377 Skr. down dining room and large family home. $147.000 ~·~[.-Udo ble 2 br. 2 bu. 100· lo MESA VERDE 3 Br. f'am 3 er. 2 bath. xtnl lot•U.:..
Huntlngtonleoch 1040 room,~ke~Jorgraciousllving.This4 <Wta-1800 bay.Club.tennisprlvt(!S. Rm.dblCple.compMel)' s•oo mo. h l & laat .
••••••••••••••••••••••• k....i h • · 1 t ...... 'LIDO Dll:ALTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• lmmed. oc:cpy lo At~. redecorated. lmmed 000.3388 OWNEH MOVES; 1'11.111 """""°9rrt ume IS convement Y ocate\i f ~ WATERFRONT lst.S4~.675·6727 or (114> posseulon S42S rno.
talwn setting, lt t·i:~. inachoice lrvine Village.Privatetennis 3377Vtalldo,N.I. 613-7JOO DUPLEX 436-3419 Grdnr opllon al. Call (
trees, 5 hcdrrns, family andp'ool.$85.SOO.Callfordetails. PIER & DOCk Luxunv furn. condo~ S4S·36SOorS4S"23l3
rm, xtru balh11. area ol L ... :-..... I 052 Ne---' •-ach I 069 k' nl
OHLY Sl7S
3 BR, tM BA . co••
pool. Sharp • • c lea-.
Ava il Nov 2Jat. Ar,.
84'1..as.s3/eves 9$3.StU .
CALL NOW 752-7315 CICJIMICI ,......,...... -....,.. • -Buy now & select your overloo g. ten s crt. 3 n--•o1nt c x e c ut 1 v t' h 0 me i; • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• own Interior. Won't last. br 1700 tno. 640-1751 -...-3226 SJ5 .5 oo Tarb e ll , DONALD M. BIRD HARIORVIEWHOME $190.000. --••••••••••••••••••••••• K.ealtors. cull 962·5566. .A. •ew~ • d s l Da Bl rt Associates Realtors 'v ._._._ Original l'ort()(in Bull er.675·1233 HCMIMsUnfurNshed pac ous n11 u s * DUPLEX * BEST DUY in the areu. Model. 3 Br. 2''1 lia + I Proo«tv lOOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo. 3Br. 2~ ba. 1 3 Br 2 Ba, fplc, bflM. Grcatlovei.tmt•nl Wesl Nine churming bonws rm w/lofl bdrm & nc:CMM •• r.~ •• ~ GeMt-al 3202 ~ n .. Breathtaking view patio, encl yd, cloee aie
Each 2 bedroom 10., 1 ..... 1_ 1044 lnine 1044 Spa111sh·stylc condo, 2 full bath, uir cond , •••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• o( beach a nd harbor school &:shops.~ ,..... Udrms. 2 balhs & Spanishtcle."'>01,lotsof 67StepsToSa.d romLR&MBr Upper Al\5.30,960-3389 d o w n . $ti 7 . ~ u u ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . h ,.. U 1 TUSTIN. lovely family lower pt'd d .. W s paccous ncs s wit briek work. new lndsci> 17 ntMotel/Ap\ c sun ecaa. O NB/HK.K S40 OSSS WOODDHlD(;t; Twnhme. BHA.l'llD NEW Turtleroc.•k bl!aut1ru1 urlenLalion to ang + moch more 1400.000. $100.0000b•n ~~story 4 Br. $SSO Oub bse, pool, jat\lul, --------~ 3 Br 3 Ba, /\/C, $79,900. Glen Plan 111. by owner. N1gut'I Golf Cuurse OPENllOUSE Own<'r Carry Balance ..._.._.,..(714) sau.na,tennistrt.etc. iJt•IMJto. i-:~s/Wknds2f:'l·439·2634 Completed Nov. 15. l'a:.ldul decor Priced SAT&SUN 11-S orappl Agenl67:MMS ~P•••mo 3207 for S 7 SO Imo . ,._.._ 3242 VACANT
_... ByOwMr
llr~er'i:. pcr:.onul home
In Nt:wport West lrJCt
llas been rcduct·d Sl4
J w.l profrsi:.1onally de
coralecl
SCOTIREALTY
5J6a7533
Choice view lot. On flor rompt sale. 161,000. 1824 Port Sheffield ••••••••••••••••••••••• <714)49)..C9()6 •••••••••••••••••••••• llanch San Joaqum"t'on-greenbelt 4 Br Ftim Rm. Fee Land $l59.,SOO --------~ Br, 3 ba t o•nhou1e.
do l.eao;e option al library. din rm. 2 ba, liiiiil By owner (714)998-2228 8 UNITS 3Br. 2 bath. Across from BToro 3232 Sparkling new coed.' t?d;iy:. markl'l VJluc powder rm. club pnv. Bay beach. Lovely view. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5470. Call "l.;Ua .••
J or rcnlorforsalc Sl"'' 500_ c ,u ""'"" -.... EWPORT SHORES In ~La Mesa, laxer u S490yrly. 675·1304 2A"'-Pond .. b IM6-137lcw~e.-.. 7~·· l''" ""'· .,..... ""°" " pers. Only 15<;{ down .,.,,.. ora. • r,
Sllo-1•500 "' "°1 WATERFRONT Seller wall carry balance Coronadet Mar 3222 2ba,3yearsoid. 124-4 C"W U Pk r .. Approx 2000 sq. Ct-lBH, . right on the be1 c~ A real money maker. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 549-1862 Nr. n1v ctcrs l.ogunaleoch 1048 2BA, 14'xllf (ftmrm + 3
Twnhrn 28r, 2Ba. wet ••••••••••••••••••••••• d<'n Lovl'ly lrg cor lot·li Two-story 3 bedroom, Call542·3676. JASMINE CREEK'S 3 Br, Fam Rm, 3 Sa,t---------
bar frplc din rm bst loc VIEW LOTS * yrs (lid Nit1.• bltn kit. bath. lots of patio & deck· most popular model-w/\lu. Mbrshp Sun/S.Ul * RENTALS * .,, ~;;~~:::::;;;;;;~~ S8!1.7!'i0.ownr640-4626 * Cln~t· to good schls ing. Owner anxious. 3.adrm. home + 3 unils, Plan 2 with 2 bedrms. & Clbinc.$450.963-l455 2BR 2._..~ 1Sll
• lly Ownr. Imm'"'' 3 br, 2 You can choose from a s79500 c 114951407 $95.000. Call PRESTIGE Anaheim. lncomeSll, den: on greenbelt with lBR'd.., .,-...·:······ .. ~ variety of locations & · a · HOMES, 645-6646 ocean view from patio. A S42Smo 4 br, 2 ba, incl use • e ... • .,.., · • .. $CTI -famill Special bu, m "1'he Ranch". Dbl prices. /\II have ocean ('UMM INCS HEAL TY Yr. Pncc$115,000. bargain at $725. per mth of Lake ForestSUn &Sail 2BR. & Pool ........ $411
gar .. lge yd .. vegetable views. OPEN HOUSE Pnnc1puls only on yearly lease. lnchJdes club. 549-11162 2 BR, Pl•n A• ........ s:IOO Beautiful lcn ~ar with garden, grcal lndscp'g. ....ORINS REALTY LAGUNA NIGUEL Daily l..S.2011 Kings Rd. Pyramid Exchangors a 11 am c n 1t 1 es 38R,2Ba ............ $430
large 1Jdrled family room XJnt t.'Ond. $08,000. t'rin ,... Ntiw crpts. New drps, 3 BR. huge ram·rm. 833-1768 Club~use, pool jacuzzi. FomtalnV•y 3234 2 BR.&Den ........ $4'0 ~reen~~~adl~d ~a~~1~1~~ only . 551-5790 * 494-8057 * Newly painted. New v J E w + Income . 4..PLEX tcnrus courts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR. FR,2Ba .•••• '4•
Down will handle. -l'-v""t,-P-ty-.-0-e-c-'r_r_i_c_ld-l---...:....:.-..::.......:....:.---I ~wy:u~i~~i:~~ ~~il~np~ ~::g· Jim Boe. Agl. l.ge$pacious unltsinxln COLE OF NEWPORT Edinger/Brookhurst ~art:~ 8:4'.~.:::::: =
531·5&10 1\vnhrnc. Single story, 2 LAGUNA preciale 4DR, 2BA, Costa Mesa rental are REALTORS super 3 br, 3 bu, fplc'. 48R .............. $41S
lntf!ntational Real br + convert. den, 2 ba, HIDEAWAY fr pie. r>ri vale yard . FEB> THE DUCKS on t;>eaut. cor. lot. Ver 2SlS E . CslHwy, CDM DW. lndry rm. $395/mo. Andwehave•.)tbenfor ,.
Estate Network upgr3ded cpt'g & drps .. ~Y~:1t~c~l~~~dinr::r muny fruit trees and .. r r om th e I ~ c . ;~ fuo comm Odil)' 675-551 I 963-4S69 or 531·9545 Agt . lmmedlateoccuponcy
gar door opener. S58.900. ...,. p 0 1 & view of the hills ~ellcr is waterfront deck: 2·sly, s 'sou· TH COAST no fee. c.:1111 for appl SS2 9046 yam. a o. crrace m"''V"tcd $79 900 BR & .Playrm 3 b" 3 BR .• din. rm., fam. rm., 1---------tree house. 1 Mile totown "" " . ' . . ., ~. 1NVES1'MENTCO. rrpl., 3 Cuti baths +sew-Redec 3 br. 2 ba. OW, 2 ne~ four 11lex. cull VERSATILE "'" h "II h' r I CURTIS-""'"'Y Xlntcood. Walk to pools. R/0 d 536·6655 Jrt 4 pm. prm . .. & .,.,:.ic "' L is or on Y ~ tennis&ocean. $96.500 645-1103 Ing center. Spacious . nu cpts. rps. $375.
.... fJlj'!' ._.. .. ··~ .;"f\oor~J.ibrl w~~""'t ~.c;iv1riowtosee ~~~T'OflS CAYWOOD REALTY 4 br house, 2 br h ....... 0 custombome,adj.tocity 963-4SG9 or 531·9545 Agt.
red hin . .-.
-Real Estate
byMd/A.Y
mg rm .. mus e rm .. o · ' , 61f5!6&itb.v ' ""'°'" park. 2 bl ks. Crom beach. No Fee. ~~~~~~~~~!" f1ce or bdrm .. take your Monarch BayTen-. * S48al290 * duplex, Costa .Mesa Beamed ceil's. & top l-
cho1ce, but come see this ""'"'71 s .... _ S16Slc. Ownr. 645-7117. cond. thruouL $650 per , ..... nnf-•--L 3240 ho San Joaquin 2 ~' r ~ even ":"8 S . 3 Br entry area. Back ~aAo _,._.. ~ den. pvt patios on IOll beautifully lndscpd. PR€~TIG~ 4BR. 3liA. quality-built Bay. lge lot $62,950. lO'k mo. Agt.644._ ....................... course$4~.640-0997
dccoratl'CJ >I <orS) bdrm.. I HOME:S home. 3 car ~ar + many d wn . 201 l l orchid. tt.ffncJtoaleach •S. of Hwy, newer, 3 br. BR, 2 ba, 2·story, Wttla t---------3 bJt.h home, then decide. xtr:.is $155 9()() h u & k ~ES AV AILA BL& S85.!IOO JOON. Newpe>rt. NB YE./\GL~R RE/\LTV 556-8868 COMMERCIAL 2ba, !pie, lndry, no pets, uge pa o bac yard. r. U95., 67<. """" GOQd neiohborhood 7 Uve in Irvine Villa.f!e. 556-6171 SPYGLASS HILL, Vu, 3 Six sharp units. Near th -......,,...., "' ' W .. A bom
552-'iSOO
... _ h c--" k · Yrs old. $420/mo. Agt. e ... ve es avail. Br 2 83. last brand new ucac """ par . mg. 2 br. 1 ba. $325. mo. Vrly 963-5678, Ask for Dick. lease In ..
MEL TS IN i55~_2l·£7LOA0.0Cf:.· .·.·~ .· .. ~· MYSTIC HILLS. Mission Viejo I 067 house by owner. 640·1751 Upgraded surro"!ndmgs. tse 1r desired. Avail now. Walnut Square 3BR. 3BA, sauna. vaew· ••••••••••••••••••••••• FantasUcalcy pnced, a 708 Av0tado, CdM. F Clean 3 br. 2 ba, cptl, Ranch Cal.Home9
YOUR MINO View·Va~w! Grt!at exec. IMMEDl/\TE OCCUP-•Bdrm,3 Ba._rumpus !'m, mustseetoday. appt,557·7010or979-9744 drps, e ncl patio. Deerfield UnivPk ChJrm1n~ cntrywJy ~ome. $159,900. Agent, 38R, ram rm, frpk. lrg, NewPOrt Height~. Pnnc. WatetirontProp .. lnc. $345/mo. 963-456 Culverdale Col.Park :;;~~a~~~n7,1 ~~~·lr~~~ REALTORS 673·7601 r~.n1dce~ y u r ~;,,, ~ce only. Agt.645-420:J 121 JJ592·281 l ~x~i>Jrep!t~: iab:. 531-9545Agt. No Fee. 2 bdrm, your choice oU w1floort1Ht•chn~ ~tone c 1 ren sarca,..,,,.,,""". Wes tcliff·Harl>-or lndry, dbl frpl, bllns fromS340to$400.
rircplaCl'. occornlorRARE UN I V. PARK EMERALDBAY •BOMDREALTY• Highlands.Beaut4br,2 V 4 .L"'"CM 642.9918 FORLEASE:3bedrm,J 3bdrm,your choiceal t4
r ... , tu r" ~.· & .. 0 I I) r Chanc·cllor 4 mt. 21,~ Ba, ocr. ... u SIDE Gall ery of Homes ba, tam.rm .. upgraded A ..... CIOA • • ba b d 700 ft from $335. to$47S ~.. '~ ' ll>An Assume VA loan no 322 · ran new, l sq. · 4 bdrm your cho1"ce of• e1111rrJina t t•d . f'amll.Y fom·rm. drn·rm, many 1714J831-941 I laundry rm., new cusl . • CostoMHa 4 Landi g h /3 v
roorn & cheerful k II ••hc·11 upl(radcs, on cul·dc· sac. Reduced to $192,500 kcll:h. Approx.. 2,000 sq.ft. quabfyang. Bltns, copper ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar . ~525~:~. wlocfd; from $450Ntoo F~
with ovl•rheJd lluori·s. Appl only 552 9795 3 Dr & Dcn<or 4 Br ), 3 b:i . BY OWNER. 2GOO sqrt, Prin only call S42-7727for plumbing, sprinklers. MESA DEL MAR 4 Rr .... N ......... ~------1 Wh"t l v l'W By A 1111 be t d I Good area. Won't last ' ' gaavener. opets. UNCH REALTY it•nt lii:htin~ & vc.l'W or.TURTL"'ROCK GLEN J e wa er I'. egean i s . s ea appt.Agnt 64<1J03 South Coast In· FamRm,bllns .rplc,dbl FORLEASE 3bt..>d 2
1 I d oox ll56 "--• • owner. C:.ill 497·2724 or 11 at $92,500. New ever. .,.. · g /o r cd b k yd : r m. 551·2000 uV(' Y rear y;i r .'. " Pl:in II . 4 DR & /\lrium noans542·1!14S ythlng. V;icant neduccd Sc.I Clemmt~ 1076 '1estmentCo. w%r~t f:1~s.n$425,afst + ba, brand new 1900 sq.ft., ________ _
HO DEPOSIT on lge lot. /\vuil. Dec '76. $3,000 for 1mmed. sale. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SlOO I d N d Landing home w/formaJ UNfVERSITY PARK Vi "40 RETURN! Sl33.S00.552·979S 2 £or l , b est huy an ro TRIPLEX c n. ep. 0 · ogs. din. rm., ram r~, wet w. 3 Br~~ Ba+ bonus
Don't bo , .. rt out.• Gel ., 'Aguna. 2 2br hse~ jn 644·0997. 644· 77 •••HILLTOP BEAUTY. 544·5100 b $57" I Id
' ~ v TURTLEROCK L...., C ., •-h 1069 lmmaculate 3 BR. 2 BA. EASTSJDE BY OWNER . ar. .,. mo. IDC g rm,. Xlnl Loe. Avail N~ 1.ll Cuesta now Com· aguna anyo n on Hewpon-ac frplc, shake roof, two Near ne w w/xtras. t BR Cottage, E ·sade. gardener.N01)ets. 1. $495. 547·1044 or llar.ibly low priced 2 Plan8.3Br.2ba 56x.140' lot. Cute & wet ••••••••••••••••••••••• b r ll 64.5-7564 5313374 Cpts, drps bltns. $225. Roberts Re-atty 833-3215
Story wurm natur:.1 1 Frplc.Pauo&Atnum blt.maturetrees.branJ:c . BEAUTIFUL patios. on eaut1.u Y or • 642.Qt3 • 848·1688 --------......-:
tone' W.illp,1ptr. up $81.5000wncr SOSO. rent. Multiple list 311 bd f ·1 ~~~at~~~eS72~~. Jusl Loh for Sale 2200 4 ,.._ 2 8 r I I rd nabmey Shar p End
.:r;id1.-cl C'arp<.•t., cuMom o'"'-.,.,., .. or 675.3017 ing. Both hses for only uge rtn;_s. + ta mi Y · BER_,,A HENRY ••••••••••••••••••••••• o• a, pc, ge ya . Condo. 2Br. till blln5. · · .....,...,.,., $7 .. 500 640 7000 ncwcarpc .,.pam . • 10 • cl""'"'toschools $380 lst Comm pool close to dr;1pcs_ c1t-.1r1 & proud 1 - --... . • or OPE ... D"ILY laS REALTORS '492 4121 LOTS COSTA MESA """' . ' Twost.,y 3 Br 2 Ba lge yd ' bdr. f ormJI DH CO\ WALNUT SQUARE 4!17-2292 " '"' · • . &last.546-9342 2 car gar s3g5 Nr' Crwys . No lse 1325. crcd p.clto !168-4456 T 0 W N II 0 •[ E U ,... 2311 FAIRHILL 215 Del Mar, ~n Clem Two vacant, l·wath older --Bushard 846 9088 675-6488.
REAL IARGAIH
I Bedroom. 2 hJth. Lcm1
I . rut1m u111!rJdl•d
1-.crpl.'t11111. I 'r nc"
,,w1mm111 ~ 1>o nl &
Jacunc Sl1d111,.: .l!lai.~
door m R.trJ.l!t.' S.'i!l.000
WESTSIDE REAL TY .
INC 848-2323
OWN F:H LEAVES PnCt!
tut ·I heir mi;, <hnang,
marl>ll' fcrct>IJn•. 110-w&x
flr>or 1lr1.,cm kitchen.
\,\ <11lp.1~1· & "'uod tu11l'l>
'Sfo3 ,51)0 T.1rbc'll
Hl•altor,, t•ull 1142 8MI
HY OW'\l::H ~onllu 2 Hr I
H.1 ~.11 r.uu \ 11111
)'!..~ lltlhi l'ru11 Onh
SOL VISTA
" • Co~ on a Hill house. next door Is newer •2 br townhouse. Mesa · · _ _
2 Br &. <~~Ei'~mac 2 A real uld rashconect Pyror::1~~~~~1t9ors 2~:;,~ l:~fm~a~:~~d: construC'tion. Can be Ve!'de. Patio, pool, $295. 3&• Br.$350&$3'10. Plush WoodbrldgeTwnhme 3 Br
a.1th upgr.;.adfti thru out. ~una Charmer. w1fon 502.500. Call 498-3005 for bought as a package or Olild ok. 833-3!174 crpt, fresh paint. Singles. 2 Ba, A t C. upgradea,
'
, ... ,vpJnd .. d 'l u•l"r tasticpe>lent1al PLUSo HEIGHTS t Will F t ' St'Pli"3le. Call for mnrc M I . ' •"so 2 b childr en, petsok. /\gent.. lakc&poolprlv.640.sMZ ~ ~ .. ~ .. ,~ bl 'Th app go as . inror mataon A g t ovn on . ..,.. r. r 67357 .. c""'""'70 lir •1 Atrium Open unsurpassa e \'icw ~ 673.7601 · kids/pets/sngls. Ft.>e ~ 5ee193. · ..... ...,,.,_, · 3 Bl" 2 Ba, College Parlt
b<'am cechnR ;\lust See. pnce cs perleC'l' S79.99."> WITH VIEW OtherReolEstate -MainRentals,S40-S370 ...,.. · hme Parks. pool1,
SSS.950 Cull 551 l(}jl Agt. 645-ll03 $10,000 now. ancf only ••••••••••••••••••••••• BUILDERS 48r 2ba 4 bl ks rrom school. Clean. S400 inti
OCE•uvlEW $:i50/mo. until close or .. .;-.1..11-H..__s Pvl ply has l ots in~· 2 br. garage. Kids, w e5tmnstrMall 1 blk lwn malnt. 640·1S38 or J '.\1 Peters Pltm l'. w 1 "'" escrow. mov~s you in to· ,.._R' ......... .1 sin lesok. · 998-2322
;11r . olhl'r upi;rallt•s, Ocean side or hwy .day. Escrow to close ForSale 1100 ~guna area: w1 lln.g to ainRentals 540.5370 schls. cul·d·sac. Kids ---------
$98,000 551 ·4525 W/P8th to beach. Colore after March 1. 1977 and ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jo1.nt venture w I rq~ht ' OK. S415. Ph 848·942? 2Story, 4 Br, 2.,.. ba, E :a:ec
• glass skyhHhls Crplc · "-f .. .... ..... selr cont'd, rull bath, bwlder for construction Westside 2 BR. bltns, 0 ,. B B type. BUly lndscpd, _
Distinctive "
Desian
GrN•t-. you rhl' \CO
llllOUll' you dnvt• Up, lt S
t->.lcrtor und intt'rior u11-
1>11111tmcnL-. six·uk or 1•11n·
tempurJry cJ~l' und
cl1ftruty l.>c.in llomc :1
IHJRMS , l RA f.cm1ly
rm>m. 'fup n>11d1Uon
S!l!+,~I
BR. 2 ba Cmstr ' ha!! a~t1~ Rc~~eo;~.t I ~~ l~:It h~ "j';;t rerinlshed inside. Set of s.ingle ramlly homes. p atio. Ced yrd, new ->"1arp 4 r. ~I a, bx~al everything. Child re;','
que brass trim )./\ $152000.;\nent 55-0.7777 up with awning. $1850 rran c only . Dy s crpt'g,allutll.pd.Adult c:se l~ sc s. c petsOK.$585/mo inckk •>lu«ant home for $159,500 . " . c•"'-6173 213426·2.514: Wknds/evs only. $275. Agt. 646·3997 s op ping s4 so m 0 . "rd n r NOW . · 1 ~ ~.. ""' 714-496-3500 962·5982 • :-;,." tvvf4·. a V 8 1 • Ml~ION REALTY ---------1 _________ 1 _ V'IV"VV•
• 494-0731 • .,.EWPORT BEACH HAVE OCEAN VIEW IN· EASTSIDE La Cuesta hme. 3 Br i~•--------
Singlt• wide 1 BR. I na. C.:OME: PROPERTY Wiii 3 Bedroom house. va. Ba, nr school & beach. lRVIN E·Tll~ RANCH: LAGUHA CHARMER low space rent. $39\15. trade for diesel yacht. cant. Call Sue at 556 7'm. $450 mo. 640.4543 t.a,rge exccutiv~~dome t.
DUPLEX tDC2709l Century 21 493-41114 . --se ~area. 4 .. °"' roo~: Nc-,ttl'd on ,1 lari:c lot Mobile Home Resale 2 Br. fplc, kids, sngls, OK. IMMACULATE 3Br. 2Ba, famdy room Cascade
11:.ird tt1 fend prcvuc.)' 2 Otvision 956·9251 Real Estate $250. Beachcomber, lee. no pets, ideal location, with gardener. SS2S/mo.
Unit-. 1 Ur. 10,1 "'uch · Exchange 2800 631·201 1. 547·2501 , 846-1463 _Agt_._7_52_-_73_1.,.s ____ .,.
S.1ndr.1 llJrtnc~s. Rltr A~ for sale 1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 879-1060 U It ••••••••••••••••••••••• SHARP 3 Br, drps, (pie, nlv. P S br hm. Pri ... I!» ISt.t WATERFRONT Will Buy·Sell·Exchng 3 BT, cpts, drps. Kids ok. gar opnr. boat access, nr Joe. Pvt comm tH •·
PRIVACY + 229 CAHAL STREET I 000 ACRES any real or personal cur gar. Patio. No pets. beach. sch ls & park. pool. $S9S. SS2-8S8T, Over Io o kin g I a r g e property anywhere. $350. 64.S-2978 lse. 846-3872 752·9381 ExC'ellenL IQCJtcon 111•a1 Spaccous 5llR. 3HA, i>rivate l:ike. 75 m in. Cal.Coasllnvcstment ---------
">t"hools. well maantacnecl gourmet k 1 t c h has from Orange Co. UtaliUes 714•332.2323 Harbor/Gisler, ram rm Look now! Sl6S. 1 br, kidl, UNIV PRK-Vlllage JU a bdrm . 2 bulh houw. microwave & self t.'lcan'g avail. $700 per acre. Xlnt br. 2 ba, (pie, OW, clean. pelsok. Fee. Princeton. 38r, nu pe.1aL ~re.it sl:ir1er home Of oven Walk to pools. ten-terms. Call 631.2000. Mr Rentals S385/ mo. 963·4569 o Main Rental5 . S40-53'10 $450 mo. 644·7770
rcn-d lll$85.000 ntS & beach. $97,500. Sehl 5319545Agt Agent. G73 7601 esinger. Agt.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• --·---'-----1$275. 3 br dup. Gar. Kid.I, Spac. Univ. Pk 2.8r, 2ba, m"-'-"-1---------1---------1Ho.ases FurnlsMd M~A VERDE. Dlx 3 br, pets. Fee W/lrg atrium. dbl H m1\r
uuu.::Jrrf!l --628 AC. $200/AC. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ba, 5 patio home. Local· Main Rentals. S40-Sl70 bdrm, take ovr lse. e Me> .. 513CAMPUSDl:tRVllfE ~~'llwpt Shorei; 2Br & den. Hilly terrain. Newhall General 3102 ed $100,000 neigh · lef\$400/mo. incls uae ol RainbOW'S End •99·2800 Beaut dccor:.itcd. Owner urea. Free & cleJr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• borhood $495 mo. on Extra sharp J brlnprime comm pool/tennis crta."
OPI::N l>AILY 1.1nx 1 011~. $74,500. Af(t ,.Ansidertrade. Country cottare 2 Dr, all ~Eld Riddle Realtor ~~a552llon1. $400 mo. Agent MZ--0604.Agt. T'hc pot '1f 1tvlcl '" tluc, I H /\ M TO l.i I' M. 631 3900, M6·7414 ""' ·I ~ 2 8 o <nOT bt.'<lrm with rurm11I rim ORTH L GU 545·3483or 673·4577 ult • 5 n g c; · "' · Turtle Rock Glen, new••
mg uno 'i(·p.c r.1 tl' '"1t1n111---------i H A NA 100/o DOWH Beachco mbe r , fl.!c . uNEWERHOME48r3 cc. 48r, chldrn/pet.I »
an•a 111 k11rh1•n <:rc•at TURTLE ROCK VIEW Newport Shores 2 story, ~9~i0602.0 ll. 547 2 5<t!_· Mesa Del Mar ea., 3 car g., shake roof. towed. $675. 5s2.7uo ;
ram1lv rm "cJl laundrv . BROADMOOR ~xecut1ve home doni; en beom clngs . Under 4 BR, Cam rm, bltns. Bright & spacious 64s-2330. •
& ~hukl' roor 1\n un· From lhc inside out, this rmc~t taste &. quality market al $78 900. Owner lolboo Island 3106 frplc, dbl gar, cor lot. HV ~out. Cheery kitchen, '
l<Arm!'iht"fl 2 yr-. olll with popular rlun t m the ex· Tons.orwa)nut & mnrblc moUvatcd! Also deluxe 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exit. First &: lasl mo. lmmac move·ln cond. The Terrace, 3 Br end..-.·
lols <JI wurm hrkk and elusive hills or Turlle Master swte w/2 both:>. br 2 story Sea Wind £-I t E. BAYFRONT. xtr n tgc, 546 3189 Sngts OK . $495 mo. It. Fplc, upgraded, elec
h I ~u" ()()() dlln & guest rm LolS or ' ' ~lilelYS 848·942Thr 962. "'"°7 a9r onnr, "-1f Clll 0Ya. cart •oncs.on y .:...... ltock ... how~ lik e :.i • Condo $63500 forsale 1300 2 Br & Fam rm1dcn. 2 $425. Mesa Verde 3 br 2 ...., -Shue""' & """"""'' <lAU\
Owner Must Sell
Wtll "Cll VI\ Ftli\ or you
muy a~s umt• ex 11";t1n.:
fo'llA loan 3 Dedrm.
o;huke root . flrepl:icc.
pnm1• area. Ju~l$HS,!J00
•
Roberts
Realty
IC41 IMca 11..-
lluUIC\ .. ~
mod('I Loc11tc<l on :i r~~:?ria~~r~s~p!.~!~Or~ ONLYio'il.DOWN ....................... Ba, 2 huge fpl c'11, ba,ncwlydecor.Walk.to 67:~s nrt'YV'·-
Qull't, Inside lot and com coastal views. Quk t cul Property HouseR42·3850 16 Unlls. Just Fh1 ished, wshr/dryr, dbl gar. Als schools & park. 008·9301 Sharp2 bedrm, huge -
pletcly customized with de -sac in Vic t oria IYOWNER all rented. Stuctios & 1 unf.winlcr/yrly.40'slip Yard.$275/mo.Cell TURTLEROCK·VIEW, a,
upf(r a d l"d rarpc t s , H.ighlands.Sl85,000 "-outirul 3 Br, Z'-'l Ba, Brs. In Oceanside. No . avail. For appl. 534·1769 3 Br. 2 ba, bltns, washer· Agent962-4471 Br 2 Ba, fam rm. Dine
drapes . wotlcovcrrngs. °" San Diego Co. Asking (7141 dryer, newly redecorat· Rm, tge yard. Nr tenn.i. s h c Iv 1•s. m 1 r ro red 2300 .,qrt hme o n t,i:a acre, $294 000 Ca 11 J l m
3107
ed. 654 W. Wilson. C. M 3 Br 2 Bo corner lot, eMI & pool. $S4S mo. S200See.
wardrobe. covered patio cul de sa<' lol. Huge f'arn Cl • · B k lkllM>a PeftlltSWa No pets. $400. mo. Call back yd, (pie, Fam Rm. dep Agt 752-0188 "
A !ilunn1nH 3 hrlrm . 496a7222 8ll·0836 Hm,pooltublc,welb:ir.2 AJe';;,o~i4l ;~.~ ~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jack Saunderson days countrykit,$3'75.5S4·7S331--·-------1-
fam1ly room homl'. JUSI a~~~~~~~~~l fptc·~. lge patio w/ncw 1714)434_1126eves OCEANFRONT NC'w 3 hr. 642-0212,eves546-2277 S 70 B 1 d d d 3 Br 2 83, oo cul de au . shortJ1stancc rrom pools 1. Redwood dcclung. HV frpl, 2 car i.car. No pets . l • l r. n c Y • pels, lgc yd, close to achla &
& tennis courts. Priced lo park.ng OK , walk to f(Olf Business Property 1400 ssso Wntr. 673·6640 COLLEGE PARK Lse. 3 sngls . .Beachcomber, ree. pk $425. 5S2·0430 afl
scllat$89.SOO cour11eS89.900646·2305 •••••••••-.••••••••••••• B,r28a.fpk,lgehvrm, 631-2011, 547·2501 , 7PM. Coda Mesa J 124 din area, ram1ly kitch. 879-1060 -----
red hill ...: .
552-7500
.A-Olan BIG CANYON OR.ANGE .,••••••••••••••••••••• Newly paanted. cpts. ----Woodbridite·Warmini\C*. COUNTY COMMERCIAL drps, terdnr Incl. No pets. 3 br, 2 ba + bonus rm .. 3 br Twnhme. Din.rm.,
Olarml.ng 2 br. Ideal for S39S mo. S•9·018S, a (l frp!c .• attractive Yd w/ AC. (714 )552-0SU . l::xclusive. quallly bit 4 bdrm. frml din, c;cp Cam
rm. sunken convertible CAREFREE pit W/CO'l.Y frplc! Up·
REAl FSTATE <>00 (.lt•nn<·~' ,. -,,
.;Q.; 11.; 9 • '..:.•1 .., 116
9 °/o HMM aotlques, 11rt studio or S/wknds. fnut trees. 1335. 673-6610. 982·14&4
$220,000 Down whatever. McNash Real· 3 8 2b C d Encl 2Br, ch1ldrcrl OK. Pets 3 br. nr lflgh School 6
Sll4,000 S~t« '77 ty,642·1334.642 7430 paJ~. g~~. :J1u1~ only. w/dep.1285 mo 962·3533 Fwys, $385. m o o u LIVING RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN aracled interior rrime
can be yours 1n this 3br. 21., baSan l~uis Rey. HEAVEML Y 114 acrt.-lot w/vtcw o( golf
go r geo u s 3 RR Golf cours e , t a ke. Anew all sh1n~ledhome cours t'. t'lt y lilt'!> &
townhomc , llPJlroded $1 IS.000. 5<17 7044. nestled on a heuvily Calahnu' Ternfic patio
w/many fenturt's not .133..a:?+i wooded tot. 3 nR. Homan for excculivc entertain·
found elsewhere. But you . tubs. fort, decks. $159,500 ing. For the very best, must uct soon or it w1)1 EW Univ Pk P etersi---------•I call838·6256.
belong to another hoppy Twnlun 3 br 2i,., bo. C
owner. Askina only Plan. Xlnt loc. $98,500. LogmiaNlgutf 1052
$S4,SOO, 547 · 7044/S.13·3215 •••••• ••••••• ••••• • •. •.
~
Walker & lee
Heol lslate Cdl Quick 968-330 I NlV PK Villoge m, Ox· FAMILY LIVING
ford.3Br2 ~Ba +bonus 'BR. 3 8a, bltns, 3 car1---
Pric• SI .705,000. \Br. yard, pets OK. No pets. 581-5851. eves or 536-0321 Charley ville. 549·1*"2.
W I I. L T A K E ulllpd,$22.'imo 556·7627 • SHARP' 4 Br 2 Ba. CULVERDALEHOMES , • EXCHANGE Bob 548-4028 l nhse t.J d bit Ye:ir.old. 31,759 sq. rt of. 41R PLUS llA l~-· · cp ~. rps, ns, 3Br. 2Ba, Crplc,_~~
rl"e building, fully as· M 11••0Y uow ·-r rm, waJk Lo •hops carpet.~~ pvois, -' ft5"' " & s.:hools. Lots or xt.ra.s park. ~'>O.t./mo 1t...ta •CNr ·-s umablc, no-ree firs . $195/Month. ~ $380. (71'> 894·0125 0 ; · -• _,,.,.,,,,.
Seller carries 11 year A.GT. HO.OS 5 1193-1351 Agt. FBr. UJ>&rd'd. nice &oe. •• second. Will close In one d d / 'd 4 week. Dane Wilhite or -----HU tl Tr NG To N n~ Y w covr •
Don Lake liftcjle J ... I! a~~~~~: 2p:rio~ ~;: ~ltbOhUR A REA, 38R' ~7m:.'~~:r~~: frplc,
Are you confused & won· 165 C 21sl St, CM . .uAw/ uge famll)'room•---------
rm. Xlnl loc S89,SOO. r:.• ~~rc~u:;oyn*~ GARAGE SALE Ads In 11. jQua~I
833 3215 or 547 7044 race. S0bm1t all oltera. lhe Dally Pilot brin• hap Plactt
Try 1J Oa,~Jy Pllor Prine.only. pyresull11.1'oplacc,,your ~ Cl~lliflt'<IAdtobuy,seU OOODEA.R11fR£ALTY drawing c:srd phon~ 752•1'20
or renl something. 5»-3080 OO-S678 today. MOO OUAaln,... ttACM
der1ng how to 11dvertu1e 642·80l1 • & frpk, near schools. No Fee To Lessee
your t'hrcHm1u glCl . $425/mo. CALL TOBIN 3 BR, 2Yt ba .. ram. rm.,
Items' For an lnox ew Xtra Lrg Twnhse. 2 REAl~TV 846 1371. WE formol din. rm. Very,
perulvc w41y to go, Just Br. l'-'t ba, frplc. d/w. ALSO HAVE other pm private! 2 Frpks. 6: IOC..
call our Cbrtstmas Ad S350 mo. 546 6299 . pert.i~ for rcnl. llomes. ohp.ace SSllO
Viser al 642-5678. ~.(1848. Apt.a. and C<1nd0t. Aaent s.5.2·7000
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.. •••••••••••• .. ••;(•• ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Yoc.atloe Rentalt 4250
...,_ J244 .._.,...t,oclt 3269 CodoM.to . J724 c:..t....... Jt24 CodeMeM 1124 •led ll40 ...................... ....................... ............... 44SO
... • ...... ••• •• ..... •••••••••• •• ••• •••• ••• ••••••••••••• •••• ••• ••• ••••••••• •• •• ••••• ••••• ....... •• .... •• • • •• •••• •••••••••••• •• ••••• ••• • .. oc.t. Jl6t PALM DISllT ••••• •• •• •• •• •• ••• •• • •• ._ -.rALS OCEANFRONT VU:W Br 1 ba apt filed am •H••••••••••••u•••••• RA.HCHOMlllAGI •TOP ,,
' ~ Pamlly Homes CONDO 2 + Otn. 2 r 't1NY Bach bouM tn trlr. llllANDNEW 1ard • piaUo. i Sm chUd BEACll 2 blks. new palnt. Lu.xurioua. lt"UOnal re *LOCATION*
J8R.aBa.... ....... prlval\I parltln1. lull P'fl. $1t5. F\.ic.':"• ~U':, pd. OK t:ncl gar. 11tandlng 3 Br 2 Ha dplx, fplc, 10rt rtnlJ1l1 Coll Is ton· Su<'Cus rul retall ur _
J BR, 2 Ba • ~urtr bui,tJI,,.. ~"rr· s,,o Avoc1tdo-». an f, M Lene It and r•l'\IO· 536·5008 blln&. patio. 1ar No peu rus condomlnluou with acrvlce location on to; ...
I BR. 2 a. .. . . . . . . .. P mo. at. · ~'1 ctteor. l br duplex $400 yrly &JHMZ lill •mnwruliea. .!f"lud I Tth Street In Coi. L .a
J8Jl,28a... ••••.... HARD T 0 YIN QuJet. .Empl 'd adult • llANDHIW • B Sund It blk t ~ for more orma .M a .
.4Bll.28a .......... 1.$1 Eutbluff &He. home 0 13S. Refa. No pela ~It • lBr. S22S mo. 28-$27$ lt>ch.' V re. 21 pds o ton. Contac t Ann •lSOOSquarefeet
4BR.2.,..S. •. •.• -O>r. ibia, ram rm. Solt S41Hon mo. dht apt.I. ap;acloua ts .~r:~ ~36 no Blldba~.0l~l04~t:\173 •2AutoblQ'll Townhomn water New cr'pLs drpa r rns, xlnt loe. nr llunta 1>t ·......, • • On.slw parklng
"2 BR. l Ba......... . JNAll\l Walk lO ~hoot ........... IHdl 37 40 St Cntt 1891 ~lark Sl· 2 blk S Br 2 Ba roomy new M ARZlCOLA • Exc.illenl t xPQ3u.rc
4 BR. 1 Qa.. .. .. • • • . . 8 ho p·a t" no j s c I u b ' ••••••••••••••••••• •••• roll thv 1)611-M·~·H>f d fllrw r0fe51 Me,,n<Wf PQsl S ol Edinger Ave, W ot cpts aundcck bltns bch Real ton * Larate 11l1n area
IBR.2 Ba ......... S37 t7:>0 tlito L ... Refs SMALL B~CH HOTEL tumbling Wdl~-rlnU1 and qulrl pools L161en 10 lhe Bch Blvd OJ>tn Snl/Sun &ba'yyrly ui~.645-·1878 73743Hlahway lll REALONOMICS. C'ori>
J BR.2 Ba.········. 6f0.m5or64$-ZMO Roornsl2$.SOweek ~nd ol bubbllng streams and growing 1hings l ·S. M&-4990 Palm DeM:rt. CUUr. Brobrs 67S 6700
·I BR. 2 8a · · • · · · · · · . • Apta $120. mo. 538 10S6 'bit lldult dlll\rtmenr home ar Vlnec:reek \All3ge is l Breathtaking P anor:unlc lllwtals to s..... 4 300
,BR.28a ......... · •MOWAVAIL• L.ogl.a.._.. 3748 c>lot<'llrulr~at. HMrl'you rt1nen)OYunuSUAlprMK'y St~~~ .. ,:arug~. poo . Bay, Oce:ian & Catalina •••••••••••••••••••••• PRIME : :Jt.22~ '... :. ::.ms =~~~~· $.500 Co ....................... ilnd luxury. Main Renta ls, S40·S370 ~~~wi ~~~~lt~~/~C:!'rt~ Need A Roocuw•••? cw ... clal s~-
2 BR. 2 Ba." "· .. $525 DIC CANYON. S750 l e:.ch. N= bea~~ Ut~I A RECREATION PARADISE. Twu 1immscou11s. 3 br, Crplc .. no ~ta. Avail mtot. Purk Newport's ~.!f°J~11trr~~:Jo~ ~?:!ab~! 'ro~~~ti~c!i 0~6r~. JBR,2"'8~ ........ $4 S*permonth as~r,.C. m~ w . Swlmmtngpoolplusul\lqu1.n10lle')ballpoot.Jocum Nov. Z8 7002 Volga Dr. llne11l lout'?n. Hurry.I 02AnJ tall. Acro~a fro m
JBBRR.2838.... • .. S4:IO HA5TIHGS Ii CO. 14 . U .M · .5.lnd vo11~.1..-11 court. Mouolllln lodno clu.bhouse Aptllt.Clcxselostores. This one won thasl. Avu1l t· 'UHl..&Mrrm hoa pitul. A\lached I,µ 3 •2"" a ......... ~ Realtors 640-Oceanfront b•ch studio, "'Jl'l"ll ,,.. • ~. l.1)4-C-OOOJ Uk-~~~" Athletic CltJb. Guod fron ;~4fw~·~·b ....... = . Ute cookln&. Also 1&2 b \Mthllrepl.xe.col"M?ndt\onpllbllllllrds.gym.11;1uild. •M.wApt.HOtMt* l'hanksg1vin& Special• cu~b..>IA<'n..q t1tgl'. Call 631·2000. M1
) BR 2.,.. Ba a . · · · · S600 Oceanview Condo. 48r apt.s .. UUJ. Uicl. S195 l Huny 10 th.i gond llfii ,ul\! rht-n r~lll>t l , 2 & 3 Ddrms from $215. $20. Utl I pd. 1 br: 832"113'Slnce 1911 Schlesinger, Agt. • · · • • • • · · · dlnrm, 2\1\Ba, pool, ten $.17$ 497.3195: 536-0321 Call l7l4 > 847-7566 Kid I t F M · 1BR.2\.\Ba ......... $M() nia, ~urlty. Kids OK . · ' FROM$265T0$35S s pe s. ce. ain Female wanted to shr 2Commerclal bld11. pnmc lBR.2~Ba ......... $600 ~.Chrfs,644·9060.Agt. SJlllS. Ulil pd. Single lncludu\gHea~ Clean2br lnquJeltriplex. Rcntals$40-5370 Br.2 Ba Promontary Pt location, 3000 sq ft.
1BR, 2"'2 Ba ........ · coupleok. Fee Near ocean. enc garage NWPT HTS brand new 3 $200/mo. 631-1180. G42,1334or6421430 1B.R,2i,.,e.a ...•..... SG25 Oceanfront, )'rly. Dix. MaioReotals.~O-S370 011~8edrnom.One&1h C.'hlld ok. You'll like ll. BK 2\.'a Ba fam·rm 2 ---------•---------4BR, 2~ & ......... Sf7S BR. 2 ba. lower duplex; T~1 Boldruom. T"'<> B.im .$24Smo. (714> 498-1653 r i 2 '0 00 ..,:la Male 44. artii;t, sculptul'i', Buslnesa ore & reccpt
frpl., laundry room. MeW'pGt'f leach 3769 13(XrAd&ms Aw. .. in Cosca Mt-sit. rp cs, car nar, ,,.. · actor nd11 t.oommete. areia, dark room uva1l
Agent675·7060 ••••••••••••••••h•••• dCl'OSS from OrangeCoasr College NEAR CIVIC CENTER A\'1t1l. immed. 644--0034 FemqJe. w/slmUiar i.n· Incl. bacb's unit, ldcul
----BE.ST ~n H<lrbof and FaiMeW. & H.B. HJgh Sehl. Sharp Lease. 28r , 2ba luxury apt terests . Lets make a de· for bus meas at horn<!.
