HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-11-24 - Orange Coast Pilotl
f.7.6 Tem"lll.or Dbrst Since '39 •
I
I
I
edieal Direetor Offieials int
Baits Fairview's . Spru·ee Goose
atient Overload May Fly Again
•
DAILY PILOT
* * * 1oc * * * ~ "·
WEDNES DAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 24, 1976 In Torture ~ase
VOl.. 6', HO. m , l SECTIONS, lt PAGES
AP Wl"""61o
FAIRVIEW HOSPfTAL NOW CLOSED TO NEW PATIENTS
Auembfymen C•rpenter, Falrv6ew'a Levine Meet Pre11
Patient O verload
Ended at F aimiew
By ARTHtJR R . VINS EL Ot .. 0.11, ... ..,,...,
No new paUenu except for a
hand.picked few are being ad-
mitted to Costa Mesa's Fairview
State Hospital because they can-
not get rroper treatment, acting
medica director Dr. Michael
Levine declared Tuesday. ·
And, be an1rily noted in an in-
~ew. the bospltJl.l is still try-
ing lo find an outside borne for
.J 'NEGLIGENCE' CAUSE
OF MENTAL 0£A1"S, AS
one or two babies placed tn the
1,700-plus-populatian who isn't
retarded at all.
"We bad at leaat two babies ad-
mitted in tbe past year who are
not retarded at all. They had
neurological problems," the out-
the retarded and physically han-
dicapped.
"But we are restricting ad-
mission to those we can provide
good programs for," he em-
phasbed.
Since his accession to the
directorship after gaining the ear
ol Don Z. Miller, California's de-
puty director of health, Dr.
Levine bas undertaken a major
housecleaning job at the hospital.
He has pointed out the hospital
is understaffed to such a severe
degree that often only one
psychiatric technician (PT) is
av.ailable lo care for 20 clients, a.s
they are called, rather than pa-
tients.
The age range of these
physically a nd ment.ally han-
dicapped ranges from a few days
• spoken chlld psychJatrist says.
Appointed upon for~er
JnedtcaJ director Dr. Anthon N.
Toto'• abl'Upt forced reslgna on
in July, Dr. Levine, 35, appeared
et a Loe Anreles news conference
T\aellctay wlth his announcement.
<See PAlaVJEW, Pace,\!)
•
"At the current time, we cu
pro•lde 1ood cuatodlal care,
food, clotblna and abelter and
there are aome Wands of ex-
eellent treatment," h e aald,
apeaklq of certain Jll'Oll'&l'M for
1
I
5 Children Saved
LULING, La. (AP) -A Ugh\
airplane crashed oolo a street,
bounced across a lawn. smu bed
tnlo a house and &battered into
wreckage that spewed among
live cbUdren playing outaJde.
'The pilot was killed but the
childten were unhurt.
•
Minister
Punishes
Hunger
DUNDEE , Fla. (AP)-A man
caught m a king a bo logna
sandwich in a chur~h was sent to
jail because the minister felt it
was his Christian duty "to ap-
prehend t hose involved in
criminal acts."
Virgil Hughes, 52, a migrant
farmworker employed on a local
farm, said he was outside the
Dundee Baptist Church on Sun-.
day, penniless and unable to re-
member the last time he had
eaten. A passerby suggested he
try the church kitchen, be told
police.
Hughes said he walked through
an open door and was fixing a
sandwich when the minister, the
Rev. James Lockwood, found
him and called police.
Officer Ron Sellgren said be
found no evidence of forced entry
and no burglary tools.
"He had nothing on him but a
can of pipe tobacco," Sellgren
said.
But Mr. Lockwood said he
caught Hughes filling a bag with
groceries.
"And of course I don't know
what else he was going lo take,"
hesald.
Hughes was taken to police
headquarte rs, where he told
authontie-. his story. Asst. Polk
County State Attorney Al Smith
then 'decided that be could be
cbarced only with trespassing, a
misdemeanor. Hughes was set
free.
But Smith said Mr. Lockwood
called him later to complain
about the r elease. The ministec
claimed that the church was
locked and Hushes broke in,
~See BOLOGNAt Pa«e A2)
1WO ems sow
ON FIRST CAIL
"The flnt call did the job. Last
year I advertised ln the Dally Pilot, and sold a Pinto -also oa
the ll~call." Tbet' the edvertiling success
story ld by a Costa Mesa man
who pla;cecl um clauifled ad;
•75 Duster1 fully equip.
Low ml, XJnl cond. ~
Call anytime ux-xnx
U you'd Ute to ccavert a car, « anyt.hinC else, lo cub -call
6'2-5678. It pays to put the Daily
Pllot lo work for you. I
llundre ds Die
Major Quake
Hits Tt1rkey
ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP ) -A
major earthquake struck an area
or eastern Turkey near the Soviet
border today. killing hundreds
and causing widespread destruc-
tion, the Turkish state radio re-
ported.
. The Kandilli Obse.rvatory in
Istanbul put the magnitude at 7.6
on the Richter scale. The ob-
servatory said the quake hit at
2:2Sp.m. (4:25 a.m. PST) and had
its epicenter in a mountainous
area of Van Province !K>O miles
eastoflstanbul.
"It was the worst tremor to hit
Turkey since the one that re-
gistered 7.9in Erzincan and killed
about 30,000 in 1939," the Kandilli
observatory said.
A spokesman at the U.S. Na-
tional Earthquake Information
Center in Golden. Colo., said he
thought the quake caused "con-
siderable" damage because the
May Fly A.g a i n
area is populated and has many
older buildings.
He put the location at about 20
miles west of Yerevan in the Sov-
iet Union.
The Impact in the Soviet Union
was thought to be minimal, ac-
cording to initial reports from the
seismic station in Tbilisi, Soviet
Georgia.
The Richter scale gauges the
energy released by a quake in
terms of ground motion recorded
on a seismograph. Quakes of
magnitude 7 can cau se
widespread , heavy damage. The
earthquake in Guatemala that
took 23,000 lives this year had re-
adings as high as 7 .s.
A radio bulletin said 500 people
were killed in the district of
Muradlye and 25 in Ercis and that
95 percent or the houses were
destroyed in those areas.
<See QUAKE, Page A%)
Public Gets Gander
At 'Spruce Goose'
LONG BEACH (AP> -Hidden
29 years in a cavernous hangar, Howard Hughes' giant wooden
fiying boat, the Spruce Goose, is
back in the public eye -and gov-
ernment. officials say they may
even try to take it aloft.
1be late bUllonaire's SWnma
Corp., the conglomerate that
nm.s HuJbee' empire, released a
seriel ol pbotocrapbs ol the plane 'tuelday, i.ncludJnJ one taken in
1947 abowin& Hughes t.alklng to
tecbntdana Inside the bis
maclllne.
lt. wu the firs{ public ,iance at.
the plaoe al.nee it made its loo•
f'Upt, lkiaaaam• alona '10 feet
above the water for less than. a
mlle, on Nov. 2, lt47, wltb
Hubes at Ute con~.
SI.e then, It haa been locked
in it.a hangar at. the harbor here
under 24-bour 1uard. The only outsider known to
have seen It regularly is a fin! ln·
apectoron monUllyround.s.
One official said despite the
Ions ateep, the plane -actually
callN the Hercules Jilyin& Boal
-•<Os in mint condition."
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration and the
Navy say they are inter~ted in
the Goose as part of a vehicle re-
search project.
Adm. Carl Seiberlich said,
<See Rt1GBES, Pate AU
Police Honor
Slain Officer
Officers from many Orange County law enforcement agen-
cles were among the 1,000 penons Who turned out Tuesday
to pay last res~cts to slain
CJPl'elS Police Sgt. Donald J . Sowma.
The 44-year-old f atber of four
.was ibot to death last Friday u
he and two other Cypress olftcers
invaU1at.ed a burglary at an art
Callery.
Arrested and charged with the
slaytna was Bobbr Joe DeMey.
32, ot Hawa~an Gardens.
VictiID
Chained,
Mutilated
ANTIOCH (AP)-NancySams
says she was chained and mutilat-
ed wtlh knives, a gun and bot
screwdriver by a man who held
her and her two children captive -
for four weeks.
Police Lt. Ray Shively saicl
Tuesday the 28-year-old victim
escaped Sunday and was
,hospitaUzed with two toes and an
index finger missing, at least five
gunshot wounds, a severely
damaged eye and her vagina
sewn up. · James C. Lanier, 45, who had
been living with Miss Sams about
four months. was arrested at their
home and was booked for in·
vestieation of mayhem and as·
sault with a deadly weapon.
"Sbets ~ritlcal but stable," saJd
Shively. '"The loss ol sight in one
eye is possJble. Her eye was poked
out with a hotscrewdriver."
Miss Sams aJso had been beatett
about the chest and stomach. and
her hair was cutoff, Shively said.
Police said she told them Lanier
kept her chained at night, but r~
leased her during the day. She
said his vigilance relaxed Sunday
and she fled in a car to a friend'a
home with her children, aged 'I
and 5, and notified police.
The children had been beaten.,
(See TORTURE, Page A%)
Coast
Weath er
Patchy late night and
early morning dense fog
throu1h Thursday. Tem-
peratures to remain about
the ilame, bJghs 70, lows
about SO.
INSIDE T ODAY
s~cond bauman Joe
Morgan of the CincinDatt Redt
it tM Natiottal Leog!W1 most
oaJualU pia~er .. again. StorJ/,
86.
Index
A'-~~Q
••
, At •• A4
Al ., .. ... , ...., •• A .. 11 •• • •
,_a2 DAILY PILOT S Wednesday, Novembef 24, 197&
Hinshaw to Jury
D~.~=tiom-~~~~ct A~•~•~C::.'!:!u.!~~~
oi .. o.11,.,11tu4llf Willlam Evans and defense al-Hinsbaw's concressional cam-The_jury began deliberations torney John McNicholas ap. prup.
q,day m the second Orange Coun-pea.red to give special attention. Hin.shaw's alleged role in the
t)' Superior Court trial of to prosecution witness George dlvers1on of county manpower
Congressman Andrew Hinshaw. • Upton iJuring their final appeals and materials to his election et-
Judge Frank Domenlchinl sent to the jury. fort led to his being charged with
his panel of seven men and five McNicholas asked the jury to. conspiracy, grand theft, em-
women to the jury room aft.er ad-r eject that testimQny because beulement and misuse of public
ding two more brief instructions Upton, a former key aide in the funds.
to the directives they received offi~ when Hinshaw was county McNicholas asked the jury 10
before final arguments were de· assessor in 1972, acted Crom rem e mber that Hins haw's
-.livered Tuesday. motives of pe.-sonal ambition signature is not to be found on
• · any one 9f the pile of vacation
Gag Snagged
Murderer, 11, Can Be Named
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court
today s truck down, at least temporarily, an
Oklahoma judge's order limiting news media report-
ing of a case involving an ll·year-old boy convicted of
murder .
slips~d overtime checks sub-
mill by assessor employes that
work don the campaign.
And he reminded jurors of Up-
ton's own admission from the
stand that Hinshaw told him
alter the .N e wport Beac h
Republican took out his filing
papers that any assessor 's
employes who wanted to work for
him would have lo do so on their
own time.
The court set aside a "gag order" imposed by
Oklahoma County District Judge Charles E. Halley,
which prohibited news reporters from publishing or
broadcasting the boy's name or photoJ!raph -even
though both had been widely displayed before -until
he was 18. ·
McNicholas claimed that Up-
ton. who has been fined and who
ser ved a jail term for his role in
the cons piracy. acted from
motives of personal gain when he
drafted assessor's employes to
work for Hinshaw.
"He had the seventh spot on the
assessor's ladder and he wanted
the third spot," Mc Nicholas said.
"'And he got il."
HOWARD HUGHES (IN HAT) TALKS TO ENGINEERS INSIDE SPRUCE GOOSE IN 1947 ,
Same Seat• Remain In Giant Airplane, Now Befng Con•ldered for Navy U••
The court's refusal to go along with the Okla-
homa judge was in keeping with its ruling last sum-
mer in a much-publicized Nebraska murder case. In
that case, the Supreme Court came close to outlawing
such reporting restrictions.
' The boy was arrested last July and later convict-
ed of delinquency by second-degree murder in the
I shooting death of an Oklahoma City railroad
1 switchman.
After initial reporting about the case mentioned
the boy's name and displayed his picture, Halley is-
sued a pretrial order banning such mention.
Eeonomist Says
Southlaml Homes
Near 'Peak' Price
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Home
prices in the metropolitan Los
Angeles area cannot continue to
increase al their present rate, a
leading bank economist said to-
day.
Conrad Jamison, vice presi-
dent and urban economist for
Security Pacific Bank here, also
warned that people who have
gone heavily into debt in order to
purchase homes could be hurt.
"Ma ny people have bought
homes they cannot afford in the
belief that, if they wcut, prices
will continue to soar and their
ability to buy a home will be even
less in the future," Jamison said.
"Also. many people are buying
in the hope that later increases in
their income will rescue them.
And there is the common feeling
that. if the burden become1> too
great, one can always sell and
take a prom.
"There is an element of un-
reality in the whole picture,''
Jamison told a group of Glendale
realtors, "and one can only
wonder when. and how, sanity
will return.·•
Jamison said prices for homes
in the Los Angeles area have
been increasing at a rate of about
E',....P~.4J
TORTURE. • but not severely. police said. They
were being cared foTbyrelalives.
Investigators s aid jealousy was
apparently the moli ve.
. Fog in Bay Area
By Tbe AH~l•ted Press
Thanksgiving Day will start
out roggy and cloudy in most sec-
tions of Northern California, but
turn fair in the same degree with
HlUe temperature change.
OAANOE COAST s
DAILY PILOT
ll'!~~(H\t 0.Uy Pt'°' wHft~l\cO'n~
ftot"4'\1 thA N"""" Ptt'-1 1, PUt)ii\NODy t,_..O...,..,.
• ~,, Pvb41\t\tfW» CO""O•f'IY ~ ... f'CMW)n\ ~·
0"&tt\"°fd Mo"<l4'f '"''f'V.,. ''HMV fOt (tKI• -\.I ~""'90f't h 4'C" HU~llftG'Ol"I 0-«hl~OW" H I" Vall•v. frw1fll11>, \4ddltlltrr.t<--V•llflf •ftd v_.. ..... ,Sou1•C..•l .,,_,..._,..,,.
hOl'I I\ 0Ubl1\ftt'-d Sttv,dtvt ...., \uM.tV\ ,..,_. r.;::~~~:;:~.~.·.:~iZn~• .,, ~,
•-nN WtW
Prt\HWf'lt •M P\l!Nj\Mf' Joe•• c .. i.. V• ~ Prf'\•dfont •ftd C..nH..tM.tf\"O'~ ., ... ,.. ........
(OifOf'
no.-··~ ~ ........ l ....
Cllut.• M 1.... •le,..,. I' ''°" ... ,~t\1~t lN~•OI~ LCIOon
Oftlce1
C'.o\l•Mf\I J)OWf\18.tVSI .....
l."9""4kK•: llN O-.r.StrMf .,...,u..., ... ,,.,., u•n &o.M• -'-•••d '"°'•Ot<~ VIII .. 1no1 lll I'•••-•t k'°' Ot•oo ~'.....,,•Y
Telephone ('714)~1
CIHIJllld Advertlel119 '42·5'TI
\OOdltbo<~ VlllfY N ... Of!kt
511 .. 310
,,,....laftC-le
4ff..oao
"'"" No<lll 0.-,_, °"""'"""' ...
$1.000 a month recently.
He said home prices in Glen-
dale are about 50 percent hi gher
than they were two years ago and
that the average price of a single·
family home in Los Angeles
County has gone up 24 percent in
the last year.
"This boiling market has been
red by rampant 'inflation fever'
and by speculation," he said.
..Obviously. this is a situation
that cannot continue indefinitely.
Eventually , something will have
to give."
FroaaPageAJ
BOLOGNA. •
Smith said.
"It's pretty hard to -convin~e;.
me or anyone else that a church
shouldn't be open on Sunday
morning," Smith said.
Nonetheless. the minister filed
a complaint. and Hughes was ar-
rested on burglary charges.
"I told the man I would stand
up with him in court," Mr.
Lockwood said. "I told the fellow
that l was more concerned that
he find God's plan for life.
"I've given my life to helping
others." the minister said. "I
don't want him harmed, but I feel
as a Christian that I have a duty
to society lo apprehend those in-
volved in criminal acts."
Mr. Lockwood said he wouJd
ask the state attorney iC Hughes
could be released on his own re·
cognizance. He also said he's in-
vited Hughes to join hjm for
Thanksgiving dinner.
Said Hughes: "l will never go
into another church."
Upton, compell ed to resign
from his job after being indicted
by the grand jury, is now work·
ing as a used car salesman.
Evans countered with the
argum ent that Upton was
nothing more than llinshaw's er-
rand boy, "who did anything his
boss told him to do."
Evans reminded the jury or
testimony by several of more
than 50 witnesses that Hinshaw
called for a list of available as-
sessor's employes and put check
marks against the names of those
he wanted to work on his cam-
paign.
"I ask yo u to fix the
respon si bility where it
belongs," Evans said. "And it
belongs right on the shoulders of
this defendant.''
Jud~e Domenichini said he w111
give the jury a four-day.
Thanksgiving weekend break if a
verdict is not reached today.
E'ro..PageAl
QUAKE ...
Turkish news agencies report·
ed that at least half a dozen
villages were wiped out.
Soldiers stationed in the area
were assigned to rescue work.
All communications with the
provincial center of Yan and its
outlying a reas were cut.
"We are afraid the death toll is
high in Muradiye and surround·
ing villages," said Burhan Yavuz
Yilmaz, deputy governor of Yan
Province.
The Kandilli Observatory said
M uradiye was at the epicenter.
The Province of Van lies on the
quake-prone Anatolia fault,
which reaches from Turkey's
Aegean coast south toward the
Mediterranean and north along
the Black Sea coast. Then it turns
south, covering eastern Turkey.
A quake in the southeastern
town of Lice last year killed 3,000
people.
5 Die in Crash
ESCALON (AP> -An Escalon
man and four youths have been
killed in a headon collision on
State Route 120 near here, the
highway patrol reported. Of-
fi cers said John Nixon Hazard,
28, was driving east on the
highway Tuesday night when his
car crossed the center line for an
unknown reason and struck
another vehicle carrying four
youths .
..... ,220
Olen ..... ,..,. Ott-~ 11\MI ...... Ciwll-
-· lot '"'""' ''°'"•· '""'"~ ........ . ....... ., ., ....... , .... ,._.f'h ""'''" ..... ..
Here CmReS the Q11ee11
SPRUCE GOOSE STILL IN 'MINT CONDITION'
Plane Flown Only Once, by Hughes Himself
Fro•Page.41
FAIRVIEW CASELOAD. • •
into the seventies or eighties.
Standards applied in staffing
and accrediting California state
hos pitals we r e attacked at
Tuesday's press conference both
by Dr. Levine and State Senator-
elect Paul Carpenter .
The Santa Ana Democrat, cur·
rently a state assemblyman, at·
tacked both priorities set, fund ·
ing methods and a recent
approval of Fairview by the Joint
Commission on Hos pital Ac-
credjtation. Represe ntatives of J CHA
earlier this year rated the
hos pital as one of the highest in
the nation in its treatment and
therapy programs in addition to
hundreds of gr aded s upport
services.
.. We are outraged at the stan-
dards of care in the California
State Hospit al system," As-
semblyman. Carpenter sa1d.
He charged the private agency
which operates on a nationw1de
basis waived particular licensing
standards to allow hospitals to
continue receiving federal aid
funds.
If JCHA standards are not met,
these funds are cut off.
''The State of California has a
con!lict of interest in setting· stan-
dards and examining its own
hospitals," Carpenter asserted.
Not long ago, Dr. Levine set up
an ad hoc committee to review
procedures at Fairview, which in
recent years has. worked with a
system of 10 special programs,
each devoted to a specific han-
dicapped group by age and
ability.
The University of Illinois
graduate had already introduced
a plan to reduce use of tranquiliz·
ing drugs on patients, bucking
the syst~m before Dr. Toto was
deposedt
He charged in a recent in·
terview state hospitals have ac-
tually been used as dumping
grounds for unwanted han·
dicappcd ch il.dr en too
troublesome for parents to han-
dle.
"We had at least two babies ad-
mitted Jast year who are not
mentally retarded. They had
neurological bandicaos," he ex-
plained. "One is no lonier here
but there is Nancy. we're trying
to get her out now.''
"The eUect on institutionalized
babies is d evastatin1. They
quickly 'learn how' lo become re-
tarded," Dr. Levine added.
"One recenUy that particular-
' ly made me angry involved a kid
Lhey tried to Jret in for a behavioral disorder. _ .he only
has a hearing disability.''
Despite skepticism byparent.al
groups and the hospital's five-
man Advisory Board, Dt. Levine
is proceeding with his methods of
improving treatment and care
programs at the Costa Mes a
hospital.
He says many more who live
there could be bal1dled through .
regional centers, which general-
ly operate on a eouncy-leyel basis
or over several c00otles ln tbe
case of smaller. rural counties.
, .. ,HWCtd .. 11 ... v1 '"''"' -...iu1 ... et e,..,,.,.MtrM,.
5«•"4 c•to ._., ......... CM•• MtM 0111••~··· h•ttrt•ll•fl "' t ff•I•• ~ M :.:::r....~"':w~:. -·••t. ''"' ,.,
Wlth the queen's bodyauard aod the
yeomen of the guard lining the route,
Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip ent~
london1 Royal Gallery of the Palace of.
Westminster in procession to the Chamber
of the House of Lords for the official open· ing oJ Parliament.
Hls own yo'1n'geat child,
Steven, 6, is ment.ally retarded
and his treatment and educa·
tional therapy provams are
handled by the Orance County
Re1iooal Center.
• •
•
E',....POffe.4J
HUGHES •••
"We 8.re trying to decide if a•
large seaplane is viable as a
future naval vehicle."
Other possible uses reportedly
include a mobile launch bed for
intercontinental ballistic mis-
siles or as a test site over water
for experimental nuclear pro-
pulsion.
The craft -whlch is not really
made of much spruce, it's large-
ly plywood and birch -became a
point or honor with Hughes, wh.o
was criticized for its multi:
mllUon dollar cost.
The 200-ton flying boat cost the
government $18 mlllion anq
Hughes , who designed it ·
personally, many times that
amount.
"I have put the sweat of my life
into this thing," Hughes told a
congressional inquiry into the
plane.
"If it fails, I will leave this
country. And I mean it!"
The craft is actually owned by
the fJOVernment, the Gener~!
Services Adminislrallon, with
Summa paying $800 a month to
rent it -plus untold main.
tenance and hangar costs. .
Its eight engines are said to
have been rited up once a month.
NASA research engineer John
McTigue said he was "surprised.
at the shape H's in alter 3()
years."
''It has been kept in a fairly con-
trolled environment. They have
air blowing over the surfaces
continually, trying to keep the'
temperatures of the vehicle and'
the air exactly the same sothere'
will be no condensation or cor-
rosion "he said. ' • I ~
No agreements or commit-
ments have been made about re-
s urrecting t he Goose bui
estimates to ready the plane rof
flight range from $.1 million to $.S
million.
' The three-story tall plane, 22$
feet long with a wingspan of 33l
feet, was built of wood to save on
metal, scarce in World War IL·
The plane was designed to carry'
7S0troops_
The GSA acquired ownership.
of the plane in 1949 from the Wax
Assets Administration, which
financed its construction.
Bligh Diary
Snapped Up
For$90,730
LONDON (AP) -A small:
water·stained notebook used by •
Capt. William Bligh as a log after .
his mutJnyinl crew of HMS'.
Bounty had cast him adrift in a ·
rowboat, was sold In jWJt SS'
seconds for $90, 730 at a Christie's ·
auction today. '~
The leather-bound book, in
which Bligh noted every i..ncldent
in his six-week, 3,500-mile
voya1e in the Boumy's launch
with a handCul of companions,
was bought by Maggs, the Lon-
don firm of boo1tsellen w.bich re-'
fuaed to say for Whom il wu act-
ing.
Apart from navlaaliona\
c:aJculalions, Bll&h jotted ~
rough sketches of some South Sea
islands showing his boat's rOQle .
through the Barrier Reef and
along the coast of AWJtralla to
salet.yin Tim or.
Bligh also set down some of his ·
lbou1bts and teara during the
voyqe. ··
"We now anxiously pray tG
make land • • -no algbt of it," b., 1
wrote just before reacbln~
Timor. And "klnd Providenc:t'
protects wi wonderfully, but it t•' a moet unhappy sltuatioo to be ln
a boat amona aucb dilcontent9'
people who don't know Whal to be
at or wbat la best for them,•• be
, W1'0t4 on another occaaioft. • '
..
Mexican
Strike
LExtends
MEXICO CITY (APJ -bus1-
•aesamen and Industrialists de-
fied a presidential call for na.
lional unity today and joined Ian-
-downers in a nationwide strike to
protest the president's land re· 1 diatribution program.
The strike at the height of the
worst economic crisis in Mexico
'in decades was against land ex·
propriations by Presjdent L~is ~heverria in northwest Mexico
and what the Chamber of Mining
Industries called hi\ "search for
a Sociali«>t o r Communist
system."
The government seized more
than 243,000 acres last week to
coovert them into small rarms
for 8,000 landless peasant
families. The government
claimed the land was owned by
-..12 families in violation of laws
limiting each farmer to approx-
imately 250 acres. The lan-
downers said it was owned by
more than 800 people. many or
whom were admittedly related.
Carlos Sparrow. an organizer
of the nationwide protest, said
business and industrial groups in
41 cities in 11 Mex.Jean states
were participating in the one-day
strike.
Merchants in the nation's two
largest cities, Mexico City and
Guadal ajara, did not
.participate. The Mexico City
Chamber of Commerce said It
had not been invited.
"Businessmen in those cities
have yet to feel the problem to
the extent that it has been felt in
the rest of the country," Sparrow
said.
He sa id the s trike was
widespread in Monterrey, the na
tion 's industrial center. where
Sparrow said even local buses
would stop their runs for about 30
minutes every l wo hours lo pro-
test against the president. Most
of the conservative opposition to
Echeverria orig mated in Monter-
rey early in his six-year term
which ends a week from today
with the inauguration of
President-el<•cl Jose Lopez
Portillo.
BART Train
Comes Apart,
OAKLAND (A P > -A Bay Arca
Rapid Transit train scored a first
of sorts on the vaunted mass
transit system a divorce
A six-car Daly City Fremont
train was· h1ghballmg down the"
Alameda Count~· right or way
1'uesday when the front hair
separated from the rl·ar half The
rear three cars were halted by an
automatic braking system
The startled operator backl'd
up the front of the tram and effect
ed a reconcil1a11on with lhe rear
half. Noone was hurt
Girl Push ed
From Window
LOS A~G ELl':S <AP l I\
young worn ,1n Marin(• 1s 1n
~1tical cond1t1on al\('r she wn.,
aJlegedly pu!'hf"d out the firth
floor window of a hold near the
Los Angel<"~ lntern:1t1onal
Airport
PFC Jody McCrarken. 18. n(
Omer. Mich . said she had Just
dlecked into the hotel when them
ddent occurred Tue-;day night
Police said she was unable to
nu me her assailant. but 1nd1cated
th;at an aq~umc>nt IX'currrd JU<,l
before
Alien Role Urged
WAS HI NGTON I AP> -
Leonard F'. Chapman. com
missioner of the fmm1gration
and Naturaliiation Service.
called Tuesday for legislation to
impose J)('nnltlf's on employers
v.lbo knowingly hi re aliens ii·
legally in this country He said
tJ\e service estimates at least one
fl\illion illega l aliens are holding
w.ell paying jobs and another
mj llion holding lesser paying
jobs in the United States
Dally Pil<rl St_aff P ... 10
STAR BOAT ANO CREW IN ACTION OFF ORANGE COAST
New Lit e Seen tor an Old and Honored SaUlng Claas
'Star' Returning
To 1980 Olympics
By ALMON LOCKABEY D•llr Pilot eoat111t Editor
The Star. oldest one-design
sailboat. is back in the Olympics
and will be one of the six yacht
classes in the 1980 Olympiad in
Russia.
The return of the 22•,~·foot sloop to the Olympics after an
eig ht-year absence wa s
decided by· the Permanent Com·
mittee of the International Yacht
Racing Union (IYRU) and con ·
firmed by Lowell North, the San
Diego sailmaker who has won
four world championships and
one Olympic gold medal in the
class.
It will replace the 22-foot Tem-
pest. the two-man keelboat that
replaced the Star after the 1968
yachting Olympics at Acapulco
North opined that the reason
for the reinstatement of the Star
was that the British-designed
Tempest nt.•ver became as
popular as was anticipated At
the Kiel Week Regatta 1n
Germany last summer t here
were not enough Tempests lo
form a class and the Stars turned
out in large numbers.
The Star class produced more
world champions on the West
Coast than any other place in the
world since it bt•cam(' an interna-
tional class in 1923
Besides North's outRlanding
performance in the class. other
world champions from thl'
Southland have been Dennis Con.
ner. Gerry Or1scoll. Milt
Wegeforth and Don Bever of San
Diego; Bill Ficker. Don Edler,
and Harry Nye (formerly or
Chicago) of Newport Beach.
Another Star world champ from
Newport Beach in the 1930s was
the late "Hook" Beardsley.
Yachting historians agree that
the Star as a one.design sailing
class first came into existence
about 1911 and was anoffshootof
the old Bug Class that was
popular before the turn or the
century.
The original Stars had a sliding
gunter rig but the International
Star Yacht Racing Association
granted the change to a fore-and-
aft (Bermudian or Marconi> rig
in 192.3. Since then the rig has un-
dergone many refinements.
causing it to be known as the
"Stradivarius" of sailing yachts.
The hull remained the same
until the 1960s when the JSYRA
allowed it lo be built of fiberglass
ins tead of the traditional wood.
The Star became an Olympic
Class in 1932 and remametl so un·
t1l 11 was replaced by the Tern·
pest in the 1972 yachting Olym.
pies at Kiel . Germany. The
IYRU booted the Star, along with
the Dra~on and the 5.5 meter
because they were allegedly too
..lilQmplicated and loo expensive
nrr most international sailors.
The Star's reinstatement is ex-
pected to create a rash of new in·
terest by builders and one-design
sailors throu~hout the world,
especially on the West Coast of
the United Stales which has
dominated the class m mterna.
tional competition for many
years
Tiro Hurt as Truck
Spills 16 Marines
A m11ilary truck carrying lG
Marines cr ashed over a 6().foot
embankment at Camp Pendleton
Tuesday, tossing them over the
cab like tenpins Two men were
hospitalized.
In order (or the others to cli mb
out of the ravine. Mannes in three
other trucks in the convoy formed
a human chain on which the in·
jured men pulled themselves up.
Two of the rescuers were taken
with 18 others to Naval Hospital.
one with rope burns and lbe other
with ankle injuries.
Cpl. V. C. Papineau, 26.
Englewood, Fla .. underwent sur-
gery for r:emovar of a ruptured
s pleen Cpl. X A. Martinez. 19,
of Pomona, was suffering from
abdominal trauma.
Both men were reported in
satisfactory condition. The other
injured marines were treated and
released.
All are members of the 5th
Marine Regiment, lst Marine Di' vision.
The accident involving \he
21'l·ton truck took place in an In· l~d part of Camp PendJeton.
Mechanical failure was tentative-
ly blamed.
'Boppy' Back
Film Festival. in Laguna
Deatli Chosen
Over· Liberty
SALT LAKE CITY CAP)-Con·
demned killer Gary Gilmore says
he would seek death even if he
were set free or allowed to live
wlth bls girlfriend in prison, ac-
cording lo Dennis Boaz, the latest
lawyer fired by Gilmore.
The first Hopalong Cassidy
(Jim produced. "Hopalong
Cassidy Enters," a 1935 classic.
opens a Laguna Beach film
rvstival honoring the tale cowboy
s&ar William Boyd Friday
Screenings are at the Festival
ol Arts grounds.
Funds collected from ticket
sales for the three-day fcstivaJ of
"J{oppy" films go to the South·
Coast Commuoity Hos pital in
South Laguna , where Boyd's
't'idow, Grace Boyd, i.s an aux-
iliary member.
-Also on Friday's pro1um is ~last feature film Boyd m•d<'.
J.i41·s "Stranie Gamble." ~rcening time 111 7 ·~ p.m
Fiiday and S11turday Suturday
and Sunday m atinees are at 2
p.m. Tickets are $3 for aduJts. SJ
ror children.
The re mainder oft.he films.
Saturday matinee: "North of
the Rio Grande" (1938) with Lee
J . Cobb and "Three Men From
Texas" (1940). Saturday night:
"Law or the Pampas" (1939) and
"Bord Pr Patrol" (1942) with
Robert Mitchum.
Sunday matinee: "False
Paradise" (1946 > and "Colt
Comrades" (1943), another
Mitchum vehicl<'.
Tickets are available at South
Coast Community Uospit,J, the
l.lWuna Beech Chamber o( Com
mcrce and at the door
Boa& said Tuesday that he
asked Gilmore if he wouJd want lo
live if be were set free. And Boaz
said Gllmor~ told him at the Utah
State Priaon, ••• l want to leave
thl8 pluet, l want tobefreeofthis
planet.'f' .
Boas lald GUmoro. was "very
irritable and 1ettlng weaker"
from the bonier strike be began
frtdaywbenofnclalsrefusedtolet
him telephone bis girlfriend,
Nicole Barrett. Sbe was conftned
to a mental lnatlluUon aft.er they
toot sleeping plllJ In a suicide
plot
Wedno&day. NovetnbClf 24, 1976 DAR..V PILOT .4S
Holiday Patrols
Drinking Drivers,
Speeders Watched
California Highway Patrolmen
assigned to Orange County will
be qperating in speclaJ teams to
look for drinking drivers and
speeders during the rour-day
Thanksgiving weekend.
CHP officials said today most
all of the 265 officers assigned to
the county will be oo duty at
some time during the holiday weekend.
And CHP spokesman J erry
Maxwell said the Santa Ana
division, which covers the buJk of
the county. will operate three
five-officer speed teams and
another two teams to look for
Ross1noor
Lawsuit
Abandoned
A scheduled Orange County
Superior Court trial of a $2.2
million lawsuit in which
Rossmoor Corporation named
the Leisure World Foundation as
principal defendant was sban·
doned Monday when lawyers for
both sides reached a settlement
of the issues.
Attorneys involved in the
original action and the rash of
cross·complaints and counter
suits that later created a com·
plex legal issue refused to reveal
details of the settlement or
a nswer que st ions on the
damages assessed, if any.
But it was made clear dwing
discussions that former founda-
tion trustees Edward L. Olsen
and Otto E . Musch have relin-
quished their stock holrungs in
the Golden West Publishing Com-
pany or Laguna Hills.
The company distributes the
Leisure World News, the Sad·
dJeback Valley News and the
Beach Cities News. Musch and
Olsen held between lhem a 51
percent contro!Ung interest in
the affairs of the expanding en·
terprise.
The legal issue resolved Mon·
day was first aired in December
of 1974. It was then alleged in the
first Superior Court lawsuit that
during the years 1966 and 1967 the
foundation failed to re pay money
advanced by Rossmoor for the
management of four Leisure
World communities
The communities were iden-
tied as Laguna Hills and WaJnut
Creek in California and two
others in New Jersey and
Maryland.
Named as defendants with the
foundation were Olsen, Musch,
Golden West and Professional
Community Manage m e nt
<PCM). which took over the
management of Laguna Hills
Leisure World on Dec. 31, 1972
with for mer foundation trustees
Olsen and Musch as officers of
PCM.
The lawsuit became even more
complex when Leisure World
Foundation filed a cross·
complaint which sought more
than $3 million in damages from
fellow defendants in the
Rossmoor action.
The foundation accused Olsen
and Musch of multiple acts of
fraud.
G e~
Talk
/j11.J I Ill \/f'/IU/1'~
THE DIAMOND CURTAIN
Rwno'a myatery t:Ueperu
drinking drivers.
He said the teams probably
wUI arrest 30 to 3S drivers sus·
peeled of being udder the in·
nuence of alcohol each or the four
days, along with several hundred
others, who wiU be given speed·
ing citation&.
Maxwell said the CHP hopes to
convince drivers that they cannot
Ignore state safety laws at will.
And he said the drinking driver
is the major cause of holiday
traffic crashes and death tolls.
Statewide durin~ last year's four-day Thanksgiving holiday
CHP officers arrested 1.930
• APllltfr-10
ON THE WAY OUT
CIA Director Bush
Bwhto Quit
As CIA.Head
lnJamrory
WASHINGTON (AP )-George
Bush. who took over the embat·
tied Central Intelligence Agency
less than a year aeo. announced
today he will quit as head of the
spy agency on inauguration day
The onetime congressman, top-
level diplomat and head of the
Republican party said he would
stay at the CIA until Jan. 20, and
pledged "continuing full as·
sistance" lo President-elect Jim·
my Carter during the transition
between Administrations.
James Rattray. deputy to an as·
sistant director at the agency,
said Bush has given no indication
offuture plans.
Bush briefed Carter for nearly
six hours last Friday at the pre-
sident-elect 's home in Plains.
Ga., on the highly secret methods
the CIA uses to gather in·
telligence around the world.
Bush told reporters in Plains
that he visited Ford before flying
to Georgia and was told to give
Carter full access to any informa·
lion he might desire.
Whlle he was in Plains. Bush re-
fused to discuss his future and
declined to say whether the
possibility of rem aining in his job
had been raised during session
with Carter.
Cart.er has given no indication
of whom he might appoint to
replace Bush.
drl vers who had been drin.ting.
CHP offictaJs aald.
And the 43 traffic deaths re-
p o rte d for the weekend
represented the Jowest count
since the CH P start.ed keeping
records in 1963. The highest hol~
day loll Wlll!i in 1970 wh~ 88 peo1
pledied. ;
Maxwell said last year's deatb
toJJ was significantly lo~
because statistics sbow lbd
normally about 14 people ar~
killed statewide daily in t:raffi<l
cras hes , or a bout S6 in any
normal four-day period. ,
Fog Cited
In Death
Of Marine
A 25·year-old El Toro Marine
was killed and his ts.year-old
motorcycle passenger critically
injured early today in a crash on
fog-shrouded Santa Ana streets,
police reported.
The names of both the Marin~
and rus passenger, who Lives iq
Escondido. were being withheld
pending notification of relatives,
officers said.
The cycle. traveling on Warner
Avenue collided wilh a flatbed
truck , t r aveling on Bristol
Street, at 2:45 a.m. today, polic.
said.
The truck was driven by John
Cain of Redwood City, police re·
ported. and Cain was not held.
Either the Marine or Cain ap-
parently ran through a red traffic
signal, police said, but because of
the d ense fog. they may not have
been able lo see the signal.
The motorcycle passenger was
admitted to Mercy General
Hospital in Santa Ana with head.
leg and possible internal injuries.
police said
First LB Craft
Guild Show
Open Sunday
The first of four Laguna Beach
Craft Guild outdoor shows will be
held from 10 a. m. to dusk Sunday
along Forest A venue in Laguna
Beach.
Seventy artists and artis ans
will display their wares for sale.
Demonstrations of various craft
techniques will be given
throughout the day.
Crafts for sale include jewelry,
potte~. macrame, candles,
leathe rwork, stained glass.
children's toys and furniture.
Subsequent s hows will be held
Dec. 5 at Main Beach Park, Dec.
12 along Forest Avenue and Dec.
l9 at Main Beach park. They too
will go from 10 a.m. to dusk.
'Gave at Office'
PITTSBURGH CAP) -The
Aluminum Co. of America says it.
channeled $166,000 to domestic
political candidates through its
employes during a nine-year
period in the 1960s.
l't>nu.1111
Ac 111.11 !.111·
(\ t(h t, lw 01."•
The . Jron Curtain of mys tery that
shrouds the Soviet Union from the
rest. of the world Includes secrecy
over that country's diamonds.
The giant De Beers Co., which sells
85% of all rough diamonds mined in
the world, ls known to have some
kind of agreeme nt to buy R~ian
diamonds. But. nobody knows just
bow many diamonds are coming
from the Soviets.
Your personal expression of
t wo-tone styling in
Russ(ao diamonds we re firs t
discovered -by accident -in 1829,
by gold pros p eetors who were
w11htn1 for gold lo the Ural
Mount.3lba. But. not until a.ft.er Wor:ld
War Jt, when a need developed ror
induatritl dl•m onds, did serious
m.Wng begin. In Ul5C, rich depostts
were found in Siberia. AND SINCE
THEN THE Russians have steadily
built what Is beHeved to be a thrivina
diamond·mlnine lndultry.
They won't Lalk much about il, and
neither will W esternen who trade
with them . but. the arowin1
searcentss o( d1amond11, plus the
Soviet need for forel«n currency, adds
lo tb.i8 intcisue
14 karat gold with
bri Iii ant diamonds.
{Q, X, Y, Z and 18K
gold available by special order .)
Pendants also available In
1 ct. tw and 0 . .50 ct. tw dlas.
matchl!:!Sllliltial rings lnO.~d. twdlas.
1823 NEWPORT BLVD COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TEAMS Banl\Am4'ncard-Mac;tf>f Cflarge
30 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE 546-3401 . ..
I
'
I .44 DAIL y PILOT Wednesday. Novemti.r 2•. 1976
Just ff!' Ma Coas ting i~J ~.'" ~ Behind Legion Deaths?
1-r ~' PHILADELPHIA (AP> -A.
' 1 t . . , • delegate to last summer's state Glassy-eyed Man Warned of Doorn , r ; American Legion convention ·· .'• with · here says he believes a ''glassy.
story to the' Pennsylvania
Department of Heallh. Four
other members of bb Luk>n post saw the man also, hetestilied. T om eyed" madman may have known arphine about the mysterious Legion·
Jn other testimony, Dr.
L eonard Bachman, Pen -
nsylvania's health secretary,
eaid investigators were no closer
than ever to finding the cause of
the disease, which killed 29 peo-
ple and made 151 others sick
before running its course.
assumlnf swine nu was the
culprit. He said informed scien·
Ufic opinion now leans toward
poisons or industrial toxins.
feet t.all~ mlngline wJth delegates on three occasions, the last Ume
about 10 p.m. the night before the
conveotioa ended.
SEASON'S SCENE: Here we
are at Thanksgiving Eve and
most folks are thinking about thf:
turkey they'll be racing across
the dinner table tomorrow. In-
deed, turkeys are much in the
news these days.
Dispatches, for example. have
crackled across the wires in-
forming u s
that the tradi-
tional holiday
birds are sell-
ing for less
this year. It is
asserted that
the a verage
pri ce ha s
dropped
about 10 cents
per pound. We
also are being deluged with all
kinds of other news. Turkeys
make good pets. Domestic
turkeys are dumber than wild
turkeys. The country now bas a
turkey surplus that we may have
to unload on Japan.
THERE'S A LOT of turkey
talk. The word has also crept into
our daily slang as a term of de-
rision or put·down.
Thus in this holiday season as
motorists leap upon every
available road to travel to every
possible place, you'll hear re-
marks like, "Look how that jerk
just cut me off. Whatta turkey!"
Even in the current CB radio
craze. you hear remarks on the
airwaves like, "Hey, you turkey,
quit steppin' on my signal ... "
Calling a person a turkey is
considered derogatory because
the birds have a reputation of be-
ing really dumb. Wire dis-
patches, however, have even
clarified that. Wild turkeys are
supposed to be pretty s mart and
became wily birds so they could
survive out there in the great
open spaces.
TURKEYS GOT STUPID after
we started breeding them so they
would carry a lot or meat. Yet
one of the big turkey farmers
here in our state has suggested
the domestic birds might make
good pets.
He says the dummies might
start following you around
because they'd figure you arc
their mother.
I don"t know 1r everybody
would agree that a turkey would
make a good pet. Years ago, our
Assistant Man aging Editor
Chuck Loos lined up one of his
good buddies with a JOb on a
turkey farm . He says thf' guy
hasn't s poken to him since
As Loos explains 1t, farm
hands had to pick up the big
birds. turn them upside down and
put them m ~hipping crates.
When the turkeys were nipped
over. they panicked and lost con.
trol of themselves. Well, that
isn't precisely how he explained
it but that's close enough.
St> much for having one as a
pet
IF YOU'\IE LABORED this
far through this space, you
a lready kn ow more about
turkey!> than you wanted to You r
real concern 1s how many slices
you'll be a ble I() handJ~ along
W1th the potatos. gravy, cran·
berry sauce. dressing and tnm-
mings when the time comes
tomorrow Remember vour acid
indigestion now. ·
And may none of us drive like
turkey!<"' ht•n we get out there on
the byways
Ha ve a happv Thanksgiving,
all.
na.lres' disease beforeJtstruck.
George Cbiavetta, a Lawnton,
Pa., legionnaire, has testified at
the start of a lwo·day hearing by
the House Subcommittee on
Consumer Protection, cha.ired by
Rep. John Murphy (D·N.Y.).
Cbiavetta said his theory was
based on a remark made by a
"gla.5sy-eyed man in a royal blue
suit'' who was mingling with de·
legates at the state convention.
WHAT CAUGHT IDS atten·
lion, Chiavetta said, was the
man's remark that ''ll's too late.
You won't be saved. The legion-
naires are doomed."
Bachman defended the state
Health Department. saying it
acted responsibly, but that much
work remained to be done.
MURPHY HAS criticized
heaJth agencies for what be has
called inept handling or the in-
vestigation in the early stages of
the outbreak. He said as the bear-
ing opened that federal in-
vestigators wasted precious time
Dr. F. WlUlam Sunderman,
director of the Institute for
Clinical Science here. said nickel
carbonyl, a clear, odorless liquid
that be said r esembled "gin or
vodka" could easily have been
sneaked into the hot.el where the
legionnaires were meeting. He
said the disease's symptoms re-
sembled those reported by in·
dustrial workers overex~ed to
the substance.
CBIAVETTA SAID he saw the
man in the royal blue suit.
described as from S-foot-10 to six
"I told my wile that the man
ml&ht be some sort. or a nut or
something," he said. "He looked
glassy-eyed and bis face was
Oushed. There was an object in
bis right inside breast pocket that
resembled a lealher tobacco
pouch.
"A.string or a tube appeared to
be attached to bis tie which was
all twisted up, and that was con-
nected to something in his right
band, like a piece of literature.''
CHIAVE'ITA SAID a Dauphin
County detective relayed bis
He said that when a state
beaJth official calJed him hat.er
about his activities at the conven.
lion. he asked the caller: "Did
you check out the man In the blue
swt out.side the hotel?" and was
told, "Oh yeah, we checked bhn,
he's clean."
Calvin Edmonds, an ad.
ministratlve officer wbo assisted
with health department question-
naires, said after the hearing
that he recalled speakJpg to
Chiavetta, but he denied telling
him the man had been "checked
out." He said Chiavetta's report
had been turned over lo detee·
tives, but be said he didn't know
what happened to it.
.Flu Case Spreads Fear
Swine Report Prompts Inoculation Rush
ar -i ,., AP w1,..,._ ...
1wetc 1r• •• • f!eft 1
WidaJys Romero Lopez, 14,
has won the title or Miss
American Teen-ager. The
Puerto Rican Miss collects
a v ariety of prizes and
honors.
Seek Asy lum
By the Associa&ecl Press
The federal Center Cor Disease
Control said tod ay that other re-
sidents of a Missouri community
where one s us pected case of
swine Ou was detected are show-
ing flu-Like symptoms and that
tests are underway to determine
the nature or their illness.
Evidence of what may be the
nation's first case of swine flu in·
nine months was detected in
Larry Hardison, 32, of Lafayette
County, Mo. Hardison, who has
since recovered, showed flu-like symptoms in mid-October.
Dr. H. Denny DoMell, head of
the medical section in the Mis-
souri Health Division, said Mon-
day the state had confirmed that
the m an 's illness was swine flu.
Chinese Tradeoff
Proposal Snubbed
BUT A SPOKESMAN for the
CDC, . Katherine Lord, said to-d~y '·''It is insufficient now to say this ts a case of swine nu. It is an
apparent case or swine flu."
Mrs. Lord said blood samples
taken from Hardison while he
was ill showed sufficient levels of
swine nu antibodies to conclude th~t be was "challenged" by
swine flu but did not indicate
when the contact occurred.
Additional evidence, such as
spread or the virus or isolation of
the virus itself from persons who
contract it, must be obtained
before a final diagnosis of s wine
flu is possible, she said.
Switchboards at the New
York City Health Department
registered 30,000 pho.ne calls ·
Tuesday, officials said, but only
5,000 callers got the nu inforT(la·
lion they wanted because of the crush.
"APPARENTLY 11IEY were
alarmed at the report from Mis·
souri," said Pascal Imperato,
supervisor of the city's flu pro-
gram. But he noted that fewer
than 200,000 New Yorkers have
been inoculated.
"During the past few days.,
we have had a slight increase
• . . We attributed this to the
cold weather which makes peo-·
pie more flu-conscious," Jm·
perato said.
The health department in Al -
legheny County, Pa., where the
deaths of three elderly persons
touched off a recent scare .
U.S. Skeptical of Israeli Fears
WAS~J!lGTON (AP~ -Some forc47 s and the rightis t -!~df~~i!~Jtas~~~:S ~=~t~~~
U.S. official~ are skeptical about Christians. T~e Damascus troops designed to symbolize ·ts . Israel 's cries of alarm over are spread thinly and have no of-cem 1 con
possible penetrat.io!l by Syryan fensive capabili~y s~ch as the air Last week, Israeli troops on the
troops and Palest1ruan terronsts power and m1ss1.le stre~gth frontier were reinforced, there
to the Lebanese-Israel border. necessary to stnke against was a sudden test mobilization of
State Department sources ~ay Israel. large numbers of reserves and an
they. understand the J ewish e xchan ge of gunfire with forces
state s. conceri:i. but c~ot agree AND THE SOURC~ say there on the Lebanese side of the boun-there is any immediate threat. is no evidence the Palestine dary ~ey. 8;lso do not sh~e. ls~ael's Liberation Organization bas ALL THIS H AS been accom·
MEXICO CITY CAP> -The U.S. Embassy has displayed little in· '!llsgwmgs about Syna s mten-moved with any real strength panied by public and diplomatic
terest in a report that two Chinese officials have offered to trade in · t1ons. . back into areas of southern activity expressing Israeli con-
formation on hundreds of American prisoners from the Indochina war l'! fact. the s?urces said the Lebanon previously used to stage cem and warning against either
for a guarantee of asylum in the United States. ~y~a~ presence .m. Lebanon now attacks into Israel. Syrian troops entering the area
The Rev. Paul Lindstrom, who heads a movement that works for the 1~ hm1ted to pohcmg the ceru.>e· But the Jerusalem government or the re-establishment of PLO· ~t~~?!~i)Jj~~7~{fM~ ( IN SHORT J II1re betwee n Moslem-lcfttbst ~s been sounding m.: .. asingly bases lhe•e.
Laos and Vietnam to 1>outhern ,... llflS Gpl!r American prisoners of war from 00 Ff B p am a tgger
China. .LO~OON (AP ). -Atlantic
R1chf1eld. an Amencan oil com.
Lindstrom, the founder of the pany, announced it has taken N ~~:~db~e l~:,;;,~b~~ec~~~i;~ ~7~~y t~~o~~~:~ig1o~s~u~~~-ewscaster
for asylum in exchange for in-newspap er the Observer,
formation to t he embassy Tues-founded in 1791.
day. The embassy said it had "no The Los Angeles firm said it
independent confirmation of the was acquiring 90 percent of the th
Rev. Undstrom'sreport.". shares in the Observer, bul that an
no changes will be made in the Netaeor b llnder Fir~ editorial policy oflhe newspaper,
r:J~~~t~~1~=~~~E~ ~~:;; ;;::;:·:·,~be•al Barba~a
in a legal attack on the power WASHINGTON CAP) -A total
wielded by America's three ma-of 133 persons have been named
jortelevision networks. to Pres ident-elect Jimmy
The Department of Jus tice has Carter's Washington transition Walt
asked the Federal Communica s~aff. including key campai~n ers lions Commission to consider aides and governmental·affairs specialists. giving more programming F f authorit\• to the networks' af. orly 0 those named by Carter
filiated stations and forcing th(.' will be responsible for liaison between the incoming ad· networks to divest themselves of ministration and the various the seven local stations each is allowed to own federal departments and agen-c1cc;
Chill on Midwest Lifts
East Suff en With UnsellJJonable Cold
T..,..p~atur~• e>ect•d 1ton9 Soutllern C11lllorn111
tJ,.,,f h•v•t1lot Ottci..s 1nd In co•<I•• ••lleys '"' "''" L-f'c•. Thtnlnoivlno It WH IM third dily Albtl'\uerqul' ~~ "' ,,,.. ,,...,Y 1o0 1...i low clO\ld conol Ancl>o-.t9t 11 1• tlom dl,.1111ted air travel .. nd crMll!d At11nt~ " ,.. """'"'o'" lrtlll< condition•. 8 1\marc9' 1\ n LO\ Ar>Qelt\ ln1trn1tl<>MI A\1'!>0'1 Boston H " W'.ll)en<ltd bolll l1••<lln9 Ind ta~I ""''"'° 1• ,,. _,.ti.,,.. lhortly 111•• mlcll>l<l'!I. Ind °'8rlt1>~ton ,. 14 01 olllclll\ Wtd $0mt 1?0 tom-rclAI CNcotqo ]<) l" lllQl\ll were 1llt<ltd. MO\I airli,.... Cl11<•nMll J~ 1< .OJ _,. dlvtr1lft9 pt1nn lo ailerMlt ~llnd )~ I\ ri.•d•. °"'"'"' "° 711 Bollt LO\ A~lt~ Ind l-9H<ll o.iMol .... l) " air lr .. fi< olflcl11\ rtllCHltd rvnwltY ~roll JI .. vhtllltll"Y ranotno lrom leu ,._ 1co Dulutll ., 11 .01 lttl IO rero 1111,...s. °"'n8ay ,. u ~ulu II 10 .. M1tlon11 We allter S•fvlct
"""''°" u u t~ecatttr. seld ltmllar moml1'9 IOQ
lnol""•CWJll\ J4 7J en <ondlllOm -•o continue ~Y .l«horwlll~ )• lO NO-A u' o ••••• <•-· •• IT'O<nlft9 but lhlt lem.,.ranorws In !he k.,,.<tsClty JS 16 01 Hn.Y0<-ll•Ofl 70\ WOUIO t>urn off"'°'' of lhe IOQ Luv..,., I) '1 ~ 28 08rh ot Mlnn .. 011 end ""'"' bv mid lwtnootl, for e llHY M-y 11 Litt~il!oO " )I Oltl-•CHy 60 ,, low• n .. rp .,.., WH • 11111• how In ···-Ml ... 1 10 M Omet>I " ,. 'iOUlhwttl lndl..,1 end l(tnluc:~v MO #llweulltt 18 ,. PelmSotl,..,. 81 ., WI,.,. rli" .oncl drlult 11'1 '°'4111...,.r•I co .. tollt'eatlaft-! Mnpts,.st P•11t " IS PltH .. 111111• •I ?I Too
...... 0r1Hn\ ·~ )I "-nlw " SI NIQ11Hlmt1 109 formed In Ml\tOUtl °"'• to0"'VIit111c1 Mornlno '*'"· Pltl\IK<rQlt 2• IS A/14 109 WA\ wlcltsorHcl alll"Q 1"9 Potlland, M~ n 7\ °'1l<)on co.ti •nd In P•rU fit .... ,.,.,, ltery \llMlllM In IN afttrtlOOll TIM"J•
Dlllly ,lletO......., Porlllncl, Or• ~, :u C..111om111 •v
Llollt varl1bla wlndt nlGl\t and .. c;.. • .....,.. Rlt-•• •• OvlrnlQhl l•mper11turn _,..In Ille I momlnoltoun HIQllS T1tvr&O.yl11H• ~111v r11111v If v""' rt11 no~ t\i11"--Se<r,_nto Sii •> 60\ In M>ulhtrn Flortda, t•l••mt llOMfW\. y.~w O.r'W'I• n" " 10""" c.~11 tw'IC:Ut I '1 Loul\ 37 ~ ,03 soull•t•n T•••• 1nd \Olltllw,u <::Nttal t1111oer•turt1 wlll ,.,,.. 0 M •ntl VOUf cupy Wiii.,,.. CMtt.,.,.,tO Salt Like City S6 ,, Olllornle, wltlt '°' <om~ over San Fre11< IKO n i1 much of Ille Or•et L.ht1 re9'00I ~ bttwnn S4 encl ••. I nlallcl tff!lo Stiurd.ty """ 5.IMolf ii l"'OI di) ..i S..nlt •s C) '""' Hlltrn O•llOIH. ""'"....., •Ill ,.~ "''-.. ...., '-=•1ve yn.ir t"Oy ny fl • "'· t. tH n.mel " .. RtaOlnQ\ In lht lHllt were ttOef\ed n. TMwa1ert1mpereturtwltlllu 7. MIO"' 10.,,, •Ill! vw• ,._ ... ~ ... -ed W•\/llllQton •t ,s In MlllM>OI• •ncl upper Ml<ltlQl<I encl S-,1'1--.TIU. I In the *II In 1111 Ufllral Gutt c;.o.,1
~....._T.,._.. v.s. s-••rt1 ti•'"'• toutllern Ntw l119te4'd ar.cl Ille w •DNHOAY
M?4I O.•n'I<' ec.,,.,, At-•O 4Jtl ~llf'n Grell Plltn\ 5tcMO• S·Jtttflll. -0.
H()t!11....., tlunt.no•o~ l'o¥11 I TM ..... ,,,., WH llflHUOflelltp (OOI
CaQforafa TNllRSOAY W'Ct Whtnwn\t-. •~lllt 111 1"" &1st. lllit f'l'IOlll~•ll"O In Ille ,.,.,. ... n ,..~ H $wl C'-nl• ~P••"-0.-¥"' ~I ~•Int. S•lt1 wire ew r<••t In
"'"' lllQll S Ohm ,.
S<Oil ~ t.eoo>11•11e1 l'llU(ltMllleMllon OeolM "'8rfllt19 , .. ,_ llw h• 5'<..,.IOw II IJ1 m. St 0-""'"I $olitll l...,. ( \,ltflt -tontlftll.O lo 1111 111 Ille ,.,_~ .... Uno •M<ll •1'110n\ .... __,,,.... •.lip"' O• UOllnl H.Ollfl "Mt,. ltw•r Ort•t l •llu r.01on • ..., ly -V tllcl t1tt Mallone! Wtett.r Sull rl-n• M."'. M\\4 Ull m I Ml<lll9911, -II WtJ tU11Ared _, Slf'vl<t Willt more Of 1111 .. -....... MMftrlt."t·»• "".MUt."p..m.
I 4
-'
..,
Thus, your Daily Pilot carrier brings you a lot more
news of the sta te, nation and world than you see on tv.
And, you get complete news and pictures of events
close to home that Walter, Barbara, Harry and Joh.ii.····
don't have lime for.
To get the complete news picture, tune in to your Daily
Pilot carrier. Qne will come to your home 365 days a
year.
Sorry, Barbara.
You get i' all in the DAILY PILOT ,
642 -4321
I
'
Telephone Co.
;.~Rehearing Set ...
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The recent ban on
special charges to some long-winded residential
. telephone customers may ootlast.
A rehearing was granted Tuesday lo Pacific
Telephone Co .• wh.icb said it would lose at>out SS
milllon a year without the special charges to residen-
tial customers.
No date was set for rebearin5? bv the California t~ Public Utilities Commission, which ruled Nov. 2 lhat
, the special charges were unreasonable for re-
sidences but could continue for businesses.
The extra charges applied to residences receiv-
• log 30 or 60-call service in the eastern San Francisco
Bay area, Orange andSanDiegocounlJes.
Hearst a ... r. Tltreat 'Boa.r'
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -Police say a bomb
threat against Patricia Hearst when she went to a
ramous San Francisco cocktail lounge was ap.
parently a crank call.
An anonymous caller told the switchboard
operator al the Mark Hopkins Hotel that a bomb had
been planted by the Symbionese Liberation Army
and "We're going to get
State Security guards ( )
Patty Hearst.
escorted Miss Hearst and
---------' her attorney, Al Johnson,
outofthehotel's Top of the
Mark cocktail lounge. They had walked to the hotel
from the Hearst family apartment across the street
atop Nob Hill.
fAnlfl Beaelt Marina Profled
LONG BEACH (AP)-The City Council has or-
dered a staff investigation to determine if Long
Beach boat owners are using out-of-state r egistra-
tions to escape COIUllY marine tax assessments.
The council also asked the city attorney to check
oenaltv orovisions for an existing ordinance that re-
quires boat owners using the Long Beach Marina to
declare the city as home port for the purpose of tax
assessments.
Sldgella ONtlw~ak Reported
RIVERSIDE (AP) -An outbreak of shigella -
a gastrointesinal disease characterized by high
fever, vomiting and diarrhea -has been reported by
Riverside County health officials.
Dr. Allyn Bridge, deputy county health director .
said 53 cases have been reported since Oct. 20, most
of them in the city or Riverside.
~ Tfp Leaf& to Bod11
RICHMOND <AP>-;-Police say a tip led them
to the bludgeoned body of a r etired Lutheran
minister in his home.
Police said they received a call Monday direct-
ing them to a 20th street address "to investigate a
welfare case." They found the body of 65·year-0ld
clergyman A . John Maas, who recently retired as
pastor of the First Redeemer Lutheran Church in
Vallejo.
Police declined any further comment on the
c:ase.
Gun Misuse Declines
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Improper use of guns
by private security guards in Caltforn1a has
I declined 63 per cent since the state began a man-
' datory firearm training progr am, a stale om cial 1 says.
Douglas Faigm. chief of Collect1on and In-
' vestigative Services, saJd from Jan. 1, 1975 to Sept .
1, 1975 there wer e 35 reported incidents of improper
use of firearms. which include apparent accidental
,shots. w arni n g sh ots and shot'\ invol ving
"hor seplay ...
From Jan l l o Sept. 1, while the tr aining was
glven, the incidents declined to 13, he said.
We pay 15¢ a lb. cash for aluminum cans
· & other, clean, household aluminum.
. which Includes a1um1n1Jm 1011 iilo pan<; •rozrn foiict 11nd 11lnnar
trays, d1p, purld1nQ anO mPat C"nt,11n!l" r;PrlJ•n Ol '1>Jr ~loan, all aluminum ''"ms can be rf'<lccm"r1 c,.11 your Cl'nl,.r '"' uo1.111s
'Bring It to Reynolds Aluminum
~orange Recycling Plant, 210 E. Meats Avenue
Riverside Fwy.
Meats Ave. • KalellaAve.
IL
l ~ z
'Tuesday thru Saturday -9:00 a.m. · 4:30 p.m.
21Phone 998-4271 for Information on Mobile Unit
schedules In your area.
.. .,
Wednesdsy. Novembef24. t976 DAIL Y"PILOT AS
ARB Adopts Camarillo
New IAmits Death Cause:
1 On Exhaust 'Negligence'
'Ameriran Mess' APWlr.,... ..
Stanford student Jeremy Geiduschek sets the mousetrap
to trigger his entry in ''The Great Bicentennial Dream
Pinball Machine Contest" at the University. Two dozen.
teams of students competed to construct a complicated
machine which cost no more than $5, used a golf ball as
a trigger and symbolically expressed "The American
Dream".
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
state Air Resources Board bas
adopted new auto emission stan·
d arda designed lo help
slplficanUy cut down air pollu·
tion by 1990 in the smog-bound
Los Angeles basin.
The action came dUring a 12·
hour hear ing Tuesday when the
state board adopted regulaUons
to reduce s mog-causing
hydrocarbon emissions and
tougbenP.d limits on exhaust
emissions for passenger cars,
and light and medium-duty
trucks.
THE REGULATIONS are
primarily aimed al cutting the
losses by evaporation from the
fuel systems of gasoline-powered
vehicles.
One reason for the emphasis on
evaporative emissions is that
tests on 1972· 77 vehicles showed
that two lo three times as many
hydrocarbons evaporated from a
vehicle with its engine turned off than from a 1977 passenger car
would produce with its engine
running.
TUE BOARD'S new standard
would require evaporative losses
from cars and trucks to be cut 17
percent by 1990. At that time, the
board estimated standing-still
emissions would account for 60
percent of all hydrocarbon veru-
cle emissions produced in the
South Coast Air Basin.
The new standards require
that auto makers seal l eaks
where gas vapors have been
escaping from carburetors and
fuel lines while cars are al rest.
Farr Case to Appeals
LOS ANGELES <A P l /\n ap·
peals cuurt ts a~<J tn t•om1dcr ing
the case of Wilham Far r, the
newspaper r epor t er prosecuted
because he r efused to disclose his
sources for a story about the
Charles Manson family.
/\n attorney for Farr asked a
thrc<'·Jt1dgt• appeals court Tues-
day l1> proh1b1l rurther prosecu-
tion of Farr. who has ser ved 40
da)s in Jail The case has been in
the courts for five years.
While the appeals court con-
sidered the plea Tuesday. more
than 3,000 per sons demonstrated
outside in the street for freedom
of the press and prohi bit further
prosecution or the reporter for re·
fusing to disclose sources.
VENTURA CAP) -Grou negligence cauMcl
at leaat four deaths at Camarillo State Hospital, a
medical specialist has told the Ventura County
Grand Jury.
Dr. Ronald Markman, a specialist in forensic
medicine, noted Tuesday that gross negligence 18. a
major requirement fOl' fi.l.lng a criminal involun·
tary manslaughter charge.
He said a flfth patient died in a case bordering
on gross neellgence and three other deaths appear
to have been caused by simple negligence,. where
care is below the proper standard accepted in the
community.
BIS REMARKS came as the grand j ury
finished public testimony about 54 deaths at
Camarillo State Hospital over the last four years.
The jury foreman said the grand jury would go
into private session today and he indicated it could
be several weeks before indictments, if any, are
returned.
Meanwhile, a spokesman for lbe sheriff's
homicide bureau said investigations into two other
patient deaths at Metropolitan State Hospital in
Norwalk "have concluded •.. without arrests."
In those deaths, a coroner's jury found that de-
ath "occurred at the bands of another other than
by accident." Reports into the deaths of John
Mulick, 37, and Mark Holcomb, 19, have been
forwarded to the Los Angeles County district at-
torney's office.
IN SACRAMENTO, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
continues to defend his slate health director in the
face of increasing calls for his dismissal.
The Sacr amento B~ said Tuesday in an
editorial that Dr. Jerome Lackner should r esign or
be fired for lack of a<lmUUSt.rallve ability that the
large Health Department requires.
On Monday, the California Slate Employes As·
socialion wrote Brown asking that Lackner and a
deputy, Don Miller, be replaced for alleged lack of
leadership in solving state mental· hospital pro-
blems.
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATEMENT 01' AaANDOHMENT 01' USE OF FICTITIOUS aUSINIUS NAME
The foll-lnq "'''°n ""'' -"" uH of ll>e llctlllou\ bu\ln.-\<1ame. THE CLOT~ES RACK FOR BIG "NOT ALL, 111 E I ltn St . Costa Mew,
CA f'l62' Tne F1ct1Uou\ Bu\ln~u Name r•· fe•l"9d lO above w .. 111...i If\ Or-Counlyon 0e< l . I'll. 'S•r•ll G Rubin, 17315 Pucll. lntlne.CA.,11! Thi\ b•,.lnns ... , cono.x 1...i 1>y.,, In· OlvlOU•I Sar•h G Rubin
Thi• 'll•ltmrnl ,.._ fllod w11n lhe Counly Clerk of Or•noe County on Nov .