IUY 3 BR. 2 Sty w/frplc & over-looking Newport al. Call 549-6633 8·S. Aak $300 mo. utll Incl. Mr
::: '::r!kelal1~ ~~~ Some people aay you get 1714154111300. NOW ll£N11NG encld gar. in Spani.sh 4 Bay'"wlbak'Ony & frplc. for BUI Hanson eves548·1Sll
qualified tenants. Also. what you P•Y for! We of ~:484$36$. mo. Bkr. 83J..923'1 Newport Crest Beaut. Oc .,.trial Rtwtal 4500
we have both month t fer more. And t.be price l Costa Mna 38241Costo Mna 3124 1 Br 1 Ba. Westclifr area. vu, Rm w/adJ ba. S200. •••••••••••••••••••••••
month & yearly leas · less. Membership '" a ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• iBR, 2 BA in 4-plex. pool. no children or pets. 213/481·7030, 642-3560 evs. PRIME LOCATION
uva1I. (;all liarbnra or Health Club .. A lcnnli. COME HOME TO SZ7S. IH&5681 Good e xpos E sy in club. Free tenrus lessons 841H230 GcragH for R...t 435 urc. 11 •
Carol Billiards ... s w1mmrn<> FOX HOLLOW VILLAGE 3 D -Ba r I be ••••••••••••••••••••••• aress&egress. Plenty of .._ & .. aclt R-"--" • • • • •• • • ... · 1 · rp c, ams. parking. On 8rQOkhursl OPEN DAILY -r ..... , Golf Driving flange • garage. blk to beach. Double garage, Costa & Atlanta in Huntington
8 /\ M TO& p M 675-lOOO Saunas + great ac· c.-_.., D.poe& W•nd $38Syrly.646-9218 Mesa."'!~f'!,,i:!113o. Beach. Approxim"tely -~~· :..:..· =..::..::...:...:..:.:· :..:.·-1-------t UviUes: Sunday BBQs . ~~~ T....ts QAtl CREST ....,.""° .. Jfew Peters· Home in ----------t Parties with live bands. . Y~ . I\ 28RWATERFROMT ---------t ~sq.ft.o~groundrloor
Univ. Park. Upgraded. 2 ExclusJve Irvine 'ferrace, Free Sunday brunch. Live on )'OUr own pnvate street tn a 2 Bltos Crplc crpt.s/drJ>ll Single garages, $20 mo. space. Sig1ung. $325/mo.
br,Z ba.vlew&ree.S46S CdM.Bt!JexecuUve4 Br. bedroomtownhousewithyard&large garJ4M ' '31020thSl, Huntington c .all Ptfr. Pfumrner.
mo 552-8$87 2~ Ba, lg. pvt pool, walk Yourrenldollarsgoeven patio. wood burning fi replace & at-FOURPLEXES 3001 FlNLEYAV.,N.B. 8each.846-!Kl88 963-6767·
· to beach, shopping & further•••A le rriflc F chn-lBR bit O/W "'{•---------_..,. TERRACE benut. park. S800 mo. lease, tached ~arage. LOTS OF ROOM OR ..,. .... ., · ns. . • Office R..td 440u anc. • " maintenance crew, pro· 1"C" rrplc crpLs/dtt>e ga· r in· .pgraded. Cambridge garden & pool ser\'ice in· STORA E AND HOBBIJ:A>! ' ....... · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ONE YEAR OLD fessional manag~merit u.-_ _., 0 few left!' eluded S29S T u )lod .. 3 Br 2 Ba. formal eluded. chjldren & pe , staff that cares, and , Adults. $375 ·-•r•unr . 3611 BALBOA BLVD.. PRJMELOCA 10". ~ico !'q.ft. lodustri:il ~rm. fplc. gardropnr. welcome.675-3152 friendly ne ighbors . 621 W. -.._ ,.__._ ~-2 8Rlroml260 NB Good exp()6ure. Easy JO· • " ., .....,_ ----3 BR fplc 2 bu •""s · · & Pl 1 s pac0 for lease. Local\.'1.1 50 mo. 644•5576 or HV Hms, Carmel 3 Br Models open dally 10·7 642-4991 ' ' -· JACOIS REALTY gress egress. enty 0 acr~ss s treet from &M~eves. -+FR. nr park & school. Sorry. no one under 21 & Will consider children 675~70 Darking. On Brookhursl Koll/Irvine Center. Nr ... no pets. Roomma te ---------• & Atlanta in Huntington New Univ Pk. Peters ..,75 mo. 644·7770 service available. Mori· Costa M•to 3824 Costa Mesa Studio Lort, Harbor Vw Beach. Approximately OC Airport. SOOO/mo.
hnhme. 3 Br 2Yi Bn. i---------t lh-t.o-rnonlh occupancy. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• See th~ lovel~ areu. Adlts/no pel.11. $275 800 sq. fl. of ground noor ED RJDDLE 2229 sqfl, xlnt toe. $550 Wallt a fislt pond? Large 3 br townhouse w /2 New adult waterfront aptB 2 &3 BR apartmt nls util incld 640--0964 space. Signing. S325/mo. REALTOlt 64648 I I ~.B33·l2IS. S47·7o« Lovely l ·story home with Oakwood Garden Apt.s baths. lrplc, patio & In Mesa Verde. Beaut.aful They are close to Central · · Call Mr. Plummer .,~~~~~~~~~
IBr. 2ba condo. Bltns. air 3 bdrms. & a lge. paneled garage. Ideal loc. Adultll. landscaping Excep. ~,ark, ,recreallon8 :hop. SPACIOUS 4 Br 2'1'a Ba. 963-0767. -.__.._.. W..t.d 4600
...._... ..,.,.. boo Lndscpd back oan.1-1·-'-t ,,. ... _. UJO. Ne>.rw>ts. &4.i-338i o -11 .. .ru b..:......_ J.:-!lBL •• ~w~s .. __ 1 e ~o .QQC.I oatio...l bik..Ja..b.c.la..11111 W -.....,. •
"'"'""· -s&a.2187 yanlu.s ~'::ii lush g~eens. """1714~· &n.9$i'f.::;:c.. • · • 1&2 bdrms 7r_om '27S. ;:c•~·~so.-ha :e ~th;r rfy;-ITTmliJ-----Dl"l!•1 •.-.. ..;• --.....;.... --
fish pond & Jots of 1 Br. gar & encl patio. Mesa Venle V1!las, lSSS apartmentlocat1ons. 28rnearocean$240mo V.ViiNf.\ii ~~c!~~~.~ed:~rot,)~ L&eOIJlionnew3Br.2Ba, privacy. Convenient 170016thSl(atDover> Adults. Refs. No pets. Mesa Verde Onve East. Dishwashe r, s hag, to bcll. Pr r HB $100
Woodbr1d1e SSOO mo tcoodacbools&shopping. <714)&t2-8170 S22S.Utllpd64S·2240 Cos t a Mesa. C714 ) w.......aR-...R--'""' garage ;;-»0 •••• •• e. · 673.Ql4 alt SPM 8oy & leac.lt ~1 "'"" ~-· -..u1.' S ;/=---i-.w top, SJ6.9S83 · 2 br, winter rental $300. Brand new 8 plex. 3 Br. 2 · 848-8300 128~46 t,644-4340 ~~---....._.t/lftf9st/
, Brand New Orangetree Realty 675-3000 l2131 445·5963 or t2 t3 Ba, ownrs unlt. also I& 2 WHY NOT? Saft Oe1Mnte 3876 ~1:.--R.anee P1an~ll.2 Br,2ba,fam ... ---------t 447.9443 • ~;r,:o,~~ 17\4 ) Sunkenlivingroom •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'leCY---. ••••••••••••••••••••• .. rm. Uv rm. din rm. At· Newport Beach, 3 blks BEACHFRONT 1 br ro Cathedralceiling ......,~°" OCEANFRONT luxury 2 ,..,.....,...,..,..,.. .__H
tach 2 car gar w/elec Mariners school & park mature adlt.s S22S mo 2 BR Furn & Unfurn. 2bedrooms, l ~baths HarbOw 3842 br, den, frplc. pvt steps ~ ~· a /c, frplc Strps 3 Br. 2 Ba. fncd yanl & Avl. 1211 675-D Mature Adults. No pets. Attached garage ••••••••••••••••••••••• to bch. SS90. 499-2807 ••••••••••••••••••••••• om Private Commun! patio. fplc. cpts, drps & Cd. loc. W-0632 Washer/dryer hook· UP ,.-..u..._ Sho SI/ D
5005
t.Y Pool & Tenni~. S490 h od kit h NEWPORT BEACH · i NEW38.r,2Ba.CO.ndo50.' Bachelor. near ocean . •tMOFREERENT• ~ P 2 crys (I) 595.1861 Eves s utters. r em c . " NEW 2 br. 2 ba. frplc, Pvtyardwtthpato le pool •""""' th 6'2-J99S • · w/dbl sel( cln ovn. $450 Bedroom furnished. d/w. Jacuzzi, 1(1tr. View Adults. SJSO. mo. to nnis, • Jacuzzi. Sl7S/mo. Yearly. 332 En-1·2·3 Rm. offices from ~. per/mon
---· -----mo.673-242S e vs/wknds S teps Crom beach. ol ocean. Teen child ok. FOXHOLLOW S450.968·5700evs. cinol.n.492·28116 S12S per mo. Adj . ~ee~~lete':d'e";, ~~~f~~
l..olJiiMahoch 3241 WESTCLIFF-$575 S375/mo. A~· 152•7315 64Vl'99'Z VILLAGE '""-3844 ocean view. lge deck. 2 ~~~~~jl·:~~eaa cure. Terms. um, 152.S
••••••••••••••••••••••• Spoci-.., Ex-H-Ocean waves! l ~r $220. 2 Br .. 2 ba, pref ma.ti.Ire or 621 W Wilson. C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• br, l ba. $235. mo. Aft -·--'~''--------1 Mesa Venlc East, Suiti·
L6e in 3 Arctt Bay, 3 br,. 2 8 2:.. -d ""i .... 1 Utd pd. Fee Main lten· retired. No pets, no 642"'991 or642"'226 Rancho Son 6pm,496·3438 60• PER 59 FT 106. Costa Mesa cnexl to
2h ba. ocean view, Pvt 54S-~3oo..., + en, rp c tals, 540-5370 children $195. 642·5848 Joaquin Apts San Juan 1617WESTCLIFF-NB Kona Lanes). Open 7
bch. only $750 mo. Call l .d I I 2 b 2 b 00' "oR, lBA w /crpts, drps, nenling from $260. c-.is'--~ 3878 AGT. 541·5032 days to serve your needs. RlM h Sach;ar , Bkr J 0 5 e r , .a. l l "' Ad I • ~ ..,... ~ 751·3741 Southland Associules, Ne~ 3 br T.ff .• lge rooms, bay. Club. tennis priv~s. bltns. $265/mo. OPEN u t <.tpts. ""'asing pre· ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR LEASE •---------
835-2012or997-4051. frplc,pool.k1dsok.$52S .. Jmmed. occpy to Aug. SAT & SUN, 224 view now 18 a presti&e3Br. dbl gar. stv/rfrg , lOFFICES •Furniture&PlywdMfJ:.
----$4751se67S 1666 Jsl. $46$. 67$~727 or 171<1 > Avocado, 752·1920 1 rvrne com munily · pool . $32S. 2.s ty. •Ladles Wear, Hi·Clasi.f
NorthL28D.2BA.2FP. 436-3419 _ LOVELYlg.3br,newly Twenty Pergola. Culver 494·7669 ' 494 ·1482 $155MOEACH •BOOKSTORE
FR 2 b to bch ocn vu S-.._ ed 'd & Sandbur~. 2 blocks so. 494-4152 ' ' Fine COSTA MESA Loe •DRAPEllYWKRM ~ 494"1127ev~ . . t--t 3271 So.HtLoguna 3786 redecorat , ' eal loc. or San Diego F'rwy. ---·------• 752 1700 •RUG/UPHLCleaner
. ........,..1trano ••••••••••••••••••••••• No peta. 1265. Mgr at 55&-UOO . South LCICJUhG 3886 • -ruRNITURE Renn SUPER RENTAL' I Br, •••••••••••••~••••••••• 2 BR, 2 ba on the,oceon. ~2SJl, 288$ Mendoza, PMCIEH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 I Contact AgntSam Cranl'
Ocean vu I Br. stained Ne-w 2Br, den, 2ba, cpts. f'\im. S700 .. unfurn S600. apt. A UVES UP WOODRIDGE Lge, quiet, luxurious ex··· ·-·~,1~~·11·~ 17141645-4170 S40·0608
glass windows. Crplc, drps, pool. A1~!~ only TOlal secunly,elevators.1 & 2 br :ipts from Sts-5 TO ITS MAMl I ... &Plf'!ESbd/\rPTSm uni'l" <·c . 2 br, 2 ba apt. ·' \•' ~ ---------
de<'k. gar, $475 m o S350 1213)947 · """'· rec.faciliUes.499-283.5 r....a, drps. bltns. Kids -'" " ' L•1 t ·> .·{ ) . •SAN CLEMENTE• ..,.,.... OverSOOtalltrees-andlO Des igned like early r:.evator oscemc pnv.. --•:::i•••••~ 1\arner As~ 494 1177 NEW 3 Br 2~--, Ba Twnhse Apca I d ok, no pets. Call between C llf 1 .. 1 bch. Party & game room. tNVESTMENT DMSJON Ctn & Cards SlS,000 • W4ml 9 •. 5 c.a.uo.. streams with waterfalls a orn a .,unga ows ,,.._1 sec. Perf...,.• Irving ----------1 B,,...,ers &i'cecream n..eanside · New. 2 bdrm .. encl dbl "ar. dshwshr. tLL-!.a.....~ "' • _,.,....... ~ s 2 o 1 """"' --~· -o ,~ ., VlnW"lllanwv create a relaxing setting r r o m 1 · I S or wknd retreat for the I &-n..&a Dr on Del Mar $22.000 $195. u n r urn. Adu It drps. fplc · PoOI & Jae. 1 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• 2 Br, frplc, patio, no pets, 1 for your spacious new 1 Plnestone. Ofc hrs 3·5 30 adventurous adult. $Sl5. 50 t WH1'0lllTT • Pottery and sculp.
romm. Mu~t be '15 .Yr$.. m1 Dana Hbr · no lge lal»oo ,......,0 3107 child OK $240/mo C2.13> or 2 bedroom apart· wkdays, 9·5:30 wknds. mo. yrly. lse499-283S Newport Financia l Ctr lure S2S.OOO ~-21121 pets 5425 493-4260 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $34-0952 Callart6. ments. F r om $~40 552-0400 lAHninc)OfficeSpac:e Crushed and cubed Log.aw.;-llSO s..taAMI 3280 Near water Sl75. Ulil. Pd. Uttle charmer! S14S. Stv Furniture available • Wntmintter 3898 CallonSjteManager Ice $34.950.
•••••••••••••• • •••• ••• • •••• ••• •• ••••• •• •••••.. Slv ~ rcfn g. Fee & ref rig. p~ Smull pets OK . Adults LGCJlllMI leach 3848 •••••••••••• ••••••• •• •• 17141642·3111ext2A6 • BERntA HEN RY
l br, 2 ba rrplc .. c pt.<1 • 3 Br 2 RJ. cnrl patio. nr s Mam Rentala. ~O Main Rentals, 54().5370 only. Office open 9:00 to ....................... ~e 2 br. 2 ba. stove, 9SS2 REALTORS 492·4121
"-~ ZSlblCoslea u C':<t Plaza $395 mo. Calf PEEK 'VlEW •-blk to S:OO. ZlOO Fairview Rd. New 2 br, 2Ya ba luxury Madison. $210. roo. I 21SDelMar,SanClem. ......... · 839-4616171 4• ·"· ·-.. Adult E-side 2 Br. encl Costa Mesa Phone condo.Oceanview.Walk S31·3S78or64EH284 BrandHew ~ Ml>-1862 . _ ocean.~ roomy ~rms, 2 gar, patio. frplc. Like 545·2300 to bch. All appliances. Awwwl t Furnishe-d Offices with private•!-_______ _ 4~ Yr. old 4 BR. l•m·rin. WH1nlinster 3298 bu, cpl d ~ drp d. Yrly. new. No pets. $235. ~ a. . .......a-M•&A . 544$625~. or can ~ furn . ..,.-or u'~rsni_ ... _ ... 3900 baths.45Cents a sq.fl. in· AFF1LIATE
·1geyn[lrP1'c. cul-de soc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-1334 or642-7430 644--0878 11:1..-~ ~-....,..,.., "'" -cludmg utilities. 300.· ,. SECOND . 1 R d I d k I ---------2 IEOROOM ••••••••••••••••••••••• sq Ct units immediate possession. S21S. 2 r P '<, > • 1' ~. Avail yrly. lge <fix 3br, 3 BR 2 8 hlld k H.wport leach 3869 · R M Ccrdl INCOME! ·
Bargain ut S.'\50. Long J>'lla. Be:u:hcumbt•r. re .. · 3ba on can;il w1i.li1>. $600. pets' ~· c ~~~~aO "~ Also l ldrm Fu"' p~._! ~~~~~S. oy c • Pt or ruu time mana~P· IHse poss1blc. Submit 631 ·2011. !>47 ·2SOI , pc.>rmoor3br2balbllc ~.mo. 0 Nochlldren,nopets. •••,••:1••1•::E••W••,•0••R•T•••• Redtorl810Hewport mcnthus.oryour own.
pel.s. Alt\. fi44·72l 1 ~1060 lo bch, S450. m~. 675-0120 Pool & Recreation "' " MINUTES TO NPT Costa Mna 548-.7729 No exper req, complete Mt;.,. Ylltfo 3267 Ca.daMlwi-• or960-31H3 Lrg 2BR. beamed cln85, 1959 M .. e A••· CM APARTMEMTS BCH. training + xlnl income.
••••••••••••••••••••••• u.t.wilMd 3425 WH •y .ti. VIEWJ ~~DslrWyal, lnnoce~At!·a~~· 1 or ~~nh:~~ and ~~~~~9~.R. COM 350 lo 1020 sq. ft. Investment (secured I
LOVELY ~ Rr + 11~:!0 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• "' "' • ~..-V'OV-ooo..i DanaPoint 3826 Adul•a.NoPels AtC. newly decorated. Call collect Mr Ames d M I C S Bayfronl A pt f:l c ing FromS2S9.50 ..., 1213)645-462.5 ~>V· patio rm. lk•aut r :a 0 ' t " · a n 8 8 1 boa I s 1 u n d 3 •2Br. lBa. upper M e~a ••••••••••••••••••••••• Open 9-6 Daily 1561 Mesa Dr. .:.M::::as::.:l,::ers:..::!...' ;:B:,:rk::r.:.·.:.67:..:3-4~120::.:..-11---------
eond. S450 m<> 639 68$1 t1emente. 3 Br, 2"2 Ba. 2 HORMS. 2 lli-\TJIS. Yrly Verde. Garage avail. SUNNY sparkling clean. Spa.Pools·Tenms CS Blks East or Newport
... --.. - ---r.ir 1-tnr, new apphc & ,,.. .. ..1nter Call ''7~ c.AtO Adults. $235 No pets. lBr. ocean vu. bltns. 0 ar. Across from F-~sb10 Blvd.) JC You Need A Staffed & l........,RIOR DECOR _..,.. och )26, t1r,l8, Clas.: tu shopping & "' '"' '' ''.,.. _._ 833.8974 no pets , $205. 493-723.. Island at Jambo"';ee () 544)..9860 Furnished Olflce, Call "'E ;~;;;~,~·;;;r~·~;;,::,~. ~u;=. 1!i:~n SPM. ~R ~n 1 ~~·~so~. 2 Ei\STSIDE2 Br 2 Ba. encl Hunthtgton leadt 3840 San1~0i:~64~~89~CC:d·R __ OCMM ______ 4_0_0_01 ~M~E.E ~e~f Pn~l~~e~ Ow~;os~e~:'.'~· YT·
n~pllonal, pvt pool, nr - - -Manhail Rlt 1;75.,.600 gar, lndry. 1 child OK . no ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• (/time recept .. phone & Must sell/Doctors or·
KhJ. at pMk, avail now So Sanu Ana. Br:ulford _J__ -petS. S275. 642·3488 N e w 0 w n e r s 0 'i·--------. ROOMS S25 wk up with mall ser vice. utll & ders. 29'N Oown. Agt.
19-Pon l.>unlc11h 1\l!t Townhouse. 3 Br, l '.,ha. Corona def Mer 38l2 . 8eachwo0d Apls. 19132 OCEANFRONT kitchen. $40.00 wk up janitorial. Secy's & ore 837-4200
Ma-075& pc)OI, lgt> p11t10 Child&••••••••••••••""'•••••••• Ba~h s unit. needd c11ea,n, Magnolia,H.B.;orrera2 _'..l pts.S48·97S5or6"S.3967 l'quip avail. Newporl --COFffESHOP
pet OK S340t mo 548 8S2l QW<'l . person, 1 ea or br. 2 ba. 1000 sq. rt. 3 BR.2 ba. '550 Center. 640-5470 · Le quaet. 3 Br 2 Ba. ced.1r orYf\3 fi7M7 _ _ running business a l security apt wt pool, 2 BR, 1 ba, Vrly S37S Wrkl( fem. Chnst1an, kit Gr011sS30.000. mo.
6 glan. on 11mblt Bay ToWllllMMrM .., hume. utH pd, S300 .. Incl jacuui. AtC. dshwhr. NEWPORTTEtUtACE prvl'g,stepstobch,N.B. TOPLOCATIOHS Outstanding thru out.
Vu. fpk . ~nals ok .• no u..tw.ithed 3525 ra "'• c(c & recer.. area, darlc Adults only. No pets 38R,2ba<'ondo~ SlS0.675-1706,645·2223 Harbor area·s best. 1 aeatsl40. peu.~yrly.644-6126 ....................... 'Tl,. lC:r!~-.... ~~~~~~fl Mr. Hanson f:i~all new Mgr at SEA WIMDCOHDO Slp·g rm only, no cook'g. ~~.!T1~'b~i~c'::rp. _41' ___ . ___ 8_3_7_.,.._:z_o_o WATER~RONT Condo, Hunt1n~t<>n Re ach 2Br. 2 BR. den 2 ba-5'1SO for older c mpl'd non· Brokers 675-67 HAMIUlfGER STAt4D
w1:w·sup.JB1r 3 B.;,dlhl t •~ b11 . ae w <'pis & CORONA DEL M AH l BCRASAfVICTfORIA & IYTHESEA s::~:O~~~~~y dnnk'r. Ono s mokC.rM. $4SC __ D_M_d_l--.--r--s SO GrossStS,000.mo.
aar w1opnr, !ll' or '<' drapes. <tr.Yer & relng In· 2 Br Townhouse, frJ>lc . , un or urn. gas New 3 br deluxe lnhse, · · mo.1543 rnnge, . . x swtes rom 1 Free standmJt build mi.:.
O(ll. 640-~110 cl. New Jlttinl S27S Qlll p00 .. tennis. <'onllncntal wtr tld Adlts, no pets 20114lhSt. S36-l71S STIPS TO IEACH Ut1I incld, A/C. 11 mplc :wrrounded by parking. mo les;-$10. for upkeep ~Sl2S art 5 :kl __ • -br~altfast Some ocenn & P~. rec rm, Sl'C. gate. 3 BR. 2ba. Uni. $425 ~11! ~ rQ°~; ~~nnb:;:i;~ pkg, janitor 675-6900 Located in So. Orange
lmprov. 2 Or older hse. Huotinl{lon IJt'al'h. 2BR, Celalina views. CIOtSe t S25Vi<'tona 642 8970 2 br, cpt.s., pool. play yd., borhood. Reas.645-5456. Fashion bl, 14th noor. County , year .round
fncd_»'d, 111 Irvine NB 11.,RA Nu <'Pts, drps sboppfog & fine· beach. S18S l..ge I Br w/ pool. nDeolawpaertes. "·..., ~J.8 A• ROOMS FOR RENT cor. sulte. spactacular beach town. Immacula te ~TnlB L1use to Hunt. Harbur. 644-~ll walk to shops. Motu .....,.,.,,., ocean/mtn view. ldenl cood. 29'/r Down. /\gt.
RLUP'FS l·l"vel JBR. 2 132$ mo. Avail 12/15. ud1ts pref, no children. Near Lak• Partc $100. per mo. Utll pd for 2 or 3 man firm Law 837-4200
" l<C.. 3-n. pe• .. 1887 Monrovia ,._________ 642·0806 l..1'b .• Zero x "Vall .---------be. Lovely grecn ..... lt •· ...,.., ·" 2 Br. l ba apt. So. or Hwy, "'1 ''" · Deluxe 3 br. 2'1'a ba. au.•· .. COCKTAILS V\: ... S."'·7924 -----... 644·~ pool. $525. Ail 644·113.1 o..pioff Uwfwa 36111 adlta. no pets. $285 mo. dbl gar .. patio, frplc. l7l3 •DELUXE• Hohl1, Mohfs 41 Ou --------Newport Beach
. ••••••••••••••••••••'·~ Call 642·59S3 wkdy11 NIWPORT Alabama. 536·3465 or Eaatblulf 3 br. 2 ha.••••••••••••••••••••••• .. The Inst 11 p ace In Outstanding appearnn<'t'
2 Rr 2 88. fplc, skyhtes, CdM I '> R 2 R 673-3983 or 645-939!+ cv1!:1 APARTMENTS 536-1718 1--ease. Incl. •n"<' mat1tcr Holl.....,Guestt7 Mariners Mlle S<luarc. & location. Seats l(}(l, beaut. lndscpnl( /\II llP· ' .~. -r. a. &wlmds. ...~. -r NB 1000 ft WCH a<: a Low down payment to pile+ wshr /dryr 0<:can \'U, heamed cell· 1BR$t4S.+UTll. 2 B r . I \.!! bo . Ne suite, din rm & dbl Laguna area r e11iden1s · · · · ·in.,
Slf\3.UOBall3 1nit.s.frple.2e.1rgar .pvl2stybelowlll~bway.2 Hr AdulL'iOllly.Nopet:t cpts/drps.dryer&refrig garag~ A utC'I d oor expeetrng ((UetlS, re· ~~111~~· & aundel'k . ~~l·d buyer Agl.
111111111 ---_,... heh i>ri'I S ~l 5 mo &den.nopet.s,adlts SS2S 2450NewportBlvd.CM Incl. New paint. S275. opener avail. Pool & glater th~m at Castle ---------.-n..w...x..-..~ 6753200 mo.644-4847 642·7678bef0f'e6pm Call646-5125art5 JO recrt=ation area. Adults l~aguna Ocean View WANTED. To rent pro-Pina& Salldwk:h
ON PENIN POINT only. No pe~" VIiia for a week or more ( e 5 6 I 0 n 3 I b Id ~ In
4 Bdrms with bal<'~le11 ¥ ln•Hts Fw91sMcl Beuu~rul 2 Br, 2 Ba. ~apt. 2 Br. 1 ba. palio. enclosed NEW 3 Br 2 Ba. rec rm, 865Am•ROS Wuy & receive l~ discount. Newport. Write P.O. Box $2000. monthly net
for each. Pre11tll{1ou11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dah shr. frplc. e er· (larage. S230t month. etc. rm. BBQ. nr City Managed by Nov/~ only. Por re· 2296 Nwpl Sch Ca ~ Great South Oranl(c
wood extericr. beams It lcAoe ltlaftd 3706 ythlng, 646-5239. 530·7290 548-7529. Hall + H OHS, $350. Cranadu Mgmt Co serv ions call 494 2996 · • · County location. seatll'\8. warmth~yrlylse R . . 988-5700evs fUm.lahed well appointed Flrslclaas! Terms. Ulll, ESPECIALLY LARGE •••••••••••••••••••••••3 B • 2 ba. lower uoit. E.side. 2 br, Iba bse & Nwprt Shra 2 br 2 b3 G.ntHoM. 4150 lS2S Mesa Verde East.
4 Bdrm & den. Front Bachelor. pvt entr. & Frplc .• sundeck with gllfa~e. rear yd .. ms. 41aocbtobeoch Avail S3i5 mo'.. lae. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~a f~xl~~U~~~:~ll~~ Suite 100. Costa MC!sa
y1rd 1s Uke a green park bath St6S. Util pd. bdutJrul vlew~Yrly mo. o pets. &42-1112 oc: 2 br. ,painted. drapes, 8J3.8Ul0. Ruth. 646-IW73 Lovlna care, 2• hrs. near uSo Vlllage over· <next to Kona Lanes>.
wtvlew or water. boa~ & 673·3731 WIUIAM WIMTOH SfS.7933. crpts, l a, gas .atove, eves/wkods balance~ dl~ls. Pvt IOQkl.Q& Nwfl Harbor Open 7 days to serve
SpyglassHlll SS75tmo. lc6ooPniftsula 1707 ftealEatale 675·3331 NN beeut. apl's. 1 & 2 cl~ gar. No peu, ".'<> Jmmaclbtw/lltras. room,p.at105.S44-3833 Secretarl a aervlee, Y needs.751·3741
IN CORONA DEi.. MAR ••••••h••••••••••••••• Rentals starting at BR. SMO. up. Appllca· children 1215 41 deposit. Yrly lse. $275 mo. U c'd Home. 2 nice room~. xerox. telex. la. con· F~r S:alc, New Beauty ~/~~ r fee 2 arR ~ rEm e•:A~1L VLcw, pier. 2 Br $325: 2&3 Bdrms. llON being t.aken 1980 ~12lhSt 873-0007 board & care ror elderly reren<'e rm, all avail If Salon. good loc, growm~ <'ellenf'tocut~n ·~ mxo $.100 1 Hr~O AdllS. ulil Agent640-7000 Anaheim St. C.M. 9,4 Vacant 3 br, 2 be. fplc, EWPORT "EA'·H.· 3 man/woman.842·5790. deslr~f. Janilorlal & un· area Laguna Hills. 1~. pd 303 I-;. F.dgewater 8 bl f 1 ........ dally. b:dcoey. gar. patio. 1411 u "' Ulily service Included. 768-5594 an sPM.
WATERFRONT HOM ES 11 > R7l·2&66
2 paSo. s~:ic. ~.' AdiU: S'nJNNJNG laze 2 Br 2 9a. Alabacna. 846-9088 ~~~iee~\1to:~~'. !~~~~! .. !~.~~ r:'i~~~. p::;1!.ed~~::~ llU TA VIRM
63l·L400 Co.to M•1a 1724 no peu. Avall npprox. w/paneledden, grdn apt. SH THE SIA S6001mo. Agt. 752·731.6 BIG BEAR House fo needing a headqtr1 & a COSTA MESA ~~~ ....................... 1 2 /I 2 . 6 7 ll ·I 4 l 8 Pool.1:2$5. 7lOW. l8thSt. n.'nt. 3Br. 2ba. S22 ~r place for occHIOnal v1•·
3Br.Back RQy area. 2"' S40.00 WEB & UP eves/wknds. 2 Br, paUo, bltns. cpt.11, ~-~~·v~~w~af~~'/n~~ NEWPORTSHORES day Callafl8 496-4119 itors. No lease S17S mo. No~~br~~~";!~i~oo.
Ba,ram·rm,frplca.$450. •St.udlo&lBRApU BAY VIEW. 2 Br. blln•, drps. adults, no r>eta. pett.Z0515dtSt.5J6-8729 ~~~~~pl~x~~8:'.r'::~ LAROE C ABlN ·Bl G G7S-3860 private orrtcc. kitchen
AV311 Dec lit. <213 > •TV• MaldServ Avail beam cellp..car adulta l215.642·l288 or53&-t718 870..9203 • DEAR nr. •kl slopes . Pr\~ Newport 10<'., 2 or a vail. Oood termll. UBI. 116tHl~S$. ~N~Serv, HBlldvpoo, CIM $'50mo.675-'774• ' "'uSTSIDE vc .... nice 2 Br LARGE 2 br 2 Ba. yanl. Sips 12. Col TV. poolta frees. $l$ sq. n.. e11. ~ 1525 Me.Jn Verde East.
H ...__ -·v d. C """"' • 1 B k h Br. 3 ba, at.tJd¥, 2 car ble. 549.e.a.ea• 540-4314 0 Mo. eacb. Suite lOG. Costa Meso ar...,.-Vlt1wHom~ 548· or64~ ComaMeM 1'24 2 Ba, lndry hookup, ~ roo5 unt aa.r.pool,sauna&tennia. 4!M..aell ~ Udo Really 673.7 <nellt to Kon.a Lanesl. ~~o:.l&~ut~~~~.14 SUSCASITAS ••••••••••••••••••••••• paUo.$17$.~WTI illton.s:n .84&-9088 Npt Creal. S41S/mo. Open 7 d•ys lo serve
be, + bonus room New Mlnull~ to NB Boch & t LRO 1 Br. pool. nr. •hops, The DYLAN Nice 1 br, 2 bdrm. 2 bath Two. M&-m\5day or eves. SELL Idle Items 1¥ith a Newly cpt;{1a~~~~~:~ your~~. 751·3741
c--.trpetl, trcslq>alnt. Uril DH rurn Ado Its. no f>et=' AdJIA, oo ~ta UUI pd. ~It'· pool. S230. mo. House. Vtty 41hafl). Chtld llavc aom •lhlnJc to Ml&'? Dally PllCK Clnatned Ad ~O sq iwy SU~ mo. Sell tblnp fast w1tb Da.Jly
que Homed7S.OOOO 21\0 Newport Blvd. CM 11184 Monrovia.S48-0336 -41$1or646-3708 0.K., no pets. 554-1.332 Claullled adt o It well. ~-5678. 5f6.78iS. Pilot Want i\ds. ,
' • ..... ... . . -
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•If DAILY PILOT Tue.day, Novembef 11!1, 1976
Add it...Bultd lt...Oiaper it ... Hah'lmer it. .. Carpet SERVICE it...Cement lt .•. Wire it ... Hoe it...Clean 1t...Move
't ... Press lt...Palnt it...Nall lt...Plaster it ... Fix it. .. DIRECTORY
• ,,.mc:•l.,.W c.,c.... C Nl/C.-nte HDunth•ikia •••a•r ...,,.... .... ,..._. ..•••................. ·····•·······•·•······· .....•.............•... ······•·••········•···· ................................................................................................................. ...
APPLJANCEREPAJR R.emode-Ung Our t1Ptt1al· Conlrartor. Cuatom Cabellero• Sclu.. ~pr ~&Buftdtnr n~ace.Ptanttta •CUSTOM PAUllTING• root rcpa1n an.a
$10--&rvic •Call ty. repel r s r es Id I work· ~. aureauLe. gardener. Fr es~. re Maintenance VerY BrlcitConc~ Patio HI Q U ALITY · L 0 ASPHALT REPAa•S rate1. f"rell uc•d. pw.
l714t$492422 comm'l. All work gu1tr ol:io concret.ecutUna.AJI a&0oable 648·4&M uCt reasonable ~lS32 BlockWalls 88QPils RAT~ ~ MH!G.Mi-17'1
-1--... .. ~-k• PaJumboCom.'t.982-831' work auo r . LJ,'d. cpm Qef.~b&46-04&4 CA.llBtuce~eves .,. ._.-.--.. _.,.,.. 4M bn. bonded. insured 492·3728 • Xlnt housecleaning by .. -_,.-
••••••••••••••• ••••••• WEEDlNG 0..EANUPS day Own lrrulllport.aUon. Free est. Slumpetone. lile, CUARANTEED Paint· , •••••••••••••••••• ... -._,,.&A late .. GeorgePJlmer&Sons LEONrTE CONCRETE •CompleteMalntenarn:e S25day.~ blockwall~. brictc. plan· Ina· lnt.r & Extr. fr~ CANOPY'l'VSVCCO.
li . '~ Ice ' Adds/Rmdl/Palnt/Plans ST A M PIN .G . Cob· Free est 00..9907 t.ers Quality wOC'k al re· est. ~pert work. 6'2-02gs Cal 63 I .z4 40 1Alt R.ewifr:vLce Mc!'Ji~wl~:n~n':is Sml Jobs·Llc'dM7.fi932 ::!~~n~ =9 & tile ROll'I Leww Sen-ice ~~:;a' cr:::::-l ~~ce$. Bob 7»9354. CNTERJOR/EX"fERIOR Onnge Co Aaphatt Co al Fair Priee9 ... 1'3S
JocorneTax . I ayrol c..p.tServic• . ---&YARDCLEANUP wfndow care Dutch Accoust.lcalcellgs25yn -· •TaxPl;innm~• ••• .. ••••••••••••••••••~or C&llfor est.M7~"709 Mainte nance Service Block. brick. slumpstone exper.~all6PM Pl.o&n.--T_,__ •••••••••••••••••-•••• 124 Broad W"Y C'f-t ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ...... .,... ll •. I • 'L"&gert ._...,... _,, T b 05 mpoo & &team clean· R Gw ~t I ... ,,.1....., , wa '...._p un,er.i,~ clal . Pal ti Int/Ext Re s .......... ._.......... u •· 64
2'
11 Ing. Color bnghtener~ Add~~!!1&~~~g ... :::: ................. Reasonable reliable re· ~n~!r·~e:·~al~ di~able. Free e!t '. •OROANTUNlNG• sbow./::.""{-:a..~ Ti'.~~~!~A~-~~~~ ::i::&ch~h~ffas~J1~}m:d1n 982·5.573 L1c31?856~~:~tf!u'!t t~~~: r~~·:j:~;:~ ~ c IJ~yMS-~-Ne~:~~~ -RAM1cee~J• Newl or
Oe p t>nda bit•. Cltil rm a 1 v~ rm Custom Home Builder . lng demolition e lc: CUSTOM BRICKWORK Polnung·l~l « Exlr . .,._.,__/R-..a.. rrndl Fr at. 1ml Joo. 963-2:Wl'7 S7 50. COl.lt'h $10. chaJr S5. R d I Contractor ' • · Xln( housecleaning done BLOCK WALLS Custom pa1nUng w/ac• ...--.,._. I · c ... .._._ -• • ---,..J. . d Guar ellm pel odor Crpt S~i~U~ins In hard.to '75l·3930 by la(J.y wtexpr. depen· Free Est. Uc. 294328 c:enl on neatness. 10 yn •:•••••••••••••••••••• ft come--.. ~•
Typmg.x>rvicc. Al ~m, s repair l!I yrs t:xpr. Do build sites fo'or appl. ~ dable.owntrans847·363'7 893-8326 114.2.9m oxpr. Refs. Free est, rA'I.'CH PLASTERING "'li.-...,.w
top <1ua1lt y work. Cal work m y!lelf Re fs J ose ph Thormun .••••••••••••••••••••••• ---642·1334,dys. a rt :> & ••ALLTYPES•• -·•••••••••••••·-·-~ _ SJl-0101. __ 640·1878 <Llc. 213494 ) Haulln&/movlng. cleanup •HOMECLEANING• wknds673·!1l30 ~l ~ emoval1. trhinnl•f·
Bookkt>cp1ng & or Carpet Manwrt!layyours Gca••UCJ f'u~. TreewJ"< Reas. Go!Jr~e:r~~:e~;m ~!'!'~~~':':! ..... Paper/Paint. 20 yrs exp. VERYNEATPATCR =·~ =~cd s~r vire~ thru It.late or mint>. Rep a irs & ••••••;•••••••••••••••• ast.. reeest 2·4S97 p i t R 1 35 1 Sat. gw.ir. Free est. N JOBS&TEXTURE Y ns • ·
ment.s.lyping. ma1hng~ clearungtoo' Guarwork Exprd Hawliangardener YOUHAVEITREADY EXPER'( COUPLE will :,~~ e:::kmln":til~ wait.save S.963-363a FreeEst. 1193-1439 . II 1-,.._ I 548-~or642-412S atbigger:savmgs. Frt•sl l'LLHAULITAWAY clean your house. Call · U,-1·"••-. I ---~3646 Yd cleanups. tnmrrung. 646-47()5 yti guar Takendvanl. oC my PalicK " ... I tg ..................... .
Ccrpent..-_ --vruning Lt Maul 'g TIM MS~ an me ~per 536-7056. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DAVENPORT•CHAJR
•••••••••• •••• •• • •• ••• Carpet & ~rniture Clea~ 645-6987 Ho.MdeaNlllCJ Lmtdsc~ PETERS p AlNTING CUSTOM PA nos P~U MB ER· llepa1r. re· Pro(~.? cleaned
F\msb Carpentry Panel mg Sale. lO yrs 10 busi Shades of Green-Yard •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Expr'd reas. rates. free •PutloCovers pipe. anatallatlo n fort3$. ·M-4105
ing.doors. c:abs. etc Cal ness 840-21JS ---CaPe Royal service. Want a REALLY CLEAN Expr'd Landscape r s est.Ca11Gene5S2-04S8 •Redwood Ottks ser~lres . G Gidley . -
Vince Lenhoff 536-8475 down to "Earth .. pnces' HOUSE? Call Gingham Sprinklers: Install & re· -I l)o My Own Worit 642·8315. wa.dow Cle I
MINOR HOME REPAIH ~~S~~;·:s~~~,'.ns 64().~ Girl. Freeests.~123 pair. Concrete & brtck Pal.f YowCas• Freeest~ •••••••••••••-··-·-•
Carpent..ry, Plumbini; & fromunder our Housecleaning By ANN · work ~'1978Malone AvrgExtrlStyS345 ••••••••••••••••••••••Clear Vl~w W tadow <:eramirTile~0-5560 DAI LY PILOT The fastest draw an the Experiencedw/re/s Al..LPHASES 2·Sl,y"651lntrS'Srm Don't give up the' ship' epalrs & Compo Wa.shi.aa • Hauilerlea•
C'HRISTMAS TREE West. .a Ua1ly Pilot 493-0680afler Spm Spri~ers. turf. plans. Prices Incl mtr'l/labor "l.Jst" it in c:lass1Cied. Shingles. lnspecllona. l n•g .. Q u • I w r k • SELL idle 1lems with 3 CALLourChnstmils Classified Ad Phone . --etc allc283974 Guar,lnsrd.rr~ebl. Ship to sbore realllta! lnsrdtlic'd. Lo priceJi, Cr auar.84Z·l3M or•~
Daily Pilot Class1r1ed Ad. Ad Viser al 642·5678 642-5ti78. Want ad results 642· Call itchelJ 545-1588 Ted 62'7·7900or !152-0134 642·5678. est. 830-5020 & or $41~930 eves &c wltncb.
Bllsiftets & Found 5300 PenoMls 5350 Help W..ted 7l 00 Help Wcmted 11 Help W~ 7100 Wmhd Wcmhd 7100 W..eM 7100 Opportunity 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ....................... • ................................................................. ..
....................... Fo ti N o b I k & t a n GR.AHO OPENING! APT MANAGER BANKING Dllllw 111a..r, P /"-OAS Man wanted, loc:al Oen'I Ofe/Gr.pblc Arts
S . German Shepherd fem. Spiritual Reodhtgs ror 41 units 111 Buena MEW ACCOUNTS Hrs & days lo be ar· car wash. Salary + beJp, ~me. Coroaa def sw:ng eM'ICe f.'ountnm Va lley a rcu. Announcing the opening Park Exper only Sal CLERK COOK ranged. S2.:>0 to ala.rt. comm.Ca11M4-4480. Mar. •Y•17Wln. Eves
ii monthly , 963-7041 • orournewoffice located +unit. <714 >s3_3·l7lO llankexper.req'd. Jmmedlate opening for g~::,(dcc/ .?e~~!~.!':t. GeMfodC>fflc. Ml·Ml9• 25 llour~ p1wcck handles -at 18155 El Camino Real, from 8-S weekdays. Contact Bob Creighton reliable individual. E•· •••GIRL FRJDAY
it. J::slabbs hed accountb Found \1 /7 Large male San Cle mente . Op en ASSEMBLERS Irvine National Barut perlence ts prf!ferred. 642-8881. 1400W Pac. Cal Permanent part.time. Real Eatale Co. _...
& e11ui pmcnl $8000. Gold /Ye llow Lab like lOam·lOpm. Now for u 833-3700 E.O.S . but we will train. Pt Hwy, NB Multi M lllion Dollar full time offlee hip.
Do, wn. UBI. lSu525 Me!.!1 dog V1ctor1a, CM limiled time only, our 11:...1-~ c:all Ms . Garve y a ELECTRONlC-~-;t;"ly corpl ·1'tafefingNenewdolecln Pref mature~·. ,Of. ~crde Ea~t. 1te 106, 642-2170 "-t read'ing, reg . .-.c:. "' • ftllllS' BAR GIRL. Attractive. r v o . e n • n __. Costa !t1 11~11 (next to ---Nu;->ow ~ • ., 50 Smaller7'e. XJnl opportunity in Mia· Salary+ College OK. 837-8000. Exp. PCB ACssemf biers tbusiaatlc:. positive ceexp ~ '""""· 4• • 0 7 .,,,_UNO· Cenlur Pk El ~ · v· 1 d t 1 1 IEVERLY MAHOR needed now! all or de· mi'n'ded peopl"' to In· salary open. Mull bo Kona L:inc:. I pen rv · Y • · adiogs also availa ble. sion ieJo n us r a CM 646-5S44 • trainable and follow .._ days lOM!rve your nt>c.'Cis las. Buschard. Magnolia, Appt's not nee. 492.9034 Complex Musl h ave ---24452 Via Estrada tails, &rry S49·273(f trodure Inexpensive na· Ca
751·3741 Blk Blond German Shep. 492 ......., manual dextenty In sml Beauty S upply S t ore. Laguna Kiiis ~v-EC'-S-EC-RETARY r ~ly known produc:ls struct.o 11 ._Uons30 .. ;... ,..!L'*. A~'orlO
!lti8-S219 or · .,.,"" compooents. Familiarity needs exper. wig & hair Equal Opporturuly "-A • t ~ from our ore. Free park· ,.,_ ""Y -'' ~~~~!!~t~y F'OUNO. ~1armalade col· P.O. BOXES ~ii°p~u~ICC~sc~~errt:. ci~d r~yli!\ /~~I =~', .. --.E-·m-p.lo·y·e·r --· ~:::·l~~!~r~~£ ~ ~;~ ~:as&edan~~~~~t~ HO~~r s!~~-s_T_•_G_E_
!10'. Cocktailo.;. :i:.k1ng or fom cul. dee lawed. sala ry commensurate 9611-1671 COOk-MA TURE ~70 wpm. sh 80-91> wpm. relax at.mos.,.."''"'· .No GlRL Friday J Recept.
s.1.15.ooo or ~ubm1l. Ulll, OC Airport area. s.16·3693 for Rent w t ex pr Call Carol _BO_A_T_R_E_P_Al_R_M_A_N_ Person. Good benems Apply, T :-.tl 369 S an exper ~. & no selling Typing, lite bkkpng. Ex-
1525 ~t.'l>J Verde East, dy_s_·-------1 631-0727 581·3830 forappl. Some fiberglass & lite Adult resident care ctr. Miguel Or Suite 200. l.nvolved. Xlnloppor for per'd Send resume to ~ale 100. Co~t.i Mt'~" F'OUND· Nov 14. female i\SSEMBLY Electronic mechanical repair. App· 642·5861. N.B. adva~~~m~nt ~•rll Cl~fied ad no. 170 c/o
Onext ~o l onu l l.an~sv'c adlt blonde Corker __ O_V_E_R_W_E-IG_H_T-,--1 Sm fnendly co needs ly Crystaliner Corp. 1626 COO., w•~ FlLECLERK u;,.~~es. ine. ~1 mu~ Qp~ ~~MPieslota'.POca ~!,_US!.
pen ay!> 0 ~0 Spaniel very rriendly Guaranteed 10·29 lbs. PCB Stufre r s W/exp. Pla-n•;· cu "AO"""" " ""'"'..., E I .. , ~ ......... ~our nlX'<ls iSI 3'i41 • v 1 c a u s ha r d & "" ..... '" .,..., . ......, Ov 18 A 1 1 For Insurance Agency. por mp oyer '"
--• 11 kl FV days. Lose accumulated Call. Barry$49·2730 BOO.,K~E·R Ke~~uci.y~~~'t~~i:~: N.8 .645-9005. _ GENERALOFFl CE GIRL THURSDAY Plant & Anl1Qut• !>tori' on~suc e . rat & inches . r a pid " IOU' La "ee h .....,,
1
... .,.,, Wantabright.witly,5etf
XJnt location Mu ... l ~1.'11 839-ll tightening of skin. in·l·--------•I A1Pay & Rec .. Invoice l'Una ac _. __ Food PTep. AM . Full time •-"~ s ufficient. orderly
qwckl)' Mt 5. tlliO :!:173 1-'0UND· Wl•slclltr Shop· creased L'nt~rgy. Sare. Associate Rep Auditing. Good career COSMETICS Apply Del Taco 2S2S2 La Type 40+ wpm. ne::it person to stay 1 da1 --pin ~ Cent er in N B, nutnous.Nodrug:..S2ti. 180ROVER openinginayounggrow-Sharp gals wantt.'<I Sell Paz Rd. Lag . Hills. handwriting . At11e to abead.Ofcmanagement...