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS llUSO•ES.S NAME STATEMENT
Th• lollowlnq per~n Is c!OlnQ bu"-
Nt\\ a,J • TIMEl.V IMPORTS, f9U So. D1amon11, Santa Ana. CA •V <M. Evelyn HAipern 9S8J Altott St,. lo• A11qeft\. CA 900lS Thi\ buslnus Is conducted oy 111'1 IAo diYlclUal Evelyn H•l1Nrn "Thi' •l•l•m•nl wn filed wlllt t"9 County Cieri< of Or•noe County ort HOvember IS. 1'1•.
~' Pvbh'11ed Orcanoe C0<t•I Dally Pilot
No• 11. 1•.atld D~c. t,8, t•I• •7'().76
.--------------------:=-...,.--...,---------==-------------------, 19, 1916. 1'50%7S ~ Publl.n.G Or•n~ Cunt Daily Pilot, 1---,,-ICT-IT_l_O_US_ll_U_S_IN_E_S_S __ . ~/4 0
/o-tQe S11iiit of tJ-.e ~ ~ _ .... _._.,_ .. _._"°_D_·_c._._ •• _.,_s._,_~,_·_....,_._,. ~~~of~:7:::::;;~::
PUBLIC NOTICE
\
""€J'\,V _J ! ~ J..:,Q,.r::_r PUBLIC NOTICE tc,atella HO.F,or-e.u.., .. , ·
tl \, ~ ~ {E t. s lt. r ff. lQ i" mo 0r~nfJ:n.111nw...-,,,,~ .. t D ' e oe tY.'' \,)
1
... ; ._....__ Y'y NOTICETOPEllSONS Daniel Jonn Goodman. 32'1 V / --INTERESTEOINTHEESTAT'E . 1'•1'1.n<I Cir., Huntington Beach, C4 01' OOROTH Y V. PLAIN .,..,
Notice 1, nerebyglven: Donald John Novak, 2Sl1 l"emsldlt
\
I To•" oersoM, lnteruted. -Iller H Or., Orenoe. CA 9246S
'.
_ )'J;.--_«1v~i -!'_~r,. 11 Ji,' /~ .__ '1 j.t /,-<-iton. ht.rs, ltQ•l•es. or devl..,..s. Tnl1 business Is con<lucttd ll'f • ~ ' _ ln lht t\lal• Of OOROTH Y V. PLAIN, general o•rlner<lllo de<o<~ w/\OH la<t •Odrns ••• ~ L.tonard Stein
.. r• '• , r 'r '' 1·'
' . it
HAVE WE EXPRESSED ENOUGH GRATITUDE
FOR OUR LIBERTY?
Just think how fortunate we are to live in a country not dominated by
any single state religion, or, for that matter, with no religion at all. How
wonderful it is to realize that each of us is free to wo rship God in our own
individual way!
Freedom of wors hip is a basic element of liberty and true democracy.
The phrase on our coins "In God We Trust" is not just an empty slogan. It
is a constant reminder that though in America there are many methods of
worship , its people are always mindful of an ever-present, all-loving Deity
who guards, guides, and protects our nation, its leaders , and its people .
ALL ARE WELCOME at the special Thanksgiving Day services of the
Christian Sci ence churches listed below. Our Presidenfs Thanksgiving mes -
sage will be read at each service. You will hear readings related to this
subject from the BIBLE and from the Christian Science textbook , SCIENCE
AND HEALTH WITH KEY TO THE SCRIPTURES by Mary Baker Eddy , as
well as spontaneous individual testimonies of gratitude.
We hope you and your entire family will join us this day of Thanksgiving
to discover more about the joy and freedom that can be found In the "Spirit
of the Lord ''.
1 "Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving" ( Ps. 95:2)
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE THANKSGIVING SERVICE
Thursday, November 25th
CORONA DEL MAR: 3100 Pacific View (10:00 a.m.)
COSTA. MESA: 2880 MeH Verde (10:00 a.m.)
JIVNTfNOTON BEACH: llt}l It Olive (t :30 & 11:00 a.mt)
lkVINE: 4'7'71 Campus Dr. (9:30 a.m.)
)·
I
LAGUNA BEACH: W lllJh Dr. (10:00 a.m.)
l.AGUNA NIGUEL: 260880etty Dr. (10:00 a.m.)
MISSION VIEJO: 25952 Cord.Ulera 00:00 a.m.)
NEWPO&T BEACD~ 3303 Via Udo (9:00 4' 10:30 a.m.)
ero.r. Santa An•. tnat l•tttr•l~t-... Tiii• 11•1•-nl WH filed wllt\ 9lll I.er, or of •dmlnlttrau°" ,,.,.., bttn , ... Coun11 Clerk ol Or6ngt County or\ HOv,
-0 10 SANFORD D. WATERS. bt: 1. 1'7•. ""'°'' Cout1ly Courl. • court of compe• NS119 tent1url""lct1onof1ntSt•t•olTeus. l'Vtlll.ned Orange Coast 0.11., Piiot. That 1n. followino per<on ,, ,_ed NOv.10, 11, 14, and Dec. t, tt1•
to or tloldlno personal pro.,.,rly ot tne ..._" ••Id detedOftl . GI. E NDALE FEOERA.I. SAVINGS, SI Fuhlo" PUBLIC NOTICE Square. City or Santa A1>•. Coui1ty of
Or•noe FICTITIOUS llU51NISS Thal IN ll'ldtrslon•d Oe•lr-H lo r• NAME STATEMENT
eel"" the u ld person•I pro""'"' or col· Tn. totlowlng oerwns are <IOlnQ buiJ. Itel tne <l•lm• atld to remoW! tn.t cof· ,,.,, ... IKltO or reol.,.d fr°"' '"'" Statt of JEL PRODUCTI ONS, 6100 W ••
C..llfornlatol"• s.tldsl•le wt>trtfette" CoHI Hwy. No. D. New oor1 &e«I\, C4 tlKlamtntarv or of admlnlslr.>llon ,...,. '161tl
bef'ftluue<I. Edo F. Guldolll, 1740 Holiday Rd. All persons havlno <l•lms 1t9AIMI Ille Newl)Ort 8t•cn. CA n6t0 de<e.,.,.,torantnterestlnsahasteteand J•mes o. stout, ,. lanclf•ll et.. wlsn1119 to oblect to such r•moval qlve Newe>ort 8Hch CA '2660 written notice of such ob1eC11on to the L•no H•llslone, 4616 ~Hllor'e
person or oersoM lnde~t•d to, or hold. or., Newoort lka<h, CA 92'60 1119 Pt!"SOnal 1>rooerty ot, th• decodMI Thi\t>Uil,..u ts conducttd bv • Umlt• ~n nolitt mu•l Dt glv•n to tho """o" ed IWlr\M•'ll•IO N>ldlnq "" ~rsoMf orol>'lrtvor-aqa•n\t Eoo F Guldolll
wtlom Ille cta•m I\ mad• ~• Int ..od•tt• Tiii\ \lalement w.n filed Wltll the
•• 11\1"" •Do•• ,.,1n1n 30 D"YS all•r Counlv Cieri!; of Orano-Counlyotl Nav, tint D<JbllC•hon ottllh noltc... 1•. 1'76 S"NFOROO.WATERS N1DI A• E ocutor ot tn• Estate PutMI~ Oran~ coa\I D•llY Poot, otOorothyV.Pla1n Nov.1,.l11tdOec l.f , •S.1916 IOecuudl _.,. l'ublls""d 0•8nQ& Coul D~•lv Pilot, No••mt>er10,ll,H,l916 098-16 --------
PUBLIC NOTICE ,,,.
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME $T,t>TE"IENT
T~ to1tow1rt11 person' ar• ""4"9 Dusi·
~\a\ HOSPITAL LINEN. HOSPITAi. LINEN RENTAi.. HOSPITAL LINEN SERVICE. HOSPITAL l.INEN REN TAL SER VI CE. SPECIALIZED LINEN. SPECIAi.i ZED 1.INEN REN TAL SP l?Cl"LIZED LINEN SERVICE. SPECtALtlFO 1.I NEN RENTAi. SERVICE. GENERAL IN. OUSTRIAL UNIFORM RENTAL SERVICE GENERAL 1NOUHRIAL RE NTAL SERVICE , INSTITUTIONAL 1.AUNDERI NCO t. LINE~l SERVICE Gi.086 LAUN D'IY. ENVIRO NM ENT Ai.$ SE RVICES A. SUPPl-IES , EN lllRONMENTl\lSCARE PRODUCTS
sos Nnrlh Evtlld ~f'\al'l•tm, c .. 11forniA 9?801 ENVIRON MENTl\LS INC.. a Califo•nlA Coroo••tl~n. s1a North Euclid Anane1m c A 0801
Thi\ 00\1n•\\ '' tOi'Wluc tnO by • fnt
"'"•lion ErwlronmentAI\, In< JOSEPH$ OO"FMl\N, Vice PrhldMf Thh >1l•IN.,."I wn• 111"<1 Wllh '"' O>tinty Cl•rk of Orono• County un Ot· tc>ber •. 106.
PUBLIC NOTICE
J17' l'ICTITIOUS aus•NESS NAME STAT EMENT •
The follow1no Df'•\OM •r~ ootno buSl-
ne\~ •·· TAURUS INVESTMENT~ )~rt C•m1110 C•o•sfrdno. San Jua11 C..1>1\lr.\M CA •7&7S
Je<~ W. Mon~ftn, &O•I woncttern O•IV•, P•IOS Vtr d .. Ptnlnsul~, CA
9011•
J J Tnoma\on. S•O& An•""'"' Ro t<I L'>llQ B•ach CA 00~01
l "1\ tlu\1n.-,\ I\ conctuc_tf'd by ~
~r.111 n.nn•r~h•O
J•c~ W Mor<>&n Tll ' \lat•m•nl w ft\ hit<! with lhlt CountyCterr,onOctobe•7' 1'16
FUJU Pvbtl\ll•d OrAnoe Co••I Dally Pllol, Nov 3 10 11. 1'. 1•16 46•1·11>
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICCO,MAIUMAL'5SAl.1: ' I.Aon Grlvtl Sr . Plalntllf v,. Rober1 M ICooo Oefen<Mflt
No ltHtJ BY vlr1ue of .,, ea•<ullon l1SUl4 on
SeP1efllt1or n. ,.,, Dy '"" S.-lof'· Court, JllOvmtnl tnltrt<I: Ho-ll, 1'7' Cou111., of Orange, Slete of Cltllfornt1. uoon 1 judQrMnt onter..t 111 f•-ot I.eon Grlvel, Sr as juelgrneM
fltltol creditor •nc:l •9•ln\I Robert M..1(-u Plibll•lled Or•t1oe Co•ll Oally PHol ludQMont debtor. s11ow1119 • net HO\llmber 3, 10 11, u, "'• "6~1& bel•"<• of m 171 ff eclually Clue °"
-----------wld fudQ"*'t on ttw O.tt of Utt 1 ..
w.nct Of Hkl encutl<l'I. I -levied
Ul'Gn •II Ille rlOfll, lltle tlld lftt-flt -----------f wld ludo"*'f dtl>lor In Ille ~Ill S.Jt1H l~e County of Or1n9e Sl•lt of HOTl(I TO ClllOITOltS (alllomla,o.scrll1ecl., fOllO'#\ Na. A-M I -Loi''· Traci »J1. 8<)0ll; 101, -SUPElllOlt COURT 01' THE ,., Of Mlketlan.ou• M•bs, and (Otft. STATS 01' CALll'ORNIA l"OR monly -nowri H : 4511 feltlleld OrllM,, TNI COUNT''I' 01" DRAHGI! CorOM Ciel Mu, Celllorril• , In t11t Matier ol Ill• E•l•t• of 2-Lot J.TractS.O.Boolttl."-11 MARGUER ITE M•E BRADFORD, ofMlsc.ellenH•tSMapsof OrenQetoulk, a.a..... ty •tld commonly kflow11 es sm l.ln-• Notice Is flertby QIVOtl to crwdlt°" coin Avt., C'rl>f'tH, C.lllornl• 1"11vlng Cltlm• eo•IMt Ille Solid Ot<• NOTICIE IS HEllE8Y GtVENll\MOft
dtnl 10 Ille wld ctalmt In tnt ofll<e Of Frldey, December 10, 1'7', •t J:Olh, the <'•"' of 1111 atore .. ld <0Ut1 ., 10 o'cloclt P M •t front of ~. P<'ftlllll them lo tne unde,.1~ al the Harbor Munlclo•I Cou•t. '601 J.-offl<• Of JUGGl!llT, VA.V(Rl(A t. bor'ee llvd . 01., ol New~ 8t•cll, WAYMA~. AllorMy\ al Law, 11• VI(. OMll!fyot Or1t119t, St•ft Of C.ltlpntf .. I to.la, In tn@ City of Co\IO MM.I, In ..,.11 Mii et 1><1bllc auction to Ille l'llQ!lftt , °'•"Vt County, whl<h tatt•r ofliGI It ~.tor OJll 111 ltwful moneyoftlle • fne e 8<e of Dulfllt\S of Ille 1111, Unlt..,Sltl•\,.,lllllt rl9/lt,tll111nctl"'!
Cltr\ tn 111 matter\ P!'r1a1"kf9 to ttl'9'1 ol Mid ludOmtnt dtblor II\ the , Hid ul•lt. Sven cl•lms "'"" Ille •llo¥e *'t•l'*I IH'-tly, or'° llWCll
"""',.,., .. oucfMn must i. w~ °' ltlef'Mf '' "Mll be .,.<ffs.t'Y IO..,,,,.,• ~nltel " elo•eteld within ,_ wkt elle<vtlefl, wlltl eccnHd 1111-i
monlM .. ,.r '"" llrtt oUblkalliWI IJf "~' tlll\~l<t. _,..,,_"-"IMrl, 1'76.
OW«I ~ov 1S, 1t7'. OM1101t· 14~ I "-"THU" THOMAS 00.. 15. llHEA
llRAOl'ORO Mar\llal,Orenot °"""1 Administrator oft,,. l!-M.llftr, Otpvty l \tMe Of ~Id Cltceffollt. tM\.Cl)\.MLIVINTMAl.,IMC. 'll~l"T, VAVllU(A & WAYMAM "-lflllff'IAIW•Y A~l I.A• 1• Cltlttilf'Y ,.,,. 1 .. t
t16 VICTO"tA S_.lt• 161' CIOl1'" MUA, CA mu ._"""'"'CA,.., Ml'"'" Ot•• eo.,, oai1y Piiot "'*'"'" 0r~ eo.,t o.11., Plttt. Nov 1',l•.enclOt<.1,1,1•7• ~I· ...... I0,11,t4,lt14 '1JN6~
PUBLIC NOTICE
'{,AB
ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Wise Postponenient
After three t>ubllc hearings on the downtown re·
~evelopment plan for Huntington Beach, it has
.ibecorne obvious that the proposal bas run into nearly
overwhe)ming opposition from members of the com-
munity.
Residents have voiced numerous complaints.
~ They say the size of the project area of 688 acres is too
large. They say that the 35-year duration of the plan i.s
too Jong.
Other.s say the proposal would place too much
authority in the hands of the city council. They argue
that a large portion of the designated area· is making
progress without the need of redevelopment being im-
plemented.
They quarrel with offical statements of
· widespread blight.
City officials have offered various options to cut
the size of the area and to place other restrictions into
the plan.
These compromises, however, seem to have done
1 little to calm the concerns of residents.
For these reasons, it appears that this week's de-
cision to postpone hearings until next Jan. 31 is the
wisest course of action to take.
ll establishes credibility to the claims of the city
.council that it is truly listening to the concerns of the
citizens and will act accordingly.
Good Fund Use
Huntington Beach Union High School District has
applied for $1, 127 ,460 in federal funds.
: The funds could provide Ocean View High School
• wilh needed athletic facilities next year.
. ..
The facilities. would not only benefit students but
the surrounding commWlity as well.
The proposed projects include an Olympic·size
swimming pool, tennis and handball courts. The pool
could also be used by handicapped persons.
District officials know that state, county a nd
municipal projects will receive priority in the com·
petition for these federal Cunds.
District funds for the construction of f acillties of
this kind are quite limited.
Despite the odds, the proposed project 1$ a de-
serving one. The district is right in making a bid for
the funds. ·
Forgotten Citizens?
Residents of a Huntington Beach mobile home
park have been hit once again with flood-like condi-
tions that threatened their homes in a low-lying sec-
tion of the city.
Several residents told the city council last week
that they feel t hey are the ·'forgotten citizens of Hunt·
ington Beach."
They said they were assured by officials that
another flood would never happen after many were
evacuated by rafts and canoes in 1974.
However, 1t did happen again on the night of Nov.
11 when water overflowed from a flood control chan-
nel and spread through most o{ the Del Mar Mobile
Home Park.
Present m embers of the city council promised
quick action to e levate the walls of the channel.
Work crews already have started sandbagging
the lowest a nd most crucial areas of the park while
looking for a more permanent solution.
With winter and the rainy season soon fo come, a
permanent answer should be found -and soon.
One flood is one too many. Reside nts have the
right to go to bed at rug ht without fears that they will
be swept from their homes. T~e Bionic Man
H /F
A Little Bit
Of Advice
From Rocky
President Will Need California
Dear
Gloo111y
Gus
Writer Misreads Carter, Brown
( ART HOPPE J
"Thanks for seeing me. Rocky.
It's ~ood of you lo spare the time ..
"Not at all. Fritz. The Presi·
dent has ordered all members of
his Administration to explain the
duties of their offlces to )OU in-
coming Democrats. Besides, l
didn't have anything else to do."
"I've already announced to the
press that Mr. Carter has as-
s ured m e l
will perform
more than
mere cere
mon1al
duties."
·'Good for
you . fella
Makcng thar
a n nounce
ment to the
press Ill th~
first ceremonial duty reqwred or
all incoming Vice Presidents ··
··Thanks, Rocky. I really want
lo do the rightthing ··
"l'o reason )'OU won·t . Fntz.
Hut what· s this about you having
a JOlOt press conference With Mr
Carter 1n Plains?"
"It worked out okay, Rocky
The reporters didn't ask me one
single ques tion."
"WELL. you never know when
they might. It seems like just
yesterda>• tn Kansas City when a
reporter asked m e a question J
remember it v1v 1dly 'Which way
1s the Convention II all?' he stud I
wish t 'd known the answer ··
"You said you were going to
tell me what I had to do as Vice
President " "Do., ..
'"For example do I have to pre.
' side over the Senate" l had to do
that when t was first elected
Senator. lt'~ an onerous chore
they dump on all Freshmen."
Is n't it a sha me about old
Scrdoge Brown! If the
state em ployes would
spend more of their time
working instead of spend·
ing our money complain·
ing, we wouldn't have to
lower our expectations and
aU of our Christmas stock·
ings would be a little fuller.
AVERAGE EARNER
G~mr Gu! commen!l ~re 1v«Knllfed by
r•tldt. '' j)"d oo no1 fttt•\\~r•l't r«Ottl \he
•1•'#\ el the new\rM Pt-r SttMI yov" Pt"t -·•to Gloomy Ciu~. O~•I• Piiot
"You don't have to if you don't
want to. Fritz l should warn you,
though. that you 'II be expected to
cut ribbons. lay wreaths. break
ground. smash bottles and pick
the President up at the airport."
.. lF I DIDN'T enjoy those
things, Rock y. I wouldn't have
taken the job. l 'm looking
forward to the foreign travel, too.
I love funerals and coronations.
But Just how do I go about de-
h vering important messages
from the President to beads of
state around the world? ..
··The best way, I found. was
simply lo say, 'A message for
you . King. Sign here, please.'
Always be sure to get a receipt in
case they try to claim later that
they never got it."
"RIGHT, ROCKY. Tell me.
though·, weren 't there limes
when you wanted to speak out,
Jtet your picture in the papen;,
make a name for yourself?"
"Wh enever l did. I always re-
membered the doctrine of vice
presidentia l privilege -the
sacred duty I had to keep this
sinecure safe for Vice Presidents
yet unborn.''
"You mean if the truth were
known .....
"Look. fella. if we didn't keep
telhng the public what a lonely,
miserable. rotten job this was.
they'd abohsh it.··
To the Editor:
Earl Waters column (Nov. 12),
entitled "California Was Loser."
wherein the columnist asserts
that California voters lacked
foresight in the recent pres1den·
tial elections because they
favored President 1',ord over
Governor Carter. is a remarka-
ble display of political naivete.
on three counts: Mr. Waters
overlooks the state's 1.ndependent
tradition, especially at the poll·
in~ booth ; he understates Gov-
ernor Ca rte~s instinctive
political nature; ~e over·
esti mates the Machiavellian
astuteness of Gov. Jerry Brown.
Mr. Waters declares California
wilJ lose out on federal largesse
because its 45 electoral votes will
be cast for out.going President
Ford wh e n Presid ent-elect
Carter will retaliate against the
nation's most populous state; all
the resulta nt c haos can be
blamed upon our cold, calculat·
ing G.overnor Brown for what
Mr. Waters says is the gov-
ernor's-weak s upport for the
Georgian 's quest for the pre·
sidency. It is the columnist's con-
tention that Brown desired to de·
ny Carter the White House in or-
der to place himself next in line
in 1980 instead or 1984. after what
might be Carter's second term.
HAVING J UST returned to the
land of the Daily Pilot from
Washington, D.C .. where I was a
participant in President Ford's
campaign drive, J believe there
are many lessons to be learned
from the contest for lhe White
House but tbey do not include Mr.
Waters' arguments.
California bas always been in-
dependent in its electoral
choices. favoring numerous
atypical candidates and causes,
a point \fhich the columnist over-
looks. Further, it must be noted
that no presidential candidate
can afford lo ignore the most im·
portant slate In the country, In
terms of economy and electoral
votes. I suspect we will witness an extra effort on Carter's part to
Americans Rediscover Home
The foreign tourism business is
troubled ; Ame ricans are re·
discovering there's no place like
home.
American bus inessmen who
necessarily travel abroad report
it's no fun anymore. High prices,
ldser accommodations •. rude-
ness -danger.
Whatever our nation's residual
imperfections, lt is still the best
place on this
planet.
Did you
h ear about
the Whllfields
and th e
Yates?
Two black
fanlilJes, dls-
lre1'sed b y
race· related
ferment in the
1 1960s. move to Africa.
Tom Whitfield was a retired
Army m an . Bob Yates bad a wife
and rour youn11tet'1. lie im-
agined that tbelra would be 1 bel-
t.er fu\1.&re lD bl1ck Zambia, so
tbe) moved tliere ln 18M.
81JT TODAY they"re homo in ~Ue -and 10 aJad to be. .. ' I
( PAUL HARVEY J
Tom says the black Africans
were jealous or the American
blaclc's education and his ability
to earn money. The black
Africans felt they should have all
the sam e advantages· wllhout
working.
BOB SAYS when the whites
were evicted from Zambia in 1964
many blacks converged from
elsewhere -expecting a shining
friction·free future.
Jnstead, under black·rule liv·
ing conditions, the economy went
r apidly dowoblll. Unemploy-
ment, poverty. disease. crime -
aJJ became rampant.
Tom was detained five montb!J
. by the government ot Zambia:
Bob for four months while the
governm ent systematically loot-
ed their possessions -even their
Zam bi an savings accou,nt.
The prlaon w s a crowded
eommoo cell wllb a filthy noor;
the food was corruntaJ, be&D$
andubbase lcav~.
American Sen. Cbarlcs Percy ,
<R·lll.) happened to visit Zam-
bia. noted their plight and helped
them get out of prison. Otherwise
both fear they'd still be there.
Bob says, "I'll never go back
and f would not advise anybody
else ever to go lo black Africa to
work or to settle."
And note the experiences of the
more amucnt who used to im·
agine there was a security
beyond the hor izon: Art Llnklet·
ter apparently did not find the
end of the rainbow in A11Stralia;
the Kennedys did not find it In
SwlUerland; the Rockefellers
clJd not find It in Argentina.
mE WORLD is in ferment. It
always has been.
Our homeland suffers growing
pains. It always wlll.
But Union Bank oC Swtuerland
fftlt Its' cmi..ssarl~ all over the
world looklng for the best of all
possibJeplaces to live.
The em issaries returned to
Switzerland and fed their find·
lngs into a computer, aski ns ll ~·Alt things considered, where la
the best place to live?"
Gucu what.? You're there.
HappyTb1nlu1givlna!
( MAILBOX J
protect the state's Democrat con·
gressional delegation in 1978's
off-year elections and to build
his strength in California for his1"
re-election bid in 1980.
As for Mr. Waters' contention
that President·elect carter has a
propensity for r etaliation against
past foes. l suggest Carter is a bit
more sophisticated than the col·
urnnist gives him credit for His
wrath will be directed against
the Republicans and those
Democrats who openly opposed
him, not important members of
his own party, Sl.ICh as Gov.
Brown, whose support he will
need in the future.
Finally. there are two reasons
that Mr. Waters' assessment of
~v. Brown is inaccurate: Jt al·
tributes more cunning and
courage lo the young governor
than is due, and it overlooks the
simple fact that Governor
Carter's alignm ent with Prop. 14
on the November ballot is consis·
tent with his basic aJlegiance to
organized labor.
NORMAN E. WATTS. JR.
BUnd t'ote
To the Editor:
Voters in the Huntington Beach
Union High School District pro-
ved that a candidate can win an
election without running any
campaign at aJJ .
On Nov. 2, one candidate was
overwhelmingly elected to the
Huntington Beach High School
board without. spending money.
.distributing campaign literature.
or appearing at public meetings.
This candidate's opponents,
however, campaigned openly by
spending time and money, ap·
pearing al public meetings. and
publis hing their views via cam-
paign literature.
I CAN only come to two con·
clusions: Either voters want
public officials who hide their
views and refuse to openly dis·
cuss their views in public, or
local voters don't lake the time to
study the issues and candldatcs
at all.
Next March there will be
another e lection to fill three
vacated seats on the JJunUngton
Beach High School District
board. Let's hope voters wiU
carefully study the candidates
before voling, and not vote
blindly for the first name on tbe
ballot.
Let's also hope that the blind
vote in the last elecUon turns out
to be blind luck, and the chosen
candidate begins to show interest
by doing a worthy job serving lbe
loca.J high schools.
DA VJD E. FEYK
E~Opetlftl
To the Edltol':
A$ a t~ach~r ln • community
coUe1e and a t~yer In \he
Newport-Mesa School Di$trict, I
am amned by the demands of
Newport-Mesa Education Aa-
sociatioo. My oiiaf\,llded col-teasues and I have been trying lo
resist tbe benevolent brow·
beating or the labor unlons since
the passage of the Rodda bill last
year. We mistakenly thought
that it would destroy the last
vestige of professional pride we
had left. The brave Newport.-
Mesa teachers have had the
courage to show us that the
California Teachers' Association
and American Federation of
Teachers have only our best in·
terests at heart.
I have three graduate degrees
including a Ph.D. a nd am
ashamed al having considered
myself fortunate that the citizens
have given me a chance to do
what I like to do at a salary which
provides a decent standard of li v·
ing. I have had the time to travel,
rest, a nd to pursue other in-
terests. However. the Newport.
Mesa Education Association has
exposed my oppression and un·
derpriviJeged slate.
I MUST SPEND three hours a
day in the classroom and one
hour in counseling students.
Then, to add insult lo injury. I
must find my own time to pre-
pare lectures. grade papers, eat
lunch a nd do all those other
things. I 'm not sure what a ''re·
lief period" is but I don't think I
have one. When my children
were born. I djdn't know that I
was entitled lo 10 days vacation.
Some days I don't feel like work·
ing but I didn 'l kn'Ow that I could
take orf 12 days for this purpose. I
now have figured that if 1 adopt·
ed two more children, attended
conferences and got sick a lot, I
could knock off 53 days or the ap-
proximately 175 days or the
school year. I would then only
need to be at school 122 days. Of
course. since I need only sJ)end
four hours on campus, including
prepa ration. grading papers ,
lunch, rest. etc .• I won't have any
lime left for classea.
At last. I would be Free from
the awful chore of teaching!
Whal a boon to the community!
Since there would be no teaching
done, students wouldn't. need to
come to class. Teachers could be
pensioned off because they
wouldn't be needed. The build-
ings and equipment could be sold
and the land made into parks for
teachers and their families to
spend their leisure time.
Al last my eyes have been
opened. No longer will I fight the
glorious new day that is coming.
Thank you, Newport·M e~a
teachers! I have only one sugges-
tion; change your name from
NMEA to GREED.
JAM~E. YOUNG
Life lsn 't Like a
Game of Roukt~e
Thoughts at Large:
Most people are disappointed
because they wrongly imagine
life to be constructed oo the order or a roulette table, when it is real-
ly made like a dart-board: not
with an even number of black or
red squares. but with a small
bull's-eye and a formidably large
area around it for missing.
We love being fooled in some
ways, a nd resent being fooled in
others; and almost the whole art
of governing consist& In being
able to d istinguish ~ lbe
two.
Men who are friends share ac·
tivitles together: women who are
friends excha nge confidences
together; this Is why, as both get
older, women continue to have
more friends than men do.
What we call "the law" is a
subUe Interface between rules
and people; and the reason
lawyel'I and laymen so seldom
agree is that the former so often
ignore the people ror the rules,
while the latter ao ollen want to
bend the rules for the people.
The ~hie! reason dJc:Ul4rsbips
inevitably fall (as we can cur· rently aee ln the case ol SpaJn
and Franco) was suc:clnctly put
by Disraeli a cent1J17 uo, •hen
that shrewd prime mln1ster ob-
served: ''No iovermnent can be Ions secure wlt.boul a fonnldable
oppo1lUon." . -The most elfecUve natt.ery ls
that directed to a penoa'a wuk·
neu or insecuriL1. not to hls
strellith: a br1J hl man h.al no need to be told he ls tntelligent, noT a beautlfUJ woman that l'lhe ts
kwel7 -but be may be lon~ng ~
\ .
(SYDNEY HARRI&)
bear that be is good-looking, and
she yearning to be told that she is
clever.
I wonder why the negative
word "disimprovements" hu.n't
come into general uuge, to
signify the kind of product or
facility that 1et. a liWe worse
each time It la chanced. llke ao many modern ''conveniences.'•
The alveolar ''t" ii ra.,t dlsap.
pearing in American speech. as
witness tbe rise 0( those two
popular words, "inncresUng••
and "genelmen. ••
ORANGE COASY
DAILY PILOT
Rohc:rt N. Wetd, Pul:llWutr
ThDma1 l<et'Vll, EdUor
Barbera Kr«ibich,
Editorial Poge E:dllor
The editorial page or the Dall~
Piiot seeks t o inform and
~imuklte readers by presenting on this page diverse commentary
on topics of interest by •)11di('ot·
<'<i columnists and cartoonists, b)' providing a forum ror readers'
view• and by presenUna thla ncwspaper·s opinions and i<lt'aS on current topic~. The editorial
opinions of the Dally Pilot appcat only In the editorial coTumn at the
top of Ult. Pnao. Oplnicil'S CX· press~ by the c0Jumru11t.s ond
cartoonist.a and letter wr!te~ nrq
thetr own and no tlldOl"lel'l\enl of
their vi~• by tho D~ly Pilot &bould be inf err~.
Wednesday, Nov~ 2C, 1976
.
Wednesday. Novembe<2'4. 1978
.
. .
~ NYC Tough for Aged Double
Bust for
Singer
DAIL V PILOT .4 t;
Equality: Ms. Ciao•
BALTIMOR& (AP) ...:. The equal
ri1ht.s movement fiDally is catching
up with Santa Claus.
Dickard, a se'rvico coosultanl for ciD a,ency. · ·
"The main thine Involved ln beinc:
a Santa Claus ia whether the peraoo
works well with children." Mra.:
' .
I t
' I
t
NEW YORK <AP) -"It is not safe lo be
old in this city," the woman whispered as she
moved closer to her husband. Two or their
neighbors, also an elderly couple, had been
robbed and murdered in their apartment.
Those woads have been heard often lately
In the ~ty's rundown neighborhoods, plagued
by increasing crimes against the elderly. •
BUT THIS WAS Manhattan's Upper East
Side, and the couple were standing in the
shadow or their luxury high rise apartment.
Upstairs at 201 E. 66th St., Frances and
Lawrence Gerber lay dead in their seventh
floor, five-room apartment for which they re-
portedly pajd about $1,000.a-month rent. Their
maid found the bodies, neckties twined about
their throats, when she reported for work.
Gerber, 84, still a practicing attorney with
offices on Madison Avenue, had been
murdered in the foyer. His walkjng cane Jay
nearby. lfu 16-year-old wile had been ill. The
maid found her on the floor of the master
bedroom, near her wheelchair.
THE APARTMENT WAS ransacked -
•bureau drawers and closet doors fiung open,
their contents strewn across the furniture and
floor.
"Ju.at some nickels, dimes -a few small
things were Jett behind,'' a police spokesman
said.
There was no sten or a struggle or forced
entry. The Gerberit were dressed in the kind of
clothes they would have worn lo spend an
evening at home.
POUCE SPECtJLATED THE Gerbers
probably were awake, perhaps watching
television, and let the murderer in voluntari-
ly. Police said they might have known the as·
sail ant.
MEMPHIS, Tenn.
(AP ) -Entertainer,
Jerry Lee Lewls was ar-·
rested and charged with·
drunkenness at the en-
trance to Elvis Presley's
mansion.
Police said they were
called to the Presley
ho.me Tuesday by a
.security guard who told
them Lewis drove up to
the gate, screamed and
cursed a nd waved a
pistol at him.
PATROLMAN B. J .
Local employment agencies report
more applications this year from
women who want lo be Santa at shop-
Pl.ni centers and department stoces.
Three out or 10 Santa applicants
this year are women. said Linda
Dickard said. :
"A girl who wants to be Santa muet:
also have a deep voice, or be able to
fake it, and be fairly tall, slnco tho
costume Js pr elty larae, .. Mn:
Dickard slad. 1
English
Make Run
On Catnip
S f.Jlndrew's 'Presbylerian Church
600 St. Andrews Road • Newport Beach • 831-2880
ntANKSGIVING DAY WORSHIP
10:00 A.M.
Dr. Ch.,I•• H. ot.renftekl, Senior Pastor
COME GATHER WITH US TO GIVE TH~KS :. ,_ ______________________________________________________________________ _ Kirkpatrick said he
found Lewis sitting in
the front seat of his car,
with a loaded .38-caliber
derringer in bis lap.
WASHINGTON CAP)
-The Agriculture
Department says that it
teceived an .inquiry
from England ''lo buy
FOR OUR BLESSINGS .
ClllW C:... r. ••l•&t .
! 1 He"Can't Play
=·~~~~~~~~~~~ ; I
j'. Unwed Poppa
l ·
=
1 Sues School
LAFAYETTE, Ind. <AP) -Sixteen-year-old
Robert Petrie trunks his high school was wrong to
suspend him from the swimming team because he is
an unwed father. Sohe'ssuing the school for$10,00L
B ut principal Larry L. Pinkerton says he stands·
by the decision. He said it was based on an Indiana
High School Athletic Association rule giving schools
........ ~
First Lady Bet-
1 ty Ford will re-
cei v e an
honorary doctor or law degree in
December· Crom
the University or Michi gan.
T h e degree
honors her ex-
amp l e to
wom e n's in·
dependence.
bulk quantities or catnip:;::::;:::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~
leaves and liquid cat-It was the second ar-
rest in less than 24 hours
for the former rock 'n'
roll star who has lately
turned to country music.
HE WAS arrested on
charges of driving while·
intoxicated , reckless
driving and failing lo
carry a driver's license
Monday after another
nip."
I Officials or the depart .
me nt 's Foreign
Agricultural Service
said prospective catnip
sett ers can contact
"Mrs. D. Richard, Cats
Accessories Ltd., Catac
H o u se. Newnham
Street, Befored MK40
JJR, England."
car overturne d in a---------
rutcb at Collierville near
his home.
We CAPISTRANO
LUNCH • BRUNCH • DIMMER
BANQUETS • ENTBtT .Al NM ENT NIGHTLY
OPEM THAHKSGtVIMG DAY
Open 2 p.m. to 9 p.m.
the right to disqualify athletes whose "habits, con-~
duct or character in or out or school. .. are s uch to
reflect discredit upon their school or the associa-
Police later said 11
breatbalyzer test for
alcohol was negative.
He was released on $250
bond after spending
sever al hours in the
Collierville jail.
SP~IAL HOUDAY MENU
496-8181 831.0232 ti .. on.
THE SUIT FILED IN U.S. District Court claims
the one-year suspension violates Petrie's civil rights
and will hurt his chances of getting a college athletic
scholars hip. Petrie said such a scholarship would be
worth more than $10,000.
Besides damages, Petrie is seeking a temporary
restraining order and a permanent order to force
Twin Lakes Hlgh School in Monticello to allow him to
compete when the team opens its season Saturday.
ACCORDING TO THE SUIT, the youth's
mother, Mary Campbell, of rural Burnettsville, r e-
ceived a letter Oct. 7 from the high school swimming
coach, saying her son had been s uspended from com-
'· petition because his child was bornoutofwedlock.
The suit alleged that Supt. Robert Hanni and
principal Pinkerton acknowledged that Petrie would
not have been suspended had he married the child's
mother. .
But Hanni said ''that statement wasn't made by
me. That is an assumption made by the plaintiff's at-
•· torney."
PETRIE AND IDS GIRL FRI END, ALSO 16,
placed their three-month-old chlld up for adoption
after deciding that their youth made marriage inad-
• r visable, the suit said. ·
Pinkerton said the school planned to "stay with
the policy until someone tells us otherwise." He said
.,. that aside from the suspension, "there's been no dis-
crimination, no hllrassment," against Petrie
,, Bavarians Build
.. Toad Underpass
.,
,
MUNI CH . West Germany <AP) -The
Bavarian ecology mmistry has reported completion
of a tunnel to help toads near the town of Forchheim
safely reach their spawn sites on the other side of a
highway.
A statement reported that in previous years
thousands of toads crossed the busy highway to re·
ach a nearby pond and many were killed by passing
motorists.
Two similar tunnels ar(' under construction un·
der highways near Bad Toelz in Upper Bavaria, the
statement said, and another will be built between
Mumau and Garm1sch-Partenkirchen.
The Armchair Hun ter says:
Ringneck Pheasant
Chukar Partridge
Bobwhite Quail
Mallard Duck
Guinea
Also available; hors d'oeuvres and boneless
· Cornish game hens.
All fresh-frozen Dressed. ready lo cook with
Free Recipe Folder. 2 convenient IQcat1ons.
APWlr-..holo
JUST WHEN YOU
START TO LOVE US,
WE .CHANGE OUR NAME.
Lately, we've been telling you how
Pie-A-Dilly sells great clothes at
substantial savings. Anywhere from 30 to
... .50% off. And you've come in and seen the
quality of the clothes. Clothes like you'd
find in the fashionable stores up the street..
Only at Pie-A-Dilly we don't charge
fashionable prices.
So, now that you're getting to know us, .
we're going to change the name. We just felt
that there were too many other stores using
the same name and our uniqueness needed
a unique name. So, we're chang}ng to
IT'S-A-DILLY: After an, if you can still get
a dilly of a deal and great clothes, what
difference does a name make?
YOU PAY .3CT-503 LESS.
TORROCENTER SHOPPING CENTER IN EL TORO
23825 El Toro Rd. a t Rock.field n ear Thrifty
Formerly pic·A-<lillf in great<'r Los Angcl('s
t:A ~T PASAL>E:"JA
Hasting:-Kanrh Shoppinsc \rntcr
'l725 f'ooth1 II Hlvd.
1':LTOKO
Torr<><'rntc•r 2:{~:?;; El Toro Rd.
t-:~Cl~O
15605 \'C'ntura Hhd. 7~~.!);,liU
}'ULLERTON
Ornngefair Mall Shpg. Ctr.
121 A Oranl{efair Mall
GAROF:N GRO\'E
12813 Hur&r Bl\'d. '
GLENDALE
:UG S. C1•ntral Ave. 2 \0-992~
(;RAN ADA lllLLS
North Hills CC'nter,
10120 Balboa Uhtl
HOLLYWOOD
5409 Sunset. Blvd., L.A.
(Ac1'0st1 from Zody'!!)
W. HOLLYWOOD 8111 HeVl•rlv Rivel. fl/i:J .!):W:J I '
LAKF.WOOO Lakewood Cent('r, t l~I ('andlt'\\O•lcl
I.ONG m·:AC ll
Marin3 ~hoppin~ C<'ntr r.
4640 £. PllCI rw Coa.'t ti\\'\'.
~to~Tf:RF:Y PARK
,\tlnntu· Squar1•
:!11111 ,\tl:tnlil' Blwl.
(!lt'\l lo \\'1•stf'rn i\utn)
~o. lfOLLY\\'000
\':ii 11°\ l'la1.:1,
1;.; t:i Laurc•I ( 'anyon Blvcl.
ONTARJO
Ontftrio Plar.a Shopping Center
1154 No. Mountain Avenue
OHANGF.
'l'u~t1n·t'ollin!' l'ihopp1ng Cenll•r,
!l:iO Tustin Aw. ·
Sflt:RM AN OAKS
Cih.•ndnl<' Fl'dc•ral l'lnzn.
t:l710 k 1.,..c.-r"ide Dr.
THOUSANO OAKS
l'nrk Oaks ~hoppin1e Cct\lrl"
Hi72 Moorpark Hond
WEST COVI NA .
WP~l Covina Fashinn Plaza
10-111 W. c;arvcy on Cali fornia ·
ffacin$l Bullock'i.)
WOOOl.ANO 1111.L~
Woodl&lud Hill:( Shopping Ccntt>I" 2HW~ Wntura BlvJ.
VF.NTURA ~,'laza ~hopt\ini.t Center _,oo E. Thompi1on UtvJ.
New Stores coming to Fountain Valley, Westminster and Brea
I
L 1'1. Boyd
'Pikers' Ca1ne
FromMissouri
Back in the 1~. the pickings were pretty
slim in Pike County, Mo. So many a farmer
thereabouts packed what litUe gear be owned
In a wagon, abandoned his half-cleared
acreage, a nd trekked west to Central
California. He wasn't exactly Jeno~ as a free
spender, having Uved at length w1thout ~ny
money to spend, but he gain~ ~he reputation
of being a free drinker, prov1dmg somebody
else bought the drinks. Now he'~ rem~mbered
merely as a pioneer, and that IS as 1t should
be. Nonetheless, our Language m~ says we
allude back to that tight-fisted Pike County
setUer of yesteryear wben now we refer to
someone as a "piker."
ALPHABET
Q. ''Why is our word 'alphabet' so
called?''
A. Comes from the first two letters of the.
Greek alphabet, alpha and beta.
Professional photographer John ~
Camera of Trenton, N.J., merits membership
in lhe Proper Job Club, too,
certainly.
That traffic offense
most likely lo be com-
mitted by women drivers,
it's reported, is the
switching or lanes without
signaling. This is in the ci-
ty, please note. The viola-
tion most common to men
drivers is said to be the
running of stop signs.
A butcher who has cut up countless beeves
claims most cattle have loose _kidn~ys on the
left side, evidently because. said cn~te~s tear
those kidneys free by hab1tual.ly getting up
from a lying position left hoof first. Also, the
left sides of beeves, be says, usually have
about 10 lo 20 more pounds of excessive fat. He
contends the meat buyers, who tend. to c~?<'se
the right sides, have a common saying: The
right side is thf' tight side."
HOTTEST PEPPERS
World 's hottest pepper is called pili pili ho
ho and one whiff of same is said to make )'.OU
gasp and give your eyes a bright reflective
glaze. No place els~ is t~at pepper ~rown com-
mercially but on Zanzibar. Thats not what
gives Zanzibar most of its money,_ however.
Cloves are its big deal. The typical clove
farmer there pulls in about $5,000 a year. .
That fish called lhe "barracuda" got its
name from a Spanish word meaning "overlap-
ping teeth." Incidentally, some barracuda,
like some mushrooms, are labeled as ex-
cellent food while others are regarded as
poisonous. But which are w~ch I don't know.
The repQrl that people of retirem~nt age
have lost 30 percent of their taste buds 1s what
prompts a medical specialist to suggest that
you serve your aging mom and dad sour
pickles for dessert henceforth. They most pro-
bably no longer appreciate f:he sweet flavo~s
of ice cream and cherry p1e, contends this
authority. The particular sensors that detect
these tastes get lost with the years. says be.
But he claims their tastes for dill and vinegar
hang m there.
"""'~" m•1l to L M BOV<I. p 0 ~. IS.0, '°''•Mesa 92l>lo
For the Record
Db•olutlo•• 01 Marria ..
FIHAL Dl!Cltl I! S
t=itf'f Nov•mt:t.rt
w~ 110 Svl••• ~~· ""' °""'"'O R•Y ~l\Wr:. ET r 8 trtMr" l tnO lt1\Cllr
f R1J8l"'4 Opll)rf"\ LO"'"'" And
l;d#l•l1 A•1•" · LI TCHFt ELO Jol\O Ev•''"'' t"IJ ~,,,,,.. C.narlPnfl QU~HH\M l•fr• •'I C"•'I•\ flt~ ~''""'._, (.r1\w•ll CilOWc;t(1 l"'V+'\
t, '""' ~'~'""'-'' M Ht.tc._. tt..rtv r .. n~ ''°"" Rf\~rf \t•fth-1 n 6Rt. W[ A °""*' l••"' "'"" ~1 "'i \•t i•thM'+ OJ\HARO()N l ,,.,, '""' 11'\f1ff.tf'C>'"'
Al\'\ tcEl"A"'-'\ (tOtH\tP I•·•" ,,,,,
.(1'10\
G -1 LFGO~. I•? Qu'>•" M>f
P'\t•ll 1 .... ,.,.,r1' ~4l ",TO"' ~O"'•I)
.( ,..,,, f,1•'1 r, \M• f H Elt•..-M-;r .
...ct "'"• 000'\()N M"~' F """ M.t•-.>••I l JOINEll, J1>1tft \ltt1Ntn
4w:1 0.bt><Aft O••M ~[l"IANN Son
n-4 '"d • •• .. ""' lt0 8ER<;Ot<I. l •V'•I H I•'• 11\'1 Fr""~" Lfli .. <;tt.E~ G• •· • ~ ·l"O o~"•'d ' \OAN0lll RIET MatyAIWl(IWfrt r
(.A.CfltN (,,,, V ilit"d J•~ Q. o owe q PA,,.., .. ., 1 o,..""""'..., J
~)·~ .............. , IJ
t-40 _. ANSON I t -.n A"" """'
oll)1"" J• r.r)Mf I '"'' •·-T
,.._.., P\tt1(1.\ PR~J1'Ct1 "°'"''"""""Iii
,..._,l v,~t Rr..,l~L ._.n..-~l-
And , nw,.r•J WEE IC' '"''~' ''-" '"°"' Cet"y MM·• <,ff ,..l'JER l l'•ft
f1fll "'"" "'"'"'" W • AAAVO
M•f'\\H''" Lu''" •nd A l o .. rtl')
R•vna LOFSTROM,\.• ••o 41on M"1
Qft~\("' Af'\r\A CMon \0'11 NAF
!AL.I\ Ann~ ~n<I -'ll•n, JVNOWICH,
Jo ~"'"' ""d Oon•trt ltl\LfEN Eawud Ft,.nkandC.orol
OPno\f Mo\GER. "lll<t I: o~d Rol»rt
~I VILL.A~ENOR, S "'"'""'" •n~
I"'" 0Rf\SLCR R•<" Sc"tt ao><f
C~r"t'' (f\•t'I""".
Death
Elsewhere
LOS ANGELES <AP)
-Mn. EUHl>eth Myers
LaToarrette, Beverly
Hills social figure and
ac tiv e i n th e
thoroughbred racing
held, di ed Tuesday in
Goo d Samaritan
Hospital of complica·
-----------.. tions resulting from a broken hip.
I'
14L Tl-Hilt.Ult.OM
llUNHALHOMI
Corona del Mar 673-9450
Costa Mesa 646-2424
HUH04DWAY
MOITUAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
MeCOllMICIC
MOITU4111S
Laguna Beach
494-9415
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
PACIFtC YllW
Mf.MOllAL,.AH
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport.
Cahlornla
644-2700
PllKllAMll.Y
COi.OHi.AL 'VNIRA&.
HOMI
7801 Bolaa Av4t. Westminster
893-3525
SMITHS• MOITUA.IY
621 Main St. Huntingtol\ Bench
538-8539
SMfTN lVTHJU LA.Ml ow
WUTC41ff CNANl Mol'tuatY •• 84M888
'427 E 171t1 St.,
Costa Mesa
BUFFALO CAP)
Irving Prlce, 92, a
founder o( Fisher-Price
Toys Inc., the nation's
second largest toy
manufacturer, di ed
Tuesday after a s hort ill-
ness.
Death Notl~e•
Cl.ARK ~UTH 9. C\.AIUC, , .. ,'""'of C:O.i.
Mpw, c.tlltornl•. P.swd • ..,.., -.. .,,_ n.. "1•. S<lrvl._.d tiy llusb8rWf ~riff M. Cl•rll: ton 0.erl" E. Cl•fll
ol Coo~ AM~, c.t. C•YPIShll WNk H
wltt 1>e held 11 00 AM F rldey ~r ,
"· lt7• •I Peclftc Vi.. Memortet P;ofk,
,._, 8Htl\. ~ Otfitll Ul'IQ Pestor
l(tM,.y Frer>I,.,, 01 TIMP PtlllCe ol
l'fft• l.allherM Cllu•t h. CO\t• MM•.
Ca. Olruted by Petitte Vl•w Mot1\ltf'Y.
MAIUU!l.L
MAltOAR@T S. NAIUtEll., .-.!ildtor>I
o4 Colla ~w. C.lltorr>la PM-•w•y
NoYelllbet >J. u a . Sur•l•eo by ~ "Wytl H•rrelt; OM "°" ~ H. Hatntl Of ui..,... Hitt~. _,
M«y ll«t Of LM V99.tt, N ... .O.; -~ Wlllleni 8raulo ol ~.
lllrH ehlert Tllelm• M11M•y ol ~Ill; l!vu Tall~ ot Le• v-oa,,
Hwad111 4'lw11la Caroll o1 °"'~" °"""'; °"' Q~l!ldtllltd. ~r•ICK lo bt l!of4 l'rtNy "'-111ber h , 1•1• •111 :00
AM ... ,.,..,..,..., ~!Ml. '"'-=-== .:o~·~r=~~ ~-:: Aell l rNOwa, MofliHty
Neptune Society
C~SMATIC>ff aUttlil\l ATIP
646-7~31 y_....,__, ... , ... --------....... CNIW ..... ......_ .. ._ ~.
'Medic Training Site Cut
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi I
Supervisors to Fol/,ow Panel's Suggeatwn
By KATHY CLANCY Of 11• O•llr ,.,,.. SIA"
Two orange County hoses
now provtde paramedic tr · g,
but county supervisors decided
Tuesday that only one agency ls
needed.
The board voted 3-l lo follow
the recom m e ndatlon of its
Emergency Medical Care Com-
mittee. The committee will re-
commend next. month which
agency should recei"e the county
lraining contract.
At the same lime, the board
agreed to pick up training costs
only for paramedJcs working as
firemen.
AT PRESENT. 80'l1f Santa
Ana-Tustin Community Hos pital
and UCI Medical Center train
Civic Center
Pools May
Be Planters
Two Santa Ana Civic Center
reflecting pools, which leak and
malfunction when full a nd
otherwise stand empty or stag.
nant, s hould be filled with
p l ants , Orange County
supervisors agreed Tuesday.
The board opted for the plant
program upon the recommenda-
tion of county staff members.
The $61 ,000 conversion project
calls f or l and sc aping,
waterproofing and installation
or a drainage system.
Supervisors also agreed to
ask the Santa Ana Civic Center
Commission and Santa Ana city
officials to approve using civ1c
center parking funds lo pay for
the project.
STAN KRUASE of the county
General Services Agency said
the board could fill the pools
with cement for about $48,000
instead. But he s aid the plaza
area already contains a lot of
pavement.
Or for about $45,000 the pools
could be.> resealed and their
pump and filtering systems re-
paired, Kruase said, but that
could result in later malfunc-
tioning and continued cleaning problems.
paramedics for cities and the
county. The county pays lhe
$2,613 training costs, while local
governments pay the salaries ol
paramedics during the six-month
medical course.
Supervisor Laurence Schmit
said Tuesday he sees nolhlng
wrong with tbe current arrange-
ment as long as county standards
are maintained.
Schmit, who cast the lone no
vote on the single contract idea,
said, "I sense a feeling of fear of
compe.tWon here. 1 don't know wby."
BUT MIKE WllLIAMS, ad·
ministrator or county emergency
medical care, said training for
the 31 paramedi~ units planned
for the cities and unincorporated
area will be complete by next
August.
After that, he said, training
primarily will be needed only for
replacing paramedics who re-
sign and for recertification of
previously·trained paramedics.
And, he said, operating multi·
pie training programs could re·
suit in a duplication or effort and
a poorer quality of training.
BUT DR. MICHAEL H. Su.koff,
chief of staff at Santa Ana-
Tustin, argued, "Competition is
a healthy item. To say there
should be one source or education
will definitely lead to stagna-tion."
"I think it would be a dis·
service lo the people of Orange
County to allow their paramedics
to be trained by only one
source," Sukorr said.
But Supervisor Thomas Riley
said the board already has ap-
proved a paramedic challenge
exam, which allows those trained
elsewhere to take the test and
qualify to work as a paramedic.
THAT TEST, ALONG, with the
county training program, both
require that paramedics have
jobs before being certified as
trained medical workers.
Riley said be fears an open
training program at various
hospitals or colleges could lead to
many students going through
paramedic training only lo wind
up without jobs upon completion.
Williams said after the meet-
ing both UCI and Santa Ana·
Tustin hospitals have expressed
plans to seek the county contract.
In addition, he said, Santa Ana
Community Colleie bopes to ap-ply.
WILLIAMS SAID lf the board follow s a tlremen .only
paramedic policy, that could
alter coUece plans since normaJ_.
ly it would J>rovide an open pro-
gram to all students qualified
and interested.
The only paramedics now in
the county who are not firemen
are women nurses staffing an
Anaheim unit. But city officials
had lo obtain special board ap-
proval before training thern.
'Bike-a.tlwn'
Deadline Set
Cyclists who participated in
the American Cancer Society's
October bike-a-thon are re·
minded that Nov. 30 is the de-
adline to send in their pledges in
order to be eligible to win a 10-
speed bike.
Four bikes donated by Carl's
Jr. Restaurants will be given
away, two each in the junior
category (15 years old and un·
der) and the senior category (16
and over ). Winners in each
category will be people who rode
the most miles and people who
collected the most money.
People who have questions
about turning in their pledges
should call the Orange County
Unit of the American Cancer
Society, 752-8600.
Toro Branch
Designer Set
An architect for the new
10,000-square-foot El Toro branch
library was hired Tuesday by
Orange County Supervisors.
The board agreed to pay
Richard Brooks Jr. and Asociates
$40,885 to design and engineer the
proposed $510,000 building.
The facility will be pletced on a
1.3 acre site southeast of El Toro
Road and Cornelius Ori ve.
Supervisors also have applied
for a federal grant to install solar
heating and air-conditioning in
the new facility.
Cot a problPm? Thl'11 wnte to Pot Durzn. Pat will
cul red tape. getting lht an$U't'rs and act ion ynu
Tli'td to 10/ut meqwtu.os m gtwemmerzl and l>ull·
ness. Marl your quutw1u lo Pal Dunr1 Al Yt>U,.
Sen'tC<'. Orarzge Coast Owly Pilot. P.O fl<J.r 1560,
Costa Mna. CA 9?626. I nclude your teltphone
ntJmber. The column appears daily ~.rcept
Saturdays.
Blade Tift D~. chopped raw beef kidney. This has
been his favorite dish for years. Now
my neighbor tells me that parasites
are often present in this meat. ts that
true?
E. R .• Dana Point
"Look at the blankety-blank blank price of their
blankety-blank bl'llk house blankety·blank blank
blanc de blanc!"
·THE
f"lUMllNG
HEATING
All COHO, tTi..et_ .. ,__I
S-.f'l,Ce 11' YOtJf Att.-c:.n
MISSION 111£ JO ?A'124' C..mn'M) C.rh~lf.J'\I')
I~~ t._., a•A • .,,,,1--..,:
495-0401 ..cosl'A"Mes-.. -
1&2& Newoort 81...a. ~· L't 642-1753 •wm
. Call642-5678.
Put a lew words
to work for ou.
'7 6 CADILLAC
TAKE OVER LEASE
IJ,OOOMtUS
HO MOMIY HllDm
6J 1 .J222 .ua FOa AL
HOWARD'S
RESTAURANT
OPEN THAt«SGIVING DAY
SPECIAL THAMCSGIYIMG DIMMER
Cream of celery and mushroom soup, roast
turkey with stuffing, mashed potatoes.
vegetable, cranberry sauce. dessert and
beverage. s 315 per penoll
4001 WI Pacific Coast Hwy.
NEWPORT BEAOI 673-nSO
DEAR PAT: We purchased a lawn
mower from Montgomery Ward last
June. Although it was sold as a "de·
mo." we were told that it had the
same guarantee as a new mower.
After we had used the mower a few.
times, we found that it had to be re-
filled with oil after a half hour of
operation. I wanted to return it, but
Ward's wouldn't lake it back. The
transmission was checked and found
to be okay. 1 then asked for a return
for credit. This was refused. A letter
to the corporate offices in Chicago has
not been answered.
R.J., Santa Ana
Ward's corporate headquarters
C6l9 W. Chicago Ave., Chicago, IL
60607) ordered a full lnspectJon of
your mower. It found that there was
no oU leak and that the transml&sJon
was la working order. Ward's de·
termlned that the problems you had
with the mower resalted from Im·
proper care. Technlcally, since
Ward·s round that I.he mower had
been aba1'ed, the company was not
liable for adjustments. It was de·
cided, however, that your mower
would be repaired to your satisfac-
tion, at no charge to you. You report
that the mower la now operating pro-
perly.
Don't worry. There ls very little
chance that parasites are present ln
top-grade raw beef kidney. This meat
also may help control cystitis In older
or irei.a&ered cats. Some veterlnartus
believe that a total dry food diet can
cause cystitis ln certain cats due to
hig.b ash content, , ·
w~ Wall• lt'Mc~
DEAR PAT: Ourfarnily moved into
a new house recently. All of the walls
are painted white. I. don't know ~ow
much the builder diluted the paint,
but I'm finding that after only a few
washings with spray cleaners, the
paint is wearing away. We ca'.''t _af.
ford a paint job right now. and I d bke
to know wbat I should use on lhe walls·
that will get them spot-cleaned and
not totally wash away the thin coat of
You can too!
·call: 714·834·88&&
1'.fdnq'• i•e Cat'• NeovJ
DEAR PAT: My cat likes to eat
5 21~
aint .
P · J .W.,SanClemente
Undllated hand dlsbwaablng lie·
tergent on a wet cloth wU1 effeetlnly
remove fJJJger marks on walls wttboat
removlag paint. Both dlabwasblng
and laundry detergent can be made
stronger for large area cleaning by
adding some boaaebold ammonia to a
detergent-water mixture.
btih:tf. * /1dst/I
Police-tested
security.
HICWH S1Cuam ONE INCH DIADIOLT .
CALL
547-7474
24 HOURS 1 DAYS
~ UO~lt
This rugged steel and braas
cylinder deadlock is the single
most effective way of keeping
your home safe from burglars,
It has 1beeh rigorously tested
by law enforcement agencies
to Insure maximum protection.
S,.tam
24 "-' c ....... s .... hC9tw
OUllT Ate LMMIT ...... ft'LT owtiD
Al.UM co. 94 OUMM COUMrf ..
What you hear may change your life!
HOPALONG CASSIDY RETURNS
The legendary cowboy can now be ~cen
in a limited numhcr of return eng.1gt'ments at
Superb clu~s1c Cttump/cs of cc1rly <i11tw1c1t1c history
Tickets avi\ilahlc for following pcrfoa mdnCcs·
e November 26, 27, 28, 1976
e M.itinl'eS 2:00 p.m. S"turd.1y and Sunday.
e Evenings 7:30 p.m. rrid.1y and S.11urd~y.
The Forum Theatre, Laguna 811c:h
( Fe•ti1111I grn11nrls on )
L11gun11 Canyon Road
Adults Sl.00, children $1.011.
(T~x dnductihl!l)
T teketa ~ ot the box of f'ic. or for
~tic.let& call 499-131 I « .fH.1018
M pr«ed ;c> to $cQh Coast Comnu'll°ty ~cl
• .
I ~
I
-PUBUC NOftCE PVBUC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE PUB.UC N011CE ~~~~--~~~-~~~---~---~-=-~1~~---~--....-..,.,,..,,.,,......~~~---~~~~~--' "CT'ITIOUI •UllNU$ "mnov1au111tus Tonight's
TV Highlights
P ICTITtOUI a UllNHI
N-1 $TATllllllUfT n. fotlow1114 IM•\Otl 11 <loll>Q WM• -·· UNllMITfO 'PORHw••R.
Wtt Se~ v . -.u11uno1o1> !IMO\. CA.,_
IC•ron t ut., ll•u•••· U711 ~ l.I\, -.u,.11,_..0ft a..c11. (A .,....
Tiii\ ~-' I• tond\KleCI DY ._ 111 dlllidlMll
ICer•" L"'" 8t"-Tll" \lele-1 w•• 11141<1 "'*Ill t"9 Qlo;ntv Cterlr ot 0••1199 Couftly Oft ~rll.t•I• ,_,
,,_,....., Or..-ot Co••f [lejly Pllol.
-11.1•. and Oe< t e. mt CU·lt
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUN1110tlCOUllYOPTl4•
STATE 0 .. CALll'OllNIA P01'
•AMI ITATIMI!~ ....... ISTATIIMtlWT
Tiie lotl1.t•ll\9 per'6ft• ••~ Ooll\9 T"9 '°'leoillftt --k claMo ouM• -1-•M' ....... .... VL.SA~ II 0...IQfl l"IN• J?0 l'OUNTAIN VAlLl!Y SOOY
Ne-1 o.<> ... ~,New-' llMCll. WOllltS tl)U W••"•'· F•1H1l•l11
tMO Vat..,,. CA ttlOe
"""'"' ~ McCllllOV<Jll. in• ~ .John O.wld Marcll ,..,, LO\
lord l.aN •0, N•wOOrt 8Mcll CA ~. F-t.oln Valley, c;A"1'/t9 '*° "''' bUM'-• ,, (Oftd\K l•d 11¥.,. '" JoM A Oln.,, t•H SllyllN Or CllVIO\lal
FUI-. CA •WI Onld J Merell
n.I\ ~MU I\ COnd"<led bY a Tiii, ~ete-1 we\ 111..i _,Ill "'°
ow-rel poorttwnlllo Gouftly O•rll of Or~ ~ Oft Pflrllh S M<Cull..... ~..-4. tfl6 ™• tllll-1\I W&\ llled ""''" IN O>vf\IY C••<' Of Or•llQe eoumv Oft ,..,,....,_4, ,.,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC N011CE
'ICTITIOUS I USINl.U
NAME STllTEMl.NT
"fl-. IQOIO..lnQ per>Oft I\ OOlrwi ~ ""'II\' TMIE COUNTY OPOllMOE ,.CTlftOUS e us1NEU
Ne,A-41ttn NAMI STATElllBHT
MOTi C: IE 0 fl HI! All INO O' The to!lowlnQ ~·~ •~ dol"O llU1'
"TITIOM POlt .. llotlATE Of'WIU. -\••
A•O "Olt LITTIEllS TISTAfld... HAllO TIMES, Ul• N•wPOn
TAllY 81\ld . CoU• Mew. CA .,u.
E1tei.o1 WIENOELL .. llAV~D. woro Cler>. 1. .... ,,,.., Gtotl
.... RAY UVMOM.0. •U WENOEU. ~-CA'l'M6S
FELTONllAVMONO. De<-" Tltlt 1111'4net\ •• con<Jucreo by"" In·
N01'1CE 1$ -.elllEBV GIVEN tt'lat dlvl<IU•I
l(Altl!N I( RIC .. MONO II•• tllfd 8vtord c Lewi\
.......,•i»lltlonfor Pr-wolWlll...O """ \t•tement ••• Ill.cl "''"' t.,. l\l'~of Lenen r utamet'll..,to tountv Cler~ ot Or•11~ C:O..ntr OI\ IN peollt!ont• r•le,.nce to -'cf'I ,, NO¥em.,., \S. ,.,,,
O•ISY Vt ASSOCIATES LTO
1110 81t<" Stteel !.ull• '°'· ~ e.oec11. CA "1.t60 John 1<onwl1tr, 1to1 Bare""'9
T•,.e<• Co<DN 0.1 MA•. C•'26t~
Tiii\ t>u\l ... U f\ COf'ld .. clad Cl't •
lltnlMcJ PM'!Mr~l>lp
JQhll l(OllWl\ar
Tiii\ •letemenl WH lllN wlll• ltw
County Clerti, of Oranoe c->lv Oft _,,,,.,. ,._,
"'* kit 1"'11\er partlc11ta"' --lfl9 time ¥ttd INC• of -1"9 IN_,,. ~ llMfl WI for ~' 1. "1•, et
IO:OO e.m • Ill·~ tOllMl"OOM di l)ooel'I.
,,_, No J ol wld co~. el XX> O•lc
c.nter ()rlw Wflt. ln tl'w City di s-ita
P\i«ll'-Or~ Coe•! OdllV P.IOI .. _ No¥ 17,tf .-c>.( I I tt>t '716-7t P\i«lll~ Or..,... CCMl\I Daily P<lol.
Al\a, Cetllor111a Dated....._,,.,.,"· 1976
Wll.l.IAM E SI J()t4N,
tollnt'P Clffll
IOWAllOM ITONf' ._,,"'""'"' ,,......_.,. Cllwtlr Orlve, w-. ..
........ -... C:.llMIM•._.. Tet:f1141.._
........ ., .. , .... 11 .....
Publlll>ecl <><•noe C.OHI o.itv P1tot
--14, u. •lie! o.c-· '· IW• 4"1-16
PUBLIC NOTICE
-"J4,end0.C '·'·'"• ,,,,,.1-------------
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
l'llCTJTIOUSaV11•ea •AMelT&TtllHtfT
Tiie IOllOWl119 penon1 er• dlllllll °'*' -M Ill OUllCStlVE.11 . Ot
OUIO<SILVl!.11 llOAlllO\HOllT'S. ,_II ~.~lke<ll.CA_, ~ Qllllolt-u ~ • . • C.llltnlia ccw~
.-e11..... Mt 1 k ••"•'•· Newoon 8ffch,CA~
Tiii\ b<nl""' ,, <°"""<'MG ..... CO<"
W.Cl9ft
Outhit-US A lllOOtrt I . M<l(11l9'1'
St<•Treat.
Tiii' 11-4-1 -~· lllecl wl1'I ,,.
Coun1V Cleft of O< ~ Co<lnf't °" Nov ... ,.,. .,.,,..
PWll"*' °'-~' Dally Pllol, ,_ u.-o.< 1.a. o, 1'7• _,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTl"10USaU,INISS MAMI STATl!MtllfT
Tiw folloWlnq --~ er• 011"'9111AI ,,
MUM: fl. RAN(MITO PROOVCTIO...S,
40t2tlll St , NeW110ft a .. c 11, CA "*'3
Allll•'• t:.1 R•MllllO NO 4 Int , IOt 41~1St .. H.-t8e.c:ll,c,.\'Mt • Thi• IKdJM\, I\ COndlKi.G b't e (Of
00te4loll Avll•'• El R•nclllto
w9.0A•ll•. PrHldeM
Tiii• tla~t wa• Illa.I wllh the
O:lllnlY Cler'< Of 0.eft91 '°""'"Cl'\ ND•
-J.1'16 ~
~I~ <><•noe coa,1 ()ally PUol
HowmllerfO,r1.t•.-oec.-1. "" ~,.
PU BLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI aUSIHIS.S
MAME nATIMENT
~ loOO••"O P•trlOf'I\ .,. dolftQ M l
~U\
HOLLANDS AWNING ~ SHAOE
CO, lbl N-l)Of1 8tvd , s .. 11 ••. COiia
MH.t. CA '1'1611 araoi.r 8•11f•mln -.o11~. 1119'1'> S.lboe Bl'td , Newoort Buell, CA'7663
Cll•l•toontr J•m•• Oo•l!M. 5108
Meol~.Newpott!IN<f'I CA9*3
Tlll< bu\ln•n I\ conduneo by A 09Nra1 !lllrlMr,lllp
8•ed~land
This sl•t•men• w41 fllfd with ,,,.
County Cit!'\ ot Oraft94t COllM• Oft NOii u .• .., •. ....,,.
P\itlll~ Ora~ Coul Oltlty PllOC
No• ll. 2'.•nd D« I ti. "l•
PUBLIC N0'11CE
t<ICT1TtoU$ •ustNHS
MAMISTATlllllNT
Tllf! toltowl119 -tpn Is dol"O blnl
l'lftSH·
OVERT PROOUCT ACCOUNT
16033 Botw Citic• St , Suite 100. _...,.,
ll\CllOfl 8eac1t. CA tt~•
Or. Fr-rick 0 Eckltld, IM:ll
N..,.,,_., LAN . Hunlll'IQIOft S.adl. CA91eo01
Tltl• -I~• ,, COl\OUCled bY •n In
oMdl.lal
Or Fr-rlc'-0 Ec~i.tct
Tiii• 11••-•nl "'•• flleo """' "" Count., Cieri( 01 Df'anoe COUlllY on Nov. "· t•l•-A7J37 PIA>tl~ O••-Coast o.ll'P Pllol.
NoY l•. •lld Oec. I, I, IS, 19ll
PUBLIC NOTICE
t<ICTITIOUS IUSINESS
NAMIS"TATEMENT
Tl'le lollowlno person~ are dolf'IQ Ml·
"9\)&'\•
THE CLOTHES 111,,.CK 171 E 17111
Street, #leW <Anter, '°'It 11NM. CA 'W1
F•tl'll M AlldelrTlutl. '"' Kiwi 0 FoufltelflV•llew,CAet10I
Rebtll M, •-•mull ~ CMdlNI
SI., Fovnt•ln v1111er. CA "11ot
Tl\I\ btltl,..U h COf'ldu<led by 4
91N<•I 1>11'1.,.nfllp
Falltl Abclelm"ll
Tltls \tetemenl '"'"' lllM will'I tl1e c.o..nc., cterll of Or a"9e c°"""' Oft i..... 1',leJ6
H7Ml
PullllsNcl o.-~t Deity Piiot. Ncl'l.14,andO.C. t.•. ,~. ,.,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
tMOM•SOOISON utum.aweur1ns
A-y•tUw
SUSOVtl\F'-St,...t
........ l.C.At0071 PIA>ll~ Oranoe CN\I Detty PllOC,
-l• &ndOec I. I. IS, 197& .m.1.
PUBLIC NOTICE
NBC I) 8: 00 -"Flood.'' Irwin Allen
("The Poseidon Adventure." "The
Towerlng Inferno") brings bis disaster
movte talents to TV for this drama a bout
helicopter pilots Robert Culp and Martin
Milner rescuing victims of a flood .
KHJ B 8:00 -"Fort Apache." John
Wayne an<I Henry Fonda head the cast of
this 1948 western with Shirley Temple.
John Agar and Ward Bond.
CBS B 9:00 -"The French Connec·
lion." Gene Hackman won his Oscar ror
his portrayal of a tough narcotics cop ln
this 1971 Oscar-winning movte with Roy
Scheider. Fernando Rey and Tony Lo
Bianco.
(TV DAILY LOG)
'
I WBDNESDA YI
llOWDllEJ 24 Ftr _.... .. .,... liltilas.
llitJM ... DAmME PIOCUMS.
._I _D_UING
7:00 o u f.U) m m 1ttws m ~ 1lw1t So.u
rJ) To Ttl tlle Truth
0 COllCeatration
CD I !me Liiey a> The FBI
El) lloru4I llnN
\Ml Andy Griffith m llld1ta11.e11rer lttj)Ofl (l9> (f)) lltulllJ m 0raaattc Sena
C:l)Mda111SFM1ily
-7:30-a DOff'T MISS $1,000,000
• NAME THAT TUlfElll!
DN-.Thlt TUM (l)Thel*~
&•tdlGame
(t) Sl.21.000 QuestlOll 0 Tiie .laMt''s Wtlcl
1t01 rricl 11 lli<t
:~~ts ~1 "-1111'sltelws a> Clllllllll H T Ollidll
31) S2S.OOO f'1nlllid C:l)Raall~
8:00
0 ((7) l D teJ Cood Times
• Granolld·s VtSrl • nondd gets a su·
p11se when GrandpJ Evans. tht tam
1ly's ThanUgmng ho11se1uest. brm&S
a spetlal guest ot his own
0 WATCff NBC'S MOYIE! * ll'Wlll AUen's "flood'' 8 tUl (() m lllC Wednesday
MoN: (C) (211t) "fl*!" (SU11>)
'16-Robul Culp. Mart1A M1tner,
Carol Lynlty. Barbara HtfSlley Ent
Olson. Rtthatd Basehatl, Jeresa
Wncht. ~mtron Mitchell, Roddy
McOowall, Whit Bissell Anoter 1,-..,n
AJleo "holocaust" film abool a oa1r of
llehcopter Piiots who 1usll to aid
001111s 1n a small town cleYastated by
a flood when a dam collair;n
(&) Mo,,e: (Zhr) 1«:) "Diamond
Hud" (dra/ '63-Charllon Heston.
Yvette M1m1eux George Chak1m.
tam~s Oatren. f1ance Nuyen. Ah11t
MacMahon. (llzabeth Allen
O (12fl (l)) ~tl 81011i< Woman
• StSlet fatmt" Working unde1co.er
as a nun, Jaime learns tflal an
1ote1na11onal smuefling nn2 1s u~mg a convent wintry as lf1e11 ba\4! ol
Ol)trattons ClJ Movtt: IC (2hr) "hl1 ~ht"
(wes) '48 lnhn W11ne. Henry
fonda, SIMtley lemt>lt. Jolin Agar
Anna Lee, WMd Bolld ffOl Movie: ct) (lllr) "Tiie 6'ttll
Beren" (dta) '68-)ohn Wayn•.
OavKI Jansst11. J1111 H111ton, AfOO Ray.
Btuce Cabal. Paftltk Wayne m BizJrre Celot w * Btllniof OI The ltd Su hwestipttd m WiW """' r1......,
ll>l'w'l'r.._
fB"'-WntJHw
: =,i'::''f:.,,.: ff••
"-W. My W., Oram. about
the I011unes and m~unts ot 1
slruuf1ne Welsh rnmlnR 11m1ly 1t the
tu1n ot the century Sian 1'111111pund
S11nley Baktf 1111 m a..111,.._ Wratliftc m ~ ~ Prosr11111
-8:30-
8 1!7) Cl) (I) Tiie hffert01t
"Jenny's OGCl!Ytf'f" Je11ny •S e~Ptt•
enc1ng pre ma11l1I 11t1er~ aod 1s
queshonine •helher °'not she rrally
iO¥tJ l tOAtt 81"-A
0:00
0 <nl (]) Cl) CIS Wtf111&4.11
ll0ti1: CC) (Zhr) "Tiit fre1efl Crwacllel'" (dra) '11-Gent Hack
11111n, Rot Sdleldtr. r ttlllnOo lley,
Tooy lo 811nco. Marcet Bouuff1,
frtdt<tc De PasQuak!. 81t1 llic~1111n.
Mn lltbbot. H1t0ld Cary. [d01t
Eaan. Two herd llOSld "" YOik nit
colics deltcl!W$ stumb~ onlo wlltt
lutll$ out to be tlie bluest llM'COCIC$
haul to th1t time-a cool 32 m•lhon
dollars
0 llowie: (lllt) ''llle ............
(com) 45-buttl and Hardy a <ia (()> a aarttta "Cttrt
Almle" i'lJsifl( H a WlllO, 8"•11• IS
lryinc to nail 1 slid row lllltf -4\en
he is abducted and lleld captive by a
touth old ~n who b"ieves llt is
he! Wlywlld SOI\. KtM llunttf luesb m Otaro, Sein Collotty
• Mel lefudttte Ptters tfieMietit Mefy T Ollltt m """ Crifflll se.. O>Mln'IUlll-.a m ..... li*ical Dr-. l2IJ hll of Ille f.adn
Ell) lltt fr•• l i1cel1 Ct11ttt lJPllHI Kubtll\ conducts tllt New
YO<\ Plltlltll"ll\OlllC Oltllestr1 ~11th
guest solo1$1 Claudio Alrau, w0tld
lJITJOUS Frencll p11111St. m 1.1 Cfiadl .. CiWa
10:00
0 ~ (() g Qont "Welcorne
10 Ame11ca Jade Snow" Molcan and
Quentin 8aud1ne 1ntmupl the
searth for thett SISltt Io helo 1n a
min1na town about to eaplode wllen
Clnntst WOf\ers ife btol.tght '" to bleak a stnh ReWitduled ....
( 6) llollMzl
0 (Qtl Ct)) 11°' a.tie's Alttl$ t.dy lllllef'' Wiien lwO Ctflletfold
cand1dales IOI "feline lbpz1ne''
are mu1dered Jiii ~IS herself up J)
Ihe nut POltnlial wtehm m"' s.utt ~~t
-10:30-m m ...
11:00
o a m ~" lll'n .. CJ) @ (I) <II NeW! a C121l (()) Cit Lon AJltrltan
Style
(J)S.Hll!I -~ ...... ID Miry Gets Momln1
• Sic.Um At Nooe Mel
Bi& ttoMy la I.fated m 1111J ttalt!Nll, Mtf1 11art1u11 a> T• ff Ille brrt Cf?J rn StDw., die sun m,,....
-11:30-
0 (f1J (]) 00 CBS Late Morie:
(t) "lht Oobtn1111 G111a" (dra>
'74-l!yron Mabt. Hal Reed, luhe
l'Mnsll -~Cl)[l»G)W.., c.. oo Tiie m Cltlb o <a CJJ) tH> n1 Rooliot MysttfJ of the ,. .. m 11ews 121> Tiit 100 a• m Moo11e: "Tiie SMllt1I s .. r·
OJIWs/ ....
12:00
&'I lat " litOlldlo Iii Morie: "Sllttioc* IMIMs alld Ttf't'Of by lll(ltl" (mys) '46-Basil
JQthbont. Nrgel Bnice m MoM: ·rrm " GeW" (d11) 'SS-R1ch11d Widmar k. M11
let1et11n1. N1ee1 Paluck, Ceorae
l:ote
-12:30-
0 All·"l&lll Sllow· "The
Plunderen," "Tiit llos's," "Sulllnn's
Tmek'' &> M0ti1: (C) "rtrfJ to Hua l!lflt" (dra) '61-0rwn Welles. Curt
Jurgtns
1:00
8 <2)) (J) (1al T omerrow mThlm°'*
2:00 8 Moittr. (Cl "St 1'MI Is ltft.
((Ol!l) ~J-K.llhryo Ctaysoo. Merv
G11ff111
D llMie Dolllllefutvrr. "hssy"
(dtll) '48-11h1garet Lockwood. 8as1t
Sydnet-"llo10\jous $e11tleM111"
(dra) 46-Ru Hlrmon. ltllt f'llmtr.
Godfley T tatle.
~l='ltt Sin: "Whiri,ott,"
-3:45-
fJ -..It: "Dt•t Tllrt1 Oat•
Strtth" (d"l '54-81ode11ck
Clawford, Rlitll ll01111n. M1ttlla ltY'<
.... "',_ .......... aft Ille .,. .......
DAmM£ llOWl£S
10:00 O CC) "Unco1141u11d" (~dv) '4/-Cary Coogtt.
(t) "DlwJ I Ille rrt.c."-
t.11 le~ll anun.ltef Ul100fl
IS Ct> "llltM Atlty" (adv) ·s~-John W•Yllf. taU1-.n e.a11
lt:tl Cl (t) "MffJ Olck" (ad•) '56-Glteorr Pecll
ll:OO • .,.. ""' """'*" (dfa) '37-Brtaa AhtrM.
1:00 • ctJ 'Tiit Uttte """-" r.dv) '73-0ebouh MakepeKt
Z:GO • a:) "Tiit ,,,.... • " •ior ltt11t1" (COm) '55-
Charltoll Hnton, Tim Hovey
J:lO . ~ ..... Part t (11t1)
'63-Rot.thnd Russell, Natalie Wood. Kart Milden
DAIL V PILOT Af
Niska Superb :
•
In 'Butterfly' ~
•.
"Mada m Butterfly''
bH always fluttered
fairly c1oae to th• heart ot t.hia lover of all that
Pucclnl created but never mote so tbM last
' ovaUoo, but lt·a Ume tb
do awaf with th' Ccnaro "Butterfly .. and
1et back to more ~
tional st•tincs. • What WU SO d~ .•
TOM BARLEY
Music Box
weekend when she
brought some measure
ol uandeur to a lk!dgl.
lq New York City opera
aeuoo that desperately
needed lt.
lt took somethinf out
ol tbe ordinary to rest«e
order to tbe stage at the
Los Angeles Music
Cent.er after the gilded
baloney of "A Ball at
Prince Orlofsky's" and lbe trite tri viali Ues ot the
gushing "La Belle
Helene."
WE GOT IT from evef
dependable Marallo
Niska whose lustrous ao
Cio Sao bas always been
ooe of the jewels of the
NYCO repertoire. One
aenses that this gifted
soprano might prefer a
more challenging vebi·
cle than Frank Corsaro·s
staging of "Butterfly" lo
which to display her
talents but she makes
the most out of what is
available to her.
She had good prin·
cipals to work with ln the
c r o wd e d Dorothy
Chandler Pavilion and
she had an orchestra -
under David Effron -
that seemed determined
to make up for some of
the inept accompanl·
ment that ravaged
earlier appearances.
Gaetano Scano didn't
set the Pavilion alight
with bis Lt. Pinkerton
but he did a sensible, competent job; so did
Richard Frederick.a as
the Consul and Sandra
Walker as an appealing
and alw ays fluent
Suzuki.
and innovative a re•
short yeara ago no1'
loob cheap, seedy aid
far-fetched . Puccin.f
would have thrown up.
bla bands in hor rot
es-pecially when TroutH
galloped across the stagf
in what loo ke d sus~
plclousty like jocte;f
abort.a.
CBO&DS AT &AN·:
POM -All goes well, we·
bear. with rehearsals for
the Orange Coast Com-:
munity Symphony.
Orchestra's annual offtt·: ins Dec. 5 in tbe occ·.
auditorium. •
-CdliJt John Acosta:
will be featured artist in:
the ' p.m . concert ~ the progratn will incluckr
Shostakovich 's Ninth~
S y m p b 0 D Y .:
Tachalkowsky 's .
"Rococo" Variations.·
Muasorgstty•s "Night OD~
a Bare Mountain" and..
Kacbaturian's "Gayne"~
ballet suite. "
-------souTt~ .(~H .S'I
1~ ~rHE
OI'HERSIDE
OF THE MOUNTAIN'
A TRUE STORY O#-L. ... ~~20VE~AN~D:,S2~!e!I.: NISKA LED tbe way to
a finale that brought a
richly deserved standing ,,..----------
..... u a.t ..... 1'ft41Jt
1.,..-=:-I
~I
call 642-5178.
Pul •few words
to work for ou.
S.A FRWV tMANCHESTU• EXJ
G.G. FRWY ICITY OR. EX.I
A. "SHOUT A THE DEV1L" , V ...... TSCOUT ...
CATMOUSa TMUUaAY'"
A ....,..,
V -ntlll61US"
//<. "ADYIMTUllS O' ~ Sl .... OCll HOLMIS ~taOTHaS
"TMI DUCHISS &
A POI•
$tleele1Price 12:3C>to 2: Q.lft.
t ..... S...& SI.Ji
Open Doily I 2:30 p.m
~
' ' .
' . .
\ \
' '\
'
. . . ·. . .
. . ..
A JO DAILY PILOT Wednesday. November 24. 1976
Romping Through Reruns With Blnty
REDONDO BEACH (AP) -Why would a 33-
year-old carpenter get up every morning to watch
television reruns or " RJn Tin Tin'!"
Lee Aaker says he does it to watch tumselI and
relive the days 20 years ago when he played the boy,
Rusty, in the series.
· "When l 'm here, 1 always watch it," said
, Aaker, who left the show 18 years ago and has been
out or show business altogether s ince the early 1960s.
"I SIT BACK AND LOOK AT all the mistakes
and think to myself that I should have done this or it
would have been bclt~r if I'd done that," be said.
IDAY MATIN EES
THURS.·FRl.·SAT.-SUN.
"Splendiferou1ly Funny."
"It'• a ball of a
brawl."
-.i..i.t~ t.n.1
Plua
edwards BRISTOL CINEMA
BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR
540-7444
u ••tt't .. ··'""" 994 2400
IU•1UWAf 11\f U \\U
SISSY S,ACllC
•I
CARR IE "'
I OGft ...00.t • U I M&IVIN
SHOUT AT THl OlVll •oi
"VI
TH( WINO ANO THl llON ,,~,
• M~I iJ;· 9;ao}
-•AY MU tlUtl"
CAHlf111 ,lU,
lOUlHALl 111
.a1 I ll•U H HIOU e llUUUH MAUm
• ·, ' "' OTMU SIDE Of TM( MOUMAJH 1i>o1 ~J ; .95ao •M
· MU$TAHG COUNTIY 101
• I <
. " . ' ... 10041 -oott •LU -.u v1N
SHOUT AT THI OfVll 1-01 .. u1
TM( WINO ANO nu llON1001
fa.(~ .WUTON e llTA MOIU.O
THI l lTZ 1•1
'tut
fllfll( & TH( l lAN 101
U<t" i'ICIAl lll.U ( ""'I NIOW t CllllDUM • 11 ... t U.t • 1111 11.,0At.111 •Ot1Ct 1 (., \DAf" U•Dl• '1 '•'t'
....... ,
S2S 3S26
... , .... ' ., t•• .... ····· S34 6212
.... h •• .... , .. . ' ........ . 1171-1162
I •u h In •"'et •••fl
S27 2223
.. ., .... , .... ., ....... _,
471 ·8831
··-421-8131
"" UIUU e JA#llS ruMCIKUl nu AMAZING DOIHMANS 101
'lUl
MAM JttDlY let
(tii••HOlll •n•o-• '°"'" <U••-••n \OllT HO •4UI l
TWO.MIHUTl WAINING It ·~"' UGH SAHCTIOH1t1
•utirtAWAf ttn H U ii
CH•tl 111 •uo1•
IOlUHAll 111, ----tl6U .. _, • MHIUH .... um
OIMH Ylt Of TMl .ouH!AlH ,,.,
run
OATOl tl'OI
I041M Of lJIUOOl'I
I .• 'lSllOtC '°TIOH 1(1
2 •• fvt I THI HANOY-..N 111
i .. llKI OOOOIOOY 111
(lllitUON MOTOH • .oMfli OUAWOU '°'" "° .. 1111 TWO.MINUll V(HNIHG111 ""' fl U llt I THI l lAN111
WAU-T'l ----THI ONOMI .MOlllll01
~ nu.t
MA# llOllll WTTWI WlllOW[O)
WAU .....,.'1
I ONOMl.-MOllLl(o1
,,,. "'"' ~ ltql MTOM WIUOW!OI ------n~~ ftt'U lOUll nlU.Ul
1. • limtal Ill t. • WMm LN mu 111
l. · to0 TOU Ml to 111
~,,_
I • CAI WASH 1N 1
2 • U"TICI Ill ,.~i-i ........................
"Sometimes I kind of blush and think, 'Hey, that
was kind of cute .' ''
Wben Asker turned 21, he said, the stud10 paid
him a lump sum or about $100,000, and he spent
Emonuell Woll p1~nh
""Mornn lll'")mon Pioouctton
Sean Connery Comella Sharpe
"The Next Man"
IN CONCERT AND BEYOND
HO LIDAY
MATINEES
THURS.·FRl.-
SAT .-SUN.
AT NEWPORT
(IN FOUR
TRACK
STEREO
SOUND)
(PG)
THE ALIVE AT THE
NEWPORT CI NEMA. 6 AMPLIFIERS·
DELIVERING 1,000 WATTS OF POWER
THROUGH 28 AL TEC SPEAKERS.
Q edward1
'!' NEWPORT • CINEOO ME 20
NtWPOnT :::; CCNTCR Chepnvm Avtnut 11 S.A. Frwy.
Newpon Beach 644-0760 Onnge • 532·3328
A TALL TALE ABOUT
LITTLE
PEOPLE I
WALT DISNEY
. p,...,.,,. ~
linoiiGIJBU 111' ..
ft•• ... WALTER l•'.>IJ v•" l'Ot'"' • ·1>1
BRENNAN TOM MATTHEW URDI
SAOOLEBACK
PLAZA
£l TOllO •D 41110UFlfU)
• LOWELL · GARBER · DOTRIC E
the rest of the '60s traveling around the world "as
sort or a flower ctuld." He gets little money
from the reruns, he said. but r~eived a residual
check last month
Aaker , now a carpenter, lives with his
girlfriend in a one-bedroom collage m this Lo.:
Angeles suburb. He said he isn't trying to gel back
into acting, "but I wouldn't turn down a good offer.''
HE GETS TOGE'lllER SEVERAL times 11
year with Frank Barnes, the man who trained the
German shepherds for the show. There were three
Rin Tin Tins -the mwn star, a stunt dog and a
backup dog.
Aaker said he has three·dogs -au sm all.
"If I lived out somewhere where he coud run
I'd love to have a big dog Uke a German shepherd,'
be said. "But there's no room here."
TUES., DEC. 7
thru SUN., DEC. 12
PEIHORN'loNCl \CMEOULE 'f ff"
1 ~ 0--. 1 •t 00 PA/' •
"'·a o•• • ·• oo•·'·' • ' h1.1n DH t •! OOP'•
J • Cl«< 10 •t 00 P1,• ~ '-.-t• Of' IJ •:" "'O tflelll ·"t\ P\"1
...nOrt U /00And••00f'N '
~P( (•Al OISCOVN' Nl(;HI
T411u DH 1
Lon9 lut" 'nu Ttltfflm "F' •mlly te1tM'4
f or Groups. Senior Citizen•.
Scoul9 and Ticket
lnformetlon •
(213) 437-2255
$6.50, SS.SO. $4.50
Tickets on sale at T1ckelron,
Mutual Agencies, Wall1chs &
Liberty. Long Beach Arena
'\I OOOfl l?V~ al!dvn<tf""lvt'\ WfO l!W".Fr, !.•I 100.tnd~vn 6 OG PM
-------------------------HU RRY. MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY!
,.,,.,,"'""'~It 1"notl"'\\fd Stilf"P"'O C ""',.IOC'f" lo Hn l'I""°" 1,'
lONI 8ft.M:" JO,.,... l000ctAn 91'10 'nf'"a """'"' (fl,.~
FIRST C..Ok t 0•1•-----1•"'•------
SECDHD (HQtCl IM"-----I "''------
,.u,..cer ot '•<•tf\ __ Al\ --f t t" \
HloMf~--------
$IRHI ---------P..0Nf -----
c11v _______ $l ,.IE ____ l 1P __ _
....__LONG BEACH ARENA _
TH! WORLD'S FAVORITE BED· Tl E STOA IS
FINALL VA 8EO. TIME STORY •••
,.. ..... ... ,,.
"''" ~ ()..... ..... ~"' • • .. t
WOUSOIMIOl 1<1C.114llCAMNS ~AHl.HGOlAH Hlll 4lDCOllAH '°'lllCIA~HOr • t' • A.lU llllOlht , .. ...... J .. t f"Cfillf~~~ti; 4
(SECOND
FEATURE)
t.AGMatter
ofGJi~
I '
r ,,
'
.NBC First Aga~'"-"l·····m--~.,.,.
But 'Happy Days' Still Top Shuw
NEW YORK CAP) NBC, for the
third con•ecutive lime, came out No.
1 1n the ratines last week, narrowly
beating ABC in the weekly ratings
ayerages, A.C. Nielsen Company au-
dience estimates showed Tuesday.
·:On the average, NBC's ev~e·n . • oams were seen in more t n s
million homes -just 356, more
homes than were tuned to ABC hows-
-in the week ending Nov. 21, the
NJelsen figures showed.
NBC'S RATINGS primarily
were boosted by big audiences tor its
"First 50 years" anniversary special,
the second part of a TV movie,
"Sybil," and the showing of the 1971
hit movie, "Billy Jack."
Last week's top.rated show was
ABC's "Happy Days," seen in more
than 22. l million homes. The lowest·
rated show wu CBS' now-canceled
"Spencer's Pilots," seen only in 6. 7
million homes.
THE %0 HIGHEST-RATED shows
last week were "Happy Days" and
"Laverne a nd Shirley" (ASC);
"First 50 years," ''Sybil" and "Billy
Jack " <NBC >; "J ohn Denver
Special'' (ABC ); ''M·A-S·J-1," "The
Waltons," "Good Times," "The Jer-
fersons," "Hawaii Five-0 " and "One
Day at a Time" (CBS); "Dorothy
Hamil Special," "Monday Night
Football" and "Olivia Newton.J ohn
Special " (ABC ); ''Chinatown"
<CBS>; "Welcome Back, Koller"
<ABC>: "Sanford and Son" (NBC>;
"Barney MHler" (ABC); and "All in
the Family" (CBS).
Film Prompts Stickers
BEVERLY HILLS CAP) -Honk if
you're being Ced up.
Recently, two women in luxury
automobiles wailing for a green ljght
struck up a window·to-window con·
versation. They t alked about the in-
justice of astronomical property tax
bills, the rising crime rate, violence
OD television and their kids, drug
habits.
'The light changed and they drove
off -r evealing identical bumper
stickers: "I'm mad as hell and I'm
not going to take it anymore."
The bumper stickers are taken
from the words in the new movie
''Network," in a scene where craz:ed
a!'lchor man Peter Finch urges his
viewers to join him in a mass display
of frustration and grievance.
More than 80,000 bumper slicker s
are now in circulation.
THIS THAllSGIVllG
MAKE WAY FOR FRED ASTAIRE,
JAMES FRAICISCUS, BARBARA EDEi AID ...
~=-t
1
11CARRIE11 IRJ
-rHIMDT
"'HAUY & WA&.Tm e<> TO
MIWYOlrCNI
La ......
-THI SO... It.MAIMS THI SA ... CNJ
""MOIMAH IS THAT YOU?"' f PGI
.. SEX Wl1H A SMILE'" (IJ
.. THE DUCHESS. DIRTWATER FOX'1 (PG)
"SHERLOCK HOUES SMARTER BROTHER'
'"SILBfl' MOY\I'" ... AMAMAS .. CNJ
"MAIATHOM MAN .. (I)
"THI LOMGEST YAU" CIJ
·An-
THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY
MANN'S
SO. COAST PLAZA Cuti llru l411 .. 11l1I
l4t 1111
"Al.1CE IN WONDERIMI" IXl 1, ... ,,.,
,_I/SAT/WM. J:IS.C)J-7-")t
"'FLESH GOIDON" t:U ,_$/SAT/I-kl•HJ.e:U
MANN'S HAH co-so. COAST PLAU ·~~~'~'pl ~,~~:11:. • 1HE MAM WHO WOllD BE KING"
Jta 1111 f-.lt ?NUllS/SA 7/SWO ~It
ltll •-
MANN'S "MARA THON MAH" SO. COAST PLAZA W• D.t.U-7!) .. 9'0 u J m n1wrr ,_VSA't/Wl'-l:»k*kO
)41 un ''"""'"
MANN'S ClllEIULAllD ,.,. s. ......
U..N1•
m1u 1
"Al.ICE IN WONOEllMIJ" (X)
1 at:n -/'-"T''"" ·~·~.,,. "A.ESH GOIDOH"
lkll -/SAT/SUH J·H01r.JJ.e:l~l·U
MANN'S "MAU THON MAH" ClllEMALAllO 1•1 .... So...... ·-•T'--1'"&9'11
IN•fl• TINH/SAT,_ an IUI l:IJ.J:,.."4~1•11
MANN'S
ClllEMALAllD 104 So WHller ...... ,,.
i U IUI
.,
"MARA THON MAH11
W-DATS7:"&9'41
-S/U T/SUM .,,._,,.w_,•~• .. ••
THl M>UHOI com AUYr
AT T>ff: ~ ClfCMA
6 AMl"UAIM OC!UVVIH!IO
1,000 WATTS M l'OW!fl
lliROUQH 29 ALTlC &NAJtlflS
(H01'°iN FCX#I TIIM:lt ITEMO l!tiNO) -iN CONCERT AND BEYOND
~Lrcrm~
nt·SQH~·rniAINS·Tnt·SA , t (~
,,. lo-
~ ...... ~;,;;;p:;.,.::;:;;=;,..:;,;;:;;::;::;;~ • -· ~ .. * *1
TW!-MINU~
.WARlll
For
some .••
too much
time to
wait.
For the
rest. ..
too little
time
to run. 4
The Young
Pa1e111s
ThP Untomm•llfd
lo•~rl
CHARLTON HESTON
T11e Two
Whn Jli\I M t!f
JOHN CASSAVETES .. TWO -MINUTE WARNING'"
MARTIN BALSAM • BEAU BRIDGES • MARILYN HASSETT
DAVID JANSSEN • JACK KLUGMAN· WALTER PIDGEON
GENA ROWLANDS·BROCK flTERS·OAVIO 6110H·AKrHOMY OAVIS·JOE KAPP
A FILMWAYS PRODUCTION/ A LARRY PEERCE ·EDWARD $.FELDMAN FILM
Screenplay by EDWARD HUME· Based on the novel by GEORGE LaFOUNTAINE
Music Q¥ CHARLES FOX· Directed by LARRY PEERCE
Produced by EDWARDS.FELDMAN ·A UNIVERSAL P1CTURE -,R-llU1aTOl ___ -:_J
TECHNICOLOR®· PANAVISION . • -· • •' • :.J
EDWARD'S BRISTOL ll'OI
CINEMA
Wt:EKDAYS
7:00-t:15
HOLIDAY MATINEES
THURS, FRI, SAT, SUN
1 : 30-4:00-e:15-8:3().10:40
edwards BllSTOl CINEMA
•tHO\ •' M.t.CAlf'HIUll _ .... _ __.'40-140
8uen1 Parle •821·4070
"One of the
Year's Best" .vfo •to\1Eand
J)J~\TH"
Pl.US
l.DMARVIN
IN
E EST
AFRICAN
ADVENTURE .
EVER FILMED
LEE ROOER MARVIN .... MOORE
I .
~ r: . . . • .. . •. '· t ~
. '• . .
• • • . . • I l
! • c .. • t
: l
i I
' *
'· t • I -r. I
•
AJ2 DAILY PILOT Wednelday. November 2.C. 1978 Bv Phil lnt•tlandi Code Adopted r--:--:---~----...;..;..-;...,_ ____________________ _,,
.-----------...,,; _____ .,.. SACRAMENTO (AP)
QUEENIE
lf,2.lf ·o ____ ,..,.. __ _
Disposal Pipeline
Dana Point Gets
EnvironIDent Plan
By PIDUPROSMAJUN
0tu. o.i1, l'IMe"""
The Cinal environment.al impact statement ror a
proposed regional ocean sewage disposal pipeline a
Dana Point states that:
It would have been "slightly preferable .. for the
city C?f ~an Clemente, which recently was pressured·.
to reJotn the regional group, to construct its own, in· dependent outfall.
-TO ACCOMMODATE EXPECTED in·
creases in south county development that increased
sewage capacities may bring, high density cluster
residential development is recommended over low
density plans.
, -For the same reason -to mitigate expected
impacts on air pollution and traffic congestion,
carpooling, busing and fixed·rail rapid transit
should be encouraged.
The proposed 57-incb outfall would serve
Southeast Regional Reclamation Agency (SERRA)
members which include Dana Point and San Juan
Capistrano, the Moulton Niguel and Santa
Margarita water districts and the Dana Point and
Capistrano Beach sanitation districts.
SAN CLEMENTE IS PETl110NING to get
baclc into SERRA, from which the city withdrew io
1974 to pursue its own sewage disposal plans. The
City Council approved agreements t-0 that effect
last week. Approval by other SERRA agencies is pending.
The council was virtually coerced to take that
position. The San Diego Regional Water Quality
Control Board bas imposed severe sanctions con· ~lling operation of.the city sewage plant, includ·
mg a ban on new sewer COIUlections, until improve-
menta are made and a Jonc-nmee plan fot sewage
dbposal implemented. ·
The city wu pqt oo notice that the state water
QtJality control board would not recommend federal
grant for an independent ocean outfall. The state
master plan calls fort.be regional outfall.
THAT OVTF~ WITll AN average daily
capacity of 36 million plloos, will empty 11,600 feet
offshore Crom Dana Point Harbor, at a depth or 120 feet.
It will replace a deteriorating 3,000-foot outfall.
San Clemente would tie in to the system with a
five-mile overland connect.or pipeline to the effluent
pumping station at San Juan Creek behind the south
end of Doheny St.ate Beach.
According to the En·
~ -The state bas adopted
a co nntct oC Interests
code for Colusa County
supervisou. the only
ones ln the state who re.
!Wied to do It themselves.
MAILBOX )
;ouGLAS FIR
£NtllDOOlS
30" • 32" S11l ONl y
Afl\llll $39 50 & C\.lAll lA·
G\.ASS AND
6 \.nl, ' .. \.OOt1tNA~ .pAtUS
5()Ml 01 ..
TfMPUfo & IROsr10
GREENHOUSE
GlASS
23'\14" x $ J 95 62 7/•''
CAN fA. Nor er cur
11/a' to 1 3/16" THICK
s·xa• or S'x9'
I UY NOW I SAVI
YOUR s29s
CHOtCI! EA.
GltlAT LOOKING
PECKY CEDAR
BOARDS $1~
STIMULATES
INDIVIDUAL
CEDAR
STRIPS
COVllS
17 Mt-ft. 5-!!
aLUl WoaM
RUSTIC PINE
BOARDS
29:.
2"x4" WHITE WOOi>
in the
DAILY PILOT
CfNHSTMAI S,.CIA
ALL WOO
Wl~E ·
RACK
•1"x7"x14H
·99!.
ECOLOCY Agency, which prepared ( )
vironmental Protection
the impact report, it
------------~--would h ave b een
economically and en-
6 n. JO 12 "' LIHOTNS .......................... .-....... .
~''X4!'. CEDAR
. .
. ,.
JJ • . . .
, ..
~·t •
! .... l.t\
.. •l
~ ' '· ,,
•t •
..
vironmentaUy wiser for Sao Clemente to construct
ilsown outfall.
.. THERE ARE ENVIRONMENTAL advan·
tages to hav1n1 two discharge points separated by a
distance of several miles," the report states
"rather than one clisduarge point. •
"There are alao environmental advantages to
the energy aavln11 available by not pumping San
Clemente'11 effluent SO San Juan Creek through the
SERRA outfall. ·
The report rnokos a number of recommenda·
tions to mltl.tate envtronmental impacts of the
overall outfall project. which includes a call for
high density hou11ng.
SUCH DEVELOPMENT, STATES the report,
combined with neighborhood shopptn1 centers, con·
trasted with low derunly housln1 and regional shop·
ping centers, would rc.>duce vebJcular travel which
in turn would reduce air pollution.
The EPA contends that sborter·trips, increased use of public traMlt and shopping by bicycle or
walking would be the result.
EPA analysts wrote that hlgh density housing
could be accom plished with the framework of the
exiatin1 county plan and would not necessarily
mean higher po~ulation.
AMONG EPA RECOMMENDATIONS to en-
courage carpooUqg are priority freeway lanes, such
as the controversial Diamond Lane. or the metering
of non-carpooling cars at freeway onramps .
FROM Fashion Island
Newport Beach
WIDE SELECTION
PRE·RNISHEO
CABINET
DOORS
6n.TO12 n. U..OTNS ••••••• , ......................... .
l"X6'' SHIPIAP PINE
.. ..,..N»fe IANDOM; LlfrlleTMI ·····'·••••··············
2''X4'' REDWGGD
lOUOM SAWIO 6'• I ' & 10' UNellll ................ ..
1 ''X4~' REDWOOD
10UGH SAWID •·, 1· a 10': LNIMI ................ .
;S"f.E.REO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
..
Divorce Trauma Aided
, ,.
I
By DENNIS McLELLAN
Of U.. O•HY .. llM MM!
It was the first meetin~ or the
newly formed Divorce Ald, a
croup dedicated to helping peo-
ple understand and deal with the
problems and emotions created
by a broken relationshJp.
The men and women, who
gathered in the Santa Ana living
room, had jotted down their con·
cerns on a piece or paper and
handed them to discussion leader
Clint Jones.
Subjects ranged from child vis·
itation, property settlement, how
to overcome the fear of forming a
new relationship and loneli-
ness.
"The only way to combat lone-
liness," offered one man, "is to
get out and.get involved instead of
just sitting around and thinking
about your problems •·
''How about trying to help
other people ?·• interjected
Jones.
"This is one of tbe reasons why
I'm involved with this," said the
man. "I get a feeling of ac-
complishment out of helping
other people."
NEEDS FILLED
"Quite honestly." said Jones,
"that's the reason why I got this
going, because I had a great need
and by helping people fulfill their
need I have fulfilled myself."
Jones started Divorce Aid in
New Hampshire earlier this
year. He is divorced and fighting
for joint custody of his daughter.
A former New England ad-
vertising salesman, Jones, now a
Fountain Valley resident, has
spent the past two years studying
divorce cases and working on a
book on the subject.
Through his res.earch, he said,
he met many divorced people
I BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Wednesday, November 24, 1976 01
who were bitterly frustrated.
"This disturbed me greatly
because I was teeline the same
pains."
The non-profit Divorce Aid, be
said, Is open to anyone wbo has
had a broken human rela·
Uooship. "This is an organization
to help people overcome the emo-
tional trauma of a serious social
problem.
EMOTIONAL INJ URY
"lo divorce the pain ex·
perienced Is acutely more
damaging than the pain of a
broken body. We're more aware
or a physical injury than an emo·
tional one. This is why it is dif·
ficult for society to understand
the injury of a divorce or broken
human relationship.
"What's really happening is we
have committed the most pre·
cious thjng we have-our emo-
tions-to another human being.
When this commitment is broken
off there is an abyss we fall into j
emotionaJly. ·'
He said the purpose of the or·
ganization is symbolized in its
logo: A torn cross (the couple )
within a circle (the family).
The rough edges of the cross,
like two people newly separated
by divorce, face each other. Fric-
tion results when the rough edges
rub against each other. When
sensitive emotions are exposed,
there is pain.
Its goal is to smooth off the
rough edges and stop the friction
by identifying the hurts.
There currently are three local
Gary Compton puts finishing touches on
coiffure for Madge Chambossie .
Lift Added to Surgery
By JUDITH OLSON
-OI IN 0•11¥ l'11M ll•H
If your best friend or neighbor has had cosmetic surgery on the
face or nose recently, you pro-
bably can look for her to come up
with a new hairdo and some new
clothes.
This 1s part of a trend in cos.
metic surgery, for a "total look."
according to se veral Orange
Coast physicians who specialize
in facial work.
Dr. H. George Brennan said,
"We very often s uggest weight
lo6s or body conditioning too.
"We look at a patient in a very
broad manner rather than zero·
ing in with tunnel vision. PaUenr's
that are the happiest are the ones
who are wllling to accept this
concept ...
Dr. Brennan likes the concept
of "teamwork" for his practice.
He works clos ely with a
hairdresser and Cashion expert.
who in tum refer clients to him
!or work.
The "total Image" program is
not an attempt to make patients
look as young as possible, he em-
,,.. pbasi%ed. •'The effort is to look
the best we can, as opposed to
lookin1 abnormally young.
"We.'re not trying lo fool
anyone. We take someone who's
~ for example and improve
th~ir appearance, which keeps
them looking a few years
younger."
POSTPONE SUllGEllY
Dr. W. Ray Henderson of South
Laguna, concurred. For some or
his patients, he suggests trying
new makeup and hair styles first
and then considering surgery.
"We see how they feel about
that,'' he said.
He believes there now is "more
insight into the concept of total
rejuvenation" and that the physi·
cians and beauty experts must
work "hand in gtove."
Some patients, according to
Dr. Brennan, don't know what
they want done but they are
aware that they are unhappy
with their looks.
It is the doctor's job to offer
them advice and help the patient
decide wbat course of action to
take.
Dr. Brennan believes a physi·
cian like himself who limits his
practice to aesthetic surgery of
the face will "em erge as more or
an expert in that field" and will
be better able to make decisions.
This approach "crosses the
line at times of being pure
medicine,'· he said.
Students are not taught in
... · A softer look in hairstyles
and make-up is desirable
after cosmetic surgery.
Women also take an interest
in new clothing.
medical school how to make a
beautifuJ face, Dr. Brennan ex·
plained. He believes the concept
or beauty cannot be taught,
however, because it is "more in·
nate than learned.
GOOD SURGEONS
"There are many good
technical surgeons but few good
aesthetic ones."
Why Is the concept of total
beauty so Important now?
"We're going t hrough a phase
where people are more acutely
aware of their personal ap·
pearance," Dr. Brennan sug·
gested.
"Also, the concept of beauty
changes as society changes.
What we think is beautiful is not
in keeping with what it was in
1920 or what It Is in other
cultures."
Dr. Henderson said more peo-
ple are thinking about it because
"more people are being trained
in cosm etic surgery," so it ls·
easier for those who can afford il
to rand a specialist.
On the other end ol the s~·
trum are the beauty experts who
are the "finish artists."
Gary Compton, a hairdresser
who works with Dr. Brennan,
said, "I enjoy combining my
artistic abilities with the Sur·
geon's skills.·•
Ha job Is to help people retrain
their t~king from hiding poor
featurea to expoai.D1 '-t•w.l new ones.
"When raults are corrected,
women often keep tbe same hair
style,'' be said.
He recalled one young woman
bom without a Up who let her
hair IJ"OW Jone to cover her face.
When her 1ur1ery was over, Compton cut her hair abort in an
(SeeTOTA.LLOOK. ..... .,>
groups meetin& in homes 10 the
Irvine-Corona del Mar area,
Anaheim and Santa Ana. Jones
said Orange County Mental
Health clinics may soon be
available for meetings.
He said re1pome to the ap-
proach used in the groups has
-been good. Diacuasioas center on
members' problems, which tbey
write on a piece of paper. They a.re
read by lbe moderator and
opened for discussion.
Often, Jones said, people don't
really know what is bothering
them. It helps to pinpoint it by
writing it down. Through dis·
cussion the answer may sudden-
ly become apparent.
"I believe we aJl have the
answers to our problems, but
we're not aware of it." he said. "I
thinJc. by and large, the majority
of problems aren't so deepseated
that they can't be overcome with
a little assistance from people
who care."
He noted that the group never
gives any professional or legal
advise. "However," be said, "we
tell it like we see it.
"We talk on an emollonal level.
We want them to get the frustra·
tions out in a s afe environment.
It's far healthier to do this than
harbor frustration and have it ex-
plode."
Jones said the organization is
looking for volunteer group
leaders to moderate discussions.
Further information and ques·
lions on meetings may be ob-
tained by calling Divorce Aid,
547·5846.
Liza
Crihfield,
26-year-old
Stanford
anthropology
student, li ved
and worked as
a geisha for
nine months
in Kyoto,
Japan.
She says if
all else fails
on the job
market, she
can always be
a geisha.
Giesha Girls' Life
Divorce Aid's goal,
symbolized in logo above,
is to smooth off rough
edges, which produce
emotional friction.
Mystery Clouds ·.Roi~.
By PETER H. KING
PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP)
Can a 26-year-old Stanford
University anthropology student
-from Indiana find happiness as a
geisha girl?
Liza Crihfleld thinks so. Armed
with a Fulbright fellowship and a
desire to learn about Japanese
customs, she lived and worked a.s
• aellba for nine months in
Kyoto. Japan , the country's
former capital and a center or
Ja~anese culture. 1'Tbey are terribly busy peo-
ple, 10 I found the best way to
· learn about them was working
with them ." she said. "It gave
me a chance to see how geishas
wort flrst·hand.''
"lNTERESTING PEOPLE
"It waa fun," abe added during an Inter view. "You meet so
many interestin1 people, really
the cream of Japanese society.''
Ma. Crlbfleld plans to In·
corporate her uperience in a
doct«al tbeala ln anthropology.
After tha\ abe hopes to writ.e a
book about ber months aa a
ceiaba and perh1P1 a history of
Japan's famous party women.
Geishas are primarily enter·
tainers. Most are registered with
a geisha house and are called on
to entertain a\ parties held in
zash lk is. l a r ge r oom s in
restaurants.
"'Some men came around ex·
peeling geishas to be prostitutes.
but they got thrown out. on their
ear," said Ms. Cribfield.
TOOK LESSONS • ·
During ber sta.3'<: Ma. Cribfleld took lesson• in', grooming,
posture. convehatton, .ervina
food and playing.the shamisen, a
three-string Japanese lute, au
traditional con~erns ol geiah ...
"I was very much accepted by
the women," she said. '1 made it
clear from the belinaina that I
wasn't looking dow on lbem. I
feel that they think 'tbef are mis·
understood and woald like io get
their story out -ao they rully
opened "'I> to me."
Ma. Crihfleld, who bu made
fi ve trips to Japan and speaks
Japanese fiuenUy, spent months
Interviewing geish•, living wltb
tbem and doing background
work in Kyoto for her thesis.
"There are many peopl• who
are curious about geishas," she
said. "They've played a •reat
role in J apanese culture, but no
atudles have been made in the
postwar period. There bu been
an information gap."
What she found was th~ the
geiab as a r en 't th e s hocking
characters some people make
them out to be.
NUDE• DROPPED
"11 you look at the stalbUcs
•ince the war, you'll find the
number o( geisbas bas dropped
by two-thirds,•• she said. "OIMs •
reason is that there are more.jolt
opportunities for women, bu\'
also they have sort of ll da'rlr lm·
age. MOit J apanese have oevs-
been to a gelaba, they th1nk Qlc:Jt
glrll don't do that sort of thing."
She wm lln1'h her thesis In the
. comin& year.
"M er that, I'll be in the job
market," ahe said. "If evny-thina elae falls, 1 can alw_,,.,
'back to belna a 1eiaba."
..
50th Celebrated
\\ft 11 ·.1• • •\ 11 ',,,.,,
(r,ltlC ul "'"''''I \II'"
11 ::; time to think
Ct1nstmao; Cards. Party
Invitations and Gift
Stationery
Let us a'I:. . 1n making
your holiday shopo1ng
pleasant and leisurely•
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vanian celebrated
their golden wedding anniversary during
festivities in the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen Lazarian. Pasadena. The Vanians,
who moved to Huntington Beach from
Pasadena in 1952, have two sons, Daniel
and John. and six grandchildren, all resid·
ing in the Newoort Beach area.
HEARING PROBLEM?
I srECIALl'IE IH
HERVE DEAFNESS
CASES
MAJOR
M.AHUF.ACTUR'HS
llf'RESEHTED
TEH YE.ARS IM
COlOHA DEL MAR
HM. AEBISOfER
First
1: Lady
Cited
HEARING AIDS First Lady Betty Ford ·
1111 1 cu11 "''"•u m 1t11 3409 E. Cocnt Hwy. will be cited as the Com·
._c.•••"•' '•H•••u-cn•H•''•11•' '•"•'•'" .. .._c-__ •_1 M_•_-_6_7s._31_3_3., municator of Hope by the
.. American Cancer Socie· :-.. ------~==-------iiiii-------------• ty during its first Media Awards Luncheon Wed·
~
f rench shipment
'
nesday, Dec. 1, in New
Yorlc.
Mrs. Ford will be pre-
sent to receive the award
at the Waldorf·Astoria Hotel.
Her citation reads:
; Beautiful Inlaid bedroom sets. .
· .Bombe commodes ... Period and
"The First Lady cap-
tured our attention and
our h earts a s we
followed her breast SW"·
gery and her candid, op-
timistic response.
' country French cabinets ... Tables .•
:,.Armolres. . .Chairs, Loveseats. . "She bas set an exam·
pie which will give
courage to women ap-
proaching a like
.and more.
~
AN OUTSTANDING SELECTION OF
ANTIQUES FROM
ALL ARO\,JNOTHE WORLD
circumstance. The
American Cancer Socie-
ty salutes its honorary
crusade chairman, Bet-
ty Ford, as a very
sped al Com municat.or 6f
Jewelry Bric-A-Brae Paintings Hope to m!Jlions of peo-
ple around lbe world.'•
,..,._. (;iff •tor flO"" lrf~nds and ho..e
Sixteen m e dia
representatives will . re-
ceive awards during the
event, whlch was initial·
The Biz arre Antiques
ed and ls sponsored by
Mrs. Enid A. Haupt, an
ACS board member.
2500 Ne-wport DJ.
Coela Meea
COf. Monte Vista & Newport II II
The awards were de·
signed by Tiffany and
Co.
• ••
.
' • I ,
I • r ' .. ...
• '·
WHOLESALE TlUS • SHIUIS • HOUSI PL.AM'TS
SJ00.00 MINIMUM
EACH PURCHA!;E 24" BOX TREES
15 GAL. TREES & SHRUBS
5 GAL. TREES & SHRUBS
WHOLESALE BOOK PRICES
S.D. Wholesale Growers
11622 WARNER AVE.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
PHONE 546-3429
DAILY 9 AM-5 PM
You can too!
Call: 714·834·8811
What you heu may change your life' .. \ -. ·--. .. . .
....
Complaints Stored Up
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I 've
been readinc your c:Uumn for a
Jong time and seen every im·
a1lnable kind of complaint
aaatnst clerlls and salespeople.
Now it's time you bevd from the
other side of the counter.
I work in a rrocery store -the
frult'a.nd vegetable department,
to be •peclfic. May I make some
suggest.ions to the public?
Please don't eat any food you
haven't paid for. If we can't
weigh it we can't charge you for
it. '!be crapes, cherries. plums,
apricots and bananas you see are
not free samples. They cost US
money and we cannot give them
to you tor nothing.
U the express Jane has a limit
don't use it if you have even on~
item more than is allowed. This
gets the checker into trouble and
irritates other customers.
courtesy breeds discourtesy
and It breeds best in tired
employes. -LOVE MY JOB
BUT THE PEOPLE GET ON
MY NERVES.
DEA& LOVE: 'lbaaU for a
good letter -bot • 've 1ot a qaea.
doa. How cu you Ion yov Job ti
tbe people 1et 011 yo. eer-ves!
Pleaae amwer IJOClll. I'll •lgQ
myself -DYlN' TO KNOW
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I ride
the bus to work. A very attractive
man gets on at lbe st.op alter
mine. Usually he sits next lo me.
He smiles. says "Good morn-
ing." then starts to read the
paper. He glances at the front
page, then turns right to your col·
umn. Sometimes he chuckles,
other times be goes "lsk, tsk."
I don't know I( he is married
(no wedding ring) but I do know
he is a neat dresser, bas· a
marvelous smile and a very
pleasant speaking voice.
(Ann Landers ~
DEAa EYES: You Jetter may
lpl&e u.ouucta ot roma.ac:es all
over &Ile c:outry. S'Yery mu
•bo rtdes tbe bat wW UllDk a.be
Ori •itt.lal DeJll to W.ID •vlliool
ilm as lier clreamboeL
Tiie aed tltD• Ile amllee at 100
, add atarU to re.ct tbe paper,
llbDply eay, 0 1 aee yoa°" readlq
Au LaDden. Wllat doea you
wUe dd.Dk ot ber advkef''
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've
been dating a man who had a
messy divorce (worse than
mine), so I can understand why
he's gun-shy.
He never talks about marriage
when he's sober. But when he's
on the grain or the grape be
always proposes. The next day
he phones and says, "l was pret-
ty bombed last night. don't take
whall said serlouslY." .
A11 1at1tt1r Mew c.u,1 ••.
The "). Year"
Air Ref re sher
ltauty • r,.,, • .,(9
!conelfty • GUARANmD
oa.omut. AIR RHRES>Q 1, 0
"""""'• O'J'Wn of ~l.J ,,_
... v1a1 .. 0 ~· ... ~ ~ <'-' do-r-1• ... ~ l111t.. ~j ,,,,_..,. •
~de ''OIJ tre.• of "•"' llOWl!t\. Got ,.,j ol ...... ~ O<b>. r.a.:,-. _..,-i IO kw lot J I.I ,._.. °"""'" any .-n " t"" ..,,_p_...,,.,._
. s-Jfl<lt ...... 74<
Salo. r ... -~IQ:
Oon'.t try to sa'ck your
groceries yourself. Let the
sacker or cashier have complete
control. They know what they are
doing and you don 'l.
Be polite. Remember dis-
How can' I find out rnore
without being too brazen? -
BROWN EYES How should I take thia? ---:;=:;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;=:;:::::__ QUF.STION MARKS
From 81
... Total Look
DEA& Q.: Wltll a pGQDd ol aalt. dear. He IOGllda too lnblbl&ed or
too frtp&eaed to be pod llubud
material. He may also be
alcobollc. Make otber frteoda.
up.to-date wedge and she was
stunning.
Since many of the patients are
women in their 40s and sos,
Compton likes to give them a
softer look.
of men having cosmetic surgery
bas doubled in the last five
years," he added.
Ona Mccallen. manager of a
Fashion Island dress shop, also
works with Dr. Brennan's pa·
tients. She finds that women who
might not have been interested in
clothes before surgery are much
more aware of themselves and
ready for a new look.
COSMETIC SURGERY .
ME*WO~EN
LOOK YOUNGER! IMPROVE
YOUR APPEARANCE!
-·---~l»
~ ~
Make·UP must be softened, too,
and eyebrows should be carefully
arched, Compton said. He helps
women select the correct make· up colors and gives suggestion
tor proper skin care and diet.
Compton, who studied in
Michigan and Canada, believes
that "people who look good feel
good" and that women who have
cosmetic surgery usually are• 're·
ady for it all."
"Women are more open to sug-
gestions afterwards," she said.
"Their negative attitudes about
themselves are gone."
• Eyes • Nose • Ears • Facelift • Breasts
• Stomach • Hair Transplants • Dermabrasion • Skin Peel
I 1)
Call For Free Brochure· Free Consulting.
. Easy financing arranged. ·
\
Compton also said he thinks
that men should treat themselves
to surgery if they need it and it
would make them feel better
about themselves. •'The number
She stresses that women
should not have cosmetic sur·
gery for any reason but for
themselves. "Mentally It gives
you a big lift. It gives you a new
lease on life and you want to try
harder."
AMERICAN COSMETIC SURGERY aNnR iNC.
6552 leh4I A-..., ......... IHQ HM70S
Member American Medical Ass·n.
Aries
You Win
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER Z5
By SYDNEY OMAU
ARIES (March 21·April 19): Emphasis on
security, recognition from peers -and
superiors. You gain satisfaction of knowing you
were right -and of having earned respect of so-
meone you love.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ): Lunar aspect
coincides now with spiritual insight, commwtica-
tion lines being opened, language, publishing and
travel. Perceive potential.
GEMINI (May 21-June20): Express willing·
ness to handle added responsibility. You'll be de-
aline with "power people." Accent on where
valuables are stored, leases, t.a.xes, salety de·
posit boxes. .
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Emphasis on
written agreements, long·t.enn arrangements,
chance lo complete important project. Insist on
improved distribution, display. You might be in
better bargaining position than imagined.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Highlight creativity.
independence -welcome chance of self-
expression and romance.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You shake off
lethargy, any tendency to be discouraged. En-
thusiasm Is keynoted. Young persons are part of
picture. You teach, learn, become emotionally
involved.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0 ct. 22): Give yourself
room -refuse to be painted inlo comer. Your
se<:urity is highlighted -property values and
diet -these au combine to be part of your
personal scenario.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Accent on trips,
messages, clients and relatives. Someone close
lo you aids in putting puz.zle pieces together.
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21 ): Money,
values, perception, member of opposite sex com·
bine for vour scenario.
CAPRICORN CDec. 22-Jan. 19): Trust your
own judgment, take initiative. Give credence to
intuitive intellect. ·
AQUARIUS (Jan_ 20-Feb. 18): Check behind
the scenes. What you need is available, but not ob-
vious.
PISCES (F-eb. 19-Marcb 20): Emphasis on
fulfillment, ability lo make wishes realities.
®
Open 1 dayt
Tonl1bt
Soap, Salad fl
Seafood Dinner $4.SO
Potage St.Germain,
fresh spinach salad.
and our famous Crepe St. Jacques
with Kai lops and shrimp.
Our most PoPular ~-course dinner!
Coate Men: South Coast Plaza. 556-1225
Open unlll 1? 00 rnir!nlght Friday -Saturday
11 .00 pm Sunday -Thursday
A1~edle: lenl• Anlt.t Fnhlon Perk, (21l) 445..JJ'15
BeMrly Hiii•; Cemden and Btighlon w • .,. (21)) 27 .. fn3
Ottt'ld•lt; Tti. Gall11ie, (213) 243-311t
Woodl•MI Hiiia Tht P!Oflltt'l•d•, 121,) 114·1225 ....... , I •
...
HEIRLOOMS
PHOTOGRAPHY l3Y DON HAMILTON
714 . 536. 7459
9th srreet studios
50%0FF
(for women only)
Here It is1! The perfect Christ·
mas gift for the man in your life ...
physica l fitness ,,nd better health!!
Now until Chnstmas. women (and
only women) can buy for their man
,, member.;hip In the Mayo Body
Control Center at a fantastic 50%
1 off 1he regular price. Give him the
gift that says "I love you" over and
over aqain
The MA YO METHOD of physical
conditioning for men is the first
program of its kind developed ex
clu~1vely for men. It combines the
most effecbve i50metric and aer·
ob1c non·stren ous exercises u.ith
nutritional guidance to build mus·
de tone. increase circulation, elim·
inate unwanted inchec;. Improve
posture and control weight
The MA YO MElliOD of phys·
ical conditioning for men is a
personalized program
that requires only three
20·30 minute sessions
per v.ieek at our convenient loca·
lion. There is personal instruction
at each session And, the number of
1.Veeks Is determined by individual
requirements. The MAYO METH -
OD has proven effectiveness. It
has been medically tested and ap·
prowd. Full documentation is a-
vaihble upon request.
The MA YO METHOD guaran-
teec; rec;uhc;1 Goals are established
and achieved Within the program
period · and without disrobing or
strenuous excercise. .
So. bec<?use you are looking for
that very special present for that
very SJX'Clal man. and you want
him to keep his sparkling good
hcDhh ilnd tip top physical condi·
!Ion, call the MA YO BODY CON·
fHOL CENTCH for th15
special off er.
And remQmber. sh·h·h"
This Is for women onlv'
. -
Wednesday, November 24. 1976 DAILY PILOT U
BOOMER J
THE VIRTUE OF VERA VALIANT by LH and Springer
010 YOU HCA~?
IHe'li:! e: WA'5
A SOM6
'N fH~
~Xc&LSIO~
IH~Ai~~I
I/ 2.1/
INSIDE WOODY ALLEN by Joe Marthen
J)O YOU F6.€L-YOU
HAV£3. L..f;:ARl\J€D
fROM YUVR R\'=>I
f;F-:f<DKS "/
WS. Vf..'.. roe.cK. 'J: Woo .. r
MAii.£-1HC::. B1c::, MISIAll.6
11\l MY <56C.DND MARt-<1A,&t:.
IHAr l. MAt:t: IN MY FJKS1: ..
AND IHAf WAS
MARRYll')S MY
i::-11~1 wrr-e:..
'
1354 'ft.ARS AGO,
1bDAY, THE 'MJMEN OF THE
/il\AYFLOWER WENT ASHORE ...
FUNKY WINKERBEAN by Tom 8aHuk
RE.MEMBER I UJ11EN
<,.C<J 60'.)S ARE ~Re.HING IN THE Mk.</S
1fiANKS61VIN6 ~
~DE .. LOOKSHARPl
BECAUSE <,JOOR
HOMETOWt-J Will BE
WATCH I NG C,.W •••
TANK McNAMARA
.. Cli.LLA'J Z14, l.W7fON II}
7T UXJl'b THIRTY'.
CJNCINOOTI TUX>TY
NANCY
OUR MOTHERS
WON'T LET US GO
r-TO THE MOVI ES
THOSE ARE MY
FRIENDS .JEAN
JONES AND
.:JEAN $MITH
TODAY'S CIDSSWDBD PUZZLE
UNITED Feature Syndicate
ACROSS
l Heerew
drum
5 Ne"' Tuta ,.,,,.,,, ~ "'*
9 De~'" ,
CO r' ''~Jy
1 • H01oe1 ooq~
I 5 81111 pa•-m
o~&en'
16 1uego
So good·
bye
17 H111 dye
18Famous
puppeteer
19 S1ock l!•Ch
Pf'\rtse '2
wo<ds
20Garden of
Eder 11!$•·
dl'PI
21 Ca" oom
actor i
words
23M8flu1tem
2S For lorn
26 Panama ···
27 Hit 1n the
head Slang
29 Veh1Clt
32 Removed by
cult1no
35 large
amounts
lnl°'mal
36 Card game>
37 Type ol tea
dr111k
38 Where the
E1llel Tower
2 J ,,
17
20
2J
·~ 39 Can prov
40 land par
eels
4 I C1aude
F• nove11s1
'2 Vital llu•d
43 MaKe il
m1stakt
44 Hutr ed
45 D1npprova1
SllOUI
46 Woe ···
48PAI~
52 Act of Olrf·
lrno raal)y
56 Dote brtellv
ST M•SS•SSIPPI
for one
58 US pres•·
dent
590tqreal
size
60Plily
61 Greallah
62 Land min
63 Sh1ps' t1llen
64 Cher•shed
65ACI
DOWN
I Haured
2 Sm.atro•o•d
fruit
3 Yearns
4 Y1eld~'IO
much
warmlh
5 Classlly
6 Navlgalor's
'i'i'S'S AS ( ... p c'AWIS ";8orr R 0 0 l'I y AN 0 A
8 I J l c 0 L l AR 'L Y-'fs . , .I ll'l a "' I IE. LOTS
c. A F" N I L I L
~ ... 'n Ir • s OG I t1 AN !) l (
'•lo !< T r I RF l'I I T I T AX
I'" p \ I N G [ 0 I F I £
• n I ~ T AR T I NA l'I ( R
f g 0 [ s AR A I NE IS iT
'l. ,, 0 0 It N
~61~ S T I.I I t O L L "R
AL A 8 A "A U '" l'I
~..!~! s
necessity
1 Three·
masted
scn0a>er
8 F"l1vorll'lg
9 Palestinian
plain
IO Parl'l"I
11 US winier
r11sor1 2
wds
12 Oliver Har·
dy's t>uddy
13 Hounds'
ouarry
2 l Show Ille
way
T E 0 T R 111'1
E 0 E 111' ArJ ----11110 back
35 Approach
an end
36 Art gall'9ry
380111c1al
document
•281ess111g
H Feels dis·
comron
4 5 Real estate
persoo
4 7 Seed Su Iha
•8 EyelHhes
49 Be1110
Ulllited 2
words
50 Former I) S
2 2 "41rr0f coin
24Poursl0<th 51Rateotmo·
27 01sc1o.sed Hon
28 Revise 52 Malay
30 Voice canoe Var
3 I Highway 53 Opportune
J2 Forlune. in· 5<41 i1ated f()(mal m
33 Acidity 55 Lacerated
34 Act of get· 59 Cloaked
10 II 12 tl
,..
-rnE NATlON WIU... 8E
WATGUNG <.-00 ...
DR. SMOCK
NO, NO,
t-JURSE: !
YOLJ Al-WAY S seRve M6
F!R.OM "f'He t...eFi'.' A._,C' THOSE
Kl'Jtves SHOUl-t=' ee se-r 10
1'HE! RIGHT.'
GORDO
THE HEAR.TH IS A
CRICl<F:T'S MILIEU, NQT THE
WAR.DROSE., ooer •
1(·~
MOON MULLINS
by Ernie BushniUer ...... ,; ... ... . . . . --··· •\• ... ~·
PEANUTS
!HAT'S WHAT I'D
CALL A PAIR OF
BLUE JEANS
TUMBLEWEEDS
!.IMPIV LltARq J'M
Rf:1lJRNIN6' YOUR
ENGAGE:MJ:Nr RIN& ••• I
NEE:P 1lME 10 llilNK
1HIN6'S OVER.
.~~ ..
MISS PEACH
l ~PPO~E MAN'( F"AN\tt.li~ Wll.t.
9E MAVING 6/A~~ Ft>~ OINNell
10MO~~ow ...
11·1>1
WHICH "EMIN~ Mf:, F\.INl(-
HOW COME r WON 1T 9! AT
'IOU ( HDL.4~! FO~ THAN1'~61VIN~ OINNf.Jtf
by Mel
YtJt..l'JC• KIOOtNG!
THAf'~ n.4a
MAIN "fHtNG
Wl'/ltE
GIVING 1HANK5
FOlt. .. .'
HoW
ELSE TO '..·.' FREEDOM BUT ,, r.::> CHE.Wr
THS IV4Y TO AW:e -~'t 6/G lft()NEY 19 TO DtJJ.
1116 ~ PA1E~"'
tfXKNlllP/
PROB'LY COULONT
DECIDE WHAf •
Tb WEAR!
by GtorCJt Let~
by Gus Aniol~;~
~ . ..
-. '
by Ferd Johnson ·
.~
.~. ·~ •f
"Dear. you'll never i,:ue~~ what moved in10 lhlll l1t1le ~hop off th ~
lohhy1" ~ ..
DENNIS THE MENACE
• ~
JI.I DAILY PILOT
PUBLJC NO'J1CE
• PICTITIOUS IUSINIU
HAMI: ITATIMINT The fOllOWlftQ l)<tr!!Ofl I\ 00<"9 llu\I ..,,": 4"1>CO CONSTRUCTION, JM I!
ll'tlf'St .. Go\la M•M. CA t2UI
W~needay Novembe< 24 1978
PVBUC N011CE
NOTtC:a OP INTINTION
TODIOICATI IAllMaNT
Wllll•IYI UO-"• PurlnQtOl'I, 1,,
"'' Weile-s, Hewoo..1 Beech, Clo~
Thi\ lllit!MU It ~onduCUO Dy Ml ln-dWl~I,
Wiiiiam E Pu•lllQIOI\
'Thlt '1etef'IMl'll wn flied wltft U.
C9ul'lty Cieri< of O'•"" County Oft ~U,ltl._ ....... P\11111~ Or•"M Cool Oelf'I Pltot.