BuiinessWonted 5010 <.:ockerSpamel.642.6378. 673-8370 NOEXPERHEC Ing co. for hardworking n atu ra l cosmti li rs 581-4'120. ha~dl e detail we)rk bkkpng. AI R , A/P.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------------· -self·star,ler Mon thru Comm. bonu!>, car . FRYCOO., F/t1me. Good worklng general r ecords. Ille HEEDACTIOHI FOUN U. Male Terrier Phys ic ia n l•ving 111 New s ubsidiary of in· f'l"i 8-5.Start$3.25. Write G45-J24S " conds & benefits. Apply secretarial In beauliful
Unill'd Uu!>anL•ss ln~c~t m1x,blk&blonde. Vic of Promontory1 Point de· te rnat1o n a l corp is Bii i Maack , 17622 · Exper'd . 7AM-JPM 6 National Systems Corp. Hunt Harbour. Call
I ,. 1 f · Ha r bor Volks wag1.•n s eres fc ma e t'ompa · est a blis hing ofrices Armstrong Ave. Irvine. Cos m cloh1••ist to d o davs. Costa Mesa Goll 4361BirchSt .• N.8. _oA"OOllforappt. mcnt~. Ol' ... a 1 vrnaa :-. . . nionship Age prttft>rably Ca 927 " " .,..,,. l ariH·~l bu!.lllCl>S :-.:i le ... 8-1~24\J<! 18.37 Must b<.• beautiful. lhruout Oran!(c County. 14. _ sculptured nails or Club,540·7500.~ GENERAi.OFFiCE
l .,. rr1 1 t G rou11u !-'loo ' o BOOKS Juhctto's w11•licnlclc . TU l!am, ") ° Cl':-. ., J I! FOUND· l3•1rkles,; do". rich. 111lt-lll'•ent. witty. 1 FURNI RE P/time 5 days wk Typ GROG SHOP d " O C t • " " portu111t1cs or me;. & S'"-'-.d Will makcofr. !l.'\.'i·62116 · · · wi e. u in rant<tt' oun Y medium. 4 color. vu· wlcnted unrl l'harm1n~. women over 111 who are .-ms ---DELIVERY ing req'd. Sh optional. P/time. Must be 2t &
to St'rvicc .>our nl•cd~. we McArthur Bl vd1Co:t~l CaJI 6i:i·0055 car~r minded. You can H=~i'fteres &
5
Cosmetology Nal'I corp. Man Wanted full-time for Salary depends on sl(alls. willing to work &-knds & an~ despcr<•l1e1 for bhu!>i Hwy 837 1200 Ext 231:1 "arn. n<.'E'<is demonslrators & fumitur11 delivery. ware· Mus t II k e work 1 n g eves. Please ~all for nt'l>.'iC~ to ~e . WC a Vt' -" r kl houstn" & building main· b x I t I th Sc01,0 u 1111·o n Do ar "o rp ~uperv1sors or ncw ~ n " w /num c r s. n aoot.~5000extS20 pcop 1• "'1 .., F 0 UN 0 G e r m J n '" ~ t XI t tenance Knowledge o be f t N t Ct ~-h d Sl96PEkWtb\ i ·"""smeo&women -' car e roncep n ne1s. e wgor r ~>oo.ooo w u arc rea y. Shorthair, dark color. """' "' career future. Call Mr s mall h a nd tool s location, <'all Rita GUARDS
v.1lhn).!. ~ ,1hk lo buy female. ,1 bt !Imo llunt Happy a ny ~ge who e n10Y Wel>l Mon-Wed 2·5pm necessary. Exper'd pre GI dsl 644 1230 f now llarbour.114tHltitll Based on your produc· .peaking w.Lothers & who r rred a one, · or Costa Mesa
CALL UBI tJv1ty. Comm. + incen· are bored withe average 4ro-9329 e crlckd Interiors appt. E.O E. Pcnnfinent. Full & part·
1525 ~fro;.i Vcrlit: Ur FOU'llt>· Ft'mJlt> l n~h uves&extrapt"ofit shar· runofthcmillJObS. COUNTERHELP 492•4131 Gene ral Office·Cle rk Ume.Phooe&transpre·
EJsl. ~111t1· IUt> Cv..-.1...1 St'llt:r at ~1ontcv1d1.:11 81•rthday ang bonus. On the JOb Mu:.t be 18 & have neat ----------1 Typist. p/lime. artns, Hti q'd. Re tired welcome. \lt~a Sehl area fr• .,r SJt. rt> training Tremendous No actual sellinR m · 3 P pear a nr e G re 31 borl't ~ave up the sl\ip! area. Reply to Classified Call 54&-0274. oCc hrs 10-2, 751 .37 41 Cl.'nU~ hdd po~ ij31 .3012 pot e ntial t o Teach volved & no setting ap· pltime JOb for student "List" tl '°classified. adno.mcto DailyPilot. Cl06ed Wed.
Ot!al '14 lh1• 1m1flo ... ,.,1nnal day~ 7
ti8 ~~fl 5-P~l Bruce =[=lro:;. rr,~~~gbe :i"r;:.';'e::i~t;:u~1ron: Apply aft 71lfll, So. Coast Ship -<o s hore results! ~~a~C: ~o. Costa HAIRSTYLIST lnve~tmeftt FO\'N.l.> 2 Hrillan) personable & amb1l1ous. successful products on ~~~oJ~:.a~t~\1~~:85 OO·S678. lmn.ed. opening. Apply O_..-i+ SO IS S1Mn11·h 1 t-' I \I both For appointme nt rmly the market today An in-in per50t!. Mgr Fafar
,.,......-. y br'l4n '*1111'' "pots, uc callbelwn9A M3PM expensive prodlJ('t who's COUHTERHELP Regis Hairstyling, 3333
1•••••••••···,·:•••••••I•• l ilh & l rvanl• ~M t Yuu~l~vT1~rkcy . name Is a household ~·ll&P/time.ApplyDel COUlll lhf• ~ S. Bristol. C.M. <So.
O\l""lOll"rll Jrtm•c oa 64:!6:);13 .,., 539·1183 word lhruout the world ru Coast Plaza Mall ) H1·modelln1t I ump,1n:. & Vu Taco. 25252 La Paz Rd. L.1~-.,.· 9 <:~tom llum1· Uwltll11g l..111-tl Va r t:u:it f1•m. 1\u:.l I~~~~~~~~~~ Work 10 a youthful. LaguD3Hllls Ul4'o Ill. S • 54()o.8888. l<•·i•I) \d hl4 nail> ~wpiwrd . ., mo :.. Call friendly atmosphere & _..;;;________ flOU hav~ 1{11 , _
p ii 01 p o Ho , 1 ;;ov, ~W 71U7 anyt11lw '~ Automotive have fun while you cam Counter Girl. Days. apply \ t'~t:i\li•,J ,!l'lti~t. -. -. -, . SociafCklbs 5400 New Detail Shop needs top pay. You receive a in person. YcsCleuners. fff Offf"r! , .
-l.llt>t c .. nrrdl 1Jrh:rtor Lag ••••••••••••••••••••• help. ~uaranleed salary + ex-19885 Brookhurst, Hunt. MoMytoloan 5025 Bch R1•w:ird. 533.7270 •• ~ . , Top wages paid. Engine tremely liberal c om· Bch.
••••••••••••••••••••••• t;'( t256Sm11ho-.p148 ARE YOU lN A CLASS St.earners. eng painters. mission & bonuses. Con· ---------,,,.,
---BY YOURSELF? buffers & polishers, up· tests & other incentives. Cuslo m Gift Wrappe ht, 2nd& lrdT.D.'s Lu"lt ~h1•lt ll.', fomale. Hai. your f1nun c ia l holstery shampooers. Xlnt advance m e nt beginning part time. ful
U>A:-IS \V.\ll.i\111.1-. · ,f\',101l" \IC Boba & security made -yoo a che<:k out, pack-up & de· possibilities for both men time holiday season, n1'fl11not1nwo1lJ11l \1d:,11Jdl·n. Heward target for ~oc1al l'l1m bvery.Apply at &women. Must be avail Sal/Sun
ti73 ·111Klllrok,•r ~7 .ti:-i.l!L'\c bt•n>' At V1dco"l'W ;!OS9HarborBl,CM Only exper need apply
Money Want.cl SOJO W!'\T Lg brown dog.
•••••••• •• •• • •• • •••• • • • 11 13 7fi. Sanlu Anu Hgts.
\1'"1 mon\•V r11r 2nd trll"l (.'hoc Lab We1maraner.
11t.'\.od Sc.Ill lh:all\ t'.111 '14hl palc:h on chest. San
J .11 le ~ r '' t t C• I f 1 (' l' Dt('~O II<' Heward CTI4 I ~ 7533ur rt·~ t~ K."i4il 5433727or 1714)22'1·516.1
Diamond Cluh, you 'll 645·1030 No exper. nee. You re· Roger':. Gardens, 230
meet olher i.mgles who ceive full pay while being San Joaqwn Hills Rd
can afford th11 best Mc AUTO trained. vou can work _N_p_Bc_h_. --..-----1
h as l o o r f c r · The SALESPERSONS morning or eve. hrs. On· D d Cl b M m Deliverymen for home de 1dmon u e · Jy 10 min. by Fwy. rrom bership is S2500 Other ICENWATIERSSAYS ull surrounding com· bv.LA~FS::1140.
)1embenilupsfrom$12S. HIGHEST munities. You owe il to ---------1
Mor .,,s. Tnnf 1----------1 !>58-lJCO C ISSIOMS yourselI to al least in· Delivery man for earl OHdi 5035 enonals 5350 Don't w Ule for les:. when OMM vestigate this unusual mom. L.A. Times Hom
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~cilnha~lw~t lyFAR!! opp0r. Contact J enelle delivery route Mus
L>nnk1n1o: probh:m'> Commission!> for uuto _T_a_u_lt>ee __ ._833-8098 ___ . ___ 1 have econ car Adults on LOANS 9%
Alto 2nd TD loons
t'a1~rm~ '111ec l~!f
Mtg. Co.
642-2 I 71 S4S.06 I I --------
SAVE SS
Pnvale party will hu)
y~r2nd T ~ 642 3573_
r st & 2nd to.1
lrvow Pacific t'inanciul
Company t~JO·Hm -----
·:ARN lO't on locol TU's
l:llLL llAROfo~TY
flea I tor ti75·2800 --------
1 ,111 1\lcohol l lelphnc .sult!Speople. If you are In ly '2~ hrs per day. N
i a hr-. a dav RJ:>.3830 doubt! Try u!i! straight BOYS AND GIRLS soliciting, no collect mg
sell ~xperienced only Mission Viejo · El Toro Westminster/Hunt. Bch ABORTION ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apply Jn person. As k for area. £3rn your own area. 638-01.26 l:uunbehn~ & Referral Scl9oof• & Ken or Don money selling subscrip·
P rt•)( l1.'<\t avail wkn<ls e.tn.ctkwt 7005 ttons after school Form· Deliverymen LA Time
24 llr ll«lplinc 547·9495 ••••••••••••••••••••••• formation. call SJ0.0913 home deli very rt0ute . ~;::;---1~--------I 3:»6AM. $275 mo. Mus PREGNANT'> IE .e IAIT&IOH BUSBOY have dependable car Carloit eonfide nl1 a l "' D & n1"ghls Apply 546-4481 . ""·II or 0 art-timt-ays · t•ounschng & referral ru ~· k daily llAM ut M1 Casa
,\bortion. adoption & Be ready to wor us .a Mexican Rest296 E. 17th •DELIVERY•
l<t-epmg profest>iooal burtende-an C.M. No phone callr. Pnrlor Full-lime. APCAHE 547.2563 l week. Free job plece·1 _________ 1 please 675 7100or83J 365t;
ment asslstanec -=---------
Tired or "Boob Tubes?.. Americ~~,!l~~tenders AYON Business man s~ks purl Dale-Party Take Trips ~.,.,.,, time associate. t:arn
Diumond Girls. 1104 E. 17lh St, SA SSOOper nm. 645·1182 Guys Use 834· 1960 HMd Extra SS
EVE FOTO DATE ~~~~~~~ To Make CAI DRIVERS "
.. .,. """• 834 I""" W--"-..i 7075 Chrbhwa1 Menier? Men or Women °"''."""""· . --.-. MLlslbt!2Sorover
DEL TACO
Nt.'eds Kitchen Help
P 1tamc positions nvnil.
JJay ht:lp S2 51) hr
G3l-t831 1720 5upcrlo
/\vc. CM
2pm-8pm. Earn about S40 on every p Demonstrator-; wante ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------'----1 uractive brunette seeks SlOO you sell as an A. VON Apply ln crS-On P'Umt>. will train to wor
Lost & FCMMd 5300 •KAREN'S* live in position as compu Re prcsentati ve Sell YAiow Cab m dept ston:. Hrly wag
••••••••••••••••••••••• OUTCALL Mt\SSAG E nionthost.es51for afnucnt beautiful g1fls. jewelry. U25l Slater Avenue + bonuiw!I Adv a nee
Lost-Fem Spayed Doxie srM·2AM 838-1780 gentleman. EnJoys cosmetics. more. I'll Fountain Valley ment possib•htw~ Open
mixture m CdM urea travel. cooking. tennis. s how you how. Call ST WRS 1ng:, m Beach Cities
Ltc no 0033111 "Our •SHARO ..... 'S * saiUng. rishlnti. m usic & S40-7041 or Zemlh H359. CARPET IH A Orange co. Call Coller
rilo. "~ 5961. "" " dancmg <Zl3l821·9618 l~~~~~~~~~I 3 Yrs. Expr. minimum Joh 2l3 1173-4737 OUTCALLM/\SSAGE Must have truck & tools n / -· --
FOUND. Femule doA 49!>-1224 Rellred European Nurse. BABYSITTER who can CALL ONLY 8TWN 6& 1 DENTAL Arnst Orth
Mesa Ve rde North 1----------1 Phy Therapist will ex· love 9 month o ld · PM.645-4337 Chnirsidc Exper 'd Only S4~or 6422233 EXOTICGIRLS cbngsvs ror sm11pt.Cr.1 Moturc. rell11bl~. my Pref. RDA 4"1 Days
Massage & Modeling area. M7-~0 E~s. hOme 2'-1 day!t u week. ClerlcaJ. Financial pay N 8 54 Hr 642 2626 Found : Mall' Sprrnger
Span. Aprx l yr
Llver/wht cir County
tags. rnd Orange/ Santu
Isabel. CM. 842 2262
LOST: 0081EtLAD. 21st
& Orangt' 3mois old.
642-'153
t----------1 Westmlnst t'r 'Bol&a ment clerk for ma1or · · · · · O\Moll Only M2·3l69 vallable Nov. 291.h. prac Chica. 892 0560. pension adminis tration Dental' Orthodontic As
'111E EXPERIENCE'' llcat nurse. Liv~ In. ----firm. Snh•ring levc:I ... 1st wunted Top pay ro
Adult motel. C losed LOAM/3PM.846·~ &tbysltter. li te h!lt'keep. light typing & 10 key r aghl~·r.son Costa
TV L~ R •---------1"" tor fam °"'7 yr old "Al..,..•I ••"" mo + xln1 -...rr. <170 c:irrwt rQr t.'Serva We.fed 7100 s.o ... n . Mo n ·L'rl ... 6 ,, .. .,. ... ....,.,. . m<:Sa. ., lions. 548·9755 r .. beneflls . <114 )644-436() -----
711-2863 art 6. ext 270 Dental Orthodontic i\s~t . •PM.MltlADER• AMAAAAMAAAAAA ,_________ exper or dental :ssstnl(
Pnsll Pr-en\ & Cuturu. •••••• COCKTAlL WAfTRESs 11ehQol. IJ.t~·25~ ""' .8ANK1NO -Exper'd under 30 pre-------FOUND doll Blk fem Uc213/694·13SOfl97·W12 JOIHOTLIHE IOOtUC•ER ferTedCall 'Jack&42·8293 DENTAi. ASST. soin
Cockapoo. Vic Pomona & -~-S«yt..OcnOrc, Reeupt Ba-'"exper ,,..ty ..6.--(runt office duties. Ex·
Wilson. C.l\1. 64S·~. Etc.Mc Etc.Etc.Etc. CooL~::'i BobC;.;.ghion COOK Ex~r 'd Coffee per. S:it morning & Mon CAU.556-~ trvllle Natlonid Bank Shop Breakfast. Lunch & duys. Or . Schu mm . FOUND shiny blk Pug Control Cll.reer m.3700 l!: o E Dinner. Apply Rigger. 847-8501
Dog. Whl ~pot on chcllt EmploymentAsenc:.r · · · ~twn 9·ll & 3·S. 16 ---------•
WearinJ blk harne!UI, WATCH FOR THE Fashion Island. NB Hiwe so.,melhi.ng you w,t1nt
Pomona Av4! C M ACCOUNTANT/ llavesomcthln(UOU want to sell. Cla331lll'<I ad.S
. ;
,.,...._Wo
CHRISTMAS CASH
bJ plac"'9 •ad_... aw
DAILY PILOT CHRISTM~ TREE ................
• ~ c~n~mo• • « ~ Gifts For • ! Everyo,.. «
fC Wh11t a '4 1111tl1·rflll "'"' lo:
"''" ~1111r µ11u1flv,. lur • l'hr1 .. 11,1u... r1i.:hl o'Ot «
• 11'1.ml 11n<11·1· OUI •
-tr l'll H IST:\I \S TIH; t-: ti **•**'********
• *********** _....__,
• ~ IF YOUR«
• BUSINESS tr « IS tr ..... • <:wr:-. Tm·~ • ......
fl !'\l'OHTI;\(; <;oon~ « .. SJ.JO
• Cl.I IT! II~<: I 'OTTE 11 \' •
fl J t-:Wf.:1.H't' /f,\H( •
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ir .\:\Tl()t; .. ;s llOUll!t-::O. «
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~ . .,.., .... Clil t rr.. .. .. ... ,...,., ... ~'JI'. ... .., ..... ,.. .... _..,_.,.. .. ..
.... ,.. ~l Ctl Mw.671 .... ,_. a. f 0 i .w. ..... fw ....... AllllM ......... ,... ... .
<7WS4S 9331 ext $07 or OAll..Y~WEE TAX PREPARER to acll' Clatsllled ads do Flad what you want in It well -Coll NOW.
645-832$. =~THURSDAY Expenenced 752·1801 ltwcll.6G·Sf78 Daily PilotClasallleda &U-M78 -~--...,....~---~----........ ~
...
, f!
HOMEMAKERS
Need Christmas SS'a!
Trainee Assembly &
Packagln i J oba now
allaU. Long ct •hort-term
assignments.
Never A Fee At Tempo
6 tempo
TEMPORARY HELP
Cal54M4SS
Equal ()ppor Employer
HOSTESSES&
CoddallWaitrffws
ApplicaUona eow being
taken-G Newport Ctr
Dr, N .B. Classiest &
most expensive club in
Orange Co. Next to Unit-
ed Calif. Bank. Must a}>p.
ly In person 8am·Spm
dally .
Housekeeper Live·i.n So.
Laguna home. 3 S mall
school children. 49!M09l al\6pm.
Houlekeeper Cor gulil1t
hOmelnC.M. •
Call 644-671~
Kouaek~per, part ·lime.
Jrvlne area. Sil·~
IHSURAHCI Topi"+ OC' mlnu.a car~
ex~ will be paid for
top Ooteh agency penon.
able to do m 11rkeUng, un-
d er w r I ting , raliog ,
cit.I.I~. etc. Must be able
lo qualify thru testing ..
also pass state lnal&J'aDCe
depl. exam & be Uc"d.
Xlnt benefll'l. cau Mrs.
Baker. 8J3..95:!0.
LIADWOMAM
Xhlt oPPort.unlly In Mis·
aJOn VfoJo compsny. Lite
uue mbly exrr In
ceramics or s m e.l~c.
tronlc componenta nee. ?
yr 11 mini m u m t•Pr.
Salary comr4eniurate
w/cxpr. Xlot beneflta.
Call Carol~ :iel -3830 for
appl.
Llve ·ln houeelteeper. L4guna Beacb llJ'ea. Ph:
betwefl\ ..,, 1sz.eeoo.
f
•
..
'
, . .w,w ..... 7100 w ....... 11ootWpW•hd 7100 Wonhd 71000ogt 1040Mitc.UOMOU• 1010 Tues<toy.NOYember 16,1916 OAILVPILOT flll .. tnic~-~ .. ;,~·;~ .. ~·;;;·;~·~~· .. s;;.-;.~·o;p.· ..... ~~;~~;~~ ...... ~~·~::~~·;;;: ....... w····:::::T .. E .. D ...... M11e.n..._. 1010 & OnJaM 10•0 ~:SI 9150 ........ •PM u 1 'd1 , d • · Sa lea person needed Stds c:h all1• s hot•• "" ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
(
-r ••ll. a 88• • u en.i.. Ctra mlca or acieoce TOP CASH 001..L.AR · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• F t llivc t,.ICIO CQnv. Evu1Sia'l SH.'7851 , Well yroomed w~~al~Y buc:kft9Und mandatOI')' wormd• PSV lsld• $100 PA ID FOR VOUR Kilchenset. .• atuUop t~l11 WW".1l\:r;crPiaoo.2 yn old, ,3 V ~maha 360 Enduro
Center. 15~ Suporior 8»'1€86 morn n~ & o-d . Basic: undtratandln• of up>~ JEWELRY WATCHES S85 Call"39-MOOSal/5'.ln llke new. Walnut. Must ~lrp d for off r o ad . ~~~ _ ' ::;1• thy. 54 3333' electronics mandatory 3 YORKSHIRE TERRIER ART OBJE(.'TS. OOLO eam.Spm s II Sac:. ~ <SlOOO Strong. Runs ad. $400
' ReaJe&tale yn e xpr n\tC. Xlnt PUPS Chrnp blood SILVER S ERVIC ~ Wfla grey Per11ian tomb !klWI ~-3471 557·5646 -~-.... U SfC.ADMll+ASST. w nt>tlts. salary com-lines. tiny 3 lbs stud FlNE F'lJRN & AN · <'Oal.Grey squlrrel cope 0 0 '13 amaha TX750, wy
-MASSE sa BROKER Seer~t.arv for trade llS• inensural\.• w /bdc k · servicc530-64SS TIQUl::S 645·2200 Bcstoff~r ~JIS12 KlMBALL R AN700 seat & peg~ Pull b1u·k <l,8.28) far leliL lull Um ' 1 ground. Min ion Viejo Jn· · ~ Xlnl cond. M.M5l see to h.a.Ddlebru-s. oliu!c xtru~.
-.,Politioo in tdanaae N ~~~rc'!.'."itx~ill~g~ dustrlal arell. Call Corol Frffto Yw 8045 LUGGAGE TAGS Like New Radial Saw. •:Jlr«IAte. $100. Plea11c m> Ph S48-8364 a rt G
up. nee. Wu tr:1ln. Call SERVICES challelll.lnar oppor. form 581·3830 for appt. ••••••n••••••••••••••• from your business card. 1'o~/~\ ~ ~~:,arn t' al\ 6. 64Mt'72 Pill:__.
'rD·lll5el day&. or ~-<W~ div w ilniUaUve to or TO G German Shepherd. 10 mo. Send one card for each a75 ~ • a Ston, llntauraftt, '7311onda CB350 twin, xlnt
·••• • .._. Need a professional wh gal\lae & h:.ndle varied OUM old male Loveschlktrer1. ta1 plus one spitrt'. We 6 ... tots co nd .. d 1 H bra k e .
MIDICAL
has owned or managoo lcgw & :A4:IOC. malh:rs MA.CH. DESIGNH Free lo aood home r eturn per mitne nlly 19 .. TV. portable la)'11 ... •••••••••••••••••••• windshield. 2 helmet~.
larite reJ1ldential resal Typing & problom sotv. Must hue .cxte m11ve 499-1%11 ____ scaled aUractive tog It good sJ2 hood ha/dryr RETAJUttS cover, SSOO. 837-5619 ' oerree with u 11ucc:eiu1ful Ul8 ability main pre· ~~.~•~on"dtool'"'nfl,,c~·ef~1~I Femi.le Shellie1Terrier strap, muleeuna airline S6.50:64S:tS25 New et&ctronic cash re· Wl3 YAMAHA 360 MX X-Ray Toch Dtt .. J11n.
vacation reller. C.R.T.,
~·· R.T req'd. ~·), Irvin Clinic M t Kdly .~' m.5"9().
baelcground of recruit reqws1tes. Call 7S2·8Sl~. .,.vu...... · • .. .,. .. nix 14 mo trl color' had ID req remenls Pre· · 8 d' t f h 11 · ing, training nnd man•~· tun; design. Autom;i\ion '. · .o9es · · vt"nt loss & theft• For a rune 30.30 Winchester . i\l gisw,.., llY •rec rom vf'ry 5 arp. we malll·
Ina people Mu!lt ~ abll SECRETARIES equipment de•ign exper .shots.~ -• ~ _persooaliied tag tmt'lose cond. Sl6S. Dresser. anlq Mfgr. ~ tained. $800 549-2835 to communicate wit * preferred. Xlnt udvance· Ch sired Sl. Bunard. wallpaper . fl)hti c or mahog 1\50 . sew log Mere.._. MolorH
broktr/owner1t --EmployersPayAllJ.'1.>cs mentQPporl.~t>ptyStan· Free to loving home "Day Glo" paper & we m-11 f' h f St., gt' r OfOr.giteo.ty Sch{"'"• tt 0 ~ Ext"tllent salary o Ut.RclndersAgency rord Applied Enaijnet.>r· Lovesk1ds. 496-8808 will back & trin1 your featherweighll646-47S7 $.47-4489 •••••• ! .. ~: ........ ~. -MEN. pertn. plffine for l)e4\Ses, ca r allowance, 4020BlrchSt.Ste l04 1ng. 3080 Airway Dr. ---· tags. or try \.WO curds ForSale'74 GMC26'M 11
-w. LA Timn homed4'livery m e dical /dental . in Newport Beach 833-8190 CM. bucktobat'k. Brand new continuous loats& M.rlftt lully equipped. lo mi: ~ 1n Newport/C. Mesa. surance Dy n a ml ' CaUforAppt/~lllb '6S FreetogoodHome PRICES· clean i ng. timer. &,11...,.. Int h $l7 500 Must have dependable ifOwth potenUal with :i TOOL ROOM 2Rabblts. $2eaor3/SS Toastmaster oven .••••••••••••••••••••••• :.0.7~ ape • ·
-car & be reliable S275 to solid based firm. na PLA.toltolllt 645·7693 41s tags$l OOea Never used. $40. Qn GeMrd • 90101---
•• 1350mo.S48·1T40. tionidinscope. Machine s hop or tool p b d Sh 6/9tags$l.50ea· bedspread. rtoral. $20. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Be uut 28' Dlplom11 l
... mt Tm E For confidential in SECRETARY room baekgrottnd ur! re ABeust ep 4 1oormore's14-0~a 548-4264 NEW SEAWAY SKIFF Motor Home for rent a-e, perm. arn ter iew nd re ume t /\SSlS'fANT TO UUSY ·ched li 'd mos male. aut. mark· . , Daily wkly mthly Sips b • S17S·SZOO. wk Fuller v se s sM sl u .. _ngraexmpewr. reqt•. logs Blue merle w brn. Sales Tu Included Frigidaire refrig. S80. 5 14 Ft. DORY 10 H~s ster'eo ulr c:ond .BrwhSales,sM·78Sl. PO. Boit !0975, Sant EXEC UT 1 V E In u ~ mus .,r 645-026l NOCARD" speedblke$50 , S230 493·6825 · · • -Ana,92702. t"hallen11i1Mt man age . ">Chedullng wor,k loads. ~ Draw your own or send 642.7678 crulsecontrol 768-0754
llodel waritOO ror picture. mentor di~rsified corp. Xlnt advanc:e~nt OP· Purebred while rem . name. address. phone & -... 30' S\Vordflsh Plan" ~· GMC MOTORHOM E
Mat be 18-42 yrs. Please -----Secretarial skms & book· Port., Apply at. Stan_fQrd German Shep. 9 mos, we'll make one card per s.450 646-7871 SJps6 Wntr rates. Pvt
• ... r· cJa1Nl.~~-0308 C.M.Askror R.E. SALES keeping knowledge •m· Applied Eng1neer1ng. friendly. obedient. good Ul8.Add2!Yeach. Mi~ellm.ou ptyw.2616 ,, _ J)()rta nt. Salary <?Pe n. ~Airway Or. C.M watchdog. Moving. can't Send check or money or· Wanted 8081 loah. Pow..-9040 642-4097 Nwpt
based onJ capab1ht1es. . -keep AftSPM.645-0280 derto •n•••••••••••••••••••• ........ ••••••••••••••• -· V
Mothns helper . Very JO.IR -H-1 Mr G 1 a r r u s so . Typ1s~1 Bookk~eper for --PILOTPIUHTIHG SSS C "'SH FOR OweMGl"OMda 37 Reill: MINI Motorho~ -li&bt hsekp'g, & some Tr <days>7S2·~l or (t)vcs) P.ubhc /\eel s office. 1!!..--1.1.-8050 p 0 Bo l!i60 ~ Reduced S5000 for quick Slps 6. Self·Co,nt. avalla· babysit'g. own car nee.. #I ht Sales S86-«>29 Must be accurate w mm . .....,..~ . · " Good used fum/refrigs · ble Thanksgiving wk . Teenager ok Daytime #I ift Uttift9s 3 yrs exp. 642·8636 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cost.a Mesa. Ca· 92626 frirs/stoves S<iG-0768 sale. Aft cabin. 2 heads, 2 SSS.1313 days. 492·459U
;" G.11-ZllU Eves. 644--0801 #1 iR A.dvet"tisitMJ SECRETARY UTILITY MAN **I BUY** Bttrdrarter. holds'• Keg WA.HTED ~~~ ~!~~~·~rrthgrs _:.vest wknds
-o• MOTOR ROUTE '"'•lllqow .. ach 1 girl office. accurate NEWPORT Good used Furniture & oi beer. new cond. $200. ORIENTAL RUGS total time. twin eng.
2 Dally Pilot route In Fo...taln V•t typillt. accurately 10 key For apt com plex. 40 hr Applian.cea-OR l will 673-S276. Calf aft llAM · Persian & Chinese also Perf. cond. ~7·934.9.
,-c1 Newport BeaClh. after· Unll~nsed or llc:ensed. adder. all general office wk.Salaryopent>«-2611 sellorSELLforVou. CUSTOM ' Tapestry.Pv.,Pty'sonly CL~IC
900ftl, Monday through Free 15· day ··Quick· $600 + Salary open. MASTERS A.UCTIOtol 640-7014 28' ROSTROP
•Friday, plus Saturday Start"t.rainingprogram. 546-1631 WAITRESS 646-8686&833-9625 WOVEN WOODS ~al -BuiltinSweden
-ud Sunday mornings Call Monday·Friday y Pttimeover 18. Apply aft •Wi T080'f OFF• ....,.._ .. , 8083 Gd eng. easily restored. oo m>per tnQnth gross.~ ask for Bev-ask for Bill SECRET.AR 4PM . Biqio's at 19204 SAVE! New & used rurn, Over401n·slo<'k patt.erns $1.SSO. AY 646-9000 ... cash dep0slt required. 848-0844 832-~0 Sol lodustries a major Beach et: H.B. 962-7212. appl ·s~ misc. Wiison's Also M1Nl·BLJNDS •••••••••••••••••••••••
Call 642·4321, ask for BEL mfg .ln the recrealion 811rga1n Nook. Now 2 64>8950 833,977 Conn Mtn·O·Matlc elec. ~u ctreUtaUon JAR l field needs a dynamic WAREHOUSEMEN ·Stores -545 & 814 W. --organ. excellent condi· 30'JEFFRIES 1"' REALTORS marketing secretary. w antedforCa.rpetStore. 19th, C M. 642·7930 & CARPET Uon.S600.P.P.S32·1259 f1ybndgeSporUlsber ~· NEED EqualOpptyEmployer Salar y !"egollabl c . Must know how to drive 548-3262.-WEBUY. _ Must Sell-Conn E Flat FreshwatertwnV8's
Bent> ft t s C a I I forklift. Some knowledge Kipg size Bed complete 4.00sq. yd. Alto Saxophone. fine Ass~oa~ AY646-9000
Real FBtate <n4lMl·~for appt. oC carpet business pre-$100 Like~ . PLUSH SHAG cond. $125. 675-1528 af\ UNI FLIGHT 21' Mega . ... CHRISJM~ $S'S? MANAGER rerred. CALL ONLY . 498-0482 Lowest prices on an 6fM FeatlnAug'76SeaMag
... ,: Rec:enl experience re· B1WN6&7PM.645-4337 major brand. Call ro &LABoatShow. Brlstol ~-' OPTENEMlNPOGSHF~OR sldential sales Prime SECRETARIES W 65 t Kng Sz Luxury, 3 Pc red freequote. lO·!ipm. Complete Roger Drum cond. fully equlp'd . .f,, : oman or over o care velvet bed set $300/bst 1714)497.1345 Set. many ~tras. $600. 675-7203 .r ICtyp•cli()pttatou location Residential. TYPISTS for elderly lady share olr.99!1"6l35afl6pm · __ GibsonSG E!Jec: Gwtar. __ • ,. Dkt=S.Cy's commercial etc. Salary. Condo apt In L.aguna. Golf Membership. Irvin $300. Fender Twin Boats.Sall 9060
fl, 'PIX raton com rnission&overrides. CLERKS Sa l ary n e gotiable. SpeciaJ lnterl. ordeci>rated CoastCountr,.YClub Reverb Amp-. $300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ., ~ ----'--' .... ""'/··L Ca 11 a p p t w I t 49H~7 Uv'rm grp lncl cmtom 642-0116 9684657 Hobie 16• trlr. new trans & ~ ......... wo secretary. 7~. made suede.tweed com· Typktl llEYPUNCH OPRS Merchandise bo sofa, velvet oct"as Digllal Clock radios re Office ,,.,.._.e & more $1,42:1. 646·~ or Acc:omflftcJClris ft .. , .................... chair & o ttoma n . paired. also Cuc:ko Equipnlltlt 8085 ~~
NEVER A FEE RECEPTION IS lnt~:C.~·Y3;~isr Anli.-S 8005 redwood cocktail & end Clocks 642-0364 •••••••••••••••••••••••Pvt. dock avail, up toss·
Local'Areas MO FHS •••••••••••••••0 ...... tbl.. fire extinguisher · ~Oil $50 -Wanted· IBM correcting pwr boat. Dover Shores.
TEMPO we have an attractive Wonderland lal!'p.walllamp.6x6orig 'vouctt~~r:P · Selectric Typewriter. No live aboards or party
TemporaryHelp opening for a well TOPPAV!!!'!!' painting + color <'O· 557-8393 Willpayt"ash 640-4657 or work on boats. please.
"" 1....,...s kvParklrvlne groomed individual as HRPMATES Of Anta•nues•. ordinated access in ---& 809 Lunityour el~trolysis & ,...... ~ Receptionist for our ..,~ redwood $1500 firm. MUST SELL Oak·fram PIClftOS °"laM O security S3.75 per ft . Cdl 540-4455 growing company One 835-1176 r HUGE w 8 re h 0 u 8 e ~or 499-2835 glass coffee table. $50 •••••••••••••••••··~··• t2\3) 924-4495
Equal ()ppor Employer at ffi crammed with over 500 Wooden Office Desk. S50 BALDWIN Acrasoruc. "" year gencr 0 ice ex-, 1505 E. l7thSlreel music: boxes. nickelo· Medit Eltpandaway buf· Walnut $1000 20· GAFF RIGG. Hanna perience needed. Must Suite102,SantaAna _.___ 1 1 ret. sea•·'". also .. h..., 1 Toas ter -oven. $25 · · •' ---------be able lo handle a "'"""' p anos, c rcwi or· "" ...., ~ '" 642-4489 499-1642 clesign. new sells. nds Nursing busy cordless PBX gans. well c locks . lge modem dresser & ,_.. ..... _________________ -_ work.$2.500 S36·3739
RH SUPERVlSOR switchboard, light typ. SECRETARY. Insurance gr andfa ther clocks. misc 846-65611 ---
7-3:30 Shift. Must have b~ and Olher general Agency, N.B E>tper:d . faOscvienra~,n.OOOg an.oooUquWeosrth PLUSH 8' Sora & 6 Lov·
I f · d t' G d No life. Sh not rcq'd. Sal -a cu t e ho s P ' t a .. o ice u ies. oo American International eseat. all WOOd game set aupervisory exper. Xlnt ~any benefit s. open. 645·9005· GaUeries; l802-T Ketter· w I match! ng aceess .
benefits Contact Mrs cations acc.,ted SECRET I\ RY EXEC ing St Irvine . Tel Glass top dineu.e glass
J ensen. Costa Mesa 9:00o.m. to 3:00p.m. Great oppor. Career secy 7:>4-1777. Open Wed thru cofree tbls. wood coffee
Memorial Hos pit al. currently working, de-Sat.9AMto 4PM. Visit! tbl, king sz bdrm set.
642·2734. t7872Cartwric)htRd sires ch311n·g posit an king or queen m at-
-___ . lrYIM CalJf admln. sales. Strt work AnUque ~. Herculon lov
' • 1st of Jr. Xlnt SHttyp, WalnutSecretary eseal & sofa, 82" tall
'" OFFICE,PART TIME
2-4 Rn per day Typlna.
nea&..: haodwrtl.ing. St
S2.50br Ideal for stu·
dent. Call btwn Noon·
3PM. 842·2337.
bvy de wisales ablty t _ C.!!!._~9887_:_ _ grandfather clock, all in DELLY FOOD girl ore. Prime Newport Applimc.e$ 80l0 xl~~·~-4'160
COMPA.._.Y Beach toe Pd. ben, start •••••••••••••••--•••••• Maple Platlorm (tocker " $800. Cmnlt res. to ad 8 r ..... k s65 o I I h 11473• oafly Pilot P .O. t'otsrnan ee ma e r. , ccas oria c r .
Equal opportunity
employer MI F'
Bole l 560, CQl'lta Mesa . !'lew -used l month. S250 grn/whl S60. Recliner Ca. installed ~3-1232:.... _ cbr wht pearl naug $125.
sofa a· toast cir $325, Fr O[v~f ~n H~~.;~!!i~~~1---------SECRET A.RY F:J;if"t!~e~E3~0~0J: ~~~a~ ~r~o~ngnl~~
Firm. lnvolvlng 8 vane· RECEPTtOtollST Admin .. l(en'I ofc duties. Warner nr Harbor. Santa hdbrd. Pin~ upholst 'd
ty or work activities For busy beauty salon. typlng. Rcspon. mature. Ana. 979-2921 $20, Walnut rnd end lbls
Math background along Exper prcf'd. Richard Resume req'd Send to ..,,.. Coro d l M w/10 key exper is desira-Ouellette Beauty Salon. ad 11792 Daily Pilot. J>.O Magic Cher gas stove, 4 """" pr. na e ar .
ble. Will train for com-200 Newport Ctr Dr. Box lSfiO. Costa Mesa . burners. Harvest Gold. 6'4-4440
.,, puter orie nted pro· Nwpt Bch. Ca. 921626. Only used 4 mo's. Cost $1SO Dtn Rm Set. Mint
c e du r es c o paid --s~R-•RY S4t5. sell $200. 642·7812 cond. 4.2xeo·· lbl. 2 Cills. s benefit s. SJlury open 1----------i ~ '"'"'. . days chrs. 646-0663, 349 No.
C II 714 ,,,.6 «N> ... a.•rni'• "ffPiroto., South e r n Callforn1a -· · -NwplBI 11 • .,. •JV•v "" ,· TherapyTech Sales Office requires Kenmore Washer~ Elec ·
-~~· Certified or k eg1stry ~ture perllQC\ w1lh 5 t Dryer S.200, Whirlpool MOVING. SelUng drop
Pa.rt time eYerung work, eligible wt exper Must 10 yrs. t•xper .. good washer S40. Kenmore leaf table, waJnut Mlalr,
xlnl Pa.Y.' no p~ures be able to do artl'rial mechanical skills a nd washer $125, O ua r · s wag lam pa. aold &
lrvme area 499-JIM8 blood ga~s JI 7 Shift. customer l'Onlal'l. FC>r 546-8672 _ whit e, call afl 6pm ,
_P_m_Ti~e.SJlfour Contact lietty Amor06o, interview contact Sale O'Keefe&Merrlt 645-7857. _ . __
Mate 1'i' Female 642--2734. Q)sta Memorial Manager at t714 >752-5561 36" sas stove w tdbl New. Qn Sz bed, ~ sngl
831 3656or67~7 196 Hospital. broiler . center grlll. beds, deck chrs, redwood ____ ••VERSATEC Moving, must sell by tbl. weight set. 675-07'14
PIX A.nwer. Sert. R F. 8 p I R AT o It y ----AIPOl!a-HY 11/28. Phone art 6pm, ----------1
Pttlme shift s vnsom TIIERArlST Must. work i\n Affirm all Vl' /l.c· 645-7857· ~~:! ~c:th& ~i~~·
wknc;b. PaW whlle tratn all shJl'l5 Apply ut San Uon/Equal Opportunity KentJX>re dryer. electric;. bedspread. c urtains:
tng. OOK 1!33·~ __ CI e m c n t t• Gener a I Employer white. excellent cond1-58&-9893 eves
PEOPLE PER.SON 1tosp1tal. Hes plratory . t.ion. $1i5. 531·9561
EM!<' needs pt tlmc 113 .. '.!lwrapy Dt•Pl 496--1122 SICURITY GUARDS • Kg sz bed. 2 Ja~p tables.
· ... I I "'-I \st & 3rd Shifts . Anaheim Laundromat heavy duty ,,.;pie dresser. sngl bed. • llOC 1nw ... esuppy ru lt"•taur a nt-Waltress. h d "'' I l __ .. .,..,..._..,, ""' area.Noexpnec A~e21 s et. was er/ ryer dresserwlmirror couch.
-Y capita 1"""'· u••·"""· Luncht!ll & Dinner. Eit· & over Uniforms furn. washer needs repair $50. end tables. 642-4417
Got six geese a
laying you'd Uke
to move before
Christmas?
~ove 1hem under our tree.
'13 Catalina 27, itlnt cond.
VHF. spin. gear. many
xtras 495-6485 eves
COLUMBIA 22. Clean 4
sails. 6 hp 0 /8. S4950.
492.2029 jiays, 493·8717
ev
26 • Eftclt.crf or
w/Moorlng.E_~ ....
HOBIE 16. Orig 19 Light
hulls full race ge ar.
many xtras. c:slm Hobie
Sl895. 644·9734.
FLYING DUTCHMAN
Hull only + racing
mast. S75. Call
640·7934
44' Island Clipper. Sloop,
race1crulse/l1veahoa rd,
btfl & fast, must see.
$32.500. 645-4979
Hobie 14', 1972~ Gd cond.
Trailer & loc ker for
boom. sail & access.
$89.5 67-S.0827
'73 COWMllA 34'
Cust. int. lu ~ diesel.
Llk'e'new Xtras. $31.500.
S31·3374or64.5·7S54 Evs.
loafs. SUps/ Docb 9070 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SLlf WANTED : 34·
Catamaran. Newport or
Dana Poml. 673·3620.
s pa;: e r 0 r 2 5 • 4 0 •
Fi!Jerglass Sailboat.
NewPort 1714)675-8990
DISPOSAL
SALI
W•"re SetliftCJ off ow
......,.. stock of .. ..,
JAMIORH
MOTOR
HOMES
New"76
Jamboree
191/2' Mini
MotOti Home
Fully self contained In-
cluding 3 burner stovL-. oven. 6 cubic rt .• refrfg ..
dual sinks. rear dinette.
root rack. A04734652132
Disposal Price
$9586.
New'76
Jamboree
22112·
Motor Home
Fully self contained In.
eluding roof rack & lad·
der. AM/F'M 8 track. 6
cubic n. ref rig .. 4 burner
range air cond1tloning.
cruise control. A real beauty. F047296S202S.
DISPOSAL PRICE
$11,668.
•
New '76
Jamboree
22112' Mfni
Motor Home
Fully self contained In·
eluding roof rack & lad·
der. AM 8 lrack, 6 cubic n. refrig .. air condition
ing, cruise control. rear
& side doors. dual dinetll'
with captains chair. Ser.
J 047266.51973.
DISPOSAL SALE
$11,548.
GUSTAFSON
LI NCOLN MERCURY
1fl800 Beac h Blvd
Huntington Beach
842·8844 per. req'd. Call for appl Car & ph o n e n ee . 963-5469
Meyerhof's, ai.k for Jim. Universal Protectio n --_-------GcrocjeSale 8055 ~80«. Serv1ce, 1226 w . Sl.h St, ltefngerator /Stove com· •••••••••••••••••••••••
R...a•s Santa Ans. l nte rvws bo.Xlnlcond.S85.or best 2nd Hander.New ·used.
,.
PHONE SALES
On each Thursday through
December 16th, the Daily
Piiot will publish special
pages to make It easier for
you to convert your saleable
Items to Christmas cash.
Dock space for 2S·30' Pwr
Boats. SJ.00 per foot per•20--.-E-ld--d-----mont.h. 673-4300 ora o. sips 6. Dy or ---------1 wk rental avail Reas.
Phone Sales people
male or femllle, It> to 6!
''.'., years of age. Guarant wages or c:omm1sstoM. ·I·~ 2~ Eu\ 17th Street
SUite 0. Co11ta Men
between ~:00 &: 8:30 p.m
&M>-4223. ~
1101
I
Equal ()pport unity
E!mployer
" dally I0-12a m & 1.30· offer 64S-322Saft .5 t20E.23rd.C.M.
ChanpPotffiott 4 30pm. 19 curt side by side ~es -Sat.10·5 W~kduys & Weekends refri~/freezer. Jlarvest Behmd Feed Barn
Chal lcnr;1ng pog1Uon for ervlcl• Stal!on Allen· Gold 3 yrs old. 642·4417 J ..a-. 8070 cupablt: mdiv1duals. Xlnt dant. exPt·r d Day & .w .... r bcneflu,. lnS4ilr Eves. F\Jll & p/timc. i\p· lic:ydes 8020 •••••••••••••••••••••••
flaril s.p.r+or ply, Shell Statton. \7th & ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• WANTED
U45Supenor tive Irvine.NB USED REBU ILT &
Newport lkh 642-24 10 SERVICE STATION Guaranteed All t ypes, TOP Ci\SH DOLLAH
A,.,."""' DANT parts. repairs. Trade·ins p A 1 P F. 0 R y OU 'R
RH c-I ...,.. JEWtLRV. WATCHES. _,.en sor 21 or older. Apply ln acceple<\63~ --ART OBJECTS. GOLD.
---------13-U. f)J1Jorp1dme. person. Wed·Mon. lOl\M 10 !30"1 s pd "Stella" S ILVER SERVICE.
"" LVH~caffom lo 4PM. 2983 ll arhor . (Francel pd S175,ridden FINE FURN & .\N· P'LASTlCS 3·11.P /tlme.MesaVerde C.M.utBakerSt. once. Msi sell $100 TIQUES.MS-2200 ~ ,..PR.l:SS Conv. Hosp. 661 Center . 1213)427-7433. 9am·S pm U tock --8-0-7-5 -St.C.M 541J-SSM Se w in g mach o prs, 842•84341.'ves vu <>PRATOR pleasanl cond's • nr 0 C. · . -•••••••••••••••••••••••
Small plastic lnJecuo Rock Ba nd wanted for Airport. McKibbin Sall:;, MOPED. ClmMU1. S&W Reg. Morgan mare, broke
_ mold shop. Expfr i party. Interested? Call 540-3684 r ea r shocka, nom<1d to ride & dri vc , blk
operation of injectlo Paul Reed. 675·9621>: SHIPPING/ board -rack. xlnt cond. parade Moraian gelding.
, molding machines 546-1.200 __ Pt(G DEPT 968·3064 Eng, Wt!lllern (714 l
.,,,; triff!ming of s m a ll s ALESt FULL·TIME. • ; . h . V . 24" 0 338-1011 • ,. ... J>last1cparts preferrcd ..... Specialty s hop. lt.B, We have anopeninl(in an Sc wmn . ars1ty l 1---------
nll STA.COSWITCH, IHC Woman, e>tper. nref'd. all gU-1 dept. Salary l!I s pd Like new. $75. MisceHGMOUS 1010
.• ,, 1139 Baker Cocsta Mesa Call 8"2-4234. ._. open w /some e>tper .. but !179-0596 •••••••••••••••••••••••
,.ldr 549-3041 __ ........ will train. Xlnl co •NEW·USED BIKES• Annual toy sale Nov t8th.