HOTICI! IS Hl!Al8Y C)IVEH Thal
Oft tM Utt\ lier of O<tolllr, 19'•. 1'IS
loe•d ot lfllu(•tlo11 ot lllt ••vine Ul'llflM\<'Mot OltlflClotOrA"OfOlut\-
IV. ca111.,..1e aOOc>led • ll•tolllllof\ of
lnle11llon to Or•llt lo Ille SOut-"
Glfll0<11lt ldltd'I ~llY e ~ -•end rloltt .. ·••Y tor.,,.._,,
elecVlctt ._"'It" tw T unH fl«I< It • ._..,.y $<110o1
A publi( ,_llnt -ll>t CIUftl-Of
mMlao ""'" dfdlUUoo "'Ill Ill Mkl el 1119 Twlle lltoc.1< SthoOI, St)I ""'-'" °'1,,.. I"''"°· C..lllornle, OI\ 11\e 1i1 O.Y .,. OK•-lt7e, al Ille 9-ol 1:JO o'ctec~ <o M. l
Areblbald S. Jforf.aa has been named·
enslneerlns manager of Fledbl• Metal Rose
MaHf1cant•1 Co•P••Y· Colla Mou. He is responsible for manalPng deslsn enlioeering ac·
tivilles and cost eaUmatlna acUvltica of \be Doyco
Corp. dlvtslon. "°"• l',1•.~ o.<.1.•. ,.,. 4714-1' *
PUBLIC NOTICE 110 ... RO O' IEOUCATION
IRVINE UNll'IEO
SCHOOl.OIJTRICT
aapbul A.Raio, Irvine, bas been appointed
PICTITIOU$ IUSINISS NAMI STATEMIHT
T~ 10110 .. 1119 Pt•son' •r• C10ln9
by A \talll•v Cor•y
s.c:-.ta'Y ol lhe
loard of EO-UC.•llon
manaaer ol llaak ol America'• South Hollywood·
branch. He la former manaaer at a FuUerton
branch.
tlU\IMUe\: Pul>l1""11 Or•"M COftl D•llY Piiot,
Nov. 1•, tt1'
• AUl'l'AIO!fltS MESSt!NGt!R
'Sl!ltvu:r. ICMOI S••••· Ave .. 11103,
Fowtlaln Vello. C" tttoii
ltoneld O. llutl, ,., .. 1(1~-.
'illftll"Qlonll .. Ch CA'91-P UBLIC NOTICE
AW!t ~;.1.~::~~~.~l~~\l~~·lf' -------------1
James B. Oevlbl has become a principal of Jooe., Cabl acad A1totlates, Huntington Beach. He
was formerly associated with Toups Corp. and
Southwest Engineering.
lllh bu""•~• I\ <onouU•O f)y • MOULTON-NIOUELWATER * ~tlH•ln•rr\lllp OISTltlCT
Aone•o 0 Aull NOTICE INVITIHOSEALED•IDS
Georse Wells, president of Tech.DoloCY Muket.-
lDC, tac., Santa Ana, has joined the editorial ad·
V\&Ory board of The Executive of Orange County. '""' stat•menl w•• 111..i wllh I"" 1'0111 THI CONSTRUCTIONOI'
<;ourlity C••rll ol Or•llll<t Counly on LA PAI PAllALLEL SEWEii AND ,._,IS, H710 e 'fPAHGllAtoltTYSIWERS
FM.SJ ANO POllC£ MAINS monthly business Journal. • .,, POllll'IMo 0f&nCjt! CO&\I Dall• Pll9t. SPICIAL f'ltOJl!CT No.2
Nov 11,U,ctlldOec 1.1, 1'76 41131-76 PNA$E 2 .,-
PUBLIC NOTICE
!MOULTON f'ARltWA't -l'ORCE
MAIN
MAINANOOllAVITYUWElll
Tn• 8o~rd ol Olrttlof\ ot lllt
'SUPERIQll COUllT 01' THE Moullon·N•Qu•I Water Ol>lrl<I of
S1"ATI 0" CALI l'OllNIA FO• Or•noe COUl'll\', C•lllor11fa. PwAlnttter
THI! COUNTY 0,. OllAHGE In .,.,,,... '"'lance\ relerr..i to .. "Ol!r
NO A-.. su UIC I," 00 htrtDY lnvllt '*"''*" Dkll for
Edward T . McGrath, Newport Beach, bas
joined Coldwell Banker Management Corp.'s real
estate finance office in Newport Befch as a real
estate finance officer. He is a former mortgage
anaJyst with Connecticut General Life Insurance
Company.
I( bT IC I 0 P H IE A 11 ING OF llllt folloWl"Q ~•IDed Pllblk ~
PltJTION 1'011 PllOl ... TE 01' WILL T,,. Con\lfUC1fOI\ Of L<l Pat P•r•ll•I
ANO 1'011 LETTERS TESTAMEH· Sewer 8"0 lly.,.n Gravity~
TA•Y ANO ,.OR AUTHOlllUTION l'Of'Ct M•11" Soo<o•I P101Kt Ho 2
TO AOMIN ISTER UH DER THE """"' 2 !Moulton Pot,, .... , -FOf'ce
INDEPENDENT ADMINISTRATION Mao" """ Gr•vtly Sewell, l<>QOI,,., 01' !!STATES ACT (PROBATE OCIOE wit!\ •II •IH><111tntn1 worit lhtr*1o, ••
.tH 15T SEOI -In Otl•ll elld delcrl-'" lh<>
George Twist, Newport Beach, bas been ap-
pointed vice president and general manager or
Towner Manafac:larlai, Santa Ana. He will be
responsible for implementation of plans and direc·
· Uvesofthe board. E~l•I• ol JO>fAN FREDERIK olans.orofll•s.or••l119s,W<tloM.-MOUN IE A ,.~ .. JOHAN F . >petlllollon1onflltl"ti.o111<eo1
MOUNIEll. au J,F, MOUHIER, eui Boyle l!nQlll .. rll'IQ Corl)Orallol\, 1501
FRITZMOUNIER,Ooce."'O, Ouall Slr•tt, Newpoft 8ttcll,
NOTICE IS HEREO'f GIVEN 1"411 CelllOtnla, "'"1<11 oocuMtnt1 ••• l>V EVERET'T O. NUNAN llas llled ,,_,...In this rtlertl\Ct l.,corPO<alHI ...... 11>. For
• oetlllon tor Prol).>i• ol Wiii end for 1.. 1ur11>er ollfli<utors, reltrtl\C.e It llt<•by ~u•"t• Of Ltlttr< Te.tamentary to llH! m-lo ulo pl•nS, orolltes, drtwll'IQS,
pell1lorwr tnd ror •ulhorirallon to ao ••<lions end •P•<lllc•Uons tor 11\e
m1nlsler the e•l•le u"der llH! I~ •bow deKrl-lmp•o.,.men1 ent11i.d
"""' Adm111 .. 1r<1tlon OI E•l•I .... Acl "Conlf•Cl Ooc:umtnt• •nd Construe· fPrtoelt Code S•l •I •••11 rete~e to hon Spectllullon• •"d CaMlfU<llon
wfllc;h '' ma<1+ for 1u•lrwtr pa111culan, Pl•"i '°' ,,,. c;on\lrucllon .,. \.A PH
""" th•I '"• um~ enO ol•c• ol fle•ri"Q Par•llel Sewer tno Bvpass G<a•ll•
Ille um+ nas o.~n "'' tor DK•-1. Se-•• •no Foret Melns, St>ec;ltt f>n>. 1•7' ••• 10 00 .. m • In ·~ COUr1'1)0(1l Of tKI No l, Phu• 2 (Moulton ~r,_.,
O.oertmenl No lo• uoo cOU<'I •I 100 For<• Mein Ano Grtvlty ~I"
c.vlc; Genier O•IVt w .... '" ,,,,. C1ly Of S.10 D'""' and \PtCillcallont ....., be
He is the third generation in bis family to as-
sume operational management at Towner. He is
preceded by his father, BUI. who remains as presi-
dent, and by hls grandfather, George Sattler. • Dool Heater, Laguna Beach, bas been named
AMF Voll'• water sports merchandise man ager.
He is the company's former sales promotion and
packaging manager. ,,
!..lnt•An•. C•hlornta, ourcha.to •I Ille ottlce ol 8oyle
D.il'<I Nov~m'"'r ts, "76 Enq1,,,.er1nq CorPOr.tt•Oll for JIO 00 per
llobert Neely bas been named dJrec:tor or
technical ser vices for Americ~n operations or ElkJ
muraational, lac:., Laguna Niguel. He is former
media specialist at the Beaverton, Ore., scbool dis-
trict.
WILLI AME. \I JOHN, ... O>ct<k mu•I ~ m•<I• payaott lo ....
Couoiy Cl••• Moullon-Nl9w1 Water D•\lrlcl
DAVIDSTEALIHG TIHGLER Purwanl lo Ille L•bor Code ot the
LAWCOltPOllATIOH Slott Of C•lllorn1e.1nt Moullon-N•~I * SOONewpor1 Ctnt•r Drive WAter 01\t"tt h•1" iluertalnedthepr~
swltt ,10 "•'""II r•1• or ~· 01em wAQn o1 '"" Todd Derr, Westminster, bas been appointed
Ht,.DOrl Buell, CA flUO 1oc•ll1y In wlllCh lhlS work I• to l>f
Atto•Myflor P•lltoo.,•r pertorm~d lo DO ., ciet.elle<I I~""' N..':u%'.1:':~ .. o~:;-.ge co••• oally P1101. !::1~~~~~~::_ :i,r:;e;, t11e '::
loan offi cer at Bank ol America's Pacific· Fruitland
branch in Vernon. He is former student rel atioos of-
ficer at the Isla Vista branch.
•82? 76 \OCl•tt d Gt.,tlAI Co.,traCIOr\ OI
--------------..,,,.,lo, SoulMrn C•lllofnla Owlotrr
PUBLIC NOTICE
lll!SOLUTION HO 76-ID
.. lllSOLUTIOH O P THE CITY
COUH~I. 01' THE CITY 01' COSTA
MEU ., CAlll'OllHtA, OECLAlllHG
ITS INTENTION TO OISPOSE 01'
SUll P l.US llE A L PllOPIEllTY ;
OE\CfltllNO TH E LANO TO llE
SOLO· StETTINO FORTH IN
GENUIAL TEllNIS THE INTEllE$T
EASEMENTS 011 llESEllVATIOHS
TO I E RESEllVEO llY THE PUILtC,
IF ANY; SETTINO THE TIME AHO
PLACE 01' T H E SALE ,
ESTAa LtSHIHG TEllMS ANO CON·
OtTIONS 01" THE SALE ANO
CALI.ING POii SEALED llOS IN
WlllTING
TNI CITY COUNCIL O"' THE Cl~ 0, P>STA MESA ODES MElllEIY
lllSOLVE AS l'OLLOWS·
T""T, WHEREAS, T tre I O.v,.;,,.,
I, 0.t09' I Arl•ct,. • S SKI""'' 100
tllfOUQh •nd '"'luol"Q "~ ol ,,,.. CO•
tNl"'tftt (_~ 0(Q\1'10 t\ fOf" It ,.,..fhOCJ
for tht dl\Ol)\1tton t')f ~orolu\ ,.,.., P'O
Pf'i'tvorahxAt tq•n<Y """ Wl<IEllEAS 11•~ (oly ha< "'<u'1>1U<
••~ cM\Crl~d nn •" "'• t·uD~f d\taChrd
to OH\ At\OluHort marJicco E whlC>I\ '' 4
-'nd bV' tl\I\ '\OM' •I •t relerf'nce fTWWM '*
P"" ,,.....,f, •nn
WHEAEAS. •'d l•'ld\ ar• '"'"" Pttri1cvltt''"' d1t\,r ro,..o in• 01., m.r'~
E•IUIWt ''8 ' tt'IA<n ... d to""' ~Ufl")t\
•1'0 0¥' lflll\ \Mf"H1t. t•l•rtn<.e f'l'WOt •
p.>rtrw<eol •nd
WHEREAS Coty <flt>""' tooo-ot
'41tJl~t,10 I ... PhQr. .. \f ~ f'l<J-f'
tlOW TH E q E I' 0 R E 8 E I r
A'Ei.el"EfJ '";\I 01.1,.\v"'nt to 11'\t ""'°'......,."' ''•'"'""" tuth.f'1t1ty , ,,_ Ot• ~ twf •b'i "' ..... ,. tot ,,.,,. ,.,.., ....... ot'O
,..... .... OifV t1bJ"I') 1n f • "'•b•I 4 .tC
t1tt"""1,_,..M .t"'1 0 mn,~ Oif"1t(UI.,
l'I de\it'f!Ot'd ., th•~ 11 m.-r't:ed E·d 1HD1t
A ~•'fllr'11'\•·r,.ll')
BE If •U•HHfR RE\OlVEO '"'°'
~·l"f I~ '""'" °""' •" 4'4 orcJ<lt'\C.• w•t~
tl'W' ff'f"n\ AM CO'\Cl100n'\ o\) Vt tQr1P'I '"
Ht• NrttN-,.. ot \4th•~• Pvf'>';c Aiwrtk>n cet
'•'"N '" 1f'\•' A•\OIU11Qn "'"''"-.-cf E• n Dlf ,,, ... fnrl tn tnit tondmort Of Mit f
''"' o.-' ,i.,,.d '" E .rub•t o · tmtn bo;
lht'\ ,.,_..,.h ,.,.,.",... "''°' • ~t t P'litl'lr~f
"!!IT l<UIH'i(R RE~VEOI-
CC>Ple• of Iha o•,,.N al P•••tlllnQ rdtt
04 oer d•tm ••Of'\ •s delermlned by,,_
0 1\lrlc.t .,, on file Al •• , Pf'ln<•WI Dtiil(f'
ol Du'°"""· 10 w•I 77\00 La PA1 Road. L.>Qun• MIOutl C.lltorn • ., A• ni<!Ulr..i
by S.CllOll 11/J 01 ""' La"°' Coot. 1i.. Contrt<tor 10 wnom tr.e contr•ct
N>r~fot I\ AW(trdt'd \hAll ~· 4 <001 ''-'tof •• ~.Kh 10b\lf~
II \hall .,.. mA.,dAIO•Y u_.. 1>n1 Con·
lt•cCor co Wl\Om tt contraCI ls •warded
And uPOn a"Y wbton1rat1or uncle• him
to o•v nol te.-lh•t1 '""sold •Pl<llh•d ralt'\ lo itU J•bOn•rs, wotkrnietn, .ff\d
mecho.,I< < ~mploytd by l~m In, ... t•
1'<.Ul•On o• t~ conlr•ct Tll~ ,,..,..11v for
tallUr" 10 COMl)li;' ntrtw 1th I\. tl)
\Pol<llootd '" ~<loon 11/S 01 lhe ldt>Or
COdt' nw contrAC'"' •h.ilt o•y 1r~ve1 an<I
,,,.,,•\tf"nt ~ Ptlvment~ to ""c"
""llf~n,.,n ~ • .,..o 10 u e<ule '"" worl<,
'" '\U<n "-'"•' •no \IJb'\tst~ OIY· ~h arr Oftttnf'd In thf' •OPlk llblt col
•~t1"" o.ro.t•n""0 •Q<Hmtflts •1ttd
""'" t~· Dtio.rtm~nt of lnd+.nMtal qffA
f1M\ in fCtOrO•nct flllfl'lf" S.C:hon 111J I
ol ""' lo1 "°' c °"" Atttnt1on ., 01,...ct~o to ttw-OfCW1Ston\
"' S.0< llOI'" II 11 S MO II /1 b of 11"'
ldbOf" ~ l Of'ICt!!rn1nq the tttnctlO"Y
~nt ol ~oort"""' by I~ Contractor
Of any \ub<Of'lr AC tor undtir· '"m
~tlOtl ''" \. 4\ ;un .. ncHG rf"Qufrw-s
th• Cot'l trett.,r or '\UQ« ontr•ctor
emoloy1nq lr•df'\m.,n In ""V APPf'fn>'
tk••O•• oc<uo•tlM to •oo•• 10 ~ 1oint
•Pof'11tnllc ''"'o conu"llt•• nt¥"4.'lt-.
\i1f ot l"t Publt< •0'111.\ Of"Ol«l and
W'f't•C'ft ~1ml,U'tl*'' ff'Wt AOO,..n(1(f"S.ftlO O'OQ'•'" If'\ th•I tr•~ •or ,. <•'11h<A~
of •OCYOV•I '"'ft' hfi(.ilt• w•ll •l~fb.
,.,.. "•ho"' •oo'•"t•c11ts to fCMKrwty~
tf\.tl Wilt Ot \1"4"'0 1n t,,.. otrlOf~e ot
t~C"Of'\trA<:t TM rAr.ont AQOrflof'IHC,., to
.o.1'"-'V'"t"" In '\ll<f\ c•\tt\ sf\tl.lt not bf
lf'\\l~OM \Oft'-f IA(fO\•
A WMn uMmoloymr"I '" 1"" 1'11>a
~ f'~~roQt ov 19't 101nt •oore"'-•CHntD
tOfT'W"nitt.-tM\ •cu~~~d "" •ilM'AQtOt
1 \ o->rcf"'1f '" 1"4 'tO dAV\ prlOf lo the-r•
Ot»U tnr C,.r-lltlC.tt•. 0'
6 W...., tlw numt>oor of-••(••
'" tr•1n1no tf\ ttw-tr•• ... (Heb• rc1tt0ot MW" t() ,,.,,. or
r_ W'*> t!w tr-un \hOWll\al II
t\ rf"O'M'•"O •t k•\l ' .)0 Of It\.~ .,.,.,.,P 1""°"11" eppr.,.Clcw\tllp T••lr>-
,,_, ~ •" •Mu•f N\•~ tt.tewtOr 0<
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS I USINESS
NAME STATEMtHT
fhto I01low1"' ptr SOn\ "'" OOl"Q Du\t "'11U•\'
IRVINE MASTER CHOR ... LE ~
NewPOrt C•nt•r Orin Sullt q?O,
lffwoorl 8t11<n Ce111orn1• •1660
O•a.,911 Counly Cl'\~ral Auoeo•••on
• C.ltto,nla non orot1t corp0r•hon. SOO
Newoort Ctnt~r Ortv~ Sutle 920, NowPOrl 8Hth Calllornla,"lMO .
Thi\ bv51nf'.;.\ f\ Oe•n9 conauc.ten by ll
-..,.om toroo•ellon
OrA"IW' Counlv
Chorat At,SO<•~t·on
81 i<~n~ttiiw Enqlar
Vitt Prt\1d~tH
T"·~ \letcment wa.-. f1lfld wit'1 ,..._
CO<Jntv c1~·~ 01 Or~l>Q• Countv nn Qc:.
IOl>fr2t, 1976
FUntl
l'Ul>tl\"*6 Or.troq,. C°"'l 0d•IY PllOI.
""" l 10 II 71 10/A •6~76
P UBLIC NOTICE
S·lll7M
SUPllllOll COUllTOFTMI!
STATE 01' CAL.,OltNIA FOA
THI! COUNTY OP 0 II ANGE
Mo A·1UJS
NOTICtl 01' HEARING O" PETITIQff
"011 OllOl!llS .. UTHOlll llNG
Lf;ASI Of< llS AL PllOPEllTY
E\lth o f rtEN NETH W
HEININGER O•cea .. d
NOTICE •S HEREllY GIVEH 1"'11
ROSE HEININGER 118' '""° """'"'" e>rllllO'l IO< O•Otr Aull1orltt1>Q U•~ ol
l!eal P,,,.,..,,., r~lt••ll• P lo ""'"h I• ~ fOf fvr1hrr CMrt1c.ular-s. ano \hat ,,,. Ill••• ano pl.c• ot hearl11q ti..,_
P\t'\ bt"'-n w ·1 for-Nov,.mt>er 1Cf, 1•1&, at
• 00 ~ m. Ill I~ tourlhOv"' ol °"°""' """'I Ntt 1 ot "11<1 r1>urt I 700 O vl<
C#nl.-• Oflw.-Wtst, In '"" (,ty of S...ta AM C..lllornlA
Oal41d Nov 12 197~
WILLIAM E St JOHN.
counlr Cieri\
llllHt •HIRlOO A ""°'"''-I C.fMrltlOll 1•c..m,,ry Pa•ll Eetl
._.. .. ,.._let.CA. -T
A*"'tY• fOf' Pt1lll0Mr Publ"""" or,..,cie co .. t Oattv P11o1,
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICITIOUS I USINf:SS
NAME STATEMENT
T~ followlnQ ptrton\ att CSOinQ """'-
nh:.s •~ 111 LAGUNA HILLS LIOUOR. l?I
LAGUNA Hl llS WINES ANO
SP I Rt TS 1lS3J Cell• tk la l..Oul$JI,
Le9<1na Holl\, CA •HSJ
ROQ., W 8a•qul\(, S06t Barotn
Ln .. tru1.,,., CA '111•
Jacquell"* Berquist. SO&l 84'rean
Ln '""~•. c"' '27" Tiii• bust~n Is c.onoucteo Dv • ., 1n-
a lv1oue1
R•rW BArQulsl
Je<qw 1lne B~•quoSI
This <l•temenl was llltd with Ille
0>u<>1y Cler~ of Ora11911 Gounfy on Nov. IS ttl&
...... ?
Pubtl~ ~81190 Coast Oalty PllOI.
Mo• 11, 14 on<I De< I I , ltllO
PUBLIC NOTICE
S·J070
NOTIC• TO Ctt•DIT'OllS
N•.A-S
SUPEltlOll COUAT 0' T14E STATI Of'C:All .. OllNIA, FOii
TH• COUNTY OF OAANOE
In t!W 'Mtt•r OI Ill• E\lat•of LEE IC
WONG, O,c: .. wo
NOll<.e ts 1>tr•t1Y Ql,,.n to crtdli~s
hevl"Q clelm• aQaln•I Ille said oec.
dtftl to Iii. w.lo c1tlm' In'"' Offk• of ~ <ltrk Of 11\e elort\ald court or 10
D"He"I lham to IM U'IGe,.IQned ......
.,.t•ct ot PETEii S P CHAN, ESO, ATTORNEY AT LAW, 1011 H
B"OAOV\IAY, SUITE )07, '" lheO lyol
LOS ANGELES, 111 LOS ANGELES
C:OU..11. Whlcl'I ••II•• olllct Is 1rw ol••
... ~IM\\ ol .... und•r<IOMCI '" •II
""'lltrs oert•lll1n9 IO s•lo tSlal• Svl:h
<l•lm• wflh lht "4!CHU•Y VO<IG/len mu<t De llled or !)rt<~nl•O as .i..,..salo
within tour mM th< •lier 11\e ltf'11
PIJl>flullonol 111•• notice.
0.l~d "4C>• 9, 1•1&
LEO WONG
E••<utor ol Ill• will
Ol \810 <lt<.clt"t P~Tf;lt S I' CHAN, ISO
At-yal·UW 1et1N l llOAOWAY 11-•ot tt o~ ~.tt• n-PwO'•'~ 1t\ ,,...
O••f'IOI' c,,..,1O•.•vP10• ~· • ,.,..."
'l'tf "9f ll ..woi'\r>fUt ._.. ........ '-'""'d
~~ llD ,._, ountt,~ 0"'~ '" ~
'""" .0... "°"•'",,..."t C.od• •"Cl to (Ol"I s ,.,. •0"" f10t~ 'lf ,,_,,. 1.,.._ft~ tfW'tCK to
toc•l1v Of'
O WPwn lhe (of>tractor ""'"'"" 'vldell<t lh•f M •MOIO'r\ ~_,.,..,
APO'...,ll(~tl\ All Of hh<Ol'lr"°'OI\ Oii
cll'W'UiAf ... ,'999 Of not 19'\\ than orw .-e>
>lo~mDar 11 11 ,,, 10• 4n~76 SUITE 207 -------------1 LOSANOILES,CA -n
""" \0'4 ~"4tr4f r•""' tNIYfYi"Q II\
t•"91h0' ••\•f'f'\•f\t\ t.>f r•~'""t~ to
.,_. rtt~Wt'I b'I tr.111 (11V ltifll l1m-o tt"d
ftt4'Ce Of \•I• •f'td • ( •H for MAJ.ed C>IOt
l,,Wf'lt\"'Q
Ml rT FU"THE i. "f'~Ol.V!!D tlWll
•O ,,,._.,. \.hf'll f)t f111i41 w tO\ trw-Ot'f cwu·t
ot ,,. Ct, ot C.o\IA M~•• on 01 O-ft)l't
1n"'l)•m ~•hCUll'\doo•O..•-.
1"1 ..
HE If rv"T'iER AE\Ol.lfEO , ... ,
t~ ...... "Ottf ,.,,,, bhj\ \~·II t•• OfM11t
•' llM 111><1' ot 10 00 • m '"I,,. Coton<tl
t """"""' "1 ,,.. ClfY (OVMll Mii• City
et C'"'I• ~-.. •t 11 ,. "" 0.1.,., CMla
Mir'-" C..t4•f,,, n1~ on UM 1 >th My ot
P..{""""' t9•• nf tT l'IN•lLY RESO\.VEO 1"91
tr-~· ,,.,..,. .. " ''°"" , •. d \••fi -t_,,,t\WUh OA•d lt'\IO tM f1tnd ff"C'W'n WhHf\ Pt.,,,.,.,_, W4'\ "Wdolt 'or ·~ I And
PUBLIC NOTICE ------------· O<""IO IO •IOhl 1°"'"'1"'en SUPElllOR COUllTOI' THE
fM c;-1racfot I\ roqulrtd to --P STATEO,CALl,ORlllAl"Oll
CW 11bu116"• 10 •UllCI• t\IADll\NO tor THI! COUNTY Ol'ORANOl
tN 40<•\lnl<tra tlof\ ol a_..ntl;.e\t!IP No US Ue pr~"''"' 11 IW•Mptova ,..,,,,,_,,o NOTtCt: TOTHI CLASS O•~llll(•\0•1our ... ymt"'"•"Y~"" ORIN BERGE. J R CH ... llVL
h<Hbl• ··-on \Utll con11.c-h ~"" ,, BERO!, •I •I • on BEHALF OF
ol'-r COnt•a<IO•t Oii t.,. ,.,_,le"'°'"" THEMSl!LVES llND ALL OT'iERS \II• •r•m•l<lnQ\UChconlrlDUllCIM SIMILARL 'f SITUll TEO, Plalnllll•.
Tll# C011t10ClOI •l'l<I a"y ~llfllroc v~ CIT"l'OF HU.,tfTINGTON BEACH, a
'"' .,,..,_, "'m tll•ll comply with,,,..•• Munl<1pel Col'POfttllOI\, Oelt..aants
QoMr ..... nh of S.t llon J/17 s And 1177' TO ALL Pf II SONS .. ,,., lkm:...-or
'"""'•mOlovm•,.•ohoPl'•""'h <Old, wllhl" ii. c11v or H""llflQlon
l"lorm,.llon 1olal1v• lo APP'•" B .. <I'\ c:.flfOtnl•, rul property In lllt
fl(t\h•O "•""•'th ·•oa \('*"''"'· llmt Hrltdol AuQu\I 1, 1•14 MldJ"""1,
-OIMr r•qvtr•""'"" may De -IUS ...... Upof\ wllom ,,,.. ,..., .,.._,..
, .. ......., tton\ ,...., Otr•tlOt ot 1~.ttt•I trttn"fer ••.a ot 1h Of ''we\ levled by
._ .. .,..,,, ., ofllC•O tn• """'""''"""' '"• C•t~ ot Hunlll'ltlon ll••c", ot AHr•nll<olhto S•n F1ahtf"o C.lllCH'nl•
Gallll)f'ftl•. 0' from IM 01v1\lon o1 .. ~ YOU &Ill! HEii E 8Y NOTl,.IEO ol
°'"'1t<Hhlp !II-rel• ano ''' .,._h """ """""'fl'.,. th~ tNY• .. nl1llod e<
Offo<H llM <omnwnc•<I o" S.ptemblr U. 1'1.1 PA\SEO ANO ADOPTED ti\!\ l\t NOTICE I\ HEREBY GIVEN IMt 111 ORIN 8E"GE, JA, Whentln the
°"','"'°~~.-=:,1;1~"'''"
M•vtJr ot ttw
cuv ot CnttA Mtt~ ..
dlTT'f!n
Ell"" I' PhlM•y
O tv a..-o• th•
(ltfofCotl• Ml!M ~T•l'&O .. CALIFOR>ltA I
COUNTY OF ORANGE I SS
C•TYOFCOST ... MES" I I 811.,EEN P PHINNEY Q ty 0~
Al\d •ototllc10 Cltrll OI IM Coty COUfW ,1
"' • ._. Cth o• Co•I• M•.. .... .... tw
<•rtlty 11\at lh<> tl'M!Ve Mtd l~"Q
lle~llOl'I NO ,. ll7 WA\ cNIY -rt
ov•"1Y oe•,..d •11d •dOot.o by ti. "''"
C•tf'C:ouncll •I • reou••• -~••"CJ
li.et'Mf, ""''0 on lhe ht day Of No• ......... "• IH WITNESS WH£"1!i0f' f II••• "-UfllO \el my llAnd •nd allhr"(I lht
~·I ol lllt City Qt CO,I• MOa lllh Jncl
d•yof NOWMDer, 1'1t (, .... )
l:llffn P Phln"o
CllY Cltr~ •nd •• OfltclO
(ltrl< Ol I~ Clly COul'ICll
of tt>e Cltyol CO\lt Mt ..
f:)(HlllT "A"
A pertton ol Pere el ) o! • m"° '''""In
llOGll st. P.ttt 7 ot P11rul M&o< ••· ·~ ot Ore11119 Cou.,ty, """"""•· Cle\trllleod •• fnllo .. t
llrtll"HtHO at '"-~I _.._ly
torM( el Mid PtfCtl l IM..C:. _,h
40'°""''•••1•d•st.onc•ol IU 2'~110
Ille fl\Oit flOflllerly <or.,., lllt,.•Of,
11-tOlllll 50 00 IS" •••I e <11•1...-ct
Of V1~ IMI to e POl"1, 11\Mct '4>Ulh
*''1i'l7"Mtl. dl•l•llco of JO ISIHI to • -'"': ,...,.ct \Ou111 ~o oo·w· ... ,,
•• ,,., • 11 ... p.arellwl 10 and n 00 1 .. 1
""'*'ly Of the WUlhe,.•terly lltW Of
"' .. ~rol i • dl"ence of •.1' ftoel to
IN i.o!Mlllq ot • l•llOt"I <-COl'I·
C<I .. llOl'1Wly 11evlflt • rHIU\ of 17,00
'"9; ·~· "'9Jl•flY ••Oftt \al«I t"'"' ™"""" ..... , •• , ...... of ... il'JD"""
4W'C dltl..,ce Of 7• " fffC lo tlwl _,,.
11.,. Of ttth llrut; tlle<\O "°""
WW1'\" -•I• «lhl•"c• of O OO!ff! 10
"'9 P'OIHf OF I EOIHHIHG IDl'fll~ ...... "C" •lld "0" ~
to ....... ""'°", .. ,., •r• Oii fll• 111 IPw
Olflce Of 1M Clly Cieri!, ""'°' 100. 11 ·"el• Orl.,., C:...ta Me•e
,.,.lthtd Or 411\0t C..'1 0..Hy Piiot
"'°"•It. 17, u •"4 ~( \, 1•1t
IN NIOulton 1'11q.,.1 Waler Ol•trtd will Pl•lrllltt. °" "-"•" ol Ille clan to •hlch
,..,.1ve ••Ol*d b•O• •I '"" othc• ol ,.. bl!tlong•, '"I" 10 oD1•1n • "'un<I 01 8oylo EnQ1.,..u11><1 Coroor•llon. •501 11\e IO 611 ,.,. QrOllllCll th•I lhe tea wo•
0 11•11 ~··~~· Mt woon e •• , .... .._~lhVIOl•llO"ollh•cltycl\arltt,
Cal1lornl• uP lo lh• Mur ol 10 00 "·"' , .wld '""' ,,.. r•lu•al le> """n wlo lex I< on O.cemDPr 10 191• at which """ a•lol•tlOllOf coMtllutlonal rl0fl4•.
oW\d llJlt<t l ... V will bl PUbll<IV _ _, '!'OU ARE ICUllTl<IE~ NOTIFIED
-r•lld S.ld W•l•O ,, • .,. ""'"Clot "" , .... .,.... m•y be H Cludod ., • ,,,.,...,,.r ,,,. "°'"" of 1~ _,k _, -.1,.. ol ,,,. c••n OH<rlt>eo •Do•• by <UOmll·
Detwe .,....,,,.,.., end ordered lh IN tl"Q • ""'"'•" rt<11H\I •o,,. .. c,_ 10
W•O ""otu!IOl'I IPw C:l•rk of Ille SU9erlor Cou'1. C4\ln!11
E¥h bfO or or-I \Mii ,,. -"' °'"• Of' Cllrl\llAn II V""Otu .....
oUI and sul)mltt"'<I on • fWJn 18 e. -At'°""y at Lew," I Civic Otnte-Orlvo ••I-., Ille Otll<e of &ov .. E"O',_,. W.SI, Suitt )00, S•nl• AN, C..llh>ml•
'"II CorPOr•l•O". lSOI Ou•ll st-• '2101,0l\or belo,. ~cemllOrS, 1'76,
Nowpor'lllt•<h C..lllor"lt.E«l\bklor YOV ARE P'UltTHER NOTl .. 1(0
D'OCIO ... t mu•I De ecc:omHlllt<I by • !Ml 11\oW rtQ.,.\llnQ u clvslon wtll be
<ol\h .. r's C,,.0 Or (MCI. <Mlflecl by a P"'Ch;041(1 ftom \l\.tflllQ Ill Ille bl!Mlltl •~oon~lblt batik or• bloder's bOnd fOf' et •• )..OOfhent II II I• 1•¥orablt to
•" emo<i"I no• •on th•" 90% of tht Ptotlll'llls. •nd tht llldQmen1 will ,.,. """""''or th<> bid Of ol lht lolal •MO<lnt elude tll memDen ol lllt CIH~ wllo oo tO<' •hlCh l""y wlll accept e contr~t l'll>tfeq .. \I ,.clu<lon
•n(l"'30<>D11yal>ttlOllltOrC1er1>rlnthlo YOU "RI! FUllTHIA HOTtl"IEO
lhor of 1119 Mciulton Nlqwl Wat"" Olt tfl!Of II VCIU do 1'11>1 '9QIH<I u clutlon, l'04J
1r1u Et<h•u<llbldororo-1\IQlllJf t11.tv, If vov '° cle•I,.., • .,,.,""!IP.
... ,.,.. -lll•d ti IM Ollie• Of .... 01•· 11Hr...C• tllfouol't COVMtf of YOUf -
1r1c1 •tor beolor• Ill• llme In !Ills llOllC-(7-\1119, II vou M "GI r-tt u
P<'O•ldoO. tlullo" al'l«I •llP••r•nct lhrouQh
T"41 •bo.,. mt<>l!Oll.O <M<k or llOnO •"""nl of your t wl'I th00\11\11, 111a
W lt t>OOl•..,••Quaf•nlttlhe1t,,.l)OO --.1 ,.,. PlalnllllJ wlll ,_._
it.r w111.,, .. , 1,,10 • COlltracl II •w......, '*"Im-I 111 tMactlon.
.,,. --aftd Wiii l)o Cltl....., a\ II· Pltlhtlttt .,. , .. ow111..i "" °"~
OUie•led 4'aMAOt•" '"" \UC("\IUI Did 11 .. II v""°'llW" of 611 Cl•oc: ~ <11rmliw\loenltrl11tol1>tCOl\tr.c-t Ori•• W.\I, Sult• JOO, SAm• Ano,
TM wt<•~fwl bklde• •Ill 111 ,.,. (alllO•"I• tUOI. Otle.,dalll I\
oulred It'"'"''"'• pey-bond '" an _....,...., l>Y Ooll P llonfe, Olv Al·
a!NUM 9qtHI IO 100" of IM <..ur.<l !Of'N\', City Htll, Hvflll1'191.., &.ac:I\, orle• •n<I • Utlll'ltul perlorm#'C~ bOl'ld (loll~•., ...
1n e11-111•tt111tto100"1.0ft'-con-OATlO; SNov 1'76
lr9'1 orl<•, .. Id l>or>df to be --CHRISTIAN Ill. VAHOEVSEN
lfOM . \\Htty (GmDll"Y utt•IKIO'Y.. ., °''"""" R v ... o.u•" ... Moulton NIOWI W•ttr 01\11~1. • AOOCI•~··
•n ltl'M\ •nd <onOlllo"' cent••'*' 11'1 Allor,.., lor PlalnlllfJ
thtlMoflYl•tlOll IOf bldOflr\, '1tKNdl~ If IS$00ROElll!O ..ci a_. of'"° blll lor'l'll ,.,." oowr11 0Mec1111tsn •
M ll'IOuQf\ fully dncrl~ i.r.111 -WALTl"I SMITH
"'4111 tl\O bKOM•a pert ol 1"9 Cllrlll"K'I JVC!Oo of IM
Tiie ~llOn N .. wl Wettf Olllfl(I s.erltf Co11'1
fM*rW\ IM rlQM In n l•(I .,,., end all OflUS'1AM ,_ VA .. DIU$1 II
Oldl or -IMWI\ Of ally -ell -· lo aAMOCIATQ •w•rd t <O"l;•<I tor '*" ,.,..,•llot lhe ~•lt..tw "-· '°' •hlcll •ucll but• •• , 1""11.0 or o..ic ~I.I• &1111111.., to ... ,,....,,, 11110.m•fll• '" • llld llOI e< ..,.. _
r.<led tw law 611 QVk C»Mer Dorl,,.""'
MOULTON NIGUEL 'WATl!ll leflltho,CAtm\
OIST,_ICt T ......... 1110'414tll Iv Alt41-I-le _,. .... "'atlltlllt ~fl•l•rr l'ubOff\ff Otel'lfl Ce.tit 0.11, Piiot,
l'ubll"'ed Ore~ CN•I Oollr ~111!11, *" 10, 11.J•. end O.c I, tf'6 ''°"" .._,.,,.., 14, 21, 1•7' ft».1' •11•7e I ...
PUl>tl<Md Orani;ie eo.•I O.oly Pilot,
r.G• 10. 11 2' •nd Dec 1. tu& •n1 ,.
P UBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TOCONTllACTOll~
CALLING POii llOS
Scl\ool Dlstrlt t · Ot•~n View
Bio Ouflllflt' ''00 O'cle>O p,m , of'"• ttl\dhol OtctMber, •'7~
Piao ol 8 10 Rtulpl: Admlnht••llon
Ofllce of,.,. Ol<lrlrl
Pro)•c l ldt"tlllc •llO" NAM•
HARIOUR VIEW SCHOOLd'MULTl·
USI! BUILDING
Pie<• Pltn' .,. Oii 111• 0111<• of An-
lhonv -L"nQfor<l'"rch•l•c"· 161S1 ~•<II 8oulevero Su•lt 201. H""tl"O!on
S.ecn C•lllort1I• tUH
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\81
I~ ,.bOve l'ltfhPd Schoo• Ol•lriCI ot Or,._ (,put1IV. C:.lllO•ttle .Cl•nQ W
•nd lhrouql'l II\ Oover.,l"Q Boord,
hertl1111t1•r rtterf•d to ••
"DISTRICT." wlll ••Ul¥f UP to, but
l\Ot taler lhall Ille aDove·•l•t.O """'•
\t.\lt<I 11oc:1' lor int •••rd ol • con1rac1
for Ille •Do•• protwc I
&Id\ \llall be r•t•lv•O 111 IPw 0111e,
lde'>tllltd ~bOVt, t"d \htll f)t ooened
•n<I pullll<IY tt•d Aloud •I tll<t •bo•e·
\l•IMl llmt ena o••co Th••• .. 111 l>t • lh••IY ll•e OOll~r
IU\ 001 cf9po\lt r•qul•td for ""ch W1 of
bid OIKu,,.tnl\ IO Ov••el!lff IM relurn
In QOO<I <ondlllon Wllhll\ 11 ... (SI den
all•• t~ Ilk! ooenll'ttl dale
Eecll f)IO mOJ•I rot1lo•m """ f)O
r-•lve to lht contract clocumwnl•
EMft Did \hlll I>" i1ccom..a"I"" by,,,.
-1.trllY r•l•rrtd 10 In lh<> COl'lfa<\ dOCum""" •nd by IM 11\I o1 P<'"90Wd
-on1rac1or1 Tit• OISTlllCT ,.,.,,, •• ,,,.. r•ghl to
r•'~' any or •II bid\ ur •o wAIVf' "nv Ir·
rt911ltr1tln or lnlorm111111•• I~ <111y IMO\
QI II\'"" blOdlnQ 1'he DISTRICT ,..., dtlltrmfMCI 1'-
(lt'Wrol 11rtvtlllf\O ret~ 01 oet diem
wtQt• '" ,,,.. lacallly 111 whlcl't W• wo•k
I• IODe pertormadlo-.. ell crtlt«IVPlt
al _,,,..n ,.,....., to o•<u .. tfle COflo
1, .. , Tlw1• ••••• .,. on me a1 ,._.
DISTRICT O"IU laUltd ott Ptll w.,,.,., A,,.n~. Munll"OIOll e.aoi.
Ca•ll"""9• C:O.,.t mey M Obie!• Oii ~I A COOy 04 llle\t ralti tMfl b9
llO'l.cl •11"' )QD ,,,,
Tl-. IOf'-1"' .C:lllldul« Of ~ cllem
wi.ot\ I\ Da\e<I uPOll • wor~lllq Oey ot
t'9111 ltl llOU•t '"• r•t• 10-llOll«lev
-o.,.rume ·-\h•ll "' Ill '"°'I tlMtal\dOM hell.
II '"tll b01 IY\a..0.IOfY -tl'le CON• 'Tll"CTOll lo wl\Om tM <onlrACI h
twardtd. eno up0n •nv Wll<!W'llflle10f ""°'' lllM, to ... llOI ,.,, lherl ..... wld
•O•tlfl•d rt•~· lo •II WOfkll'l•n
Oll'IOIOYe<I D• lheM In lilt •*UllOl'I Of
°"'COl\lrtct Ho 111-r may wltt.drew hl,tJtO tor A
oetlod 04 IMIY·ll•~ IOI Claf• eftef' ll'le
dt1t Ml for'"' 09t'll<IO Of blfl\,
A pey....,.1 lleftd end • ""'9Mnel'ICt
-Wiil Ill r~lfH t><IOr lo.-.. ....
OllM<Ol'll't<I TlltP .. me"lllONllJ\ell
W 1'1 IPw lotm ut lortfl In ti. COfttrec1 _ _.,
Oowrl'lll\ll IHrll
IY Cllerle1 OtterhmCI
Cltrk oftllot """' alTN\l.e\
Publl"'8d Of•llOO Goeu O.lly ~IOI "°" 11. t,•. ,.,. ...,.
I
•
Eleeted Ctaof1 ••-
Former astronaut Frank
Borman has been elected
chairman of the board of
Eastern Air Lines, following
the r esignation of F1oyd D.
Hall. He retains hsi existing
titles of president and chief
officer.
Women to Speak
On Finance Needs
Two women ba nk officers will
discuss women and finance al a
noon program Tuesday
spon sored by the Women's
Center al Golden West College.
Fem Deal of United California
Bank and Joy ce Coffee of·
Mariner Savings and Joan will
discuss women's credit, invest·
menls and purchasing real
estate: they will answer money
questions from the audience . The
progra m will be held in the col-
lege activities conference room.
Further information is availa-
bleat892·7711, ext. 59land192.
Giff Pr~
'78 Intermediates:
Shorter, Lighter
DETROIT (AP)-Omert.l Motors' inlenned.late canwill'bealx in-
cbes to a foot shorter, up tolDO pounds U1bter and fea~ aomo radical
styling changes fo-t 18'78. uoolftcial pbotosof the new rnodel1roveal.
The refuhloned mid'llbe 11.Deup, wbld1 debuts nm fall, ii Part 2 of
GM's mulU·billlon-dlollar program to make all its cars smaller and
lighter by 1980 to meet govern· -·------------.ment fueJ.improvement require-
ments. ·
STYLING SEEMS TO in-
fluence the totermediate btu>er
more than it does the bi.a·car
shopper, analysts ~. In addi·
tion, intermediates curTentl.y are
the hottest segment ol the new-
car mark.et.
Tbe auto giant's f\&ll-siu cars
were "downsized .. for 1977.
Those m~els have been made up to a foot shorter a.ad 1,000
pounds lighter. putting them in
tbe same exterior-sire category
as GM's current intermediates.
The result is a fuel mileage gain
averaging 3 miles per gallon of
gasoline for the big cars, from
14.7 m .p.g. in 1976 to 17.9 m .p.g.
lblsyear.
NEXT YEAR, THE. in·
tennediates -which currenUy average around 210 inches in
length and weigh approximately
4,000 pounds, will be about the
size of the firm's carry-over com·
pact models, which will undergo
their own shrinking act for 1979.
Photos of unfinished pro·
totypes of GM's 1918 in-
termediates were taken at the
company's proving grounds in
Mesa, Ariz., and furnished by the
indu str y trade we e kly
Automotive News.
Affected by tbe changes are the
Chevrolet Cbevelle and Monte
Carlo, Pontiac LeMans and
Grand Prix, Oldsmobile Cutlass·
and Buick Century.
TRE CU TLASS, cur-
rently the industry's top-
selling model, will share a new
fastback body shell with the Cen-
Over The Counter
HASDUmngs
~R~
SltrlQ Sir Slrawll Cl ~rEI TIME DC htn90A Taylf W1 Tt<ll Pul> Tt<um P y,,..,. .. 1
Ti111y Co T0><0Cp T"'"'° 0 Trlco PO Tdtn OG
TvrnSllr Tyson F Un McGll ~ t:~t.
UV• Bkl Uo""n P
tucy, while the Cbcvdle and
LeMans will sport a notcbJ>ack
design. The Monte Carlo and
Grand Prix wiUbavenatterbod)'
aides. • ·•
In addition, cars will come
standard with smaller ·engines
and feature singJe reet.an,War
headlamps to distinguiab them
from the dual lam,ps on current.
!ull·slie cars.
Interior dimensions of t.be new
intermediates are not available.
but GM likely is seeking t.o pre-
serve the space of current mid-
size models. The interiors 0( the
new full.size models offer less
hip and shoulder room than their
19T6 counterparts, but have more
head and Jeg' room a.ad lar&er
Lrunk.s.
RIGErl' TO E4T
DRAWS SUPPORT
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -
Labol" union efforts to organize
farm workers must be weighed
against the rights of employers
who produce food needed by
Americans, says Agriculture
Secretary John A. Knebel.
Knebel said farm workers are
entitled to livable wages and
security, but be added, ''The
rights of millions of other
humans are involved and must
be rem em be red. Strikes or
lockouts. which destroy the
availability of food cannot be
condoned because they affect the
very lives of other innocent.
humans.''
I
2 3
Vps and DolmlS
Pct.
.'J. tSOA/I Sunenaary • ' 6
Off 21.4 Ott 21 ~ Olf 17 • Oii ll.O Off 11 s OH 11 S OH 11 1 Off II O'
Olt 100 Oii • s
NEW YORIC (&Pl-Most Adi"'-· Ille Coutlll!' tlOC~\ SUOOllH by HASO 1 • • 10
N•""' VOIUIY\a Bid Asllfd <Jlo, GovEmp pl, ltl,700 9'-11)1.\ -'" ~. B , .. ltl • .00 '914 I,_. -'fl 11 ..... tt Gov Emo IU,000 • •'-NSlu Mkl 102,)00 I 1-1• 11'4 =~~~,? . 78.:&~.~\~·~ 1~~
Am E•P· 11,100 41 ., .... Sl>ltcl Pn " M .SOO II ltllo Anlleu\ B M , 100 11'1> 1• Am"Grtel., 62,700 'I ,,.
AdVfnCtd ,... • ·• •••• •·• 0.CllMd • • •• • • • • • • ..
..... IJ
; 1-16 :; _..., 16
:..:·~ :~
"' • 19
UnchtnQtd •• .. ........
T04•1 isS\H!S • • •••••••••••
H.w lllQI\> ... • ........... , Ne'W tow\ •••• .. ........... . Totel Hth ............... ,
-20 41• 11 1,m n
2."4 u
0 l• 12 1S 1 .on ,«JO ,.
Ott ".
Off "' Ott '90
Off • b Oii 11 Ofl I J
Oii • ' Off 10
Oii 7.9 Oii 11 Off /1 Off , l °'' , 1 Off 11
Oii 1 ' Off 1 I
MUTUAL FUNDS
NEW YORK (.'Pl 100 I'll ),00 NL SPecl S.» S .. ~ Men U.•• 16.t• Mutechu~tl Co: Me9 C 1 37 J, Sw Inv\ 7.66 t 18
-Ti.. lollowl"' Q"°' 101 Fd t ST NL Slock f,;17 10.0S ISi Group; F""° I /1 I.SO MllQ In 8 9S 9 •2 Swt" GI 4 st •.'5 tttlOf!S, \llC>Plled D1 lier-Cle> 1 0 '·"~DI~ Sp 16.13 NL Grwth •.•S ··" • lndtp 7 31 7"' PIM SI 10.9) NL Sover '" 11 ... I~~ ll'le Nallon•I MSOCI· 8onchlk 4,71 S.I lillf .. ff 10.&S 11 S8 11\CqfTI 3 S8 '·" Men 10.73 11 73 Pl-r Furld: • Sp-cir• F .... Ht.. allon of S.curltl•\ Bo\1 Fdn •.« 10.:n l!lfll<\ Tr t•.16.. .. tm '" 10.s1 11.so MtH Fl.,e..cl. Funo 11 H u 83 Stal• Bon<IGr: ~~,'i~"1~·-.. ~~: ~/:u~::~u ~~~dllu ::~ION~ .~'t.un rn"ro1 ~:b 1rn 1H~ Pl~,.,., :rn a·~ 5~~:d rn t~ 'lit•~ ucurlllf\ l!ullcll 17.61 n IS Fllder••td Funos. Imo GI~ no 7 II MIO , u.» 1S,4S Pllgrth 11 M 12.1 Proo ,. J lW 4 20
toutc:I lie¥& llOth Catlcln 1 ~ 8 Am L<I• t OI t IS Inc 8oil & O• . • MFO 11 ll t2 74 Plllfll<I 7 tt 7.91 St,::rm 0 1 '·" ML \Old (Ntl •n•I OIVld , 1J 3 ., EIY\lllr 1' OJ ' lrlduslty 1 II, • MCO ., 2S IJ,11 PTlo Fund• SFrm Be '2' NI. .. 1w1 0' "-~hi Montll I• U I• 11 F 17;. '" INTGN 8 10 1.7' Ml'B IS 70 1• tt i;,wth 10.M NL Sl•I• SI d .50 NL I ..... Ph•• ~ C.h N•IW s ••• 10.. our E .. lnl '""SI 7.. • ,, l!Mthert u l4 NL lncom 10 07 NL ... .,..,.,. ,Ulldt:
.';gel TUO\Clay . NY v .. 10 71 'I ,, FldotllY Ofovp. '"" Ou•d • 20 HL Ml Gap IJ 71 ,. Tl N Er• 11 ll Hl Am 1"4 '11 Hl. S.11 au CG Puncl 10 01 10:11 llond I 71 'U I lnCllC I st ~L Ml. tidy I 00 NL N Horii 6.. HL AUO ~ I.ell Nl.
AGE l'n<I •" • f. CG 111(11'1 I U t.71 C6pil I 7S t j4 "" Mid AM ) ~ S '1 Pro Fur.o S SI Hl lnve\I I ,, ML Ac0"'"'c:I Cap PTH I 00 '4L Colltf<I 12 01 HL :~~ ~_JO SS 11:37 "11(111 Ml<t I 00 Hl l'Tu SIP tlS 10.1t Oc••" t ~ HI..
_,. Ort 1~:: • -N~ ~r .~ 1~ ~ ~~-·4 g::~~ ' ~ w . Ml ~ s ; ~~ g: :tr..-,: .~ ~ '0"6~ ~~ ""m~ 12 ··~.::.Of f:i~ Ht... ~ ll'IC.,, J ..-. . . OWl'1 I'd ll 81 u 01 Eq Inc U,.S NL l"veslon Grouo· ' M\11 .... t 00 10 11 Eqult 10 0. 10 Cto 0 I 0 NL ~.. 1'1 '0'1 Hl OWlte ... ~Gf' llo.~ 1 •• ~·BO '°10.~t . NL IDS 80 } .... If. Mlt< Fo I st • n C..Or9 IJ 71 u SIOCll IJ SJ ML -l11v _.., ,. -· '"' IDS Gf\ UO.. Mii' Giii ) 8S ' u Grwth TO II 11 T S...Wy F I~ 'JI Aall\f F 1 ... I" Ffm C 3 S6 3 n ~:,. \~ ~ :~: IDS n<ll '7S S,I• M<lluelof Omal\t lncom 1.t~ I '8 = GI 10 ll II IJ MIM Sh 119' U 20 51\fM 1 '1 ,I 16 • O ~ '1 Mull t.11 '·" AmtH' 11 71 11.'9 '""''' A°' I 1 Trav ll'IV 1.00 NL A!llllH't ,t U3 NL Si>e<I '3S s IS ~~~~ 11' 1• NL s"'toc:oo ,,',!L!.·n,T °'"'"' • JI .... Vl'1• 10.•1 11. ,.,, E3 10 OI 11.07 :::~':i."41 ·9:~ 't.'tt g:~ \~;~~ .~~ Tr9nd )1 Sl 21 SI ~~~1 9.M io.l/> ~7<~" ,rn IDNI~ ll~~Q 1~ :} 12N1L ~(G4 1l:rs ~t
!::'&1,,11 1N: 1o"o~ c~~D~r;t ~~r •.• J "1&-~1•1 p~°1i NL .~·~.~ : ~ rn ~:.~ t:.,ul !~.~ ~t ~:~~~ ~: s"s~ ~A ·~ u~ ~r
""' liqlly' S.10 s St Man "d '6S 2.tO ll\d111t 00 NL '"" 10.~ 21.•1 ... I Soo<ur S.•' s.tfK Eqt I •••• ,. UllP,_,Mul • n NL "'='c:.l '1~' 1 13 eo~":':,• • •J '·n ~1~~.cJ SA NL ~'?' 0.111 ,gt~ 11~s~ = : ;: 1Nt ~~~1}.:,.,S:: ui tl::J!::.'1"< M: '·" /llfKp J ~ HI Cn¥r1 •.OS .... DIKO 'Id J ... J.,,111 F' 17.IS NL OMd i .. ''7 Intl I'd 11 U HL .._ 12JJ IJ,tf
A Mll!I •.so 10. FllM t,JJ 10-46 °""" • 19 1 0 Jol>n H•ntocl<· Onr1h s •• 6 IJ ~· tt" NL ~ Inv • SS 7.ot a-ISO Ith ~ '·" S.•l lncom •" t .7• e.1.,. 9,00 •.11 Pf !>tit• 101 1•1 B•I•" 14M NL u c.., IOU U·1' Ceo Fol • •1 1 01 ll'ICOM a.a • 6S Stoel! • ,, '.. llOl'ld "•s 21. , •• '"'-s JO s.71 Com St • 27 Hl Unlell li.14 .11
•Gr'Wth •.11 , .. , Colu Glh• 104 NL FllMlt A t OJ '·°' °'"""' 6 °' ... I Sfoc• • 01 • .... ~ " 10 lM '\~ Unlc.cl l'und\! I~ 1601 IP °"4th All I 00 1. ""'1y t<r l• IS NL ~I" 10'1 HI. Hlllt• Fund' Sec~ty ,unclt: AcCM 6 •J 7,0J
ICA u Q11 U ~ OMlll C I.. 1. Fn<I Gii\ J •t •)A Key\lofW F11Nh1 1.,11 1'-U 11.•I ~O'ltY S.7' 4 14 llOl>d i'.0 l.09 H ~ 1S • 16 11 Ctmo Ca 4 11.... ,_,. Group Apollo J,79 ._ lS Grwttl I n • SJ '""'" 7.JO Jtl Cbl'I Of' ·~ M1
Wet M • II , « Comp lkl • •s 'JO c-tfl 4 Sf 4.. Cll'l II 17.'6 11.1• 11\COfft u "' n 1S Ullr• ,,,, '.. °"' IM • 10.u ArN< Gt"9rt l Como Fd 161 t.1' lll(om 12.U U.17 ~ 81 ,. to 11 Jl St• ,, ... '' ~ SienlJMI GfOUO' lf'COM It, S 1.1~ 'Gllo M I t1 9 64 ~°"' II 74 NL Mu\el t.~ t.N Clo 8' I.at • 1> HtWe~ t.'l'll •• J 11 4.U Val ... LltW Ff: C:..0 0< • 11 4 j6 COii• lllV 10 J7 10 17 Scltcl t tt t 09 ~ It I 1 tJ t U EMOY IJ.t> NL Be..,, 1 6' 1 • .0 Vtl LI 6 41 -4" lncme • ., 1 01 ConJtel G Ul ~L ,..,.,.,,_1111 Gf'OUP. Cu1 ltl uo s •• Ou•l'd 1' ., NL Com s 1117 I?.., lncom • .. ~ °'
V9!tf 10 1' It 10 Cbfll MUI UI l'CL OHTC 6.66 1.11 CU' SI ti ... to.Sf Pe'1nr t.tO NL Sel'll Giii t ~ U .• UY C)l't 1 Ml I ... £41 ~ • 11 7,. Ctry Catt 11,7} u .10 Grwt1' '.., •.or °" St • ,. 10 '° ....... Fd , ! NL S...l'Y F It OS IJ.10 s.t Sit J SI Ul 1 Fd AM 6,,_ 7 H 0.VQll ICd 7.U HL Utll\ •.tJ S 01 ~ SJ 1. U >.tt ..... Wld 1 , NL 5"«.....,_, Qp: \l.litlt• $endt'1' Prov 'l ) 12 •.11 OeYttfl JI e1 NL lft$Ol'll I '2 1,0 S• 3 49 t IC """""" 11 H ()Mill B • e.OS ltlC°"' U )I I• ...
Arn Gf'th J OJ , 0 0.1•"'*" Group: U$ Go• • M IQ S9 M 3 ll J 41 IOwt Inv 10.;IO NI. E"lf'O S 3t S.11 '""0t 1 It 1.16
,.,,, IMlll 'It i... Oocal '"'' It.TS Ceclll ,,., U• t...l'ld 0th 6.76 ,_,. Hlcll" I IJ.27 NL Flet FO ),!? s. C6Mm '"·" 6 ... 71 ""' lllyt t.OI NL 0.l•w 11.u If,, &quit ,,,, i ... L•,lf!VIOll 01. ~· uo to NarOr •• ,. • t .14 5"<1 1.1' ,, AWIN ,Qth llf• 1 •l Otte!\ • Jt t. Ffklll LI• 9 QI t.at CP LO• IS S 11,q1 Hw .. tt t• 91 NI. \Attl • & M U Vtf\d Gt!\ UI NL M<llOJ' Gf9\IO: bolt• •.H 4,t ~fl 0.0 I tt "L "9• Of' I 00 ,.14 ~ t .•l t . Pote 9 SO 10 M Vallll I~ J tl NI.. • 0.hy 1 9' NL Ott tao ) 9" '· """"""' 1 U 1,t1 "91< 11'1 10.7. I .)t ~ 14.Jll N tllM.rtOfl ,IHIClt: V~fd Qffup : or'Wtll 1.07 • 1 17 0.... C U,17 NL ir111111 11\C 4r'P t:.ea R U.JO "·" 1,,,.. FCI; Aoore 16-6\ 17, l'<Olr l._14 11.30 lnc:m4 • 1 n • 11 ~··lu• • II NL Comm uo t.U Lift IM • 12 7.. 6.2' 617 11\COl'n • "·" '' fllllCI• """°' Ill.If 10 .. °"•\'tll\ Crp lmpac 1 .. I .'" ll11<oln Nell· IMO<n e.SI '· 111""' 10,f110 W HI• 14,., ~tr '1) .,S. IO Of'•l'f 11 Ot 1J 11 ll'ld Tr 10 St 11 SO l ll\C Ca llf\f• II 000 Mo 1 00 N Slerr•O I... N ,,,_,, 7.66 a U ~d '"" T 14• ~O IQVlt S 10 NL f'ttOC t ta t 61 Set AM 7 en '4L AI M t 07 t 91 Siio"" O U Si N liNrO ti I• 1111 W~J\ 10 » 11 It U.... 14 J6 IJ .. GES• $ -vell Set ~ 13 01 Nl. TI-6 fl 1 ~ l'Uftd~ 1'""\ •JI 10 ts AllMll J U I >1 L.)q ~~ 10,0l NL Oell Se< t 11 NL ~I\ $.ay .. , OTC $« It .. U 91 c.cMI t » I Welltl U C)I IJ 1t
AM "°"91114WI ~. Inc; 11, Nl. °"" ll'ld 11.. NL Cec!tl 10 ~1 NI. 111.,l'fl'! M ),q e 111 ... M 10 .. ti '1 W.1111'1 • '2 10.l l'lld I 1 t' I H Ta£am He!l'llllOfl Mui 11.0 NI. l'Mll lllvt 6 'N • i1 Tl'VM I U t 1 ~t 11 t .. 10 ~ ll'IC ,d • I J ~ H 'II NL , HOA • ~ 4.JS Loni Abbtll "-"" ~ I 2t H ~ •.n t ,• WI~ t tt 10 ..
Stock 'tO t t7 ,,,.... C II. .. 12.11 Onftll : .. 11S Attll.., J M a S2 """' Mill a 11 H ""'""'"'' Vulfl P lo l 7S ILC Gth 10 4) II H l:eclN c;., t 21 10. IJ l11<om ., t 1• Ol\d Oii 11ot1lt11 ,.._,.. 1't J t IC911'1 r 10,.. tt WellSt 0 '14 4 II a.bl ll'IC I,.. H lefom•How•rd 14•'1 Giil 10 6) HI. IMOM J ,,, M ,..... Cop t.'' u ""1lllM t.00 N wtll't EQ 10.lt NL -* 111>1 t 11 HI. '-I H • H ~atl L•v 6M H l Lllll\tre11 llro. "'-" I"<> .ill 10 1 Mu!\18 ~II G" l 11 11' 9"Cn Hll I JO NL Rilr\ t W Nl H.tr,...,1 t t7 Nl. f:Ynd 10.U 11.•• Pl~l!I ~I Wll( Inc I a S II .. 11<1'1 In ' 4t HL Qnwt!I I•' • JS '*'110t I 7t • l ll)WM t U 10.0I I Fl _ lt.8' IU $1111 G NL No IMd ~ Group; IMom &.01 'At -. Tl' t.00 H us Oov 10 Oi 10,H IQ ~ 7" 1 Siii! lft (Mtt\ cller'°l
'
Wednesday's
Afternoon Price
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS~
OuOl•I'-lt>tl-\f-\tft\,_ ..... Y••-Mk!W.•I, P.cltlc, PllW, lhstO<\, 0.trelt-Cl<>e:ll'IM Ll >100. •«....,.,_ r~ D• IM •'OllOllAI AUOCl•llofte>f Sf<ll'it .. J D.ai.~ •lld IMllNI
.... , ..... l-(N
Tft0"0"-1 I 6 .. UV.• " Te-Pf 2 ,. • . ·~ 1•'-o ..... T••.co t I kJ t\f\ ~ TuE•I I tJ • n JI ...... T~[TOI I 40 . ll ""' I, T11G\T t I U O 'h • V.
f tolflel 1b1' • 14 ·-•• Te~lntt 1 U Ill 101'1> t IV. ,.., ... , 1l ~ ••• + ,,
TuOG> 2011 Ht 1t1• • '' TAPcLd >~ •• 1 n•., .. •• TtwVlll I n10 ttt iov.. ~=~m·:.o, '1010 ~~ ,;~--: ~
THtronl>Q t I• n•• '• Tu tr pf 1.a. • • :JO\,• '• TllloMnl .,. • )() 171.'t "
fllOMtMI M 1' • •0"' • '·• Tnomln u 9 3 IOV.. • 1.
T"°'"JW 10 I 41 I<~+ .... T~<•ttOQ ,.OtO ~ 111., "-
TldwtMr • 7• ttlt, °"' ~I~/~, ~,i 1~ ~! .. _,
TlmeMI< .to ti « 20
Tll'f\•n 110<t ' ti IO'~• • • TIU\ Rlty 4. U'. • I. TOddSftlp•d 21 9 1•
T04Edi\ l tJ • \0 141'• • '•
TO<IU Co 4ll • 0 It 1 •
TOOIAot 'Ob 9 I •II.• .. T•-C.01 OllO J lS -'• Tr.-.un 1 1.io ,, n•-. "
frans.WAlr 1• ~ tt•, '•
TWA pl 1 J lllt+ '• T•tnMlm .. t t•O tl~ '• Trtnln< I ,, O 221'> Tr~• .tO 1 111 16', 't T•.,.Kn 0 1 It 1~-141
TtGPL 110 SO • t 2tV. .•• Tr.,..c:)ftF" 10 S '\ 1'•, • '•
Tr.nwy t 00 I II '°°" Tr••I~ I a. U 2SI >6\4o 't
Trne1re>1 2 1 •?11. •
lTICon t S)e 111 19 loo '• Tr1$ouMI~ • t '•, t 16
Tr1.nlftd tOI • 3~ 9 • ''° TrltnoPc .0. 17 I 1l
Ttlntyll't .S. S .. 10"' T1'111>1t•n 30 17 97 ?t •-' •
i11e.onGt.a. 9 Ito tS•"'-" i ....,,een .SO 9 t•t tO 1 • • T\ICOUD '° 10 ,. , •• ,. • .,..
Ty1.,eo.o IO • .. 1t .. -u-u -ti: '·'° • s 11·~ u~~:..S11~ • ''~~ ~i~ UMET T• l p,
UOP 11• •O 11" UllllWI t SO • U l •''t" .i. VARCO I lO 7 t 1''1')
U118•nt P 8.0 10 xl• tO'-, . 8~Z:~ tfJ '~ ,:; ~!: •:,:
Un Comm rt J) •'h" '·• Union Corp 1l I• o• • UnElec I :it. I '30 IS'•
UnElpf l SO • ttlO 40 • "• Un El pt • IO . 1•0 SO UnElpt 6 00 , llt.O /I ~ '' Ul'IEI Pl 2 11 t 18"t UnEt pl 1 •• 1 •1 I Un F1<1ellty I t n . • • U~I 1 10 I .. S>\\ '; ~t~~.~ t) 1J ~.,. . ::
UnPe<Pf 41 • U ti•,• '• Union.I In< ta '• t 16 Unlror•t SO Ito ttt t • '• 8~:a:,1!!.s~ t H~~ ~'; I'.
UnltCP Ue 4' ''• UnEnAtt n 4 JJ 1t \. '• UFtnC.I l • • :i. 11 " Un Gv•rf\ty l.t u t1''> • 1• Utllum ? U t ?l 1•1'>. u111um Oil 70 • rno ,,. , •. Unlltnd 60C1 I I 10• t -1, Un1ttnpt '7 J t> Un11tnn 10 \ 10 4'. • UJe• 8~ 1 0. I 11 ,,.. '.
Ul'lllMM llO SIS It -... UnN1><tr It ,. 30 .... Un1tP~ M if\ 48 14 1'*t
Un•IA•tq So 8 JI IO'• USFoS t It~ ?I 16'> USF•OG 1 '31 t 181 49\. • >~
USGyp~ t 6013 11• JS'•• '• USGyipf 1.IO 1 11"" • 1,
USHom 16 ll 11 I'• '• UStnd 40 9 1'1 .... ', ~~~~r~fn·~' s '~ ~::
USS.-t OS I 66 161~ • '> US St•t12 70 o l32 ., .. • '• USToll<I< I 17 I lS'o • .. , \JnTeth t 10 I •lt lS .._ • • UflTtchpt a 101 1S9Y> •,
• .. UnTrnpt1 31 t? 106'> -'••
1 Un• ftl I 70 to •l 181fo ..
, Uf\1Tel w1 lb 1 .. '• Un Tl 7pft 10 t? ,,,,,. '•
UnltrOO tO 9 ti Ho '• Un~oat t S6 I '9 ll''• .. ~te";e t ~ '; m ~~ . U\tlleF ... 14 ti\,• " VtaMnt t 20. 13 111 .,..., ''o
Vt1hPl 3 11 9 IOI • l ''• UIPLPI 7 llO t7 37''1 " -v-11 -VFCO I 10 1 .. I• -•1 .. VStCMp 68 6 7 ti Ve•l~vln '° r Hl •'• • '• V•t1•n 78 17 19 t)\o • "
VerO ll"C1 .... 111 •'• •
VtnooCo •• s"' • •, lltnltt 10 S I 3\4o Ve\f~IJf,. 'I t4• .. , '• l/~ICO IOt 1 JIO 70'• -'>
v,.com tnt •o '' •'~ ... 1 .. ~~'~c:iweo,m/. o,~ ••• • ,::~. • •
V•EPpf4 IO t7llO SI •.-, VeEPOf S 1100 S3 • '•
V•E P 011 n 11100 es"' tl V•EP Pl! tO tO lO._ venot 1 n 110 u " V1EP Pll lO r10 10 • '• ll•EP PO •S 1330 ft.,,• t llornaelo inc s t> S"'
Vul<•n Mir 1 10 I 11•. -w-w -
W.JbR Pf4 SO . tlO 4! ... -t Wt< hO•• SO 10 91 10 -1'o
W.chOf 7 20 • I SS • '> :~:.:::·Oii" i; ,: . .., i. :r~~•n, ~ ~ ~ ;:~ ~
WatlBul .Ml 4> xl 11 • P"
w1ttMu I 8 u 10'" -"• WellJtm uo 10 11 t JO" . Wa•OFd I I\ . • 3 SV. ''o We•naco 601 , 93 • , Wrncp! I.SO . I U -'II werns 1 10 • s n 1•''• •, WrnCom 60 1 ~() 7l''I -"• WrnC p1 t 2S . . t o •, •,,
WrrvtrCo ~ It 1 •'•. •, WlfMrL t t3 US 19.... '• WHhG' I t8 IS lb ,.... .
WitJhN.tt IO 4 .. t••.; • '• ~=~~:'·~·s ~ n ... : ~ WHW•I I lb 1 >'* 7) ... + ',
We,ftM IOt 12 709 IJ • ... WatklnJ 31 It 13 10'.. I>
WayGo\ 41 • • 1 ... -, .. WayGoft 60.. 1 19
Wtan Vnll ' 16 4'41 wea111to so I 30 t'') • .. -DttE • 103 &I•-v. WtlVolkl .'7 • • ,.~ ..... WtllsFr90 I I ,,, ,,,,,,_ '.
Wall"M l:le U 3" I • • ''• WIPP pl4.SO • rJOO n ••. , W1Pt~p2 '° ' ,, ....... '. Ynl(ITt I t4 I 1 lS' •
WnAlfL 00. It 11 9\li-'• wnenc: 1 '° • ss• ,,,, • ..
WnHO<A -S SI 131'1+ '• WnP•t Ind 6 1S U '4 '• WnPubl IOI> 6 -.n 11 • ..., wun1on t '° 10 es 11•.i. • • • wnuno,.60 S 51 " '•
wnun pO S6 .. tl ""' + " Wt\tOEt .91 • cu 1"'t-•;
WMIO pfJ to rS030 0 1 • + 1' ·1
W•tvMo t 10 • J7 Jtllo + ·~ =~~2, ':~1! u~ !~"'..'.. ~: =~,% 1·: ,, .! rs~: :::
WhfflPll Sit 9 UI 111'>-" W~IPllOfb .• 1100 Hilt+"' WNtPltpt S r•O 411/t-\Ir
WlllrtOOI IOU 1J ?1V. .. WlllltCOllS la 6 .. 1 15'41+11/t While Mot ti 10 sv. + V1
WlllllllO nt . .>O 6 31 ti • 14 Wllltta~tr 10 21 n• .....
WlC kt\ , 11) 106 U I/, + \\
W\tDdlSl.l? I t 6•t..,,
Wlllm'Co< t • 712 Ut4-V. Wll>h~,11t I JI Slit , WIMO• IS. U •• C3~+ 1 WlMOIM 8 2 Slllt + \I• WlnMbtQO 10 ' ,._,_ .... WIK!tPw 2 t ,. Ul't-''<
Wt'I! Df •'II 110 tocv,-v, Wls<le• 1 70 tJ " 11 ....... .
Wlt<PL I 6010 •2 )014 ... .. WIKPS I .. 9 JS 701.'t-\lo
Wllto 1 IO 1 It J•---..... Wtl,oof 1 U I •S ... -Vt wttt<O to s • l<V.• h
WOlvrw .17• • •t '" . Womtt<O .. 1 II It'•-t; -Cp to.• 1 1'• Wood"9t 10 10 IOJ II~+ , .. Wolwth 1.70 • 191 ll"'-Vt
wotwpf '10 . ' ,.~.-..... World"'''°''' 1 •••• ::.1~.', ~ ; ,: :~~: ~
Wvlt tn .O It '" '"' • '" Wyly Co<o no ,,,. • "' -lt-Y-l · XHO•Ccl I >014 ill St~ 1 '~
Xtra tn< 1• I 11 -'" 1•19(;.o(o .. • S6 U\4 + ~ l•1N1te JOI> i 41 IOl't
Z..,,rt Corp • 70 "".. • Z.,,llllR# I U )47 261~ • ·~
Zllf'nlnd .• t JS 1J\Ao-"
UAW.GM Vote Set
DETROJT <AP> -The tentative contract aar-eed to by tbe United Auto
Wodten and General Motors must
oow be approved by the union mem.
be,n follow lna overwbelmln1 ap.
Jl"OVal by the unlon't NaUOllal UAW·
OMCoundJ.
UAW Vice President Jnlnc
Bluestone, bead of the union's GM de·.
putmeat, said only seven d.lssenUng
votes were c11t by some !00 council
deJetates who spent a run day Tues-
day rev1ewtn1 the three-year •.&rte
ment alf ecUn1 390,000 rank·and ·fllers
in 21 states.
Wednesday. November24. 1976 s O.\IL Y PILOT
Top of the Beap
Ma Bell's Dimes ·
Keep Piling Up
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
The corporation that continuea to make more money
than uny other is your old friend, the ttllephone compMf,
known formally as American Telephone & Telefr-_pb, in ab·
breviated fas hion as AT&T ~md more famlliuly as Ma Bell.
By whatever name,
ll gets to keep more
money than anybody.
which may not be iiur·
prising when you bear tn
mind that il has llS
mdlion phones work.mg
for it every day.
Money
Tree
Both Exxon and General Motors <GM> will take in more
money this year than AT&T. Each will collect more than $40
billion in revenues whereas AT&T's take will range between
$30 and $35 billion. However. neither Exxon nor GM, even
with spectacular fourth quart4=rS, wall be able to catch the '
phone company when it comes to aftertax proms, wbJt.
businessmen call "the bottom line."
FOB A WHILE, SEVERAL YEAHS AGO, 1t appeared
as if the oil companies, especially Exxon, might soon sur-
pass Ma Bell in earrungs. Indeed, in 1974, with the Arab
price increases billowing its sails, Exxon sailed to net prG.
fits of $3.14 balhon, just shy of the $3.16 billion logged that.
year by the phone company.
But oil company profits have not advanced significaoUy
since then. And AT&T has spurted ahead, giving it a com· •
manding lead.
Ma Bell has now reached a new kind of stratosphere -
it's earning, after taxes. $\ billion every three months.
That 's so mind-boggling it's difficult to get it in perspective.
So look at it -$1 billion of profits every three months -in
these ways:
-ONLY THREE O'lllER COMPANIES-Exxon, GM
and IBM -earn more than $1 billion in the entire year .
-Only some 300 companies take a.n as much as $1
billion in total revenues for the entire year.
-The $1 billion netted by AT&T every quarter exceeds
the total profits made last year by the nation's SO largest
transportation comparues (airlines, railroads, shippers.
truckers).
TJIE PROFIT STANDINGS AT THE END of the first
nine months of 1976wcre ·
AT&T· $2 7 billion
GM· $2.1 billion
Exxon· Sl.9 billion
IBM $1.7 billion
Texaco: $639 million
,.
Two petroleum giants, the world's largest computer
maker. the world's largest auto producer and, at the lop of
the heap, the phone company.
AT&T's PROFITS IN TitE FIRST nine months of the :_,
year were up 21 percent over 1975. In the third quarter tJ\ey
increased by 25 percent. By the time the year is over , the
phone company will have approached the $4 billion level in
aftertax profits. and it will surely go over that mark in 1977.
Just a short time ago such a profit )evel would have
been considered unthinkable. But inflation has numbed the
mmd with strings of zeroes. And no company rings up these
numbers with such clanking ferocity as Ma Bell. And if you
ask her, she'll tell you: "We need every dime.''
Dianwnd Cutter
Carves His Niche
GARDNERVILLE. Nev CAP) -This tiny western
Nevada town has a few thousand residents, some great
Basque restaur ants, a beautiful view or the eastern Sierra
and a diamond cutting school.
Leonard Ludel, a third generation diamond cutter, says
his institution is the only accredited one of its kind in the na-
tion.
AND HE'S NOTTEAODNG IDS craft in New York, or
Chicago or Los . Angeles because he wants to live in
Gardnerville.
Students from around the nation come here to team how
to turn nature's hardest substance into glittering
keepsakes.
Gardnerville is about one hour's drive south of Reno.
Ranching is the economic mafostay or the area. Ludel
hasn't exactly put his town on the map, but he does have one
of Nevada's most unusuaJ schools
HE ONCE LIVED IN NEW YORK City and later in Los
Angeles. While on the West Coast, he and his family often
vacationed at Lake Tahoe. On the drive to and from Los
Angeles they passed through Gardnerville.
··w e always said how nice it would be to live here. One
day we just decided to come here." He added that when
several of his friends in the city died at early ages of heart
attacks, his move became easier.
HE SA VS GARDNER VILLf: HAS answer ed the
rhetorical question: can a diamond cutter find happiness
and a living outside the big city?
Ludel concedes Gardnerville isn't a likely spot for a
diamond cutting school but says he attracts students from
around the country with no problem.
Actu(llly, what he teaches rnlght better be called
diamond finishing.
ms STUDENTS LEARN HOW to take rough stones and
tum them into finished gems with the required 58 facets.
They sit for hours at elevated benches, grinding and
polishing the stones on heavy cast iron turntables spinnJng
with a slight hum at 2,500 rpms.
Rough diamonds set in lead or grasped in special blt:oi
soon take shape . Beginning students practice with small low
quality diamond!l with while advanced techn\cians produce ·
the fine.quality stone for which Ludel pays them and t}\en
sells.
LUDEL SAYS CUl'TERS ARE ALWAYS in demand
because there are fewer than 1,000 of them in America.
He was born of American pa.rents in Amsterdam. His
father was a diamond cutter who died wbJle Ludel was a
boy. HJs mother then married another diamond cutter.
Consumer Class Offered ~:
A weekly class In flghUng inneuon Is beln1 offel"ed at :
the Sigler Commuruty Center, Westminster. Stalled b)'
home economists, the consumer education coune lnclu~ea
demonstrntions and t~tures covering such areas as food
purcbaslng nnd preparatlon, buying Ups ror appliances a.Qd •
home goodt1 , sewing, health cares, child raising, and mony
other homemaker concerns. ,
A pre.school child care program Is avaHable . •
throughout the eta.as period. / •
The program, sponsored by the We.stminsleT Commurrl·
ty Services Department and Orange Coast Colle1c. 1$ free.
Jt ls taught In Enallsh from 9 a.m. to noon Fridays and ii\ •
Spa.nlsh from 9 a.m. to noon Tuesdays.
Persons may register on their first visit visit to tho
class . .Furtbrr information is available at 893-8703 or
898-3311,,~)(t. 262. •
JOE MORGAN
Reds'
~
NEW YORK <A P > -Second
baseman Joe Morgan of lbe Worlc
Champion Cincinoau Reds toda)
became only the second man in
National League tustory to wu1
Most Valuable Player honors two
consecutive seasons.
Ernie Banks, former Chicago
Cubs shortstop, was named MVP
in 1958and1959.
In the American League, con·
secutive winners included Jimmy
Foxx, 1932·33; Hal Newhouser,
1944-45 : Yogi Berra, 1954-55 ;
Mickey Mantle, 1956·57, and
Roger Maris, 1960·61.
Small bul Quick
Obscure Defense
Is Key for CM
By ED BURGART
011"• O'llY Pilot St.IH
During a successful season in
which its offense has consistently
drawn raves, the Costa Mesa
Hi gh d efense lingers in ob-
scurity.
The names uf quarterback
Dave Mollica and running back
Dan Duddridgc arc well known
around the South Coast League,
but mention such football un-
knowns as Oale Amburgey and
Chris Cathcart, <md the average
football fan m1ghl think you are
talking about Junior All-
Amencan prosperts
In fact. no Costa Mesa
J\Ju slangs defensive s tarter
l'Jrncd all-leagut' honors c1ther
on first or Sl'cond tl'am And no
starll'r \\('tghs more lhan 195
pounds
Still. l't>'>I a Ml'"'' I <tke ... an 8 1·1
re('Ord into Friday night's 8
o 'clol'k Sl•cund round Cf F 2·/\
playoff game against Bellflower
:it Newport Harbor High. And its
defrn:-.e has shut out two oppo.
nents and only allowed two of it:.
last six fol'S to score more lhan
nine points
"Quicknt•ss 1s thP kl'Y." says
Tom War('. Cost" Mesa':. de
fens1v(' coordinator. "Plus, wt•
hav<' gn·at pursuit It's seldom
when w<.• havl' only om• guy m<ik
mg a tacklt• Usually, two or
three guys will get an assist. H's
gan~ tackling and our kids hit
with the b'•:;t of them "
Bv hitting with th<' bc~t f>f
them Costa ~ks,1 has recO\crcd
23 nf 39 fu m hll':i
·· Acronhng to our figures. wr
havt• {' JUM'd 26 of those fumbles,
t'lther by hard lJckling or by rip
ping lh<' b,111 ,1wa~." says Ware
.. And wc 'n• had 10 interceptions
\h• want to ha\ l' run on defenc;,e
.ind "c're tr~ ing lo '><'orc 1f \H
1·.1n Om· of our 1:oub 1:-. to scort•
on defvnsl' ·'
In its 3-1 7 pla~off wrn Ovl'r La
ll:ibr.i':-. Son11r.1, the Mustang!-
1h•frnw bltJC k<'d a punt for a TD
.md rel'11\ t•r1•1I two fumbles for
"'llrl':i
To scnrl' nn d1•(l·rise, the
\tu:;tang.., hkl• to take advantage
or lht 1r hnt•b..ickt-r..,
"On our ali~nmt·nt.s, wc try to
prott'ct nur hnebJckers, ·· ~a)·~
Ware · Wt· tr.\ lo hm1t the of
fens1v e hm·mt'n lo rcrtdtn block
mg .rn~lec; '-<> they hav<' to block
our down hn1•m1•11 H\ doing that,
our hn~b.H'k"r' Jrt' frt·t' to m.ikt
1111·kll'"
·That \I.a ' our pl11lo .. oph~ ;ii
I ht• lw-g1nnin..: of the !>t'.l~On \\-f•
I .akers' Rally
Def eats Bucks
MIL WA L' K F: F. I AP > -Don
Nelson. <A asl1ng no lime reta1lor-
111g the raggc:ct Milwaukee Rucks
with the ~tvlt.· lhal made the
Roston Celtirs ;i <tvnasly, feU less
than four minute!, :-.hort or a first·
m ght surccss.
Th(' Ru cks. runring and
fn•elancing mon• than t1'ev have
011 Tl'To11'9•t
Cha111W1Sat8:30
all season, mourtled a 112·103
lead with 3:49 to play Tuesday
n1ght.
But K ar eem Abdul-Jabbar.
pouring in 16 or his 36 points in
the fourth quarter , and Bo
Lamar led a Los Angeles rally
that enabled the Lakers to nip the
Bucks, 117·114, and s poil
Nelson's first game as their
coach.
The takers moved on to
Denver tonight.
The Bucks· 16th defeat in 19
National Basketball Association
games ran their latest losing
streak, which finally cost Larry
Costello his coaching job Monday
night, to seven games.
"I think we may have gotten a
little lucky tonight," said I the
Lakers' Jerry West, himself a·
rookie coach.
lOSANOlll' (1111 -,_4, llv~ll•.AbOul· •J~r 3', Alltfl It, Cll•nty t, W.U.1"'1on 11,
r11..,..1J.K1f1Mc2,L•mer 1',~MS
MllWAUllll 11111 '''-"-'· ~00. ,, Snlllll t, lluc~,,.rA, W•nl•rU7. l>.ovl•t ll•oll••
I, N.t.-10, ltoyd 4, W11lo11I. McOoMldl, ["<!II"' ~
lM "llOfllts • 1' 1\ 7' 1' -I !1
M1l ... uttt )S )I JI 11 -111
knew then that our linebackers
were good athletes."
ln their 5-3·3 defense, the
Mustangs start 175-pound Mike
Brantley as middle linebacker
and 155-pound Mike Teregis and
189-pound Jeff Frazier as outside
linebackers.
"We're not big enough to fit a
5·2 defense and take on a team
like Bellflower." says Ware .
"Since we're not very big, we
stunt a lot and try to play dif·
ferent alignments up front."
Up front. the Mesans start
195-pound Steve Perez .at noM·
guard and 175-pound Amburgey
and 173-pound Troy Ybarra at de-
fensive tackles. Also, 145-pound
Rick Little has seen act.Jon at
nose guard.
"Our nose guard always plays
on the-center and we move our
tackles arounq a little," says
Wa re. ·'One or the nice surprises
has been Amburgey. He's show·
ing a lot or aggressiveness and a
good pass rush."
But the strength may be al end
where 168-pound Cathcart and
185-pound Stan Mill er start.
"l lhink they were lwo of the
finest ends in the league," says
Costa Mesa's head coach Tom
Frenrh. "Cathcart probably
hasn't said m ore than 10 words
all year , but he never misses an
assignment and has good qui ck-
ness. He runs the 40 in 4 8.
.. Miller isn't quite as quick as
Cathcart but he is stronger and
has good agility ...
Slartmg in the secondary arc
~like Snow, Rick Ayers and J im
J.aJeunt-ssP.
Yet. when talk in~ ahout the de·
fem.e's strength, French can't
pm point one pla) er -or one area
"I think it starts with our de·
fensive coaches, Tom Ware and
Al Dies." says French. ·'That
plus the fact our kids hustle and
play team defense Our kids are
all for one another and don't care
who gets the glory
The glor y has come m the
team '-; rirst wmning season in
the srh&ll's 17-yl'ar history and
its first trip to post-season com-
petition.
Morgan Selected
Morgan. who won {'()flVlJlcingly
over Greg Luzmski tn 1975, was an
equally impressive winner over
his Cincinnati teammate George
Foster this year in the balloting
by the Baseball Writers As.iocia-
tion o( America. The 5-7, 165-
pound infielder collected 19 first·
place votes from the 24· man com-
mittee. The other five voters
placed him second.
.. lt'8 a real honor. I Wnkofit as
being unique,·' Morgan said when
informed or his award. "Ernie
Ban.ks was the only other guy to
win it two years in a row, but be
did it on a leam that finished in
ninth and 10th place. Nowadays, if
a team finJshed last you wouldn't
Wlllthe MVP.
"Ernie was one of a kind and I
think maybe this award is tbe
same thing."
What first place votes Morgan
did not get went to Fosler, who
fini s hed se cond a h ead .
Philadelphia's Mike Schmidt was
third. The first three were the on-
ly players named on all 24 ballots.
First place votes counted 14
points, second place nine points,
third place eight points, etc.
Morgan finished with a total ot
311 points. Foster had 221 and
Schmidt 179.
The Reds placed three players
in the top Cour, as third baseman
Pete Rose finished fourth with 131
points. Cincinnati's Ken Grittey
was tied for eighth. Philadelphia
had three players in the lirst 10,
with Garry Maddox filth and
Greg Luzinski tied foreigbth.
Cy Young winner Randy Jones
of San Diego was the only pitcher
in the top 10, finishing 10th.
Morgan finished fl.fth in the bat·
MVP
..
ting race "' Ith a .la> average. Ue
had 111 runs batted in, 10 l«;ss than
Foster, the league lead~r.
¥oraan aJso hll 27 home f'\.IN fnd
stole 60 bases despite an inJury·
plagued season. .
Cincinnati players have · been
chosen the National League-MVP
five of the last seven ·years.
Johnny Bench and Morgan each
have won the honor twice•'and
Roseonco. lnterruplingthttl!eds'
string were' J oc Torre of St1 1'.ouis
in 1971 and Steve Garvey Qf Los
Angeles in 1974.
·'· . ·~
o.i1v Pll.t Pllete
FV DEFENDERS DON BOHAY (66), FRANK CHRISTY (79), BILL GRILZ.(61), TOM STALLINGS (78), MIKE MUSSO (47).
Barons' Defense Shining Trojans'
Five Shutouts Capped by Los Al Victory lliwer Grune
By ROGER CARL..4'0N
01 I~• O•lly PllotSr.oH
Like most expl0-5ivc football
team s, the defense us ually
doesn't get the play or notoriety
that quarterbacks, running backs
and receivers get.
And at Fountain Valley High·
where the Barons are preparing
for their second round CIF 4-A
playoff game against Newbury
Park at Orange Coast College f'n·
day night (8) the same has held
true for the most part.
Fountain Valley coach Bruce
Pickford offers some insight into
a combination that has recorded
five shutouts in what is now a 9-1
season. the latest perfectoagamsl
tough Los Alamitos, 21-0. Los Al
netted 110 yards and did not
penetrate past the FV32.
"We selected Don Bohay as our
defensive player of the week,"
says Pickford, "but really, we
would like to have picked the
whole damned unit. Getting a
shutout against a weak opponent
is one thing -getting 1t against
Los Al amitos is another."
Two defensive aces -Mike
Musso and Tim Bienek -missed
the last three quarters of play
with inJuries, but John Nicholson
and Bryan Ca ldwe ll came
through in style.
"We were crying earlier in the
year about the lack of depth,"
says Pickford. "However during
this season we've played without
Mike Musso. without Bo Boxold,
without Ken Margerum, without
Gary Cole man, without Tim
Bienek a nd witho ut Frank
Christy.
"But people like Caldwell.
Nicholson, Doug Thompson, Stan
Shibata. Brad Wood and Tim
Henigman have been doing a job
for us. It's one of the big reasons
for our success."
The Barons use the conven-
tional 5-2 defense with an ag-
gressive philosophy, one which
Pickford describes as a slant and
angle attack.
"The secret lo our defensive
Sports in Brief
s uccess." says Pickford, "has
been the agilily and quickness
with aggressiveness going lo the
ball. We felt we were in a mid·
season blues after los ing to
Edison, but in the Los Alamitos
game we played with intensity .
We attacked and went after them
and I think that was the dif·
ference.
"Our two subs -Nicholson and
Caldwell did fine jobs for us, bul
there were more. Bo Boxold was
ferocious and BiU Grilzreallytorc
Los Al up. Our secondary,
especially Jeff Mason ... just lhe
whole defensive unit was out·
s tanding."
The Barons have allowed 46
points in 10 games and the five
shutouts s naps the previous mark
of four whe n FV blanked four
straight Irvine League opponents
in 1969.
But when it comes to the matter
of shutouts, clearly the No.1 effort
for a Fountain Valley team under
Pickford in the past 11 years came
against Los Alamitos. a highly re·
garded eleven which had such im·
pressive backs.
Marshall Fired;
Alexander Signs
CHfCAGO -Herman Franks
was selected fi eld manager of the
Chicago Cubs and Bob Kennedy
was chosen director or baseball
operations for the team today.
Both appointments, as well as
the firing o f manager Jim
Marshall, came at a news con-
·. ference today.
Marshall piloted the Cubs to a
fourth-place finish in the Na-
tional League East this year.
Kennedy, 56, served as a Cubs
head coach in 1965, the final year
of the club's no-manager experi-
ment. He was named vice presi·
dent in charge of baseball opera-
tions.
Borg Adeaace•
COPENHAGEN -Bjorn Borg
of Sweden trimmed Italy's
Adriano Panetta, 3-6, 6-2, 7-6 in
the opening match of a $60,000
round robin tennis tournament
Tuesday.
A~allder t• Te~a•
PROVIDENCE, R.I. -Right·
hander D9yle Alexander signed a
multi.year contract with the Tex·
as Rang~rs Tues day night.
Alexander was the eighth of
Jerry Kapsteln 's 10 free agent
clients to sign agr~ments within
lhe past week.
Alexander, the losing pitcher
for the New York Yankee3 in the
first game of the 1976 World
Series, won aeven of hls Jut eight
Hmes during the put season
and had no·hilters going for a~
innlngs ln four of those games.
Dierker. a fixture in the Houston
Astros ·starting rotation since his
days as a fuzzy-cheeked teen·
ager, has fallen victim to the
team's youth movement.
Dierker and reserve infielder
Jerry Davanon were traded to
the St. Louis Cardinals Tuesday
for former Dodgers catcher Joe
Ferguson, who wilJ be expected
to Rive the Astros much·needP.rl
catch.inR help and added power in
the lineup, and young outfielder
Bob Detherage.
Nfte<e•IJe Sal&
KOBE , Japan -John
Newcombe of Australia and CUff
Drysdale of South Africa ad·
vanced to the semirinals of a
$100,000 international tennis
tournament toaay.
Newcombe defeated Ross
Case, 6·2, 3-6, 6·3 and Drysdale
whipped Vitas Gerulailis, 6-4, 8·2
in first round matches at Kobe
City's central gymnasium.
I.Aul'~.., ..
LAS VEGAS -Forwards Sam
Smith and Eddie Owens com-
bined for 53 points as run·and·
gun Neva da -Las Vega s
destroyed a touring basketball
team from the Republic of China,
174·90, in an exliibition game
Tuesday nt1ht. I
The taller Rebels hit 64 percent
of their shot&, 71 ol 110, and
passed !or 3S assists against the
overmat(:hed Chinese.
In Big Test
LOS ANGELES (AP) -John
Robinson, normally a man given
lo understateme nt, reaches for
the soap box when he starl$ talk·
ing about "power football.''
"People don't seem to notice
what's required of coacbe6 tmd
players when a team play& Jt;>..,er
f ootball," the Southe rn
CaljJornia coach sajd Tuesday.
.. They just think, 'Here come the
gorillas.' •
"They don't r ealize wbat a
great deal of work goes int.a play-
ing that type of game, the techni·
que involved." ..
Robinson , whose third•ran.ked
Trojans whipped UCLA 24-14
Saturday for the Pacific-8 cbam·
pionship and Rose Bowl berth,
said the victory was a matter of
wearin~ the Bruins down.
"We beat 'em with brote
force," he remarked, forgettmg
technique for a moment. "We overpowered 'em .··
Tailback Ricky Bell, t.h·e focal
point or the Trojans' J><>Wer I
formation, bulled and slashed his
way for 167 yards against' the
Bruins, while the Trojans' de-
fensive line shut down UCLA's
vaunted Veer offense.
The Trojans' final two foes will
provide powe r-against-power
tests. Before meeting se&>nd-
ranked Michigan in the. Rose
Bowl, use has the matter of
Notre Dame to take care o( this
Saturday.
"Notre D a m e is big,
strong ... and good," Robinson
said of the 13th-ranked Irish.
"We're not going to out-physical
Notre Dame .
The Irish, bound for a Dec. 27
date with Penn State in tM Gator
Bowl, bring an 8-2 record intO the
Coliseum Saturday again$. the
9·1 Trojans. · ·.
Robinson was asked if he were
upset that, despite the Vic\()ry
over second-ranked UCLA. Satur-
day, the Trojans remained third
in The AP football poll' wbile
Michigan moved from fourth to
second via a 22·0 triumph oyeC'
Ohio State.
"Naw-w-w," he replied, "it
doesn't bother me. I see a playoff
for the national title. w~ play
Notre Dame and Michigan, and
Pittsburgh (No. I) plays Penn
State and Georgia. Who's No. l
wlll be decided when that's over.
Where we're ranked now.doesn't
bother me"
Thursday's TV
9:30a.m . (41 -NFLFOoT.
BALL -The Buffalo Bills
meet the Detroit Lions at
Pontiac, Mich.
10 a .m . (2) -NBt\
BASKETBALL -The
Washington Bullets meet thf!
Suns at Phoenix. •
12:30 p .m . (2) -NFL
Ft>O'l'BALL -The St. Louis
Cardinals vs. Dallas at Irv·
ing, Tex.
"~tut ~-f.t_l ....,.t -1.M AllOti.• H l Milw,..-.. ,, • • '7).
Ill • '
09ffy ..........
MESA 'TARS CHAIS CATHCART, JI~ LeJEUNESSE {11). Ferw••• 'l'r•"• HquSTON -Pitcher Larry
Owens, a 6·6 senior, scored 23
and Sam Smith hit ~. Guards
Tony Smith and Robert Smith hit
22 and 15, respectively. The
Sfnlth! are not related.
s.~ p.m. (7) -COLLEGE
l'OOTBALL -. Tens A&'M
meets the University of
• Texas. -
N~wport . . . Girls
A,dvance
Wednesday. November 24. 1976
'
DAii. V PILOT 8 7
E m e r son,
Newbury Park, Lutz Vie
L . s· .1 InTourney
a ys Pic k f ord
iom imi ar The $'l0.~ Challenge
Kelley Smith and Kelly
W asner led Newport
Harbor High to a 17~·5
CIF 4-A quarterfinal vie·
tory over host Santa
M.onlca but Corona del
M1lr dropped a 1
beartbreaker, 11~·11 to
undefeated Claremoot In
3-A aotion Tuesday.
The Barons of Foontain Valley High are ln the
CIF 4·A second round of the football playoffs, but
they find themselves in somewhat of a limbo sltua·
lion with injuries to fullback-defensive end Mike
Musso, center Tim Bienek and other assorted
bruises a cause for alarm.
The Sunset League runnersup meet Newbury
Park Friday night at 8 at Orange Coast College and
at this point it would appear John Nlcbolson and
Bryan Caldwell wUl be in at defense and Brad Wood
and sophomore Tim Henigman will operate at
fullback.
C\lp, pJtling top men's
proleeslon als in tbe
Inaugural Prolesslonal
Tennis Classlc got unda'
way today and continu•
through Sunday at the
Racquet Club of lrvtne.
Former Wtmbledoo
charnpion Roy Emerson
now residing In Corona
del Mar, Dennis Ralston
and Bob Lutz of San
Clemente will be amoni
the pros vying in the
la r gest pr o fessional
tourney held in Orange
County.
: IJ1be victory pits
Newport Harbor aaain.st
FoothUl. The match will
be played at Newport
next Tuesday afternoon.
Foothill defeat ed Bishop
Moot~om~y Tuesday.
Smith and Wagner won
all their singles m atches
for the Tars and the top
Newoort doubles duo of
Debbie Gilchrist and Jill
JohJot,on captured three se4Ji> pacing the team ~*1-ory. :~na del Ma r 's Sea· Ki* were dumped by
tfle ·narro w est o f
mar.gins by the 15·0
Claremont squad. Under
mls CIF olav. each of t}\~e sioJles players
and jbree doubles com·
~-·plays three sets.
S!Qlfes count one point
at)d::. ctoubles one and a
hal(poinls.
:Ann Ko.ehler, Michelle
P()rd and Cindy Root
ptayed singles tor the
Sea. Kings while Terri
B a:J d w i n , S h a r o n
B <·r c a w , K i m P9-{~rll e l d , Tenley
Kri;t~. Karen Macke
an4 .. ~ichelle Goodbody
wen! :the doubles com·
bti;is.
N~rC Harber C171'>l CS1 S...la
M Of'U(il'
s1,..1n Sm•lh INl de• lCIHaC~ •1 . .,.,
Flr\tm;,'tl't 6 4 diet Sttenn 6 1 Wd9f'W'r
CNl -f>.l,•0.~·1, I. M1•f\IN)IOS\
2 ... won•-•. IO\I CH Doubt"
c,.1chrl\t·JoM•ton IN I 001 Wit""'
Holt 6·0, o.r Chu Coull\ • ' dtl
Sle.•t·M.ot1on 6·l . Mt "'"""Alley INI won 1 s. losf 1 6, won 6 0, °"""'''" M.o. Myer• IN I lo•t • 6. won
f>.l, 6 1.
CMM.olHIM.orlll) Cll'h)Cl.on,,_,
• • • Slftt les .ic:an l'tr (CdMI •o•I to C Cl<IV\wn
1 ... del Elwell l>-4 dtl 0'8rl"" l>-0.
Ford CCdMl lo•I O 6, won 6·1,.,.1 Aool
(CdM) lo\I 0·6, ?·6, won 6· I
--~-Btr~":~MI l°'I to K.
Claunen-Brant •·o. det Su·Pt0.t ... 1.
de• Chrlstta n Chrl \l(•n 6·>
Porlerl!eld-l(rfler CCdMI fOi! ....
wm 1·6, •·I. Mt<k•·C.oodl>ody ICOMI
IO\I I~ ..... •-6.
Playoff
Grid Sites
Cl .......... 11,.IUtlf
Slttt for ,.rtday HI•"' •• SI P""I v\ Cypret\ •I I.a Ptlmt
P•r' Ill 1.o~a al Wt\I Co"'"' Ill
1..M Al'°' V\ O<K Pueblll\ ti UC s.n. ··•••Da•a 181 Wkt Torrano v• P1u• X al Veter..,
Slacllwn Ill
C.0"'1>100 •1 Wt""'""'" Cll Stnc• Monie• "' "'"" •t Pn_..,. CC'<tl
i'l•~•rv Par• v\ l'oun1••n Vallo
atOCC tel Sol;!. ~lfh •I Fonttnf !fl
) A
5o l'•~dtn• " l ro, •I f ullertOO'I Hlqn 111
Mw• Cott• al L.o"'DOC I! I
Aly•r•lda Poly .ot O•m••" 181
• '-'•"• Park •• PacllJCa ti 8ol'-t
c.o->.i9t1fl )01
l1t)Wood •I El MO<I•~• 1,1
lt,,.Plt Cny o l!tn no "1..n•los •I
O.rdt•Gl"O .. i'<IQPI ••I
An-ltn-. ~A v ..... y at~·""" 8twl 191 Cr"'"'• \lfllO •\ S.1'1 M4"''" •I Aoc.1<11t HIQI> Ill
J-A ""'•I-v., ... ~· CN llM I h/-
•• H--H~tl 1\1 !u.e,...,u •I C..lo" 11 101
v_.....,. Oto! on A90<Jr• t i T,,.,.,._
OehHltf' "' Slif't Olm•\ v\ Nottrt•••• • Cov•M
Dlw•IC\ ~tacl•um ltl
C•t•t•r•• V\ N ort• Vf\1• •t
ll!Vtt\>Oe CC (I I
WM-"' l(e,,.,..dy of Btnl-•1
8.o"t-H•Ql'ICll
tl•\llle•tr "' CO\la Mna "" ,..,.._,H.,borUlq" II
Av••t•&f' ~ 0uM·U HH• tt .,.,..,,._.
llallty CC fl JOI ,..
ll«foe» .,, Mary Star •t 0.-.•tlt
Flal<1,ll Car1>•'119rl•., Pawi f!OC)lh Ill
111 ... 01 no. World., s ..... y,..,
ttno•rlel V\ Notre O •m•
lllh•Of$1j)e l •t UC A •Y~rtlde Cit
' •• ,,..,. Cllam1H0tttlll•
Cuy•Mt V•llev -. Montclair """ t\Gt~ 11ltlt Hlqh Ce t
·Polo Scores
~
Suns et L e ague Cha111pions
The Fountain Valley High Barons recently
captured the Sunset League cross country
title. Front row (from left) are Dennis
Ouddy, John Sarmiento, Rick Smoot and
Kirk Buhler. ·Back row: coach Bill
Thompson, Jim Testrake, John Spreitzer
and Brian Appell.
' Mesa vs. Bellflower:
Matchup of the Lines
The script of sPeed versus size is
becoming quite old for Costa Mesa's
small Mustangs, who will be racing
another large team in the second
round of the CIF 2-A football playoffs
at 8 Friday night at Newport Harbor
High.
The Mustangs opponent is
Bellflower, which compiled a 6·3 re·
cord in regular season action and won
the San Gabriel Valley League with a
5·2mark.
Like previous foes San Clemente
and Laguna Beach, Bellflower
feHtures some 230-pound tackles and
holds a considerable size advantage
over a Mustangs team that starts no
200-pounders.
"It's going to be a matchup or the
lines, and the outcome will depend on
what our line will do against their
size." says Tom French, head coach
at Costa Mesa. "Bellflower is huge
and 1s a very physical football team."
Some huge Bellflower players are
230-pound guards Jeff Benjamin and
Tim Whittaker and 215--pound tackle
Don Craig. All start on the defensive
hne. while the Mustangs' largest of·
fens1ve lineman is 185-pound tight end
Stan ~hller .
Bellflower's size isn't all that con·
cerns French.
"There are four things that concern
us," says French. "First, they will be
the biggest team we have faced.
Second, they have a different of·
fens1ve philosophy and run out of
spread formations and throw quite a
bit.
"Third, we are going into a game
not really knowing our opponent and
fourth, they are a pretty fair de·
tensive team. Their philosophy seems
to be on defense."
Bellflower's defense ha.<; only ·al-
lowed one touchdown in lbe past four
games and is only giving up 7.5 points
per game.
Costa Mesa will counter with its
sprint.out a ttack that is led by
quarterback Dave Mollica and run·
ning backs Dan Duddridge and Dave
Brennen.
MolHca, back of the year in the
South Coast League, has completed 72
of 136 passes for 8S6 yards and has run
for eight touchdowns, gaining 444
yards on 125 carries.
Duddridge and Brennen, effective
on both dives and sweep.s, have picked
up681 and417 yards.
Doug Dysart, who caught 21 passes
for 282 yards during regular season
action, is the Mustangs' top receiver
while tight end Stan Miller has hauled
m 15 aenals for 222 yards.
B~s Sudden Death I,oser
Rustlers
In Mat
Opener
Freshmen will carry
the load for Golden West
College's wrestling team
this season.
Coach Dale Deff.oer's
Rustlers open the 1976-77
campaign tonight (7 ::.>)
hosting Pierce. •
Golden West has just
two lettermen return·
ing-Steve Belanger and
Glenn Sasano. Belanger
will wrestle in the 158-
. pound class while Sasano
. is a 1.26-pounder.
The lop freshmen are
Mario Lara (142). Je{C
Orman (167 ), Dave
Sliney (126), Mark Vick
(177) and Dan Meeks
'(190). Sliney, Vick and
Meeks are from Marina
High <Huntington
Beach), Lara prepped at
Fountain Valley and
Orman went to Pacifica
(Garden Grove).
"Our strength wiU be in
the upper weights." says
Definer. "From 158
pounds up we will be as
strong as ever. We also
have some fine wrestlers
in the lower weights, but
they are untested."
GWC Poloists Triumph, 8-7
By CRAIG SHEFF But lhe defense shut hal!time lead, watched OCC goalie Bill Rice
01tM0•11r"1101slafl down the Falcons and Lo B h r· · Golden West College, ng eac scor e 1ve m was especially sharp,
sparked by Tom Crook's Crook got the Rustlers a row to take a 10.7 ad· bloc king nume rous
five goals and a de· close with a goal from vantage early in the shots. the hole two minutes into fourth period Store by Ou•rltr& fensive unit that came to · · the last quarter. life in the final period, Crook t hen tied it with But the Pirates didn't Orar19ecou1 l J l s-u
Fullerton J I 3 3 10 Or•n9e Cool tcorlnv-Trout 1.
WV•lt 2, Scott 2, Crock•ll, Dav1<1ton,
Wa•d.
Those possibilities did not pose a threat lo the
FV arsenal last week against Los Alamitos when in·
juries to Musso and Bienek failed to make much dif·
ference.
However, with Newbury Park, Fountain Valley
faces a team similar in personnel to Westminster
with big running backs operating behind a big
llne.
"Newbury Park wjll gi.ve us both the run and
pass to defense," says FV coach Pickford. "These
guys are strong and the backs are reminiscent of
Doug Boswell and Duane Gerardi at Westmjnster.
And Newbury Park probably throws the ball better
than Los Alamitos."
Pickford says his team's first chore is to put the
clamps to tailback Jeff Mathews, a 170-pounder
with over 1,000 yards to his credit in 10 games.
"Ne wbury Park's offensive line," adds
Pickford, "is also similar to Westminster with a 6·5,
250-pound tackle, another in the 200-plus category
and a 230-pounder listed. Los Alamitos had scooters
capable of breaking for the long run. But these guys
are strong.''
It was Westminster's Lions who rammed the
ball down the middle against Fountain Valley,
before succumbing, 14-10, on a 74-yard pass from
Doug Thompson to Ken Margerum. ·
With highly regarded South Hills probably
looming for the survivor of the Fountain Valley·
Newbury Park skirmish, Pickford says: "I just
hope we can get after Newbury Park and play with
enthusiasm. We have to attack defensively. ·
"We have to do that with the prospect of playing
without Musso and Bienek, but we've played
without some aces at one time or another."
Volleyball Teams
Topple CIF Foes
By HOWARD L. BANDY
OHM Dally "'lot Staff
blocked shots and came
through with two key
services in the second
game .
Other featured pros in·
elude Charles Pasarell,
Sandy Mayer, Tom
Gorman, Marty Riessen
and Jeff Borowiak.
Emerson was the will·
ner or two Wimbledon
singles tiUes and t b.ree i4 •
doubles. Ralston , the
Davis Cup team coach
and captain, paired with
Rod Laver to w in the
1976 U.S. National Pro
Indoor doubles cham·
pionship.
Qualifying for the
doubles teams which will
face the four featured
pairs began today.
In a dditio n, Los
Angeles Dodgers stars
Don Sutton and Steve
Garvey will be on hand
F riday morning from
10·12 for various youth
activities.
Garvey will team with
actor Chris Connely for a
match with a team ot
teaching pros at noon.
And si ngle s
quarterfinal action gets
under way Friday after-
noon at l with the finals
scheduled for Sunday at
1.
P r o Scores
NatiOMI aathtNll At\a<I .....
K•n•••C•IY 100. NV 1Cnl<k•'9 $.on Antonio n1. Bufltlo 11s
Pn11..ie1p;i1,.11•. Boston 101
NewOrle•n• I 11, GoldenSIA1et4
t..o\AnoelH 111,Mllw•uke. II• Dtnv~r 111, W4\hll'IQIOft,.
H•llo1W1tHooey1.a-Mon1r .. 1~.NV l$IM\dtrs1
Dale Keough was the
catalyst with a big assist
at the ser vice line by
Lori Webb and Sue Corea
as the Corona del Mar
High Sea Kings toppled
Marlborough High, 15-2,
15·10, Tuesday night in
second round CIF 4-A
volleyball playoff action
on the winner's floor.
· Webb, the team cap-
tain, served 10 straight liiii!iiii!iiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
points to run out the COIMmc su•ouY
Third-seeded Laguna
Beach advanced to the
quarterfinals with a 1.S-7,
~ victory over h05t St.
Paul of Santa Fe Springs
and Newport Harbor top.
pled Bishop Montgomery
In Torrance, 15·10, 15-6,
to gain the quarterfinals.
Laguna Beach will
play Glendale at home
Tuesday while Newport
Harbor will host Santa
Monica. CdM will play
Mira Costa in another
1home match.
Keough , t h e Jone
junior in the CdM start-
ing lineup that has two
fresh m e n a nd three
sophomores, spiked the
ball hard, placed soft
l ob s out o f reach,
Ne t R esults
. f MIN -lOOIC VCXINOll count m the irst game as 1M,.ov1 voua AmAlANCI
the Sea Kings dominated • ...:,'¥:,~~~
the action. ,.,,_.~·'---In the second game, AMIRICAN COIMmC
Marlborough J·umped to •u•o .. , ClllTI• INC. .... -. ..... '-· -,_,...
a 7·1 edge before Keough ~~~~~~~~~! served two CdM points -;
and Corea cam e on to 1977 CARS
pick up seven straight to . & TRUCKS 'put coac h Kathy
Bulmer's Sea Kings in
command, 10.7. f
Linda Robertson and
the Laguna Beach de·
tense were outstanding
fo r coach George
- w LEASE
Carey's Artists.
Judy Fogt of Newport
said it was a team effort·
RATES!
All makes! for the Tars
Clf'.,_A SttOfld 11......r 833-0555 loulsvill• d&f F'OOIPllll 1 S.7, IS.J
Marvmounldef Hoover IS.II, ls.? Please ask for
Corona ""' Mtr dPI Merlbor1>U911 .... lH. 1s.10 "RAY" s,.-7~"'
Mir• Cost• d~I MilCCken IS.3. lM We of fer to ......... tAounaBeKhdelS1 PaullH,IS-6 UVJ
Gltndale del Sl.Josapt11S.S. 16-U your old vehicle. Ntwoort H.Hbor d•I 8/thop
Montgomery IS·IO, IS~ HOWARD Ch rol
1
s.5:"'" Monica dtl Sat1Marcos1).2, _______ e_v __ et _ _.
toppled Cerritos, 8-7, in 1 :45 left 10 regulation give up, scoring four
overtime Tuesday to and put two more goals goals in a 3'h-minute
gain today's Southern away at the l :30 and 2:S8 segment to take a 11-10 c.oici.nw:-"'°"·~·'! 3 ._,, uctrvt•Mo:,:·~ .. ~~rn•.....,•
California JC water polo marks of the first over. marginwitbl:40left. G_a,. , 2, ,._, <»--erlile-Trou1 O•' BcNnnon-
fmals at Fullerton's ln· time. Finlt Greg Scott Upped ~°:.:..':':.'~.:i:;1,"~~~'D.:;. ~~~!;!.~~.!;:-~·:;~
dependence Park. Ce rritos tallied its in a s hot, then Oscar ni\,Furlor>9, Fort!H-Gaverlydel Olldley-Govaa,.,,
C o a c h T o m final goal with 1: 10 left in Trout foll.owed with a 1.acc S<•~"~ °';'~~ 0 ,_,, ~!su°m-,:!'s~6-~,~~!~""' ""·
Her m st ad·· s G WC the second overtime and turnaround goal from occ • > o • 1 o 0-11 w ......... "'"a••
Rustlers. who defeated had two chances to score the hole. Steve Wyatt Orange co .. t \Corino-Tr...., >. OPan-Stroder '"~" c1er Go<"don-
G l d OllV•d10n 3, Ward 1. Ad..,..s 1, 5'0!11, C.eddu, 6·2. 1·S: B-Armst•onq. en ale , 17 ·9, in a intbelast20seconds.bul and Jim Davidson then wva1t1 eou1wino.1.Mue<1t1111(re.1r.M .,...:
m orning game. mel GWC goalie John Wasko added goals from way S<orelly°"'1"f..-s c~"""-' Aooi-wan1.~•.
Most administrattve, proless1onal and executive posi-
tions 1n Cehforn1a arc not advor11scd or lts<od. II you
Qualify tor a SIS 000 lo S65.000 job, send us your resume
now and lel us hr>lp direct you to lho missing ma1on1y,
Beller sllll, call now tor an appointment There's no cost
or obhgal1on • •
Lo B h Cc bl k C.ur los 1 > 2 o o 1-1 6--4; 0-Wa111 .. w.11 .. otl. Aobort .. ng eac today for oc ed both attempts. out to give coach Jack Goldef'lwast 1 2 1 2 1 o-. 809Nr,.,J,.,,. auoc •alt'•
the SoCal crown. Meanwhile, tbe OCC· Fullerton's Bu cs the Golden wur scorl"ci-Ct1t0• s, MtudP'l11•>•
Halda·n~ San 01190171412ll·llla
600BSUeet. S••lf•2010 °"-C....flly {Tit) M-70
~67 San Noeo•n Of
N1wpo11 Beach, Cati! 02860
Lo B h l d Jol'tn\on 1, Rice 1, Oennlt 1. Olleft-Ptrtter·Kalln def • .John!.rud. Esrobl••htd 1947 Long Beach advanced ng eac game was a ea . OtMrkarH Jo!Wlsrlld, ~ ..... •-1: B-1.au-Pr1m to the ch am pionshlp tilt see-saw battle with the Long Beach tied it with L<ln9 ... c,, n. P•tom•r' def. ,.,,.,.rson-Al'ldarM>n, °"· 6-1, 1>-l; Offim i11111ost majtr cities
Loe Anv•let (2U) W ·2J11 3601 W1llhlla Blvd, Sullo 1200
Safi Fra11t:l•co (411) Hl.,UO Hearat Bldg., lr1lro 8110 Market with a wild 13·12 sudden two teams exchanging 13 seconds left in regula· ~~i!t~~:,;::~~;,, ;~":a~~·~~~a~:;.~~;~·.~:r "'0'•o•mmenu;ency
death win over Orange scoring flurries. lion and both teams ven11Ka11,01•""•••• Eva11~0,. ..... 111a1.•-2,..i. ~eo~,,,.~..,.~··=··~·~1--~··=··=1"=·"'~.,..~··~.,,~ .. =· .. ~~~~======~===~~~~
Coast. occ·s Pirates, a Long Beach won it one traded goals in the first --------------------
14 · l O victor over minuteinto suddendealh overtime, then traded NOW APPEARING "I llu•fn M@r.firnv,:;)o r(5\~ .... n ~a Fullerton earlier, faced on Greg Boege's goal. shots ln the second three· Y~ f./\M U UU ~ l..!::0.§lU
Ventura today with the OCC, which had a 7·5 minute session.
wtnner advancing to the..----------------THE but bought my n~W C8t ' ::-?:~~J£:.••titwas HIGH·RISE VIEWS. BOB VERA SHOW ln ~f!.@~ftom be~:nRu~~:;~to~h~t!!~ LOW•RISE WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY JOHlllli..ISON & SON'"
Umes earlier this seasoo, CONVENIENCE. 7 p M. 11 p M rtll
looked sluggish and ap-Got a Pl I N rt Ce t • • • • peared out of it entering ew y aza n ewpo n er. FRIDA y. s £TURD Ay
the final period behind Four new buildings in a garden A A
by a 6-4 couitl. office community. 8 P .M. • I A.M.
''The Beffer Bargain·• Outstanding views, high Identity, ALSO
prestige environment. DIXIE~D BRUNCH
low Price. and becng treated like
a member of the Johnson Family,
was worth gOlng out of my way
for. Thots why I recommend you
drive to Johnson (, Son. Their
Golden Touch service is the ONLY
way to buy. Give 'em a try They
make you feel real Important.
And. to m~. that 1s important.
...
"CHINOOK
.· S6S9S
For the best choice in Chinooks,'
select from the large inventory at
Ma rquis Motors.
Come in
~~~~ ....... ~~~~...._today!
Up to 8,000 square feet per floor. llLLY WtW ~ IACHELOIS
Free adjacent parking. Free space planning. SUND A Y-10 A.M. to 3 P .M.
Ge A. TEW' AV Contocl vour broker Ml Ml or 8111 Dolley or fom Ulmon
PLAZA of Mollow·Kenneay Corporation,
(714) 644·5165.
. ~.
NEWPORT4f;CENTER .. .
by 1HE IRVINE CDv1FW«
A ~lier Dloce '°' bu'ln .. s In o .,..,fi environment t0t peooi. •
'
Marian Moses
MARINA DEL REY
ORANOE COOHTY'S OLDEST Ll~N><MERCIJRY ~RStllP 65 YEARS <:I FRIENOLY fAMll Y
&RVCEI
I-$-* •••11·1 -**"Ii
ohnson &'son
2626 HARBOR DLVO
COSTA MESA $4(>-5830
....
-.... -. .... .. , . .. . .. ~ ... :.: ~ ... -:• ~ .. ~\
. .,
t
DAit. V Pit.OT W~nesda , No11embe1 24, 1978
AU S10IU C10Sl0 TJIA#ISGlflllG
SPECIAL VALUES COSTA MESA
2946 BRISTOL ST.
FOR TODAY
THRU SUNDAY
SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY.
-II
IF PRICE COUNTS
YOU'LL SHOP ·
PEP BOYS NOW.
llACK Of TAN
Mod• of tougl\ ®'obi.
"'o••dol. looh file
loothor.
ms 149 MOST
CAIS
CHROME PLATED . LICENSE FRAMES . ·:
rliiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~=il PROTICT •
YOUR
LICINSI :
PLATH
139 ·:
DllESS-111' YOUR CAR IAot
• LOW PROFIU aoss BRACED
HANOlE URS
• WAffll STYLE GRIPS
lXTRA WIDE FENDERS
• RAT TRAP PEDALS
KIDS LOVE 'EM e "
PRICED LOW FOR
CHRISTMAS
TIRE SALE!
CHECK THESE LOW PRiCES
ON CORNELL TIRES
CORNELL 200
WHITEWALL TIRES
. 60 OR 70 SERIES
WIDE TRACK
49
RAISED
WHITE LETTERS
llG WIDE-TUBELESS
.it.PLY NYLON
30 MONTH
LIMITED WARRANTY *
SALE PRICE!
70 SERIES
FOREIGN CAR SPECIALS
FREE 1 IR E
MOUNTING
We<:lnesda . No11ember 24, 1978
·: :: ·.
'I.
't
'· . ·
NEW 1976 MUSTANG
llMPG2 + 2
53579
fE.W '7 6 GRANADA
4DOOR s4
LT.D. 4' DR. H.T.
,../G~C)} ~-_
~Q... ~J
2'300 c~ •nq•n• • eyllndf"" .. •~
1rantm1\11on ltt')l'lt & "'•r b1JMOf'r-
-"' 59< •8R03Y 1104' I
NEW 1977
FORD
f.150
PICKUP
'
NEW 1977
PINTO WAGON
$
2300 cc 4 cylinder engine, 4' apeed
t"1nsmisslon. steel belted wsw tires. deluxe
bumper group, tinted glass complete. Ser.
#7R12Yt01712.
s3479
2300 cc 4 cylinder engine. 4
speed transmission. front disc
brakes. steel belled radial
!Ires. deluxe bumper group,
tinted glass complete. Ser.
117R10V101707.
NEW'n
MAVERICK
s4379
AIR COMDmOMIMG
250 6 cylinder engine.
automatic transmission. steel
belted radial t ires, power
steering. power front disc
brakes. front & rear bumper
guards. tinted glass corrolete.
Ser. #7K91L104061,
£1'?J,'-. --z+DL -•
DAILVPILOT
250 NEW .
CARS & TRUCKS
TO CHOOSE FROM!
NEW '76
TORINO
s4279
AIR COMOITIOMIHG ~1 V-1 •n9fn•. aulomatoc Iran•""'''°"
-Sl"""O 00-llOl>I d..C brlll'° "'""' Mitt tnm. i1ee1 beU9d tad11I W5.llll' "'M Of'tu,.,
"""'8 .. covet'\ ffont & rear bumoN' QtWm
tin.fed qfan cO.fT1ofere delu11e "•P-.t brflt h•f\
hl "O temure conttot tn•HOr Ser ·~~H10617S
'74 AMC
NEW '76
PINTO Runabout
s2g79
2300 cc -"" • "'"" ,,._ .._ <l•X tw•ltM '\tffl belled r.01a4 W'\W fires,.
front I tfJlt bumoet Q\lltch Ser ll;Rl1Y1309~•
MOMTI CARLO AMI !JOO YAH COMY. LEMAHS
Auto. trans . factory atr,
power steering. power
brakes. radio. heater nice car. ( 173GXF)
,.CKU' FtlHllD V-8, auto. trans .. ractOl'y Auto. trans.. factory air Pf..-rOWAGOM V-8. auto. trans .. ractory 1 i conditioni n g . p o wer air power steering a r. power steer ng. steering power d
4 speed. radio. hearer ~~~~t radio. heater. po~er brakes. Extr~ power d isc brakes. brakes. AM/FM rad'.~'f
(854GGVJ Sharp! (8850ZI). radio. heat er. under heater. rallye wheels:
V-8. auto. trans .. factory air
cond1t1 on1n g , h earer
(696SSR).
2 Or. H.T. V-8. auto. trans ..
factory air condlt1onlng,
oower steering. p0wer disc
brakes, radio. heater. vinyl
roof. Landau top. (898LIR).
'2179
'75 FORD
GUMTOllHO
V-8. a. trans .. fac air. p str .
p. brks .• R&H. wsw. vinyl rf .
tnt. gls.. whl. cvts.. to rTl4
Sharp. 1 yr or 12.000 '"'· war. t5A31H105873.
FIRST
IN IDYICI ••
llRST
•MUI '
(124'MWL). (583LVYJ.
s1979 '1279 '2579'4479 '3179 '1979 '2979
'73 FORD E200
ICOMOLIMI YAM
V-8. auto. trans .. Extra nice!
(E24GHS21177)
'74 DODGE
YAM
'73 CHEVY '74 CHEVY '71 MERCURY 175 CHEVY
WAGON CArtUCI WA~OM WAGON MONTE CARLO CPI.
V-8 t t f ct V-8. auto. trans .. factOl'y air. v..a. auto. trans .. factory air. v..a. aulo. trans .. factory air,
at.r' a~ 0·51r!~''in a ory p. steering, p. brakes. p. p. steering. p. brakes. radio. p. steering. p. brakes, radio. bfakes: radio~ h~~t:r. windows. radio. heater. heater. whitewall tires. heater. whitewall !ires. wsw. tinted glass. wheel whftewall tires. tinted glass. tinted c;ilass, wheel covers. tinted glass. wheel covers,
cover s (527GIU) wheel covers, tilt Wheel. (072DKI). Sliver finish. (124MWL) . '27~9 ''3979 •167t •427g
ALL CARS SUIJlCT TO ... SAU
SAU IHOS I 1·21-16
+ TAI & UCIHSI
(2 DAIL V PILOT
~,,. .................. ~
.. htot• ....•... 1000.2999 The Bluest Marketplace on the Orarwe Coast
Emptoymtnt &
bt Rtntal1 .......... ~
Busintn, lnvemnent &
Rnondal .......... 5()00.!(MC) DAILY Pl' OT CLASSIFIED ADS Prtp0t atlon , .. • . . 7000. 7199
Mttthondltt •.•... 800CM099
loafs & Merine
Announcements, '-'onats, wat & found .•..•• SOSO.Sim
Strviut & Res>e*t ~
You Can Sell It, Find It, ( 642 5678 ] · One Call Service
Trade It With a Want Ad : • ~ Fast Credit Approval
f.quipm.nt ........ 9000-9099
Automobiln & ....
Transportatiln .•.. 91Gt-:""
. ~!.~.~ .•••••• !~:~~ ....... ~-~~ ....... 1~.~~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... 1~-~~ ....... ~.~~ ....... !~:.~~ ........ .
• MltORS': Advfl'ffHN G.....a I001GtMf"OI 1002 G1111rol 1002 G ... ,.. 1002 G ... ,.. tooz•••rill IOOJ .... ,.. 1002 .... ,.. 1002 ~ c.19ec• ,..,, ads•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• .. •••••••••
delly Clftd report ~,..
ran l....,dfatefy. The
DAILY '8LOT 01.-1
hbHlty fOf' tM first ltt-
e.ol'ftd IMet1ioft only.
W.-..'tNotfu:
All real estate advertised
ln this qfWSpaper is sub
ject to tlle Federal Fair
Housin g Act of 19611
which makes 1t illegal lo
advertise "~ny pre
ference. liml\ation. or
,discrimination based on
•race, color. religion. sex,
or natJonal origin, or an
Intention lo make uny
such preference, hm1l a·
t1on,ord1scnminat1on "
This newi.paptor will not knowmgl) act•e pt any
ad\'erl 1s1n1t for rea l
estate which 1s an viola·
t.ion flfthc law. ----Houses for Sofe ., ••..............•...••
....... al 1002
·-····················· NORTH TUSTIN
OH, IT'S llAUT1FUL!
Absolutely perfect 3 Bedroom. 2 b~th,
Mesa Verde pride of ownership home!
Large . private well manicured yard
(complete with tree house) s urrounds
a sunny, spotless, well maintained r e·
sidence. There is a massive double
fireplace with a hearth in the family
room and one in the golden toned li v·
ing room. The investment is $86,500
happy dollars!
U ~ l()U I: ti()Ml:S
REAL TORS1. 546·5990
1525 Mesa Verde Dr ive. East. Costa Mesa
also in Corona dcl Mar, at 675 6000
Large home on a large
lot ror a large family 4 Gteercal I 002 G~al I 002
Br. f;jm rm~ d1n 'g rm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Quiel rl's1dcnll;1I locallon
nr lhl' iunt·tiun o f
GG /Nwpt Fwys. $71,000.
THE HOMESB.LERS
752-5353
NEWPORT SHORES
2·Story A·frame; wood I.learned ceilings ; 4
bdrms . 2 bat h s;
secluded pat.Jo. Walk Lo
hcach. pools & tennis
Heducl'd to $85,000.
673-3663 642·2253 Eves
associated
BllQl([llS -11 .EAlTO llS
10JS W SalLoo 611 )U I
. . . s uggest s you ask about the
beautiful Lus k home in Eastbluff
which Hester·Brown & Associates are
offering at $112.500.
STARLIGHT CIRCLE. M.I.
An elegant home in exclusive
BAYCREST. Highly upgraded. 4
bdrms., den, formal dining rm. -
huge family rm., 4 baths & 3 car
garage. An xlnt value at $179.500.
THE BLUFFS, N.8:
A VIEW condo with 3 bdrms .. 2 baths
& powder rm. -(rplc. Location offers
great appreciation potential SllS,000
-Will consider lease/option.
When You speak WE listen !
HOIU euobJOlieM4
-"° ohfigalialt
• •
CORONA DEL MAR· 675·3000
I
GeMrOI 1002 G1Mrol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DOLORES MODa Bluffs end unit with
won't quit view! 3 bdrms .. ~lh baths.
wet ba r, wrap.around view deck.
$152,000. Just immaculate condition;
many extras. Make offer.
673-4400
HARBOR
1002 Geweral G.-rol 1002 GeMral 1002
I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXCLUSIVE
MESA VERDE
COUNTRY CLUB
Pnme Country Club a re1:1
of Mesll Verde. Quwt
lree lined c ul·de i.ac
leads to I story. spacious
3 bedroom home. Large
master i.uite plus 2 twin
sized bedrooms. Family
room hosts massive
s t onl• fir e pl ace,
breakfai.l bor & over·
looks 1rop1cal ~ardcn
patio. fo\J II pnce Sl00.000.
10'.< down Call 962·TI88.
~ KE:Y
VP.E:ALTOP.s H
RAHCHOMESA
Blny UPRraded :I bd, 2 bt.1
home i11 Rancho Mesu
lluge master bd. w rnn
\Cr SJ llOn areJ &
»lre!>i.l'd for frplc h!c
FR. :. O\O\;\• dell'l'I ur
iireat } d \ mu:-t !>l'l'
Si 1.950 ~~!H
Walker & lee'
Real ls tale
Lachenm.yer
Realtor •
LOOKING-
for 11 home 1n Newport
fteach's EastbluH Bia
Canyon Harbor View ·
The Bluffs . Westchff ·
Trvine':s Turllerock,
ctt'. '! We ha ve lovely
homes lo show you in till
these area:.. and much
.->re. pica!«? call
C. F. Colesworthv
UALTORS 640..00fO -------
INVESTMENT
TRAILER PARK
.. . with 19 Spaces. on 2-'•
acres with two houses.
Pool and shufOeboard 4 Miies Crom Perris Lake.
P\111 price $150,000. CAL
W..2660
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
SllK& ,IN
PRICE REDUCED
DEAN HOME
Clean. neat. 4 bedrm,
fam rm, recently painted
in and out. Boat door.
patio. l~e back yard.
Xlnt family home . Of·
Cered al a low S60.SOO.
Hurry on this one! •
POL.AHO
K V 1 A C S T E T T l H Y B S K A Y S
A 0 K L H P H P U L A S K 1 H S K T V
T K S 0 0 I 0 0 B C S R Z I 0 A R B 1
O A A M P L Z L A N E 1 l 2 0 R U Z K
W R E S I S R A L 0 T B L H E U Z C S
I K S E " U U N T S V B A E R P A Z W
C A C T 0 G C A L H L S T S E M S A
E S 1 E T Z I N C E H Y R A U I U 0 I
K 1 T 0 A T S Z E N T V A P Z K A G N
S A L U T S 1 V N 0 A 0 W R A V Z 0 E
U R A S 0 I V I L A R E M A M A M Y 1
t S 8 L P E T Z H E D H J C S J P 8 W
C A R P A T H t A H S E T S E R R J D
0 W K I K S D U S L t P l S U 0 A H M
N A L 0 S Y K S N 1 B U 0 A T I C W R
Baltic Sea
Bydqoszcz
Cerpath1 ans
Oanz19
lub11n ~
Mazurka u
P11sudskl Warsaw e
Sejm Zloty
T01110rrow: Thanksgiving Day
~SELECT GiMr.e t 002lG••r.e t 002 ~F>~C>f>~~-rlE:~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
OWNER
Ewopelo-.d
Don't miss this Cost•
Mesa 4 bedrm homr
t.turtng formal dlnln~. 'e kit. w/dinetle. Huge
Ovlng area centered
ttound many trees and '4' covered pullo Comer
loc1tlon , l ots ol
privacy-room for motor home, bont or traller.
Prtced rt1ht at sm.soo.
Call ~SSllO.
-: s?-HERITAGE
RU\lTOR'. ...
••
CE
110181 ILllRS aa
OVER 50 YEARS OF StRVICE
11.Ufff "9 P\AM""
Lovely Condom\nlum with Unusual
Music-RO< SOLD 3 Bedrooms, 2'At Batb1 .auon Plt &
Fireplace. AOJ01os Greenbelt.
Reduced to $99,SOC>
•I DOYll D...a 631·1•
Brand new, contemporary Cape Cod.
Oak floors. 5 bdnns .• 41h baths. 3
Cr pies. Landsca ped. Boat slip .
$375.000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
3.11 8oy~1de Orrvt' NB 67S·blb1
LUXURIOUS
ltGCANYON
CONDOMINIUM
Jusl reduced $20,000.
Spac1oui; three lx'droom,
family room and dminR
room with fantastic vlrw
Scarce vaeant lot.. 66x300
For horse lovers 1 Zoned
A·l, Cully fenced, nice
neighborhood. Hurry on
this one. asking $55,600.
Call 540-115 l
~HERITAGE ·
. • REALTORS of the NewPorl Harbor , ... ._ __ .. __ _
are11 as well as night
hghlii. BeautHully up·
graded with enclosed
pnvate patio and 11tlrac·
live landscaping. Now
$215.000. C811 673.SS50. Ol'I"' Ill 9 •ti\ IU"' IC)lif N~ I' tvel'IS!ll
GeMral 1002
SECLUDED VIEW
Eleg1nt 3 bd, 2 ba, lge
FR I n p op ul ar
Turtlerock. Vaulted ceU·
ings, lovely atrium
garderui & much more .
Price reduced. S45·9491
~ --....................... --------
fll~~
DUMl4~
Very popular Kensington model in
University Park's Deane homes:
Family & dining rooms, 3 bat.M.
Beautifully decorated in earth tones
& attracUve tandscapln.a. Nr. tennis ~ & pool. $116,500.
A COLDWILL aAMC• CO.
644-1766
llAT INR.AnoM S28.900
New paint & carpets. Good locatl0t1. end
condo unit, security gate. playground,
pool, greenbelt. picnic area. BBQ area.
Carport. 2bedroorm. builtins, F I A heat.
l~baths.
IMCOME PROfatn $69,900
AU TlltMS
Duplex and separate home on large lot.
Can build more units. 3 car garage,
fenced yard. Near shopping. schools,
etc.
HEW COSTA MESA LISTIM&I
$63,900
Lovely 3 bdrm. 2 ba, new carpet. Xint
location. Nearallschools: frwys&shop-
ping. Lots of charm. Large lot. Quiet
s treet
OPPORTUMITY CAIEllt NIGHT
Come as you are and get the details on
your future in the lucrative real estate
profession. Speak directly with our
Fountain Valley Manager.
M CAMTCM TOWlllOMI
The "Oakcreat" 1-story model hi&hlY
upgraded. Air·cond, lush cptnc 4' custon drapes, mlcrowa•e oven.
. View. Lease $950 mooth.
Jiii S.J1 ;' ......
..wPOaT CIMTa M.I. 644-49 I 0
1002 ..roe 100~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Mov..,.lftable
H a rbor View Hi 11 :.