..,, .., EquialOppor l!:l'nployer SALES. p/time. Mon thru benefits. Call 9am·lla m Buy-Sell· Trade l 0 am • 3 pm T 1 C ·
'•:>n Fri. S·9PM. No uper forappt.545-0403 Pnrts &Repairs TOCKERS THRIFT
to·-net'. Will train. S3 per hr.•-------• Skateboards. · SUOP S40 W. 19UI St. n; PLUMl!R.REPAIR Forinio.Call847-7267. SHft.Es•• tE.C. Cycle4Co.2"'88Newport ~t.
· FtUme. 5 'fears min ex· SALES-RETA.IL P-ER'"so"'.-t:~ Blvd. Cost a TthS-. Bookc:ue Headboard ror -PflC'.CaHS36-l452. '" G42·'191Q. · . __ dou~le .......... sis. Small _. Plumbing flx\.ures & •UP· -""" "PRODUCTION WORKER piles Exper'd only. Call Mens. & Womens. lm· Cofs 1035 Wh te l\nllquc Dresser
Mfgcompanyneedshal'd 536-1451. pedtate o~en1ng . ••••••••••••••••••••••• $20. Boy's Sc:hwlntl Stin:,
-working young man tA•---------1 er~nent P t ime. Bu!· f' E R S l AN C A T S gray $15. ~l!lal Office
._ tralq in produc non. SALESWOMAN furn 8 No. l. Fashion beautiful long holr top Desk SilO. Call 830·3157 ' possible advancement p Island. NewPOrt Beach. r " l ' aflAlr ll a.m. ~1 t-opplys. S3.00 hr t.tart L~die~ne~~a ~'!.\~i~~~ Apply in l)e'l"SOnl()AM to ~1 t,. reg stered . ---------
>4 .,...,_.,.,.,,,f,., ·ipnt. ,, S.30. 9 · 638•9308. AUTO TELEPHONE
"""'"""" v• • "' jt.~<Jtn~i~. iF~a:s:h~i:o:n_l~s~l:•:nd:~~;.i~~~~~~~ FOR YOUR CAR Sl-" • 644-4-ill Beaut Himalayan Cat. -· .-..1 • /ProdllcffOft • Show. quality. t yr old &1'M073
~ 1 ' s.p.ni1o0r See what's un4er our S... Mott Loan Ofer ~ w tpepers. $150. 846-6568 U'xl5' shll1 beaut $100;
• iQ Exper'd cJl(>>tY coat.ins DArl.V PIL.QT Recept/Secretary. toS12S tO'xlG' cpt. 1tnlned Sts;
t>J•1 t«hnolog:y·hot melt film CHRISTMAS TREE &-cretarit!ll to$800 "YOU t>ll·ln d ishwasher $15
• .1 ~ adhesive & prepreg11 . every Thursday in the SecytConaU'UC. toS800 11.aveaservtc:e toofferor S31-03S8 ~. Strong Q'l«h nppl Xlnl. Clusified ff('\1on. l rvlne Pefl.OCHMll Aacnc:y IOOda to ae.11. r•ac.e an ad ---------·
• _co. ben. IUl. Fuller Co. t orlnfocall our 488E.l7th COltaMesa fo ti\~ Daly Pllot The fattest drav, ln the
,,,. Call <213 ) 42.4·0114 o Christmns Ad· Viser Sulte224 642-1410 ClaaaUled Section West. .a Dail1 Pilot fl"i eves. C'tl4l 67~ 642·5671! Pbooe642.s678. Clualfied Ad. sc.sma.
·"°
•
Buy a box under our tree &
sell your toys, sports
equlpmeat, luggag e,
appliances, furniturt,
antiques, handmade & unique
gilts and no matter what your
business -we have a box for
you!
Putting a box under our tree
Is easy and inexpensive.
Rates a re $4.00 for the
smaller box to $22.50 for tile
largest b ox. BIG, BIG
SA VJNGS if you run more
than '°ne time.
For more Information and to
place your ad just call
642 ·5678 and ask for your
Christmas Ad·Vlser for more
Information. Your credit Is
good with us. Wf11 bill you or
you can charge your ad to
your Master Charge or
BankAmericarcL ·
rates, 968-3643; 963·l993 WA.HTIO
Slip for60 yr. old
restored 58 ft classic '74 EstablishlMftt
Power Boal. 22' Mini Molorhom('.
DON BERMAN Dodge 360 V-3. auto, PIS.
1714>152·1920 PtB, A/C. AM/FM 8·trk.
SU PS FOR RENT slpe 6. fully self.cont .. a 27'&~'.Newportbch ~~F~~Y a t S6995.
714167}-082'? REGENCY MOTOR
loah. S--t& HOME RENTAL Sid ~~ 9080 92SN Harbor Blvd. S.i\.
• •••••••••••••••••••••• -•531-2503• .
14' BRISTOL, Ail Mabog. Rent Di x 25' Tilnn
60 hp Evinrude. auto Lndcrsr. W/T V . CB, all
starter. trlr. In good xtras. Sips 7 496-1338
cond s1000. 497.3953 eves.
CAM PEit SHELL
For Small PickupSlOO •
8.17·1073
9180
e11r 111 Miler wtdc . 75 GMC Sun'eyor, calJl,Pr tread 9.50·1fl.5LT 3 Utes.
van, semi aelf contd. used 5, ooo m 1 u o.
loaded w1qu11cJ AM/FM 5Bl.,uo7
stereo.CB&manyxtraa. --, , -
498-1497 • .... Sate •
9\<!i' Holiday Cabover •••••••••••••••••••••••
Cartlper, loading jacks. ~/ ~
semi self coat'd. loll or Clistiec1 9520
xtras . Sharp $1200. •••••••••••••••••••••••
549-283$, •OVER 70CARS•
IN~VENTORY
9150 n-.h~ •'"'L·~~lCS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,..&l'f ~ ""° f'ri>D) 9rdi , to~ Bolls
Roye°'; rrom uoo tu
$60..t.000 C8(S. Honda 250 ~1-lnore
$500/flrm 6'1t-119S
Haf'ley J>avldson ~. ~y 4000 cnl. > Xtnl (Ond. Saerlrlce SUISO". &4W4M: ln-64.Se
. t
ISUY .Slm.L·TRAD&
B.%FA.RGO &.CO
830S. Ma.ln·S.nta Ana
l0to6, ~ • .Sal.
elated SUnd~
• 547.1709.
\
.. , ..
0
' ;
8 J2 DAILY PILOT Tiielday. November 1e. 1978 ...._ .... ~ ......_ ... a.+td AMtot.1.,...w ~ UMd Alltot, U1ed ..._ UNCI
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••····~· .. ••••• ... •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••G•••••••eeeeeeeeee ~I Vw · '570 .wo..1,..art.d o.t... 9 720 MlrcMHlea '140 Yellsw_,... t n o Mel& 991 eo..tfM..tal '930 Ford 9 c:aGilic1 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••• QMevy Van. 2.IS.000 ml , Mfe lto.eo ,J70 '69 Datsun Roadater '163000. clce root. 1tereo. COMVIRTllLE I t7S MARK IV Clasaic '57 T'Blrd. •
'58 MGA. COUPE mq,s. Vfide Urea. ateroo. •••••••••••••••••••••• G.000 ml. SlTOO best ol· parttl net.a. Im mac rond, ] VW ~~ ~ew t;na 72 Slt:)'lark. Super clenn L.eatber . ~plll power top. Runs 1'4lat. I
Katt. all onglnal. Good xlnlCOftd ss100.a,u.97311 • Spydu. tld Tso« top (4.'I' ~ _ J 11 wrntySlUOO 540-'mt X:,:, fi~o,:.a.w, . .;•· W.00/t&ka ovtr pymnb seats. stereo radio " full itreat. $0000. ~1-87S9
mecbankal oond. Muat -1974FORO ~~~ ... ~~L2~;:~er Rat , 9725 MG -974J - - -or$2:!00/ottrade for Van. power.<S47LVY I Uncofn 99
sellthis wcekloaa.t.Wy SPO_.M ...... Y...... _ ••••••••••••-••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'74VW Bic_.adr·A,MJFM staom. 94J5 «'state. Make offer or •u~ """" •" ....... 970 atereo. low en lu g . -trade for bOat.a. l\IU Ot With only 15.511 m1lea -1'10 Flat 850 Spider. Gd '72 MG )tldaet Cd cond. competlUori oraoae. C ••c 9 91 5 lV76 MARK IV blk/
Wllh blk lutht•r sea
fully power. AM/FM
track. <'ru11w control.
tilt whl SuPtr Cle
$U,975. P .1'. 968°33
J eJ tl: c92.1MYA)' •••••••••••••••••••••• rood Makeof(er. Nu d utch. 41.000 ml Very sharp COL2l2 ••••••••••••••••••••••·•--•Mira .~••Ille ew ry,.4e IE •2200 6795 im IOOLS Audi. super 496-5868 Alt 6pm 11700 496-9789 S249S. ·
;r cond. low m1 S2.SOO ---DCY'\•Uey u oro.R -~~-----~-..! ~l-6427. '74 f'lal 128. 2 dr • .o.ooo MGI 9744 n.c.u.,.... -PLYMOUTH Speci11l -------mJ, SHARP' Sl500. PP. ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOt.U~ RENTAL Octluxe. Busineasman'a "73 Audl lOOLS. aulo. ~ur, 988-&2'1 •67 MOB red. Good condi· 005 N. llarbor ~IVd, S.A.
Co up e . '48 M odel. AM/FM. sunroof. cleun uon.Sl500 firm. •63\-2:503• Or i gt n a I Cond 1 t Io n Clllillj'. S2800 499-~ 1974 Fiatl28 E Rebuilt eng. Radio & _ _ __ _ · -- -2 door. 4' ~peed. with 67~-63S8 ves. '6S Van. l600cc mtr. Flt'St
beater. Gauges ~II work '7S FOrd E·lSO, auto trans. '71 Audi 100.LS Xlnl cood Alt FM & radials. Mu~t "68 MGB. yellow. new top ofroft800 lakes. CallboC
t700 or offer . 642-2073 v.s r adio 11, .. blue hke must IC.II. Sl.800. see. Finl off er over brka & batteries, super 2PM. S484344.
--· • • "' ,.. ' 64IM9t81R&PM 11700 l & d d bl J. '°'· •54 Porsche 356. 1500 eog.. new. New brks, tires. _ ' c un epen a ~ • '6S VW, nUCluu.:h. brakes.
all orig .• orig ownr. Bluebk. 14700. Sell $4200. ~ 971 497-~Eves. Sl800.400..1~afl 4PM tires, r uns gd . nlleds
(!)
73'7-2678askforJim. 642-7812days. •••••••••••••••••••••• '71 FIAT 8~ SPIDER. Ponche 9760 paint.$3'15.M7-3842 afl 5.
Don't miss the 4th Annual ·m VW Bus. Nice Int, runs con ve r t ab 1 e · 46•000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '67 Sqblc $1600, needs little Quality and Pr ice·
Kruse So u t h e r o well. nds body & elec miles. ~uns good. Must '14914 Por. w/appearance restonng Eric S81·9388 G uaranteed
Nabers
Cadillac
California Collector Car work. S900/bH o fr. sell. Private party. -1995 grp. 2 litre eng., hgbt anytime ~utl pnce. Call anytime. metallic green. new steel . Aucllon ... 400 Cars .. ..$at &u-27?4. 64H646 --~ ----blld radials w /mag whls. '89 VW Bug, engme needs & sun. Nov. 27 & 28. io ---. -klll50
A.M. _at Newport Bea.ch I.Nii-9580 Hondo 97'l.7 AM/FM 8 lrk. 37.000 mi. wor ·
Marnotl ror local In ''7 BUY OR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,SS950. 83()...4()Q6 -S4.8·l~S . .. .••.•••....•......•.•••.
formauon 1213)393·9221 NEW •76 LEASE HOW lraftd New ''76 76, 914 2.t... looded, mus '71 SUper Bug, xlnt cond.
51 MG·TD. SU""r cond. a c ABRJ II M .. G HO .... DA c sell, make o(fer . 7~-0517 Many1rtras. ~ew stereo. ... --~ r .... ars or 646-5001 Askit\g $1795 °" best or beauUful. pvt ply. C-Om~letc With front disc HURRY! ova I 00 fer. ~l077. 644-0815.
____ 832_-'1_97_9_ brakes, stee l be lte d These arc the last si1l TS Ponche 911S. Targa, ---------1 Recreational r adials. s t yled steel .765! One 2002 . 4 spe ToChoose From! leather , air. immac. Vol•o 977'l.
Veflldes 9530 wheel covers, rack & w/skyroor; lhree 5301As; UNIVERSITY· 833-2900 dys. e~stwkods •••••••••••••••••••••••
pinon st.eering. reclining ooe3.0S1 &one3.0Sia. ~-L--.1..n. 673-8839 '77 •••••••••••• •••••• ···~· bucl<et seats. fold down VWU>,_~
1976 CHIMOOIC bench seats. vinyltop. IEA T THE Honda Cars • GMC '73 Porsche 914 1 7 Xlnt
MOTORHOME $108.87 Mo. PRICE IHCREASE Trucks rood. s spd. AM/FM. I VOLVO Self conlained. & dual air With only tax & lie down . 28SO Harbor Blvd ml. gd tires. new clutch.
conditioned. <365RDK>. <•""".34> Cor 48 months Co5t.a Mesa 540:9640 $5650. Ph~U
.._, SADDLEIACK HERE NOW f 2 000 on approval of your good VALLEY IMPORTS '73HONDA ClVlC '74·914. ma!ly 1ltras. Im-
l easing Specialists Pr~ferrcd Rater.
Largest Selection
ofNew & Used
u dillacs in
Orange County
Open Sunday
Cadillac
Master Dealer
2600 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mes..i 540·9 100
Nabers
Cadillac,
credit. Total cash price mac lo m1 must see t 8 3 1·2040 495-49 49 HATCHBACK ' ' -'76 CAD El Dorado Conv. Nalllrl CI •1c 1 ~I. tedax & lie. tS43l S. Silver w/black anterior. apprec. S56-6307 •MEW COLORS ... White on wht w/red in-. __ ~-.... I u.:ierr pay men price ~ .__-. -including tax, he & in· AM/FM radio. rad_i als '71 Porsche 914 Ap. Grp. •MEW MODELS ter. Loaded. 646-7361. ~ ._. MO._ terest $5552 Aftnual mngs. SIG50 :c!!~.F~~~~~~~ning Huge ~avlngs on all re. '7l Cad. 4 Dr. Absolutely ~=======~! percentage rate 12.96"~. 631·3l49 ma 1n1 ~g ne w 76s & immac. New paint. vinyl
TERRAIN ·VEHICLE Ser. GAECSK24S42-GI st 6 HOADWAY 7S Porsche 914. t.8. duel Demos m stock. top, brakes. tires. eng.
'74A'ITEX440 JL035hp SAHTA AHA '73 Civlc, auto. AM/FM. Webers. appear group. MARQUIS VOLVO tuned, wblte on wbite,
cng. Jncls lrlr. SISOO or 835·3171 xlnt cond .. must sell. AM/F M q ua d . ma ny MIS.SJON VIEJO full leather. Local r e-
bsloffer. <714l963-0U7 THEUU*AH011MNGMACH1H£ S17SO.SS4·l684 xtras. Copper metallic. 8 3 1-2880495-1210 altor 's pri de & joy.
4 Whee4 Drives 9550 •USED BMW's* Jaguar 9730 fast & c lean S6SOO. Be low dea le r price.
75COHTIHEHTAL ev ea . 83 3 ·1!6 7
TOWMECOUPt _<_7~-L~~-w_>· . ._.._..__, ..
t\IJJ power. f1actoc')' air Mwcwy 99
cond .. sliver e xterior •••••••••••••••••••• w t matchlng padded .00 Colon" Ptk St W
vtnyl top & buraandy In d 1 • • terlor . lmmoc ula t o Loa ed. Mlm con
thruout! <~UC>. wear. $8:!0. Ph 548·7116
MOW $6998 Mumte111g 99
MARQUIS VOL YO 0 ••••••••••••••• •••
MISSION VIEJO '68 Mustang 302. Al ,
8 3 l ·2110 495-I 2 10 runa perf · • nd.a pat $900, Ofr . 496·7620
'74 Mark lV. Special Gold 496-0t32
Edition. Moon RooC, Cully -.67-M-U-ST-AN--G--g-d-. c-o-nd-.t-
e q pd .. pe r f cond. cyl.Auto,P/S,FMrad
SS7-9349. S9SO. 546-0310
JUST ARRIVED
THEFA.IULOUS
· '77MARKV
GOOD SELECTION
IN STOCK FOR
IMMEDIATE
DEJ.IVERY
GUSTAFSON
LINCOLN MERCL•RV
16800 Beach Blvd
Huntington Be;ich
'66 4-spd stick sbift. X
eng, nda body work.
646-6SS5
'71 oldis Cutlass Spr
conv. lcnrnuc .• load
w/all x t ras. S2SO
64.S-8625.
'71 Olds Toronado
xtras. Needs work.
ol£er. 811-2708. 842-8844
'75 MARK IV ~ ........ ,_ .... !!.$].
Loa~ed w ith all t he '72 Pinto. Good cond.
goodies. Mus t see to a p-Aulo: S1500 or best offer. preclate. (483LPW > CaJJ 644·5836 . $8616. .
GUSTAFSON '74Phrto
Like ne w, only 25,00C
rruJes. Muat aell. $1995.
~
••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Bavana-<906LVY > ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~596 Rick. ORANGE COUNTY 640-5560, 644-0505 Eves.
1973 Ford F-250, 4x4. auto Autos Wanted-9590 '752002 <629NBK> '62 Mark X Saloon. 4dr . VOLVO '71 Coupe DeVllle. Jm. '7l Pinto. AM/FM slere<
trans. Power l.lrakcs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '762002A <04991 sed. blk, very g~nd. n-t• R . EXCLUSIVELY VObVO mac, lpowner .• good cond. Corvette ""\: 9932 ~::,-~~:new tires.
LINCOLN MERCURY
16800 Beach B lvd
Huntrng1on Beach
842-8844
(7141847 1002 Closed_ _ OnSunda~s 642-1272. .... "Ulll' oyce 9756 Lar gestVolvo Dealer $1900 P 6732642 -CASH FOR CA.RS' ••••••••••••••••••••••• in Orange County! . _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9960 ·74"4 whtdra-v" GMf. J im-Top s Dollar $ paid "r6 ORANGE COUNTY'S Mcada 9738 #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. BUY or LEASE 1974 COUPE d e Vall~. '71 Corvette. White T·top ...................... ..
my Sierra 3!10 c ng . clean used cars. trucks OLD£ST •.
7
•
4
••M•a·.:d••a••R•X••
3
•Co•••u•pe••.•
4
• ~ ROY DIRECT loaded. lat owner. lo m1. lmmac. Many extras. Ph
22.000 mi .. new ures. xlnt Corvettes. Ask for Pa ul " In beaut. eond. Looks 963·7608 art S. ATLAS ::i~,:k,,';':,;.~,;t m 0J'.j~ARDChovnl.t & ~i,';.~~n>ly, my ~~~;[ ~., ••w ••" S6'00. ',.t',;i:·.;:;•~•if:i ::::
'72 Toyota La ndc ruiser. ~ePO&~ail StC 1 ·74 RX-4 Wagon Like *"""°"•m" ___ -.-..:-~ 1972 CADILLAC Pvtpty:~·Ol43 aft.6 Oi>e~~lO
i\Mt FM. new Norseman N T BEA I-Sales-Service-Leasing new, loaded. $2800. Pvt ~ -2()25 S mot..,._,u:111 COUPE DEVILLE '73 ~tte. T·Top 350. P~t
ll rcs.SJ000.536·l925 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR Ro~CarYer,lnc. Ply Call642-4281 ClOSEDWNOAn Anaheim 750-2011 Full factory power With Air auto PW tPS/PB mHarborBlvd .•
J<.-ep CJ Scrics.TJ keo off FORTOPUSEDCARS Rolls koyce BMW Merctdeslem. 9740 .. __.,;: ---9765 le a the r In t e r i o r . $S900.Eve~640.7798 ' Co.sta M esa
new equip. Spare tire FOREIGN, DOMESTIC 1540J amboree ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,....,..... <OOOH.FW>. - -546-1934 or CLASSICS Newport Beach 64o.&14 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NOW $3398 ~ 9935 mount w/dbl can rack, L ' ~ cans incl Rear seat IC your car is extra clean --.. ease '77 MAR'-'UIS VOLVO ••••••••••••••••••••••• lymoulh Special Deluxa,
Businessman's Coupe.
'48 Model, orig. c<U\d.
Reblleng. Radio, healer.
Gauges all work, $700, of.
fer. 642·2073
tor ge box & front ~us first. .....W Us-..a ,. ·74 Max Van. 56,000, rblt.
::asts ! m1 m lrock roll BA.UERBUICK 19732002.28M'm1.sunroo ""' • cu MJ8.510N VIEJO $3.SOO. '72 !\fax Van.
harw hghl!> &IS-1263 bef 2925HarborBlvd &air,SSOOO. OVER 100 TOYOTA 8 3 1·288049S·l 210 98.000. r bll, $2,000. '75 7 Costa Mesa 979-2500 833-8701 MERCEDES S Pwr wagon. 20,000. cam -
P!_ll· ou DISPLAY '74 Cad Sedan De VIiie pershell. off-road whls &
PS WE BUY 1973 2002 28M m1. s unroo " •SALES LOADED F '7• G~C ':· ton <tx.i • •USED CARS& & air. dk grn wttan ml. House of Im~ HERE NOW •S-VICE _963·2706aft4:_30 p_m . uM·reris. M-• 9-5. 979-ieos. Plymouth Valiant. xlnt PB, Auto.. ;.11r. stereo. .. .. CJ>n """ a o cond 4 dr lo ml P/S Aux tank, spoked whls.. TRUCKS• ~.,.,.,. AUTitORIZ D Canro 9917. ---. ' · ' •
Rhino tires. m any xtrds. Come inor Call 83J.870I MERCEDESDEALER •NEW COLORS .-1.EASIMG 1ge Colt toooGT Sspd. Sl.200.894-4667
"cuv.. "•"8402. ~ICE"' '--' h O ••••••••••••••••••••••• NC AM /FM stereo I yr -- -
.,,,.,..,., '7'fV' n\.~~ppra1>U1 '72 BMW 2002. Air . stereo, 6862Manc e!lter. •NEW MODELS Yet'HCll 1975 CA.MARO old · "~k· g SJ 000 ·Call Valiant 67, sed .. greal
Tndls 9560 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'7S LlJV Mikado PU. Red,
!ltlck. 42,000 ml. $3600.
Camper shell & phone
;ivail for extra. 837-1073
'73 FORD. 1 T. longbed.
hydraulic dump , re
movable s ide s. new
brakes. 70.000 mi. S38SO
837-1073
'69 Travelall. Reasn. Used
.is a sen •1ec van Eves
673-9105.
'ti8 Dodge 1, T V ·8. 318
cng. Reblt l'n~ & trans
s1:m 496-2763 Tom
Servi~ l 'lll truck bed. for
11 ton or '• ton pickup
Sim 962 ~~ urt 6p~
For S:ile or Tr ade 'S!I
Chl'vy P ll :\• ton. hvy
duh 6, ~0-3083
W Che \\ El Camano, full
flWT J1r shocks. shell.
::.170ll or bst ofr . Good
1·01)c1 842·5037 Evs ----
!Ai .. ·om ·'• T pickup. Good
medun 1t'a lly $700
1146-~
Groth Che•rolet xtnt cond $4800/h r m. Buena P ark Huge S:lvings on ALL re-DeliYery Automatic. factory alr S47:a/X;9;.'731-19so.' eng .. gd brakes, Urea.
1821J Beach Blvd Eves7S2·0109 5 2 3-7250 main1ng ne w 76s & Servlce&part.anowopen cond .• AM'F M stereo . Br uised fender, $495.
Huntington Be.ch On the San~ Ana Fwy_ Demos. on Sat's 8 to 4 for your tape, rallye wheels & '69 Dart, P /S, A!T· slant-6 675-77
847·6087 * 549.333 I C.-1 9715 •MB ,74 4sosL Blue; blue The Better Bargain ~nv~miencc, c o p p e r f i n i s h eng, 2 new r~d1als, $1350. For sale.SUper clean '7• --A.--••••••••••••••••••••••• JmmarSl4,500. MARQUISTOYOTA. w/matcblng Interior. Mon-Wed-Fri, 3:30-7:30, P lymoulb Fury . A£ -
TOP DOLLAR 74 Capri. Cully equipped. Wisco2 C714>~1. MJ8.5JONVIEJ O <S02MCE>. 646-8264_ S2.000.Must see.S81-n41,
PAID top cond $3000orbebt Of· · - --831·2880495-1210 MOWS4898 d 9940 lfnoanswer, k.eep call-IM MEDIATELY fer. Dys,640-6735 '00 220 ~lesel. Mech'ly & 1 FOR ALL . otherw1Se xlnt. JOmpg., '71 Mark ll Sed. Low EZ MARQUIS TOYOTA ••••••••••••••••••••••• ng. __
FOREIGN CARS '72 1200. Air . sunr oof. no reas. ore refused . mi's. Pvt Pty. Sac. $1S9S. MISSION VIEJO I 975 COUNTRY '72 Satellltc. PB, PS. air.
<.;ALL OR COM 1'.: IN AM/FM radio. Clean. 714-995-2268. 536·7278 831·2880 495· I 2 I 0 SQUIRE WAGON Runs & looks good. Over
TOSEE US $1800 •\!19·2986 ---Small VB. automatic. air 90k mi. Bargain at S980.
NEWPORT IMPORTS Datsun 1976MBZ280 '72Cehca.4Speed.a ir.re· lq66 Horhor CM 6469301 CheYr'Olet 9920 cond .. roor rack, pwr ~5214.P.P.
3100 W Cst Hwy, NB 9 720 Automatic. s unroof & air asonable price. steenng & brakes. silver . . -
642-9405 ••••:::::·.··,·:::;:•••• cond . L i ke NE W ! 962-0822 '73 Volvo Sta Wag. Low ••••••••••••••••••••••• gr ay wt match ing In· 64 Valia nt. Xlnt transp
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR CLEAN
IMPORT CARS
AU MODELS
~-~~., ~-·J • •111n· RF r..r1• Eli v'.)
.. UNllNG'0 "4 REA•.><
K.J ; ""H1 '°IJO fJ,1.\i
~ ~ • ...., t893NRM 1. Tin·.--1. 9767 mi's, auto. Runs Xlnt. Don't See Us First... tenor wood gram appll· car. Leaving State, must
TOPDollarPaid $12 500 _,,.., $4000.6733592. ButSeeUs Last!!! que & low.low miles. 1 sell. $400 /b s t o rr.
On ALL Trade-ms •••••••••••••••••••••••Autos. Used "If You Don't owner. (861NKL>. 644·1147·
NEWPOltTDATSUN .....,, CeM c :1~~;:,:~~·~~99;. ....................... Buy From NOW $4998 ontioc 996S
888 Dove Strttt 2"0 .....,. ...... 644-8140 General 990 I CO .... ~'L. MARQUIS VOLVO . •••••••••••••••••••••••
Near MacArthur ~ .._ MO tl90 ""a. MISSION VIEJO 973 Lel\tans Sparkling
&J amboreeRoads VolluwOCJ9ft You•reP:ting 8 3 1•2880495•12 10 cln. slvr, blk Int, 2dr,
833-1300 -••••••••••••••••••••••• TooMuc '·" HP.d1: .. Vb·k8. a ir. P IS. -'70 220D. Auto .. a ir, ·72 VW Beetle. nl.'w nres, '7S LTD Exec. car. Im· I 1sc r s, xlp\ mech DRIVE A AM/FM stereo cassette, new brakes. xlnt cood. CONNELL mac, Jo mileage, air cond$259S-iN6-<!Mf_. __
4 nu radials. $S800. 9-5, $1850. S40·8100 cond. Avocado green. 1 1 Firebird Formula 350 LITILE... 523-333.l& eves & wknds. •, CHEVROLET $4300/best.offer. Pvt pty. l'SZPB/Air/AM·FM 8tk
VE A LOT <2l3>865-4S90. '68 Bug, xlnt cond. Nu 813LQB. S40·7800 8-5 tape. Blk inside/outside. ~SA MB 450SL '7ti 486 mi., ~;c,~~m~~-~ck int. 2828Har bor Blvd. weekdays, S24 ·21S7 TA radials. mags. Im·
SHOP&COMPARI:: Astro S il ver / b l k ., AMC 9905 COSTAMESA weekends.Ask for Bud. mac. cond. $30009r best
IARWICK DATSUN Decker Mex . 'ltereo. '12 VW 411, xlnt cond AT. •••••••••••••••••••••• S46-l200 _ 1965 Ford Galax1e, auto .. ol'fer.642-7499
San Juan Capistrano cruise control. Sticke_r. AC. AMtFM . Make Offer •75 Pacer D/L. 14M mi , 1976 CHEVETTE V-8. radio, new brakes. fCJO 9974
leUYJ UNK CARS 8 31-1375493-337 5 s21,ooo.,sl9.SOO +Lac SS7·2tnJ auto P IS P /B air SUper gaseconomy with clean, l owner. sharp.••••••••••••••••••••••
USED AUTO PARTS TOP IUYER ~0~:5 F~k':;ys~'J!g~~~ J!172 VW camper. N;;;;blt stere0. mags, ~r ;ack ' l~s tfian
1
11.000 miles. $.595.4944issaftS PM. 3 Hatchback, auto, mag ~Sl2S 847-11637 See us first, & last ! To Pr. pty. eng, battery, ures. S3200. more. $3270. Pb.494·9891. UJceNEW · (198624 ). 7S Granada. lo mi, good wheels, nice cond. S127S.
Vans 9570 M E~IC wants r;,;. dollar paid for imports. ,67 MB 200D xlnt cond Ph: 548·6295. _ Transportati<?n : 196 NOW $2598 cond. S3400 or best otrer .... 968-0290 _______ _
••••••••••••••••••••••• n 1n1 r e p a ira ble or COSTA MESA SJSOO. New e'ag. AM/FM '68 VW Fastback, gOOd Rambler Classic wagon MARQUIS TOYOTA Dys,640-6735 or Salo '76 Chevy Vega
·74 Ford Con v van, wreckcd cars.847-4~. DATSUN cassette . 7S4 ·0685, cond. $800. Call after Rebui lt eng.,& lr~ns Ml8.510N VIEJ O H1 c hb c k . Gre e n
loadcd,uulo,trans.A/C, --•xu"Harbor Blvd. 64().-0034 6PM.640.4798. NfeedS,sOObrNake JOb. Ars 1 8 3 1·2880495·1210 GARAGE SALE ads in $2800/bst o fr . C a ll pwr steer pwer brks Wanted. Clean VW Bug or ........, or •· · 0 reas. 0 r re the Daily Pilot bring hap 962-152.S art 6pm.
A:-.ftFM. t~pedeck, TV: Sqbk. Approx 167 vin· Costa Mesa 540-641 '71 VW St. Wagon fused. Call 546-414S '67 Chevelle. Standard PY results. To place your -
icebox. 20.ooomi. SC7-969l tage. Reas. S48-S497 after S ELL Idle Items with a $1800/or best offer shirt. 6 cyl. runs gd. drawing card, phone Have ;;<?melhlng to sell!
l)y:s 4 & weekeods Wanl ads Daily Pilot Classified Ad. Call 645-7342 Classified Ads 4;42-S67 962·0822 642·S678 today. Class1f1ed ads do it well.
Aaltos, Mew Alltos. Mew ...._,Mew 9800 A..hK, Mew '800 Auto1, New 9100 AMtos. New 9100 Allfos. New 980 , Hew tlOO .................••.... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ...................... . .................... ,
C .. NILL
C•IYROLIT
AND
.. _.._, ___ ..,.. __ .
8INIRAL
MOTORS ·-•1• FROM THE FACTORY
.-·
CASH REBATE
FROM NQV. 11th TO JAN. I 0th •
IF YOU PU RCHASE ANY NEW '76 OR 77
CHEVETTE OR VEGA IN STOCK OR ORDER
YOURS BY DEC. 10th. YOU'LL RECEIVE YOUR
S200 FACTORY CASH RflBATE ...
OVER 70 IN STOCK
FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
t
MflMOft
YIHO
'
Huntington Beaeh
Fountain Valley
E D IT ION
..
Aft •rnoon
• Stoeks
• •
TEN CENTS1
____.UICI e
' Girlfriend Joins Hiln in Drug Try .
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AP)
-Gary Mark Gilmore, under
sentence to die before a firing
squad, atte mpted to take his life
with a drug o verdose today,
authorities said. His girlfriend
also was found unconscious in
her a partment from an apparent
overdose; police said.
Medics brought Gilmore "back
to life," a m edical technician at
the Utah State Prison reported.
His condition was serious.
Gilmore's girlfriend, Nicole
Barrett, was found unconscious >n her apartment, also of an ap·
parent drug overdose, Spr·
ingville Police Chjef Leland
Rowers said. Mrs. Barrett, 20,
was in c ritical conwtion at Utah
Valley Hospital in Provo. a
c;pokesman there said. ,
Gilmore, 35, who had been sen·
· s·au ;·~yea ,·same~"
Pooch Faces Pound Death
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ot lht O~llV Pilot St•lf
Sad -Eyed Sadie s till s tood
guard today over a I luntington
Beach home whose previous le·
nant a pparently movcd out and
left he r behmd with only an old
pot roast bone and her faith
Today, it appeared the mixed·
Pmoor Shift -
Ex-DIA Head
By MIC'HAF.L PAS KEV1C11
CM t~ O•Hy P••01 s .....
Militnr) <,l rf.'n J!l h has sh1(tC'd
angerously In rarnroflhe Soviet
nion and then· 1s C'uphona 1n
oscow ovC'r th<.' prnspct"l of
chievin~ :i · lonJ.( rang<' ~oal of
orld·commun1s m. acc•ordmg to
t. General Oant<'I 0 Graham.
ormer d irector of thl' D\'fcnsc·
ntelligence 1\~('ncy
Graham. who resigned from
he Army mtclh~enc<.' post in 1975 s a protes t to the d1sm1ssals of
rense Secretar y James Schlcs·
ger and CIA Director Willi am
lby, made the rC'marks Mon-
ay in Newport Beach bcforl' a
unch eon g::ithC'ring o f the
mericanis m Educational
eague, a pat r1ot1c , pub li c
, ucation o rganization based in
uena Park.
He charged the U.S with aid·
n.1 Soviet euphoria because of
. mpromises during SALT talks,
be failu re of detente and a
lecreased emphasis on building
utronger national defense
Gra h a m , who recently re·
\lflled from a USSR trip. said the
ic>viets are initiating an "iron
'isted" civil defense program
;omplete with m ass evacuation
'>t'actice and incr eased construe·
lion of bomb s helters. In the ~v.ent or nuclear warfare Soviet
0$Ses could be as low as 10
nlllion, compared to 110 million
~mericans, Gr aham said.
Consider ing what Graha m
>eUeves is a lower Soviet rt'gard or Ufe -''after all, they killed
Ive milUon peasants to collec-
hue agriculture" -the US.SR
:ould use the difference in the
><>t ntlal loss or lives as a
~apon to get its wny.
• <See SOVIETS, Page A2)
breed dog who greeted Bob Mac·
Phee and his roommates m ay
end her days in t he Orange Coun·
ty Animal Shelter.
MacPhee, 20. of 20272 Village
Ori ve. Huntington Beach, his
brother E d, 19, and their room·
mate Dave Watnmough, 20, can-
not approach Sadie.
She stands a faithful vigil un·
der a cactus plant beside the
front door , appa rently a waiting
the return of a n owner who isn 't
coming back.
"We m.oved in Sunday and she
went after Ed twice. Don't get too
close .... " MacPheewamed.
Sadie finally settled on her
haunches, her time-bleached and
tooth-gnawed bone beside her.
But she made it clear the peo·
pie must stay away.
Sadie takes up a position of de·
fense in the rear yard by her bone
when anyone approa<.'hes her
lookout beside the front door.
· She looks like she·s scared to
death all the time. She always
has her tail between her legs,"
:.ays MacPhee. a drywall worker
who receotly moved out from his nat1~rinceton. New Jersey.
"Mayb~ she did used to live
here and got lost , and when she
found her way back her owners
had gone," he speculated.
A real estate agent told Mac·
Phee the previous tenants moved
out two weeks ago but the firm
had no knowledge of a dog living
al ~hat address. in a lract
bounded by Adams a nd In·
d1anapohs avenues and Bushard
and Magnolia streets
Mac Phee conceded they must
have 0" ned Sadie and Just s aid
nothing to avoid a possible rent
in<Tease to cover pct damage
•·she's JUSt a mutt.·· MacPhee
says of the golden-eyed black and
''h1te dog who waits dutifully by
thP front door ··But she thinks
.,he lives here ..
"We get a lot of calls about
loose dogs. but a lot of them J>ave
JlL'lt been a bandoned," ~rved
Pohce Officer Chris Schneider,
whom MacPhee contacted about
• ad· Eyed Sadie.
.. A lot or people get pets," he
said. "and then they just don't
care.··
Terminally Ill
Man Cleared
RIVER S IDE (AP ) -
Riverside County authorities say
a 7l ·year-old t erminally ill
cancer patient was acting in sell
defense when ¥. shot and killed
his brothe r -in-la w during an
ar gument al their Meadowbrook
home near Lake Elsinore.
Riverside officials said no
charges had been lodged against
Gardner Powell. They identified
the d ead man as Nizer
McCaskill. 51.
Bikes Invited
To Mark ~Trail I
A segment of the Coast Biceo·
tennlal Bicycle Trail will be de·
dicated at 2 p. m . Friday in Hunt·
ington Beach.
Mayor Harriett Wieder has is·
sued an invitation for those with
bicycles lo join in the opening
n de.
It will beg l n at Beach
Boulevard on the ocean side of
Pacific.' Coast Highway and wiJl
proceed toward the Santa Ana
River Trail.
tenced for the killing of a motel
clerk during a r obbery, was
found unconscious in his cell,
said the prison medical techni·
c1an. Tom Anguay.
"He tried to take his own life.
Hetried to OD," Anguaysaid.
. Anguay said he wd not know
what kind of drug was·used but
Gilmore has been on medication.
He said Gilmore was conscious
after treatment but said nothlrlg.
An ambulance a nd a
paramedic unit arrived at the
prison gate and a stretcher with a
person on it was placed in the
ambulance, which r emained at
the gate for several minutes
while someone inside was being
. treated . It l a te r left for a
hospital.
Wa rde n Sam S m i th said
Gilmore was not breathing pro·
perly when he was discovered
unde r a special surveillance
system set up to keep watch on
him. Smith said medical techni-
cians were rus hed in and gave
him resuscita tion.
. He said Gilmor e was breathing
at the time he left the prison.
Asked where he could have got-
ten drugs, Smith said he might
have obtained them from other
inmates, from visitors or other
persons, and hid them under his
tongue while being searched.
Dr. Al R oe, the prison
psychologist, said he had predict·
ed Gilmore would attempt to
commit suicide. He said he had
interviewed Gilmore and found
rum frustrated .
S'mith said earlier that prison
authorities were a ware of, a
sukide possibility and were tak·
POLICE EXPERTS cHEcK FIRE scENE FoR·cru~·" Pho•o
Dropped Cigarette L!ghter Blamed In Fatal Blaze
Lighter BlaTr)ed
For Fatal Blaze
Costa Mesa fire investigators
are blaming a cigarette lighter in
the fiery deat~ of a 59-year·old in·
vali d Monday afternoon.
Mrs F rances Supple, 124
Clearbrook Lane, Apt. A. was
pronounced dead at the scene of
the noon fi re, a half block from
the <'ity's police department.
The woman. a stroke victim
confined to a wheelchair since
1965. w as found near he r
wheelchair on the noor by two
neighbors who failed in their at·
tempts to pull the victim from
the home.
Her hus band, Joseph J . Supple,
60, was away from the home al
the lime.
Fire officials set damage or the
flames to the Supple home at
about $20,000.
Lois Wendt of 120 Clearbrook
Lane r eceived second degree
bums over six percent or her
body while attempting to pull the
victim from the house.
A sudden mixture of air fed a
smouldering couch in the house.
said fire m en , promptin~ the
blaze to rush through the la ving
room. blowing Mrs. Wendt out
the front door.
Fire Analyst Russell Hen·
derson said toda y the fire "ex-
plosion" was possibly a combina·
lion or a sudden btalze from a
broken s liding &I~ window,
combining with a smouldering
couch and flames.
''We found a clgarelle lighter
in the open position near the
woman," Hender son said.
Lodge Fire Arson
"We think s h e may have
dropped it and it ignited her
clothing or the couch. But the fi re
definitely originated in the
couch."
Henderson said there were two
possible explanations for the sud·
den blast of fl ames that engulfed
the apartment in the tnplex in
seconds .
"When the back window let go,
the fire could have received a
draft. touching off the smoulder-
ing names and roaring through
the house."
He also said evidence or ex·
tremely charred carpeting in the
living room and a dining room
points . to a ra pid fl ame spread
over the carpet.
"The broken window may have
given it that extr a gust or oxygen
it needed to blast through the
apartment .·· Hendersonsa.id.
Patty Working
I
In Hospital
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Patricia
Hearst is working as a hospital
orderly at federal Metropolitan
Correctional Institution as she
awai~ word this week on passi·
ble freedom on bail.
Warden Waller R. Lumpkin
disclosed Miss Hearst's work as·
signmenl during an Interview
Monday in which he also de·
fended the ability of his staff to
protect the heiress.
Lumpkin s aid Miss Hearst Is
confined to the third floor of the
new prison buJldlnc where sbe
SONORA (AP) -A nre that arrived a week &IQ, allegedly
destroyed the SO-year-old Sugar after seeking transfer rrom
Pine Lodge In Tuolumn~ County Pleasanton Federal Correctional
apparently was deliberate!ly set, facility in Northern California
authoritie$ reported Monday. for rea•ons otu fct.y.
_.. rth e st
t
m g precautions. But he has
declined to discuss those precau-
tions.
Mrs . Barrett, or Springville,
has been vis iting rum daily in the
prison,
Mrs. Barrett was warned Mon-
day before visiting Gilmore that
s he wa s known to hav e
purchased s leeping pills on pre·
scription and must not bring
them to the prison, deputy
Warden Leon Hatch said Mon·
day.
Hatch s aid she was subjected
to skin searches by a matron
before each of her visits and that
Gilmore was searched before
and after each vis ib
Gilmore had been scheduled to
be executed by a firing squad' on
Monday, but the execution was
delayed,
APWl,.OllOtff
APPARENT OVERDOSE.
Nlcole Barrett
Huntington Beflf!la
Residents Ask .
Flood' Relief ..
Residents or a Huntington
Beach 1 mobile home parlc im·
plor'ed \he city Monday night to
take prompt action after the
second flood in two years hit their
dwellings. ,
They said that nearly 30 inches
of water inundated the Del Mar
Mobile Home Park during last
Thurs day's storm ;md that
several coaches were damaged.
Residents said the incident re-
vived the specter or the storm in
1974 In which 47 coaches were
HB Girl
Injured
Jn· Wreck
A young Huntington Beach girl
was undergoing surgery today
for severe facial lacer·ations suf-
fered in a predawn triple-car col-
lision on P acific Coast Highway
at the base or the Bolsa Chica
Bluffs.
Victim Sharon Kramer, 18, of
16382 Oakmont Lane, was taken
lo f acifica Hospital after the ac-
c ident and its a ftermath as
rescuers worked to save her life.
Police Officers Bob Archey
and Dan Mc Kerren administered
first aid to the pinn.ed·in young
woman -working from outside
the wreckage -as they waited
for firemen and paramedics' ar-
nval.
The victim was finally cut free
of the demolished German sedan
driven by her companion, Robert
E. Ivers, 23, of 17301 Keelson
Lane, Huntington Beach.
Police said I vers. who suffered
minor injur ies, was arrested and
booked on suspicion or felony
drunk driving as a result of the
2:15 a.m . crash.
He was extrica ted from the his
crumpled car by witnessetJ, in·
eluding four people in two parked
cars which were rammed in the
collision.
Investigators s aid Donald C.
Dapper, Arthur Guzman. both 19
and both from West Covina, were
asleep in their car waiting for
sunrise surfing when the Ivers
vehicle plowed into it.
The impact sent Dapper's
sedan slamming straight ahead
into a third car in wruch James
F J arrett. 21, or Cudahy, and
Lori L. F agan, 19, of Downey,
were parked .
Jarrett told police there was no
warning such as skids or a horn
honking and just suddenly there
was a thunderous boom that sent
his car screeching and spinning
down the road.
Spokes men at Pacifica
(See CRASH, Page A2)
Crash Kills' Pair I
SPANGOAHLEM; Wes t
Germany <AP) -A U.S. Air
Force F4 Phantom jet crashed
:ind killed both American
crewmen Monday evening, the
Air Force bas announced. The
twin-engine fighter-bomber was rewrnlnc from a training Oigbt
to England when it crashed near
Spanedablepi Air Base .
t
either destroyed or damaged by
water overflowing from a flood
control channel.
"The city assured us then that
the problem would be solved and
it hasn't been," Mrs. Louise
Elwell told city council mem·
bers.
"We feel forgotten by the ci-
ty," Mrs. Elwell said. "No other
people in the city have been as
forgotten as we have been."
Council members directed city
offlfials to take immediate sfops
to prevent further flooding at the
site on Brookhurst Street south o[
Garfield A venue.
Mayor Pro Tem Ron Pattinson
said the situation demands top
priority action.
Mrs. Elwell said that residents
of the park li ve in constant rear o(
storms. ,
She said that if so much as a 1
cloud a ppears, several older resi-f
dents go to the homes of their
sons and daughters to spend the
night in safety.
She said that water as high as
eight feel coursed through the
trailer park in 1974. There were
no drownings, she said, but five
people suffered heart attacks.
She s aid res idents we re
evacuated by rafts and canoes
manned by fire department
personnel.
"We were told the probletn
would be taken care or and that
there would never be another
flood ," she said. "None of us
dreamed tha t it wouldn't be
taken care or." I
Bill Hartge, director of the I
city's public works depa rtment.
said Thursday night's storm was
a "crazy phenomenon.''
He said that between 10 :20
p.m. and 11 ·20 pm. Thursday,
1.25 inches of rain had fallen and
the flood control channel that
bisects the park overflowed .
He said that city cre ws had
sandbagged the lowest and most
crucial areas of the park and that
more sandbags would be added
in the next two weeks along the
channel banks .
Hartge pointed out that a more
permanent solution may be to
raise the channel banks with a
wall.
<See ~L0~•1e AZ> .,
Coast
\\'·eather
Warm sunny days and
clear cool nights through
Wednesday. Highs near 80
at the coa st. lows to about
SO. Easterly winds .