Highly upgraded in ever·
yway -custom drps,
crpts & wall coverings .
tinted gJus. Lge famUy
rm w If.Pk. kitchen has
pass thru window to
patio & lge land&caped
yard w /sprlnkle rs .
Master suite has sep.
dressing area. Sep laun-
dry w /storage area. 3
Oar aarage. See to ap-
pre c 1 ate . Sl38,SOO .
644. 7270 ""
MESA VERDE
411t~AMILY
$84,500
lmm.culate Mesa Verde
4 bedroom doll house!
Beautiful Pacesetter
bome. Slate entry way.
Gl&anlic form•l Uvlng ~-mas1lve wall of
rlreplace. Huae family
room. Spodess gourmet
kitchen . Secluded master wlag-plus 3
more family sized
bedrooms. O wner
transferred. Must see to
believe. Hurry -call
~1700now!
Available Tues. and Thurs. evening6to9
p.m.orcall forappt.
Pl.AN TODAY FOil YOUI TOMOtlltOW
Off"' ht 9• ti~ ll}N 101!1 Hlfr:'
1.=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; ~-ft111tll
18055MagnoliaSt.. Fountain Valley
963-8311
G.....t 1002GeMf"GI 1002 ········•·············· ···~···················
O~;·:ft!b~"'t...~.::
low 'O '°'"' '°"' ~mple WO<d•
I OUGOIE
I 12 I I I I
I
OYLAM 1 1
. I I I' I .
SMB.L THIS
Beautiful home-nolhing
smells better than new
plush carpets & fres h
paint Squeaky clean
thruout. 4 81~ bedrms, 2 baths . Family room.
fp lc. all the extras'
Great Costa Mesa loca
tlon near schools J usl
listed al S68.500 Ca II
S40·ll51
~~~HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
I l A 91ee1 moment on ho\IOfY W Y K A G ~ w•S when Orv•lfe W t 1 q ht ' I~ I I I m•de 1he '"" aorpi•ne 11iot.1. . • _ • . _ ~nd wo also the l1ru 10 lowr
hll bro1ker Wtlbvr'~ -on l R E E M E G I tne plane • " .... -, -,-i-,-, -,__. 0 ,.,..,.,, •.• "'• ell"" .. q-
• • " • " " • by '·~·:i ........... ~ -d .__...._..._...._...._ ...... ..--""91oo ~ lt99 No. 3 below.
• ~~~~1~000~°.ts(ll[tS r r r r r r r 1
6 'tr'f !.~lt lfnm '0 I I I I I I I J
SC!llAM-lETS AMwtn In Claniflcatto. UIO
'
~COATS & WALLACE
'J:IJ REAL ESTATE, INC.
II lOCAllY OWN lO COM PANY SE RVING
JHE SOUIH COASJ ARE/I ·mm 196.1
BLUFFS WATER VIEW
Outstanding Bluffs Trina plan with
panoramic Bay View. 3 Bedroom,
2lh baths. new appliances. Desira·
ble end unit with 2 patios. $139.000.
Call 64().6161.
RANCHO MESA
POOL HOME
Outstanding 4 bedroom home.
Great Costa Mesa location near
South Coast Plaza. Room for boat
or trailer storage. nus new listing
is in move.in condition. Hurry!
$69,900. Call 640.6161.
LA CUESTA WJ?OOL
Rare, single story Valencia model
with dramatic enclosed courtyard
entry. Island kitchen with breakf ut
area. 4 Bedrooms, dining+ family
room. Master bath has door to rear.
Low maintenance yard with
beautiful ANTHONY POOL $89,500.
Call 962-4454.
I NEWPORT WEST
3 Bedroom Newport West home that
ls truly a short walk to State Beach.
Atrium entry way with Koi fl.sh
pond. Massive Palos Verde. stone
fireplace in living room. Family
room overlooking rear patio. Eat·
log area in kitchen + separate
laundry room. NEW LISTING .
S72.SOO. Call now, 962·~.
Getttral t 002 GeMf"GI I 002 NORTH COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
'
macnab/lrvtna
. realty .
CUSTOM ULT
4 Bedroom, family room home on
one of Newport's rlnest streets.
Built.in, everywhere! Outstanding
master bedroom w /adjoining study.
4 Fireplates. $297 ,500. Polly
Johnston 642·8235 (Q71 )
642-1235
~1 OowrOrlw
-~·
New listing ln a nice neighborhood.
Has 3 bedrma and a game room.
Blg p·auo area and huge l)ack law.
"Early Bird" will take this at
$59,950. Call ~41
COOL OCEAN BREEZES
Near enouab to beach to enjoy the
salt air and close enou1b to
shopping, churches • schools to enjoy a bealtb.J walk, Walnut
panelln1 and country kitchen
lxudes warmth and pleasure. Call
QOW ror ftutber detaUs on th1a 3 bednn home. Priced at $.n,500. Call
5t6-4.14l.
-,.
I ............ ......................
...... 100
Hous,,., ,. vr ~ Hom.. For~ l Woui~• I >r 5'.:e Wedne9da . November 24. 11178 iC DAILY PILOl •••••••• ,. •• ............ ................... .... ....... ••• • •• •••••• ••••• ~~;;.;;.;;~~~;....;:~;;.;.:...;.;:,;...;.__....:,._..,__.;;,;.:;;;;.;_;...;.;;---..-iii! ... ~!.~.~•••nu~~!~ ...... , ~':t.!!~.!~. ~.~~u•n•uuu~~~ ............. ~~~~ ~.~~uen•• ~.~~u•u•• ~.~~-•.§u •
...................... '~-:~;:;~~~:--t••····· .............. . ~.~ ....... !~.~J--... -.11m----·1 ~~~~~ ... !~~~ ~:~~~ ... !~.~~ ..... ~~ ..... !L~~
IAYFROMT' F'\otl Mesa verdt-2 acy. 1 Ral~'S £rill
br. 2\11 ba Open HOU4e 'The Pot ot 1old la Ll'lla 4 THWA.RCHIA
fJ --~-MIT
PICICRS
waCOMI!
bul we warn )'Oil, il wll
be t ough flndln
11Jl)1hina WtOf\~ wilh th taateru II)' decor a l (l
home In convcr1ie"
Oreen b r ook . Th r e bedi-ooma. two baths
hUIRe country kitchen
family room. 1cclude
overs ized jacuu i wll
86ak away your ache
and pain.$. JUJt reduc
lof18.~.
Cal 640.9900
·*'-'~&I.I.~
Valley Realty
COMDO ~at/Sun 1·4 or ll ppl. beclnn with formal din· ()p.,n Hov .e Sor Sun _si_:mo ________ , Ult! wld separate eatm&
310 F'£1\NANOO 4 SR +ram rm. area in kitchen Great
UNIT 310 under '60.000. No CM ramHy rm. •~P laundry.
SlAS.000 Aat.546-3168 & shake roor An un __ O_WN_E_R_s_·1_s_-8_7_53_-J ----------1 tanushed 2 yri otd with
BY OWN ER choice R BRAND HEW ~or w;ann brick and SPEAllNG Of APPOINTMDRS
Ocuntronl P roperty 81.lilder'a own custom eartha.ones.only ~.000. .you•n really be excited to see the
TO LOVE ME OR NOTTO LOVE ME,
~T IS THE QUESrION. But how
will you ever know unJess we meet?
CaJ.1673-7300 & my agent will arrange
a date.
P,S. l'rn on beautiful Lldo Isle & my
ad mlrers s ay 1·m a r ea l doll
IYO~H
4Br. 2i;ba. ocn vu,
& paUo. Ire lot. SlSO
Ph .499-2Sl3 Prine o
....
11do
btwnC &DSt.a.873·3961 home. 3sa. rum rm. appointments in this stunning 3
COf'OftCI I cent-air. lop loc. walk 'I< Owner Must Sell "-d..-b th . self cont 'd, full b~lh. .. Mar 02 dist U> ull !iChl:l, OCC & ~ uvm 2~ a Rancho San Joaquln LIDO REAL TY , .. w. r~finl"h-" inside. Set
bouse ... so. call now, okay!
••••••••••••••••••••••• &wim rlub.C-Ome and see WlllseU VA·FHAorrou Townhome . Enjoy the "Forever 1-7 -vt-•a..a..... .... I. 67.,7300 ...... "" """ ,Riv •T£ or c:-.11 (Qr more ln!o. m11)' 1tli&ume Ol'l1l ng Vi .. ., ... -. " , UI> with awning. $1860. "" s10.ooo NE WPO RT F HA lo11n . a Bedrm. ew, customized window shutters, 1_648_~_17_3 ____ _
IEACH ACCESS IRVINE REALTORS. s hake roof. fireplace. oak floors. and rnany more elegant C-rclal
4 IR Reduced 838-8S86 prime area. J ust $65,900. upgrades. This is a celebrity owner, so LCllJllllCI Hllh f 050 ,,.,.,_. .. och I 069 Property 1600
to 5109,SOO. .RDblrts you mast ca ll ror an appointment -to ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• The pnce Is right. th N...,. lock lay soo the appointm ents. $106.950. · t•"'UTY WITH RONT loc:atton ls g reat, t h 3 Br. den. 2.,.. Ba. 2 sty -IY O~ER BA Yf •
t bdr . l lh Condo . Ga& Cplr , Realty A.VIEW a.... (){fl b"'ldl -ms r m IS g1an ' r ..., CALL NOW 752 7315 This lovely L""Un" Jl1't•v ~h'Olll 18 Collins Isle ce ... P &. IP!K· yard is pool sized. th beautlruJ Woodstream by ~ ... · 11 -"o " u Tr u d c 0 r r in a n c e . tacular view, luxurfOU:<.
I a nd 1 s f ee. th o wner. $60.000 . P h *41 llMCll ll'tC. DONALD M . Bl RD 3BR hm is loc on quiet 1308.000. 613·7770 or executive offices. Al\ xlnt bathrooms are two an 631-0485 lnU.C-'-' cul-dt ·sac w/greal view .SSS-8723 inve$tmentat $630.000.
the fireplaces are too ~~~~~~~~~ ····~-A~s~~~~ia~t~e:.;s~.~R~e~a~lt~o~r~S~_J of valley & rolling hills. A ---------1 llLL GRU .. OY • Mesa Verde, 3 Br 2 Ba. -m o s t d e s i r a b I E' W
644-7211 new decor. Secluded bk -------~ ----------------nghborhood. lrplr & cov· SEA VIE R~ 675.6161 ~.~1f · $6.S.900. Ownr. S7110 DOWN ~~ ••• ; •••••••• !~~~ ~ ............ ~~-~~ ~ ~~~a~~ s~~ ~~ = rB~~~~C'J.r::~ o.lextt/ /JD.NIGEL
OAIL(Y &
ASSOCIATES ---------1 2 Bedrm . Townhome ---------c ofrs. Call now for appl. 67~1519. days 642·7101 <Wha* 1800 -----_ Lowut Priced with new cr pts. n ew THITBUlACE BEAUTIFUL !J68.3301. Princ1pals onJy. ••• .. ••••••••••••••••••
OWNER MUST SELL $46,900 dr1tpes, new paint. Take Redlc•dTo Self! JUST IO NEW UNITS
t BR r I over FHA loan & owner .,...,,_ km Attractive Condo. All up Principals only · a mi y. 2''RA. VetsWek<HM will help finance $331. •U<t'O'Nnersare anxious. ded 2 b 2 b 140 M a gn o l ia a t CP~m eo .. '!ighhl a n ds . New listing -Owner per mo includes all. so drop everything an BEAUTIFUL ~!stctfrr stio"p·g. P~c:CS FULierton St .. C M. All
n vate u.:ac a ccess. moll.,ated' Lowes t S36.900F\illprice. call for an appoinlmen This 4 bedroom. 2 balb for qwck sale $64,500. bachelor units. Monthly Clean & ~harp. Price re· pnccd home av;:ulablc 531·5800 to see lhis dr amati single story Plan 3 In .-.Iha-.. Pvt. Ply 642·38« 111come $1940. a nd ex
49J..-.CrffkDr. duced for quick sale. today In Cost a Mesa lntematlonalReal "Cardirt'' model hom Deerfield Park Homes ~·Iii.. -----------, penses $336 . Price
... ln Corona del Mar. Agt.67~5511 Three s pacious bdrms Estot.Nttwortc with 2 outstanding has upgraded carpel & ~====~=.=~:_I Finest Newport Heigh $295,000. 25% Down.
Beautifully appointe lnine Terrace pl us JS'x20' ram rm, with bedrooms. 2 baths, we drapes thruout, profess-Bf:aut J Br. cntrl air. huge area. Rustle home 2 BR. Owner will carry paper.
two.story home in th Super 3 br w/fam rm on I a r g e Ya r d a nd ~~~~~~~~~ bard. edenclosed p&alld·o. up ionally la ndscaped gar, trplc. sphoorklrs. close +den. wood burning Cpl, Do not disturb tenants.
new private comm unit extra lge lot w /over sized workshop. Nol a condo IY OWNER rr~s r::::eror a rfrr._~ sprinklers front & rear: lo shops. SC Is. frwy. space for r ec reallon CaJI 64().2455. •
o( Jas mine Creek. Thre pool. Com pl redone. new Investors. assume 8"'1'1~ 4 blocks lo beach. New Close to community pool e I e c. ga r a ge doo r 547-4425 anytime. vehicle. $87,000 ~
bedrooms, 2VJ baths, carpets lhruoul i\11 for Vi\loan.Totalpymtson· u l tra, pl us h . rully &park.Rurry!Reduced openers &tr~sh compac·LocJllMMICJllM 1052 PAULMARTIN [(j)IDiiiil~
ramily room,hbrary und only S t l !l.500 Call Jy $284/mo Please land.'icaped. 1800 sq. rt. losellalS69,900 tor. Association dues on· ....................... Real Estate 644·7387 Dt-
master suite includes a 540·99?? hurry, call today. Glass &cedar wood patio ly $17 .50 per month. h loy T S,..Vr. S5.000 . --·---rt t. 'tti ti f 1 2 bd .. lncludes the useors com· Monarc en. "' 5 P vae s1 ng roomw1 Call'.540·3666 home-rp c· rm-uen· 3257 Se Se 0 th. I VIEW 00 fireplace. Pool, jacuzzi lge master suite+++ munity pools. jacuuis. l ven . as . n is a r ge lncotm ,roperty 2 0
clubhouse & TEN NJ storage.dbl garage. A cable TV &trash pick up 4BR. 3BA. quahty-bu1lt home. + receive $2500 ...................... . cg~~RoE·AL~~T2Eo.~asP<>n1 ltiV#i/MJI ~o·~~~~~~~~~i~~~yl~~~~~~~~~I I ~~t~6gR1~1E1:L~ny ~n~{~:d~~~:~~~~~t '?,t~~!~~
I -·· -••" ••• _,,. Kings Rd. Jim Boe, Rllr. $400.000. Sl00,000 Down 2S15 E Cst Hwy. CdM 2 BR & GAR APT 2 Cov. We're here to help! 511 lSlhSt. Hunt. Beach. Classiried ads sell bi& ---------1 546-8640 Owner Carry Balaoce
675-5511 patios. nicely rum, So. of • 714/536-825667~9337 items: smaJI items or OCEANVIEW Agent6'73·454S 1
• llwy. Only ~07.500. Agt. DanaPotnt 1026 forappl a ny 1lem. J us l call · Pr ivate a rea. Gua rd Newpor+-$17,500
.._.,,....__.. ...... ...__,,..._....,.. 675-3222 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWNER DESPER/\ TE . 642•5678· RANCH REA1.TY gate. JBR. dinin g rm, 3 IR + IOHUS Hi 1111__. a. • •
OceClft View Duplex $2400 savings 4 bedrm 55 I ·2000 2"'1BA. 3-car gar. 2500 sq. Quiet hillside cul de sac. ~ +°" ac 11/1 Acs lock lay .... _ o Pt M · bout. · 1' r th ' WOOOIRIDGE r t N e a n e w Poro· co entry. H .... e llv. COMMERCIAL La,...,e ranch style home Costo MHo I 024 ~ ana • onno a one m1 e rom e . d 1 . r . _
Ov.:"rt-... ing Upper Bay ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Years new 2 Bed· beach. GI and all terms. War mington Mo e . B Clldorn Interior Landscaped beauU/ully, rm. . b rl c t r r p I c Six sharp units. Near tbe
"""""' r ms den 13.4 baths. $67 .500 T a rbe ll . lownhome.Xlntlocation. SU d B & lotsofgoodies.$197.500 Spacious real country beach. Good parkin g. and surround1nRS 4 4 BR. 21" B:i. n ew. rireplace>. s pacious. Realtors. hurry, call ~~Ste~ upg(2ra
13
del!,,,n_
1
o
068
w. persharp con ·4 r J ayW.Yeats Realtors k1tchen ·breakfast area. Upgraded surroundings. Bedrms, dining rm. s pj>c io us s pl it -level $112500 962.5566 ""'" ve, _.. den. 3 ruu baths, deluxe 499-2237 Magnificent BONUS . Fantastically priced, a
rarruty kitchen. lge den Wffrplc. ram·rm. & dbl . or (714lSS2-4090 kitch, 2600 +sq n. Many ---------FAMILY ROOM , over must see today.
with wet bar and dark s;ar.Nr.So.Coast Plaza. WoridWideBrokers PUILICNOTICE olher upg ra des. low ffXlrSAVE 700 sq. rt. -r a ised WahrfrontProp •• lnc..
room. Beautiful pool set m.ooo. i\gt. Sam Crane Bolboo 673-4545 G TURTLEROCK m.Unt yard Located In 3Bdrm, 2 bath. air-cond. h ea rth r r p t c too ~ l213J592·28 I 3
in expansive gardens ~-4l?Oor540-0608 OVemmenf Plan8.3Br,2ba desired Uni v. Park, Comer lot. lmtned OC· Cathedr al beamed ce1I·
e nt e r tain i n g ce n B b ths Bk Owner transf erret.I Auumableloolls Frplc,Palio&Alnum $93.750 b y a ppt . cup. Ing. 12 h . we t barl~~~~~~~~~
t.cr /guesthouse SSSOOOO J&ri;F.,P'.2 a .Nr ap er Paceseller 4 BR.2•~B/\. Ava1·1able toanyone! No -1 cJ>nOwoer Ownr//\gt.552·3176 •10"4DIEALTY• w/r efrl". Seclud ed NEW CUSTOM 4-P~x · · · a1rv1ew S62.000 nn nearly new. upl(raded -_,., " PETE BARRETT only. poolsiz.elot.$86.000 new loan costs. Low in· 8J3.398Sor 67S-3017 RARE UNIV. PARK GalleryofHomes master. Tiered redwood Many extras. $88, .
-REA• ·rv-Coastline Rily 631-1846 tcrest av:ula ble. take C Chancellor 4 BR. 2'Ai Ba. l7 I 4) 831-9411 decked lanai patio. 2200 Agt.. Geo. Frey. 635-28M "' 4 over payments . 3 & 4 J.~. Peters Plan · w t fam·rm. din-r m. many sq. Cl. Plus much
642-5200 2 STORY 4br. 2ba. bonus ANCHORAGE bed rm homes. hurry, air. othe r up grades, upgrades. on cul·dc sac. LAGUNA MIGUEL more! Call fast. 752-1700. ln••stors Dream
rm. Oy owner S7:1.500. 1 .... -STM__., call 962·5566. S98.000. 551-4525 Appl. only 552.9795 01111111-i ·"' 111N 11111 r;oc1 • 8 beaut. units, Costa ~.....,_,,...__...~....,,.~ 646 2700 "u; """'~ ---New crpts. New drps, [ I Mesa. Closed gar ages, __ . _______ , 171 .. 1 .. 9 ... 7711 5 Bedroom & family rm T ~ROCK GLE N Newly pa inted . New •·11~~iilj~ a.lboaPenmsulo 100 MESA VE RDE :I Br 2 Ba. .. .. -fAA118 I $89,000 or lease opt ion. TUR L r. . O/W &d' I T < ' lndry, nr. mkls. Lot 63.5
...................... bltns. nr schools . By • IUlli"'-Prime location, Uni v Plan 11· 4 BR. & /\ln~m for ~our15ra~1i;"f.~1 ~~g . 'A ;y j "270. st. to st. & rm. lo
llST'H Street Duplex. 3BR Own e r P r inc o n Iv Fowttotn Volt.y Park. Pvt com munity. on lge lot. ~v:ul. Dec. 76· prec1ate. 48R 28/\, frplc. -=i::s -build. Nr. Nwpt. Deb. Lo
2BA , b lock t o bc h NM.1 .• 71 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• "#lhlCollfornio" t e n nis, s wimmtn (!. $129.S00.552·079_5 ___ privateyard,many fruit dwn. ownr. fin. Mary ,..._ $130000 """' "'-"" "'" " TRYTHfSON Rltc hie, N e w E ra vwuer. · ·'""'4""" -DUTCH HEAVEN 552"8587or7S2·9381 Woodb r id ge. s pe nd trees a nd view of the 1r.•CHHOME •--. ~.. ·----Y• ••FOR LUXURY•• Ch bills.Seller is motivated '""' R ealto rs, 525·5891, LY U U URL!WlV-POOL-J ACUZZI-2 WOODIRIDGE B~asJ~r i~at~u~::: 900 This 3 bdr m .. 2 bath 772-5630
A CONvENitNT llHOPPINC ANO
5'WINC QJtOf 'Oft lHE
GM.ONlHI CO
Culotte Outfit Fot Girl or Boy!
Stncl youngsters out warm ty clrt"«d Ofl brisk moming11
OUICK • CROCHET s1~ter
brotller 1ac~ets are 1rtat tor
190rtS. $Chool, e<>iftg Olates.
Crochet of Germantown yam Pauern 7127 Ctuld's Sau 4.
6. 8 10 incl11ded.
Cl0SC1'Ull Of rASHION I~ $1.00 for each P•tt~m. Adel
OM patttm' Smooth culOttes 35r 11ch P1ltern for first-<:~ click With a slftveless 1Klltl. •1""'H •nd trandlin&. Sud t ·
llOllC~ltntlY tied shirl Nice Brooks
Printtd Ptlltm 9211 H•ll Needlecralt Oepl 105 Sires 10•11. 12•.,. 14' 2 16' z o11ty P 1101
18' i Sire 14' 2 !bust 37' eo11 163 Old Chel~ea Sta..
1ltewe1tss ftclel ctilollts 3' • New Yo;k NY 10011 Prinl yds. S4": ~Ht 211 yd~ 4s· · Name Address. Zip
Send SIOO lot tlCh oattern. Patte<n Number. •de! 35<' tor eteh pattern for MORt tNn ever befort! 200
t1r1l ·tlm ~;rrna I, ~ndl•nt;. deslp a plus 3 free ptlnttd I~
S.H t•: Sidi fC£W 1976 NtEDUCIWT
Marian M1r11n CATAl.OCI Has mrythinc. ?Sc.
Panern ~t. •42 Cl9dlet ..itti s.um 11.0000 Daily Piiot ertellft • wwm&t -t. 232 WHI 18th SI .. Ne¥f Mitty Fifty lllllb 1.00 York, NY I 00 11 . Ptinl .,,,,. Croclttl UIO
NAMe. AOOAES S . ZIP. Se• • b it l otk 1.2$
S I Z E a n d S T Y L 6 llHdlepelnt lotk 11.00 NUMBiR flewtf Crocltet Itek . 1.0f · 11a1..,111 Crechet loo\ _ 1.00
h J'I -.. llew tf ftt I h11ta11t Cndllt .... -1 .. 111tttn fTetf S1tC _. ftr lllitallt Mxrt11t IM -Sl .00 .. .. raMtttet l'lttlf1I 1uta11t w.y .... _j u' ~~...,. ...... ..., Ctlt•ftt. llf't.... 1.10 :::. ~ r ,.. ..... _..._ ~,... ,1 •. 1.eo
S. ;-we....... i1J!J 12 Prta Afl\llt ,12 -SOI s. + _ c..J6. t.IO ,... •f 11 1111t1 11 __ soc .... ~ ..... ...... '"" .... 12 _50, ~ ~ = ,',-!! , ....... , , •• ,, -·· ._. ---·-.... 11 llttr• _.,
s q . fl rl erorate d t AMERICAN Throw a stone & hit the TasteCully decorated & $79. . ~~~·g~~thh~~~:~C:. _E_A_S_T_S ___ l_D_E_C_M_
perfection. cathedra Walk to the beach or lake from this beauttful upgraded. Cul·de·sac. Nr <::::::::~~ g rade d with a ne w TRI PLEX. $82 ,000
ceilin&s. custom drapes Westminster Mall from location. It 's in Wood· I a ke & park. Mu s t ~c:::::: 489-4684 ldlcben, enlarged mstr. SJS.8472 or847·2959 gas BBQ. auto. gar dr bridge Place. just across ·n .. 7 ~ Pri c ---------Un believa ble. S98,500. llus quality constructed 3 theslreet from the beach sacn ce. •• . . n · 1---------bdrm .. new paint & new
Ph: 962-7751 bedroom. 2 bath home in club. Large 3 bdrm .11iiiionliiiiiyiii. 552iiiiii·iii0526iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MOMA.RCH IA y carpeting. Living area
INT'L R.E. NETWORK a prime location.! A lov· h formal d ·n 1·ng 11 vlEW overloolc.s lge. patio wrtb Take your choice, singles ely p ati o. r e n ced ome: 1 • UMTOUCHAILE • greenhouse. Located l ·
4-PLEXES I
OPEN HOUSE backyard.PLUS "Oougb fa m ily r m .• a t rium . Kids special near beach, . or pairs. All for salflin dramatic vaulted ce1l· Al SS2.9SO this highly UP· l · b t blk. to ocean in a pnvate Costa Mesa South COnt S t. S 1 S Boy" pool. carpetin(t. ded ·r nh I en n I s. u s s o P . community w /pool. . r -• un • ings.Actsoon&you can gra ow ouse s a Ou t s ta n din g r i ve Jnvestment.64~1103 11079 drapes& fireplace make "hoose car..,.l color• steal! The lowest priced .....,.,~ th ho $85.000 ---------this a home for a proud ... ,....., .. i I ........ vum. six ba me NEWPORT IEACH
Flower Ave. owner! $62,500. S88.900 ~'!:~sei~w~~; ::i~f~efl m Monarch Bay. Large REA.Ln 675·1642 7 GREAT
JU ST I N T I ME ro r ~ qwck! Hurry up and get g o u rm e l kit c h e n ---------1 NEW UNITS . . w/fireplace. $218,000 West c 11· l r . ff a r bo r
ENTERTAINlNG in this • u Highlands. beautiful 4 Eost.w. Costa Mffo H 0 L I D A Y Im 'IQ ail~ TSSH2·[700·0·· . ·.· .. _ Rinelailnteors! c833all.3380Red. Carpet
lovcl) l wo :.tory home Place BR. 2 BA, famlly rm. UP· Deluxe new units, still
with 4BR. 3BA and just Pt ap•rtiea VILLA.CE. . ... · .. 96·7222 1~ I 08~6 graded laundry rm, new u·me to choose colors an' d 21'2 years old /\ formal · 7S2-1t20 ri: .. ~ • ~ custom kitchen. Approx.
dining room, J wet bars. 1400 OUAllst MIW 11"'" REALTORS Doft't Do It!! 1---------2.000 sq. ft. Prine. only. options.
open st:un:ase. £ireplm·e ---------i Oon'l come see this 2 MhsioftVl•jo 1067 Call 542·7727 for a ppt .
l'LUS a BONUS ro<>m. -Wl .... Dl.._.G bed.rm plus den charm· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Agt . I& .Quail ~ make living and enter· " " ing house on the green· -"---------1
taimng a plea:,ure o n ~ Staircase belt in Turtlerock for on· If I HAD A Place · beaullfully lundst•aped -ly $82.500-unlcss you a.-.....tlea . .
E leads lo private upstairs · b ye .-. -r. 5" 1920 pool s1ie yard. Don't Real-5tate are a serious u r -HAMMER 7 •• wait TIS THE SEASON quart.ens In this all lUX· because you'll love it! l400QUA1Ul.NIW~TIMD4
NOW' by NV!lAY ury Townhome. jus t list· Don't say we didn't warn l could a dd 2 lovely
.... Quail~ liiilPlaat
Pr ties ~-1920 1400 OUAIL Sf NIWP'Ollf HACH
ONL y $46,000 I I
End unit 3 8r, <'Ondo
huge bonus rm. 2 ca
gar. 963-8377 Bkr
~~~ -----~
SEASONED
TOTA.STE
New drapes, new kitchen
rtoor. freshly paint~d.
new dishwasher. Qu.am
5 bdr h o m e w i th
cherisbable appeal. D R.
& Bonus rm! Gas trplc.
mL.R. 968"'456 .
i luAlngtoa leach I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WA.UC RIGHT IN
Sit nght down In this 2·
story POOL home. 4
Bdrm, 21ft baths, canvas
wall covering, dramatic:
ram rm. with stone frplc.
& bookshelves. Water
sort G arage d oo r
opener. Pretty as a Pie·
ture ! 968-4456
"HIDOEM
HACIENDA."
Large 4 bdrm. For ex·
ecut1 ve buyer. Private
courtyard. Spa nis h
quar r y e ntry. 2
nreplaces. rust carpets.
Sep. d en wtwel bar .
Formal D.R. Boal gate.
low maintenance yard
with rreeCor m POOL!
968-4456 ENO 4th. 9UA.RTY!
B"ying lime! What could
be better than this de·
llghtfully designed uni·
tiue 3 bd rm. home.
Wallpa~r. ctieery in·
terlor for Uvely couple.
Near beach. Won't laal at
thls low price! 968-4456
HERE'S LOOKIN'
e d! Bra nd n e w ! 4 you! b e droom s to thi s
Bedrms. 3 baths. full R~ c.,.t marvelous starter bomE
guestdlning room,fami· RHlton833·ll80 on a huge lot with
I Y rm • c u d d I e u P beautifully landscaped HOUSI of GLASS
fireplace. Air cond. com ·~~~~~~~~~ )'&rd. This s hake root Oft C....._. Wt M.I. fort! BKR.call540-1720. .. h 10 .. 8 .th r· I . . ~IJlllllG oc .. w1 irep ace is in a Spacious 48R. 3BA, den
TW04-PLEXES
(4 ) 3BR. (41 2BR. Prlrlle
res'I area, C.M. $130,000
Ea . 1 5 % dow n .
W /tr ade ... + 3-0N·a·lql,
(1) 3BR hse w/fplc + (2l
2BR duplex. $85,000. UY'°"
dn. Ownr I Agt.. 540-0555
-l ••••.••EX••C••H••:::;_•E••.•••• QUALITY LOCATION & ga m m. Gourmet.
I 11~1-"'"w and close lo shopping kilcb b rkfsl nook & DSll If you bave Income pro· $62,SOO. Corm~I d in rm AGT. One rrullion slx hundred
l h e . 673-7601 thousand;56Deluxei "#1 lftCalfonMa" p e r Y a n y w e r 1.n l£n::~I 2ba·21,.\ba units wit . ---------1 Orange County, we will LAICEFORIST trade for 3 3 Bdrm.. • 2Story,4br&den.2 batlu Prime location. I #
Lake Front. 4 Br. 3 ba, bath wood/glass ocean Place & ru 11 wine cellar. t r a d e. O wn r I A • •
frplc:, bra nd new-view home In Laguna Proplll"tiea $136.500.642,4096. 540-0555 ... Be ch. $125 ooo 751•1920 . ~a~a;~ ~nlJ :S!·O~O. HORIMS REAL TY MOO GUA1ut. NI " LIDO ISLE · By owner Sharp 4·Plex + Bach apt,
Own /A t 540.0555 057 Ne.,n .. ach I 069 ~~:~~61~rsi~g. patio. ~~ 0~t~4~.f:. I~~
er gen · · * 494-8 * •••••••••••••••••• •••• • only /\gt 644·5769 T84MISPLAYERS SanCIHltftte 1076 . . . TA.KE NOTICE ._ _______ ... FEED THE DUCKS ••••••••••••••••••••••• CM Tri-pt ex w /cash Oow.
MYSTIC HILLS .. from th e I g e · JUSTPERF E""' tg ·• br own"r's un1't + Super sha rp 4 bedroom 3BR. 3BA. sauna, view· waterfront deck : 2·sty, S *** "' · ". · " Pl an 2-W in "The Vlew·Vlew! Greal e'xec. BR. & playrm.; 3 ba. I mm ar~IA l e b ea u t y 2·2br s.$98,500.Propert>
Colony" includes lighted home $159,900. 1\gent. Xlnt cond. Walk lo pools, w/3BR .. BA, charming House.642-38509am-9p~
tennis courts, cort1muni· 673-7f!Ol lennls &cx:eun.$96.SOO lr~lc .. s ha~e r oof, 2 LohforScff 2%90
t y p·oo l , p ar k &~~~~~~~~~ CA.YWOODllALTY pnvwate pat1os.iont the ••••••••••••••••••• •• clubhouse. Associationr: 548 1290 pre est corner n own.
dues only $18 per mo. TOP... * . * ONLY $72,SOO.
Won'l last long! So act ... OF T HE WORLD. SPYGLASS HILL Vu 3 * BERTJIA HENRV *
now ! Choice location on park· Br 2 Ba last bra'nd new REALTORS 492-4121
juat perfect for the s mall --------Pnc' • 1.,..&..~-...a family who de11lre a cozy EASTILUFF 5~
· 3 bdrm .. 2 bath home In BV OWNER. 5 Br, 3 ba 200 Deg, ocean view,
lmmaculato condition! Lusk home. $1<19,950 . 1_M_u_st_se_11_14_98:_t_936 __ _ I like lot with privacy . housebyowner.64().1751 21SDel Mar.San Clem.
Pl'loed for prompt sale at Principals Only. Open BY OWNER LOTS. COSTA Mis.A
185.000 Sat/Sun 1·5pm. or by 2 Br house '62.~. Walk Two vacant, l·wlth ~r C~TTJ..~A ! IAMCH RIAL TY
From your seclusive ISl·ZOOO
appt. 22A2 Aralia St , NB to "Riviera Bch". Ocean houae, next door Is ne'11(er -~IPt!l 645.2999or844·1653. v\ew. PrimelocaUon. Gd cons truction. Ca n be ~tlW si fncd yard, covered bought as a packalO.or
•etM eoo JUST LISTED patio. Very d ean inside. separate. Call for Ofite
Beaut. decorated 6 BR. 3 lmma~ rood. Open house I nform a l Ion · A&\.
IY OWNB BA home. New kitchen. Sal/Sun 149 W. Ave.1_ff7_~_7_eo_1 ____ .......,,.,,,.
REt>UCED $2$00 Spec · llx&O RV p~r k i n &. Comelll. Sa.n Clem . Of R·2,6Unitlotwllb clty':I>
master bedroom balcony ---------
or living room ~tlo, tht TRULY
extraordinary view ol Capff v~-1.his 3 bedroom, 21At bath ... .,., .. ~
condo wlll delight the D e a n e H o m • . 3
connoisseur ol quality Bedrooms and ramlly IY OWHER Uvlng! Formal dining, room , 2 baths; on a cor·
Landmark 4 BR & Cam LA R G E bed r oo m . oer lot. Near community
r m . boat gate . Call fireplace. carpeting, park, pool and Ughled
96MQ19. $'72,950 PLUS po o I »r e 1 / · tennis courts. Tb ls de·
WNER MOTIVATED: jacun l .. come see ror UghUul home ls ln top
tacular ocean & coastal Hu r r Y • c an t I a al. call 4.98:.'°°5 prov al. Weat.aido. 29~
views. 3 BR. 2 Ba. 2 Jh SL29,500. Call &4S-'722l. s.ta AM I OSO Down. Owner wUI carl'1
new. Submlt all often , ,.,.~ • ••••••••••••••••••••••• new first. $74,500. Call
"F\issy and finicky". 4 ,YOW'lealf. S7UOO. condition Price 199.500
culdeuc street On l)' 9ii 8'drm, quiet. .. pri'lle II!' ~
S6o,soo J ual lls lt:d, ....._ltrtltPll Taroell, n~1Jlor1, won't .--• -P'rn•t920
la.slfong, call 842-8854. 1400 0UAt n HI MACH
WNER L£AVES: Ju1t
$48,9llO, close to beach.
tmvcnlcnt lo freeways.
lmmaculate 3-bcdrm.
Villa Condo, trn'lluo en
try , bu1c k itchen ,
T1rbtll. Rcallon. hurry,
call 842-8854.
PAlTYHOUSI
One year new pool 6
JKllu:l. 4 Bedrooms, 2 balh.1, at ramny room •
Ubell l l !.. 1.
WESTStOE Rf l\l. 1
INC ll :~ :'l,'1 •
lf513 CAMM~IMtl
OPtiNDAILY
IA.M.TOtP.JI.
we're anxious to aell. ~ uulg ~a.SS '
........ °' -m111t121 ~~~;~ (~1111
v!Olan
Rf Al [STATE
'' 0 '••'I• It 'f' I' ~·
, J I, ~ ''" f" ,,~
W"fclff R•dty 3 bedroom . carpet ed - -townbom e wlth early
COME SH autumn Interior decor 4' J &al~ In Nwpl Shores. dellahUu.I sunnt tltchtn.
3 br & den. 2 ba. Under Double garage & paUo.
ut-~ Bl market at 178.900. Call ~.000.
1n111U ower Prope11,yHouse&u·38SO r antt.atlc vu, ltaJlan tilt
tuba & •boweri. auined HAUOR VIEW KMOLL ~-·Qual~I ' alu~. hu1e country New ~ condo. 3 BR. Plan
kitchen, fplc. 4 bdrma 2~ 1\8. lam·rm, dln·rm. PrlWll ties SW .GOO make crpt selection. -r;;i.1920
•--------.. Move ln Feb. 7~..o392 .MOO OUA11.n NI t NACM
~ 1 ..
. .
I
Cf DAILYPILOT Wedo ~ 1978 ....... u.fwn'+ d ....... u ........ d Ho.nu~ _...._ __ ..._.;....;.;;;.;;;..;-----~=.:;:eeday=::.c.:.· .;.;Hol;;::.:..:.,..:;m:.;,;ber;:.:..:.;.:·~;.;;:;· ....... •••••••··~··• •••••• •••• .............. •••••• ••••••• ......... . 0.....a .. u..... "-"U•fw Jeti1d .._..Uefwill t • U • ... .._. 3240....... • 3244 ....,_t•ec• 32•t 1~• ... lfl--....................... .......•.•..•..••..••.• ....................... .........•••.•.•••..•.. ·············••········ ·•·····•·••······••••·· ......••.••...........
lhuat• D....n. C.-.. M.r 322 Cod. Mne l2Z4 J Br w/f1m rm '°" 4 br, B£Atrr. Exec i,~ home. 3Br 84c.k S.y ana. 2.,; ........ ••It l74 : I....+ 240 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••--•••••••••••••••••• wtw i hll(, drps; bltna, 2 st)', 4 Br, 2~ \J&, Fa m Ba, fam-rm, lrplcs. S4~. ••••••••••••••.,•••••••
-·••••••••••••••••••• S.oflf , Jb Coll~eParlr,3BR+du, fncdyd,Sblbtc.be•cb. Rm, wetba r . LC)vcly Avatl Dec l at . (213) STUDIO
Bir Bear lot for salt1 *2ba fp;>.;.,;;c:0.• pe~' dbl p r. Xlot cond. ~. Nodoas s:m mo. lmmec:t cpt.s, ~. ll\ntout. 1'\!lly t6SoSMS. -----ssr -~ .. 100'x2S' lo devclopln • ' • • mo.SSM.351 occp 'y. Employment lodscpd mcl Jfallo. $S75 ......._ "'"
area. $1 ~O. 845·773 ref., gar., $49$. 6'1S.a>O verification roq\lestcd. 1ntnr lncl. 640-0074 --------111 F\111 Kitcben Is
eves ' · BR dln & r 2 •-.........&../Mof.. S.0808 WATltt ... OHT Unena •UtJUUe. • :J • am. rms. _.Ji ~A-NoF'eelo leuee Llt>O lSLE, 2 " a den. MlL'ETOOCEAN o.tof~ !'!&~o~ac~.T~nd. NRS OPP G 3 BR, 2 ba, g ar. dr. 3 Br. 2 ba , format din. over u oo 1q . rt. of R--.IS.ltn Properly ....,., o. '-'t·"" '1lir/2ba/$39S/mo. i.t. opener , cpl/drp. Child rm. Quiet 1treet; tennis ULTIMATE Uvlna. P'ull ""'M.t..
....................... z Bedrm, 11,; balb COM + ~'A,s:,:~;;'· OK, U75 mo. 96a·3170 cts. & pool avall. Clean &i security, underground 727 Yoridown l1Ycl.
ATTIHTfOH c har m er with occap readyfor youtomove lh park.inj&dockaaeavall view. Choice Joe, close to Fr. Qtr 13br,2ba./Condo SZ85. 2 Br. gar.:. Jcld.s, &;.~ts. Cor6 mos. $39S Mo. 1)15 Per mo. yoars leue. Beach Blvd at Yorkt.ow&l IHYIESTOIS 2nd ... h ,. d $350/lal /last/1ec/cl,n ' 1ngt1 OK . r ce. &f.ai'n 2BR,1 both $3SO .. '( & ·-L 53 .. 04 I I J l I' t·" 10 l h ""'3C ' c:p...,, rps, C~54f-1Lrr 0~•-• .,~"5370 ..,.. us .s .,.. sores op bltns plusrefrig.Adull.11 -_,. .nc11 ..... a.__,. 3BR.2ba,ram rm$435 1........ 475-lOOO ~~ ~· ::~o~~~ty:g only. $395 /mo. Call Brand new 4 Br+ FR. + 3 BR, 2~ ba, FR $450 .... , •aca. 3741
ot b~sy ~tense~tion, op S7S.2:3t1, Sharon. 3 + den. 2 ba, dbl gar, DR +z~ Bu, ~-3 Br ~ ::: ~ t!:: ~~ ~ J Br z Ba dplx, fplc, 1 blk ch. Neu be.ch. Utll
prox 1 '14 Acre & hghte Beaut nu hme Jasmine fenced • puUo w /brick ZIA Ba, $3'7S. 3 Br 2 Ba, 3 BR,2~ ba, ram: rm.. lo bch new cpta, drps pd. $195-$225 mo: $8$ wk.
asphalt /oarklng lot.. Fo Creek, 3 br, fa~ rm, 2:£00 bbq, ~mo. 5411•9536• $450. 062·78S9 din. rm .. 2 fpl. $S50 • pulnt. Beam cl~. natural 1435 N. Cst. 49'·2508
more to o call 968·3;!01 o s q rt. n<> ls e re q 'd. Swi5s Chalet szio 2 Br AGENTSS2·'1000 wood walls. $450 yrly eantront eves 548·52.51. 644·6449 ( , kid ' • , 1 • ~on 673 7684 J\pts, bach p.c. s, pels, ang s. Hart.Ow 3Z42 New Turtlerock Glen 4 · studio Ute cooking 1&2
Pvt home on 2 lots, for ~~0M aln Renlala ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR home. Possible Newport Sbo~ a BR 2 br StSS·$3'1S. UUl 'mcl.
lease. 524 Hazel, Dr.. ~r. 3 ba t ownhouse. purchase option w/leasti. Ba, near bch & lerulJa, 536-0321
CdM. Buck Gulley, N. or l>GnOPoiftt 3226 Spar kling n ow co nd. S'IOO. p /mo. Own er. beams, frplc In fam·rm.1---------1
llwy. 2 Br 2 Ba, den, ••••••••••••••••••••••• s~?o Cull "Lila., 833-l927or 963-2958 lease $450. mo. Unique ~· 2 b1a. Northe1nd.
1 I · '"f der • · ' vo.:ean v ew gar nc ~~~.~.e~1::. ~:r. dr. opn~: 2 Br, !&_>le, m_a gn11icenl tw6-1371 or846-S4S8 eves. Deerfield Twnhme. 2 br , Homes.675·6000 ulil. Pvt ~I. ~dulta,
Rock fplc, mtn vu, ocn, ocean view. $42Smo.Ca1J 2~ ba, frptc., paUo, or K.V.HOMES2Story,4 Br, 6mostoyr lae.49'7·1247.
Rffll Estate cyn vu, + garden area. 493-M4S l"..,. 3244 pool. $375. mo. 552-8740 2~ ba, lge Fam rm & the beach $200 UtU &c~ 280 ~. WiU negotiate. Last Spacious Dana Bluffs •••• .. •••••••••••••••• 1..ARGE near new yard kitch, 2 trplcs. Rent pd. Fee Main Re~tal.s ••••••• •• ••••• ••••• ••• & ~l $100: ($50 rerunda· Condo. 3 Br, 21,-!a Ba, 18JO & home. 3 Br 2 Ba: only i negotiable'. avail Dec I.st. S40-S370 · •
Will Buy·SeJl.Exchng ble 1r possible). For appt. sq. fL Brealht.Aklng view .,, AIHT ALS * $375 997-1.284 (714 ) Ph: 675-5673
anyreal orpersonul 6JJ.J219aft 6PM. of beach and h arbor 2 BR,2~ba ..•••.••• $.S2S mo. · ---------.i.._._wporile«h 3769
property anywhere. from LR & Ms tr Br. 1 BR, den, 2 ba ••••• 5475 Great Family Living 3 :~··~ ba.~plper1d';flex. •u••••••••••••••••••••
Cal. C7o14as~.!~.~.~.~ment ~OK. 2FBr, kMids, peRts, stanglsls Oversized 2 car gar, 2 BR. & Pool. ....... 5475 WOODIRIDGE from t>e°~~h. ~ygt'. 673.~~~ HST -----°"'-~----1 54(}.'s:n':· am en · wood frplc & bl~. Up. 2 BR, Plan A •••••••• $500 New s ngl family bme in IUY
RHIEstafe per & lower cpld sun· 3BR,2Ba ........... S450 beaut. Irvine, w/parks, H.V.Homes.2Slory,4Br, Some people sayyouget
Wanted 2900 Costa Mna 3224 ~eeks: Clbhse, poo.I, 2 BR. & Den ..•.•••. $450 pool, lake w /swimng & 2~ ba, Lg Fam rm & what you ay for ' We or.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Jacuzzi, sauna, tennis 3BR,FR,2 Ba ..... $495 sailboats. 3 Br 2 Ba, kltcb, 2 frplc. Re nt rer more ~dthe.priceis LEASE /OPT w t d ••••••••••••••••••••••• crt, etc. All for $495 mo. San Lu.is Rey • •• • · • $62S w/all lhe features Avail negotiable Available 1 M · be h ' l
only. Sadd~~b:ck ME.SA DEL MAR, 4 Br, (714)493-4900 4 BR, FR ..... • .... $.550 Dec. 1, $450 mo._i2 mo. Dec lsl. 675-5673 .:!Jth ciub~sA1plt!~ni~ Prine. Fam Rm bllns, fplc, dbl S.. l 3 4 BR. ·· .. ·· · ·· · • · · · $475 lse Or owner will t un· l b Fr · I Vlyarca.Call 51:1G·04?5 o garw/o~r fncdback yd ioro 2 2 Andwe haveoth~rs for 'd. 1 h LIDO lSLE c u : ee lenrus ess~ns.
586-7737 . • ••••••••••••••••••••••• . edi s 1 e r se pure ase 2 t 4 9 SB di Billiards. Swimming. ---------t w/frwl lrees. $400, l sl + . 1mm uteoccupancy 675-3320 res · (1) 776-1100 s Y, r , a, n G IC 0 · · g R g Rentals SUlO cln dep No dogs S42Smo4br,2ba,mcl use f • rm /fam r m , f r p l c, o rivrn an e . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 544·5100 ' · · of Lake Forest Sun &Sail 0 c. S7S.Sl09 Sa.u.nas + g reat a c·
Fu I h d club.549-1862 TURTLEROCK Plan JU, ------Uv1ti~: ~nd~y BBQs. Hous.s rn 1 ~ llarbor/Gisler fam rm 3 . 4 Br dm' • &Caro r m vt ----.----.~ ParUes with Jive bands. ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• br. 2 ba, r.,1c.'o w. cle an. New 2+den ON t.he lake yd 'vie~. $575 'Jo . ON PENIN POl!'JT Free&mday brunch.
lolboo Island 3106 $385/mo. 963·4569 or on cor, w/fantastic view! ~mOorS52 7093 4 Bdrms w/balcontes for
••••••••••• •• •• •••• •• • • 531-9545 Agt. A/C & all extras. Ready • • each. rrestigious wood Your rent dollars go even
2 Br l "' Ba. Fplc, 2 car Janl,'77.$S45.Call ('114) RanchoSan Joaquin 2Br , Loguna•och 3248 inte rior & beams & Curthe r .. •A t e niflc
I • -'t I ___ ...._ , '"'-
.., ........ u.t... ]Al• ..... u..fllr9; : ..............................................
~~ ...... !~.~~ ~~ ...... ~!.~
BRAND NEW
Strolr the l>alhw4ys ol a pine forest M~ndtt pest
tumbling watlrff olls anJ qulet pools. Lltt4'n to the
sound of bubbling streams and grcMl\l'9 tf'll~.
'\bur adult llp.1rtment home at Pln«reek ~lioge ft
e total Tetre4t. Here you can enJ<>!i unuwal prt\W.y
nnd luKUiy.
A ~REATION PARADISE. Two tennis courts.
5'.l.immlng pool plus unique 110lle~ll pool. Joetml
Sand volleyball court. Muunl41n lodge clubhou'8
\I.4th fireplace, convetsallon pit. bl~~. auna.
Huny to the ~ life and &hi:n r~lax.
FROM $265 TO $35$
Including Heat
One Beclioom. One a.th T"'° 8ed100tn. TINO Bath
1300 Adams Ave .• In Costa t.fesa.
acros.s from Orange Coast College
between Harbor and fall\llew,
.. COME HOME TO
FOX HO .. LOW VILLAGE
Sec..nty= W9•ed' for9 T .......
Live on your own private street in a 2
bedroo m townhouse with yard & larp
patio, wood burning fireplace &. at.
t ached garage. LOO'S OF ROOM FOlt STORAGE AND HOBBIESt
Adults. $375 gur. balance of winter. MESA VERDE. Oil< 3 br, 962·:1614. den. pvt patios on golf ••••••••••••••••••••••• warmth $60() yrly lse. maintenance crew, pro· ~mo.6'13·EOOO !~a·;rt~io0~o0m~!i~iit: Fountain Vofley 3234 course$495.640·0997 NFoRrth 2Lb2Bt Db 2hBA, 2 f'P, 4~~~~,~~~;A~~~l ~~!~}o~~~lmcaa"rae~~m8e;~ II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
62 I W. WhaR. C.t. Mes.
64Z-4ttl
•J
.i
CCM'Ol'ladelMor 3122 borhood.1$495 m o. on ••••••••••••••••••••••• LE~ESA~AILABLE -U:494.4~~v'socn,vu. yard is likea gr~npark fr iendly n eighbors."'
•••••••••••••••••••.•••• lease. Ed Riddle Realtor Redec 3 br. 2 ba. OW . Live an Irvine V1l.lage. .....,..,.,,. w/V1ew of water . boats & Models open daily l <J.'I. Costa MHO 3824 Coata M"9 3114 .,
F\irn house to resp prly 646-8811 R/0, nu cpts, drps. $375. We have homes avail. for RENTALS Spyglass Hill. $575/mo Sorry, no one under 21 & ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
s:12S on 6·12 mo agrml 963·4500 or 531-9545 Agl. lease in•• LAGUNA IEACH GRANDCANAL·Waler no pets. ~oom m ate BEST EASTSIDE Loca· Lrg 2B R, beamed clngs.
3BR.den,1"'4DA.l'il,last COLLEGE PARK ~e. 3 NoFee. WalnutSqua re Yearly. Cha rm in g 3 service available. Mon-Uon2Br l~Ba.apl.Cplc, sngl stry, no pet.s, 1200. dt>pos1t, r ef. Curage Br2 Ba, fplc, lge hv rm, Ranc:h Cal.Homes 3 BDRM. newer home bedrm w/brick beams th·t.o-monthoccupancy. paneling, gar. pvt patio. 2049-D Wallace646-8885 res\'d for my persnl dm area, ~am1ly kstc:h. Exec.48r&Den. Deerfield UnivPk locat ed in P or ta fino warmth. ' S32Smo.5S9·l82S
slorage.64221Sb Newly pai.nlc d. c pts , Pool&lge y.d. Cu!verdalc Col.Park ~ag un a. 2 Baths, WATERFRONTHOMES OakwoodGardenApts •2Br. l Ba, upper Mesa
_ __..;:. _______ , drps, grdnr incl. No pets. $460/mo. 000.3076 Turtle R<><:k f~repla<'e, ocean view. 6JJ.1'100 New adult waterfront apts Verde. Garage avaU.
Costa Mesa 3124 S395 mo. 549·0185, a rt • 2 bdrm, your choice or 3 Excellent tam. home al ----......,_, 880 Jrvine <at 16th ) in Mesa Verde. Beautiful Adults . $235 No pets •
....................... 5/all daywknds. HuntinCJton•ach 324 from$340lo $400. $S50 mo_,__ ,.___,_~ (714)645-0550 landscaping. E xcep-8J3.89'74 • . J.r~ Mod up.:ra~ed, 4 ll~,. • . ••••••••••••••••••••~· 3 bdrm. your choice of 14 Newport Shores A·fra me tionally rich inte riors, .._
den. 3 ba, J8<'Uit1,:l Dr. 2ba Condo. Encl 4 BR, 2 ba. 2-story, wit from $33S.lo$475 2 BDRM. home, deck 3br 2 ba new plush cpts 170016uiSl (atDover) 1&2 bdr ms from $275. EASTSIOE2'br 2Ba,enc1
Ca talina vw. $650 mo patio. gar. adults only. huge patio & back yard 4 bdrm your choice of 6 w/ocean view. Liv. rm. & d~. Pools, tenors & l7l4)642.8170 Mesa Verde Villus, 1555 gar, lndry, 1 chUd OK.no
5'Ul·2l&I. N~ pets. 581·5851, eves Good neighborhood . Crom$450 to$550 w/open beams. Owner bch. $4~. yrly. IS42·:1850 ---------1 Mesa Verde Drive F.ast , 1*$.1275.842·3'88 u._.·~ •-h 3140 556-7627 Yrs old. S420/mo. Agt. No1''ces pays utiliUes at$375mo. or645·0423. 2 br, winter rental s:JOO. Cos t a Me sa. (714) CASAVJCTORIA
nYTT
1•"'J"on8'1C'ac T h · 2 8 '"-b 963·5678,AskforDick. R"' .... CHRE"'LTY <2\:n 445·5963 or (2 1:1> S40-8871 •••••••••••••••••••••··~ew ~n se. r_.l vz 8 • "'" "" 480RM.&SWIMPOOL. Bayshores,3Br1Ba,w/w 447.9443 · 1&2BR.unlor furn,gas
Mobile homt', walk the .rdulls; Gar, patio, S275. Clean l br, 2 ba, cpts, 551·2000 has fam. rm. & dining s h a g c pt , f p I c: , WHY HOT? & wtr pd. Adlta, no pets., P d•1~. S?70, utrl pd. Pct~ IG5 C 2l st St , C M. d r p s , e n c l p a t io , . rm. Landlord pays for wshr /dryr, pvt patio, 1-'REE RENT · in ex· Sunken livingroom Pool,r ecrm,tec.gat.e,
UK. FC'e. M111n Rentals. f>'2·SOl7. SJ 3 5 I m o . 9 6 l · 4 5 69 •Ranc~o San Joaq~n lge pool service. Exe. long furn or unf, fncd yd. $4MI change for lite hskpg, Cathedral celllng 525 Victoria. 642·81170 :>io.s:no ..,.,ES"' ...,ORTH 531·9545Agt.No Fee. 2 ~r 2~Ba .,r.plc,dm_rm. termrentalat""75mo. yrly ; "'4 00 win te r . sha re s m b ch hs e & 2bed '-'·b ths ---,.., "'"" wetbar,upg1adcs,pat10, ~ ~9635 ., fn e ndship.F.,25.39_ rooms,l n a 2 Br,l ba,patiu,enclosed LOCJl.wla Beach 3148 Attractive a BR, 2 Ba, pool. S4!l5. 644·0496 1 BDRM du lex unit l 673.5040 days 673.7493 Attaehed.ga.r;;ig~ gan:ge. $230-/mon\b. l ••••••••••••••••••••••• P.V. stone frplc, fncd FORLEASE:3 bcdrm,2 . · P . · 2 Br 2 Ba, frplc .. beaut. • Washer /dryer hook·up 548·'1529. t r~·ascOt•canVscw family rear yrd, s hu tter s, ba,brandnew,1700 sq.n .Sunshiney Sharp End Blk. from s hopping, lndscpng. All uppli . $4!l5. eve. Pvtyardwith patio
llome. 2 Hr & den/bdrm. wallpaper. $385. mo. on Landing home w /3 car Condo. 2Ur . all bllns. closet~ beach. Landlord 963·1208 Winler, A·frame, b ach Adu!ls. $375. mo.
fri>ll'.fncdyd ~25.A\·uil mcmthto month or lease. gar. S525/m o. in cld g Comm pool, close to paysutil.al S220mo.Y apt. Lge sundeck. I Blk FOXHOLLOW Adull E·&lde 2 bl', encl
gar. patio. Like new. No ..
l •t thru Junl' or Aug 30 Im med. cx•cpy. Call Agt. gardener. No pets. frw ys. No lse $325. MISSION REALT Newport Shores 3 br: 1¥e l o buy /ocean. $200. VILLAGE
,iw.4726 Gl'Orge Marlin to see FOR LEASE: 3 bcdrm , < 675·6488. PhoM 494-0731 fam.rm., heh. tennis & 675-4189 621 W. Wilson, C M. Larae bach. Adults Only. ~ pets. $250. 644.()878.
OCEAN VI EW, g;irdens, 2 _546-8640 ba. b~and new 1900 sq.fl Woodbridge Twnhme3 Br Spedacular Ocean View 3 pool. $490. 962·8964 BEACH FRONT l Br for·•--642_-4_99_1_or_642 __ ·4226 ___ 1 Wtr le elec. pd. $170. 6mJ .f
fplc's, :mllques. char m SHAR P! College Prk L;andmg home w /formal 2 Ba. A/C, _upgrades, Br 2 Ba, dshwshr. $455 $300. Util pd, 1 Br, den. mature adlts. $225 m o. catok.646-4546
ing. 2 Br. $450 mo 11rea. 3 br. 2 ba. bltns., din. rm., l"m r'!'• wet lake &pool pn v.640.8542 mo.494-612S aft6Pl\f kids. pcls. sngls. Fee. Avl.12/1·6/30.675-3824
dsh h cl'd d ..,,..5 bar .S575./mo. 1n cld @ . Ml';~o~~· -...io.s:no 497 J700 320~'5 ~·ee~ y'0~ k S t · gardener. No pets. Univ. Pk 5 br hm. Pnme 3 Br Laguna Charmer, 3 Sout+a LOCJUfta 1786 BEAUT. new 2 br, 2 ba, llv nn, din rm, frplc, beam
ceil., bllns, jacuui, aar.,
ocean vu 642· 7992
Newport leach 3169 ~4471. Roberts Realty loc. Pvt comm ten & blks lo bch. Lots of room •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• 141-1688 ~~~ils1SS95. 552·8587, & privacy. S3911 mo. San Clemente 3276 2 BR. 2 ba.on the ocean.
!.l'XURY furn tondo. 28R. gar .. fenced yd, SS7·1989or688·7538 ev. ••••••••••••••••••••••• f\lm. $700., unfum $600.
.,,t'rlook'J.:, lt•nnii. crt J pelOK Nochildren. UNIV PRK·Village I ll LogunaHills 3250 New luxury 2 Br, 2 Ba. Total s~.u!'ily,elevalors, E/Side rust.ic. adlts, no ·•,
pets. 1 Br, S20S: 2 Br S2'1S .;r hr S7110 mo t»O 1751 SZS5 tmo. 546·7506 4Br. 2b a, 4 bl ks from Pn nceton. J Br. nu paint. ••••••••••••••••••••••• twnhse, ~ean v.iew. d bl rec. facilities. 499·2835 PIHECIEEIC ---· E Westmnstr Mall, 1 blk tA: $t25 mo 644-7770 gar. pool, Jacuzzi, secun · J Hr. fpk. mod kit Wrnter Chn slmas move-in.,. xtt schls. cul·d ·sac. Kid~ · 3 br, 2 ba frplc., cpls .. ty (2131598-5206 ~nts UVES UP Lg. 2 Br, 1 Ba, dshwsbr, "
inc ulll. 646-0505
SJ.'JO mo Yrl~. $400 mo Mesa Ve~c. 4 br. 2 -: ba, OK. $415. Ph848·9427 fURTLEROCK-VIEW. 3 drps .. S385. 2516l Costeau u..fwMlhed TO rTS HAMl stove, drps, new cpl.I & 1_
P\t pallo W11l tent un Bucco l a · S7 OO I m 0 · Br 2 Ba, ram r m. Dine 549·1862 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• paint thruoul, carport,
lum tn right party 1t de· Owner/Agt !>46·5990, aft La Cuesta bme, 3 Br l~ Rm. lge yard. Nr tennis 3Br, l~ba, A IC. cpls, Son JHn GeMral 3802 Over 500 tall trees and 10 Cned yd, wtr &c trash pd, 11 ~
-,1rt.'<.1 c213 I 2117 7420, col 5, 9'79·0456 Ba, n r school & beach. & pool. SMS mo. $200 Sec. drps, bltns, dbl gar. Copfsfrano 3278 ••••••••••••••••••••••• streams with waterfalls $225 mo. No children OI' ·'1
IN·t Wknds 7 !4 f.45 2937 3 Rr frplc £.Side. $375, $395 mo. 640-4543 dep. Agt.. 752-0188 frp 1 c . gr d n r . $385. •••••••••••• ••• •• • ••• •• (2) 2 bdrm, l 'h bath create a relaxing selling pets. 675·3436 ·: ~~~~~oust• Sill & Sun Isl .& last. S49·3847 or SHARP 3 Br, drps, tplc, 3 Br 2 Ba. on cul de 11ac. 838·4075; 833-4678. Avail New 2Br, den, ~bu, cpts. Condos. $310. month. ~<>;-~o'be~~~~i:'sa~ea":.t~ Redecorated. $1B5. Lge 1
831J.7712. gar opnr. boat access. nr lge yd, close to sch ls & 12/1. drps, pool. 1 m1. to Bch. Eves, 559-4536. me nts. F r o m $24 0 . br w/pool, walk lo shops. be h hi & k $39~ SJSO. (213 )947-1425. r. N I : Houses Unfurnished Comfy 2 br 4 plex. Kid:s, lsea~A~~7: par · pk. $:!95. 552·0430 aft SUPt:R QUIET AREA Balboa lslClftd 3106 F urnitur e available. Mature adlts pre o ••
••••••••••••••••••••••• y a r d . S 2 3 5 . ·,,..., 7PM. 4 br, 1"4 ba, all bltns. NEW 3 Br 2'h Ba Twnhse, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Small pets OK. Adults children, no pet.5. 1887 ~ 3202 Ac" c h rom ber • fee •• NBWER HOME 4 Ur J Spuc Univ Pk 2Br 2ba encl. patio. 2 c:ir garage. encl dbl gar. dshwshr. 4 BR., 3 ba., s undeclc, only. (){flee open 9:00 lo Monrovia. MIJ.7924
••••••••••••••••••••••• Ga l ·2011, S 4 7 ·250 l , Ba. 3 car g., shake roof. w/l;g atri~m dbl s~ mstr Close to frwy access. drpe. fplc, pool & Jac. I lrplc., washer & dryer. 6:00. 2300 Fairview Rd, BAY MEADOWAPTS ,,, : Sl~,..; &pie,, l tir. ~1n~lt·s 871.l-1060 Bri gh t & s paciou s bdrm.take o~r lse.6 Mo S550. 22561 Montoua. nu Dana Hbr , sme pts ~Yearly. Costa Mesa. P hon.e 1 br, gar, pool. Gas &
0 k s l ,1 n t 0 11 • lhruoul. Cheery_ kitchen, left $390/mo. incls use of Owner 54 5·2487 or ok. $425.493-4260 WILLIAM WIHTOH 545-2300 water pd. No lclca, no 4~
tit."u c ht'omhrr , (er MESADllMAR imm;sc move-in cond. comm pool/tennis crts. 548-4471 $400Lease.4 Br-Village. Real Estate 675-3331 S._---"-Mea-peta.From $220.646.ocJ73 •:A 5 Br 3 Ba, $-175. SSHI~ Sngls OK $495 mo rwwnv -6J I 2011. ~17 2501 orM4J.'>45 S48·94Z7 or 96z.3287 · M2·0604.Agt. LOC)IMaNiguel 3252 Upgrades thruout, a vail lalMHIP.-IUla 3807 21B>ROOM Brand new 3 Br 2 Ba. "' 1179
IOfiO :l br, or High School & ••••••••••• •••••••••••• Nov. 22· 493·7780 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alto I .._ P.,rn bltns, fplc, panelfng, lge ·~~
CONDO I h·H·I, 2 HI<. 3 hdMISA.,VERb DEi II 28/dr. c~~ren O~ .. ~~!~ Fwys. $385. mo. 45l2 Newd01x:2~wn8hse, 2p Brk. Concbninlwns N
8
eRaroceadn&kbay Nochlldren,nopels. patlo,gar,$425.SS9-1828 , ~
h.i fpl. .itnurn lmml'tl · r m .,. 11, u Y w ep . ..,., mo. '1VV..,.,,,. Charleyville.549·1862. ll~u y, 2 a . ar Furntshed 3400 2 .. sun ec .$325 Pool&RecreatJon •
•'ICl s;ns 1\._tt b4 I 113:1 CllJ"peted & draped, bit or SJS-0321 Niguel, $495 mo. 496·2777 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marshall R!ty 675·4600 1959 M-.&.. An, CM STUNNJNG lge 2 Br 2 Ba, • t ins. 2 car gar , boat ac New 4 br detached home .. _, 1 f d ..,..... w/paneled den1.~nbi apt. J Br 2 lla. n~w rph& dl'fll' tl>s!I, Rardener included. H U N T I N G T 0 N in trvine's Woodbn dge Missian Viejo 3267 "' Br, ruce Y ~rn & e· Big Deal! $100. Ulil pd. Pool, S265. 710 w.18tbSt. ...iM
p.-atro. b1i: huc·k ~ .ird. S425 mo. Call S40·L521 HARBOUR AR~A. 3BR, Villoge. Use of lake, ••••••••••••••••••••••• coraled, 2 patios, enclsd Near water. Fee. Main 1 Br , gar & encl. patio. S.Ootl deposit w/ad. ,..
t•ar J::lr, neov.I> pa111ted. cowner l alter 5 or 28Aw/huge (am1ly room parks,swlm 'gpoolsele . LG.Mdm.3br,fam.rm.2 garage, pool, $275. Sa Renlals,S40·S370 Adults .. Refa. No pets. • •••
Avail now U10 mo I t'ln 5"!Nlli55 lAJlt ). Available & frplc, near s chools $475. mo. 544-4186 ba, frpl, blt.ns, 2 car gar. Clemente. Ph: 496-2267. $225. Uhl pd 845-2240 2 BR, lBA w/crpts, drpe, .,; . .I
(('A 11!177"'u, :\,l i·'v..i• '""··I $425/mo. CALL TOBIN Fncd yd tclds ok.no fee. Agt. Coro..acMIM.-38Z2 8rand newSplex aBr 2 bllns. $265/mo. OPEN ~ v o.. u J """ n1.·•1 TY "A"1311 WE GE · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' • SAT •· S UN .. 2, •• , City """"" ...,.,. ... WOODBRIO • n ew 2 $410 mo. 1st Pioneer, Townhous. Ba ownrs unit., also 1& 2 G • • --om PLUS 2BA, r ead) ALSO HAVt: other pro· sty, 4 Br. 3 Ba, 3 car gar, 842·4421 Uttfurnlshed 3525 Br' apls, no pets. (71•> Avocadb. Mr. Lake or ~~ ~X~C Shi.rp, :• llr i H8 . now $395/month. perties for rent, Homes, lots of room. lndscpd, .... ;:: 827 .... 790r "•n.8077 Mr. Altman, 752·1846. ..•-•, k " d C d ri ' ·1 ..... ___. .. _och '269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• n;B .. &It ...., ' ids. pets, pJrk, l mo AGT 540·0SS! ,..pts. an on os. lake & pool p v gs. Ava1 --~ ....... .c ~ b ....
$375 ~J7 1284. Tu .. tin now. No pets please. $525 •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• Near South Coast Plaza, '1'1,, orttJ 2 BR .Fu rn & Unfurn. 1..AROE 2br, 2 ba. SZ2S. In·
SU P t-:R CLF.AN 3 Br, l 'h Redec. 3 br, 2 ba. new mo Ownr/Agt 552.0620 HARD TO FI ND Bradford Tnhse. 3 BR, • Mature Adults. No pets. fant & sm. pet ok. Call lolboo Island 3206 B a . n e w k i t c h paint. crpts, drps, R/O, 2 __:__ · h l ~ Ba, newly decorated. _ Gd toe 645-0632 642-6612 for a ppl • .. ••••••••••••••••••••• w/dshwshr. 2 <'Br itar <'a r ~or . S3 4 5 I m o. TURTLE ROCK EastblUCf Exec. ome. Pool , lge patio, child OK. CORONA DEL MAR · · 1
2 Rr I Bn, 1111 w1'0d. cpt11. nsre y»rd areu. $375 mo 963-~or531·9545 Agt. 3Br. tnm·rm. atrium, 4br, 2ba, ram rm. Sort $330. mo.556·1977 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. 2 Br 2 ba, pref m ature or 2 BR House, {ncd. Yd. lg • .111
d r ps. fplc. p ut10. no 559·1828 Clean, 4 br, 2 balh, R/O, great vu, $.S25. 644·4646. water. New crpts, d~. Pool, lennls, continental r et'ired. No p et 1, n o kltch, child, am. pet Gk. J children or Pf'ls. Yr ly paint. Walk to schools, BRANO NEW 3 Br 21~ Ba. breakfast. Some ocean & children $195. 642-5848 $260 molM2·085T ·
lse. 12 '1. 49-1 SOOR NEWLY Redecorated ~ sD3W50' 1crpt, 9d6a~p4s5.6l>rplc, RENTALS s$7h5o0p/sm, ot enL~eis cnleuf~· Sfptlc.B~hnt.i COrom DoWhhcnrfey CalnUnA views. Close to LOVELY 1 3 b 1 LG 2 br refrtg pool, nr -'o"
h r• 2 b a · I> 1 t n s · mo. · o r · Single Family Homes · ., · ... · c "" ana 8 • shopplng &: fine beach. g. r, new Y Hbr. Sh~p'g. Ad11Ua. JUC ''"' :t RR 4c Dem. 2 ba. frpl, wet washer /dryer. $400 mo 531·954.'I A)?l 2 BR 2 0 .. 00 64()..6775 or645·2240 $450 per mo. 634·8282, ......... 11 redecorated , Ideal loc. Bob .,. ...
661
ac lt
bar & I,.:. patio. S.575 yrly, 654 W Wil Call J le · ' a ........ ··..... 8·5PM, 524 ·1012 Evs. "'"""' No pets. $245. M,gr. al mo. • .._... • "' O incl 'ft ullls. 6'13·1200 S ou ~derS:~·n D aa; s a Br. ram rm, cpts, drps. 3 BR, 2 Ba .......... $385 *MOW AVAIL.* . 979-2531, 2885 Mcndoia, 752·1925, or call642·1!8 &.2.0212 EvesS4G·22'77 fncd yd,nr bch,shop'g,& 3 BR,2Ba ........... $:J95 1lfE BLUFf'S, $500 to lRBfrrl twnhse 1n H.B. 3 BR, 2 ba. 1ower unit. apt.A 1 "'RGE111 ... ~TSIDI loeboo Pettinwlo 3207 • schls. $350. SJ6.61SS. 3 BR. 2 Ba ....... •· .. $425 $795per month e g stv. Wshr/dryr. .,, 1 d .. Ith _..;.--------1 -.,_
•••••••• .. •••••••••••••Large 3Br. 2ba family • 3BR,28a ........... S800 BIG CANYON. $750 lo S22S /,;.o. No c hldrn. b:futliUi ~re~SsOOY~lY 3 BR,2Ba,palio,children 2 DR, encl gar, flt new
38r. 2 bath At'russ frorn home. Lg Liv rm w/warm 2 Br, l ba, newly decrt d 4 BR, 3 Ba ........... $615 $995pcr month 968-t139. WIWAM Wl...,...OM ok, no pets. $265. mo. S250. Adults 6'$·754• l(l < Bay beach. Lovely view. fireplace bllns In kilch condo, cmpJt laundry fac 4 BR, 2~ Ba ..•.• ·· •• $850 HASTINGS Ir CO. ~;5.3331 546-9080or M6-898S eves. 1,,.,.
$490 yrly. biS-1304 dbl gar.' nice llZ yard & l>OOJ:,. !:'~Im,!!;. H. 8 · Townhomea Realtors 640-SSGO ,__._"" Furnldted Real Est.Ale FOUR SEASONS A""'S 1 br, upper. Freth "'lint 1 : lJ95 mo 642 '1196 area.~ or ""'·7788. 2 BR I Ba .•••••••••• S32S ....,... ·-' " Modern a b 3 b • ~ L . ·19~ Lrg 3 Br, 2 ba rlplx on · · B"'•UT 3 8 til 2BR:1sa ....••...•• $350 Oceanview Condo. 4Br, ;::.:_·:·,::i:.::~:·•3••7•0•7• wee l I 11 ~: .. 1 .a , Spaclous2brtwnh.se,l~ atove .. ~ .. ~frig.&Adul-.no Penn al 116 E. Ba lhoa. Xtra l~e 2 Br. Fam Rm , ( .,.,, · !• new e. 2 BR 2 Ba •..•••••.•• $375 din ZY..Ba t t 0 • _.. --grea oca 00• "'"' n s, ba, pool, pvt patio, no pets ........ 4044 •·~ 4pm J 8 C 11 P k $425 cpts & drps, Just painted. • 9 -5 . rm, • poo • e •••••••••••••••••• • •••• $4'15. yrly. 675--0993. pets ..,.,,. 135 J n St l\ -Cln & unfum $175/mo a. o ege ar • 1360 Sngl5 ch ildre n 2 BR. 2 a ........... ......, rus. security. Ki<h OK. ~ · ~-. oa n • Deluxe 930 aq. n. IBR., cu~
Call Mr. Cole. 675-2653 Isl, l9sl + dep. 540-164'1 pets. OK No fee ~70 2 BR. 2 Ba ........... $435 '625. Chrl1, 644-9060. Agt. Studio Jingle apt. no pets. Old CdM 2 BR + Den ~ BRAND New dlx 2 br 2 2BA pvt paUo bltna. ~"13 oft 2 PM. Agt, T h e A. e'73-ST44 .S54533'1 2BR,2 Ba ........... ~ Ocean 1 blk, $180 mo. 11ar no dogs $365 ~o b d .1 • crp~ d""' rrpic $24.5 ,tu J acksonGroup l.ld SPACIOUSDlx.3 br.frpl. or gt.. . . 2BR,2 Ba ........... ~ Exclo.sivelrvineTerrace, 75'2·'1167 1) •S A ... 6"4-1zi1 • a, w/&ar, a uta, no A•d ·l~ir-'A u'u -encl'd. yd, gardn'r . 2 car 2 BR 2 84 $52.5 CdM Btn .exec • Br 2~ . ave ·• a~· pet.I, S285 & $293. 1912 mo. u "· va • /1. \ti ,
'"' Block lo Ocean or Bay, gar. WestcHfC area. S39S 3 c:o~~r!t ~~blct~!~8':; 3 BR: 2~; 83:::::::: '. S425 ea, ig. pvt pool, waik to Steps lo beach, $132. UtJl Sparkling clean 3 Br, Wallece, 645-3356 !t:O:c~!:S.;· 646-1812 'l ·• k8!..!~,!Ja0wn. $4r75 yrly. 67H849 ahopplngcent~r&be~ch, 3BR,2\.1i ~ ....•••.. $450 beach. shopping It park. ~~e:· Maln Rentals. w/open beam celllna, Easta.ldel Lie l Br. H11h • .1'".,
_......... Colle1e Park. lmmed OC:· "3'75 mo. 84&-1296 afl 5PM 3 BR, 2'h t:a .••• • • • •. S4~ S800 mo. lease, aarden & aun deck, brand new be1au, all pine lntr. Ga1 l4.'I>
C.0..0... cMf M.-3222 cupanc.y. 3 Br, Zba, new. 3or4 Br,21,A, ba ... " "'95 pool aerv Incl, children 4c C:O.teMeta 3724 cpta,. drPt Ir atovc, gar pd. $200. Non·amokcr DmMtPMlt 3126
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1y ~ecorated Close tc 3 BR 21,A, ba condo. Ldry, 3 BR.21,A,Ba ••••••••• $49S pebwelcome.675-3152 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Incl d,N'OPETI M:Smo. w/refa.6'5·?3B8. • ...................... -. ~
schoola, abops . Rertl ref.,alv. Kldlolc, 00 ~1:· IBR.2~ Ba ......... $$50 nv Hms, Carmel 3 Br $40.00 Wiii( & UP 6*0lllor8'13-007S Sparlding clean, ~.1 .... .. Sborecl\ffs, 2 BR, den,
sp.ic:ious llv·r m, 1l11nt
back 1ant. Pvt heh. $575.
898-3533 or 875-t!824 or
675-6ZM
ocaotJable. S..S.2165 afl ! ~r-~~&~ · =I~·~~==······ .. ·= +FR., nr park & school. •Studlo &t BRAp-. Unique Ch•leau be low S:c 2:~:\i~arl~· br, bltna, g~~ oetaa :: ./
pm. . 3BR'2~Ba ......... S600 S550 mo.844-7770 •1VltMuld &lr vAvaO Hwy. 3 81'. YIP, D/W, Sr adltspref'd.No pets. vlew.SUOmo.01-'1211 ~ ..
m R, l~BAduY\lcix . Stove, ADULTSOVER40. aeR.,' 2.,. .......... 1600 N rt 0 _ h 3 bllc *PhoneServ, Htd pool adlta, no pets. $525. ~ $$7o12l4 • Ex. l"'e 2 br 2 ba -·-~bt, .. NeverUvedlnLandmark ......... ewpo uo:oc • 1 237&Ncwpol'\Bl•d,CM &44-4841 ' 0 • i .. ,....,. ~. W/D hookup, 2 car Condo.2Br,2ba,waaher, 38R,2!A & ......... 9&25 Man ners school & park. S48·9?MorMS·39ft? 2 Br 1.,. Ba, no pets, N. dttssl.ng rm. Adu ta +,1 .J<tq
JASMI NE CR E EK 'S garage. 1 cbikl OK, nc dryer,dthwshr,dbl oveo 48R,2~Ba ........... 15 3 Br, 2 80, fncd yard & EXTRA lg. duplit. 2br1 Costa Mella. pa.Uo, encl teeoa1er. From ats. ~
most.. p0pular model-pets. 407 Ha mUtod: $265. a~ve. Many rec. lacll. patio. Cplc, ept.s, df1>S & SUSCASITAS • 2ba~ ocean vu, beamea aar,nrabo ... $411-?229 Gaaokwater pd.491-mt. 'Jmi>:'
Vian 2 w1lb 2 bedrmtc & Ph ·7983 S37f/mo. 962-048S 1hutlera, ~mod ltltcb Mrnuttll lo NB. Bach & t ccJJ p , lrpl, 2 car ·~· · «ll!tl
den: on greenbelt with 2 Rr 00 mo Adults onJy w/dbl eolf cln ovn. $460 BR f\lfn. Adult.I, no J>Cll. pv\ bch prtvt $445, Yl'lf · Oood ~ation, 2 Br 2 8a, ............... 3140 h a:i
oceanvlew.rrompatio.A no ' ti. Cpta & drp$ BE.AUT new HnllJ mo.8'J3.2f3S evt/wknds 21lONewportBJt d.CM. 475-3203 bltos, drpe, ry1c, ~ar, ••"••••¥••••••• .. •••• Jib·,. ::!r:.a~;.;~e~:!: /~:i.!d~ 642·ll40 ' ' t.-i:t~,~~n?':'it WISTCiJFF~$S75 , Attractive 1 &: den. Cotta M9se JI 4 = no pe •· *290. Now ow n er• or ~
11 l l a m e n I l l " t1 -NEW t,UX. Twtthse 3 ltr 2 Ba. $450. Oya 963-2361 S'-.._. lqc tf... Patio. 1ar. l A dull. no ..................... ,. ~tchwood Apt.a, 19132
Clubbout•, pool Jacuzil, 2'-t Ba, lple, pool, kJda Eva/982·27!51 2 Br, 2 Ba + den, lrplc peta.2Zl4 ARut1ersDr. ~JDE.Sep 2 8r 2 8-, I Br apt. 711 W. Wl!Joft. Mqnolla,11.B .. otra'aa tflU\iacowu. OK Fncd yd i.1a u;J; 541-1300 IHdl 3740 adull unll w /enc1 181· Encl. patio. $225. No br, 2 ba, 1000 aq. ft. .,ft.,
COLIOflHIWPOltT 8'1S.le88 • s::,ir.,_aqholnf w%~:h~ WATERFRONT Condo •-•••••••••••• .... •••• $265.548-a:Mor6'5-2'181 pets.846-USl 1:::~1'.>' Ai~~ :t:::~: '~k,
25 ~~lTHe•sCDM a Br. W/vl~~. Horse. pet cb orfuJ klt~h. dln ln'I. W/ 3'' •IJp •• Br 3 Ba, dbl l Br ,.,. apt, VI/ Pool, NlCE l br. lrpl. I, URN GE 2 Br Apt $200 mo. Ado1\I only. No pe\s. A' 15 06J.nl'i kldl OK.. 1 iuUe to beh area It fi'pl. Pvt back 1 OPEN DAILY tar w/orer, lse or lae clole-to bch. t03H2tb St . adult.I. oo pet.a. P . o P•t• &S7·U80 or •· Cill new Mar a t t 1 ~ GU-1014 Ol'!fy$37S.14894Zt 8 A.M.T08P . .M. opt.640-9U9 G3Q,$38.te:ll 549A757oc648-3'708 842>99'1'T. Ma4JOO
•, •
Wedneeday. Novemt>erK 1978
Add itm8uild lt ... Oiaper it ... Hammer 1t... Carpet SERVICE DI RElft!TiQR:V ~luV'·t •( ... :ate 1 ··· ipe ... emos! ... lt...Cement it... Wire it. .. Hoe it. .. Ctean it. .. Move V .I ,1 : • , Hoo 1 1 i ... an scape t ... Tile it ..• Trim It... w it...
IL.Press it ... Painlit. .. Nall it...Ptaster. it ... Fix it... au t ... Add it... Plant It... Alter lt...Learn it ... ts,· ... .--. C.pe " C...nt/COlllCl"9'h Ge-dl•9 t' C IJ ..._JF"J .........,,..,.,... ~ reeS..-.lce ~ ~ 4 I ••••••• ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• d
,. APPLJANCEREPAIR SpttlaUzJng In larae & LEONJTE CONCRt::Tt> hades of Green Var YOUHAVEJTREADY FreeClt SlumP1ton\',tile. PelllltYowCasle PLUMBER·Repalr. re Htmoval6, tr1mmlng1 Slo-&nl~Call 1m1 rcmoddln&. aftera STA MPING Cob Car ~~~·1 ~.ernvi~•s: l'LLHAULITAWAY blockwoll8. brick. plan AvrcExtrt5t.yS345 ptpe . 1nstallatlon prunin&. free t-Sl Wc'a <ll4)S&-3C22 tlon~. Ii rep111ra Svs blestooe, br1ck & till down to Eurth P c., TIM 548-6306 I~ QuaUt.y work at re· z.sty~1111tr~ sorv1cu. 0 . C.Hdl~Y. t\111.)'lruiured. 642-21624
... -""'"'--calls. Palombo Con. st petJols, etc 640-4349 640-9485 LL..---'--'-.._, prit'es. Bob ?SO 93$4, Prices incl mtr'l/tabor 642·931$. 1~.._ ci....-t--_...,, Mb-888 F ..__~ !~m.l Guar. inard. free est. 0 .......__ ... ,..._.., ... r ---. ••••i:,•••••••••••••••••• . ~l ~crv1ce. Controctor Qabellero & Sons. Ex pr ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Mo lftCJ T .... .,...._7900 ,.,. cc...._,,.,,.,. "-'""'I ••••••••••••••••••••••• all wk gua.r 962-8314 rd L"f esls re· 1 •y CL ' .,, ~ -· "" ...-·v"'" llabyalttcr. 13 yr exper. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ga ener r ' Want a REA ·~ • !::AN ••••••••••••••••••••••• DAVENPORT &CHAIR Uc w/count.y. My home FlNISH. REMODEL & LEE M. JARVIS ason»ble. 646·4654 aft H9USE! CaJI ~1n11hom ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXPERT Pamllng. lntr at Re~ a 1 r a & Compo Prof sioo111ly cleaned
SpeclaJl)' fo lntuts. Rpr. Small jobs OK Additions & RemodeUn& 4pm Girl. Free est&, 00-51.23 f'rlet>dly Moving Co. Etn· l'.!xtr. Free est, Guar. St11ngle1. tnspecttons. lot $.15. Ph: 960-4105
6C4128 Reas. 979-0379 962.5513 Lie 31785( WEEOINO·CLE."ANUPS n.....•ess•onal C"""'l Cl"un· cienl, fritilldly servlc;e . work 64.2-0295 lnsrd/Uc'd. Lo Pri<'C3, fr ~ -C.__~
nVf • ..... ~ .. u t.owest poss rotes est.830-~&or54l·5930 .... __,w ~ OUld care. Fenced yard. C.,.. ~lee Bob Sea · c 1 •Complete Miuntenance In& t1lllQ floor cor~ & &11--0992 INTERIOR/EXTERIOR ' •••••••••••••••••••••••
0•>'• or eves. WUM>n, ....................... Gener!f:0:r'!~~'!~r~~ Freeest 642·990'l wi~dow cart•. 'outcb • Acoustical ceil'gs 25 yrs S.wiltg/Alhnltioftt Clear View Window
Victoria school area. Shampoo & steam clen.n· Commercial·ftesidential T<YJ'AL LAWN SERVICE Maintenance SNvice A·l MOVING. Top quail· cxper.894~at't8PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• W1111hing & Housctlc&n·
le-1506 lng. Color bnghtener~; 496-0009 L1<: 2209ill Newonrt, costll Mesa. 537·1S08 ty. Best price. 25 yrs e>cp. p 1 U Ext Prof Dre u m akin g . in & • Q u a I w r k ·
bwht carpts . I 0 m~n D-...&ri at Hwit~-Bch. Reas. rates. HOUSECLEANING IS No be,ter service or : n na· Int/ . Rea.s. Taalortng/Allerotlons &Wir.6'2·1334 or 673"5130 leach. Clean hv rm, din SllWQ' c Lie Cal\645-75884-Bpm . C 11 fairer price anywhere . epen able. Free est. f.)-om Germany. 20 yrs eves & wknds.
rm & ball $1S Avg rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Our ~.us1_n ellS . a 542·~ art 7pm. dali.y. 0111Jay6'5-7965 l'xpr.S3l-<Y7Z3
.. ••••••••••••••••••••• S7.50, couch $10, chair SS. t:lect.rh:al Service Calls MONEY is what your Janice s Raggedy Anns An)'t1111eSal/Sun.
Architectural & Struc Guar ebm pct odor Crpl Sl3. Lie Cl0Jl5132. C;.ill yard'll need less of 111 11lG'7S--OSS3 C0Ue1e Student. Exp'd T••ltioe Repair tural Plans. Remodel & 1 D L d painter needs part time ••••• •••••• •••••••••••• or New Construction. rcpa r. 15 yrs C!xpr. c 842·8233 Richard . s . s c P andscap"'9 'alntMCJfPC11P9riR9 work. Avail. for odd Job!!. CANOPY TV SVC CO.
Reald/Comm'l/lndslr work m yself Refs FeacilMJ CleanulJl'I. ree ma Int. Fr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• etc. afternoons&: wkods. 1st Rate Service
641).7020 5:Jl-OlOl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• est~ Expr'd Landscapers. Pa1nl·Repa1r·35 yrs in Ca11Greg9'19-9621 • at Jo~alr Pnces960-1833 ----------tearpet~anw1lllay.youn CbalnUnk.Umtedf'cncc GrodUKj Sp!"nk1ers: Install & re· a rea, workmans hl
or mine. Repairs & $2.15ftinstalled. •••••••••••••••••••••••pall'. Concre~ & brick guar.Takeadvant.ofmy PlcahrfRaa..& Tit.
•*Oeorle Pllmer &Sons
Adds/RmdJ/Paillt/Pla
Sml jobs-Lie 'dSS7-eJ32
MINOR HOME REPAIR
CIU'pentry, PJumblng
Ceramlc Tile S49-S:i60
cleaning too!. Guar work Free walk gate 557 1502 Skiploader, dump truck. work. 645-1978 Matone exper. 536-7056. .,.-r •••••••••••••••••••••••
at bigger sav10gs. Fr esl hauhng, trtt wk. grad· PETERS PAINTING ·;~~~·;~~;~·~;~~·CERAMIC Tile. New or
645-3646 ~ 1ng, demoltl1on.et c. MoloNy t:xpr'd reas rates. free u A.LLTYPESu ~~~m'i~i~"::Jt t0b:;
HOLIDAY SPECIAL ••••••••··~.··•••••••••• '15l·J930 ••••••••••••••••••••••• est. Call Gene S52·0458 Free Eat 540.fi825 ---------1
Shampoo or Steam Exprd Raw11an gardener. . Fireplaces-Planters
Cleaned. 2 Rms. Hall 01 Yd cl~ups. lnmmin~. Classified Ads. sell big BrickConcrete Pat.Jo lnt/E.xt Painting. Avg rm VERY NEAT PATCH
bath ns.95. 541.3547 & pruning. Lt Haul g 1te~s. small items or BlockWalls BBQPit.s $3S .. allplicesinclpa10t. JOBS&TEXTURE
537-7396 ~87. any item. 642-5678. Ref. Ests 646--0464 Free est. 642-3l94 Free Ellt. 893-1
Try a Daily Pilot
Cliwlfied Ad to buy. seU or rent 10metluog.
USE THI
DAILY PILOT
"FAST RISULT"
SERVICE
DlllCTORY
For Result
Service Call
642·5671
ld.lJJ
Af a Iwata.......... Afha baHts llllfwft. Rooms 4000 Offiu Reetal 4400 lmiliHs Lost & Fowtd 5300 Pet"SONls 5350 Jobs W.ted, 7075 Hetp Wmhd 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CJpporheltity 5005 ........................................................................................... . ,._...._°" leacll 3140 Newport a.ach 3869 ROOMS S2S wk up with If You Need A ~lalfed & ........................ LOST male Or'ange cat Drinking problem? Available Nov. 27th. prac-•••••••••••••••0••••u ••••••••••••••••••••••• kitchen .• $40.00 wk up Furn~sh~d Ofr1ce, cal! Womens Sportsw.. w/Oea collar. Bushard & Call Afcohol Helpline Ucal nurse, live In. Call BANK1100t<NG KE-ER IYTHISEA rARkHEWPORT apts.S48·9755or645-3967 THE EXE C ~TIVE Sucessful, prof1Lable Adamsarea.963-1408 24hrsaday83S-38..10 846-2289 ....-bs SUITE. Renl includes business in downtown ---------1 &nkexper. only.
New 3 br deluxe tn e, ArARTMENTS Wrkg fem. Christian. kit f/time reccpt phone & L g B h Best Lost brown fem spayed AIORTIOH HelpWanted 7100 Coolact»obCrelghton
*lll4thSt.S36·l7l8 Jor~Bed~oomsand pt\•l'g,stepstobch,N.B. mail se rvl<'·~. util & n:m~:~n s~~wear & Do~ie mix. Vic. CdM Counseling&Rererral ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrvineNalionalBank
% br, cpts., pool. play yd.. own ouses Sl50 675-1706. 645·2223 janitorial. Secy's & ofc spDrtswear Owner retlr· 3:r'~: Lie. 003318, "Bur· Preg. test-avail. wknds 833·3700. E.O.E .
no p e t s . 2208 A , FromS259.SO equip avail. N~wport ing. $19,000 + mventory nto .646·5961 24HrHelplineS47-9495 JOIHOTLIME n...• Opcn9-6 Daily Room w/kitchcn pnv'gs. Center 640-5470 c uaaware.S36·0959• Spa-Pools-Tennis CaU before 12 noon. CM · alcost. FOUND Men's watch PREGNANT? EX ITJNG EleautySalon
NEW3 Br2 ea, rec rm, Across from Fashio area.645·7920 CDMdlxswles rromSlSO. "Bi:ll Wright." Seashor Caril\g <'onrtdentlal ~f0~~~a~bl~e 5 RECEPTIONIST
etc. rm, BBQ. nr Caty Island at Jamboree o 4150 Ulll incld, AIC, ample area. 645-7767 counseling & referral. "' for busy beauty salon.
Hall + HBHS, $350. SanJoaquinHillsRoad. Guest Home pkg.Jamtor675·0000 FOUND wht/apra·co Aborli"n. adoption & Call556-8SOS Mustbeexper'd. F/time. ""° .......,.evs. (714>644-1900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. ControlCareet" "'· _.,.,... __ .. _,.,., ______ , _________ ,Loving care, 24 hrs. Pnme NewpDrt loc .. 2 of· C o c k a Po o v I lteeping. Employment Agency n.ichard Ouellette Salon,
balanced diets. Pvt races. S2S sq ft . ea. S250 •Alrniture&PlywdMfg. Newport /C.M. Col APCARE 547-2563 ----------1 200NewportCtrDr.N.B.
••-NewAA6.a• OCEANFRONT room,patios.544·3833 Mo each :Lasoodi~._!8[gKi·Class! 631-<&Uaft6pm. *SHARO .... 'S* _.,,. ,... ---------1 Lado Realty 673 7300 """' ...,. 1-2·3 bedroom. children 3 BR,2 ba. S550 Vocation Rentals 4250 •DRAPERY WKRM fo.d Labrodot OUTCALL MASSAGE
BANANA NOSE. please
call Meme. We love ya. IOAT
CARPENTERS olt. pet's consjdered, dis· 2 BR. l ba. Yrly. S375 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pnme location in Hunt· •RUG/l'PHL Cleaner Balboa Island 673.1398 bwashers, cpt.s, drapes, NEWPORT TERRACE BIG BEAR House for 'n gt on Be a c h on •F\JRNITURE Refin 45-1224 Are you a boat carpenter
closed garage. clos.-to 3 BR. 2 ba condo $500 rent. :JBr, 2ba. ~2 per Brookhurst. 800 square Cootal'I Agnt Sam Crane F 0 UN D : Sm I d a r EXOTIC GIRLS ~':!~::'ct':~~~, [g~ stc1e"..'!°.1s,:._:~peur~ novlcae1la~ SUWINDCOMDO day.Callaft6.496-4192 feet S1ngh?.t;arden type (714)645-4170 S4o-o608 Cockapoo. re mal M~o·age &Modeling wortd's finieslllailboats? ......, "''"' .-2 BR, den 2 ba $4SO :.tor<' or orr.ce. Good. ex· Orange & Old New part • .....,,
le. Call (714)847 7566, t.t.YFRO,..... HOME LARGE c AB IN B 1 G posure, signage parking. _C:.:M.:.·:...:64&-4,:..:..:.....::955:.:.:. ____ -' __ 0u_t_c_al_l_On_IY_542_·_31_69_ West.sail Corp., maker or
LOem·Spm. 7 days. " "• BEAR k I t: 11 M p 1 I.his excellent craft. is ---------i 3BR,2ba S2000Moyrly nr s 1 s opes. a · r um m er FOUND : Iris h Sette ''THEEXPERlENCE" now accepting applica-
Sl90. Neat 2 br. kids or
singles. Beachcomber,
fee. 631-2011. 547-2501,
879-1060
STEPS TO BEACH Sips 12· Col TV. pooll~ 963-6767 *Balboa Island* Male, Hntg Bch. area. T Adult motel. Closed Uons from skilled boat ble. 548-3446/ 540-4314 or · 't TV F R 3BR. 2 ba. unc. S42.5 494.8611 Ofc toshaN'. in a boat yd.. Rare find!! Identify. 842-6288 ar carcw . or eserva.,..,.,..___...._ ...... ..,.......,_..-....lf Carpenters w/at least 2 ---------1 on NewpDrl Bay. $175. _3_1_E_v_s·-------i tions,548·9755 yrs woodworking exper.
LAKE Tahoe-Incline mo.673·6540 1'WO tn one be_ auty salon F 0 UN 0 ·. Fem . ., ... , uRE"DER• ACCOUNTANT/ In the boat.Ing industry, v·u 2 b 2 ba comp 1 d bl ,_... 10A TAX PREPARER for Cull-time or piece associated f~'d .. f~I. TV: Suuna .Medical S!e for rent, 900 &retai boutique; ou Australian Shep mix, Past. present & future. Experienced. 752·180 work employment. Jf
$l75.lbr,singlcs ork1<1s. &jacuzzi Thanksg1v1n~ sq r~ C h.01ec loc al licensed. Xlnt loc.allon. white eye. CdM area. Llc2131004·135e697·9272 you'reanuncompromls-
Beachcomber. fee. & other prime times 6'1S-461010am-4pm !u~en':eelaerCeaslltarborhsahdeddl· 497·2771evs. AIDES & ORDERLJE ingcraftsmanwho gives
BRO..: ~RS-REAL TORS
lUl\ W Bolboo • 11 JU 1
631-2011. 547·2501 , ~ • PO BOXES allshilts,LidoConvalea A-'" th ....,.t fh" If 879-1060 avail. Wknd · Wkly. & 400 3 000 S A t1onal information; price FOUND : Yng pa rt cent Centnr, 155 VIUJ e..,.,.. 0 tmse •DELUXE• monthly rates. S.17 -4658 • ' q.rr. b • • " to the job, apply to the JllDROOM Eastbluff 3 br. 2 ba. NUrlF'wy •. Anahlc1mt Arie. $21,500 ~f:.ei.i~~g~:.g4i3~~ For Rent Superior,N.B.646-7764 Security Guard . 275 • FULLl"'THS Lease. Incl. spa<: master Luxurious. furn. villa on t1 . cp.s., p en Y "'t' to identify McCormick Ave, Costa 6 " suite. tJ1n rm & dbl Sayulita Beac h near park'g. 25'' 5415311, Spr· 631 -0727 ASSEMBLERS Mesa.
Frplc. enclosed garal'e. gara~c Auto d oor Puerta Vallarta. 4 br, 4 inger Found: Blk rem. Toy Poo· ---------FulTirne I~~~~~~~~~ L':.~ocaUon. $275 mo. opener avail Pool & ba. $500. wk. 731 -.nn __ Lido Village . Newv<•rt die mix, wht chin & OVERWEIGHT? Xlnt opportunity in Mil IOATCARPEMTER ---------1 recreation area. AtJulls Rentals to Shatt 4300 BC'h. ores avail. Beau11ful HAI.HO \l~l.A' I> throat. Sml wht male Guaranteed 10.29 lbs, 30 sion Viejo t ndustrla Finish teak. Fu 11 or
2 Br, 1 ba. near oew. 4 only. No pets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• view. comp! w tsrl!re· • 671-6900 • poodle, apricot ears & days. Lose accumulated Complex Mu 1 ha 865A W back Springdal e & fat & inches. rapid · . 1 v p/Ume.CallS48-8149. plex. S2$S. Crpt/drps M migedos bay AVOID INCOMPATIBLE t.arial & recpt. SCr\1«' & w~•..:.,_,M•--...... "'N<• tightenina or skin. in· manual dextenty ln unl11---------Gar. Patio 5C7·'19l. · anag y ROOMMATES! oheqWJ) ..,..... ............... ........., .. components. Fam1Uanty IOAT Gnlnada Mgmt Co Lido Business Ct·nttr He.burger Stmd FOUND Pi creased energy. Sare. I .
SPANISH STYLE Nwprt Sh 2 b ., ... h..... .• E·Ob.ru UMJMrrm 714-675-4oa<>ask for Carol Gross $15.000. mo. ,,~ lggeon approxt nutrious. No drugs. $26. ::!rp~ur•cG~~~eritrsy MANUFACTURH
3 BR. 2 s•....., w /frplc, rs. r. "' .,a ~Tak th G k . -----.. -0 M"'ior Highway location wv~ agBo, I b. grayl • lamed. 673-8370 salary commensurat Cabinet Assem, biers. balcony, j;;{io, plus $315 mo. lse 833-8190: es e uesswor Bus~ss R....tal 4 5 .._, · 1c a oa s a n ---------d XI trpt'g " dbl encl gar R u t h , 6 '1 6 8 4 1 3 out or rmdmg that ••••••••••••••••••••••• South County beach 673-<I077 Greyhound bus ticket to w /ex pr. Cal I Caro l!Olll:!e exriet!· ~ 1 • M nt ~.mo. Pet •. c"'ildre cves/wlmds RIGHT ROOMMATE •TOP 1t town. Free standing Bulfalo. N.Y .. or any S81·3830forappL ITm.~:~ J:..fue~ O~K "' •• 832-4134Smcc 1971 building. loads or park· FOUND: Oacmhund. v1c Point enroute, one way. ----------1 NEWPORT SllOHES *LOCATION tr ing. No maJor competi-Magnolia/Talbert F . V. Call 968-1378. ASST MGR TRNE A Kalmus, Costa Mesa.
Bkr. 536·1484 l''l blk.b tooct•.1n Super Looking for a fnendly Successf ul retail or t1on. Easy 29% down. 847.J064 Apply Del Taco Lagun EqualOpporEmployer.
3 8 2 b r 1 2 br cfuplcx Ownr (it.O personable girl to share serv1<'e JucJtton on E Agt. 837-4200 FOUND. blk /wht male SCRAM IEJS Hills. day shift. 2S252 L loat M...,,oduri"! r · 8 • r P c · 870.9200 beautiful 3 Br Bayfront 17th Str eel 10 Costa -=---------' Paz Rd. wa~her/dryer book up. --home $142 per mo. Mesa. Htrfffy/R.talt Puppy, Thurs. Vic. Bear Co. seeking Boat S·
pebo. $360. 894-6510 an 6. BEACH 2 blk!.. n<·~ paint. 673-3818.&675·3381 • 1800 Square reel 12,000 sq . n.. & Sun f Io w e r. S. A . ANSWERS Automotive semblers w /wood work
B Bab 3 Br 2 Bu ripb., fplc , 2 A t bays NewportBeachlocetion. 546-4276 New Detail Shop n exper. Electrical 2 r . 2 · ltns, ent'losed bltns. patio. gar No pell>. Woman with one child will : On~a~epatklng ~l"05sed over SU~.000 .. in Found; blk & wht nwfy GGa'!!.~ _:-E~e'!.':e-=-help Installers. Plumbing !!!~~·1 ~fut~l~~-r~e~ MOO yrty 64~1682 spoohalr.e8426-~:'1. twnhse & • ExccUent expDsure 75. but other busmt:5s In· mull, vie Npl.. Ave In Top wages paid. Engln lns tallers. Exper 'd ....... ~ t ts ed d Un 1 .LUGGAGE Steamers, eng painters, Gelcoat Touchup. CJip. schJs S2SO mo. S46-37J Lease 2Br, 2ba luxury .!Pl • Largts1gn area eres ca~~ ec e n Tustin. Call 731-1849 Aft A great moment in his· buffers & Polishers, up per Marine Corp, 1919 E.
alUPM o verlook in~ Nrwport Male 25·35 desired l o REALONOMJCS. Corp. '76· Sacn£ice for only 5PM. tory was when OTVille holstery s hampooers Occidental, SA.
% B. l ... Ba Bay w balcony & frplc. s hare J BR hse w /2 Brokers 675·6700 S7,000. down. plus stock. Wright made the Cirst h
t ..... ,sepgar,p\l 833-9ZM females.$122962·9740 7000 SJ r t Com· Agt.83'7-4200 Lost : Mlnialurc blk airplaneflight.andwas clivecerykoAupt.plpylcakt·UP&de· BOOKKEEPER
petlo, S250. 6a6-6805 aft • female Cockapoo. 11 /21, also the first to lose his · 6PM SPAC..:IOUS 4 Br Z\-a Ba . mctt1al/ ai'ehouse bldg Coc:lctadfDlnt1er Hse vie Npl Crest. 543.5192 brother Wiibur's LUG· 20S9 Harbor Bl, CM General bkkpng duties.
2 Br. encl gar. paoo. bill encl patio. l blk to bch ~sforRnt 4350 ~~.~~~~~:t~~e!\",e~11i:d~ J'~~r$1~,::'~P~fy~tr eves.or833-7044dSys. GAGEontheplane. 64>l030 ~ito~~bl~!q~~Pe~r~:·1~
to beach no pet.s 205 JSt Yrly 673 7TOH • •••••••• •• • •• • •• •• •••• Su1tablc for comm 'I & Europe & must sell ! LOST: St. Bernard F .• ------''-----1----------i Dianne al Bauer Motors,
SL SJ6.8729or $36-1718 NE.AR HOAG ., Ur l l. Single garages. s.io "'0 whse u.<1c. $700 per mo. Located m heart of busi· s mooth coa t. v 1 c Social Clubs 5400 AVON Costa Mesa, 979-2500.
0 -t · ~ dlt· 310 20th St. llunllngton rm m e d occupanc y . ness d1·., • ....ict. Seats 260. Baker/Fairview CM .••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... 2 Br, pool. 0 ar. kid .... P!.,~· .. ~~r,;.,~., s, no Beach.846-903ll Jleavy front traffic. ~ .. , BOOKS _, "' P'U ... ..., .....,.....,.. Lowrent.14Yearlease. 545-7758 BORED? COLLEGE
OK. Fee. Main Rentals --Phone 642-4210 ask for Ed S6S.OOO full price. Agt. LO ST : Sm Fem a 1 e DATE you can ~elate to. C.....shftlH Im.....,. Sfvdetrts
M0-5370 Br. wntr rfr<>nl. fully rr Bucko. 837-4200 . · . Send $3.50 reg1Stration letln How Houwwi•H & ~orated. p vt tfo<'lt. U'll' Offlc• R.ntal 440 Blonde Terner. VIC H.B. ree to R R II 171 F I!-... U--"t: Sito l Or. child OK. Nr ol boal dot'lc. hont !>lip ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORTR<.,,~STORE Coast Hwy. Reward. n. id . owe· rurAVON -en =~~o waan Ren ~?~~mo s,i1;~!)4s11r lm~MMil~i'il J~~~~~s~i~~~:.~~01 tn•HtnRnt 960-3811 ;;::.,:; eAve.Ne.= Be~~~~:b~~h ~o:ie~~1!~m~~~i
' .... ~ liia : !llj Opporlunffy 5015 LOST. s ha ggy g r ey ....................... customers. Interested! any .ace who e njoy ;;:r.=r: Jt• Luxury Conilo Nwpl Olderhouse:As as.700 sq ....................... Schnauzer. female. Ans So.Pac.C . Call 540-7041 or Zenat spea.lun&w/others&who
Crest 2 Br. 2ba 1475 Ph -"A.tr~ R. $250 mo. No lease at lnsrtl( lorder to "Sam". Vic. Garfield ,..._. 7.1359 a.re bored withe average
••••••••••••••••••••••• t'o4.S-<1867"1524 7731 .;_:;::::-..,_... 2S28_NewJ>OrtBlvd.CM. SlOOOOOR·~-d & Ma gnoli a, F .V. Need female 1st mate. · runollhemilljobs. Nt!'r!:·.2,::i~:Z: 21RWAT!RFROMT ~:::;:___. lndlalriaiR.ntal 4SOO For B~siness \le~t~re Reward.962~ ~c;i:::r~~~:/!~: BABYSITTER who can No actual selling In ·
M509U-5700evs Bulltin5 • (pie-. crp\s. ~---••••••••••••••••••••••• $600.000 RETURNED Found· Group of men', tended c ruise. Call love 9 m o nth old . volved & no setting ap----------4 rl~. ~ara11e $4J."i .,,::;..-.,:-...... PLUS LIFETIME REAL cloth~s near S Coas ~123. Mature. reliable. my pDantments. Work w/one ~••••••••••••~~~ 3001 FINLEV AVE, NB ONE yr•R OLD ~~~~Tfo~t',S~:At Plaza. 751·04ll afle ~ -----,..-&----home 2.,., days a week. or the most papular &
J 6 COIS R11r:'"'1 TY U. 5 JOpm yw Westmins te r /Bolsa succ~ful products on WOOOBRIDG "' "' '"~ QUALIFIED principals . :. --"-Chi c.. 675 6670 4150 Sq.fl. Industrial -r-vn....• ·ca.892-0560. the market today. An in·
PINESAPTS ____ • •l MO F'REEJIENT• space ror lease. Located only. 159·00"11 . Lost: fluffy grey cat ••••••••••••••••••••••• . expensive product who's
1. 2 " 3 bdrm units . S.Clet.nte 3876 1·2·3 Rm. ofrfres rro m a c ross s treet from llllrtlllf*r l\eUlered male; whit Sc:hooft& ~bys1tter needed. pa name Is a household
Designed like early $125 I> .. ~ -o Adj Koll/Irvine Center. Nr paws & underbelly, nea lnttn.cHon 7005 tune, mosUy wkdy5. San word thruout the ""orld. Ca b I ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'' u• · ~tol 1!025 II l b II N J .. lifornla unica ows. OCE NFRONT L 2 A1rporter HoJH No leas OCAlrport. SOOO/mo. • ....... "', OClft ~ ~.o ar ~ e . om ••••••••••••••••••••••• uan. 493-4744. Work ln a youthful.
F' r om $a 1 0 · I l A uxury rCQ. 833-3223~1 noon ED lllDDLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Corona · $100 Reward .J•---------tBanklng friendly atmosphere & ~. ~5r~!k~:~$: ~h~~f~:~ step:i
10 11r:uQ FT REALTOR 646·8811 ht, 2nd & 3rd T.D.'s 673~ 499·314 IE A TELLER~ .d have fun while you cam .. ~ 60< P~· LOA!"S AVAJLABLE LOST: Large Male blk SNr top pay. You receive a ~OCOO Bachelor . n ear ocean. 1617 WES'ICLlt"f'·NB Credit not important tan German Shepherd TitAVEl AGEHJ TOK BAf.IK guaranteed salary + ex· ....... .._.. 3841 $175 mo. Yearly. 332 En· AGT .141·5032 lltntats Wanhd 4600 673-4883 Broker "Fido" vie Magnolia 3333W. Coast llwy, NB tremely liberal com.
••••••••••••••••••••••• cinoLn.492·2896 ••••••••••••••••••••••• T t Warner REWARD Momlng-At'temoon 64&-7121forintervlew mission & bonuses. Con·
OCEAN VlEW c..-.....o&. I__ 3886 150 I Westc;Uff Dr. Desperately need 2 or 3 Br Morh)aqes, nn 5035 846-M32. · · Evening BANKING tests & other incentives.
RENTALS _. ...,._... NewJ)Ol1 Financial Ctr bse, abt S300 mo. Laguna DHdi 0.A.SSES ST RT XI n t adv s n c em c n t ••••••••••••••••••••••• • -'-Offi .... Snar.• Bch area. 49'~729 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOST: Miniature wht A UMIOH IANK poss1biUUes for both tnen 2tlc'lwnhleapt4"2brhs 1 ,. ul 1 rl -,._,.., -r--h Bl Ca MONTHLY o...1-:r::a.--1.. •lf'1>lc fl garaae Walk ""t\e, q et. uxu ous eJt· CalloiSlte MtinaJ1er LOANS 9% s acgy poodle, g . .,. ~ &women. · ec. 2 br, 2 ba apt {71'l642·3lllext246 lusinns/lnnst/ nyon area. Please call Has mmediate lo bcb. S m •ll pe Elevator to scenic pnv ~t Aho2ttdTDLooM 6"-4383 PACIAC OpeningForAn: No exper. nee. You re·
welcome. 547·S448. l)ch Party & game room. •••••••••• ••• ••• • •• • •u TRA Va SCHOOL EXPER'D TB.LE.R ceive full pa.y while being
l br, La ....... Charmer. tct.a1 sec. Perfect living New I""-a.Mness Fairest Terma since 1949 hrsoM!lt 5150 610 E \7\hSl, S. Ana trained. You can work ·-· o.-d r h -y __.._;t.v 5005 Sattttr M ... Co ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 .. 'S L61t5 Neal appear. Type 40 . h 0 Quiel nejghborhood. « w .... retrl'at or l e Of re s with private Op,.....-... , '7 • '9-w wpm Starting ulny mommgoreve. rs. n-
1275. mo + $35. mo gar. adventurous adult. $515. ba&.k 45 Cents a sq.n.. in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-217 I 545..0611 *KAREN •5 * Accredited by NATTS commensurate w /exper. ly 10 min. by Fwy. from -.~&497-3'28. mo.yrly. lse499-283S c!ulUJg .utilities. JOO-Pluo-leff'oWlne SAVrt:. SS EstabUsbecl 1983 all surrounding com· .._ l•llhhmilhe4 5C1.'\.u01ts. NETS$3,l!OO. MPO. '" OUTCALLMASSAGE F\nanciaJAidPrograms PleaseApply munlUes You owe It to J Br·view. Adll.s, block -+-ah&. d*nd. 3900 • Roy McCwcle Major M Issi' on Vl .. J Private party will buy 6PM·2AM 838·17 ln Person yourself to at least ln·
beach. cpt1, stove, or-vw111-~ yourl!DdT.D.642·3573 To Doris Mttch.ell vesll1ate this unusual refrte. 1275, 494·16S9, o••••••••••••••••••••• fedtor 1110 H•wpori abopplng center, all ---------1Cbristlan Girl, teucber, MEN WOMEN 610NewportCtr Dr opJ>Or. Contact Jenelle -.1c nn: EXCITING Cott.Metia 541·7729 ~C uip~enl brand tnev/. l1tlr 2wc1Lomt5 ~ra1n,!Sh,Cehnrisulplanhollll.lYldaty. TIAIM FOR N---rt Bch MB·S280 Taulbee,833'8098. PALM MESA ArTS. ross as growing s ead· frvine Pacific Finaociat v o • IAITIHDIMG --...... 1---------llllNUTES TONPT ly, but 4 partners c:u'l Company.640-8292 days . Athletic type . TWOWEEKCLASS Equ_al()pporEmployer IOYSAMDGIRLS ............. 116 ••••••••••••••••••••••
2 Br, fJ'l>ICi 1~ bath, i
patlot, enc 1un pofeh •
gar. Walk to t>eh. Comp!
redecorated. Adulta/no pell. S375/IDO Yrl)'.
~
BCH NEWPORT BEACH agree. Terms . Att 558 UW. NATION·WlDEJOB Banking Exper. fuU time Mission Vl~jo . El Toro
8acb, 1&2 BR. <Xe w/sec~lary 837-4200 &\.RN 10~ on local TD's. PLACEMENT leUer, PH: 492-8100 Ban.k area. £arn your own
fromSI9S. $3.SO/mO. 752 5626 ...... BILL HARDESTY MASSAGE •"SIST•NCE o( San Clemente see Mr. money selling subscrip· Aduj~iNoP"''ti Manufact.unng Weluiv& Realtor 615·2866 AA••UMODELS ~ " <'nib •• .. _ .. 1 .,. 1 lMl Meta o~": APPROX 800 sq ft. C·2 ut Macb.ining-Fabricahng wv GOOD JOO ... r:: __ Y·------uons ancr Su•OO · "Ot n• <SD.lbEastofNe~rt 130..E. 17th St .. S2SO m o. Nets 25.000. yr. ~ave Alr-c ... nh/ ESCORTS OPPORTUNITIES 8Qnklng formaUon,call830--0913
Blvd.> Doyle548-04T~ shop. Agt. Sam <fane, «'Wftf!As/ OUTCALL ONLY AM•ICAH PART TIME TELLER IUSIOY
$46.9860 •-•1 ~JIJ -s 645-4170 Lost & Foilftd ] I •• 1 I I A R T I M D I R S OpenlDg for permanent Pays & nl .. hts. Ap~pl.r
Codtped 2 level slnaJe. ~7~Po~u~Zin.1c·:_..·• Dc:'n~"s!~ ~':n &i"{ ~k •••••••••••••••••••••···---'--·-~--~---• SCHOOL f: time teller ln our dally uAtit"'ai Ml Cul\ szto lncludca utll In ,~ r • ., I W "'.,.}lEllA1 ~AF f .. w ._-.ettntntt 5100 11"" E l ... hSt s.a una Nl,ue.I otc Prtf Me-•cao ft~•""" E 17th ear strano. IU ah•re ""'. Ons. vu v .. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,. • .. .. " . lU ..,... ~ • . H1rbor View HomH . glr 7514824 Santa Ana. $70Clt. com· ·834·l960 •avinp " oan or bank C.M. No phone calla Adlta, aopeb. ..._.... Lovely quiet mwtl· · • pJcte. Ail. Sam'Ctano, Oran1e Cou.nUe.s most ad· • ........_ J•H SchoollCoatTo t teller exper. Hrs. ev~ry pleat 60-?a l)'. Htd pool, JY\ gar . ut Class .Ole. Su(X'nor 645-4l70 vanced Color Workshop •""""1""9 •-A.-W
5
Sat. 8:30-1 :30. Tues &•....___.. ______ _
--------"adulta only, no pet!I. Ave, CM SlOO mo tnvtt~yout.oparticipatc Ateyouc()o(Use4&woo·-~ 70 Tbun, 8:1S.S:OO. XlntBualaeu Mao R. E .t
BB.\tmFUL F¥m b~c '19S. mo. Davls·Brown Co 646-1684 JR DEtn' Clbachrome School. For <kr1na how \o advert.lse •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• beotflU, lncl \tlsurance, ntod• -dally toucb o 8AYPRONT 'P\am l br . mo. trn· OUTLETstOR.E: Info. & reservations. Call your Chrtslmat aUt Mother'A HlllPera for "l!be vacaUon,aldc leave pro· ~etplna ho\lr or ao
JeAbYlew.l!ty,2br, fwn lbr .Onrum2eFURNISHEO. decor. Ideal for co le Neta S8l.Q22:2 Items! For an Inn· HolldayY. .. Coapbu f1Ubaring.Ca1t'95:ci50 toexcbaJliefortreeUv· bit. ldftl cood.. new c \w SUJ Ready on or angl ofc, w /phone on $1000 p1mo. \.000 full C01lN£LLSTUDl0 ptn&ive way lo ao. Ju t clunln•. Free a.t. REPUBLIC FEDERAL 'in&· tr service answer&.
bllli9.. '850/mo. 142-before . 30. Pbooe Coot Hwy. S7~ mo pnce. So~ rm•. Ail 252011.aPaiRd. c•Jl our Chri&tl*'H Ad Cluoin1 w/car•. Pula, SAVtNOS . leave m e.su8e for
,,.._, orews:S4&-41846 842-JOU 9 to a 6*1:NO• • Sam Crane. -4170 Leguna HJll$. V~r •l M2~a. Ai Dare.I, a&l.a9U. F.qual Oi>POr Employer Walter 768-8890
•
,.> ,,
..
. .
I
t '
I'! ... ....
. .. _
..
"·
'.,
, Cf DAIL¥PILOT W-!!J;-24.Um ~.!.~ .... ,?!!~ ~~.'::'!'!,,,,,!~_!~ ~ ... ,,,,,,~~.~! . " -_ • · "
Hefp W•t.cf 7100 HftpW•hd 7100 HelpW..t.d 71001Modt1waoted!Ot'plctunt SALES/MGMT new Buutllul bras1NCR ca1b .._ ... _.. IOQ Mlar:lfll•.o.. 80IO Mttal-•• 1010 ···•·····•······· ...... . . . ..•........•••.•••.•.............••..•••.•... •••••• •• ••••• • ••• ••-•••••••• • •••••• •••••••••••••••• Miut ... 11-U~rs. rtc11e at ore mer>~/ wom tlna tt0lstA!r s:ns •••••••••••••••••••••••
111:11--\I "' 1.1 • • · • Pl ....__ b d ·~•· $ears Air Condltloner Business man w~ka part CUSTODl.At4 G11Mr .. Offlu co ........., .,.. na.. or c: on le rn po r r y ti44 SS30 All wood ca me aot um ....... an """" ~dow lOOOO BTU 11o•
time-assoch1te. £arn Vitamin M r1. vay1 , rermanent pa•l·llme JN sporbwnr. Poslllon• Appione-. 1010 w/llllitcbmg 11ec&sorlea, at a ~In volt. .,:c•ue.s-6491.
SSOOpermo.64.51182 Neal. Matun" Apply hi Multi Miiiion Oollat Mohl Hite Cleric uv111l 1n both dt-pt.a. Ex ••••••••••••••••••••••• cut velv \ aora & lov· ___ _:67:.:.:...:::.:.::::... ___ l---------c ,.1 D•av""•S person. Lmwllco Labs, COfl>. 1tamna nc:w ore In l 8 t w \ per. onll net!d upply ln Scot man Ice· Maker eseat, «1&.sstop dinette, Maple dHk 22 .. 1111 log, Game at\ upholstered
A " !!;A 2148Nc:wport81vd,C.M. lrvtne. N eed en 1 es e• ern person.~cnnetbUoydof 1 lb ...... ~ wood coffee tbl, alau xtr la doihoulc bourbon barrel.I unused Men<>r Womf'n tbu1iuttc, puH1vt Otpi.struolnn, mu,tb<' Ne-wport, 2700 W. Coast New-usedtmon .-..v COCfeetbJ.t1.l•mP$,lclng • M2·UIS • S300. Al•o several
Mustbe2:1orover l~llvcrymenforbomedc· minded poople lo 1n bondab~. ov r 21. Cull llwy,N.8. ID1lalled.67J.l232. bdrm •Ht w /armolre, · Mldwe•l aatlquea.
Apply Jn PenstJll 1.tv. LA T1mc11. lt'Oducc lnexpen.alve na fOr appt. <714 >4&3 *I· SA.Lis.MGMT Jo'RGT DAMAGED HOT-kin& or quHo box 1prin1 Sleeper Couch & Chair , ~
YeUow Cab Coll 54A·1740. Uonally known produclb ~URSE POINT Sale. 3308 w. & mattress. All ln Jtlnl szoo. King H Bed. $30. --------
ll251 Sluter Avenue Oeliv""' -nn (or ear•u from our ok. Free pork RN or l VH We ore looking for 4 Warner nr Jlarboc Sant.a cond. MUST SELL • Stereo $20. 41M-7792 aft. 5 0 ~ n b Y s.~,o n •WI •,r e Fountain VnHc-y -·1 ,._ ., Ing & otber benellla 0 N Xln f1&hJon minded ~oph.i Alla. m mt • ~-4780 ( 'Romaru' baerv ce or -------"---t mom's L.A. Times home plusant surroundlnCJ 6 arte urse 3·11• \ e'q~r'd In women '11 • UtUcton bench pipe vlse e. <Pd. $50 . ). never
CAILE TV dell vory route. Must rehaxed atmosphere. Ne 'P~ri<Xl~~~~e,!1v""center fush1on clothing for ules REFRIGERATORS 9-pc comer i.roup; xlnt SlO. Hi~ ttl\sity lamp SI. UHd. $3:!0. 5S9.oo92
IMSTALLEAS have ecl·on cur. Adullll exper n~c. & no selling N • w/advAnccmont Into WASH~KS.01\YERS qutsllty. l..ake n ew, ?thtal portA·flle $1. .......~
App)" In "''r"on. Storer only. 2~~ hr:1 day. No involved. Xlnt oppGr. Cot ewport Bcb 642-8044 m.'lnaaement. tr you're Recondlt1on•·Rcpros & walnut table w/:strorase. Toostmaater portablt Comb1bln~~obollUtabrd!e, .,.,..er
J •-"' soli<'lting, no C'ollectlng. advancemeol. Ca ll mJRSES interested in a career m Frgt Oamaite. Gu1&r/Oel. M:!-0381. Sl75 e lectrlc heater $15. ta 8 "' a • c:om~ g~~l;.~~~~~21~~~~~ Weiitminster/H.B. area. 833·809Si Tlm ellh • LVH•i<M's v;omen's fashions, cnll 29Yr1ln Or11ngeCo. Kin£$ize bed $lOO couch Dremelm~1boppowe1 plet:u~f.hJ;~balla &
Niguel. 638·0l216 Ubraries. nt'. Equ;d Op. Ex per pr,f'd. 3 t o 11 for appt. 4' interview• DU .... LAP'S loveseat, $75. COffee tbi jig saw $10. BJg Wheel $5. cue . • •
DEL TA.CO por EmployerM/F ahlft F/tl~ or P/llm1' lion thru Fri 9.s. TH.I!: " SIO 96H'J50 k e lv lna to r 80Uolo1 11100 bricks· Save over
CARrET CLEANER Needs Kitchen Help G l R L Friday I Recept. Good s t11Cflng pattern. WOK, S4<MSOO. 1815,Ncwport DI, CM . nitrigerated bOtth,1 cooh~t $$0. 35$ aq.' 11., pick 'lJ>,
Nl'Oded Im medi&tely. P /lime Positions avuil. Typing, lite bkkpng. Ex· XJnt l>Or19fits~ · Sandwich Delivery, rem. CALLS•IM'180 Convertible ~!a· brown & r.·B~~!°:.~;11:.:;,'rsi':. cuh. Me-9640
_Callll402'100 Day help . $2.SO hr. per'd, Send resume tc ParkLldo~ot1•Ctr Moz:nlngs9:30-no<>o.Xlnt Gen'l EJec.18lbWasher. whttweed, .... e ne:o_1785 114 size r ollaway b ed Exte rnal Breaat
CARPET LAYING G:ll-1831 1720 Superior ClassJncd acl no. 770 c/c CALL842·80H J?ll1111e pos. Info.Call $125, Kenmore Wosher & SlOO treme $25. Small electri" Prosthesis. alr.e lO. Com·
APPRENTICE Ave, CM Daily Pilot, ro Box 1560, ""'URSES ... 10£-S W-OUS. Gas Dryer $200, Ken· Sngl twn bd. like new S8S t an $3. Sear~ Sprint: panlon, Tbo Airway. $50..
E f 'd c II 0 Co6U Mesa, Ca 92626 " A • more Wusher & Elec dbl bd w /hdbrd ss3 tension family fitness set 847·9'118 xper pre r • a DEMONSTRAT RS· 7..3&3·11. Exper. preC'd, Schllus Dn•fl' Dryer $19S. Guar/dt=l. HoovervacSJ0768-T737. ~Turner portable pro· • -~·OOOl .Pllime l-4 days_. foods, GUARDS tM will train rilJture Hourly position. $U8 per ~8672 pane radiant beater SS. Ml1cell_.ous
CAR WA.SH MGR. ~;;f~liances&Jewelry, Costa Mesa persons. lntervws Mon. hr. Lag llch School DlSt, Fr Sea C Ids t Comer group, bdrm set , Poloroid Big Swinger W..t.d 1011 "'---------1 Perman""nt. F'"~' •·part. Fri 8am·4pm, Mesa Call494'8013. eezertr. rs . oht pogd.' end tbls. lamps, cbrs, ...._,.amera $S. t~airlfel .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lmmed. employment " uu"' V rd C H ,,.,1 coppe one, upng , . """ .. 088 ....,,,.,... T'~~ ~vo1I for full serv~c ca1 UEN. TAL Assist. Ort ho time, Phone & transp re. e e onv. osp, "" cond S16S 552.0037 misc . .._..... 8mm projector $J.5. 1 v . Short-Wave ~dlo wash manager. M st be (.;ha1rs1de. Exper'd Only. q'd. Retired welcome Center St, C.M. Sears Tuaedo Dept · · , antenna & pole sz. 50' Wltb clear recepUoo In
c.'<per'd m <.tll ph es uf Pref. HOA.•~ Days. CalJ546--0274,ofchrsl0-2 \IW'Ses Aide, part timo. Salesperson needed. For sa l e Kenmore 9M~ra~e~. 1good$2'1fod. new TV/FM lead wire coodt'Oftd!Uoo.Reasona·
t•ar wash mgmt. op snl N.lJ. $1Hr.64.2·2626. Clo&ed Wed. Varied shifts. $3.00 per Well 1fferoomtd. Mostly v.•asher1drycr deluxe lop esea~:-"Js~~7l. · Sl.50. 9541 Flounder Dr, ble. 536-8280 + bonus + comm J.'or h 9 35 9 mornings "' wknd ~ of the line. Hus ever· H.B.962-3822
interview call 644-4160. DENTAL ASSIST HAIRSTYLIST r. 4 4·55 ' 4 4'1151 P /time. Calhy, S40-333J, ythlng housewife needs Water Bed, Super Deluxe Mittie ..
--Busy, happyofc. Xlnt hrs Apply University Park room 219· ext341. S485 set . 404 Iris. CdM model. $800 new, SSS-0 IA.llllHG IROOICS IMtrwltwts IOIJ
"'"'JllERS, over 21, full & benefits. Denlal as · Co'(( 18052 c 1 p · llkk "i7" cnc.c 7 n. s Ideal for •1·1·Ris" apts., ••••••••••••••••••••••• "~ 1 ures, u ver art lime eepcr, Sl!!l"RET"'Rlo:.S u .roRolU complete.968-923 a . v tame, S locnt1ons, s1stn'g t'ourse preCr'd. Dr, lrYine. 552-8080. Costa Mesa cabinelshop. """" A <; small patios, etc. Enjoy Coan Mln-<>·MaUc elec.
METRO CAR W ~<m Exper not nee. Applicant 540-SSJS t.egal·M any to $00() U P R I G II 'I' Selling unique imported your own g a rd e n or1an, excellent condi· 2950Harbor lll\·d, CM. must be quick, well or· HANDYMAN lll>okkeeper tu $1100 REF'RIG ER ATOR JN hand carved 3 pc !iv.rm waterfall this Christ.mas. lion. $600, P .P. 532-125&
ganiled. bard working. P/fIM E·Prefer ftetiree, p ART· TIME l:.mployers Pay All Fees GOOD CON DITION $60. set.. $3,000. 644,8020. 548·1444 OHi 111t...-1&..-& CHEF thorough, happy & ex· Need conscientious han· OPPORTUNITY Liz Reinders Agency Call 644·8581 Ct rwnwfW'W Experi~ced Chef tremely slf ·confident. dyman w /landscaping In produC'tion dept. II rs 4020 Birch St, Ste lll4 n f . g t West Gcrq Sale 8055 Fld ve bllgbt s ilhv
1
erb ca
1
n· 1qi11,....t 1085
for Le Bwrntz French 545·4958 day.· 768--7529', k b t k Nev.PortBeach 83J.•190 e n era or • · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ela ra 18" g , ce ••••••••••••••••••••••• now ow o eep u Mon noon 4pm & 8pm· " h 14 Xlnt cond b k Cafe. Apply in ""rson, 581-7884 eves. N po t ct r bldn Call for Appt/E.s tab '65 10~ ouse · . · Mov'ing Sat & "··n Nov 27 uc et, trays ; en· Exec wooden dak w/2 r ew r r o t' " 5.am, Tues 5pm-4am. No A do $175 675-3665 · "" I d 93-8037 !!~.....Noo·. Npt Bl, Nu. DENT.AL HIGENIST, looking SHARP! s.-end r.e· "X""r. fl"C. Will tram . ----------VOCll • . • & 28 933 Joann St, CM <'YC ope ias. 4 erect attached. Modero
..;...,..,, l C I f " r-" SECRETARY·EXEC . ft f r «•"·oCn4 . .. " , . T bl •· righllumsec:t'ydslt., l.ge ---------1 part lime. 2 days p/wk. sume o : a I orn1a Apply Pennvsaver 1660 GrcalOPPor.Carecrsecy Sears ~2 cu. . rost· reE ....., . 40 x72 . Dra1t111g a e .,. & m ed sbe blk cbk
ChildSilterNecdcd llunt'gBch.898·4425 ~~~~~::•s~;~~eg!,~~ Ph1ce~t1aAvc.c.M: currently working, de· n err.ig. On l y $l00.2nd Hander, New.Used. Drafting !Dach: Xlnt c h a irs, plastic floor
torSyearoldboy -1431, Los Angeies. Ca PEOPLE PERSON sires lhalln'g posit. u1 675-9735 120 E. 23rd. CM .. Tues· cood.. $400 incllud1ng llrg matts .. 1709Westcllrf Dr. "'"II behaved. He is DENTAL RECEPT admin. ~ales Strt work e· les 8020 Sat 10.S &bind Feed assort . draft ng loo s. NB Ste I Joe ted DI' ,.1~itmg fortheholl-Some ex pe r, Laguna 90067. Exec needs P1llme as-lst of l l. Xlnt SH/lYJI, .!~!~•••••••••••••••••• &~ • 67J.289laft5pm. hlick.6Jl..0Ul. a
duys from out or town. Uch,494-7522 Hostess, full time. Appl}' soc.'" whsle supply. f'ut. h~ deU w/~aJes ablty, 1 US ED, REBUILT & POOL TBL. 1" slate top, 2 . •
Grandma works DRIVERS in pers?n JJ.12 & 1:30-3. ly<'apilahzed 673 2223· girl ofc. Pnme Newpcrt Guarnnteed. All types, •PA'.flOSALE• sets balls, 1 Cun ball. 4 Complete omce set-.up,
<1nd needs l Ha rry s N. y. Bar & Beach loc. Pd. ben, start parts. repairs. Trade·m~ Fr1/Sat 10 ~ 3 cue sticks, 1 cstm cue x.ln~ steel desks & chat rs•
somroncparttimedays CrossCountryl Grill 4248 Martingale 5800. Cmplt res. to ud accepted6Jt.2101 Jlo':'se hold atems, $3SO.Pb•97·l302 swave la also. 675-3000, 8 15toS:45 .. Nov JO No special license req'd. Way: N.8. Nr. O.C F47J, Daily Piiot P.O refngerator, small ap. Bay"BeacbRlty;
thru Jan 4. Refs req. MacGregor Yacht Corp, Airport PHONE SALES Box 1560. <.:oi;tn .Mesa. •NEW· USED BIKES• pliaoces, clothing, toys & Official uneven Parallel ·~
8017 l'all516·5710art6PM I631Placenlia,C.M. Ca. ttuy·SCll·Trade More. Bar , Uke new GSC f'on.
lv1c Fa1r/Fa1rview,CM) EXEC SECRETARY r HOUSECLEAN ER Want Phone Sales peoplf', Parts & Repairs 617 JASMJNE,CDM Equip. #6618. 1976·77 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . ~r ed ror maintenance co male or female, 16 tu 65 Service Stall<.n Allen Skateboards. Lt--8060 catalog San Pedro. P1us F\'ee OalmaUon female, 3 t.:LEANING Lady, S nites investment co . 1n Expernec.S4S.0766 yeersofage.Cuaraoteed chint, exper'1\ Day & ~cle&Co,24S8Newpo>r1 ..._.._, 2•12 .. s'x5' Foarn pads· yn, AKC shots, lovu
CJ \\k. tipm·2::10am. Bon· Fashion island. Mus t wages or commissions c;,·es. Full & p li me. Ap .. d C M ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 . S 000 children.Mt 3973 h 4 t Hsk Mat re oman ror 250 I::nst 17th Street, 1 Sh 11 St l l?th • ., v · · · 642·79l0 F c:--1 2 · •. ho ny on covenng. 1 · • d:iblc NB. ore bid~. 40 ave yrs exper .. ype pr. u w plry\'l"no,~•e. a ion. "' c-r.A• & qorua"""rteerb:o!°e.rues ... s w c:omplete. (714)~.()'796. al-.. & "'---8090 llrs. stt•:idy work. Phone 65-10 wpm, sh 80·90 wpm. occas Cul.I dy ba~y::.1t11~11 Suite 0 , Costa M<.>~<1 . ~ ,, _,.,. ._ ... n--·..-•
t>l1·U606 Apply, TMI 369 San & hskpng. Ref~ reqd betwt'enS·00&8·30prn Equipnwnt 8030 Call847-1091. Bicycle, 20" •• t.op shape,••••••••• .. ••••••••••••
-· Miguel Dr. Suite zoo, 731·2402. 646·4:!23 Service Sta~1on \t1c11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIS. Walnut lamptable, ChrislmuGU\?Wurlltzer
CLERK TYPIST N.B. HO US EK EEP En. for Equal 0PPortumty Jant, .ex per d. hit 01 CANON TLb w/FDl 4 hwelry 1070 $7. 921 MacKenz.le, C.M. Cherry Spinet Orian. Al
.
h
l mmed. openin g for .l::mpluyer part·time. Apply !\rec I M' t d $ll0/bst ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Cond$S75 640-7007
l.) pc.t in sales dept of small exclusive Motel 111 Station, 17th & In tne, ens. '" con WANTED '
electronics manu!. Must FOOD ORDER Laguna Beach. S da} CM. _o_fr_._833_·7_7_28 ____ -1
week incl wknds. 494-8521 Cots 8035 TOP CASH DOLLAR t ype al least 50 wpm. SOClABLE ASSOC y O
Pleasant phone voice. ~SEMBLY HOUSEWIVES PLUMBER, REPAIR • : ••••••••••••••••••••••• PA ID FOR U R F SY needed by i::xt;c Ill • JEWELRY, WATCHES ore exper. pref'd. Xlnl P /time jobs .. flexible /lime. ears min CX· whsle Jo\Jlly cap1tallzr1I lhmalayans 3 mos. blues, ART OBJECTS GOLD'
ben-ef1ti; including Jo~~iJ'L~e hrs. while k1do., a1·c in per.Call5:lG·1452. sup pl v . P /l1 mt & seals, reasonable. SJLVER SERVICE'
medit·al/tlentalinsur. st·hool. Apply, 1.>l'I Tal'O. Pit Sales. S40$70 wk up. (2131592-3295. ~:>719.A~7 orwknds F INE FURN & AN°
Disc Instruments FAR WEST SERVICES 252.'>2 La Pat Hd, Lag Men. ladies . ~tudcnls. ·1 \ ESF.: Se I · k' TIQUES. 64S-2200 1021':.Raker.CoslaMesa 1612ReynoldsAve llills. Ev<•s/Sat 554 •7851 , SOUTHERNC/\t.IF. Si M : a point it-_ _;;... _______ -11 Call979·!>300 lrvme 839.7006. Representative for leru..2 1-.$2Sea.S48·~38 CUSTOM
Equal Oppor Employer JANITORIAL --established marine chart or 552·8733 GOLDSMITHIMG
Cocktail Woit~ss ~~~~~~~~~ P/time, F/llml' Exp<>r'd surveyS, distribulio~ & Doqs 8040 Wholesale&Retail
P /lime.Mustb<-21 A~p· GARD EN ER w /exp. adultsonly.Local i:;,•es. Rcall':'>tate advt sales, part·llml •••••••••••••••••••••••JEWELRY repair and
ty m person. 1-'ri. ll/26 & needed for the La~un~ Top wages. 979·~Zl. BROKER with car. Send qu~hfka YORKSIURE TERRIER remounting. 500 patterns
Sal 11127 betwn 12 & 2 Lido Apts full time lions to ChartGuiclc. PUPS Champ blood to choose from. Stock
The Rib C:igc. 858 S 499-2835 ' JANITORS p O Box 2311• Anaheim linl'<, tiny 3 lbs stud nngs, chains and custom
<.;oas t Hwy, Laguna -P/fimeS·lOPM. fo'ash1n11 SERVICES 92804 sernce5J0.64SS casting. Large stock ol 'Bea(•h GENERAL OFFICE Island area. Couple!\ OK. TECH I .._. 14k findings.