INSIDE TODAY
Reporter William F.arr'e •
legal efforts to 11011 out of ;ail 1
over protecUttg. a news source
continue. Story, AS. ,
12
"" "11 AU
~: ... • ••• l ).S A1M J .. .,,
M
A4
>
AZ OAIL Y PILOT HI F Tuesday November HI 1976
Mixer Sought
Bloody Mary Burglar in HB
lie •l1lk the :s~ by night,
apparently in searc}J ot what
some l'onnoisseurs claim e<tn·
nol be concocted: the perfect
Bloody Mary cocktail.
But Huntington Beach police
pledged today thti Bloody Mary
Burglar wtll wind up an serious
trouble if he continues breaking
mto other peoples' houses for the
ingredients •
They rnude this observation
alter taking burglary reports
from two residents of Cornne
Circle who reported being vic-
timized Monday
Officer Rudy Delgado was tak·
1Trial Gag
Mulled for
!Murder Rap
A sanity hearing for a
Fullerton man accused of
murder, rape, kidnap and rob-
bery was sidelined today in
Orange County Superior Court
pending Judge William L. Mur-
ray's ruling on the role of the pre-
ss in the pretrial proceeding.
Judge Murray called newsmen
to hi~courtroom Monday in what
appeared to be a move to resolve
a dilemma created when the
public defender's office objected
to the presence of the press at the
sanity hearing scheduled for de·
fendanl Ken Richard Hulbert, 24.
It was made clear by newsmen
during the conference with Judge
Murray and lawyers for both-
sides that there C"uid be no ques-
tion of their agreeing to .my form
oC voluntary censorstup dunng
the hearing.
Judge Murray then comment-
ed that be might have lo restnct
pretrial coverage in the light of
deputy public defender Walter
7.ech 's .. erotest that cerl-ain
psychiatric evidence he intends to
offer could be highly prejudicial
to Hulbert 1( made public at this point
The move lo bar the press was
not opposed by the district 3l·
torncy's ofhce.
Hulbert is accused or the rape
and murder of Gina Marie Tis·
her. 19, of Whittier, wh'ose nude
body was found last Jan. 2 in the
back of a car parked near a
Fullerton apartment complex.
He faces further char~es in
connection with his alleged rape
and attack on a F'ullerton Com-
munity College student \\ho told
JlOlice she was robbed, raped,
beaten and then thrown into a
ditch m the Irvine area la!>t Jan.
li
Gang Slaying
Suspect Held
TOHRANCE (AP) A 31·
\t-ar old Torrance man ha" bern
.irrcstcd 1n conncctJon \\lth the
deaths of two other men in what
lt1 vers1de Countv authorities
desrribed as a rival motcwtcvC'le ~ang shooting. ·
Offlct ab 1denlif1ed the arrest
ed man as Gary Lee Rrown. They
:,aid Brown was on<' of three men
"'ho \\Biked into a Cilen Avon bar
1· rh ts and :-hot <.1nd k1l lc·d
Wt•5ll'v Outler. :l~ of Rivcrsidr.
.inti Trav1<, S Wl'aH·r. 2f\ of
l f'l .md
fnv<''>tigator-, :-aid Rrown was
.1 mrmb<'r or one motorn •cle
j!.llli.! .and l>uttl'r and Wea ver
mC'mbl'r!I of :l rl\'al gang
Fro. Page Al
FLOOD ...
Hartge estimated that the cost
(" thr proJect m1i:tht n1ngc from
Sl00.000 to $150.000
llatlfr?e · sa 1d that the trailer
r>ark IS located on the lowest part
of Talbert Valley Jlesaid 1t rests
on~ old peal bog and that the r1 -
1y has refused to allow single
family homes to be constructed
there
(
ORANGE COAST >< ~
DAILY PILOT
t~n,-·~C:N t f'i•IVP ~t~•fl 'lllf1' f'•'\•...,.,. ,,..IW'fj,,,., H•~ ,., •. ''tu~·""""""t•Or~o
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t1•W\ 1• Pu~h\f'WI'\ \Ah1,.l1AY\ i9l"C1 '"'""·•'<!' t l'\r •···~ •o"t nhbli-.tiri1"Q ot1u"t 1" ., 110 w,. t '' , .. ,,,, . .,, ''''" M#i t (,.1,,,..,,,, •-:'~.~•
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H\111tfnaton l••ctl<>mce
1 ,.)'f &.•C f'I f\.Oyltt••Td
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\addl•bM. V-H•'t H>ft1'. Pt t •o .. •t \411\ 01•fit0 ,,,.,.w.n
T•l•pllone (7t4)W~21
Clen lfled Adwertlllng ~-5171
,.-:,.~ ... ,."' Ot•""" (.ovMy '°""""""'."' •~tUO
~'1: !!!!. o;.= <t.:.!!.::.~~~·~~.
••Utt •r .. v.ttlt•M•"h 'Wtt••f" 'Y'AY t'lll r-e•re4'uf•d wllMut ,,.,1.1 ,..,,...,.•eft Of ._ __
~-<l .. 1 H•I-Hll •I Ct>I• MtH. C.llferftta tv•t<t1•tt•" .., Cfff1•• '' \0 moftf~ff. ,., "'I U IA H ~"t't. M1tll••• .. , ..... _., ,._,,...
(
Ina a report from Mrs. G. J,
Galyen. of 6531 Corrine Cir~lel
who com,lalned 1he was toboea o! can o tomato Ji.itce coclrtall
when a neighbor approached the
p1ttrolman.
OHicer Delagado said the
neighbor reported someone
broke in al G!"i~l Corrin Circle and
heisted a $10 half-gallon or
vodka.
If the manhunt is successful .
the intruder will be disappointed
to le arn th::tl Jailer Warren
Biscalluz serves the brunc h
tomato juice stnctly Sa11Sp5eason-
ings or vodka.
Fro• Page A I
SOVIETS ••.
Whtie the U.S. still holds an
economic and technological
edge, Graham said the Soviets
have overtake n the U.S. in
military strength during the past
10 years because of U.S. em·
phasis on nucl~ar weapons as a
deterrent rather than an offense.
By pumping 15·20 percent of
lhe Soviet Gross National
Product into defense thc'USSR
now holds a six to one ad·
vanatage m 1ntercepter aircraft
and has a s uperior surface fleet.
Graham said
Ourmg SALT talks, Graham
said the U.S. made a serious mis·
take by agreeing not to use antt·
ballistic missiles. thus canceling·
a 20-year V .S. lead 10 this depart·
ment.
·· Evl'n 1f we s tand equal (in
militarv strength) we are at a
disadvantage s ince we must
ce<ie 1n1t1at1 ve lo the other side,"
Graham said. "And the advan·
tage of initiative 1s worth many
missiles, ships and lives."
Despite what Graham termed
a "dreaded scenario ahead," he
s aid four recent events may help
lo point the U.S towards an ef·
fort to re cstabl1sh military
superiority
-Graham said s peeches by
Sovie t defector Alexander
Solzhcn1tsvn have reaffirmed the
new that 'soviet Ciovernment 1s
oppressive r ather than henign
-The firing of Schlesinger
pointed out the conflict between
detente and the need Cor an in·
creased <lef ense budget.
-Soviet use of Cuban troops in
Angola has highlighted the US-
SR 's goal or world domination.
-Ronald Reagan 's strong
primary election run aga_.l a
relatively conservative prcs~ent
informed voters of decr easing
U.S. military strength.
Teen Slain
By Officers
\.ISALIA (AP) -Two
Tulare County ·sheriff 's of·
fl cers "ere wounded and
their teen-age assailant.
was shot to death today.
authorities reported.
Dctecttve Roland Hover,
29, was shot through the
II ver a nd Sgt Chuck
Ezelle, 4<1, w3s hit Ill the
ank les when they
responded to a report or a
prowler m a r esidential
area eas t of here, the
sheriff's office reported.
Reports indicated' that n
youth 1denl1Cied as Mike
Atkins. !ti, a bduc ted a
hostage Crom a house and
was nee rng in a car when
deputies a r rr ved shortly
after dawn.
'Devil Attack'
Parents Jailed
RALTtMORE (AP> -
Baltimore police have charged a
New York City couple with tryinl(
!O ntn down their three daughters
\n an automobile because they
believed the children were
p<>ssessed by the devil.
l:U!nJamin Singleton, 39, and his
wife Dianna. were arrested after
allegedly assaulting and aban-
donmg the girls on the parking
lot al South Baltimore General
Hospital.
Police said the girls -Vic.
tori a, 11. Yolanda. 10, and
Sharetta. 5 -were treated for
cuts and bruises and were placed
in a foster home. The girls' eight·
month-old brother. Benjamin,
was found with the parents and
was placed in protective custody,
authorities said.
Rail Mishap
Suit Seitled
LOS ANGELES Ci\ P > -A man
who won $200,000 dam agts alter
turning down 3 $700,000 settle-
ment in a suit over the loss of hM>
legs in a railroad accident has ac·
cepted a $600,000 settlement dur·
Ing tht second trial oflus case.
A rBllro&d worktron his second
day on th~ job, he was injured
March 11, 1971 near B&kar. Ore.,
"s be walked along the tracks
checkln& for rail damqe.
Kissinger.
To Brief
Carter
PLAINS , Ga. CAP)
President·elcct Jimmy Carter
will meet with Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger here Satur·
day for a briefing on foreign
policy matters and will confer
wlth President Ford in
Washington next week, it was an·
nounced today.
Ford and Carter agl'eOO in a
t elephone call Monday rught to
have their staffs work out ar-
rangements for their meeting.
The day for the session has not
bee n decided, White House
spokesman J ohn Carlson said.
Carlson said Carter put in a
telephone call to Ford as the
President returned aboard Air
Force One on Monday from a
California vacation. Ford re·
t.urned the call wh~ he arrived
at the White House.
Carter's staff said Kissinger
will be accompanied Saturday by
Lawrence Eagleburger, the un-
dersecretary for management at
the State Department who is
handling the department liaison
with Carter during the transition
from the Ford administration.
Eagleburger was to meet late?-
today at the State Department
with W. Anthony Lake, who has
been designated by Carter to
head rus foreign policy transition
team. Lake 1s expected to see
Kissinger before the secretary
travels to Georgia.
Vice President-elect Waller
Mondale, who will be in Plains on
Fr1day for a meeting between
Carter and CIA Director George
Bush, also will attend' the Carter
hrie.fing. with Kissinger.
The meeting is the first
between Cart er and the
secretary of state, whom Carter
and Mondale frequently
criticized during the presidential
campaign . The session,
scheduled for 7:30 a .m . PST.
marks the highest-level con-
ference Carter has undertaken in
lhe transition period.
Carter and Mondale will be ac-
companied at_the Kissinger
briefing by David Aaron, who is
their representative on transition
matters dealing with the Na:
tional Security Council and in·
teUigence activities.
Carter is beginning what he
says is a "careful and thorough
and deliberate" process to name
the top officials who will help him
run the government.
Carter met Saturday for
several hours with Dean Rusk,
se'eretary of State under John F.
Kennedy and Lyndon 8. Johnson
and now a law professor at the
University of Georgia.
RB Chamber
~ts Citizen
Of Year ~ods
Th e Hu ntington Beach
Chamber of Commerce is now 'n?-
ceiving recommendations for its
annual citizen of the year award.
Jack Feehan. chairman of the
awards committee. said the win·
ner will be honored in January at
the installation of the chamber 's
new offi cers.
There are two requirements for
consideration a's citizen of the
year:
Evidence of significant con-
tribution lo community better·
ment.
-Encouragement of genera l
business interests and promotion
or the private enterprise system.
A resume in writing must be
submitted to the chamber office
18582 Beach BLvd., #244, Hunt:
ington Beadl, no later than Dec. • 15.
Fro• Page Al
CRASH •••
Hospital said today it was too
Parly to classify Miss Kramer's
condition, bu,t that she is definite-
ly expected lo recover.
They indicated the victim will
require plastic surgery to repair
her slashed and torn face.
Smly Loses Ber Mast
An Orange Coast College class in off shore
sailing ended abr:uptly Monday afternoon
a mile off Newport Harbor when the mast
on the class boat snapped. The 10-meter
boat, Sally, was recently donated to the
Coast Community College District. No one
was injured in t h e mish ap and a
spokesman for the sailing program saii
two shrouds apparently broke, causing lh~
mast to break.
Huntington Sets L~t '
Cormcil Adopts Noise, Scenic Rules
Huntington Beach Ci ty Council
m~mbers have approvO::d in~rirn
noise and scenic highway ·ele
ments to be incorporatec;I into the
city's general plan.
City officials say the two ele·
ments are not hard and fast rules
but will serve as goals for the city.
Noise sources that the city will
deal with in later ordinances were
identified Monday night. They
will focus primarily on highway
and freeway noise. Other sources
include railroads. airport and
helicopter ~e'ralions and oil
pumping work. .
The scenic highway element
sets forth a program to establish
and protect city scenic roadways.
It establis hes the lO·mile
stretch of the Pacific Coast
Highway in the city as a scenic
highway.
The element will provide city
authorities means to regulate de·
velopment along the route.
The proposed extension of
Bolsa Chica Street from Pacific
Coast Highway to Warner Avenue
and the planned extension 'O
Edwards Street Crom the Pacifi
Coast Highway lo southofTalbe
Avenue have been listed as loc
scenic routes.
I..ater ordinance are e~
that will permit various con
along the routes.
Acting__ Pla-D..njng_Di.r~ awafd Sell Ch sald Mori<Jay-fil
that the two elements were
quired before a redevelopm~
law for the city can be passed. '
A redevelopment hearing is
scheduled Thursday night.
'I Tried to Go Back In'
Searing Flames Drove Neighbor Back
'\
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of Ille O•llY Piiot Slall
"If she had been in her
wheel c hair. J could have
wheeled her right out," said Lois
Wendt several hours alter an ex·
plosion blew her out of a. Costa
Mesa apartment.
' '?tie neighbor she was trying to
hetf>, Frances Sueple, 59, a crip·
pie. died ln the searing f'lan)es alf-
'the aparttnetil al 1M Clearbrook
Lane.
Mrs. Wendt. a 53-year-old
health food distributor,
described what happened during
the noon hour J>laze.
She lay in her bed three hours
after being l~ken to Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital where she
was treated for burns to her
hands and leg.
Mrs. Wendt heard screams
outside her apartment shortly
after noon Mon~ay. .
"I went to· the door and saw
Candy (neighbor Candy Van
Sickle)· pointing inside Ure apart·
ment," she said.
She said she and Mrs . Van
Sickle rushed into the apart-
ment. They found Mrs. Supple
crumpled on the floor near her
wheelchair.
"We could s mell smoke. but
there weren 't a ny flames
anywhere." she said.
Mrs. Van Sickle ran from the
apartment lo gel a blanket while
Mrs. We ndt tugged at the still
form of the victim.
"She was lying on her s ide. J
Oothing Drive Set
By Valley Wome n
The South Coast Junior
Women 's Club of fountain
Valley 1s conducting a clothrng
drive Cor lhe Providence Speech
and Hearing Clinic in Orange.
The clinic is seeking clothing
for resale in its thrift shop.
Clothing from children's to adult
sizes are being sought.· For
pickup information, call 962-3138.
could only gel hold of one of her
arms." Mrs. Wendt said.
She said she was just about to
the front door of the apartment
"half tugging, hat? pulling the
woman," when there was an ex-
plosjon.
"l didn't see any names inside
while I was trying to get her
out." she said. ''Then, alJ of a
sudden, flames engulfed the
whole back wall.
··tt reminded me of a big fi ery
wave, just like the ones you see
in the ocean, curling at the top
Strike Faces
Union in SF
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Unions more 'llccustomed to stag-
ing strikes found themselves be·
ing struck by the ir own
employes.
"Yes, it's ironic that we're l!O·
ing on strike against union of.
fices," said Reeva Olson, presi-
dent of Local 3 of the Office and
Professional Employcs Interna-
tional.
She said Monday that no talks
are sch e duled but further
negotiations are expected later
in the week
Risk Patients
Flu Shots Set
A swine flu immunization rlmic
will be held at Hoag Memorial
Hospital Saturday for high risk
patients. hospital officials an·
nouncedtoday. •
High ris k patients are those
over 60 years of uge and the
chronically 111 over the age of 18
The immun ization will provide
protection against the swine nu
and the A· Victoria s train.
The clinic will be conducted in
the hospital's conference center
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The shots
are free.
and coming right at me."
The-explosion sent Mrs. WeQCI
stumbling backwards out th1
door, where she said Mrs. V
Sickle was waiting with
blanket. , •·r tried to go bacli in," Mk
Wendt said. -
She lay quietly a moment o
the bed, then tears welled up ·
~rey~. ~
"It's so frustrating when yo
k11ow you can't do anything
help."
In a separate interview, Can
dy Van Sickle said she and b
mother. Mrs. Patricia Harding,
smelled smoke coming from the
next door a partment about noon
Monday.
"It really wasn 't that strong,"
Mrs. Van Sickle recalled. But
she looked out the front door as
her mother called the fire de-
partment.
"I saw some smoke and
knocked on the door," s he said.
When no one answered, she
pushed open the door and scrw
Mrs. Supple on the noor'by th~
couch. '
"I called for help and Lots
tMrs. Wendt) came runnif'I~
across the~wn from her apart1
ment."
The two omen tried to pull
Mrs. Suppl Crom the apart.
ment, then Ml"s . Van Sickle ran
next door to get a blanket.
"When I got back, the apart·
ment exploded in name and J
saw Lois crawling from the front
door and into my house."
Juvenile Drinkers
S~ject of Foriim
e Edison High School Parent
Tea er Student Association will
1'!res nt a program on problem
j uvenile drinkers at 7:30 p.IJ'I,
Wedn~sda y in lhe sc ho~•
cafeteria. .
Jim Preston of the Orange
County Department oC Mental
Health will be the feature'1
speaker.
Foster Child, 17, Sues
'A SCAR ON YOUR BRAIN'
O.nnla Smith AIM Suft
•
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Dennis Smith is in his 17th year
and his 16th foster home. "It's
like a scar on your brain," he
says.
"I want people to realize
what's happening to foster
children." he adds . And he has filed an UJ'lusuaJ
lawsuit with that purpose in
mind.
The 1ult, r.ltd In Alameda
County Superior Court cm Mon·
~ay, ask.a d amages of $.500.000
from the county social .service
3gency and otflcials or Ote public
school system the re.
Smith claims the agency told
hia mother he would be placed
for adoption but sent him ln.,tead
to one loatcr bom~ al'lt!r another .
He aays the schools accepted
wbat he called a mistaken
cUaanos.ts tbat he was ment.t.11)'
I ..
retarded and put him in classes
for the handicapped.
"Jf I had known I was going to
spend the first 16 years of my life
this way, I'd rather have been de·
ad. I'd wished my mother could
have aborted me." said DeMIS.
Dennis was born m Oakland on
Oct 5, 1959. His two legal aid
lawyers say county records nre
unclear where be spent rus first
21 2 months. He doesn't know who
his parent3 are ~r where he got
the name "Smith."
Early in 1960 he was plarcd
with a couple already caring for
one foster child. Then came more
homes and ft couple of stretches
ln public orphanages.
He was placed last September
in his present Coster home, where
his attorntys say he ls ·'re·
asonably content''
But, he said In an interview,
'(
"It's not like having parents. ··-
The relationship was somewl'\at.
distant. When you want t.o talkM>
your roster parent11, you're.
always afraid that what you say
will go into the book.·• He was,,.,
ferringto records that are kept~
ofCiciala on Coster children's deor
velopment and behavior.
Dennis, a high school junjor.
said IC he wins the lawsuit he will
use most of the money io lobbJ
for legislation to overhaul tho
foster parent system.
In Oakland, Alameda C<>UMy
officials refused to comment •
specifics of th~ case. but lJbrinlo
Perez, director of the Sodal
Servicea Agency, said:
''Re1ardless of the outcomt.
we are r e.examining our opera·
tlon lo determine whether im·.
provements can be made or, If
prcve.plive steps can be t.aken."
Laguna/South. Coast
EDIT I ON
~OL. 69, ~· 321, 2 S6CTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1976
' Aft e r n oon
N. l'. S t oek.1
TEN CENTS
SSR Gaining Big Militaij Advantage'
ByMJCHAELPASKEVICR • ' OUlle~llYl'llOISU.tt
Military strength has shilled ·
dangerously in ravorofU,eSoviet
Union .and ·there is euphoria in
lloscow over the prospect or
ecbieviog a long·range goal of
world communism, according to
U . General Daniel 0 . Graha m.
~rmer dlreetor of the Defense
lD~Ugence Agency.
Graham, who resigned from
SUICIDE FAILS
Gary Mark Giimore
'Flood Plan
Tops Full
LB Age nda
The Laguna Beach City Council
will consider a 54-item agenda
Wednesday including a con· r troversial flood control project. ~ &tateboard controls. allocation of
federal housing money, a new ca-
ble television franchise and a new
bathhouse ordinance.
The council session will be~in at
3:30 p.m at city hall PublJc hear
ings are scheduled to begin al 7:30
p.m .
A county flood control project
for the Canyon Acres area 1s being
protested by some residents.
Ray Unger . a 1 community
spokesman. s aid the primary
concern is that storm drain pro-
ject will facihlalc new develop·
ment in the area above Canyon
Acres.
The Canyon Acres area has
been designate d a "speciat
hazard" area due to inadequate
fiood protection. The pro1ect, paid
tor by the county funds. will great-
ly impro\'e flood safety, accord-
.Ing to county officials.
The council will consider a re
port by Police Chief Jon Sparks
suggesting variety of actions
which could be taken to tighten up
skateboard use and safety.
The bathhouse ordmanco being
mulled by the council will set
strict standards or sarutallon. re-
q uire operators to register with
Ule police department and pro-
hibit minors Cr om us ing the
facihties unless they are with
parents or a guardian.
Under the publi c hearing agen-
da. the council will consider a
franchise agreement with Storer
Cable TV. It would set up new
standards for dealing with sub-
scriber complaints and allowing
&he company a $6.75 monthly re-
&idential base f ec.
Allocation of $110.000 in federal
Housin g a nd Community
Development funds t.o a senior
citizens housing project also will
be considered by the council.
Oran ge Co ast
Weathe r
Warm sunny days and
clear cool nights tltrough
Wednesday. Highs near 80
at the coast. lows lo about
SO. Easterly winds.
I NSIDE T ODA. l'
R~porler Willia.m F'afT'I z.oai elforl• to stay out of ;oil
over prottcUng a ntw.s aourc~
continue. S(OTJ/, A.S.
the Army intelUgence post in 1975
as a protest to the dismissals of
Defense Secr etary James Schles·
inger and CIA Director William
Colby, made the remarks Mon-
day in Newport Beach before a
lunch eon gathering o f the
Americanism 'Educational
League, a patriotic, public
education organization based in
Buena Park.
He charged the U.S. with aid-
ing Soviet euphoria because or
comr.romises d uring SALT talks.
t he failure o r detente and a
decreased emphasis on building
a stronger national defense.
Graham. who recently re-
turned from a USSR trip, said the
Soviets are initiating an "iron
fisted" civil de fense program
complete with mass evacuation
practice and increased construc·
tion o( bomb shelters. In the
event or nuclear warfare Soviet
losses could be as low as 10
million, compared to 110 miJllon
Americans, Graham said .
Considering what Graham
believes is a lower Soviet regard
for life -"after all, they killed
five million peasants to collec·
tivize agriculture" -the USSR
could use the difference in the
potential loss of lives as a
weapon to get Its way.
Killer's Suicide
While the U.S. still holds an
econo mic a nd technological
edge, Graham said the Soviets
h ave overtaken the U.S. in
military strength during the past
10 year& because of U.S. em-
phasis on nuclear weapons as a
deterrent rather than an offense.
By pumping 15·20 percent of
the Soviet G r oss Nation al
Product into defense the US.SR
now holds a s ix lo one ad-
Fails
vanatage in intercepter aircraft
and has a s uperior surface fleet,
Graham said .
During SALT talks, Graham
said the U.S. made a serious mis·
take br agreeing not lo use ~ti·
ballistic missUe~. thus canceling e 20-year u .s. lead in this depart.·
ment.
"Even if we stand equal. (in
military str~nglh) we are at a (Sff SOVIETS, Page A2)
Girlfriend Also Reported in OD Try
~
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (APJ
Gary Mark Gilmore. under
sentence to die before a firing
squad, attempted to take his life
with "a drug overdose today,
authorities said . His girlfriend
a lso was found unconscious in
her apartment from an apparent
overdose,.police said.
Medics brought Gilmore "back
to life," a medical technician al
the Utah State Prison reported.
His condition was listed as
serious .
Gilmore's girlfriend, Nicole·
Barrett, was found unconscious
in her apArtment, also of an ap-
pa r e nl drug overdose. Spr-
ingville Police Chief Leland
Rowers said. Mrs. Barret!. 20,
was in critical condition at. Utah
Valley Hospital in Provo, a
spokesman there said.
Gilmore, 35. who had been sen-
tenced for the killing of a motel
clerk durl-ng a robbery, wa~
found unconscious in his cell,
said the prison medical techni-
cian. Tom Ahguay.
"He tried to take his own Life.
He tried to 0 D. '' Anguay said.
Anguay said he did not know
Cfnaversation Piece
what kind of drug was used'but
Gilmore has been on mcdicallon
He said Gilmore was &nsc1ous
artier treatment but said nothing
An a m bu l a n ce and a
paramedic unit arrived at the
prison gate and a stretcher with a
person on it was placed in the
ambulance, which remained at
the gate. for several minutes
while someone inside was being
t rea t ed . It later left for a
hospital.
Warde n Sam Sm ith said
Gilmore was not-breathing pro-
perly when he was discovered
Larry Sharman of Costa Mesa saw this old
cannon at a swap meet and decided it was
just what he needed. So he brought it
hOme and put it in the front yard of his
home al 292 Flower St., much to the de-
light of Nancy Carmody, 14 ; Kathleen
Sharman, 10 ; Kim Lisk, 11 , and Maureen
Sharman. 14 (from left ). Sharman's wife
says it makes it hard to mow the front
lawn. The lady across the street asked
Sharman lo aim the cannon al some other
house.
Tests Please Educators .
CUSD Kids Get High Marks tor Achievement . .
By ANNE COOP ER
Ol tfle Ollly Piiot Stoff
Capistrano Unified School Dis-
lricl administrators say they are
pleased with recent district test
scores, but admit they recognize
certain soft spots in the instruc·
tional program.
Philip Grignon, a ssistant
superinte ndent for instructional
services, told district trustees
Monday that, although the
average IQ among CUSD stu·
dents is 103 Cor about average).
students generally scored 20 to 30
percent above t he national
average on achievement tests.
In order to inform the com-
munity in what areas students
are doing well. or not so well,
Su p e rint e nd e nt J erom e
Thomsley said he is preparing a
newspaper advertisement to pre·
sent district test results.
"We c an't tell the newspapers
what to print in the.ir stories on
test results," Thornsley said,
"and we want to be sure the com-
munity has the w)lole picture."
The supe rintendent said lhe ad
Indecent Exposure
Smpect Sought
Laguna Be ach police are
searching for a middle-aged man
who attempted to kidnap· an 8·
year .old girl after exposing
himself to her and an ll-year-0ld
llirl Monday.
-The incident occu.rTed at about
6 p .m . in the 200 block ol
Diamond Street The area is
close to a school bus slop for
Aliso Elementary SchooL
Detective Gene Bl"OOks asked
today for &11sistance from anyone
wbo saw the lncident, or who re-
\nembcrs ~eeln«i a man in his 40s, •
with gra y hair. a gray
moustache, wearing a gray suit
and driving a two-door gray
hardtop in the vicinity. Det.
Brooks may be reached by call·
ing 494·1124.
The man first exposed himself
to the 11-year-old girl while he
was sitting tn hJs car. The child
ran away.
La~r he lured the younger l(irl
to his vehicle. and wlth his
,. trousers down, attempted to pull
her lnto hls car. The girl freed
herself and (Jed. '
will be paid for out or general
operating funds.
"It is not uncommon for school
districts to take out newspaper
ads," be s aid. "Many school dis-
trict boards use this m ethod lo
make annual reports. C have a
whole me folder or such ads ...
Thom sley said he clid not know
whether CUSD administrators
have pJaced similar newspaper
ads in lhe past.
Thomsley said two areas of
focus in the current school year
will be on spelling in elementary
grades, because this was an area
in which students did not test as
well as expected.
District administrators will
also look hard at the differences
between ins\rUcUonal programs
at Dana Hills and San Clemente
Hlgh Schools, he said.
College bound students at San
Clemente who took the Scholastic
Aptitude Test scored 415 in
vetba) akiHs. 437 In math. Dana
Hills scored 454 in verbal skills,
488\nmath.
These results place Dana Hills
(Sff TESTS, Page A2)
)
'I1llef Gets Cash
"San Clemente poUce reported Ute tben. Monday of $800 ln cash
Crom the home or Edward John
KeMedy. 323 M onlerey Lane.
Pollce said lhe buratar forced
oi>en a slldin1 glass door and re·
~ movc4 the Cl!Jh from a beflrodln.
•
• under a special surveillance
system set up to keep watch on
him. Smilh said medical lecbni·
cians were rushed in and gave
him resuscitation.
He said Gilmore was breattunc
at the time he left the prison
Asked where he could have got
ten drugs, Smith said he might
have obtained t hem from other
inmates, from vii;itors or other
persons, and hid them under his
tongue while being searched.
Dr. Al Roe. the prison
psychologist. said he had predict·
<See KILLER, PageA2)
• ... ,'"""° ..
APPARENT OVERDOSE-
Nlcole Barrett
School Plan Eyed
Laguna's ~rustees
Girding f o·i-G~.-.wth
Laguna Beach Unified Sc&lOOI
• Distr ict ln.11-tees will be asked
tonight to a r1prove mast.er plan·
ning of Laguna Beach High
~hool for an eventual student
population 71 percent greater
than currenl enrollment.
There are 1,166 students at the
high school.
District Bus iness Manager
Clyde Lovelady said, according
to the state d epartment of educa-
tion, the mos t effi cient high
school enrollment is 1,800to2,000
students.
He said that "with careful and
detailed plannlrig of existing and
additional facilities," the 13-acre
Laguna campus could handle
that many.
The school board will be asked,
at a 7 :30 p.m . meeting at district
headquarters, 550 Blumont St., to
appoint a committee to prepare
preliminary studies and set ob·
Jectives .
A high· school master facility
plan would be prepared by an
architect by next September.
Lovelady said a master plan-
ning approach would prevent an
"add and p atch" method of
h andling increas ing school
enrollment.
Studies are under way of the
possibility of buildJng a new,
larger swimming pool on the
campus.
Representatives Of the pool
committee would be named to
the master planning committee
to coordinate proposals, unde r
Lovelady 's plan.
Other committee members
would include representatives
from the hi~h school staff, stu·
Study Tonight
On Downtown
San Clemente
The City Council and the
Architectural R eclew Board
meet in study session al 7: 30
tonight to discuss how downtown
San Clemenle should look.
The m eeting is al the Com-
munity Clubhouse, 100 N. Calle
Seville .
The architectural board bas
made a number of recommenda·
lions designed to preserve a
Spanish appearance downtown.
The council has adopted the
standards, in principle, which
include the use bf tile when
sloped roofs are built, a.nd the
encouragement. of t>eavy wooden
beam, iron grillwork, heavy
st\lcco t exture and theme·
oriented wlndow and door treat·
ment.s.
City planners tonight wU\
work lo d ovelop spe clflc
downtown -district boundaries
and pl•ns tor landacaplng.
sidewalks and s~eetlltlatin&.
dents, the district adminislra·
lion, the community and a school
planning architect .
The committee would set time
lines, determine tasks, prepare a
design concept and projeet s tu·
dent populations. ~
Kissinger
Briefing Set
For Caner
PLAINS , Ga. (AP)
President-elect Jimmy Carter
will meef with SectetllrY of"State
Henry A. Kissinger here Salur·
day for a briefing on foreign
policy matters and wilt confer
w ith President Ford i n
Washington next week, it was an·
nounced today.
Ford and Carter agreed in a
telephone call Monday night to
have their staffs work out ar·
rangements for their meeting.
The day for the session bas not
been decided, White House
spokesman John Carlson said.
Carlson said Carter put in a
te lephone call to Ford as the
President returned aboard Air
Force One on Monday from a
California vacation. Ford re·
turned the call when he arrived
at the White House.
Cartel\'s starr said Kissinger
will be accompanied Saturday by
Lawrence Eagleburger, the un-
dersecretary for manag~ment at
the Stale Department who is
handling the department liaison
with Carter during the transition
from the Ford administration.
Eagleburger was t.o meet later
today at the State Department
with W. Anthony Lake, who has
been des ignated by Carter to
head his foreign policy transition
team. Lake is expected to see
Kissinger before lbe secretary
travels to Georgia.
Vice President-elect Walter
Mondale, who will be in Plains on
Friday for a meeting between
Carter and CIA Director George
Bush, also will attend the Carter
briefing with Kissinger.
The meeting i s the first
between C arter a nd the
secretary of slate, whom Carter
and Mondale fre q u ently
criticlzed during the presidential
campaign. The session .
scheduled for 7:30 a.m . PS!,
rnarks the highest-level cpn·
f erence Carter bas undertaken in the transition period.
Cart.er and .Mondale wlD be ac·
comtanied at the JClssinger
brietmg by David Aaron, who is
thelr representative on transition
matters dealfnc with the Na-
tional Security Council and in-
teJJJgence activities.
Carter la beginninl what ha
says Is a "careful aDd thorough
and deliberate" pr«ea to name
the t.op offici;,;;•laaasw•v~wm·be·lD·Jalm·· ~ runthoroverpms-...._
r ,,
A2 DAIL y PILOT C'ISC
.Bond Vote
:.Delaye d ..
In CUSD
• ~apistrano Uniried School Dis·
trict trustees chose Monday not
to call a school bond election in
March. saying a May election
will allow more time to generate
support for the me a.sure.
Superintendent Jerome
Thomsley told trustees he is op-
timistic about voter confidence
in the CapUl~rano school district,
but doubts voters would support
school bonds at this time.
Trustee Bob Hurst proposed
the bond election be postponed
until district employe groups are
solidly in support of the measure.
The school board is currently
negotiating contracts with
employe organizatjons.
''Happy teacll'vs , happy
employes will alwayNupport a
bond el~n." Tony Leon. presi-
dent of the Capistrano Uru!1ed
Educational Association, told
trustees.
"I cannot understand how
teachers can support over-
crowded classes," said Trustee
Ted-Kopp. "A bond election
should not be used ,as leverage in
contract negotiations."
Trustee Hurst said teachers
who oppo'e a bond eJecti()n simp-
1 y to oppose district a d -
ministrators are takinl the same
posture as voters who tum down
a bon(l 1'neasure because they are
against higher taxes, even
though' they have been told pass-
ing bonds does not effectively af-
fect taxes.
Superintendent Thornsley said
district adminlstrators are stu·
dying two possible elections -a
bond election and a lease·
purchase election. The first re·
quires a two-thirdg majority vote
to pass, the second a simple ma·
jority.
Thornsley s aid administrators
are also analyzing voter support
for an election to support con·
struction of new school buildings
to accommodate projected rn·
creases 1n :.l udcnt enrollment.
Rail Mishap
Suit Set tled
J
S:a(ety Tops
City Work List
DAI y Pi... Su" ..,_..
"SOVIETS AHEAD'_
Defense Expert Grehem
Fr,,.. Page Al
SOVIETS .J .•
disadvantage s ince we must
eerie initiative to the other side."
Graham said. ~And lhe advan·
tage of initiative is worth many
missiles, ships and lives."
Despite what Graham termed
a "dreaded scenario ahead," he
said four recent events may help
to point the U.S. towards an er.
fort to r e-establis h military superiority.
-Graham said speeches by
Soviet defector Alexander
Solzhenitsyn have reaffirmed the
view that Soviet Government is
oppressive rather than benign.
-The firing of Schlesin&J?r
pointed out the <.'onflict between
detente and the need for an in·
creased defense budget.
-Soviet use of Cuban troops in
Angola has highlighted the US·
SR 's goal of world domination.
-Ronald R e agan's strong
primary e lection run against a
relatively conservative president
informed voters or decreasing
U.S. military strength.
Froni Page A l
KILLER ...
ed Gilmor e would attempt to
commit s uicide. He said he had
interviewed Gilm(>re and found
Improvements in pedestrian
safety, village esthetics, transit
and parking, park!>, sewage
treatment and new development
processing are being given the
highest priority in Laguna
Beach's "department of
municipal services. 1
Stan Scholl, department djrec-
tor, identified the six areas as the
major objectives fQ( his opera·
lion during the cu}IQ!nt fiscal
year.
In addition to !denti!yin~ the high priority jtems, &boll also
noted that due to t ime and
personnel limitations, some
lhings would go undone. They in-
clude improving drainage in the
community, concentrated safety
and productivity programs, code
updating and improvements in
the budgetary items.
Scholl said the areas being em-
phasized will be stressed without
noticeable "sacrifice of all of our
maintenance services."
Slides Retell
'Freedom
Train' Story
A slide presentation on the
J anuary visit of the Freedom
Train to San Juan Capistrano
will be shown Thursday by the
chamber of commerce.
The hour-long presentation is
scheduled for 7 p.m. at the El
Adobe restaurant, 31891 Camino
Capistrano in San Juan.
Children can attend the slide
s how. which includes a
soundtrack describing train ex-
hibits and tne reason San Juan
was chosen for the Freedom
Train visit.
A ch a r ge of 50 cents per
person will be made. Additional
information and reservations
a re available by calling the .
Chamber or Commerce,;
493·4700.
him frustrated. · ·
Smith saia earlier that prison Cyclist Hort authorities were aware or a
suicide possibility and were tak·
ing precautions. But he has In Collisi·on declined to discuss those precau·
lions. ~ A C a m p P end l et on
Mrs. Barrett, or Springville. • motorcyclist emerging from an
A breakdown on the high
priority items follows :
-Pedestrian and traffic safe-
t y : improvements to city
sidewalks , in stallation of
wheelchair ramps , signal
modifications and better marked
crosswalks.
-Esthetics: planting or addi·
tional sidewalk trees, installation
of brick aidewalks, n ew
landscaping, facilitation of un.
dergrounding districts, addi·
ti on al street maintenance.
-Transit and parking: im·
provement of the bus terminal.
new benches, increased -1>us
ridership and service, increases
in parking by restriping spaces:
-Parks improvement: new
sprinklers will be installed. ten-
nis courts, handball courts and
improved landscaping wiU be un.
dertaken.
-Sewage treatment: Plant·
esthetics will be improved and
operation of the plant will be up.
graded.
-Development: processing
time for new construction will be
shortened and improvements
made in the department's pJan
checking and communications
with developers.
The Laguna Beach Municipal
Services Department has a fiscal
1976-77 budget of about $875,000
and employs 48 persons.
Bank Robbe r
Sought at
Marine Base
Federal, military and local
police this mornjng launched an
extensive search around El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station for a
man believed to have robbed a
Ballimore bank about a year
ago.
The search began at 3:30 a.m.
after a car driven by the federal
fugitive was stopped by military
policemen on the base. ,
A spokesman for the Federal
Bureau of Investigation said
MPs determined that the car was
stolen in Las Vegas and driven
by James Alfred Rice, 30, who is
suspeeted of robbing the bank on
Dec. 3, 1915. He ls also wanted in
Washington, D.C. for fprgery.
O.lly f'lltt , .. ,, ,._
POLICE EXPERTS CHECK FIRE SCENE FOR CLUES
Droppe,d Cigarette Ughter Blemed In Fet•I Blu e
Lighter mtimed
For Fatal Blaze
Costa Mesa fire investigafors
are blaming a cigarette lighter in -
the fiery death of a 59-year-0ld in-
valid Monday afternoon.
Mrs. Frances Supple, 124
Clearbrook L~ne, Apt. A. was
pronounced dead at the scene or
the noon fire,. a half block from
the city's police department.
The woman, a stroke victim
confined to a wheelchair since
"1965. was found nea r he r
wheelchair on the floor by two
neighbors who failed in their al·
Niguel Man
Injured in
Apto ~FAS~
tempts lo pull the victim fr<Q
the home . •
Her husband, J oseph J. Supp~
60, was away from the home at
the time.
Fire officials s~t damage or t.be
flames to the Supple home a•
about $20,000.
Lois Wendt of 120 Clearbrook
Lane re<.'eived second degree
bums over six percent of her
body while attempting to pull the
victim from the h,puse.
A sudden mixture of air fed a
smoulderin~ couch in the house,
s aid firemen, prompting the
blaze to rush throOgh the living
room, blowing Mrs. Wendt out
the front door.
Fire Analyst RusseJI Hen -
derson said today ll)e fire "ex-
plosion " was possibly a combinal
lton of a sudden bfe~ from a r
br k~n..,~ding &Ja~~ wind~,-.
com6uung wfih a smoulderidg
couch and flames.
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A man
who won $200,000 damages after
turninJ? down a S700.000 settle·
ment in a suit over the loss of his
legs in a railroad accident has ac·
cepted a $600.000 settlement dur·
mg the second trial of h.is case.
has been visiting him daily jn the ~Uey off El Camilli Be.al, near
·prison. Avenida Paliz~~ to San
Mrs. Barrett was warned Mon· Clemente. colll<led wt!b an on-
MPs dlased the car and shot
out its tires but Rice escaped
near the border or the base, the
spokesman said.
·A 23-year-old Laguna Niguel
man was jnjured Mondv when
the car he was driving stamined
into a parked vehicle near the in·
tersection of Nyes Place and
Soulh {;oast Highway in Laguna
".Wf} lqWld e ~aaret.t.e-Jighter
in tho open position near the
woman," Henderson said. A railroad worker on his second
day on the job, he was iruured
March 11. 1971 near Baker. Ore .
as he ~Jlkcd a lon~ the tracks
che<.'ktng for r ail dama~c
1~ Pre•• Clal el
day before visiting Gilmore that coming car and was hospitalized s h e w a s k n o w n to h a v e Monday. · · · · • · ·
purchased sleeping pills on pre· Police said Michael iack
scription and mus t not bring Brown, 24, w,Jto listed bis local
them to the prison. deputy address as 211 Avenida Palizada,
Warden Leon Hatch said Mon· San Clemente, failed to yield to a
day. car driven by Julie Marie Buche,
Hatch said she was subjected 27. of 214 Avenida Cabr:illo.
to skin sear<.'hes by a matron Brown was taken to San
before each of her visits and that Cle mente General Hospital,·
Gilmore was searched before where he was treated for severe
and after each vis it. scrapes and possible internal in-
Teen Slain
By Officers
VISALIA <AP ) -Two
Tulare County sheriff's of-
ficers were wounded and
their teen-age asslillant
was shot to death today,
authorities reported.
Detective Roland Hover,
29, was shot through the
Ji ver and Sgt . Chuck
Eielle. 44, was hit in the
ankle s when they
responded to a report of a
prowler in a residential area east or here. the
sheriff's office reported.
Reports indicated that a
youth identified as Mike
Atkins. 16. abducted a
hostage from a house and
was fleeing in a car when
deputies arrived shortly
after dawn.
j uries. and transferred to
Pendleton base hospital. The
woman was unhurt, police said.
-Housing Meet
In Capistrano
Low cost housing will be the
subject of a forum at noon Wed-
nesday hosted by the Capistrano
Beach Chamber of Commerce, at
Bradley's Steak House, 33157
Camino Capistrano. San Juan
Capistrano.
County government housing
experts are scheduled to djscuss
the possibilities for low-cost
housing in Orange County in
general , and the Capistrano
Beach Project in particular.
The Capistrano Beach Project
is a self-help housing relocation
program geared toward moving
a community of about 40 families
from substandard homes near
Doheny State Beach.
· ·· ·He'safd Mal'lt\e Corps-helicop-
ters and bloodhounds from the
county Sheriff's Department as
weU as officers from the FBI,
Marine base, Sheriff's Depart·
menl and local city police agen·
. cies joined in the resulting
search.
"We believe he's still on foot in
the Orange County area.'' the
spokesman said.
The spokesman sald he did not
·know if Rice is armed.
Rice is described as 30, black,
almost 6 feel tall, 170 pounds,
brown eyes, black hair and has a
one· inch scar on his forehead.
Beach. '
Samuel Velazquez of 32641
Mediterranean Drive, sustained
head injuries in the mishap. He
was taken by ambulance lo South
Coast Commun ity Hospital.
Velazquez was released after
emergency treatement.
Laguna Beach police said
Velazquez was southbound on
Coast Highway at about 11:20
p.m. and failed to neogitate a
curve in the road. He hit a parked
car damaging the front or his
vehicle and the rear of the other
car.
.Jody P ow('lt grins as he
hears President-elect Jim-
my Carter announce his ap-
pointment a s press
s ecretary. Il was the first
appointm e n t for Carter, ;~~,/.'!~~ 10
•nnounc•,, Sad·eyed Sadie
ORA NOE COAST
DAILY PILOT
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Telephone (114)942-4321
CIHtltled AdvtrtlllntM2·M"I
legun• le•cll All ~ment.:
Telepllone4M-MM
, .......... (10 .... ftlt
415.oNO
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Pooch Faces Pound Death
87 AR1'UUR &. VINSEL
0t 1,.. oan., Pt .. , st•"
Sad-E yed Sadie still stood
guard today over a Huntington
Beach home whose previous te·
nanl apparently moved out and
left her behind with only an old
pot roast bone and her faith.
Today, it appeared the mixed-
breed dog who greeted Bob Mac·
Phee and his roommates may
end her days ~·n he Orange Coun·
ty >.,Qlna!Shel
MlcPhe'e,. , or ~lllage
Drive, Huntington B h, •Ms
brother Ed, 19, and eir room·
mate Dave Watnmough, 20, can·
not approach Sadie.
She stands a faithful vigil un·
der a cactus ·plant beside the
front dOOl', apparenUy awaiting
the return or an owner who isn't
coming back.
"We moved in Sunday and she
went after Ed tWice. Don't set loo
close ..• , " Mac Phee •arned.
Sadie finally attl1ed on her
haunches, ber time--bleachtd and
tooth·cnawed bone beside her.
But she made it clear the peo-
ple must stay a)¥ay.
Sadie takes up a PQSition of de-
fense in t'lle rear yard by her bone
when anyone approaches her
lookout beside the front door.
LB Planner • Confab Guest
Laguna Beach Planning Direc-
tor Dougl11 Schmit& will be the
guest speaker at a meeting of the·
North Laguna Commun.tty As·
sociation at 7:30 p.m. Thursday
in the meeting room at the rear of ..
the City Council Chambers.
He will discuss zoning regula·
tions and changitlf buildln1 re·
quiremenu in the clty, as well as
the possible effects the develop-
ment of adjacent lands wiU have
on the clty.
All residenu or the city north or
Broadway to the clty Ul"Olu are
welcome to attend.
0.UY ,110\ S .. 11 """9
BighTinae
Laguna Beach Fire Capt. Harold Johnson tests position·
ing of a ladder to the turret of the remodeled Barbara
Webel' Studio, 1148 Glenneyre Street. The structure was
moved from Broadway but in the process, lost its
weather vane. Conventional means of reaching the tip or
the steeply pitched room failed so Laguna firemen came
to the rescue. Builder Bill JUggs ascended the ladder
alter \t was secured and installed the new weather vane.
' ( 'I
"We think she may have
dr6J)fH~d it and it ignited her
clothing or the couch. But the fire
def1n1tely originated in the
couch.'"
Henderson said there were two
possible explanations for the sud·
den blast or flames that engulfed
the apartment in lhe triplex in
seconds ..
"When the hack window Jet go.
the fire could have received. :l
draft. touching off the smoulder.
ing flames and roaring througtt
the house.··
F ro•PageAl
TESTS ...
students above and San
Clemente stud~nts below the na-
tional average of 431 in verbal,
472 in math aptitude.
"'Grignon said one reason Dana
Hills students outscored San
Clemente seniors is that Dana•
Hills offers two refreshe~
courses, one in math skills and
the other in gramma r ,
vocabulary and reading.
"We found that students at
Dana Hills who took the revielV
courses scored 15 to 30 poinu.
higher on the SA T's than students
who had not taken the course,"
Grignon said .
"By the time studenLc; are in
their senior year, some skills de:
veloped in earlier grades have
died of disuse." he said. "They
have the skills, but a review can. "
have obvious impact on test
scores.''
Grignon said population fae~
tors must also be considered in'
evaluating test scores. lie said
Laguna Beach students tested
better than Capistrano students.
tn part, because the Laguna
• 8 ('a c h p opulation is less..
transient and more ;Jfluent •
'"Laguna Beach parents pro-
hably put &realer emphasis on ·
education," he said. "And final~
Jy. it is important. to rememberl>
that Laguna Beach spends.
more money per student than we
<to." Tn1st~ Bob Hurst asked about'
the neighboring Saddlebiok ~
tricl. Grignon sai'd socio•
economic factors apply to a com11
parison wllh th al district as well.
Capistr ano state percentile.
scores for twelfth grade students
are: reading, 82; written ex··
prcssion, 80;. spelling, 82;-•·
rnathematics, 73. •
The ranks for Laguna Beach
seniors are: r eadin(J, 19; wriltetr
expression. 78; spelling 81 ;-
mathematics. 91.
Saddleback Valley Unified
seniors scortd: readlnJ(. 8S; writ..:
ten expression, 83~ spelling, 88;. ..
mathematics, 83. J
,,
Irvine· ·. Toduy's Clos ing
N.Y.S tocks EOlTION
'·
VOL. 69, NO. 321, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDA Y, NOVEMBER 16, 1976 I
"-TEN CENTS
'USSR Gaining ·Big Milita1y Advantage'
By MICHA EL P ASKEVICll
OllM o~u, ~lief SUH
Militarx strength bas shifted
dangerously in favor of the Soviet
Union and there is euphoria in
Moscow over the prospect of
achieving a long-range goal of
world communism, ~ccording to
U . General Daniel 0. Graham,
former director of the ~tense
Intelligence Agency.
Graham, who resigned from
SUICIDE FAILS
Gary Mark Giimore.
King Death
Docmne nts
Destroyed?
WASHINGTON CAP)-Docu-
ments.relatrng to the murder of
l>r. Martin Luther King Jr. ap-
)parently ha vc been destroyed
since the creation or a House
committee to investigate King's
slaying, committee staff mem·
hers said today
Chief counsel Richard A.
Sprague or the llousc Commtitec
on Assassinations said the docu-
• ments were · relevant lo our in-
\ CSt1gal1on" Jnd .. would ha\C
bt.•<:n in the pos~C!iSion of law en
forcement authorities."
Sprague added. "I have been
advlst•d that the destruction has
been since It was ar\nounccq hn
S<>ptt'mbf'r I thilt this comm1llec
"''ould be 1n\ t•sl 1J;:ating · th1·
murders of King and President
John F Kennt•d\
Sprague cautioned that hl' had
not received off1 c1al notif1callon
that the documents were
de:.trn~ ed. bul. in an apparent re
frrenl·e to J mt•mhcr of his staff,
said he lcarm·cl of their destru<'
lion "from an 1ncl1v1dual who has
inlt'rvH·~ etl 111 ht'r pc.'Oplt> "
SprJ~m· rt.fu .. .t•d to d1'i<'US<,
wh11·h IJ"' l·nforn·ment a~enc:;,
po.; essl.'d ltw 11111 umt•nts
I I o " e ' 1• r H " p I I e n r >'
Gon1alt'l 1 t> Tt·'·'-" '· a commit
tee mcmlwr. tuld a reporter he
believed the rlornrn<.•nts had been
m the po ... se~!>1un of ;mthont1es in
1'enncssce v. her<· King was killed
ll) 1968
During .1n unexpected pubh<'
session of the committee,
Gonzale7. asked staff attorney
Hobert <her 1f h<' had any reasoo
to belle\ t' that documenLo; rel at
in~ lo the-King asc;assinat1on had
been dest rovt•d "since the con
st1lut1on of this committee ...
"Yes, sir," Ozer replied. "I
believe thc>rc arc some docu
rn e nt s that have been
<Sec P ROBE, Page AZ)
Orang{;j Co ast
L /....... ?Os 7 S::..-
\\'e at h e r
Warm sunny days and
dear cool nights through Wednesday. mgfis near llO
at the coast. lows to about
50. Easterly winds.
l~Sl.~E TOD1' l'
Reporter W1lliom Farr'$
legal effort$ to $fay out of jail
<Wer protecllng o news sourcl'
contmue. Story. AS
Inde x
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L M lottl 11.7 ~Vltl
C.lllOrfti• AS -~.i """"' Cll\\tllN I• 11 H111-t He...•
COnlto A 10 0>....-Counl, en"_.. IJ ,...,
0 .. 1~ Ho11c.. "' SNr'll f.f•lerl•I P••• A• Stec-M1r•th lntorll•nmtnl A 11 Ttlev,.tott ""'""<• 1o11 n Tll••'"' "°'9HO... AU WMI. IM~M""... lo 11 Wtf'I. lftwt -
11
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the Army intelligence post in 1975
as a protest to the dismissals of
Defeo&e Secretary James Scbles·
inger and CIA Director William
Colby, made the remarks Mon-
day in Newport Beach before a
luncheon gathering ot-tlre_
Americanism Educational
League, a patriotic, public
education organization based in
Buena Park.
He charged the U.S. with aid-
ing Soviet euphoria because or
compromises during SIJ,T talks,
the failure or detente and a
decreased emphasis on building
• a stronger national defense.
Graham, who recently re-
turned Crom a USSR trip, said the
Soviets are initiating ill "iron
fisted" civil derense program
complete with mass evacuation
practice and increased construc-
tion of born b shelters. ln the
event or nuclear warfare Soviet
losses could be as low as 10
million, compared to 110 million
Americans.tG raham said.
Considering what Graham
believes is a lower Soviet regard
for life..-"after all, they killed
five million peasants to collec·
tivite agriculture" -the USSR
could use the difference ip, the
potential loss of lives as a
weapon to get its way.
While the U.S. still holds an
economic and technological
edge, Graham s aid the Soviets
have overtaken the U.S. in
military strength during the pas t
10 years because of U.S. em-
phasis on nuclear weapons as a
deterrent rather than an offense.
By pumping 15-20 percent of
the Soviet Gross Nationar·
Product into defense the USSR
now hold:; a s ix lo one ad-
vanatage in lntercepter aircraft
and has a superior surface fleet,
Graham said.
During SALT talks, Graham
said the U.S. made a serious mis·
take by agreeing not to use anti·
ballistic missiles, thus canceling•
a 20-year U.S. lead in this depart·
menl.
"Even if we stand equal (in
military strength) we are at a
<See SOVIETS. P age A2)
Killer's Suicide Fails
Girlfriend Also Reported in OD Try
~
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AP)
-Gary Mark Gilmore, under
sentence to die before a firing
squad, attempted to take his life
with a drug overdose today,
authorities said. His girlfriend
also was found unconscious in
her apartment from an apparent
' overdose, police said.
Medics brought Gilmore "back
to life," a medical technician al
the Utah State Prison reported.
His condition was listed as
serious.
Gilmore's girlfriend, Nicole
Barrett, was found unconscious
in her apartment. also of an ap-
parent drug overdose. Spr.
ingville P olice Chier Leland
Rowers said. Mrs. Barrell, 20,
was in critical condition al Utah
Valley Hospital in Provo, a
spokesman there said.
Gilmore, 35. who had been sen-
tenced for the killing of a motel
clerk during a robbery, was
found unconscious in his cell,
said the prison medical techni-
cian, Tom Anguay.
"He tried to lake his own life.
He tried to OD." Anguay said.
Anguay said he did not know
OiUV ,;1110. St~lf ,.,Mt()
POLICE EXPERTS CHECK FIRE SCENE FOR CLUES
Dropped Cigarette Lighter Blameo in ~atai Blaze
Lighter Blamed
For Fatal Blaze
Costa Mesa fire investigators
are blaming a cigarette lighter in
the fi ery death of a 59-year-old in·
valid Monday afternoon.
A sudden mixture of air fed a
smoulderin~ couch in the house,
said firemen, prqmpting the
blaze to rush through the living
room, blowing Mrs. Wendl out
the front door.
what kind or drug was used but
Gilmore has been on medication.
He said Gilmore was conscious
after treatment but said nothing.
An ambulance and a
paramedic unit arrived at lhe
prison gate and a stretcher with a
person on it was placed in the
ambulance. which remained at
the gate for several minutes
while someone inside was being
treated . It later left for a
hospital.
Warden Sam Smith said
Gilmore was not breathing pro-
perly when he was discovered
• under a special surveillance
system set up to keep watch on
him. Smith said med.lea! techni·
cians were rushed in and gave
him resuscitation.
He said Gilmore was breathing
al the time he left the prison.
Asked where he could have got-
ten drugs, Smith said he might
have obtained them from other
inmates. from visitors or other
persons. and hid them under his
tongue while being searched.
Dr. Al Roe, the prison
psychologist. said he had predict·
<See KILLER, Page A2)
Carter-Ford Talk Next '
APWi ........ ..,
APPARENT OVERDOSE.
Nicole Barrett
Kissinger Meet Set
.PLAINS , Ga . CA P ) -
President-elect Jimmy Carter
will meet with Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger here Satur-
day for a briefing on foreign
policy matters and will confer
with President Ford in
Washington next week, it was an
nounced today.
Ford and Carter agreed in a
telephone call Monday night lo
have their st affs work out ar-
rangements for their meetinJ!.
The day for the session has not
been decided. White House
spakesman John Carlson said.
Carlson said Carter put in a
telephone call to Ford as the
President returned. aboard Air
Force One on Monday from a
California vacation. Ford re-
turned the call when he artived
at the White House.
Carter 's staff said Kissinger
will be accompanied Saturday by
Lawrence Eagleburger, the un-
derse<!retary for management at
the State Department who is
handling the department liaison
wtlh Carter during the transition
from the Ford administration.
Eagleburger was to meet later
today al the State Department
with W. Anthony Lake, who has
been designated by Carter to
head his for:eign policy tran:;ition
team. Lake is expected tb see
K{ssinger before the secretary
travels to Georgia.
Vice President-elect Walter
Mondale, who will be in Plains on
Friday for a meeting between
Carter and CIA Director George
Bush. also will attend the Carter
briefing with Kissinger.
The meeting is the first
between Carter an"1 the
secretary of stale, whom Carter
and Mondale f r equently
criticized during the presidential
(See CARTE R, Page A2)
Traffic Work Continues
Walnut,-Culver Problem Gets lroine's Eye
• I Several road improvements been made, including:
aiready are completed and -Installing crosswalks at the
others are planned for a problem intersections of Ravenwood
lrafCi c area near Walnut Avenue Street and We1lnut Avenue and al
ana Culver Drive in Irvine. ac Es cola r Street and Wa lnut
o.:ording to city a1del> Avenue
City Traffic Engineer Conrad -Lowering the speed limit to
Lapinski said the area 1s cau's1ng 25 miles per hour when there are
µroblcms mostly because of in children prrsent.
creased residential development
nearby and the completion or the
Lapinski said t h at other
changes in the corning months
will include:
Installing a traffic signal at
Walnut and Yale Avenues. It is
scheduled for construction within
four months.
Ch anging the sign al at
(See TR AFFIC, Page A2)
Irvine High School.
Motorists have trouble m aking
left turns onto Walnut Avenue
from Culver Driv<.' and residents
of the Greentree. the Willows and
California Homes tracts are find
ing it increasingly difficult to turn
onto Walnut Avenue as they leave
their homes, Lapinski said.
Irvine Panels Set
. The traffic engineer added that
when Heritage Park and the
high school s tadium are under
construction new traffic
modifications will be needed.
Woodbridge Meet
Four Irvine commissions will
meet jointly Wednesday night to
discuss the Irvine Company's
plans for the next phase of Wood-
bridge Village.
similar types of parks. schools
and bike trails that were in-
cluded in the first quadrant. Mrs. Frances Supple, 124
Clearbrook Lane, Apt. A, was
pronounced dead at the scene of
the noon fire, a half block from
the city's police department.
The woman, a stroke victim
confined to a wheelchair since
1965, was found ne ar her
wheelchair on the floor by two
neighbors who failed in their at-
tempts to pull the victim irom
the home.
Fire Analyst Russell Hen-
derson said today the fire "ex-
plosion" was possibly a combina-
tion of a sudden breeze from a
According lo Lapinski, some
, improvements have already
The meeting, al 7:30 p.m. at ci-
ty hall. is open to the public. It
will concern both the re$id<'ntial
plans and the commercial center
proposed for the area.
The first formal hearing of the
new plans will be Jan. 4 before
the planning commission.
lier husband, Joseph J . Supple,
60, was away from the home at
the time.
Fire officials set damage of the
flames to the Supple home at
about $20.000.
Lois Wendt of 120 Clearbrook
Lane received second degree
bums over six percent or her
body while attempting to pull the
victim from the house.
Yugoslavs Irked
BELGRADE, Vugo$lavia
CAP) -Yugoslavia will not need
the protection of the United
St3tes against the Soviet Union
after President Tito dies, a
spokesman for the 84-year-old
Yugoslav leader has told re-
porters.
•broken sliding glass window.
combining with a smouldering ,
couch and flames.
"We found a cigarette lighter
m the open position near the
woman," Henderson said.
"We think s he may have
dropped it and il ignited her
clothfag or the couch. But the fire
definitely originated in the
couch.··
Henderson said there were two
possible explanations for the sud-
den blast of flames that engulfed
the apartment In the triplex in
seconds.
"When the back window let go.
the fire could have received a
draft, touching oU the s moulder-(
ing n ames and roaring through)'
the house."
He also said evidence of ex-
tremely charred carpeting in the
living room and a dining room
points to a rapid name spread
over the carpet.
"The broken window may have
given it that extra ~t of oxygen
It needed to blast through the
apartment," Hendersonu1d.
Park Users:
Apply Noiv
Groups or individuals
who wish to use facilities at
either the new Harvard
Community Athletic Park
or University Park are
asked to apply now al city
hall
Applications arc now bt'
ing taken for use oC the new
facilities during the first
si" months or 11ext year
The applications will be ac-
cepted ugUI Dec. 15 and
should be' made in person at
the community services de·
partment at city haJJ , 4201
Campus Drive, Monday
IJ)rough Friday.
For more information,
phone 833·3840, extension
53
· The next portion to be de-
v e I oped In Woodbridge is
bounded by Irvine Ccntc•r Drive,
the North Lake, Jeffrey Road
and Barranca Parkway.
Plans for the-area will be in-
formally reviewed by the city's
planning. community services.
transportation and bike trails
comm)$sions.
A total of 1,942 residential units
are proposed for the new de-
velopment, which will have an
estimated population of 6,115
persons. The area will include
Citations Hit Home~
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
County Department of Health
Services has Issued four citations
against Prestige Convalescent
Center or North Hollywood, a
nuning home where an elderly
wheclchairbound patient ac-
cidentally drowned last week.
Turtle Rock
Tractors Hit
By Vandals
Vandals inflkted more than
$1,000 damage to two tract.ors
parked at a Turtle Rock con-
struction site over the weekend,
Irvine Police said today. '-..
The tractors, parked near th~
intersection of Sierra Oro arid
Turtle Rock Drive, are owned l y
Amerco Industries, Inc., of Santa
Ana.
Vandals destroyed the tract
tors' batteries, headlights.
t.iJJights, various levers, fuel
lines and also poured dirt into the
fuel tanks and radiators of the
equipment. Polic~ said they found no
evidence at the site and that resi-
dents who live nearby reported
they did not see the damage OC:•
cur. ..... . . .....
{ .,
r A2 DAIL v PILO'T' Tueaday November 18. 1978
Bandit
H11nted
In Toro I Federal, m1lttary and local
police this mornmg launched an
extensive search around El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station for a
man believed to have robbed a
Baltimore bank about a year
ago.
The search began at 3:30 a.m.
after a car driven by the fl'deral
fugitive was stopped by military
policemen on the base.
A spokesman for the Federal
Bureau of lnvesllg&tion su1d
MPs determined that the car was
stolen in Las Ve~as and driven
by James Alfred Rice. JO, who 1s
suspected of robbing the bank on
Dec. 3, 1975. Ile is also wanted in t
Washington. D C for forgery.
MPs chased the car and shot
out its tires but Rice escaped
near the border of the base. the
spoke,sman said.
He said Marine Corps helicop-
ters and bloodhounds from the
county Sheriff's Department as
well as officers from the FBI,
Marine base. Sheriffs Depart-
ment and local city police agen-
cies joined in the resulting
search.
"We believe he's still on foot in
the Orange County area," the
spokesman said.
The spokesman said he did not
know if Rice is armed.
Rice is de~ribed·as JO, black,
almost 6 feet tall, 170 pounds,
brown eyes, black hair and has a
one-inch scar on his forehead.
N'"' Pre•• Chl~I
Jody Powell grins as he
hears President-elect Jim.
my Carter announce hi s ap·
pointment 3 S press
secretary. It was the first appointm~nt for Carter,
who plans to announc ~
others soon.
F ront PGfle A l
PROBE ...
destroyed."
Ozer is a former member of a
Justice Department strike force
agAinst organized crime 1n
Detroit.
The hearing. originally expect-
ed to be held in closed session, was open to the public after a mo-
tion to go into executive session
failed on a 6-6 tie vote.
Chairman Thomas Downing
Murder Trial
-Ball~ on~Press .~
Unde r Study
,~;":~., ~-.-4 ~ ~i)t;'HYi;.#e~·
wouhttry to issue subpoenas for
documents later in the dav in or
der to prevent any further
destruction of m aterial the com
mittee wants.
A sanity hearing ror a
Fullerton man accused or
murder. rape, kidnap and rob-
bery was s idelined today 1n
Orange County SuJ>('rior Court,
pending Judgt• Wilham I. Mur-
ray's ruling on the role or the pre-
ss in tht· prC'lrwl pro<.•ecding.
Judgt' Murray called newsmen
to h1:. courtroom Monda) in what
appeared to be a move to resolve
a dilemma crt,>alt•d when the
public defendt.>r 's office ohjected
to the presence or the press ill the
sanity hcann~ scheduled for dc-
fenqant Ken Richard Hulbert, 2-t .
It was made clear by newsmen
during the conference with Judge
Murray and lawyers for both
sides that there could be no ques·
tion of their agreeing to any form
of voluntary censorship dunng
the hearing
Judge :'11urr..t\' then comment·
e<i that he m1~hl have to restnct
pretrial covcra~t· 111 the light of
depul' publa r rJC'fendcr Walter
Zech s protest that Ct.'rta1n
psych1atnt· t'\ 1tlenrc he intends to
offer ('!1Uld be h1~hl} pre1ud1r1al
to Hulb<!rt 1f made public at this point
The mm e to ha r thC' r rr's \\.I';
not Ofl!X'Sf'r1 h' l ht• c11.,l n el ;11
lOl"nt' y ., of( 1 n·
llulht•rt " .1<'<'ll'l'<I of tlw rape
and murder of \.ina Mane 1'1s
her. 19. or Whittler, whost• nude
hndr ''as found ftt.,t ,/an 2 1n tht' h:1rk n~ .1 1·ar parkC'<l nt•ar a
J-'ul11•rl on a 1>..i rt m enl com pit'~
lll-fact'~ htrtht'r Charj.?CS in
connt'<'lllln "1th ht., allc.i:t•d rap('
and dlt al'k 1111 ,, Full<'rton C:om
muml\ <.'ollt·~l' '1 uclt'nt I.\ ho told
polt('1• -.ht• \4 ,1., r11hhcd . r;,1pcd.
b<>:Hen .111<1 I h1•n throv.-n into ,,
ditch in thl• In m1• area lJ!tl Jan
G
f ·r one Pog~ il I
'CA RTE R ...
t' a m p a r g n T h • · ' ,. s ' t o n .
:-Ch('dUll'd for 7 JO a m PST.
mark-; tht> h1gh<''t tev<'I rnn
frrcncc l' .1r1t•r ha' 1mcfrrt,1kl•n 111
lht• trans1t1on Pl'rtOd
l ".1rter anti M ondal<' will he ac
<'Ompanied at the K1 i..,1n~er
lml'f1ng h~ Oavid Aaron. l.\hO 1s
their reprt'M'nlat 1 vc on lrans1111m
matters dealing with the Na-
tional S<.•curit~ Council and tn·
tell1 en<'<' activities
OAANOE COAST
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hlephone (7141842-4321
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On Monday, Sprague said th<:
committee will hire 170 tn·
vestigators to probe the Kennedy
and King assassinations I le said
the size of Lhe investigative team
'~as not l'XCCssive and said that
by romparison. the Warren Com·
mission had >13 aides, 150 l"Bl
agents. 60 Secret Service agents
and the help of the Central In -
telligence 1\gcncy and lhc In
ternal Revenue Service in 1l:s ·probe
O.••• "'Hot Stau PMto
'SOVIETS AHEAD'
Defense Expert Graham
E'r o • P age .I\ l
SOVIET S ...
d1 sadvantaj!1• c;inct' Wt• mu:.t
1 t•oc m1t1 Jt I\ l' h I h1• 11lhcr <.,1dr
<iraham -..ud And th1· ad\ an
IJ J!.t' of 1111t1<1l l\ 1• "\\or1h m..in\
m1ss1lt'.,, .,t1111:. • .111<1 h\'cs
lksptl(' what (;raham tcrmE>tl
a "rtreadt·d '~ t•nario aht·ad." ht•
:.aid four rt.•(•1•n1 ••\ents may ht•lp
to poanl the l ' S towards an cf
fort to rc-c!.t<.1bl1sh mrl1lar.v
::.upenority.
\.r;.iham said spN'C'hl'S by
Soviet d('fccto r Alexa11dt•r
Solzh<'nitsyn have reaffirmed the
\'rew that Soviet c;ovcrnmcnt fs
oppressive rather than benign.
The firin~ of Schl esinizer
pointed out the conmct between
detente and the neNI for an in-
creased defense budget
-SOviet use of Cuban troops in
Angola hai; highlighted the US
SR's goal of world domination.
-Ronald Reagan's strong
primary election run against a
relatively conservati\'e president
informed voters of decreasing
U.S. mihtary strength.
Big ~le's
Eyes Wander
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP)
A financial aide to the New .Y~rk
City Council says it was just re-
search, not an interest in legaliz·
ing prostitution, that made him
ask Nevada officials about their
profits from licensed brothels.
Donald Schnakenberg, assis·
tant director or finance for thf'
coun<'il. said Monday he was try·
mg to find out thc cost of enforc-
ing Nrw York City's laws against
prostitution, which flourishes In
many areas of Midtown Manhat•
tan -.
'
Muslim
Gets Life
In Court ..
Black Muslim sect member
Saladin lbn Khan Bisrnillah was
scnl<'nced Monday to life in
prison after being found guilty or raping, k1dnaping and assauJting
a young Huntington Beach
woman who was al!iO forced to
participate in acts or sex._ual perversion.
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Everett Dickey ordered
the maximum term on the multi·
pte -tu r y convictions for
Bismillah, 29, who was known as
Robert Stanley Wood11 before he
adopted his Muslim title.
It was estimated in court Mon-
day that it will be at least 15
years before Bis millah can seek
parole from sentences imposed
by Judge Dickey.
In any event , it was explained.
Woods faces further criminal ac-
t1o!l for the .previous parole on a
rape and assault conviction he
violated when he committed his
crimes in Orange Countv.
Sheriff's officers patrolling a
s ector of Santa Ana Canyon last
June 14 said they found Bismillah
in the act of raping his 18-year
old v1cl1m in the back of his van.
The woman testified that
Dismillah forced her into the
vehicle as she got oul of her car
in Huntington Beach, robbed her
and then repeatedly raped her
after driving her lo the remote
location.
Sun Smiles
··On 8!ope1: as~ ....
Skiers Frown
By The Associated Press
Mother Nature has turned a
warm shoulder to ski lovers and
those waiting for a cold sholl1der
might <JS well cool it.
Co11 v ers ation Pieee D•llY Piiot l'tlole lly L.H P•Y ...
Larry Sharm;.rn of Costa Mesa saw this old
cannon at a swap meet and decided it was
just what he needed. So he brought it
home and put it in t he front yard of his
home at 292 Flower St., much to the de-
light of Nancy Carmody, 14; Kathleen
Sharman, 10; Kim Lisk, 11, and Maureen
Sharman, 14 (from left). Sbarman's wife
says it makes it hard to mow the front
lawn. The lady across the street asked
Sharman to aim the cannon at some other
house.
•
P r of Booked
Mter Irvine
'Disturbance
Irvine police arrested a UC
l ~1!,le_ professor 1!Jonday night
for Oistufb1ng tne 'Jjeace after
loud shouts from a restaur<1nl
bar d isrupted the nearby City
Council meeting.
Police said they booked the
man an Orange County Jail on the
misdemeanor charge, with ball
set at $150.
The associate professor d1a..
turbed the City Council meetinQ,
police said when he allegedly
made several loud yells from th&
Sad·eyed Sadie
Pooch Faces Pound Death
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL the fronl door. ''But she thinb
Oft11•D•llvP1101s1.u s · here.'' ,
Sad· Eyed Sadie still stood .. We t a lot or calls about
guard today over a Huntington oose dogs, but a lot of them have
Beach home whose previous te-us~ been ~bandon~,'' observed
nant apparently moved out anc;V' olice Officer Chns Schneider,
left her behind with only <µr'6fcj whom MacPh.ee contacted about
Pol roast bone and her faith. S~~-Eyed Sadie. •
Today it appeared the m1'xed . A lot of people get pets, • he • · said .. and the th · t d 't breed dog who greeted Bob Mac-·.. n ey JUS on
Ph d h. care. ee an is roommates may
end her days in the Orange ~oun
ty Animal Shelter. '!'hat's the word today from the
National Weather Service and
the California Automobile As·
soc1ation as skiers and resort
owners anxiously wait for the
first heavy snowstorm of the
St.!ason.
• bar area of the Don Vito's
MacPhee, 20, of 20272 Village
Drive, Huntington Beach, his
brother Ed, 19, and their room-
mate Dave Watnmough, 20, can-
Risk Patients
Flu Shots Set
Weekend Ouhies managed to
dump nearly an inch but AAA
~pakcsm cn who surveyed the ski
resorts sa 1d 1t w asn 'l cold enougtl
to freeze the ground.
''The ski operators said there
is a warm wind blowing and all
the snow has melted,'' said
Marvin Parker, ski rcporte;-for
AAA.
"We need one good storm to
get the ground frozen and then
another one on top of lhal to ac
cumulate snow that will stay,"
he said. Ski operators are hopeful that
enough snow wall fall in time for
a success ful Thanks giving
weekend, but the weather
scrvire would only say ··it's
possible."
Last vear. the lack of sufficient
snow dcl<1 ycd I he opening of the
sC'ason and forced an early clos-
ing Ski operators called it a
rinanctal disaster and privately
fear worse this year unless they
cun get the season under "ay
:.oon
7,000 Go Free?
LO S ANGELES <A P>
Abolishment of California's irt ·
clE•terminate sentencing system
und('r Senate Bill 42 will release
7,000 dangerous criminals from
prison contends Los Angeles
Pohcc Chief Edward M. Davis.
who sa.>s 1t means an "imminent
nooct of crimt' and untold s urrer-
mg
· restaurant in the Town Center
complex.
Police said they warned the
professor once that he was dis-
turbing the City Council meeting
and arrested him when he al-
legedly failed to stop shouting.
F rora Page A J
KILLER ..•
ed Gilmore would attempt to
commit suicide. He said be had
interviewed Gil more and found
him frustrated.
Smith said earlier that prison
authorities were aware of <'
suicide possibility and were tak-
ing precautions But he has
declined to-Oiscuss those precau-
tions.
Mrs. Barrett, o( Springville,
has been visiting him daily in the
prison.
Mrs. Barrett was warned Mon·
day before visiting Gilmore that
s he was known to h ave
purchased sleeping pills on pre-
scription and must not bring
them t o the prison, deputy
Warden Leon Hatch said Mon -
day.
Hatch said she was subjected
to skin searches by a matron
before each or her visits and that
Gilmore was searched before
and after each visit.
Gilmore had been scheduled to
be executed by a finng squad on
Monday. hut thl' execution wus
rlcla~ ed
not approach Sadie.
She stands a faithful vigil un-
der a cactus plant beside the
front door, apparently awaiting
the return of an owner who isn't
coming back.
"We moved in Sunday and she
went after Ed twice. Don't get too
close .... "MacPheewamed.
Sadie finally settJed on her
haunches, her time-bleached and
tooth-gnawe<J.Jwne .beside her_
But she made it clear the peo-
ple mustsL6y away.
Sadie takes up a position or de-
fense in the rear yard by her bone
when anyone approaches her
lookout beside the front door.
"She looks like she's scared to
death all the lime. She always
has her tail between her legs,''
says MacPhee, a drywall worker
A swine Ou immunization clinic
will be held al Hoag Memorial
Hospital Saturday for high risk
patients, hospital officials an·
nounced today.
High rjsk patients are th°'e
over 60 years of age and Ure
chronically iU over the age of 18.
The immunization will provide
protection against the swiQe flu
and the A· Victoria strain.
The clinic will be conducted in
the hospital's conference center
from 10 a.m. lo 5 p.m. The shots
are free.
Fro• Page Al
who recently moved out from his TRAF native Princeton, New Jersey, Ff C
"Maybe she did used to live • • •
here and got lost, and when she
found her way back her owners
had gone," he s peculated.
A real estate agent told Mac-
Phee the previous tenants moved
out two weeks ago but the firm
had no knowledge of a dog living
at that address, in a tract
bounded by Adams and In·
dianapolis avenues and Bushard
and Magnolia streets.
MacPhee conceded they must
have owned Sadie and just said
nothing to avoid a possible rent
increase to cover pet damage
"She's just a mutt," MacPhec
says of the golden-eyed black and
\\ h1le doe who waits dutifully by
Walnut Avenue and CUiver Dri¥e
to allow a left turn phase for all
directions and t9· make a double
left turn lane from Culver Dri~e
onto Walnut Avenue. Completion
time is estimated at three
months.
-Walnut Avenue will be le·
aligned and widened from Yale
Avenue lo Jeffrey Road. Comple·
tion time is estimated at six
months. Also, state funds have
been requested to complete the
widening from Yale A venue to
Culver Drive. If approved, that
would be accomplished in about
one year.
Foster Child~ 17, Sues
SAN FRANCISCO (A P>
Dennis Smith is in his 17th year
and his 16th foster home. ··n •._
like a scar on your brain," he
says
"l want people lo realize
what's h appening to foster
children,'' he adds.
And he has filed an unusual
lawsuit with that purpose in
mind.
The suit, fi led rn Alamed/
County Superior Court on Mol
day, asks damages of $500,000
from the county soeial service
agency and officials of the public
school system there.
Smith claims the agency told
his mother he wouJd be placed
for adoption but sent him instead
to one foster home after another
lie says lhe schools accepted
what he called a mistaken
diagnosis that he was mentally
Family Guidance
Cl~ses Offe r ed
The Irvine Unified School Dis-
trict's Family Guidance Clinic
will offer two classes to improve
parent/child rclot1onships begin-
ning Nov 30.
Both classes will meet 3t the
Irvine School District Offict', 294J
Alton Avenue, Irvine. F'or mar('
informatJl"lm contact Dr. Bruce
Givner, 556 4900.
)
retarded and put him in classes
for the handicapped.
"If I had known I was going to
spend the first 16 years of my lifr
this way, I'd rather have been
dead. 1 'd wished my mother could
have aborted me.'' said Dennis.
Dennis was born in Oakland on
Oct. 5. 1959. His two legal ai d
lawyers say county records arc
unclear where he spcnl his first
Handicapped
Needs Eyed
Improvement of facilities to
accommodate the handicapped
will be one item of discussioo Fri
day al a meeting of the South
Orange County chapter of the
Ca Ii forn i a Association Aof
Physically Handicapped
(CAPH).
The meeting Is scheduled rot
7·30 p .m al Marco I•orster
Junior HI Rh Srhool, 25601
Camino del Avion in San Juan
Capistrano.
The meeting is open to anyane.
interested in resources and op·
portunities for the handicapped,
said Cleova Weiner1. president
Additional information is ava1la
ble by calling Mrs. Weinert,
496-2836.
21h months. He doesn't know who
his parents are or where he got
the name "Smith."
Early in 1960 he was placec\
with a couple already caring for
one foster child. Then came more
homes and a couple of stretches
in public orphanages.
He was placed last September
in his present foster home. where
his attorneys say he is "re-
asonably content."
But, he said in an interview,
"It's not like having parents ...
The relationship was somewhat
dist.ant. When you want to talk to
your foster parents. you 're
always afraid that what you say
will go into the book." He was re-.
f err Ing to records that are kept for
officials on foster children's de-
velopment and behavior.
Dennis. a high school junior,
said if he wins the lawsuit he will
use most of the money to 1.obby
Irvine Tools Sto len
Hand tools vaJuJd at more than
$1.000 were stolen over the
weekend from a gyrn equipment
warehouse in Irvine. according
lo police. Officials from
Universal Gym Equipment.
ti352 Von KarmaM, toJd police
Monday that the theft occurred
at their combination factory.
warehouse.
l
for lcgislat~n to overhaul the
foster P,ar~L6system.
Jn O~ nd, Alameda County
officials r fused to comment on
speclrics of the case, but Librado
Perez, director of the Social
Services Agency. said:
''Regardless of the outcome,
we are re-examinin~ our opera4
t1on to determine whether im·
provements can be made or I(
preventive sleps can be taken."
Trash Firms
Interviewed
Representatives from fou'r
trash collection companies vying
for a city refuse contract in Irvin~
were quizzed .Monday night by c\•
ty officials and resident.cs.
However, nothing will be de':
cided until the next council
meeting, Nov . 23, when the cou~
cil is expected to decide wh~
t ype of tra11h collection service
will be implemented in Irvine
be~lnnlng Jan. l.
The four Cirms still tn ~e run-
n i ng are Dewey's Rubbish
Service of lrvlnt, Irvine Refuse
Disposal or Santa Ana. Cal San,
Inc. or Downey and CV Disposal
Service of Whittler. •• •
Tue day'8
Closing Pric NYSE ~ COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
DAIL V Pit.OT
Pan Ana Profit
Poliiics' Harm
May< Be Offset
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
It looks as If Pan American World Airways will mate money t.bls year foe lhc flrsl tima alnca 1968, which should
give it something tocelebrate1n 1977 when It '1150 years old
ll won t be much of a profit, but the black ink may provldu
a pgychologlcal lift the
atrJtne badly needa
Once the ruler of lhe rn
ternahonal airways,
Pan Am has seen 1ls
power di mi rush as the in·
ternallonal m arket
grew
Money
Tree
At the root of PanAm'slrouble1s politics, not economics
An aubne can't cross the national border w1lhoul ~coming
enmeshed in poht1cs Pan Am crosses more borders Ulan an~
other airline, hence1t h~ more political problems.
CONSIDER, IF YOU WILL, THREE oC Its current.
problems. tnvolving Brit.aitl, Japan and the Soviet Union.
Br1llsh Airways has decided 1t wants a targersbareofthe
1UT traffic over the Atlantic The British government, which
happens to own lh1s airline, naturally supports the bid
It so happens that the Uruted States originates about twcr
thirds of the passengers flying between the two countries.
British Atrways is nowcarry1.ng about one lh1rdofthetra!flc.
Whatdoesil want as its proper share? ll wants50percent
\J S AND BRITISH GOVERNMENT oCficaals have
begun negotiations to settle this problem IC schedules are re4
Jligered to enable BnUsh Airways to capture a bigger chunk
of the market, the gam 1s hkely to come out of Pan Am's hide.
Over the Pac1f1c it's a similar problem Japan Air Lines
reels 1l 'snot getting a "fair" shake in the Japan U S. market.
What's fair m these matters is not easy to decide The
Japanese point out that the_y are now on glnatmg 6-0 percent ot
the passengers between the two countnes Americans malte
up only ~O percent of the traffic. Yet the U S. carriers, which
lnclude Pan Am, have 48 percent of the market. Japan Air
Llneshas36percent Japancnes, "unfair "
JAPANESE AND U.S. GOVERNMENT officials have
begun negotiations toselUe the problem If the Japanese gain
a larger share, Pan Am is hkelyto lose again
Then there are the Russians Pan Am rues to Moscow v1•
a reciprocal agreement that allows Aeroflot, the Soviet.'
a.irhne. to fly to New York Aeroflot does much better on thLs
route than Pan Am One ffi"10t reason 1s the way tickets ar. sold
In the Soviet U mon the only way to buy a seal on a Pan Ali
plane 1s to go to an Aeroflot office, and you can well 1magiQi
the reception a Soviet citizen would geto\(,he or she did that If\,
Uus country Aeroflot seats were available through any travel
agent
BUT NO MORE.11lE CIVIL Aeronautics Board (CAB>
acted last month to designate Pan Am as the sole lick et a gen
m this country for Aeroflol That was in retahallon for lb«
way the Russians have acted Chalk one up for Pan Am --.~
Frustrated abroad, Pan Am has tried lo wangle so~
routes at home, and the CAB has now given the beleaguered'
a1rhpe its first domestic route .,
It s not much of a route but It's something Pan Am h~
been carrying European-bound passengers from Detrolt1
stopping oH m Boston before gomg over the Atlantic It novl
has the right to sell seats on the plane to passengers Oylng on•
ly to Boston .. •
The Detroit Boston service will not add much to Pai&.
Am's coffers, at the most $1 m11llon a year But 1l 1s anoth•
psychological hrt It's the first time Pan American has evet
been allowed to sell tickets for a flight within the continen~
Un~States •
Du Pont and AT&T ::
NeWs Cools Stocks
NEW YORK CAP) -/\stock market rally came to an
abrupt halt this afternoon when 1t ran mto adverse news on
two ma1or blue ehip 1ssues -Du Pont and AmcricaD
Telephon~ & Telegraph Trading was active
For most of the session, stock prices added to gams of
Monday, with brokers noting continued approval of
Pr~s1denl elect Jimmy Carters remarks to repor1ers Mon
day
Carter said he believed he could work harmoniously
with Federal Reserve Chairman Arthur Burns. and also ob· ~erved that he didn't expect a need for wage and pnce QtJ'?\'
trols
The Dow Jones average of 30 stocks lost 08 points to
935 34
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, A J4 DAILY PILOT Tuesd1y. November 16, 1976
Your Horoseope THEFAM1LYc1ncus· By Bil Keane
Taurus' Vital
Signs Strong
WEDNESDAY,N~VEMBER 17
By SYDNEY OMARll
AlllES (March 21-Aprll 19): Lie low -wait for
other& to send s ignals, to lake initiative. Accent on
reflection, contracts, legal affairs, partnership,
marriage. Learn valuable lesson that being alone is
not same as being lonely.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You get work or.
den, align priorities, gain physical atrength; vitali-
ty makes a comeback. Member of opposite sex
finds you more attractive. Business associates respect your judgment.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Finish what you
start. Realize that emotional responses now are
sharply boned. Be ready for change, travel, varie-
ty, unique associations.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Stick to facts.
Insist on verification, solid material. Discard
rumors, gel rid of the flimsy. New deal is in order.
Be more Jndependent in thought, action. Create and
illuminate.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Short trip, evaluation of
idea, consultation with "teacher" -these could be
on agenda. A void trying too much simultaneously.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): You could learn
"My turn next!"
This Machine Foils
Any I ..azy Pupils
meaning or inflation. Money. valuables, COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-"J don't have any,"
possessions are very much in picture. Element of won't work any more as an excuse for not doing
luck -or timing -is on your side. homework for Mifflin Junior High School pupils.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Lunar cycle is such The "homework machine" goes into operation
that you make friends, influence people and find this week. Parents will be able to check on assign· yourself being wined. dined. Personality, judg. be il ment, timing are spotlighted -you could be center· ments for var ious classes fore an errant pup
of-attention. runs out to play by calling the school for a recorded message.
SCORPIO iO~t. 23-~~· ~): You iai~ "~ide" Many parents told teachers "if I knew what he
information. ou re P g to pee ac age. had to do, I'd help," said Asst. Principal J .T.
You detect who is pulling strings. Aura of mystery, Landes, who came up with the idea of installing the
Flotw Saelu DUaPJH!ari ..
DEAR PAT: I would like to find out where I
could purchase some old-fashioned cotton flour
sacks. I 've searched all the fabric shops and other
retail material sales sources to no avail. I have an
interior decoration project under way at home and I
would like to use these sacks to cover one of the
walls. Am I out of luck!
A.J., Costa Mesa
Several of tbe fabric stores A YS conlac&ff •lY
that .Jtbougb the Dour ud feed sac.ks you want caa·
not be obtahaed, a very goocl sabsUtate ls available.
Abbot Fabric• aella 100 percent co«oa maalbl
paaela priD~ wl&la.alx dlfferaat aatbeDUc sack de·
alps. A puel measares 45 lncb¥-aelvage to
selva1e and ls ZS lDdaes 1'tde. Con&act Abbott
Fabrtca, 141% Broadway, New York, NY 1"18, at·
teadoa: Vick! Lea.Dani, tor mail outlets that now
hawe &hla aew fabric.
1tlWu!d tor All ltt• 1t'ortla
DEAR PAT: I'd like to know if there is any
scientific proof that sweet acidophilus milk benefits
the digestive system. When are the live organisms
added to this m ilk and is there any chance that they
can multiply?
V.N., San Clemente
Although there att many testimonlaJ claims to
the contrary, lnformatloa from the Agrtewtur.i Ex·
tension's home advisor's office states that there ls
no published sclentllic evidence that demoastrates
a public health benefit due to the lDgestlon of lac·
tobacWus acldopbUas.
Cot a prqb~m? Then write to Pot Dunn. Pat will
cuf red (ape, getting the answers and oction uou
need to (Olue meqwtiea in govemmt.'nt and busi·
ness. MaU your question& to Pat Dtuln At Your
Service, Orange Coost Doily Pilot, P.O. Boz 156(),
Cotta Mesa, CA 92626. JncLude ~ur lt~ne
number. The column appears dailt1 ezctpt Saturdays.
•ddopfdlu doea ila& ...._., ud • addl are ... ed.
U &lie mm were Mid at a war• Cempentaft..
&M baeCerta woal~ Oft JD Ute mllll, c~ ...... •Uk aqu to add aad nMlq &Jae mUk p,.. to
co.plate. thereby........, a IOU mllk •.O like
bettermllk. Sweet acddopldlu milk ta ..... e
becaue lt ls a aw~ mUk coe&aJDJaa aoapatllo&Hle
arculsma wblcb lau aa aeeeptable refrtgeraiecl sWflite.
Gr.. DeU"f!!r9 6-ra•teed
DEAR RAT: l bad occasion to send a Westem
Union night letter to a business associate recently. I sent it at 4 p.m. on Monday and it was not reeeived
until early the !oUowing Wednesday morntng. lan't
there some kind of time limit oo delivery of nlgbt
letters!
A.R .• Fountain Valley
AIU.O.p It 11 mt ceeeraUJ bowa. w--.
Uldoa often money·badt ~ • delivery
time for all typea ol ckn'9Ntlc 9el'rices. Nl&M leUed
are supposed to be clellnrecl wttlala 1 ~ to z llou9 by
pboae, or wltbl.n 5 boars If deUwered b7 laud. Mall·
grams slaoald be expected to arrive la die flnt bul·
nesa mall delivery Ule day after bda& seet. .U 1oa
do DOt get service wltbln dliese Ume Umlb, yoa are
enUtled to a fllll retancl or yoa may have yov
message rfleat at no dlar1e. Coatact yoar local
Westera Ullloia,castomer Hl'Vlce operator to rue a
dalm.
glamour prevails. Take advantage of it. Be dis· ta d "N th 't ... ~ d bt " creel. pe recor er. ow ere won u.: any ou .
SAGITTARIUS(Nov.22-Dec.21):Emphasison l_;:_~~~------~~------~---~.:.....------~------~------~--------------------------------------------------,---------------------~---------------------~,
what you desire, what you require. You make gains
as result of business investment. You gain coopera·. ~-,_ _ . ,., .
\ion or family. --.. -•. ... .-~ -="'--~--.. --• sJ' .-·---: • -....:..-·---• ,.,. ---~ ""-~-;: • ...i. • • • -
The culture concentration lD tbe milk can
range Crom 50,800 to 500,000 live organJsms per
millllU.er of milk. The culture is added to the milk
after pasteurization. and Wlder aorm.i martd,and
home storage condltlons. the lactobadllus
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on
sl3nding, prestige, ability to communicate with one
in authority. Define terms -see clearly, avoid self.
deception. Aura of mystery or glamour prevails.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Journey, com·
munication , educaUOn, organization are featured.
What seems out-of-reach actually is attainable -
and you are closer than might be supposed.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You feel what is,
what to do, perceive costs, potential -and you re·
alize the power or love. Money of partner, mate is
very much in picture.
II November 17th is your birthday you are an or-
ganizer, an executive in sense that you are willing to
accept responsibility. You are dynamic. stubborn.
creative, passionate and capable of winning over
what spposedly might be overwhelming odds. In two
years you could be rich•
High Court Nixes
Suit by 43 Narcs
WASHJNGTON (AP)-The U.S.SupremeCourt
has refused to review claims by 43 California un-
dercover narcotics agents that the former publisher
and editor or the Los Angeles Free Press should have
to pay them for an mvasionofprivacy.
The court let stand Monday a decision by the 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that Arthur Kunkin.
former owner of the Fr~ Press. does not have to pay
a previously agreed-on $43,000 in damages.
THE LEGAL CONTROVERSY began in 1969
when the newspaper purchased a list stolen from the
California Department of Justice giving the names,
home addresses and telephone numbers of 80
narcotics officer5. The Free Press ran the list under
a headline "Know Your Neighborhood Narc.··
Forty-three agenL-; sued Kunkin Cot· invasion of
privacy. and Kunkin agreed to pay a $43,000 settle-
ment But he later, declared bankruptcy and asked a
bankruptcy court to absolve his obligation to pay off
lbe debt
FEDERAL 8ANKRUPTcv Jaws dictate that
such a debt d1sm1ssaJ cannot be made iJ a "malicious
and wilful" act had been committed. But the
bankruptcy jud~e ruled that the Free Press publica-
tion or the hst was not a s ufficient show of malice
toward the well being and privacy oflhe undercover
agents
The bankruptcy Judges' decision was upheld by
a district court and by a 2·1 vote of the circuit court of
appeals
APPEALING TO THE Supreme Court. the
narcotics officers said the justices should rule that
the newspaper's action was malicious and that the
debt should not be dismissed.
se_j '·
.iittlrtott's
BOOKS
• H.UDIACKS
• ,A,Hl4CICS
• CHILHIMS IOOICS
•GIFTS
WESTPORT SQUARE
Htl.17tt.ST.
COST4MlS4
(4uos. ,.,_ ltllph'• ......
~6-4-IOOKS
0,...1 DllJ'
JCWCl.t l>S -OCMOl()C;l\IS -0(<.lC. ... rRs
714/963·5&25
20902 Brookhurst Street, Suite 201
Huntington Stach, CA 92646
o •• ,. ,,~. '""•••• t
If you've got $1,000
we've got tl)ree good reasons
you should change banks.
1 You'll get a checking
•account free of service
charges when you open a
Grand Account.
2 You'll get paid our maxi ..
• mwn savings interest
rate allowed by law.
3 You'll have your savings
• and your checking
accounts in one secure and
convenient place. Security
Pacific Bank.
lf you hllvc $1.000 or
rnorc sitting in :mother
'
Bank or S<lvings nn<l Loan.
bring it to us and let us put
1t to work. We'll give you ii
check ing account ;ind p;iy
you up to 7~% annual
interest on your savings, ,
de.pending upon the matu-
r~y· you sclcc~ in one of
1t>ur specia l Preferred
· Passbook Savings Accounts.
Thac' more than you cnn
earn in any regular
savings account pl11s you
get your checking nccount
" -
•
free of service charges.
That's what we mean
by "security in numbers"
:it Security Pacific B;-ink.
SECURrrY PACIFIC BANK
There's Security in Numbers
..,
Orange Coast
_ _ EDITION
T oclay's C lus iug
N.Y .St o ck s
VOL 69, NO. 321, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1976 c TEN CENTS~
~USSR ~ainil)g Big Milita1-y Advantage'
B y MICHAEL P ASKEVICH
OflMOally l'll.tSt.att
:Military strength has shifted
dangerously io r a vor or the Soviet
Union and there is euphoria in
Moscow over the prospect of
achieving a long-range goal or
world communism . according to
Lt. General Daniel 0 . Graham,
former director of the Defense
Intelligence Agency.
Graham, who resigned from
the Army jntelligence post In 1975
as a protest to the dismissals or
Defense Secretary James Schles-
inger and CIA Director William
Colby, made the remarks Mon-
day in Newport Beach before a
luncheon gathering of the
American,sm Educational
League, a patriotic, public
education organization based in
Buena Park.
He charged the U.S. with aid·
lng Soviet euphoria because of
compromises during SALT talks,
the failure of d etet't.e and a
decreased emphasis on building
a stronger national defense.
Graham , who recently r&-
turned from a USSR trip, said the
Soviets are initiating an .. iron
fisted" civil d efense program
complete with mass evacuation
practice and increased construe·
Uon of bomb s helters. In the
event of nuclear warfare Soviet While the U.S. s till holds an
losses could be as _low as 10 econom 1c and technolosical
million, compared lo 110 million edge, Graham s aid the Soviets
Americans. Graham said. have overtaken the U.S. in
Considertng what Graham military strength during the past
believes is a lower Soviet regard 10 years because of U.S. em·
for life -.. after all, they k.iUed phasis on nuclear weapons as a
five million peasants to coUec·. · deterrent rather than an offense.
tivize agricultµre" -the USSR · By pumping 15·20 percent of
could use the difference in the the Soviet Gross National'
potential loss of lives as a Product into defense the USSR
weapon to get its way. now holds a six to one ad-
vanatage in intercepter aircraft
and has a superior surface fleet.
Graham said.
During SALT talks, Graham
said the U.S. made a serious mjs-
lake by agreeing not to use ~ti
baJUst1c missiles, thus canceling·
Jl 20-year U.S. lead in this depart-
ment. .
•'Even if we stand equal (in
military strength) we 8M at a <See SOVIETS, Page A2)
Slayer Tries Suicide
SUICIDE FAILS
Gary Mark Gilmore
Sun Smiles
~On Slopes a.s
) .
Skiers Frown
By The Associated Press
Mother Nature has turned a
warm shoulder to ski lovers and
those waiting for a cold shoulder
might as well cool it
That's the "Word today from the
National W<'ather Service and
t he California Automobile A~
sociat1on as skiers and resort
owners anxiously wail fdr the
first he:l\ )' snowstorm of the
season
Vfrekl•nd flurries managed to
·du mp n<'arb an inch but AAA
s poke-. men "'ho surveyed the ski
re'>orts said 1t wasn't cold enough
tofreczl' the ground
'Thl' sk 1 oper ators said there
LS a "'arm "'ind blowing and all
thr "no"' ha <> melted ... said
~fan in l'arkl•r. ski reporter for
AAA
.. Wt' nt'C'd onl· i:ooct storm to
Jtel lht• s.:rnund frozen and then
a nothH one on top nf that to ar c mulat<' snow that will stay,"
e said
Last .,..E'ar , the lack ofsuff1C1ent
snow delaved the opemn~ or the
season and forced an early clos-
i n~ Ski opt-r,ators called 1t a
financial disaster and privately
fear worse this year unless they
<'an get the sea son under way
soon
Ski operators are hopeful that
enough snow will faJI in time for
a successful T hanksgiving
w eekend, b ut the weathe r
servi ce would only say "it's
possible ...
Ora ng~ Co ast
L .L:-... ~-=-
Weathe r
Warm sunny days and
clear cool nights through
Wednesday. Highs near lr>
at the coast. lows to abot,tt
50. Easterly winds.
l~SIDE TODA l'
Reporter William Farr's
legal efforts to stay out o/ jail
ovt'r protecting a new source
continue. Story, AS.
Index
AI Y_S.,,,lc• Al4 A""u""" It ......... m ... o I t ,...,.,,." AU LM .. ,. A1 Me<tltt All
C.llltnli • AS Mll!IHI ltlHld' A II O•HlllH •• ,, ,..._,,.... A4
Coeml<t Alt 0. ..... c-t>ty Al c.reu.-. 9J ....... l l•t Cle.Mii Nel><tt Al Sllwt\ I J.S 1~"'1•11'•.. •• S..11"'-,-•h AIM) l_,•l~lllMI Alt T .. •\llflell .. ~-· AIMJ ~ All MwawotM A t• Wtell1tt A4 r111~mlul911 A 11 w.n. News A4 -·.
Girlfriend Joins Death Pact
SALT LAKE CITY CAP ) -
Gary Mark Gilmore, whose wish
to die before a firing squad has
been delayed by a reprieve, and
his girlfriend were found un-
conscious today in an apparent .
suicide pact.
Authorities said they believed
both had taken drug overdoses.
"He tried to take his own life,"
prison medical technician Tom
Anguay said of Gilmore, "he
tried to OD.''
Gilmore, who has contended he
prefers death to languishing in
prison and asked a court to dis-
regard appeals on his behalf, was
rushed from the Utah State
Prison to the' University of utah
Medical Center. His condition
was listed as serious, but hospital
s pokesman John Keahey said 1t
was believed Gilmore would pull
through. .
Nicole Barrett, 20, was in a
coma and in critical condition at
Utah Valley HospitaJ in Provo, 40
miles to the south, hospital of.
f1c ials said. She was rushed there
at 9:30 a.m . after being found in
her apartment in Springville.
The develop_ment came one
day before G ilmor e was
scheduled to a ppear before the
Utah Board of Pardons for a de-
c1s1on on whether it would com·
mute his death sentence to a
lesser penalty.
Board chairman Geor ge
Latimer said that if Gilmore 1s
unable to appear as scheduled
Wednesday his case will not be
considered until the board's next
meeting Dec. 8.
Springville PohceChier Leland
Bowers said Mrs. Barrett was
found lying unconscious on a li v
mg room couch. covered with a
blanket. with a photo of Gilmore
on her chest.
He said two empty pill bottles
were round by her bed, one or
Seconal. a prescription sleeping
pill. and one of a mildf'r sleeping
pill He would not comment on
~hether she left a note. but
telev1s1on station KSL said two
envelopes were found near her.
Reporters knocked on hf'r door
this morning but got no response
Ne1ghoors went to check and the
door was opened by her 3-year-old
son
Smith said it was not known how
Gilmore got pills. lie said it was
possible he got them during v1s1ls
from outsiders, and hid them un
der his tongue when searched af-
terward.
Mrs. Barrett, Gilmore's at-
torneys and family members had
visited the inmate, Smith said.
In addition, deputy Warden
Leori Hatch said he warned Mrs.
Barrett prior to her visit to
Gilmore Monday that the prison
knew she bought 20 sleeping pills
recently and t hat she was not al·
lowed to bring them to the prison.
Hatch said she assured him she
acquired the pills only for helping
her to sleep and would not smug·
glethem to Gilmore.
Gilmore, whohasspentl8ofhis
35 years in penal institutions, was
critical of Gov. Calvin Rampton
(See KILLER, Page A2)
Death Better?
Foster Home Slmffle Told
S AN FRANCISCO <AP) -
Dennis Sm ith is in his 17th year
and his 16th foster home. "It's
like a scar on your brain," he
says.
"I want people to reali ze
what's happening to fost er
children," he adds.
And. he has filed an unusual
lawsuil with that purpose in
mind.
The suit, filed in Alameda
County Superior Court on Mon-
day, asks damages of $500,000
from the county social service
agency and officials of the public
school system there.
Smith claims the agency told
his mother he would be placed
for adoption but sent him instead
to one foster home after another.
He says the schools accepted
what he called a mistaken
diagnosis that he was mentally
retarded and put him in classes
for the handicapped.
Baylor Signs
With Angels
PROVIDENCE. R.I (AP) -
Catcher Gene Tenace and out·
fielder Don Baylor l eft the
Oakland A's officially today,
T enance signing a mulli·year
contract with the San Di ego
Padres and Baylor agreeing to a
long -term pact withthe
California Aneels.
Both signints were announced
by agent Jerry Kapstein, who
also represents eight more of the
availa ble free agents.
"If I had known I was going to
spend the first 16 years or my life
this way, l 'd rather have been
dead. I'd wished m y mother could
have aborted me," sajd Dennis.
Dennis was born in Oakland on
Oct. 5, 1959 His two legal aid
lawyecs say county records are
unclear where he spent his first
2»monlbs. He doesn't know who
his parents are or where he got
the name "Smith."
· Early in 1960 he was placed
with a couple already caring for
one foster child. Then came more
homes and a couple of stretches
in public orphanages.
He was placed last September
in his present foster home. where
his attorneys say he is "re·
asonably content."
But. he said an an interview.
.. lt's not like h~vmg parents ...
The relationship was somewhat
distant. When you want to talk to
your foster parents, you're
aJway,s afraid that what you say
will go into the book." He was re-
f erring to records that are kept for
officials on foster children's de·
velopment and behavior.
CSt>e FOSTEtt. Page A2J
Dishwash er He ld
MOUNT PLEASANT, N.Y.
CAP> -Bur ton Lerner, a 28-
year-old dis hwasher who al·
legedly threatened to poison
Philadelphia 's water system un·
less $1 million was paid was be·
ing held he re today, police said.
Lerner is on probation for mak-
ing harassing telephone calls and
has been under going outpatient
psychiatric treatment.
Larry Sharman or Costa Mesa saw this old
cannon at a swap meet and decided it was
Just What be needed. So he brought it
home and put it in the front yard of his
home at 292 Flower St., much to the de-
Jight or Nancy Carmody, 14; Kathleen
Sharmani 10; Kim Lisk, ll, and Maureen Sharman, 14 (from left). Shannan's wife
says it makes it hard to mow the front
Jawn. The lady across the street asked
Sharman to aim the cannon at some other
house. . .
1 '
,.,._., .o rtK
'
Dally l'llot Stall,,_
POLICE EXPERTS CHECK FIRE SCENE FOR CLUES
Dropped Cigarette Lighter Blamed rn "'Fatal Blaze
Lighter Bl~med
For Fatal Blaze
Costa Mesa fire investigators
are blaming a cigarette lighter in
the fiery death of a 59-year·old in-
valid Monday afternoon.
Mrs . Frances Supple, 124
Clearbrook Lane, Apt. A, was
pronounced dead at the scene of
the noon fire, a half block from
the city's police department.
The woman, a stroke victim
confined lo a wheelchair since
1965. was round near her
wheelchair on the floor by two
neighbors who failed in their at-
tempts lo pull the victim from
the home.
Her husbtmd. Joseph J Supple,
60, was away from the home at
the time.
Fire officials set damage of the
flames to the SuS)ple home at
about $20.000.
Lois Wendt of 120 Clearbrook
Lane received s econd degree
bum s over six percent of her
body while attempting to pull the
victim from the house.
A sudden mixture of air fed a
smouldering couch in the house,
said firemen, prQmpting the
blaze to rush through the living
room, blowing Mrs. Wendt out
the front door.
* * *
Fire Analyst Russell He n•
derson said today the firf: "ex·
plosion •'was possibly a coml>ina·
lion of a sudden breeze from a
broken sliding glass window.
combining witfl_ a smoutd~ng
couch and flames.
"We found a cigarette lighter
in the open position near the
woman,'' Henderson said.
"We think s he may have
dropped it and it ignited het'
clothing or the· couch. But the fife
de finitely originated in the
couch."
Henderson said there were two
possible explanations for the sud-
den blast of names that engulfed
the apartment in the triplex in
seconds.
"When the back window let go,
the fire could have received a
draft, touching off the smouJder4
mg names and roaring througb
the house.'·
He also said evidence of ex-
tre mely charred carpeting in the
living room and a dining room
points to a rapid name s pread
over the carpet.
"The broken window may have
~iven It that extra gust of oxygen
it needed to blast through the
apartment." Henderson said.
* * * Wave of Fire
Rescue Attempt Thwarted
By STEVE MJTCQEJ.,L
Oi \,_. O•lly Piie! S\itll
"If she had been in he r
wheelchair . I could h ave
wheeled her right out," said Lois
Wendt several hours after an ex·
plosloa blew her out of a Costa
Mesa apartment.
The neighbor she was t.rytng to
help, Frances Supple, 59, t crip-
ple, died in the searing flames al
the apartment at 124 Clearbrook.
Lane.
Mrs. Wendt, a 53-year·old
h ea Ith food d istri but or.
described what happened during
the noon hour blat,.
She lay in her bed three hours
after being taken to Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital where she
was treated lor burns to ber
hands and leg. 1
Mrs. Wendt beard screams
outside her apartment ahortly
alter noon Monday.
"I went to the door and aaw
Candy (nclRhbol' Candy Van
7
Sickle) pointing inside the apart-
ment," she said.
She said s he a nd Mrs. Van
Sickle rushed into the apart·
ment. They found Mrs. Supple
crumpled on the noor near her
wheelchair.
"We could smell smoke. but
there. wer en't any flames
anywhere.," she said. ·
Mrs. Van Sickle ran Crom the
apartment tO get a blanket whtfe
Mrs. Wendt tllggecl at the stin
form of the •ictim. ' "She was lying on her side. I
couJd only get hold ol one of her arms," Mrs. WendlSald.
She 1aid she was ju..t about to
the !ron.t door of the apartment
"half tugging, half pull1og the
woman;• when there waa an ex·
plolJion.
"1 dJdn 't aee any names inside
whlle I was trying to 1et her
out," ahe said. "Then, all of a
sudden, flames enR\ll(ed"' tho
<See BLAST ,
1
f•fe AZ) ~
-•
A.2 OA.ILY PILOT I c runctay. November 18, 191&
. r
Kissing~r ·Meet Set
j:1 F ord..Carter Con/ab .to ·F()/,low
PLAINS . Ga <AP >
President-elect J immy Carter
will meet with Secretary of Slate
Henry A. Kissinger here Satu.r·
day for a briefing on for eign
policy m atters and will confer
with President Ford i n
Washington next week, il was an·
nounced today.
Ford and Carter agreed in a
telephone call Monday rughl. to
have their staffs work out ar
rangements for their meeting.
The day for the session has not
been d ecided, While House
spokesman John Carlson said.
Carlson said Carter put in a
telephone call to Ford as the
President returned aboard Air
Force One on Monday from a
California vacation. Ford re·
turned the call when he arrived
Variance Delayed
Mesa City Council
-May Eye Sign Rule
Costa Mesa councilmen told a
realtor Monday night to come
back later with more complete
plans for his request for variance
to the city's sign ordinWlce.
But they also hinted that tbey
might want to .take a second look
al the city's three-year-old or·
dinance for the purpose of dis·
cussing possible amendments to
thesignlaw.
The panel told Harry Winters.
manager of The Real Estaters at
1700 Newport Blvd., to come back
Dee. 6 with specific drawings out-
lining his request for larger-than-
legal signage along Newport
Boulevard.
Winters told councilmeh that he
felt his variance requestshould be
allowed, due to tt.e unusual loca-
tion of his offices at the busy in·
tersection oC Newport and 17th·
Street.
He said the location of the build·
ing makes it difficult to see from
busy Newport Boulevard, and
O.t1ff .,to• St.ttt P!Wto
·soVIETS AHEAD'
Defense Expert Graham
Fro• Pag~ A I
SOVIE)fs . · ..
disadvanta~e since wt• mu't
cede 1nitiati ve to the other s idt• .'
Graham said "And the advan
tage or init1ativt-is worth maO\
missiles. ships and live-. "
Despite what Graham tcrmc<I
a "dreaded scen ario ahead," he·
:iaid four rcc<'nt <.'\ t•nt.s may hel1)
to point the u s towards an er
fort to re-establish miTilar~
:;uperiority.
-Graham ~aid ~petthes by
Soviet dt>f Pctor Alexander
~h:henilsyn have rearrirmed the
view that Soviet Government is
oppressive rather than berugn.
-The firin~ of SchlesinRer
pointed out the conflict between
detente and the need for an 1n-
<'reased defense budget.
-SOviet use of Cuban troops in
Angola has highlighted the US
SR 's goal of world dom ination.
-Ronald Reagan's ~lrong
primary election nm again!ll a
relatively conservative presirlenl
i nformed voters e>f decreasing
U.S. military strength.
OR ANOE COAST c.
DAILY PILOT
~:~:t.~ .. ~~:;·~,:_~,=:"~c:.;;. • °"''' P"IAll•""'i"'9 Comotf'l'I Sfoel'•t•...,·•~ ,,. t1Ubi1\.,_. MofWA1 '"'°"Cl" F'.'t'Oey ....,.. Cr t•
Nlll>'-3 Mf•OOr-t t\f' t rr. • .,.Uf\ff~M Bf.AK '-'fOl.-'t
''"' V•fl• ... ''"""'· \1tl11••tlo<111lL v.n • ., ""'1 ~=~~~~~::r~~·~~ fW tl(to_.t p\lt>41~h4\'! .,,,,.., t1 ~ l10 WIH f\ay
~lfttl.Cbit•Mto,Coul•rn.,.,.,._ ·-·"-"''"_, . ..,_,,....,
J•~'"·<-• \l.u f'l'hi.nt •"" o.-• Mo,......
ntiMHltfffM e .. tw
T ... mn• ,,__
~·•ti"t •"i""
Cl>•''"' .. '""' .......... "'" A\\l'\tan\ M1u\•~f'IO r•tor"\
'hltpllon• (7141M2~t
CltHllltcl Adnrtlll"D ... 2-5171
Coo-rltllt "'' Ota••~ C•"'' """°""".,. "°"" ..,_,¥ ...... .,. ,,.,.,,, lltu'\"'•tlinft' M1t9"~•t
mi1ttto ttt '""'.'"'"'"'•""" ,_,.,..1,, m • ., ~. , • .,,,_.o,•'1 w1tf'lout \Of t•I 1>• ''""'''~ ,,. t.Wr .. M~r
'\f(•"4t ''•" "' .. .,. ,,.~ct .. (olt'\t• .._."' <•'""'"'" ,,.._~(""' •"': o .. t.,, ..•. ,, \4' MM\tf\h ., "'it•I \f ,0 l'MM"lf ""'Mll'1 l1ftM~~ ,.,,,o"l"I'
even more difficult to gel lo from
Newport-or 17th Street.
Winters requested 104.S square
feet of signage for his offices. The
city's planning staff said 84.5
square feet is what the sign law
provides for that location.
Councilwoman Mary
Smallwood agreed the real tor has
a problem, but added, "We have
to stick with the ordinance."
Mayor D.ominic Raciti echoed
her feelings, saying, "I wish we
could do it. but we can't. Ir we al·
low this variance for your build·
ing, we'll have to do it for ever~
yone else."
Vice Mayor J ack Hammett
argued that the ordinance should
provide for unusual situations.
"Due to the unusual location of
the business. I don't see why a
variance can't be allowed as long
as it's not outlandishly garish."
Hammell said.
He called for a review or those
sections of t.he s ign law dealin~
with special problems Jor dis
cussion of possible amehdments
to the sign ordinance.
The council then voted to have
Winters return with more definite
sign plans al the council's next
meeting.
TONIGlrr
M E S A V E R 0 E
HOMEOWNERS ASSOClATJON
Regular m eetmg. Speaker
Carl Nelson, Environmental
Manage ment Assn. of Orange
Count~ on Adams Street Hndgc
Mesa \'erdt' Elementary School.
7 JOp m
CM HOUSING AND COM
MUN ITY DEVELOPMENT
COMMITTEE-Public hearing,
coun<"il chambers. 7:30 p.m .
' ' B E H I N D T H E.
HEADLINES" -Or. Giles T
Rrown lecturer, QCC Forum
7 30 i .m.
"~ATURDAY . SU NDAY.
MONDAY" -South Coast
Repertory Theater. Tuesday
Sunday through Dec. l9,8p.m.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17
OCC LECTURE · "Antique!>
and Collectibles," Allen Lawton
lecturer. Fine Arts Rldg. 119.
7 JOp.m.
'Devil Attack'
Parents Jailed
BALTIMORE CAP )
Baltimore police have charged a
New York City couple with trying
to run down their three daughters
1n an automobile becau!\e they
believed the c hildren were
possessed by the devil.
Henjamin Singleton, 39, and his
wife Dianna, were arrested after
allegedly assaulting and aban·
doning the girls on the parking
lot at South Baltimore General
Hospital.
Police said the girls --Vic·
toria. 11. Yolanda, 10, and
Sharetta, 5 -were treated for
cu&$ and bruises and were placed
in a foster home. The girls' eight
month-old brother, Benjamin.
was found with the parents and
was placed in protective custody,
authorities said.
Risk Patients
F1u Shots Set
A swine flu immunization clinic
will be held at Hoag Memorial
Hospital Saturday for high risk
patients, hosplll•I officials an.
nounced toda'y.
High. risk patients are tho~e
over 60 years or age and the
chronically ill over the age or 18.
The immunization will provide
protection against the swine nu
and the A-Victoria strain.
The clinic will be conducted in
the hospital's conference center
rrom 10 a m lo 5 p m. The 11hots
are free.
at the White House.
Carter's staff said Kissinger
will be accompanied Saturday by
Lawrence Eagleburger, the Wt·
dersecretary for management at
the State Department who is
.handling the department liaison
with Carter during Ule·fiar\.Sltion
from the Ford administration.
Eagleburger was to meet later
today at the Stale Department
with W. Anthony Lake, who has
been designated by Carter to
head his foreign policy transition
team. Lake is expected to see
Ki ssinger before the secretary
travels to Georgia.
Vice President-elect Walter
Mondale, who will be in Plains on
Fnday for a meeting between
Carter and CIA Director George
Bush, also will attend the Carter
bnefing with Kissin"er.
Sally I.oses Her lflast
Ca rter met Saturd ay for
several hours with Dean Rus k.
secretary of State under John F.
Kennedy aftd Lyndon B. Johnson
and now a law profes:;or al the
University of Georgia.
An Orange Coast College class in off shore
sailing ended abruptly Monday afternoon
:i mile off Newport Harbor when the mast·
on the class boat snapped. The 10-meter
boat, Sally. was recently donated to the
Coast Community College Distnct. No one
was injured in the mishap and a
spokesman for the sailing program said
two shrouds apparently broke, causing the
mast to break. -
The meeting is the f irst
between C arter and ·the
secretary of state, whom Carter
a nd Mondale freque ntly
criticized during the presidential
campaign. The session.
scheduled for 7:30 a.m. PST,
marks the highest-level con-
ference Corter has undertaken in
the transition period.
Brothel Query 'Innocent'
Big Apple Official Curious Aoout Profits
Carter and Mondale will be ac·
companied at the Kissinger
briefmg by David Aaron, who is
their representative on transition
matters dea ling with the Na·
tional Security Council and in·
telli~nce activities.
Carter is beginning what he
says is a "careful and thorough
and deliberate" process to name
the top offi cials who will help him
run the government.
Marine Killed
As Carrier
Flips Over
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -
One Marine was killed and 22
were injured today when an am-
phibious personnel carrier over-
turned, a base spokesman said
~osL of lhe iojurie.s were
described as minor except for
one Marine who was taken to the
Naval Medical Center . Iden-
tifications were withheld pending
notification of next or kin.
The 26-foot vehicle was being
used in a routine training ex-
ercise when it rolled Over fi ve
miles inland from the Pacific
Ocean . about halfway between
Camp Pl'ndleton ·s main gate and
Las fo'lores
There was no word on the
number o f men aboard t he
tracked, shore-landing machine
which can carry 25 combat· ready
Marines, plus three crewmen.
It is 10 feet high, 10 feet wide
and able to travel 40 miles an
hour.
An investigation was ordered
to find out why it overturned.
Front Page Al
KILLER ...
when Rampton stayed Gilmore's
scheduled execution so the board
could review the case. Gilmore,
originally scheduled to die Mon·
day for killing a motel clerk dur-•
ang a robbery in July, said delay·
1ng the execution s ubjected him to
the "stress or cruel, unusual and
inhumane punishment."
Gilmore is known to have at·
tempted suicide while an inmate
in the Oregon prison system.
There also have been reports of a
pact between him and Mrs. Bar·
rett, a mother oft wo, under which
she would commit suicide after
Gilmore was executed.
Warden Sam Smith confirmed
the prison had been aware of the
Gilmore s uicide possibility and
set up a special survelllanceofhis
cell as a precaution. Smitbsaidhe
knew nothine about whether a
suicide pact was involved.
CARSON CITY, Nev. CAP >
A financial aide to the New York
City Council says it was just re-
search, not an interest in legaliz·
ing prostitution, that made him
ask Nevada officials about their
profits from licensed brothels.
Donald Schnakenberg, a.ssis-
lant director of finance for the
council. said Monday he was try.
ing to find out the cost of enforc-
ing New York Caty's laws against
prostitution. which nouris hes in
many areas of Midtown Manhat-
tan.
But one Nevada official sug.
gesled that New York, beset by
severe money problems, would
be smart to consider legalizing
prostitution as a way to pick up
quick cash.
Schnakenberg s aid he wrole Lo
APWlfel>lloto
'A SCAR ON YOUR BRAIN'
Dennis Smith Ales Sult
From Page A I
FOSTER ...
Dennis. a high school junior.
said if he wins the lawsuit he will
use most or the money to lobby
for legislation to overhaul the
foster parent system.
In Oakland. Alameda County
officials refused to comment on
specifics of the case, but Llbrado
.Perez. director of the Social
Services Agency. said:
"Regardless of the outcome.
we are re-examining our opera-
tion lo determine whether im·
provemenls can be made or if
preventive steps can be taken."
Nature Walk Slated
Fall's seasonal changes will be
the focus on a Wednesday dis-
covery walk at the Environmen-
tal NaLure Center in Newport
Beach. The free, 90-mlnule walk
begins at 9 :30 a .m. at the center.
located next to Newport-Mesa
Unified School District Offices,
1601 16th St. For more informe-
Uon call 645·8196.
Clipped Wings
'X' to 'R' for Kids' Film
NOTTINGHAM, England (AP) -The 10-year-
oJds at the Bentinck primary school caused an in·
temational flap when they made a film about the
school's pet lovebirds that Included a IO-second shot
of the birds mating. .
The British Council, the government's cultural
arm, picked the 2~minute film to be shown at a Unit·
cd Nations educational festival in Cairo ne"t week.
Bµt tha sex stlots will not make the trlp.
, "It was not offensive to '1s:• said the !\chool's
headmaster, J ohn Dexter. "But I was told by the
British Council that it would be better to cut about 10
seconds of the film as the mating shots might be con·
sidered offensive to Islamic cutsoms and law.",
The birds in question are a pair of Budgerigars,
small Austra lian parrots. wh.ich are more commonly
known In the United States as grass parakeets or lov·
ebirds.
Nevada's secretary Qf s.t~te .. Bill
Swackhamer, for the data, and
was referred to officials in Lyon,
Storey and ChurchUl counties
where ordfnances make
bordellos Jegal. Just after his in·
quiries were sent, res idents or
Lincoln County, Nev., a1ao voted
to legalize brothels. ·
Schnakenberg said he wanted
the data for a study aimed at pin·
pointing "bow much it costs to
enforce our laws against pro-
stitution. No one really knows
what the cost is." He said he
started the study on his own, not
at the direction of the council.
Hts questions got these
an5wers:
-Lyon County officials sent a
description of their prostitution
ordinance and bordello rec structure, which nets the county
$42,000 a year -one of its best
sources of income.
runs the Mustang Ranch brothel.
where Argentine boxer Osctr
Bonavena was recently shot to
death. Storey County didn't seo4
a copy of its ordinance, though. A.
deputy county clerk said
Schnakenberg would have •
send $6 to get it copied.
The ldea of UcenaJng p
stltutes In New York has
proposed seriously Ui the p •
complete with details for requ.ir-
l n g them to get medic1l
checkups.
Scbnakenberg's inq&iiries
come at a time when the city is,
proposing a major offensive
agalnat one nest of prostitution IQ-
Manballan.
A proposed zoning chan,_.
would ban massage parlors
altogether and set strict limits on
the number of pornographic
bookstores, sex movie houses.
peep show palaces and topless
bars in the Times Square area. -Churchill County officials
sent data showing that its $12,000
in yearly brothel fees make up
only a small part or its total re-
venues.
-Stor ey Couf\lY sent data
showing that brothel operator
Joe Conforte, the only licensee in
th al county. provides about
$40,000 in annual fees. Conforte
Hamlnett New
Mesa Health "
Panel Envoy
Front Page A J
BLAST ••.
whole back wall.
· "lt reminded me or a big fiery
wave. just like the ones you see
in the ocean, curling at the lop
and coming right at me."
The explosion sent Mrs. Wendt
stumbling backwards out the
door, where she said Mrs. Van
Sickle was waiting with a
blanket.
"I tried to go back in," Mrs.
Wendt said.
She lay quietly a moment on
the bed, then tears welled up in
her eyes.
.. It's so frustrating when you
know you can't do anything to
help.''
In a separate interview, Can·
dy Van Sickle said she and her
mother, Mrs. Patricia Harding,
smelled smoke coming from the
next door apartment about noon
Monday.
"ll really wasn't that strong,"
Mrs. Van Sickle recalled. But
she looked out the front door as
her mother called the fire de·
partment.
"I saw some smoke and
knocked on the door," she said.
When no one answered, she
pushed open the door tnd saw
Mrs. Supple on the noor by the
couch.
"I called for help and Lois
(Mrs. Wendt) came running
acrQss the lawn from her apart·
ment."
The two women tried to pull
Mrs. Supple from the apart·
ment, then Mrs. Van Sickle ran
next door to get. a blanket.
"When I got back, the apart-
ment exploded in flame and 1
aaw Lois crawling from the front.
door and into my house."
Vice Mayor Jack Hammett has
been appointed to represent
Coste Mesa on the Orange Coun-
ty Health Planning Council.
He replaces Jack Hall, who t&-
cently resigned as the city.'.s
representative to the organUa-
tioo. I
Hammett, who is business
manager for the Bristol Park
Medical Center in Co3ta Mesa.
was appointed in an unanimous
vote of the council Monday night.
He said he would abstain from
voting if a conflict or interest
arose in planning council meet-
ings.
The council maintains an ove,...
view or the county's health aid
delivery system, with extensive
power to approve, or not ap--
prove, existing or new health
facilities. •
Teen Slain
By Officers ·
VISALIA CAP) -Two.
Tulare County sheriff's o(·
ricers were wounded and
their teen·age assailaJl~
was shot to death today,,..
authorities reported.
Detective Roland H<>ver; .,
29, was shot through tl\~,
liver an~ Sgt.. Chuc)!;.
EzeJle, 44, was hit in thf!
ankles when they
responded to a report or a
prowler in a res idential_
area east of here, the
sheriff's office reported. . ·
Reports Indicated that a
youth identified as Mike
Alkins, 16, abductM a '
hostage Crom a house ~d"
was fleeing in a car whel'\
deputies arrived shortly ,'.
after dawn. '
,.
Fairview Plan Cut
A propoaed roadway, which
would have cut through the
western portion of Fairvlew
Regional Park, has been deleted
from Costa Mesa'• general plan
bytheclty council. •
Council me-oibers unanhhousJy
approved the dele~on ot the-so-.
called Bluff Road rlh o( Wilson
Street to Placentia Avenue in or·
der to speed devetlopment. ot the
285-acre regional p • .
The short, no ·south leg,
adopted as an amendment to the
city'• master plan in 18&4, was on·
ce seen as a necessary arterl al
alona the Santa Ana lowlands in
west Costa Mesa.
Later, plans tor the Fairview
Regional Park Jdlled any chan~e
of residential development ill the
area, and the Bluff Road proxed
to be a thorn in the side of county
approval or the park's environ-
mental impact report. ,
Because the proposed rO"ad
transverses a portion of the~.
the Or':rnge Count..y Planning
Commission last August rejected
an EIR covering dcvelopm~ljlrQf
the park, citing a contlict bet ~
road plannlng and park p\llJllmu'-
The comml11slon said it d
not accept the final EIR un""f.A..u.a•
time as a determination
need forBlulrRondwasma l o.Lt.
The decision resulted in a e111y m· development of the re~\>"1
park project.
..
Orang~ Coast
EDITION
'
r
Today s Closing
N.Y.Stoeks
VOL. 69, NO. 321, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1976 TEN CEtNTS
~USSR Gaining Big Milita1-y Advantage'
B7MJCRAEL PASKEVJQI.
OltMO•llY l'llotSQH
Military strength has shifted
dangerously in favor of the Soviet
Union and there is euphoria in
Moscow over the prosAect or
achieving a long-range goal or
world commuolsm, according to
Lt. General Daniel O. Graham,
former director of the Defense
lltelligeoce Agency.
Graham. who resigned from
the Army inteJUgence post in 197S
as a protest to the dismissals or
Defen5e Secretary James Sehl es·
lnger and CIA Director William
Colby, made the remarks Mon-
day in Newport Beach before a
luncheon gathering o f the
Ame.ricanism Educational
League, a patriotic, public
education organization based J.n
Buena Park.
He charged the U.S. with aid-
ing Soviet euphoria because of
compromises during SALT talks.
the failure of deleote and a
decreased emphasis on building
·a stronger national defense.
Graham, who recently re·
turned from a USSR trip, said lhe
Soviets are initialing an "iron
fisted" civil defense program
complete with mass evacuation
practice and increased construc-
tion o( bomb shelters. In the
event of nuclear warfare Soviet
losses could be as low as 10
million, compared to 110 million
Americans, Graham said.
Considering what Graham
believes is a lower Soviet regard
for life -"after all, tbey killed
five million peasants to collcc·
tivize agriculture" -the USSR
could use the difference in the
potential loss of lives as a
weapon lo get its way.
Killer's Suicide Fails
SUICIDE FAILS
Gary Mark Gilmore
•P Wtr-f'pftot9'
APPARENT OVERDOSE
Nicole Barrett
Sun Smiles
On Slopes as
Skiers FrOUJn
By The A"~ociatt'd PrMs
Mother \laturl' has turned a
warm shouldt•r to ski lovcri. and
tho e v.a1tmJ,? for a cold shoulder
m1~ht as wpll cool it
That s the word today from the
National Wc>ather Service and
the C'alifornta Automobile As·
soC'1at1on as sk 1ers and resort
owners anxiously wait for the
first heavy s nowstorm of lhe
season
Weekend flurries managed lo
dump nearly an inch but AAA
spokesmen who surveyed the skt
resorts said It wasn't cold enough
to freeze the ~round.
"The ski operators said there
is a warm wind blowing and all
the snow has melted," said
Marvin Parker, ski reporter for AAA.
•·we need one good storm to
gel lhe ground frozen and then
another one on top or that to ac-
cumulate snow that will stay,"
he said.
Last year, the lack of sufficient
snow delayed the opening of the
season and forced an early dos·
ing.
· Fmal Work Slated
r
On Jas'1tbe Creek I
Work is slated to begin by the
end of the year OD the final por·
lion of Jasmine Creek, the Irvine
Company development in the
bills above Corona del Mar.
City councilmen have ap-
proved lhe nnal tract map for the
last SO units to be built in the
tract. There are presently 324 un-
its In Jasmine Creek between
San Joaquin Hills Road, Crown
Dr·, '.1,lh and Marguerite
Avenue.
Girlfrien4 Joim Death Try
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AP)
-Gary Mark Gilmore. Wlder
sentence to die before a -firing
squad, attempted lo take his lire
with a drug overdose today,
authorities said. His girlfriend
also was found unconscious in
)\.er lJ.P!rtment from an a~parent
overdose: i)Ohee sitld~ · ~ .-~
Medics brought Gilmore "back
to Jiie," a medical technician at
the Utah Stale Prison reported.
His condition was listed as
serious.
Gilmore's girlfriend, Nicole
Barrett, was found unconscious
in her apartment, also of an ap-
parent drug overdose, Spr-
ingville Police Chief Leland
Bowers said. Mrs. Barrett, 20,
was in critical condition at Utah
Valley Hospital in Provo, a
spokes man there said.
Gilmore, 35. who had been sen-<e1 .... "f:'d ~·~ktHing>~ d"rhv~~!··
clerk during a robbery, was
foWld unconscious in his cell,
said the prison medical techni·
cian, Tom Anguay. ·
"He tried to take his Owtl life.
He tried to OD," Anguay said.
Anguay said be did not know
what kind of drug was used but
Gilmore has been on medication
He said Gilmore was conscious
after treatment but said nothing
An a mbulan ce and a
,paramedic unit arrived at th~
prison gate and a stretcher with a
person on it was placed in the •"Kf'l'it.a;.c.~ ffhi ;;:a • ~."!"".J~-e\.• •
the gate for several minutes
while someone insid~was being
treated. It l ater left for a
hospital.
Warde n Sam Smith said
Gilmore was not br.eathing pro·
(See KILLER, Page A2)
Chamber Meas11re Dies
Directors Drop Federal, Fwuling Stand
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OHM Oally Piiot Staff Directors of the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Com·
merce have tabled a proposed re·
solution cirti<:izing the use of
federal funds for a senior citizen
center in Newport Beach.
A maj.orlty of 30 directors at-
tending Monday's monthly meet-
ing voted to discontinue con·
sideration of the measure which
had been s uggested by the cham-
ber's executive committee. The
executive committee consists of
about 10 of the chamber's of.
ficers.
The resolution. prepared by Ben Jackson, the chamber's
liaison with the city council,
would have recommended that
the city not accept funds from
another governmental entity un-
less a specific use has been de·
termined, unless there is a need
demonstrated and unless the
money is not available in the city
treasury. The resolution. had it passed,
would have been presented al lhe
Dec. 13 city council meeting.
Councilmen will conduct the
County Offering
North Star Share
Orange County supervisors
said tcday they want to tum over
their SO percent share of North
Star Beach in Upper Newoort
Bay to Newport Reach.
While the cny ana county now
own the b each together,
Supervisor Tom Riley suggested
the whole beach be turned over to
Newport Beach so the city can
develop the property as com·
munity residents wish.
And at his suggestion.
supervisors also dropped de
velopment or the beach from a
list of projects which could be
financed with Newport Tidelands
Funds.
The board's action today flies
in the face of a city council de-
cision last month to retain the
joint ownership with the county.
Council members at the time
said the beach could be developed
with tidelands funds.
But Riley told fellow
supervisors today the beach
wouJd primarily serve Newport
Beach residents as opposed lo
county residents in general.
Riley lives in Dover Shores. the
residential area in which Norlh
Star beach is located
Nature,Walk Slated
Fall's seasonal changes will be
the focus on a Wednesday dis·
covery walk al the E;nvironmen-
tal Nature Center an Newport
Beach. The free, 00-minute walk
begins at 9:30 a.m. at the center,
located next to Newport-Mesa
Unified School 9islrict Offices,
1601 16th St. For more informa·
tion call 6't5·8196.
S~ltl Loses Ber Ma•t
second of two required public
1-aearings al that meeting as part
of the application for the federal
grant which is being used to pay
for the center.
The grant, made by the federal
Department of Housing and
Urban Development, is made in
yearly installments over three
years . The application under con-
sideration is for the thlrd year's
funds.
The council, which got into the
program in December of 1974, has
decided to use the money to buy a
six-acre site at Marguerite and
Fifth Avenues in Corona del lt'¥tr and to convert a pri vale schooJ.Q{I
the property to a senior citizens
center.
Opposition to the proposal has
surfaced in recent months.
Among other things, opponents
have argued that the need for a
center has not been clearly
established and that the city
should not be using federal funds .
Proponents of the chamber re-
solution backed those contentions
and pointed out that the resolution
would not be an attt!tnpt to take
sides in the issue, but rather a
means of informing the city coun-'
cil that chamber mc-mbers
believe a closer look ought to be
taken of the issue.
The resolution was tabled after
several speakers. including al
torneys David Delancey and
William Eilers and BobMcCurdy,
of Newport Marine Supply, ques-
tioned the chamber's entranc e in-
to the grant application matter in
the third year of the program.
Though tabling the rl'solution.
chamber directors agreed that
any city proposal that involves ex·
penditure of tax funds is a propc-r
subject for chamber comment
An Orange Coast College class in off shore
sailing ended abrupUy Monday afternoon
Sl mile of{ Newport Harbor when the mast
on the class boat snapped. The 10-meter
boat, Sally, was recently donated to the
Coast Community College District. No one
was i njured in the mis hap and a
spokesman for the sailing program said
two shrouds apparently broke. causing the
mast to break.
f (
While the U.S. still holds an
economic and tt'chnological
edge. Graham said the Soviets
have overtaken the U.S. in
military strength during the past
10 years because of U.S. em-
phasis on nuclear weapons as a
deterrent rather than an offense.
By pumping 15·20 percent of
the Soviet Gross National'"
Product into defense lhe USSR
now bolds a six lo one ad-
vanatage in intercepter aircraft
and has a superior surface fleet.
Graham said.
During SALT talks, Graham
said the U.S. made a serious mis·
take by agreeing not to use anti·
ballistic missiles, thus canceling•
a 20-year U.S. lead in this depart·
ment. "Even if we stand equal (in
military strength> we are at a <See SOVIETS, Page A%)
O•ilY Piiot Sl•ll PllO!ao
POLICE EXPERTS CHECK FIRE SCENE-FOR CLUES
Dropped Cigarette Lighter Blamed In Fatal Blaze
Lighter Bla!"'ed
For Fatal Blaze
Costa Mesa hre investigators
are blaming a cigarette Lighter in
the fiery death of a 59-year-old in-
valid Monday afternoon.
. Mrs. Frances Supple, 124
Clearbrook Lane, Apt. A. was
pronounced dead al the scene of
the noon fire. a half block from
the city·s police department.
The woman, a stroke victim
confined lo a wheelchair since
1965, was found near her
wheelchair on the floor by two
neighbors who failed in their at·
tempts to pull the victim from
,he home.
Her husband. J oseph J . Supple,
60, was away from lhe home at
the time.
Fire officials set damage of the
names to the Supple home at
about $20,000.
Lois Wendt of 120 Clearbrook
Lane rece1 ved sec·ond degree
bums over s1 x perc·cnt of her
body while attempting to pull the
victim from the housc-
A sudden mixlu,rC' of air fed a
smouldering couch in lhe house,
Baylor Signs
With Angels
PROVIDENCE. RI. <AP ) -
Catcher Gene Tenacc and oul·
fielder 1Don Baylor lefl the
Oakland A's officially today.
Tenance signing a multi·year
contract with the San Diego
Padres and Baylor agreeing lo a
long .term pa l'l withthe
California Angels.
Both signings were announced
by agent Jerry J<apstein. who
also represents eight more of the
available free agents.
Terminally Ill
Man Cleared
R1VERSIDE <AP >
Riverside County authorities say
a 71 -year-old terminally ill
cancer patient was acting in
defense when he shot and k" led
bls brother-in-law durio an
argument at their Meadow rook
home near Lake Elsinore. .
Rivets ide officials sa d no
charges bad been lodged a ainst
Gardner Powell. They identified
the dead man :>s Nizcr
McCukiU, 51.
said firemen , prqmpting lbe
blaze to rush through the living
room, blowing Mrs. Wendt out
the front door.
Fire Analyst Russell Hen• ~r.son said today the fire "ex·
plosion'' ~as possibly a combina·
tion of a sudden breeze from a
broken sliding glass window,
combining with a smouldering
couch and flames.
"We found a cigarette lighter
in the open position neaC' the
woman," Henderson said.
•·w e think she may have
dropped 1t and it ignited her
clothing or the couch. But the fire
definitely ~tiginated in the
couch."
Henderson said there were two
possible explanations for the sud~
den blast of flames that engulfed
the apartment in the triplex in
seconds.
"When the back window let go.
the fire could have received a
draft, touching off the smoulder•
mg names and roaring through
the house."
lie also said evidence of e:C•
tremely charred carpeting in the
living room and a dining room
points to a rapid flame spread
over the carpet.
"The broken window may have
.itiven it that extra gust of oxygen
1l needed to blast through the
apartment," Henderson said. .or::£J
1
:ast
Weather
Warm sunny days and
cleatJ cool nights through
Wednesday. Highs near fkl
al the coast, lows to about
60. Easterly winds.
l~SIDE TODAY
Reporter William Farr's
legal ef forla to &tay out of ;ml
OUtT protecting a news source
continue. Sto111, AS.
Index
1 y..,, s. ... 1n A 1• •~ u~ ''
,,.,.. Bom~~ 82 "'°"'' ''" •u ll M Boyd AT Movlt\ •11
c:.tllornl• AS _.,., """'' All 01\\111941 ••-n NallOMI N .. n A•
Comlu A to Or'"'" CMtn1y At tr.\\-· ., ....... •1-2 OHl~Notlc" Al ~I AM ~dlto.-l1f "•°" •• SloO M••-tl• AIM> lt>O•Ufftm..,t A 11 Ttlevl11oft ••
l'IM!>tt AU U Tllfften All
14offt<tM A 14 WNIMr A4
'"'"'"'''"•" A I\ WOfl41 New~ Al
)
A! DAIL v PILOT N Tue,day November 16 1976
Bay Sewer Delayed
CoaAt Panel Quorum Melts Away
Action on the proposed Upper
Bay sewc•r line was delayed
again Monday by the regional
coastal t>om mission when the
late afternoon departure of some
comm1ss1on members left the
group w1tJwut a quorum.
The permit ror construction of
lhe sewer h ne has been pending
before the South Coast Regional
Zone Conservation Commisi.ion
sinct•.June.
~ commlsaioners remalnlnt
at the close or Monday's meeung
111 J(untington Beach rescheduled
the hearing tor next Monday
when the commission meets In
Torrance.
The proposed sewer line would
be installed a long Back Bay
Drive from ·the N~wport Dunes
Aquatic P a rk lo Big Canyon
where it would run along the
south side of the canyon to Jam·
boree Hoad.
Ford Session Set
Carter Schedules
Kissinger Meeting
PL AI NS , Ga. (AP ) -
President-elect J immy Carter
will meet with Secretary of State
He11ry A. Kissinger here Satur·
d ay for a briefing on foreign
policy m atters and will confer
with Pr es id e n t Ford i n
Washington next week, it was a n·
nounced today. I Ford and Carter agreed in a
telephone call Monday night to
have their staffs work out ar-
rangements for their meeting.
The day for the session has not
bee n dec ide d, Wh ile House
spokesman John Carlson said.
I Carlson s aid Carter put in .a
telephone call to Ford as the
President returned aboard Air
Force One on Monday from a
California vacation. Ford re-
turned the c all when he arrived
at the White House.
Carter's s taff said Kissinger
will be accompanied Saturday by
Lawrence E agleburger; the un-
dersecretary for management al
the State Department who is
handling the dt partment liaison
with Carter during the transition
from the Ford administration.
Eagleburger was to meet later
today at the State Department
with W. Anthony Lake, who has
been designa ted by Carter to
head his foreign policy transition
team. Lake is expected to see
Kissinger before the secretary
travels to Georgia. .
Vice Preside nt·elect Walter
Mondale, who will be in Plains on
Friday for a meeting bet ween
Carter and CIA Director George
Bush, a lso will attend the Carter
briefing with Kissinger.
Aetlon on the proposru original-
ly was d elayed by the com-
mission because commissioners
believed information on the li ne's
environmental impact was insuf-
ficient.
The project ns originally pro-
posed w u opposed by the
Friends of Newport Bay, but last
week a spokesma n for the gro\'p
said orricinls or the sanitation
district had agret.'<i to a dozen
conditions to lessen the damage.•
to the Upper Bay wildhfc pre·
serve and to Big Canyon. The lat·
ter is bei n g considered for
purchase as an adclition to the
preser ve.
Because of opposition from en-
vironmentalists, t he commission
s taff p revious ly had r ecom
mended disapproval of the pro-ject.
However, with the approval of
the Friends, samtation dist rict
offtc1als believe t he l'Omm1ss1on
:.taff will drop its oppos1t1on to
the project.
The line, according lo sanita-
tion district officials. 1s needed to
ser ve r esi d e nts of Newport
Beach who live north or San Joa·
Quin Hills Road.
It witr.also eventually serve the
residential developments in the
vacant land a long J amboree
Road between Pacifi<' Coast
Highway and San Joaquin Hills Road.
When t he perm it application
was fi led this summer, sanitation
district officials warned that a
normal winter 's r ainfall -about
14 inches -could cause the exist-
ing line's pump stat ion lo over-
flow.
Since the new line will not bt'
built until next '>pnng, sanil<tlion
district offic1als have installed a
dike arould the pump station lo
catch any verrlow before 1t goes
into the ba
Co11versation Peace
Larr} Sharman of Costa Mesa saw this old
dmnon at a swap meet and decided it was
1ust >n hal he n ~ded. So he brought !t
home and put it in the front yard of his
home at 292 F lower St., much to the de·
lq~ht of Nancy Carmody. 14; Kathleen
Sharma n, 10; Kim Lisk, 11, and M~ure.en
Sharman. 14 (from left). Sharman s wife
says it m akes it hard to mow the front
lawn. The lady across the street asked
Sharman to aim the cannon at some other
house ,
'Scar on .. Your Brain'
Foster Child Files $500,000 Damage Suit
SAN FR ANCISCO CAP) -
Dennis Smith is in his 17th year
and his 16th foster home. "It's
hke a scar on your brain." he
s avs. =·1 want people to realize·
what 's h a ppening to roster
children." he adds.
And he has filed an unusual
lawsuit with that p urpose 1n
mind.
his parents are or where he got
the name "Smith."
Early in 1960 he was placed
with a couple a lready caring for
one foster child. Ttien came more
homes and a couple of stretches
tn public orphanages.
officials re(used to comment on
specifics of the case, but Llbrado
Perez. director or the Social
Services Agency, said:
"Regardless of the outcome.
we are re-examining our oper a-
tion to determine whether im,
provements can be made or IC
preventive steps can be taken.••
Tideland Fund Use
The suit, fi led in Alameda
County Superior Court on Mon-
day, asks damages or $500,000
from the county social ser vice
agency and officials of the public
school system there
He was placed last September
in his present foster home, where
his a ttorneys s ay he is "re -
asonably content.''
But, he said in an interview.
''It's not like having parents ...
The relationship was somewhat
distant. When you want to talk to
your fos ter parents, you're
always afraid that what you say
wiJlgo into the book." He was re-
f errirtg..t,Q records that are kept for
officials on foster children's de-
velopment and behavior.
King Death
Docmnents
Destroyed?,
011ly ~•lot ~i.tl Pl>OIO
'SOVIETS AHEAD'
Defense Expert Graham
f'rom Page A l
SOVIETS .....
tJ1 ,,1tl\ .rnt.igt· ''"N' ~e must
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1JJ::t• of in1t1alJ\'l' 1., worth m.my
m 1-.,ll1o•-;, .,h1rs ;ind !in·' ..
Jl1· ... p11 .. "h.1t c:rJham krmt.'<l
:\ "dn•;idt•d '-l'PnJno ahl•ad . ·• h('
•• 1111 fou1 rt•('(•nl t.'\t'llts may twl11
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!11rf to rr '"'l<•hhsh m1!1 1JrY
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'It'\\ th.it ~"' 11•! <i°' l'rnment 1s
oppr1'""" l' rJth1·r thJn bcm1J:n
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p11111tt•tl 11111 the· t onn1 rt het1A.1,:rn
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Anl!ul.1 ti." l1tl!hli~hh-O the l S
Sit ., ..:oa I of \\ 01 lrl dom1n.1l1nn
It 11 11.1111 H , .• lJ?Jn s .. trnng
pnm.11' 1'11•1 111111 run a1.?amst a
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l S n111t1.ir' ... 1n·n~lh
~~ Firt> Arson
SONORA IAP> A fi re• that
destro) t.'rl 1 ht• 50·yt.•ar·old Su$:.lr
Pin£' l..odli?l' 1n Tuolumm• County
;irp11rt•n1 ly was c!t'htw>rat<'ly set.
:1uth11ril1t•s rcpnrt<'d Monday
ORANGE COAST
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Telephone (7U)W-4321
Cl•uifled Advert111no 642-5671
Ci°'ft~, ~1 1lt'i\ 0•'4no111 (t1>~tt r'tlN•'t."'1 (•m
IJ.l'~y ._,~ f!A.,.-\ .,. t1h 1H11-.trttt1,.,.• , tlttw·•I
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1'Mflllf'11y ........ , ;1 .. , """''~' "''"'''' 4ill'\tM"l.tl•11111U ~l'ftttf\tfttt
Urged for Traffic Smith cla ims the agency told
his mother he would be placed
for adoption but Sl'.'nt him instc.id
to one roster hom e after another.
He says the schools accepted
wh at he calle d a mistake n
diagnosis that he was mentally
retarded and put him in classes
for t he handicapped.
Callin g · traffic congestion
Newport Beaett'~mber one
pro ble m , Oran County
·Supervisor Laurence hmit has
suggested using tidelands funds
to help ease traffic snarls.
Schmit s uggested the county
use part of the $972,000 Newport
tidelands fund to help build a new
Pacific Coast Highway bridge
east of Dover Drive to ease traf-
fic congest ion and help the public
arress lo Newport recreation areas.
Fellow super visors agreed lo
Tots Needed
For Program
Of Park Play
Pre.school ugc <'hildren who
live in West Newport and the
Peninsula area a re being sought
for the pre-school play program
al 38lh Street Park.
The program is one of three of-
ft"red in <'ity pnr ks by the Parks.
Beaches and Rc<'reallon Depart·
ment.
A spokesman for the PB and R
• department s <t1d lhe program is
~eared to operate with a max-
imum of 30 children between the
ages of 3 and 5. Orgaruzed as a
<'ooper~l1 ve. the mothers of lite
<'h1ldren donate one mornin~ a
wt•ck to s uper\'1s1ng the
children's play activ11ics.
The SS registr ation (t'C charged
by the <'lty goes for supplies and
other operating expenses.
The programs at Mariner's
Park and at Corona del Mar's
Community Youth Center a rc
nea r ly full , t he recreation
!>pokesman said. but at 38th
Street, there are less than 10
children and the program has
been cut back from fi ve days a
week to three.
All of the programs run from
9:30 a m . to 11:45 a.m.
Anyone interested in enrolling
their child in any of the three pre·
school programs may contact the
PB and R department at 640-2271.
f'ro.a Pag~ A J
KILLER ...
pcrly when he was discovered
under a s pec ia l sur veillance
system set up to keep wat<'h on
him. Smith said medical te(hni-
cians we re rushed in and gave
him resuscitation.
He said Gilmore was breathing
at the Umc1 he ten. the prison.
Asked where he could have got·
ten drugiJ, Smith said he might
have obtained them from other
inmates, from visitors or other
persons, and hid them under !tis
tongue while being searched.
Dr . Al Ro e, the prison
psychologist, said he had predict-
ed Gilmore would attempt. to
commit suicide-;
add the bridge to lhe list of six
recreation and beach projects.
But S uper visor Tom Riley of
Newport Beach told Schmit the
bridge already is expected to be
built within t he next two or three
years and has been approved by
state highway officials.
Supervisors were adopting a
m inority list for use of tidelands
funds which will have ac -
cumulated by the year's end.
But of the total, about $26~.000
wi ll be spent for harbor patrol
a nd m iscella neous services.
supe r visor s learned, while
$842,752 is expected lo be spent
for developing a Newport Harbor
Marine Studies Institute in Dana
Point.
Possible proj~cts approved to-
day for the re maining $267.151 in-
cluded the highwny bndge, re-
furbishing of the Newport Dunes
Aqua tic Park, the purchase of
pr ivate boat ramps and view
ar eas above t he bay and the
possible joint development with
the state of the Upper Newport
Bay.
Irvine Coast
Talk ·Planned
Members and guests of the
Corona del Ma r Chamber of
Commerce w ill hear Don
Cameron of the Irvine Company
d iscuss current development
plans for the Irvine coast area al
a luncheon meeting Thursday.
The lunch wi ll be held at noon
at the Villa Sweden. 3536 E. Coas t
llighwav.
Cameron, who has heart ed thl·
company's efforts to get a de-
velopment plan approved by the
O ra o gc Coun ty Board of
Supervisors. will discuss the im -
pact of the proposed develop-
ments on the Corona del Mar
area.
"If I had known I was going to
spend the first 16 years or my life
this way, I'd rather have been
dead. I'd wished my mother could
have aborted me ... srud Dennis.
Dennis was born in Oakland on
Oct. 5. 1959. His two legal aid
lawyers say county records arc
un<'lear where he ~pent his first
2' :! months. l lc doesn 'l know who
Marine Killed
As Carrier
Flips Over
CAMP PENDLETON (A P l
One Marine was killed and 22
were injured today when an am-
phibious personn<'l <'anier over-
turned, a base spokesm an said.
Most of the injuries were
descnbt'd as m1nor except for
one Marine who was taken lo the
Naval Medica l Center. Iden-
tifications were withheld pending
notification of next of kin.
The 26-foot vehicle was being
used in a rout1ne trammg ex-
ercise when 1t rolled over five
miles inland from the Pacifi c
Ocean, about halfway between
Camp Pendleton's main gate and
Las Florc>s
There was no word on the
number of men aboard the
tracked. short?-landing machine
which can carry 25 combnt·rcady
Marines, plus thrct? <'rl'.'wmcn.
lt is 10 feet high. 10 feel wide
and able to travel 40 miles an
hour
An investigation was ordered
to find out why it overturned.
~lipped Wings
'X' to 'R' for Kids' Film
NOTI'INGJIAM, England (AP ) -The 10-year-
olds at the Bentinck prim a ry school caused an In-
ternationa l flap when they made a film about the
school's pet lovebirds that included a 10-s econd shot
or lhe t1ird s mating.
The. British Council, the government's cultur.al
arm, pick ed the 21h ·minute f!lm t? be s~own a t a Unit-
~ Nations educational festival in Cairo next week .
But the sex shots will not make the trip.
· "Jt was not offensive to us," said the school 's
headmaster . !John Dexter. "But 1 was t old by the
British Council that it would be better to cut about 10
seconds of th<' film as the mating shots might be con·
sidered offens ive to Islamic rutsoms <Jlld law."
The bi rds in question ure a pair of Bud~criJt3t5,
small Australian pnrrots, which ur c more rommonl y
known in the United States as grass parakeets or lov-
ebirds.
\
Dennis, a high school j1mior,
said i( he wins the lawsuit he will
use most of lhe money to lobby
fo r legislation to overhaul the
foster parent system.
In Oakland, Alameda County
Teen Slain
By Officers
VISALIA (AP) -Two
Tulare County sheriffs of-
ficers were wounded and
their t een-age assailant
was shot to deatb today,
a uthorities reported.
Detective Roland H<l'ver,
29,.'was shot through the
Ii ve r and S g t . Chuck
Ezelle, 44, was hit in the
a nkles when th ey
responded to a report of a
prowler in a r esidentia l
area e a st o f h ere, the
s heriff's office reported.
Reports indicated that a
youth identified as Mike
Atkins, 16. a bducted a
hostage from a house an<t
was fleeing in a car when
deputies a rrived shortly
after dawn.
WASHINGTON CAP)-Docu.
ments relating to the murder or .
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. aJ>-
parently have been destroyed\..
since the cr eation of a H ouse
committee to investigate King's
slaying, com mittee staff mem-
bers said today.
Chief coun sel Richard A.
Sprague of the House Commtitee
on Assassinations said the docu-
m ents were ''relevant to our in-
vestigation" and "would have
been in the possession of law en-
forcement authorities."
Sprague added , "I have been
advised that the destruction has
been since it was announced (in
September ) that this committee
w ouj.d be investigating" the
mufders of King and President.
J ohn F . Kennedy.
Sprague cautioned that he had
not received offi cial notification
that the doc ume nts wer e
destroyed , but, in an appare nt re-
ference to a member of his staff.
said he learned of their destruc-
tion "from an individual who has
interviewed other people."
Spra~ue refused to discuss
which law enfo rcement agency
possessed the documents.
ll owevt•r, Rep. H en r y
Gonzalez <D Texas), a commit-
tee member, told a reporter he
believed the documents had been
in the possession of aulhorilies in
Tennessee where Kin~ was killed
in 1968.
Legal Brothels
Eyed by New York?
CARSON-CITY, Nev. (AP.) -
A financial aide to the New York
City Council s ays it was just re-
search, not an interest in legaliz-
ing prostitution , that made hjm
ask Nevada officials about their
profits from licensed bro~els ..
Donald Schnakenberg, ass1s·
t aot director ot finance for lhe
council, said Monday he was try-
ing to find out the cost of enforc-
ing New York City's laws against
prostitution, which nourishes in
many areas of Midtown Manhat-
tan.
But one ·Nevada official sug-
gested that New York. beset by
severe money problems. would
be s mart to consider legaUzing
prostitution as a way to pick up
qulck cash.
Schnakenberg said he wrote to
Nevada's secntary ol state, Bill
Swackhamer, lor the data. and
was referred to oflcials ln Lyon.
Storey and Chu.r hill counties
wher e ordl n a ces mak e
bordellos legal. Just after his in-
quiries were sent, residents or
Lincoln County, Nev .• also voted
to legalize brothels.
Schnakenber g said h• wanted
thP. data for a study aimed at pin-
pointing "how much it costs lo
enforce our laws against pro-
stitution . No one really knows
what the cost is." Ue said he
) >
started the study on his own. not
at the direction of the council.
llis q ucst1 o n s got thes e
answers :
-Lyon County official~ sent a
description of their prostitution
ordinance a nd l>ordello fee
structure, wh ich nets the county
S42.000 a Y<'a r one of its best
sources of income .
-Churchill County offi cials
sent data showing that Its $12,000
in yearly brothel fees make up
only a sm all purl of its total re·
venues.
Risk Patients
Flu Shots Set
A swine nu immuniiation clmic
will be held at Hoag Memorial
llos pitM Saturday for high risk
patients , hospital officials an-
nounced today.
High risk patients are those
over 60 years of age and the
chronicaUy ill over the age of 18.
The immuniutlon will provide
protection against the swine nu
and the A· Vi ctoria strain .
The clinic will be conductro in
the hospital's conreren<'e center
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The shots
arc free.
\
I •
Saddlebaek ..
l. 69, NO. 321, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESD~, NOVEMBER 16, 1976
Afternoon
1 • Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS I
USSR Coining· Big. Military Advantage'
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
OHM O•llY PUOC St•ff
'.Military strength has shifted
!ll\gerously in favor of the Soviet
nion and there is euphoria in
oscoW"" over the prospect or
aeftjeving a long·range goal of
Id communism, according to
. General Daniel 0 . Graham,
f0l1Jler director or the Defense
Da&elligence Agency.
Graham. who resigned from
the Army intelligence post in 1975
as a protest to the dismissals oC
Defense Secretary James SchJes·
inger and ClA Direct.or William
Colby, made the remarks Mon·
day in Newport Beach before a
luncheon gathering of the
Americanism Educational
League, a patriotic, public
education organization based in
Buena Park.
He charged the U .S. with aid·
ing Soviet euphoria because or
compromises during SALT talks,
the failure of detente and a
decreased emp~sis on building
a stronger national defense.
Graham, who recently re-
turned from a USSR trip, said the
Soviets are initiating an "iron
fisted" civil defense program
complete with mass evacuation
practice and increased construe· ·
tion of bomb shelters. In the
event or nuclear warfare Soviet
losses could be as low as 10
million, compared to 110 million
Americans, Graham said.
Considering what Graham
believes is a lower Soviet regard
for life -"after all, they killed
five million peasants to collec·
tivize agriculture" -the US.SR
could use the difference in the
potential loss o f lives as a
weapon to get its way.
Killer's Suicide
While the U .S. still holds an
economic and technological
edge, Graham said the Soviets
have overtaken the U.S. in
military st ngtb during the past
10 years because of U.S. em-
phasis on nuclear weapons as a
deterrent rather than an offense.
By pumping 15·20 percent of
the Soviet Gross National"
Product into defense the US.SR
now holds a six to one ad-
Fftils
vanatage in intercepter aircraft
and h as a superior surface Oeet.
Graham said.
During SALT talks, Graham
said lbe U.S. made a serious mis·
take by agreeing not to use anti-
balllstlc missiles, thus canceling
a 20-year U.5_: lead in this depart·
menl.
"Even if we stand equal. (in
military strength) we are at a
(See ~VIETS, Page A2)
Girlfriend Also Reported in OD Try
SUICIDE FAILS
Gary Mark Gilmore
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AP)
-Gary Mark Gilmore, under
sentence to die before a firing
squad, attempted to talce his life
with a drug overdose today,
authorities said. His girlfriend
--a<~---ff1ottn~ i<l
her apartment from an apparent
overdose, police said.
Medics brought Gilmore "back
to life." a medical technician at
th«: Utah State Prison reported.
His condition was fisted as
serious.
Gilmore's girlfriend. Nicole
Barrett, was found unconscious
in her apartment, also of an ap·
parent drug overdose. Spr·
ingville Police Chief Leland
Rowers said. Mrs. Barrett. 20.,.
was in critical condition at Utah
Va lley Hospit al in Provo, a
~(>Ol(esman there said
Gilmore, 35, who had been sen·
tenced for the killing of a motel
clerk during a robbery, was
found unconscious in his cell,
said the priso~ medical techni·
cran. Tom Anguay ..
"He tried to take his own life.
He tried to OD." Anguay said.
Anguay said he did not know
what kind of drug was used but
Gilmore has been on medication
He said Gilmore was conscious
after treatment but said nothing.
An ambulance and a
paramed.ic unit arrived at the
prison gate and a stretcher with a
person on it was placed in the
ambulance. which remained at
the gate for several minutes
while someone inside was being
treated. ·It la ter left for a
hospital.
Wa rde n Sam Smith said
Gilmore was not breathing pro·
perly when he w as discovered
• under a s pecial surveillance
system set up to keep watch on
him. Smith said medical techni·
clans were rushed in and gave
him resuscitation.
He said Gilmore was breathing
at the time he left the prisQll.
Asked where he could have g
ten drugs. Smith said he might
have obtafoed them from other
inmates, from visitors or other
persons, and hid them under his
tongue while being searched.
Dr. Al Roe, tb·e prison
psychologist. said he had predict·
(See K~LLER, Page AZ)
•P'#l ..... tOS
APPARENT OVERDOSE.
Nicole Barrett
Toro Hunt
Continues
For Suspect
Carter-Ford Talk Next
Federal, military and local
j>olice this morning launched an
extensi\·e search around El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station for a
man believed to have robbed a
Balt1mote bank about a year
ago.
The search began al 3 30 a m
after a car driven by the federal
fugitive was stopped by military
policemen on the base
A spokesman for the Federal
Bureau of lnvest1 gat1on ~aid
MPs determ int-d that the car was
stolen 1n Las \'egas and dnvcn
by James Alfred Rice . 30. who 1s
suspected of robb1n~ the bank on
Dec. 3. 1975 He 1s also wanted in
Washington. 0 C. for forgery.
MPs chast'd the car and shot
out its tires but Rice escaped
near the border of the base, the
spokesman said
lie :.aid !\tarim• Corp!> hehcop
ters ,md bloodhoundl> from the
rounty SherrU'!>. l>cp~1rtment as
well as orf1cers from the FBI,
Ma nne ha~e. Shl•rifr s Depart
ment and loc .il n t\ i.>0lire agen
c1e-:; Joined 1n lh<' resulting
search
.. We belil'H' he s ~till on foot in
the Or ang!' Colinty area," the
spokesman said
The spok ec;m<Jn said he did nol
know 1r Rice 1s armed
Rice 1s descrth<'d as 30. black.
almost ll fe('t tall. 170 pounds,
brown eyes. black hair and has a
one·inch scar on his forehead.
Citations Hit Home
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
County Department of Health
Services has issued four citations
llgainst Prestige Convalescent
Center of North llollywood, a
nursing home where an elderly
wheelchairbound patient ac·
ctdentally drowned last week.
. .. -
Coast
\\'e athe r
Warm sunny days and
clear cool nights through
Wednesday. Highs near 80
at the coast, lows to about
SO. Easterly winds.
INSIDE TODA V
Reporter William F.an"•
regal •/Jori• to 1tay ou1 of jail
over protecting a news source
conHnue. Story, AS.
Kissinger Meet Set
O•llY Pll01 Stall P<lofo
PLAINS , Ca . <AP) -
President-elect Jimmy Carter
will meet with Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger here Satur·
·day for a briefing on foreign
policy matters and will confer
with President Ford i n
Washington next week, it was an-
nounced today
Ford and Carter agreed in a
telephone call Monday rught lo
have their staffs work out ar·
rangements for their meeting.
The day for the session has not
been decided. White House
spokesman John Carlson sc1i d.
Carlson said Carter put in a
telephone call to Ford as the
President returned aboard Air
Force One on Monday from a
California vacation. Ford re-
turned the call when he arrived
at the White House.
Carter's staff said Kissinger
wiU be accompanied Saturday by
Lawrence Eagleburger, the un·
dersecretary for management at
the State Depa rtment who is
handling the department liaison
with Carter during the transition
from the Ford administration.
POLICE EXPERTS CHECK FIRE SCENE FOR CLUES
Dropped Cigarette Lighter Blamed In Fatal Blaze
Eagleburger was to meet later
today at the State Department
with W. Anthony Lake, who has
been designated by Carter lo
head his foreign poLicy transition
team. Lake is expected to see
Kissinger before the secretary
travels to Georgia. Lighter Blamed
For Fatal Blaze
Vice President·elect Walter
Mondale, who will be in Plains on
Friday for a meeting between
Carter and CIA Director George
Bush, also will attend the Carter
briefing with Kissinger.
Costa Mesa fire investigators
are blaming a cigarette lighter in
the fiery death of a 59-year·old in·
valid Monday afternoon.
Mrs . Frances Supple, 124
Clearbrook Lane, Apt. A. was
pronounced dead at the scene of
the noon fire, a half block from
the city's police department.
The woman, a stroke vi ctim
confined lo a wheelchair since
1965, was f ound near her
wheelchair on the floor by two
neighbors who failed in their at-
tempts to pull the vict1m from
the home.
Her husband, J oseph J . Supple,
60, was away from the home at
the time.
Fire orficials set damage of the
~es to the Supple home at
about $20,000.
Lois Wendt of 120 Clearbrook
Lane received second degr ee
burns over six percent of her
body whil_e attempting to pull the
victim from the house.
Yugoslavs Irked
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia
(AP) -Yugoslavia will not need
the protection of the United
States against lbe Soviet Union
after President Tito dies, a
spokesman I or the Sf.year-old
Yuaoalav leader has told rt·
A sudden mixture of air fed a
smouldering couch in the house,
said firemen, prompting the
blaze lo rush through the living
room. blowing Mrs. Wendt out
the front door.
Fire Analyst Russell Hen ·
derson said today the fire "ex·
ploslon" was possibly a combina·
lion or a sudden J>r~ze from a
broken sliding glass window,
combining with a smouldering
couch and n a mes. "We found a cigarette lighter
an the open position near the
woman," Henderson said.
"We think s he may have
dropped it and it ignited her
clothing or the couch. But the fire
definitely originated in the._
couch.''
Henderson said there were two
possible explanations for the sud·
den blast of names that engulfed
the apartment in the triplex in
seconds.
"When the back Window Jet go,
the lire could have received a
draft, tpuchlng off the smoulder· ., .,,.,..; .. ~: h~~~e~~. and roaring through Nete Pr.e•• Clllel
He also said evidence of ex· Jody Powell grins as be
tremely charred carpeting in the hears President·elect Jim·
Uvtng room .and a dining room my Carter announce his ap·
points to a rapid flame spread p 0 i 0 t m c n t a s p r e s s over the carpet. .
rrs.
"The broken window may have secre~ary . It was the first
given it that ext.ra gustoloxy1en appointment ror Carter,
it needed to blast throu,gb t.be who plans to announce
apartment.''H.eudc~ soon. •~ I ' •
The meeting is the first
between Carter and the
secretary of state, whom Carter
and Mondale freq uently
criticized during the presidential
c ampaign . The session,
scheduled for 7:30 a.m. PST,
marks the highest-level con·
ference Carter has undertaken in
the transition period.
Carter and Mondale will be ac·
~ompanled at the Kissinger
briefing by David Aaron, who is
. their representative on transition
matters dealing with the Na·
(See CARTER, PageA2)
Schools to Reopen
Pact Discussions
'"'.::--.... Trustees and teachers in the SaddJeback Valley Unilied !:>c~l District have agreed to reopen negotiations in their
conflict over an employment contract.
Dr. Richard Welte. district s uperintendent, said the
agreement to continue contract talks as soon as possible
came during a s~cial meeting Monday night.
He said both teachers and trustees expressed a commit-
ment to conclude the process as soon as possible.
Although there has been no change in the positions
tajcen on the issues and trustees, the trustees chief
negotiator John '«a~er is being replaced by Welle.
The ~uperint~~said Wagner will be avrulable ior cons ultation.
CUSD Test Scores
Bolster District
By ANNE COOPER
Of tM Dally Piiot St31t
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
trict administrators say they are
pleased with recent district test
scores, but admit they recognize
certain soft spots in the instruc-
tional program.
Philip Grignon, assistant
superintendent for instructional
services, told district trustees
Monday that. although the
average IQ among CUSD stu·
dents is 103 (or about average>.
students generally scored 20 to 30
percent above the national
average on achievement tests.
In order to inform the com·
munity in what areas students
.are doing well. or not so well,
Superi ntendent Jer ome
Thomsley said he is preparing a
newspaper advertisement ti> pre·
sent district test results.
"We can't tell the newspapers
what to print in their stories on
test results." Thornsley said,
"and we want to be sur~ the com·
munity has the whole picture."
The superintendent sa1d the ad
will be paid for out of general
operating funds.
''It is not uncom<non for school districts to take out newspaper
ads," he said. ''Mtny school dis·
trict boards use this method to
make annual reports. I hav~ a
whole fiJe folder of such a<b."
TbomsJey said be did not know
whether CUSD adrninistntors
have placed similar newspaper
ads ln the past. ·
Thorruiley 1ald two areu oC
focus 1n the current ~ year
will be on spelling in elementary
• grades, because this was an area
in which students did not test as
well as expected.
Di$trict administrators will
also look hard at the differences
between instructional programs
at Dana Hills and San Clemente
High Schools, he said.
College bound' students at San
Clemente who teok the Scholastic
Aptitude Test scored 415 in
verbal skills, 437 in math. Dana
Hills scored 454 in verbal skills,
488 in math.
These results place Dana Hills
student s above a nd San
Clemente students below the na·
tional average of 431 in verbal,
472 in math aptitude.
Grignon said one reason Dana
Hills students outscored San
Clemente seniors is that Dana
Hills oHers two refresher
courses. one in math skills and
the other in grammar.
vocabulary and reading.
"We found t hat students at
Dana HJlJs who took the review
courses scored 15 to 30 poiJfts
higher on the SATs than stude'tts
who had not t aken the course,"
Grignon said.
"By the time students are in
their senior year, some skills de-
veloped in earlier grades have
dJed or disuse," he said. "They
have the 1km s, but a review can
have obvious imp;tct on test
scores.''
Grignon said PoPU)ation fac-
tors must also be considered in
enluaUn~ test aCOC"eS. He aaicl
(Sff T£STS, P&leA2) •
A2 DAILY PILOT SB_ Tue~ay, November 18, 1976
To Represeni Italy
SaddlebaCk M11lls~
10, 'U .N ~' Delegates
Saddle ba ck Vulley Unified
School District trustees are due
to consider authorizing a teacher
and nine students to attend the
Mode l Unite d Nations Co n
!ere n c e a t Th e H ague,
Netherlands when they meet
Wednesday.
Dr. Robert Ford. \he district's
director of secondary education,
s ajd Mission Viejo Hlgh Sc.>hool is
one of s ever al American high
Bond Vote
Postponed
Until May
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
t rict trustees chose Monday not
to call a school bond eleclion in
March, s aying a May election
wilJ allow more time to generate
s upport for the measure.
S upe r in te nd e nt J e r o m e
Thornsley told trustees he is op-
t imistic about voter confidence
in the Capistrano school district.
but doubts voters would s upport
school bonds at this ti me.
Tr ustee Sob Hurst proposed
the bond election be postponed
unW district emp•oye groups are
solidly in support of the measure.
The school board 1s currently
n egotia ting con tracts w ith
employe organi zations.
'·H a ppy t eachers , happy
cmployes will always support a
bond election,"' Tony Leon. presi-
dent of the Capistrano Unified
E ducati·onal Association, told
trustees.
"l cannot understand hnw
teachers C'an support ovt-r·
cro\.\ dcd classes.'· said Trustc('
Ted Kopp .. J\ bond election
should not be used as le\ eragt• in
contract negotiations "
Trustee Hurst said teachers
who oppose a bond election s1mp-
l y t o o ppose dist rict ad-
ministrators ar e taking the same
posture as voters who turn down
a bond measure hs ·ausc they are
a gainst h igher es. even
' though they have bee old pass-
ing bonds does not effectively af
feet taxes.
Superintendent Thornsley said
district administr ators are stu.
dying two possible elections a
bond ele<·tion and a lease·
purchase election. The first re
quires a two·thirds maJont~ vut1•
to pass. thl' second a simple m.1
JOrtt~
Thurnsk~ :.aid adm1nistr:itur-..
arr :.ib11 anah .oni.: \'Oler support
for an election to support con
stru1·1 ;on of new school bu1lchnJ?s
111 .ircom mod ate projN'lNI in
crc11-;cs an :-.ludcnl t·nrollmt•nt
KILLER ...
ecf l.:lmore \.\Olllfl allcmpt to
commit :.u1c11le lit• sa1tl he had
lntf'r\'1ew€'d <;11morl! .ind found
him frustr;1tNI
.Sm11h :.Jtd t.'arlwr !hat pn .. on
~1uthnritieor; wrrc aw:irr nf a
~u1ndt· p<1s..,1h1hty and wt•rt• luk
in~ pn·rnut1on-. Uul h1· h;"
<il'din1·d to d1..,t'Uli" those' precau
lions.
Mr-. Harrett. of Sprins.:\·il!t· h:i~ h<•i•n ,.1,1ttn~ ham daily an tht-
pn~on
Mr.; Rarrt>tt was ~aml.'fl Mon ·
d:1~· h('fnrt> v1sittnR Gilmore that
s hl' wa s known to htivl'
purcha sed sleeprng pills 11n prp
scn plion and must not brtng
them to the pri:son , drputy
Warden Leon Hatch said Mon
day
. Hatch said .~was subjected
to skin searches by a malron
before each of he v1s1ts and that
Gilmore w as searched before
and after each visit.
ORANGE COAST se
DAILY PILOT
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CMf .. t".L"' 111<""'4~.IUll
A"IU•nt M.t.-1101~ Editor'\
l•ddleb•ck Vellty Offlc. 2S10l L• P•1 RoiH •t S4M Of49' Prff-#1'1
Ofllctt Ol.l• Mo•• >JO ........ a.y5•-••vntlnoton AtMf\ ,,.,, ftl.Mh ~ .. ., ... 4 ~0""• &fitt." 1t .. Glotl"nlllV'•~ttMJ
~•l•phone (71c)M~21
Cl11elfled Advertllllng 642-5671
s.aot•Of<• \/•ttty ,.....,. Ott1<,
681·6310
rrom ~"' C•~tt C?5-06JC>
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f!M•"4 ,. ... """••• •"" ., c. ... -... C•llftt"'•· Sutuc,tptlott fty C'A"ltr U JO ::U::r.;,,:~:~::.~ -1~1y; 11\llllOTY
schools invited to particip<1te jn
the y6Utb confercnc~.
If approved . the-students will
be representin~ ltalv in debates
on current und rece nt interna-
tional issues.
The group, whicta will cover
their own expenses. would be in
E urope from Jan. 21 to Feb. 5.
The district's expense would in·
volve hiring a substitute teacher
for 10 days.
D••ly Pllol Sl•ll Pt>olo
'SOVIETS AHEAD'
Defense Expert Graham
Front Page A J
SOVIETS ...
d1s:.td\'antage sin<'l' we must
celH' m1t iutive to th(' other s1d(' "
Graham said "1\nd lhl' advan-
t:Jg(> of mlliall\ t' 1s worth m<1ny
m1s!:>iles. ships ttnd lives."
Despite "hat Graham term('d
a "dreaded scen;.irio ahcart, ·· he
said four r ecC'nt c:vents may help
to point the l · S . towards an ef
fort to re·establish military
superiority.
<.ir aham said speeches by
So,·iel derector Alexander
Sol1.hen1tsyn have reaffirmed lhc
\'iew that So"il'l Government is
oppressive rather than benign.
-The firing of Schlesinger
pointed out the ronnict between
detente and the need for an_m-
.crea~eq defe nse budget
Sonet use <)f Cuban troops in
Angola has highlighted the L'S
SR 's goal of \\orld domination
Hon aid Reagan's s trong
primary election run against a
rt'l.it1 vely C'l\nsl•n a t IVl' µresident
1nfnrml'd H>ll•rs of tlN'rcasing
l " S mt11tary strt·ngth
The irusf~es' m eeting i s
scheduted to begin at 8 p.m. in
the multipurpose room <et Lo$
Alisos lnlermedi ate School
Although the trustees past
several m eetings have been
dominated by the dis pute over
uns ettle d n egotiations with
teachers, teachers' leaders sa y
there are no demonstrations
planned for this meeting.
Trial Gag
Mulled for
Murder Rap
A s ani t y h ear ing for a
Fullerto n m a n a ccused of
murde r.· rape, kidnap and rob·
ber y was s ide lined today in
Orange County Superior Court
pending Judge William L. Mur-
ray's ruling on the role of the pre·
ss in the pretrial proceeding.
Judge Murray called news men
to h.is courtroom Monday in whal
a ppeared to be a move to resolve
a dilemma cre ated when t he
public defender 's office objected
to the presence of the press at the
sanity hearing scheduled for de-
fendant Ken Richard Hulbert, 24.
It was made clear by newsmen
during the conference with Judge
Murray and lawyers for both
sides tha t there could be no ques-
tion of their agreeing to any form
of voluntary censorshlp during
the hearing.
Judge Murray then comment-
ed tha t he m ight have to restri ct
pretrial coverage in the light of
deputy public defender Walter
Zech 's protest that certa in
psychiatric evidence he intends to
offer could be highly prejudicial
to Hulbert if made public ·at this
pornt
The move to bar the press was
not opposed b y the district at-
torney's office.
Hulbert is accused of the rape
and murder of Gina Marie Tis-
her. 19, of Whittier, whose nude
body was found last Jan. 2 in the
back of a car parked near a
Fuller ton apartment complex.
He faces further charges in
connection with his alleged rape
and attack on a Fullerton Com-
munity College student who told
police she was robbed, raped,
beaten and then thrown into a
ditch in the Irvine area last Jan. 6. . ..
Sad·eyed Sadie
Pooch Faces Pound Death
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Oil no D•••v P1lol Sl•fl
Sad-Eved Sadie still stood
guard today <>Vfr a Huntington
Reach homl' whose previous te
nant apparently moved out <.tnc1
left her behind with only an old
pot roast hone and h<'r faith.
Tod:i). 1t appeared the mix<.·<.1 -
breed dog who greeted Hob Mac-
Pht-e and his roommates may
end her days in the Orange Coun.
l\ Ani mal Sht•ltt>r
· MacPhN·. 20. of 20272 Village
Drive, Huntington Beach, his
brother F.d, 19. and their room-
mate Dave Watnmough. 20. CUT\·
not approach Sad ie.
She stands a faithful v1g1 I un
der a cactus plant beside the
front door, app;irenlly awaiting
the retu rn or an owner who isn 'l
coming back
"We m oved in Sunday and she
went after Ed twice. Don •t gettoo
close ... , .. MacPhee warned.
Sadie finally settled on her
ha unches. her time-bleached and
tooth-gna wed bone beside her.
But s he made it clear the peo-
ple must stay a way.
Sadie ta kes up a position of de-
fen~e in the rear yard by he r bone
when anyone approaches he r
lookout beside the front door.
"She looks like she's scared to
death all the t ime. She always
has he r tail be tween her legs,"
says MacPhee. a drywall worker
who recently moved out from his
native Princeto n, New Jersey.
Fro.a· Page A J
"Maybe s he did used to live
her e a nd got lost. and when she
found her wav back her owners
had gone," he.s peculated.
A real estate agent told Mac·
Phee the previous tenanL-; moved
out two weeks ago but the firm
had no knowledge of a dog li ving
at tha t a ddress, in a tract
bounded by Adam s a nd In-
dianapolis avenues and Bushard
a nd Magnolia streets.
MacPhee conceded they must
have owned Sadie and j ust said
nothing to avoid a possible rent
increase to cover pet da mage.
"She's just a mutt," MacPhee '
!lays of the golden·eyed black and
white dog who waits dutifully by
the front door. "But she thinks
·she lives here."
"We get a lot of calls about
loose dogs. bul a lot of them have
just been aba ndoned," observed
Police Officer Chris Schneider,
whom MacPhee contacted about
Sad-Eyed Sadie.
"A lot of people get pets." he
said. ''and then they jus t don't
care.''
Prof Booked
I
Mter Irvine
Disturbance
Conversotio11 Pieee Dilly P1lol Pllolo ov Ltt P•1fltt,
Larry Sharman of Costa Mesa saw this old
cannon at a s wa p meet and decided it was
just wha t he needed. So he brought it
home and put it in the front yard of his
home at 292 Flower St., much to the de·
light of Nancy Carmody, 14; Kathleen
Sharman, 10 ; Kim Lisk, 11. and r.laureen
Sharman, 14 (from left). Sharman's wife
says it makes it hard to mow the front
lawn. The lady across the street asked
Sharman to aim the cannon at some other
house.
.,
'Scar on Your Brain'
Foster Child File8 $500,000 Damage Suit ..
SAN FRANCISCO (AP > -
Dennis Smith is in his 17th year
and his 16th foster home. "It's
like a scar on your brain," he
says.
"I want p eople to r ealize
what's nappeni ng t o foster
children." he adds.
And he has filed an unusual
laws uit with that purpose in
mind. '
The suit, filed in Alameda
County Superior Court on Mon·
day, asks damages or $500,000
from the county social service
agency and officials of the public
school system the re.
Smith claims the agency told
his mother he would be placed
for adoption but sent him instead
to one foster home after another.
He says the schools accepted
what he called a mistaken
diagnosis that he was mentally
f'rowe Page Al
TESTS •••
Laguna Beach studen~ tested
better than Capistrano students,
in part, because the Laguna
Beach• p o pul ation is less
transient and more afOuel)t.
"Laguna lieach parents pro·
bably put g rea ter emphasis on
education." he sa id. "And final·
ly. it is important lo remember
t hat Laguna Beach spends
mor e money per student than we
do."
Trustee Bob Hurst asked about
the neighboring SaddJeback dis-
trict. Grignon said socio-
economic factors apply to a com-
parison with that district as well.
Capistrano state percentile
scores for twelfth grade students
a re: r eading , 82; written ex-
press ion , 80.: spe lling, 82;
mathematics, 73 .
The r anks for Laguna Beach
seniors are: reading, 19; written
e xpression, 78; spelling 81;
mathe matics. 91.
Saddle bac k Valley Unified
seniors scored : r eading, 85; writ-
ten expression. 83; spelling, 88;
mathematics, 83
Handicapped
Needs Eyed
Improvement of facilities to
accommodate the h'andicapped
will be one item of discussion Fri·
day at a meeting of the South
Orange County chapter of the
California Associ a tion of
Phys i c all y Handi c apped
CCAPH).
The meeting is scheduled for.
7:30 p.m. at Marco Forster
Junior Hi g h S c hool, 25601
Camino de! A vi on in San Juan
Capistrano.
The meeting is open to anyone.
interested in resoutces and op·
portunilies for the handicapped,
said Cleova Weinert, president.
Additional information is availa-
ble by calling Mrs. Weinert,
496·2836.
ret arded and put him in classes
for the handicapped.
''If I had known I was going to
spend the first 16 years of my life
this way, I'd rather have been
dead. I'd wished my mother could
have aborted me,•' said DeMis.
Dennis was born in Oakland on
Oct 5, 1959. His two legal aid
lawyers say county records are
unclear whe re he spent his first
21~ months. He doesn't know who
his parents a re or where he got
the name "Smith."
Early in 1960 he was placed
with a couple already caring for
one foster child. Then came more
homes and a couple of strelcbes
in public orphanages.
He was placed last September
J in his present foster home, where
his attorneys s ay he is "r e-
asonably content."
But. he said in an interview.
"It's not like having parents ..
The relationship was somewh
distant. When you want to talk
your foster parents, you' e
always afraid that what you say
will go into the book.•' He was r&.
ferring to records that are keptfo~
officials on fost.er children's de-1 velopmentand behavior.
Dennis, a high school jU11ior}
said if he wins the lawsuit be will
use m ost of the money to lobbf
for legislation to overhaul the
foster parent system.
In Oakland. Alameda County
officials refused to comment on
specifics of the case, bul Librado
Per ez, dire ctor of the Social
Services Agency, said : '
"Regardless of the outcom~.
we are r e-examining our opera·
tion to determine whether im-
provements can be made or if
preventive stef s can betaken. •·.l.-
Kidnap, Assault
Muslim Sentenced
To Life in Prison
Black Muslim sect member
Saladin Ibo Khan Bismillah was
sentenced Monday to life in
prison after being found guilty of
raping, kidnaping and assaulting
a youn g Huntington Beac h
woman who was also forced to
particJpate i n acts of sexual
~rversion.
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Everett Dickey ordered
the maximum term on the multi·
p ie jury convictions for
Bismillah. 29, who was known as
Robert Stanley Woods before he
adopted his Muslim title.
It was estimated in court Mon-
day that it will be at least 15
years before Bismillah can seek
parole from sentences imposed
by Judge Dickey.
In any event, it was explained,
Woods faces further criminal ae·
tio!'I for the previous parole on •a
rape and assault conviction he
violated when he committed his
crimes in Orange CoWlty. "'
Sheriff's office rs patrolling '"
sector or Santa Ana Canyon la~l
June 14 s aid they found Bismillat\
in the act of raping hls 18-yeai"·
old victim in the backofh.is van. u
The wo man testified that
B.ismilla h forced her into the
vehicle as she g<>t out of her ctif
in Huntington Bea('h, robbed her
and then repeat edJy raped her
after drjving her to the remote
location.
Four Marines Face
• ... Charges ID Fight ...
Four Camp Pendleton Marines
were in custody toOay; awaiting
possible court-martial trials
because of an attack which sent a
half-dozen others to the base
hospital.
The injured men. including
four with sta b wounds , wer e
described as white and those in
cus tody as blac ks. A white
County Plan
Board Topic
Marine said the blacks invaded a
,barracks while the whites wer~
huving a party last Saturda.v
night and attacked them in the
mistaken belief the men wer~
white-power activists.
A s pokeswoman al Camp
Pendleton said four whiles were
still under treatment at thw
Naval Medical Center for slab
w o und s infl ic t e d b y a
scre wdriver. She said all six
whites we re also beaten.
An investigation was under
way to dete rmine if the four, all
unidentified publicly, must face
trials.
•
CARTER ••.
tional Security Council and in·
telligence acli vi ties.
Irvine police arrested a UC
Irvine professor Monday night
for disturbing the peace after
loud shouts from a restaurant
bar disrupted the nearby c~
Council meeting.
Police said _they booked the
man in Orange County Jail on the
misdemeano?' charge, with bail
set at $150.
The 1 assoc:iate professor dis-
turbed the City Council meetiflg,
police s aid when he allegedly
made several loud yells from the
ba r are a or t he Don Vito's
restaurant lo the Town Center
complex.
,Death·s Tied
Despite Lag
County P l anning Co m
missioner William McDougall
will talk about the Orange Coun-
ty Platining Commission during
a general meeting or the Sad-
dleback Area Coordinating Coun-
cil (SACC) Wednesday.
The meeting will begin at 7:30
p.m. in the commµnity room of
the Peoples Federal Savings and
Loan Building, 23688 El Toro Rd.,
Indian Guides
Set Breakfast
The Broken Sance Nation ~
theSaddleback VaJleyYMCA Jn-
dian Guides will i:ierve pancak~
a nd s aus age Saturday Crom ~
n.m. to noon at Universi\y Weil
School in Irvine.
Cnrte r is beginning what he
says Is a "careful and thorough
and dellbernte" proccs~ to naml'
the top officials who wlll help him
run the gove rnme nt.
Carter met Saturday for
several hours with Dean Rusk.
secreltt ry of State under John F.
Kennedy nnd .Lyndon 8. Jol)nson
and now a law proressor at the
University of Georgia.
Police said they warned the
professor once that he was dis·
turbing the Cit y Counqtl meeting
and ar r ested him w~en be al·
legeclly f allcd to sto.P. abouting. ,
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Two
pathe>logists have testiCied in the
trial of accused skid row slas her
V3uahn Orrin Greenwood that
therfl were similarities in a series
of killln~s 10 years apart.
Dr. Robert Bucklin, a deputy
county medical examiner, told
jurors the method used in the 1964 11nd 1974 and '75 killings was .. quite similar.'' ,
El Toro. '
McDougall, a Laguna Niguel
resident. waR appointed ,{O the
fifth supervisorial spot on the
commission last spring. He is n
former executive diredor and
c ouns el to the County
S upervis ors Association ol
Californ\a. ,
Tickets are $1.25 and can tMt
used as coupons for $1 off aay
Shakey's family pizza In frvlM..
or Laguna Hills, said Rop:
Hoover, Indian Guide chief.
The high school Is located af
4771 Campus Drive. Additional
information Is ovalloblc by c~U:
ing GJenn Loraen, &30-5674 . ,