Lite typmg & bkkpng, Call714·S32·6550, M·F HIC An AKC l>achshunds, shots, 8J3..JO<l8 8JJ..3064 COUNSELOR
Home sturly c.ll\01sion of
pvt l'<ltl<'<llu>n inst1tul1on
ha ' o pen1n ~ for u
c:ounselor Te.ll·hm)( <'"
f>t'r & trl.'dl'nt1al pr('( d
!-lend r(''lume & :.al.1ry re•
c1wn·m<>nt to "SC l'O
Jlo"t 2 112 11, Nrwpo rt
l:3eill h. C.1 <126l>.l. J\ Un
l'er:.onnel Dt•pt
Phone f'xper. Gooc Need a professional who Ceramics or scil·nce Sl.50 & Up. Red & Black MacTavish Goldsmith customer relauons. c M KITCHEN ASSIST. has owned or managed background mandatory 495 4~ 2SOSc 1 D N 8 Needed p /time Cook , larit<' rl..'std<'ntial resale Ba d d' f --4 ot r, pl. ch 5'19 ~2. Cf f 1 sic un erslan ing o FrtttoY-• 80 .. 5 -------1 Tues & Wed P 1 ll me Dis o ice "1th a success u electronics mandatory. :J "'" "' IJcautiful white gold •r.. ct
SELL·SELL·SELL washer. Xlnt benefits baC'kground of recrual· y rs expr nee. Xlnl •:••••••••••••••••••••• .Solita1re,sz6,$125.orof.
thoseChnstmasnems .l\pplyinperson. Jkverl} mg,tra1111ngandmanag. benefits. salary <·om I-cm . Shepherd m1" fcr.546-7053
fromunder our :"llaoor, 340 Victoria. mR people :'11ust be able mensurate w /hack (white) 1 Hold. Great -.---------1
DAILY PILOT c M. lo rommun1cate with J?round. Mission VieJo Jn W/k1di. hsC>brokcn. 1-'an· LivHtock 8075
CHIUST.\fAS TREE brokerfo'4ners rfustrial area. Call Carol t;,,t1c do~' Allergy in ••••••••••••••••••••••• CALL our Cllnstmas Landscaping ma mt. N\·ed Excellent u I a ry. Cl(· 581·3830 for appt. family 493.(fl·~'fi Reg. Morgan mare, broke
---\d \"1seral642-5678 t•xper. man l8·2.5 Mu!>t pcnseo;, car allowance. y 0 to ride & drive, blk ha,e refs.S3hr .st.1rt1n~. mctl1t·al /dt'ntal an · TELLER/PfTIME 1 r. Id Ulacl\Lab Free parade Morgan gelding
Co1u1 t t lu•
bl~·ssi11gs
flOH l111u.-
'o off~r!
by placilMJ • od ww.ltt-ow
DAILY PILOT CHRISTMAS TREE
• **********"' « -tr ~ Christmas •
• Gifts For «
-tr E•~ryon~ •
: Whal ;1 wnnclrrful w,1\ lo:
~l'l l \llllr .:noll1<"' l11r
• ('llr1,tn1:1~ • n11ht out«
• trorn 111111l-rour «
·• ('llH l~nl\'\Tll~~Jo~ •. ***•*********
• ***********•
• ~IF YOUR•
• • BUSINESS• « IS «
• <:lti'S ·1'0\'~ •
• SPORTING GOOOS it
• (.,,OTlllN\. ·POTTl::H\" •
• .JEWl-:LRY ·Hl\IR -ti
-tr :\IU~IC ·FURNITUH fo; • « A:";TIQU liS ll()IJIJIES «
-t1 UOOl\S ·Al'l'LIJ\NCL::S -.
.. HOJ\TS 1!11\l::S
«· AUT0~10Hll.l::S • ,.se11 th<.>m t111• ~1mptt'•
il oind ~·a~y ~ .... ,. t r11111 tc
unckrour •
• CllHJST~l/\S Tlll·;t:; '41
************"
Ywcllft
hen·•• llCI
... , WU
forSUO
........
tW1 Jin
fwS7.SO
Ow .,., Plot Cliiktm11 Tree _. rm ... llllrl4ilrr .. o.c.. ......... .., ..... ,... .... _ .. _..P9,.. ...
'-,_ INlrfJ Ctll '4J..M71 a_.,_..
Cliiletr..1(, MoVhw ... --......... .......... ,... ...
•
Call 751·2.399 betw 5·6pm o · B h f k bo d lo i:ood home E w ' surance. :vn am1c ranc o c l>ce s n a 5J5S4?2 "47.2959 .,.!.g
10
•
11
est ern (714 ) Rmwth potential with a ble Teller lo work ....,., MAIHT. TECH.
Maintain and Tool
Vacuum Equipment
Must have machmmg ex
per & basic understand
ing of electronics. Tn
work with minimum
suill'rvision. Musl be sell
starter. Salary from
$6001mo. based on
ab1hty.
Newpurt Thin Film Lab.
S-19·0620 Santa J\na
s olid based hrm, na p/time. Expcr. pref'cl C.:Ol·kapoomalcl Id
tional in scope Contal'l Hilda Terranovc· '"rv fnendlvyr 0 . • Mochin"Y 8078
F1)r <'Onfldcntial in· (7\4)644 7255. ~. ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ler,•1cw s end resume to Western 1''cderal Savin~s S.!6 7S!ll FORK LlFT, 5000 lb. Neu.
P.O. lk>x 109i5, Santa Z744 J<: t 'oast llwv l'dM 2 F'etn411e Part Shepherds Sharp. 168" Lil\, ma ke
Ana, 92702 ~ual Oppor Emplnvcr 3 mo's (J!d ' offer. 5311·3068 633·5200
-----TYP y --645'9917 Mbc~llGMous 8080
RECEPTIONIST .IS . German Shep. 9 mo•s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• For profess1o~al orft<'e. male, blk/tan, shots & WAltri..•TED
/\llrartivc, ovrr 18, for Excitu_ig ~row th oppty. he. 646·1185 of\ 4 l>M. ""' F/P Time. ~nd n''Um<' TOP CASH DOLLAR 111-:i\LTll SP/\. We will P.O Oo .'I: 424, Ualhoa LovableCockaP<>OTcrrier P A ID FOR YOUR tram right person for 1 I I easy Cun JOb Mr Giar· 5 an< mix puppies, 8 wl'cks JEWELRY. WATCHES,
Milll' w:inted to help milk<' russo. t2ihrs l 752 9561. TYPIST C<ill 642·2818 after 6pm. ART OBJECTS. GOLD
nursery hoxl'!>, s tJkc,, Fv "t 80SO S ILVER SERVICE. ('tC' Mu~t be goo d Restaurant For l B ;\1 Sl'll'l.'t11t', miure J'INE FURN&. AN-
PER j~tcmory l "1>ewrlt"r & •••••••••••••••••••••• • 'l'IQUES. 64"'2200 workc>r. /\pplv ~.30·4 , BOOKKEE , '" ..,. li~GothardSt.llll. Expcr nee. Apply, City ~;l~~~er.' Expr. pr('f **I BUY** -LUGGAGETAGS , ________ :;; Yard Bar & Gnll, Ill W -Good used Furniture &
Pal11ada, San Clem. __ ..,. A d ~ 1· ----''R 1 ·11 from your business card. MARI ME
B.ECTRONICS
INSTALLER
Vt:'nCOlll'9 Hen ant npp iances ~ wi S.•lld one card for each 4!1111211 fo r National Food sellorSELLforYou. -------1 MASTERS AUCTION ta~ plus one spare. We TAIL Service t•ompany in San rl'lurn perman ently RE Juan C:aplslrano. Xlnl 646-8686 & 833·9625 se.ile\\ attractive ta" & W<"'iti;a1l C:orp 1s lookin1: k' d t & "' /\pphC'ation~ heing wor ing <'On 1 111n" 'ltrap, m eeting airline fnr .1 hll!hlv !i kallt>d AN·cpled 1-'or . liberal (range benefits $.\VE! New & used furn, 1.0 l'equirements. Pre·
marint• l'let•tron1cs in· .o.<sT. M"'..., "'GER ~111>:~.55;1 E .O.E. ;1ppl's. misc. Wi lson's vent Iota & theft! For a ~t.1ller to work on the -"'"'"' ----Bargain Nook. Now 2 0 II d I most beaul1Cul sa1lboah ()pcnm.:s m our Cerritos WAIT1':RtWAITRt-:ss, .Stores _ 545 & 814 w. pcr:i na ze la~ C'nt• OS<'
macte Must h.1ve iltleast location. f:xpcr in Jr. <·x~r. Lun('h~on &. din. 19th. C.M. 642. 7930 & wa llp;i\)cr . fa bn c or
2 yrs expcr. m this field Sporhwear helpful. Op· ner shift~ <•vail Aho. 548·3262. WE BUY "Day "'°" paper & we
Pica.so 11µply, lo lhc por. for advnnct'mcnt matun• woman fnr food --will lwck & tnm your
Secunty Guard ol 275 Sulary commt'nsurutl' counter w111k Hc~ul;1r, MOVING . Sellang drop tags. Or \ty two cards
McCormick Ave, Costa w/cxpe r . Apply , P1time. Tw1> nr 3 dttys lt!11£lablc,wolnutchalr. backlo~a~~ES·.
Mt'saorcall549·971t,ext P E TRI E'S, 147 <'achweek. l'h 196·5767 swas lamps. JtOld & s$" 47formoreinformalion. Wes tminster Mall, Corinterviewappt. white, call art 6pm , $2eaor3/, l•--------•I We11tmlnster. Sec Mrs. 6'15·7857. 4/5lajjs$t ta. Croft. WAITRESS --6/lllal(s $1 .~ MASSEUSE -·-·-------1 Expcr'd only need apply. Maple table, 51 inch oval, lOor more SI ea.
U8·28) for legitimate full RH Charc.Je Nurse l\lr. O's Corri'{' Sho11, :w50 mar rcsistent top. 4 Sales Tax I luded
t ame Po s i I ion in 3·H r /lime. 11·7 Ftllme. E. Cst Hwy, <.;c.IM . matching mate:t chair~ NO C/\I 7 ---with gold cush1on!l, $75. Draw your ow or send Massage. No exp. nee. lVNMedlcatlons WINDOWCLBANEH 97923'12arter6:0(). name, address, one &
We train. Ca ll 752 9561 J.ll P /tlme. Mesa Verde Exper'<i. Guar si;ou+ Pt>r --. we'll make one d J)('r
<24hrs). 2112 Harb(lr, Conv. Uosp. 661 Center mo. All equip ,~ tr~·k Dbl. Sofa 1f11Je ·a·Bed. tag. Add2S<cach.
C M. 2930 W. Pacific St., C.M. 548-MSS. rurnsh'c.I. Aµply at 123 w. Like new. Brtl~d new Send check or mo Y or
Oiast tlwy,N.B. 011,.e,Oran~e. mattress. Sll.iS. l>h derto:
MEDICALASSlSTANT SAILBOAT Women. 25 & oldf'r tt 7~-8494 Pl'i?J'eoR~~
HB physician. Reply RfGGEtl work ror housrclranini! ~ Octagon table, 4 Capt CO!lt M. e· 9
Classmed Ad. !'801 Daily Westsoll Corp. hac; im· S\'S p /Time, gd hrs <'hmr.i, hanging lamp, 2 a esu, .1..
Pilot, PO Box l.560 Cost«1 med. vacancy for u part· r.75-65.'i.J end tables. S.16-8701. Beer drafter, bolds "'4 ~ Mesa, Ca. 9216218 b . r ..,. d .,... t 1 me s a 1 l on t n g g er 'a 1 e 0 c 110 u 5 cc u 1 0 1 o u..:er. new con . """ MEDICAL w/lots of ex.per . to work Men:handlse turniture re1t•onabl~ 673-5276. Call aft lJAM. 30 h k Pl ••••••••••••••••••••••• I C' •.,T
TECHHOLOGIST 20-rs per w · e~se .6...M-.. 8005 11nce<1. Lenox china, cir
Sun Afternoon 5Pm·9pm Gapplrdy to Jh~ iccur,•l: ;:::~."'••••••••••••••• It rolJewey b<.I, sofo, CUSTOM
Must be llc'd & bave re· ua • 27 c orm c btrm set, huff ct, ontQ WOVEN WOODS
cent exp. May add addi Ave, Costa Mcso. Wonderland ,.<.,y. oak :11debocird, sci •50% T080'M OFF•
t. I h b k' • oa~ thl & C'hrs , misc 1ona rs Y wor an~ ~ , Of Antiques! _rw\. 548_7800 p,1 pty. Ovcr40in·1tock P'1llems holidayS & vac reli()f Also MINI 81 ... INDS
Xlnt pay. Top working S4lt.-CUTTUS JI U G E w ~ r ch 0 1111 C' WalJlll hookcuse bed 645,5!)00 tsaa•9770
conchs. & SEAMSTRESSES ('rammed with over 500 w /b~JC sprlni.: & mat' ----------1
Pacifico Hos.pltat The Monurocturer of the music boxes, nlckclo· luss, m{1 IC'l11n11 dresser CARPET
18792DclawarcSt be11ul1Cul West:sall Cru1s-deon pianos. clrC'us or· w;m~ror reasonable
HuntiogtonBeach ln11 Srtllboats. has Im· gan:1 , wall clo<'ks, 642·02t$! ' 4.00sq.yd.
842-0011ext293or271 med. O!}COlngs for s all )lr"n!'tlfathl'r C'lork:. rLUSH SHAG
C'uttcrs & !leamstrC'S!l<'S fascinnting antiquc<i DinellL' tel SM. C(lffcc & Lowest prices on any lt1EN, perm. p/time for 1 Ovcr$1,000,000Worth cmJ t h!~ $35. Twin beds j b d c II c LA Times home delivery w/at least J yrs expcr n Amc•rican lnteinollonal ~ <.'ha\r 540 1012 4293 · ma or ran · 3 or
In Newpor\/C. Mesa. Aiiil making. Must hove Gnller1es: 1802·T Ketter +-'.-Creequote.10-Spm.
Nu.tl bave dependable own lOllls Apply to John 1nJ: St, Jrvinc Tel 7' hro"' new ('Our h (714)497·1345
car & be rtllable. $215 lo Vyn, 1638 Pluc<.>ntia Ave. 7~ 1777 Open W1-d thr1J C'ul!Ul~ ~u!it/brn. Ai1k
$.1SOIDO. Mt-1740. ~11· ta tMI csa or151eave ~tP· s11t. 9 AM to4 l'\1. V1s1t! lnlft'I 111.tofr 840 3327 PLUSH CARPET
p ca on w C('Uri Y ---carpet Contnctor ha1 llemt Troe. perm. Ean Guard at 2'7S McCormick SEU. iule ltt>m" with a 8' Saddle <lfm hrn vnyl l63 yds. Rust Nylnr
fi?&·S200 wk. Fulle1 Av~. C06ta Mesa. l>aily Pilot Closs1l1ed Ad snfn S'lSO, ~~ntq. Alias Plui1h. Sncrifice, .M\1'11
en.b8ales,554·78SL l•-------•I &U·5Gi8. 8arS150 M~l.640·4051 ~U67S-5906,642.2210
•
'-----1-·-t---.:
,
t .,
Got two turtle
doves to sell by
Christmas?
Move them under our tree.
On each Thursday tbrougb
December 16th, the Dally
Pilot will publish speelal
pag~s to make it easier for
you to convert your saleable
Items t-o Christmas cash.
Buy a box under our tree & ·
sell your toys, sports
equipment, luggage,
appliances, furniture,
antiques, handmade & unique
gUts and no matter what your
business -we have a box for
you!
.1 Putting a box under our tree c
is easy and inexpensive. ·
Rates are $4.00 for the ~
smaller box to $22.50 for the ,
largest box. BIG, BIG ,
SAVINGS if you run more
than one time.
For more inf ormatlon 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. We'll bill you or ·
~ou can charge your· ad to
.~ur Master Charge or ; nkAmerfcard. ,
I
;;,.
111191111 ' • I '
14
642-5678
.,,
' \
.
'loah.Mcwiu Eqlli,.. ...
r ••••••••••••••••••••••
'Wanted: 25·35' stoop o
• ketch. Trade la nd, valu
'. guar. (714 ):J2'7·9888
:......., rower 904
·74 Ca rv e r 28' al
llberglass, ny bridge
lwin 185 HP 1/8 , VHF Sonar. s ips 8, fully eqpd.
846-3033 _____ __.
25' Glastron. Twin mere
eng .• loads of xtras. 197
x lnt cond. S1 6.500
898·18m t
71 COlUMllA 34'
Cuat. int. lux. dte<iel
Uke new Xtru s:u .WO m ·3374or64.'l 7~ 1-:\s
"74 Columbia 2.1. l'X 1·onrl
Trad~ fDr 1 ' S4i95
75-~ dll>''" John
SABOT. full n <'e
Near New. $400
C.11 aft &PM. 64~4717
l:l' a\oop. plyw00i1, ri xed
'keel Sl2SO. 14' sloop. trlr
~.548·3429
i.m.ana 22, Cull raec. 7
1all1. 1tan keel. xlnl
rac 'g r ecd S5 JO O
<213 >4B7-6349
I L .... • 'I
See wbal's under mu·
DAJLV Pll...OT CHRISTMAS TR£F.
every Thursday Jn lM auained section
For lnfo cell our
O.riatmas Ad·V\Str
142·$871
1'66 Hoi4fbt ( M 6'6 ~?g:l
Vbur unused items l'OUld
be !IOMeOhe" aui.stmas! WI\)' not aell them Undu the D.ity Pilot CbristmM n. For Information ra1J our Oviaunas Ad· Vascr.
ecz.5'11
"GUSTAFSON .
LI NCOLN MERCURY
16800 Reach Blvd
Hun t111g!on Bt>,1ch'
. 842-8844 •.
9'57 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'72 PinlAl Runabout. 4 spd.
/\JC. lug rck. $1~ Ph
552-0128 aft 5 pm.
'74 Pinto Squire New
Radials. shoeks. battery
SMOO xlnl cond 7S2-16J7
i6 Runabout. 6 cyl. pwr.
air. :l600 m1. I dent. $3600. orbestorrer 67;J-~
mouth 9960
.:
h
,
·.
''"'
-·-..
PQWer steering. AM radio. H78x15 wsw
tires. Ser. JG0072GGD180H.
. -I
•
Huntingt on. Beach Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
...·
VOL .. 69, NO. 329, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA W EDNESDAY,-N OVEM BER 24, 1976
)
llB School Pay hnpasse DeQd)ine Nea ·
By BAY ESTRADA
OfU.. D•llY l'lleUlafl
Teachers and administrators
plan to. negotiate Dec. 3 from 8
a.m. until midnight in an attempt
to settle the three-month-old con-
tract dispute in the Huntington
Beach City (elementary) School
District.
Meanwhile , a teacher
spokesman said, instructors
would continue to refuse
participation in aner·class meet·
1Dgs and activities unW an acree-
ment is reached.
Teachers said 90 percent of the
district's 325 instructors are
participating in the work
sJowdown.
District officials said only SO
percent of the teachers did not at·
lend meetings on Monday.
"Considerable progress .. was
made during Monday negotia-
tlons, said Deputy Superinten-
dent Charles Palmer before
about 100 parents and teachers
Tuesday at Dwyer School.
Palmer said he hopes a ten-
tative agreement will be reached
at the Dec. 3 sessioa. The board
of trustees could approve the con-
tract by Dec. 7, be added. .
But teachers said they were
upset over the slow pace of
negotiations until the Monday
meeting.
"There have not been enough
meetings between the district's
negotiator and the teacher's
bargaining unit," said Hunt-
ington Beach Elementary
Teacben Association (HBETA)
negotiating team chairman Lori
Anderson.
"Tbb bu been the major bang
up in the negotiations,'' she said.
Palmer said the district and
teachers are "far apart" on the
salaries for new instructors. The
district has offered a four per-
cent increase while the teachers
are uking a 23 percent hike, be
said.
Currently, new district
teachers are paid $9,484 per year.
Palmer said.
''Teachers are frustrated and
disillusioned" over the contract
negoliaUons, said Keith McAfee..
HBETA president. •
"Morale ls at an alMJme low,.~
be said. "We feel the diatrict is
dellnitely stalling." The teacher
spokesman also critlcited tbe
district's salary freese at Sep-
tember 1975 levels.
Palmer deCended the board of
t.ru.stees' decision to maintain _.l
teacher salaries at that level. '
"The board took that action CZJt
<See DIPASSE, Page AZ>
Tt1rkey uake Ki11s at Least 500
'Goose' to Fly Again?
Navy Eyes Old Hughes Plane for Experimenu
LONG BEACH (AP) -Hidden
29 years in a cavernous hangar,
Howard Hughes' giant wooden
flying boat, the Spruce Goose, is
back in the public eye -and gov-
ernment officials say they may
even try to take it aloft.
The Jate biJlionaire's Summa
Corp., the conglomerate that
runs Hughes' empire, released a
series of photographs of the plane
Tuesday, including one taken in
,HB Airport
'Noise T est
'Request e d
The Huntington Beach City
..council wants Orange County of· ~ficials to test noise levels st
Meadowlark Airport, but county
super~sors said Tuesday they
aren't sure if they can or will.
f
The board asked staff mem·
bets to study whether the coWlty
has the capability to learn if
I airplane noise at the private
' airstrip is-a nuisance.
• And they want to find out how ~much such a study would cost
·and if the city would help pay for pt.
A city representative told
supervisors city officials thought
the county was obligated by law
to provide such a study
But County Counsel Adrian
Kuyper said he believed that de·
cision w o uld be up lo
supervisors.
The Huntington Beach council
had asked for the county help
after residents earh<'r this month
complained about noise
In a message to the board, the
council said stud1ei. 1n 1971. 1972
and 1974 determint'd there was no
excessive noise at the small
airstrip
Gays Blast
LAPD Effort
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
police department's proposeci
$226 million budget has come un-
der protest from members of the
gay community. who criticize
police for spending too much
time enforcing vice laws.
At a news conference members
of the American Civil Uberties
Union Gay Rights chapter
charged the LAPD with "over·
emphasizing vice enforcement."
Coast
ft·eath er ·
Patchy late night and
early morning dense fog
through Thursday. Tem-
peratuus to remain about
the same, highs 70, lows
about50.
I NSID E T OD/'\ 't'
s~coftd ba u man Joe
MorQ071 of tM Cindnati R«1s
ti tlte National wagw'1 mod
~tile J>la11"" .. ogom. siorv. Be.
I ndex
•• ,. .. 11
At ..
"' M .,,, ... ,
·~' •• """ •• ...
1947 showing Hughes talking to
techni cians ins ide the big
machine.
It was the first public glance at
the plane since it made its lone
flight, skimming along 70 feet
..above the water for less than a
mile, on Nov. 2, 1947, with
Hughes at the controls.
Since then, it has been locked
in its hangar at the harbor here
under 2.f·hour guard.
The only outsider known to
have seen it regularly is a fire in·
spector on monthly rounds.
One official said despite the
long sleep, the plane -actually
called lhe Hercules Flyin~ Boat
-"is in mint condition."
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration and the
Navy say they are interested in
the Goose as part or a vehicle re-
(See HVGBES, Page AZ)
Making a Sandwieh
Starving Worker
Bwted by Minister
DUNDEE, Fla. (AP) -A man
caught making a bologna
sandwich in a church was sent to Jail because the minister felt it
was his Christian duty "to ap·
prehend thos e involved in
criminal acts."
Virgil Hugtres, 52, a migraflt
farmworker employed on a local
farm. said he was outside the
Dundee Baptist Church on Sun-
day, penniless and unable to re-
member the last time he had
eaten. A passerby suggested he
try the church kitchen, he told
police.
Hughes said he walked through
an open door and was fixing a
sandwich when the minister , the
Rev. James Lockwood, found
hlm and called police.
Officer Ron Sellgren said he round no evidence o( forced entry
and no burglary tools.
"He had nothing on him but a
can of pipe tobacco," Sellgren
said
But Mr. Lockwood said he
caught Hughes filling a bag with
groceries.
"And of course I don't know
what else he was going to lake,"
he said.
Hughes was taken to police
headquarters, where he told
authorities his story. Asst. Polk
County Stale Attorney Al Smith
then decided that he could be
charged only with trespassing, a
misdemeanor. Hughes was set
free.
But Smith said Mr. Lockwood
called him later to complain
about the release. The minister
claimed that the church was
locked and Hughes broke in,
Smith said.
"It's pretty ha rd to convince
me or anyone else that a church
shouldn't be open on Sunday
m0rning," Smith said.
Nonetheless, t he minister filed
a complaint, and Hughes was at·
rested on burglary charges.
"I told tbe man I would stand
up with him in court," Mr.
Lockwood said. ''I told the fellow
Woman Raped
In Huntington
A younl Huntlngtoo Beach
woman preparing for work was
raped tb1s morning by a dffp
voiced intruder wbO broke into
her bome Jlun1 a towel over ber
Mad and dratled her into the
bedroom.
Police said the victim
described th~ 6 a.m. intruder as
havini a deep voice. probably ln
his 20'1 and said he wore only a
pair of blue Juns .
Sb was unable to get. a good
look at he.r attacker who pried a
screen from an open window
because be threw the towel over
her bead as a hood to block her
vi.eion, abe told Lnvest.lgators.
that I was more concerned that
be find God's plan for life.
"I've given my U!e to helping
others," the minister said. "I
don't want him harmed, but I feel
as a Christian that I have a duty
tc society to apprehend those in·
volved.in criminal.acts."
Mr. Lockwood said he wowa
ask the state attorney if Hughes
could be reJeased on his own re·
cognizance. He also said he's in·
vited Hughes to join him for
Thanksgiving dinner.
Said Hughes: "I will never go
into another church."
Hinshaw Fate
Turned Over
To 12 Jurors
By TOM BARLEY
01 Ille Dally l'lkll Slaff
The jury began deliberations
today in the second Orange Coun·
ty Superior Court trlaJ of
Congressmari Andrew Hinshaw.
Judge Frank Domenicbini sent
his panel of seven men and five
women to the jury room after ad-
ding two mote brief'instructjons
to the directives they received
before final arguments were de·
livered Tuesday.
Both Deputy District Attorney
William Evans and defense at-
torney John McNicholas ap-
peared to give special attention
to prosecution witness George
Upton during their final appeals
to the jury.
McNicholas asked the jury to
reject that testimony because
Upton, a former key aide in the
office when Hinshaw was county
assessor in 1972, acted from
motives of personal ambition \
when he recruited office staff for
Hinshaw's congressional cam-
paign.
Hinshaw's alleged role in the
di version of county manpower
and materials to bis election ef· rort led to his being charged with
conspiracy, grand theft, em·
beule~ent and misuse of public
funds.
McNicbolas asked the Jury to
remember that Hinsbaw's
stpature la not to be found on
any one of the pile ol vacatioo
sllps and overtime checlra sqb-
mltted by assessor employs that
worked on the campalen.
And be reminded Jurors or Up.
too'• o~ admisalon h'om the
stand .b_at Hinshaw told birn
after the Newpor t Beach
Republican took out b1J flllng
papers that aay a11e11or'll
employes who wpt.ed to work for him wouJd have to do 10 oa tbelr
own time.
McNicholaa claimed that Up-
ton, who baa been ftMd and wbo
served a Jall term tor his role ln
(See m NSJIA W, P•(e AJ)
. Damages
·Reported
As Heavy
Frot11 Other Land•
Cheryl Biscailuz, a 10-year·old student at Perry School
in Huntington Beach, displays Irish soda bread baked by
Mrs. Candice Druckman's fourth and fifth grade class.
Foods, costumes, songs and dances were part of cultural
festival at the school Tuesday as students learned about
customs in other countries.
Carpenter Readies
Bill Against Smear
Labeling misleading campaign
materials "a crime" State Sen.
Dennis Carpenter CR-Newport
Beach) said today be would in·
troduce legialatlon aimed at
curbing the use of "last-minute
smears lbroueh deceitful
methods."
Carpenter, in a release iasued
throulh bis Irvine office, said be
plans to draft his bill with t.be aid
of the state Fair Cam~gn Prac-
Uces Commission and introduce
it during the 1977-78 legislative
session.
The senator was highly critical
of the "unethical" campaicn
W. County Offices
On Holiday Friday
West Oran1e County city ol·
fices wtll be closed 'lbunday 6nd
l'idaY for tbe 'lbanbeivin& boll· Clay
H~nUniton Beach, Foantaln
Valley, Seal Beach and
Westminster citt halls w1ll re-
open Monday, city otflclaJs said.
I
practices used in recent cam-
paijns without specifying any
particular candidate or cam·
palgn.
"The voters of Orange County
deserve a higher level or cam·
paigning than they have been ex-
periencing in recent years," he
declared.
He was particularly critical or
campal'1's that featured the ",in-
appropriate use of names of in-
dividuals, organizations and
groups put together at the Jast
minute by two or three in·
dividuals saying they had en-
dorsed a specific candidate."
Carpenter was the vfctlm or
such ploys in the recent primary f
and eeneral election campalcns.
One candidate, Jim Sfemons,
used m aterial that Implied
CarpenteT's endorsement in~
primary and a letttt tbat again
listed the state "'1afur'1 endorse-
ment Ill tbe teaeral election when
no such endorsement had been
&inn.
Re noted th•t •late w federal
Jaws require cantdatee to rtveal
(8" SMEAlt, r .. e U)
ISTANBUL, 'l)lJ:key (AP) -A
major earthquamtruck an &r4'&
of eastern Turkey near the Soviet
border today, killing hundreds
and causing widespread destruc-
tion, the Turkish state radio re-
ported.
The Kandilli Observatory to
Istanbul put the magnitude at 7.6
on the Richter scale. The o~
servatory said the quue hit at
2:2Sp.m. (4 :25 a.m. PST> and bad
its epicenter in a mountainous
area of Van Province 900 miles
east of Istanbul.
"It was the worst tremor to hit
Turkey since the one that re-
gistered 7 .9 in Erzincan and killed
about 30,000 in 1939," the Kandilli
observatory said.
A spokesman at the U.S. Na•
tiooal Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colo., said he
thouebt the quake caused "con~
sider able" damage because lhJ
area ls populated and has ma~/·
older buildings.
He put the location at about 201 miles west of Yerevan in the Sov·
ietUnion. The impact in the Soviet Unioni
was thought to be minimal, a
cording to initial reports from th
seismic station in Tbilisi, Sovi
Georgia.
The Richter scale gauges lb
energy released by a quake i
terms of ground motion recor
on a seismograph. Quakes o
magnitude 7 can caus
widespread, heavy damage. Th
earthquake in Guatemala tha
took 23,000 lives this year bad
adings as high as 7 .5.
A radio bulletin said 500 peopl
were killed tn the district o
Muradiye and 25 in Ercis and tha
95 percent of the houses wdr destroyed in those areas.
Turkish news agencies repo
ed that at least half a do
villages were wiped out. I
Soldiers stationed in the area
were assigned to rescue work.
All communications with tbe
provincial center of Van and ft.a
outlying areas were cut.
Sl,ain Police
Officer Buried
Officers from many Orange
County law enforcement agen--
cies were among the 1,000
persons who turned out Tuesday
to pay last respects to slain
Cypress police Sgt. Donald J .
Sowma.
The 44·year-old Cather of loar
was shot to death last Frida7 as
he and two other Cypresa offtceta
invesUgated a burglary at an art
galler y.
Arrested and charged with the
slaying was Bobby Joe DeMeY.
32. of Hawaiian Gardens.
1WO CUlS SOLD
ON FIRST C4lL
"The first call did the job. IAlt
year I adverlbed in the Dally.
Pilot, and sold a Pinto -also Oft
the first call.'·
Tbt's the advertisinll success
story told by a Costa Mesa llllh
who placed this classified ad:
'75 Duster. fully equip.
Low ml. xJol cond. S28.'5C>
Call anytime XXlHWct
If you'd Ute to ccnvert • cai:1 er anfthtnc else~ to cuh -cau
MZ-5618. Jt pays to put the Dally
PUot lo worlt tor you.
-·~
..
f·Jl.2 DAILY PILOT H/F Wednesday, November 24. 11176
'fortured
I ANTIOCH (AP)-"'lNancySams
Oyuhe was cbaine8 and mut.Uat· fd with knives, a gun and bot
screwdriver by a man who held
her and her two children captive
for four weeks.
Police Lt. Ray Shively said
Tuesday the 28-year-old victim
escaped Sunday and was
'hospitalized with two toes and an
index finger missing, at least five
gunshot wounds, a sever ely
damaged eye and her vagina
sewn up.
James C. Lanier, 45, who had
been living with Miss Sams about
·!our months, was arrested attheir
,home and was booked for in·
vestigation of mayhem and as·
sault with a deadly weapon.
"She is critical but stable," said
Shively. "The Joss of sight in one
eye is possible. Her eye was poked
out with a hot screwdriver."
Miss Sams also had been beaten
about the chest and stomach and
her hair was cut off, Sh.ively said.
Police said she told them Lanier
kept her chained at night, but re-
leased her during the day. She
said his vigilance reltlxed Sunday
and she fled in a car to a friend's
home with her children, aged 3
and 5, and notified police.
The children had been beaten,
but not severely. police said. They
1t1ere being cared for by relatives.
investigators said jealousy was
apparently the motive.
Bligh Diary
tSnapped Vp
For$90,730
LONDON (AP> /\ small,
water-stained notebook used by
Capt. William Bligh as a log after
his mutinying crew of HMS
Bounty had cast tum adrift in a
rowboat, was sold in just 55
seconds for $90,730 at a Christie's
auction today.
The leather-bound book. in
which Bligh noted every incident
in his s ix -week, 3,500-mile
voyage in the Rounty's launch
with a handful of companions.
was bought by Maggs, the Lon ·
don firm of booksellers which re-
fused to say for whom it was act·
ing.
Apart from navigational
1 calcul,.tions. Bligh jolted down
l rough sketches or some South Sea
is lands showing his boat's route
through the Barrier Reef and
along the coast of Australia lo
safety in Timor.
Bhgh also set down some of his
thoughts and fears during the
voyage
"We now anxiously pray to
make land . no sight or it," he
wrote 1ust before r eaching
Timor And "kind Providence
protects us wonderfully, but it is
"most unhappy s1tuat1on to be in
a boat among such discontented
people who don't know what to be
at or what 1s best for them." he
wrote on another occasion.
f'ro..P~AJ
IMPASSE ...
the advice of legal coum;el." he
said
"°Thl' salary fr«>c1e 1s the dis
trict ·s leverage JUSl as 1s the
teacher access to parents and the
pres,;," Palmer said
HBETA has challenged the
legahty or the salarv freeze. /\
state edu<.'allonal Employment
Relations Board meeting will be
held next spring on the matter,
Palmer said
Black Rule Dated
GENEVA, Switzerland CAP>
Negotiations lo establish black
rule in Rhodesia may move
forward today following a British
proposal to make March 1, 1978,
the firm target date for the
transfer or power in the African
country.
OllANQE COAST . H ~
DAILY PILOT • ltrr.. Or-•• Co.t'\t O••I• •••-ot wtff\wft1(1-t\ ~ "'"""tl t"-frff~ ,..,.,, ''°""'"'~evtlWQf'#\tp
C'"aA\I Pvofl'\l'H"Q C.,moaflly ~·'• ~l!Gft' •• ,. ovbli\f\ftd Mof\d•• ,,..,...,IJ"' 1 ,.,,,.., •or (&\t•
AMY NtwOOft 8-•rf'I "4uflll l"IQf°" ..-.CPI '"°""" '"'" v .. 11 .. ., ... ,. .... r \•d'1'"""••• v.111.,, • .., l,.~8•¥~ """Ulf'l(0-1 I -•"O'"'"Ot6Ml•ttt
,._. I' CNb'l\JWHI \41~'d0\ A"'CI ~l' ,,.,_ °" f'JC•N• ovbtt,•u~ oh•"' '" •• no ......,,, ... ., S0"1. "''• M•'• C.hfOtfll•,...,..,, .... ,1,. w.....
"'"' ck"t •lf'lld Pvbi•·Nr
JH'. CWf'Wt' 'V•u ...,.,."'t •Nt GtlW"'111o! ..,.......,,....
, .. ..._.,l(".-it Eo11or
~ .................. ... MM~•q1rtQ f lf•llV
0.,lnN l-llkM .. P '"'" AUUIA'tl "'-"AtiftO ECIU.,\ ...... "' ''"'"' Wf\tOt•,,..(.ouMY f~tor
Huntlnaton Beech Office t)tif .. tcflt lov'f'w•rd
.... Ill~ "dd'"' P 0 8o• li0 •M
OfflCH l•z:.~ :::." ;~~~~~~ .. ,
\.tOdlftbtt• Vtllt'Y lU01 \.• fl•t •Nd ., $M OlfOO ., .. .,,,,..,
Telephone (7U)~-4321
Cl1Hlfled Ad111nlt1119 t42·M71
"·--·'~°"'-'-·~11 .. ...,,uo
Oo'lrltlll -0--'-" _..,. .... , ..... _.., .. ,_"" '"'ttt ll~ltt'I'"-"' Ht1M,1Ait
flfteU•r er M vt rll\f""ll'\h ~'.'" me'f &II rttH .... CH wtt"-"' •Hrtat wm10 •9-ft •• .....,...__
~r.:''"~~·",!::!~ .. :'•.,:t,~;::, ~':.
-1~1,; •• ,,. .. , .-M -~'" """'•'Y .. _,_., .. _.....,
Gag Snagged
Mur~rer, 11, Can Be Named
WASHINGTON <AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court
today struck down, at lea1t temporarily 1 an
Oklahoma judge's order limiting news media report·
ing of a case involving an 11-year-old boy convicted of
murder.
' The cou.rt set aside a ••gag order" Imposed by
Oklahoma County District Judge Charles E . Halley,
which prohibited news reporte~ from publishing or
broadcastin. g the boy's name or photoscraph -even
though both bad been widely displayed before -until
hewasl8. ·
The court's refusal to go along with the Okla·
homa judge was in keeping with its ruling last sum·
mer in a much-publicized Nebraska murder case. In
that case, the Supreme Court came close to outlawing
such reporting restrictions.
The boy was arrested last July and later convict·
ed of delinquency by second-degree murder in the
shooting death of an Oklahoma City railroad
switchman.
After initial reporting about the case mentioned
the boy's name and displayed his picture, Halley is-
sued a pretrial order banning such mention.
Businessmen Fight
Alien Worker Fine
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
variety or businessmen objected
Mooday t-0 a proposal tlqtt collld
subject employers lo fines for
hiring people who are in the
country illegally.
Sen . Bob Packwood (R·Ore.},
conducting the hearing for the
Senate Small Business Commit·
tee, said there are between six
million and 12 million illegal
aliens in the United States.
ln October, 30 Orange County
businesses tested the effects of
potential legislation which would
punish employers who hired iJ.
legal aliens.
The study, organized by
Packwood's aides, divided the 30
local firms into three groups.
One group required job appli·
cants to sign a citizenship docu·
ment. A second group hired
without any guidelines on
employment of illegal aliens. The
third group used an extensive
screening process on all job ap·
plicants.
Orange County, Cleveland and
New York City were test areas
for Packwood's study into illegal
alien hiring.
"It is estimated that ending ii·
legal alien employment in this
country could cut one percent
from the national unemployment
figure," Packwood said.
Packwood added that if illegal
aliens were ousted, U.S. tax·
F,.._PageAJ
SMEAR .••
the sources of contnbutions. but
there are no laws which regulate
the truth or campaign materials.
"Candidates have lacked self·
restraint and l believe the public
deserves a more common decen·
cy approach in the campaign lac·
tics used on them.
"When such violations occur, I
am suggesting that such action
results in a crime and should be
subject not only to a fine but to
the possiblity or that particular
<.'andidate being unable to lake
office," he said.
Carpenter said that one way of
insuring the accuracy of an en·
dorsement is to require written
authorization for the use or the
endorser's name.
Carpenter also suggested that
in cases where a subgroup of a
political party gives an endorse-
ment lo a candjdate of the op-
pos1te party. the legitimate
status of that subgroup should be
established in a written
authorization from the sub·
group's party county chatrman.
He explained that in the re·
cent election. phony organiza·
ttons were set up to give the ap.
pearance that candidates were
receiving support from the OP·
posite party.
"Where a candidate wishes to
put together members of another
party to support him, he should
be required to show in aJI ad·
vertising the exact number of
such persons who have given BC·
tual written authorization ror
such use,·· he said.
"The standards I am s uggest·
ine are aimed at protecting the
public from confusion. last
minute smears through deceitful
methods, and hopefully will re·
duce the activities or those 'hun·
gry' candidates who will say and
do anything to win an election.
"We need truthful and ethical
candidates and those not meeting
these standards should not be
elected."
Car Flips; Marine
Hurt in Huntington
Only one of three marines in a
s mall foreign car was hurt Tues·
day when it slid orr a Huntington
Beach street and rolled into a
dilcb. landing upside down. William Faszboli, 21, of 9112
Playa Drive. Huntington Beach,
was treated by rrre department
paramedics for a bump on the
head and possible broken hand.
He aald be would have a doctor
checll lt.
payers could save an estimated
$13 billion in welfare costs,
education benefits and U1e
money that aliens send lo their
home countries.
Several witnesses at the bear·
lng objected to the butdeo that
would be placed on small busi·
nessmen if they we r e held
re!ponsible for determining if a
job applicant was an illegal
alien.
They said the businessman has
no way to check the authenticity
of birth certificates, naturaliza·
tion oaoers or other documents of someone seeking employment.
J . George Piccoli.of the New
York Chamber of Commerce and
Industr y suggests employer's
responsibility be limited to ask·
ing a job applicant to show a
Social Security card or some
other governmenl·issued docu-
ment.
Bob Neville of the NationaJ
Restaurant Association testified
that if employers are held ac·
countable for screening out il·
legal aliens they will "tend to
play it safe and not hire anyone
who looks foreign or has a foreign
accent."
He said this could get them into
trouble with government agen·
cies responsible for preventing
discrimination.
Charles Brewer Jr., president
of C. Brewer Cornpaoy of
Anaheim, added that "Many
employers would avoid hirin£
any persons who did not speak_
English .. •·
Man Killed
On 'Joyrith'
PORT ANGELES,
Wash . (AP) -A
cameraman involved in
filming a chase scene 1for
the movie "JQYlllde" was
killed when the car he was
shooting from overturned,
the state patrol said.
The driver and another
passenger survived.
Charles A. Parkison Jr.,
31, Sylmar, Calif., was
leaning out a car window
filming when the vehicle.
which was supposed to
have gone into a skid and
slide sideways, rolled in·
stead, said a state trooper.
From Page AJ
HUGHES ••
search project.
• •
Adm. Carl Seiberlich said,
"We ar:e trying to decide if a·
large seaplane is viable as a
future naval vehicle,''
Other possible uses reportedly
include a mobile launch bed for
intercontinental ballistic mis·
slles or as a test site over waler
for experimental nuclear pro·
pulsion.
The craft -which is not really
made or much spruce, it's large·
ly plywood and birch -became a
point of honor with Hughes, who
was critich:ed for its multi·
million dollar cost.
The 200-ton fl ying boat cost the
government $18 million and
Hughes. who designed it
personally, many times that
amount.
''I have put the sweat of my lite
into this thing." Hughes toJd a
congressional inquiry into the
plane.
"If it fails, I will leave this
country. And t mean it!"
The craft is actually owned by
the government. the General
Ser vices Administration, with
Summa paying $800 a month to
rent it -plus untold main·
tenance and hangar coots.
JU eight engines are said to
have been fired up once a month.
NASA research engineer John
Mcniue said he was "surprised
al the shape it's in after 30
years."
Home
Market
Shaky? •
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Home
prices ln the metropolitan Los
Angeles area cannot continue to
increase at their present rate, a
leading bank economist said to-
day.
Conrad Jamison, vlce presl·
dent and urban economist for
Security Pacific Bank here, also
warned that people who have
gone heavily into debt in order to
purchase homes could be hurt.
"Many people have bought
homes they cannot afford in the
belief that, tr they wait, prices
will continue to soar and their
ability to buy a home will be even
less in the future," Jamison said.
"Also, many people are buying
in the hope that later increases in
their income will rescue them.
And there is the common reeling
that, if the burden becomes too
great, one can always sell and
lake a profit.
''There is an element of Un·
reality in the whole picture,"
Jamison told a group of GJ~dale
r eal tors, "and one can only
wonder when, and how, sanity
will return."
Jamison said prices for homes
in the Los Angeles area have
been increasing at a rate of aboui
$1,000 a month recently.
He said home prices in Glen·
dale are about 50 percent higher
than they were two years ago and
that the aver age price of a single·
family home in Los Angeles
County h as gone up 24 percent in
the last year.
"This boiling market has been
fed by rampant 'inflation fever'
and by speculation," he said.
"Obviously, this is a situation
that cannot continue indefinitely.
Eventually, something will have
to give.''
Fro.Page Al
IDNSHAW. •
the conspir acy. acted from
motives of personal gain when he
drafted assessor 's employes to
work for Hinshaw.
·'He had the seventh spot on the
assessor's ladder and he wanted
the third spot," McNicholas said.
"And he golit."
Upton. compelled to resign
from his job after being indicted
by the grand jury, is now work·
ing as a used car salesman.
Evans countered with the
argument that Upton was
nothing more than Hinshaw's er-
rand boy. "who did anything his
boss told him to do."
Evans reminded the jury of
testimony by several of more
than 50 witnesses that Hinshaw ·
called for a list of available as·
sessor's employes and put check
marks against the names of those
he wanted to work on h.is cam·
-;>aign.
''I ask you to fix the
responsibility where il
belongs," Evans said. ··And it
belongs right on the shoulders of
tHisdefendant."
Judge Domenichini said he will
give t he j ury a four-day.
Thanksgiving weekend break if a
verdict is not reached today.
HB House Looted
A burglar looted a Huntington
Beach woman's homeof$1,600in
personal belongings including
jewelry and a television set,
police said Tuesday. The victim
was identified as Mary Ruch, a
resident of the 4800 block of Heil
Avenue.
""~· FAIRVIEW HOSptTAL NOW CLOSED TO NEW PATIEN'TS
A ... mbtyman Carpenter, Fairview'• Levine Meet Preas
Patient Overload
Ended at Fairview
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
OftMOally l'i11Ui.ff
No new patients except for a
hand-picked few are being ad·
milted to Costa Mesa's Fairview
State Hospital because they can-
not get proper treatment, acUng
medical director Dr. Michael
Levine declared Tuesday.
And, he angrily noted in an in·
terview, lhe hospital is still try·
ing to ftnd an outside home for
tacked both priorities set, fund·
log methods and a recent
approval of Fair view by the Joint
Commission o n Hos pital Ac·
creditation.
Representatives of JCHA
earlier this year rated the
hospital as one of the highest in
the nation in its treatment and
therapy programs in addition to
hundreds or graded s upport
services.
"We are outraged at the stan·
'NEGLIGENCE' CAUSE dards of care in the California
OF MENTAL DEATHS, AS State Hospital system," As-
one or two babies placed in the semblyman. Carpenter said.
1 h . • He charged the private agency 1,700-plus-popu ation w 0 isn t which operates on a nationwide retarded at all. "We had at least two babies ad-basis waived particular licensing h standards to allow hospitals to mitted in the past year w o are continue receiving federal aid not retarded at all. They had funds.
neurological problems," the out-[( JCHA standards are not met,
spoken child psychiatrist says. these funds are cut off. Appointed upon former medical director Dr. Anthony N. "The Stale of California has a
Toto's abrupt forced resignation conllict or interest in setting stan·
in July, Dr. Levine, 35, appeared dards and examining its own
at a Los Angeles news conference hospitals," Carpenter asserted.
Tuesday with his announcement. Not long ago, Dr. Levine set up
"At the current time, we can an ad hoc committee to review
provide good custodial care, procedures at Fairview, which in
food, clothing and shelter and recent years has worked with a
there are some islands of ex· system or 10 special programs,
celle.nt treatment," he sald. each devoted to a specific han·
speaking of certain programs for di capped group by age and
h d d d h · all h ability. t e retar e an P ysic Y an· The University-of Illinois dieapped. · .. "But we are restricting ad-graduate had already introduced
mission to those we can provide a plan to reduce use of tranquiJiz.
good programs for," be em· ing drugs on patients, bucking
phasized. the system before Dr. Toto was
Since his accession to the deposed. ·
directorship after gaining the ear He charged in a recent in'..
of Don z. Miller, California's de· terview state hospitals have ac~
puty director of health, Dr. tually been used as dumping
Levine has undertaken a major grounds for unwanted han,.
housecleaning job at the hospit.al. d i c a PP e d c h i I d r e n too
He has pointed out the hospital troublesome for parents to han·
is .understaffed to such a severe die.
degree that often only one "We had at leasttwo babies ad·
psychiatric technician (PT) is milled last year who are not
available to care for 20 clients, as mentally retarded. They had
they are called, rather than pa· neuroloRical handicaos." he ex·
tients. plained. "One is no longer here
The age range or these but there is Nancy, we'r-e trying
physically and mentally han· lo get her out now." :
dkapped ranges from a few days ''The effect on institutionaJized
intotheseventiesoreighties. babies is devastating. They Standards applied in staffing and accrediting CaJilomja state quickly 'learn how' to become re-
hos pi tals wer e attacked at tarded." Dr. Levine added. ·
Tuesday's press conference both ''One recently that particular·
by Dr. Levine and State Senator· ly made me angry Involved a kid
elect Paul Carpenter. thev tried lo ~et in for a.
The Santa Ana Democrat, cur behavioral disorder ... he only
rently a state assemblyman, at· has a hearing disability."
~~~~~~~"'---~~~~~~~
HOWARD HUGHES (IN HAT) TALKS TO ENGINEERS INSIDE SPRUCE GOOSE IN 1947
Same Seat• Remain In Giant Airplane, Mow lelng Con11dered for Navy UH
r
• ·~
•
·1rvine T o day's Clo lag :
.Y. Sto cks
VOL 69, NO. 329, 3 SECTIONS, 28 P~GES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA W EDNESDAY'" NOVEMBER 24, 1976 TEN CENTS
Irvine Ejring Apartnient Cost Cuts ~
I\.
ByBILA&YKAYE oui. D•llY PlleC ~
The Jrvine City Council satld
Tuesday it will use federal hous-
ing money to pay fo roads,
storm drains and other improve-
ments as a means of lowering
construction costs and, thus,
rents for future apartment
dwellers in Irvine.
The council also said jt. would
spend additional federal rnoney
to buy park land, also with the
aim of lowering a partment rents
indirectly.
And, if any extra money comes
in to the city, it would be spent to
buy-land for either a student
housing cooperative or an apart-
ment project for elderly resi·
dents, the council said.
Sites have not yet been picked
out for these projects, but de·
cl6ions are due by July 1 ol next
year.
The city plans to advertise for
builders and then pick wbich pro.
jeds and sites appear to be best.
for the bousfog assistance pro-gram.
'The city already bas in band
• $187,965, which it will spend on of -
f-site improvements. such as
roadways, storm drains, sewer
and water lines.
The city is also anUcipating an
additional $60,000, which would
be spent on park site acquisition
at a different location.
No other money is authoriied
yet, but city aides said today they
expect there wilJ be more money,
Ydticb could be spent to asslst stu·
dents or seniors.
Students from the Student
Housing Cooperative lnc. spoke
at Tuesd ay's council meeting
again, asking that the moqey be
spent to buy land for the CO-OP
project.
Mike Ruggera, president of the
co-op, said after the council de·
cis1on t,bat be is happy they gave
the students some consideration,
but admitted be was hoping for a
higher funding priority.
He said that until more mone1
comes in to the city from &he
federal 1overnment, he wUl COA·
Unue to try to interest rouncra ..
Uons in helping the students start
the cooperative housing project.
However, Ruggera said that it
would take at least a year betote
any foundation money could '1e
obtained.
T11rkey uake Kil)s at Least 500
880 Face Chmnsma Damages
Reported
As Heavy Tree Review Sought
I
Confronted with conflicting re·
ports regarding eucalyptus treeS'
in Woodbridge, the lrvine City
Council asked three tree experts
Tuesday to take another look at
the trees and decide what should
be done with them.
The Irvine Company has re·
quested that 888 of the towering
trees be cul down. They are on
the 159·acre site or the next re-
sidential development in Wood·
bridge.
Two weeks ago, the council
Carpe nte r
Hits Srne ar
iCarnpaigns
Labeling misleading campaign
mat.eriaJs ''a crime" SUlte Sen.
Dennis Carpenter CR-Newport
Beach) said today he would in·
? troduce legisl ation aimed at
curbing the use or "last·minute
smears through dece itful
·methods."
Carpenter. in a release issued
through his Irvine office, said he
plans to draft his bill with the aid
of the state Fair Campaign Prac·
ti•es Commission and introduce
it during the 1977·78 legislative
session.
The senator was highly critical
of the "unethical" campaign
practices . used in r~e~l cam-
paigns without spec1fymg an)'
particular candidate or cam·
paign.
"The voters of Orange County
deserve a higher level of cam·
palgning than they have bee n ex·
perienclng in recent ye~." he
dttlared.
He was particularly cnllcal or
~ampai,ns that featured the "!n·
appropnate use of names of in
d ivlduals, organizations and croups put together al the last
minute ..by two or three in·
dividuals saying they had en·
dorsed a specific candidate ..
Carpenter was the vtctim or
such ploys in the recent primary
and 1enerat election campaigns.
One candidate, Jim Slemons.
u sed material t hat i mplied
Carpenter's endorsement in the
primary and a letter that again
listed the state senator's endorse-
m ent in the general election when
no such endorsement had been
given.
He noted that state and federal
laws require canidates to reveal
the sources of contnbutions, but
there are no laws which regulate
the truth oC campaign materials.
• ''Candidates have lacked self·
.restraint and I believe the public·
deserves a more common decen-
cy approach in the campaign tac·
tics used on them.
• "When such violations occur, I
(See SMEAR, Pace A2)
7WO CARS SOW
ON FIRST CALL
*'The !int can did the job. Last
year I advertised in the Daily
Pilot, and aold a Pinto -also on the first call.••
That's the advertising success
story told by a Costa Mesa man
who placed this classified ad:
'75 Duster, fully equip.
Low ml, xlnt cond. $2850
Call anytime XlUC·XXlCJ(
U you'd like to convert a car
or an)'thina else, to cuh-c;ll
642·5678. ft pa ya to put the !>a.Uy
Pilot to work for you.
'
heard a report by the environ·
mental cons ultant hired by the
Irvine Company as part of the
regular environmental impact
report (EJR) process.
That consultant. J ames Grif·
fin, told the council that the trees
·should be removed because they
are either dead, dying or are too
crowded.
However , the coWlcil was re-
luctant to accept that opinion
without seeking a second recom·
mendation. The coWlcil studied a
Man Killed
'
On 'Joyri~'
PORT ANGELES,
Wa s h . (AP) A
cameraman involved in
fllming a chase scene for
the movie "J oyride" was
killed when the car be was
shooting from overturned,
the state patrol said.
The driver and another
passenger survived.
Charles A. Parkison Jr ..
31. Sylmar, Calif.. was
leaning out a car window
filming when the vehicle,
which was supposed to
have gone into a skid and
slide sideways, rolled in·
stead, said a state trooper.
Blig h D iary
Snapped Up
For$90,730
LONDON {AP> -A small.
water-stained notebook used by
Capt. WilUam Bligh as a log after
his mutinying cr ew of HMS
Bounty had cast him adnft in a
rowboat, was sold in just 55
seconds for $90,730 at a Christie's
a uction today.
The leather -bound book, in
which Bligh noted every incident
1n his s ix-wee k. 3,500-mile
voyage in the Bounty's launch
with a handful of companions,
was bought by :Maggs, the Lon-
don firm of booksellers which re·
fused to say for whom it was act-
ing.
Apart from n avigat ional
calculations. Bligh jotted down
rough sketches of some South Sea
islands showing his boat's route
through the Barrier Reef and
along the coast of Australia to
safety in Timor.
Bligh also set down some of his
thoughts and fears during the
voyage.
second report Tuesday from two
UCI professors, Joseph Ar<litti
and Eloy Rodriguez. that disput·
ed many or the findings made by
Griffin.
The professors said that many
or the trees could and should be
saved with proper tree main·
tenance.
Instead or siding with either
opinion. the council form ed a
three man panel, including
Arditti. GrifCin and H arold
<See TREES, Page A2)
Wmhined
Billing Plan
Rejected
The Irvine Ranch Water Dis~
tricl rejected a request by the Ci·
ty of Irvine Tuesday to combine
water and trash collttlioo bill-
ings on the same mailing to
Irvine residents.
Lansing Eberling, lRWD
board president, told the city
council that it would be too costly
to send the two bills out together.
Eberling said the water dis·
trict is growing rapidly and is
now attempting to switch from a
manual billing system to one that
uses data processing.
"With our accounting costs.
there just wouldn't be a sav-
ings," said Eberling.
But Irvine City Manager Bill
Woollett disagreed.
"Our staff has researched it
and found that there would be a
$25,000 to $30.000 savings lo both
agencies if we sent out the bills
together. I res pectrully dis·
agree." Woollett told Eberling.
Mayor Dave Sills said that
since both iroups are public
agencies. thdy would "look like
fools" if they sent separate bills
to the same people.
The city is cons idering operal·
<See BILLING, Page AZ)
"""' ......... FAIRVIEW HOSPfTAL NOW CLOSED TO NEW PATIENTS
Assemblyman Carpenter, Fairview's Levine Mul P.r•'•
Patient Overload
ErUied at Fairview
By ARTHUR R. VJNSEL
01 llte Oally Pit°' S\aH
No new patients except for a
hand-picked few are being ad·
milted to Costa Mesa's Fairview
State Hospital because they can·
not get proper treatment, acUng
medical director Dr. Michael
Levine declared Tuesday.
And, be angrily noted in an in·
terview. the hospital is still try·
ing to find an outside home for
one of two babies placed in the
1,700-plus-poputalion who isn't
retarded at aJJ .
"We had at least two babies ad·
milted in the past year who are
not retarded at all. They had
neurological problems," the out-
spoken child psychiatrist says.
Appointed upon former
medical director Dr. Anthony N.
Toto's abrupt forced resignation
in July. Dr. Levine, 3.5, appeared
at a Los Angeles news conference
'NEGLIGENCE' CAUSE
OF MENTAL DEATHS, AS
Tuesday with his announcement.
"At the curr ent time. we can
provide good custodial care,
food, clothing and shelter and
there are som e islands of ex-
cellent treatm ent." he said,
speaking of certain programs for
the retarded and physicaJly han-
dicapped.
<Stt FAIRVIEW, Page /\2)
Legality at I s sue
Water Pact Questioned
The Irvine City Council has
questioned the legality or a· new
pact among the Irvine Ranch
Waler District, the Irvine Com·
pany and Orange County Sanita-
tion District 5 related to the UD·
developed coastal area.
CouncU members unanimously
agreed Tuesday that City At-
torney Jim Erickson should seek
legal counsel from the state at·
tomey general's ofnce.
'That vote came after Coun-
cilman John Burton accused the
IRWD oC "playing rootsie with
the city of Newport Beach."
Burton and Mayor Dave Sms
both contended that the new
document mdy not be legal.
According to Erickson, the
agreement s pells out the aonexa·
Uon of coastal lands to Sanitation
District 5. That land currently
liea within IRWD borders.
ISTANBUL, Turkey CAP) -A
major earthquake struck an area
of eastern Turkey near the Soviet
border today, killing hundreds
and causing widespread destruc·
tioo, the Turkish state radio re·
ported.
The Kandilli Observatory in
Istanbul put the magnitude at 7.6
on the Richter scale. The ob-
servatory said the quake hit at
2:25p.m. (4:25a.m. PST)andhad
its epicenter in a mountainous
area of Van Province 900 miles
east of l s tan but.
"lt was the worst tremor to hit
Turkey since the one that re-
gistered 7 .9 in Enincan and killed
about 30.000 in 1939," the Kandilli
observatory said.
A spokesman at the U.S. Na.
tional Earthquake Information
Center ln Golden, Colo., said ho
thought the quake caused "con-
siderable" damage because th4!!
area is populated and has many
older buildings.
He put the location at about 20
miles wut of Yerevan in the Sov·
· ietUnion.
The impact ln the Soviet Union
was thought to be minimal, ac-
cording to initial reports from the
seis mic station in Tbilisi, Soviet
Georgia.
The Richte r scale gauges the
energy released by a quake in
terms of ground motion recorded
on a seismograph. Quakes or
magnitude 7 can cause
widespread, heavy damage. The
earthquake in Guatemala that
took 23,000 lives this year had·
readings as high as7.5.
A radio bulletin said 500 peo~
were killed in the district of
Muradiye and 25 in Ercis and th1tt
95 percent or t he houses were
destroyed in those areas.
Turkish news agencies report•
ed that at least hall a dozetl
villages were wiped out.
Sot<liers stationed in the area
were assigned to rescue work.
All communications with the
provincial center of Van and its
outlying areas were cut.
"We are afraid the death ~ll is
high In Muradiyc and surround.
ing villages," said Burhan Ya~
Yilmaz. deputy governor of Van
Province.
'The KandUU Observatory salfl
Muradlye was at the epicenter.
The Province of Van lies on~.;
quake-prone Anatolia fault,
which reaches from Turkey's,
Aegean coast south toward thet
Mediterranean and north alone,
the Black Sea coast. Then it t~
south. covering eastern Turkey~
Coas t
We athe r
Minister Busts Vagrant
The agreement also reportedly
includes a promise by tbe IRWD
that it would not seek repl'esenta·
lion on the sanitation, district
board. And, some of the annexa-
tion fees to be paid to the sanita-
tion district by the Irvine Com·
pany are to be deferred, accord·
ing to Erickson.
The agreement follows a
decision several months ago by
the Local Agency Forma-
tion CoD'lmiss1on, which divided
the coastal area land between the
Newport Beach and Laguna
Beach sphere's o( i.nfluence.
Irvine was not included in lbe
split.
Patchy late night and
early morning dense fog
throusb T hursday. Tem-
peratures to remain about
the same, highs 70, lows
a bout so. Hungry F armwor~r Faces Prosecutwn
Dl/NDEE, Fla. (AP)-A man
caught making a bologna
sandwich in a church was sent to
jail because the minister felt. it
wu his Christian duty "to ap-
prehend those involved in
criminal acts."
an open door and was ~ a
s andwich when the mlnist.er, the
Rev. James Lockwood, found
him and called police.
Officer Ron Sellgren said he
found no evidence of rorced entry
and no burglary tools.
"He had nothing oo him but a
can ol pipe tobacco,'' Sellgreo
said. ·
But Mr. Lockwood sald be
caught Huahea filling a baa wUb
gocerles.
"And of course I don't know
what elae be waa golilg to take,"
hesajd.
headquarters, where he told
authorities his story. Asst. Polle
County State Attorney Al Smith
then decided that be could be
charged only with trespassing, a
misdemeanor. Hughes was set
free.
But Smith said Mr. Lockwood
called hJm la ter to complain
abo\lt tbc release. The minister
'claimed that the church was
·locked and Hughes broke in.
"It'• pretty hard to eonvtnce
me or aDYone else tbat a church about~ 't. be open OU Sunday
According to Erickson, the .
JRWD approved the new a..-ee-
ment Monday night and the
sanitation district is scheduled to
I NSIDE TODAl:'
consider the document at its Inde x
meet.ins toni1ht . Ho said he as-••V-W.k• •• ,......,,,...
aumed the lnine Company had t..":'.!:r.' :; :-.. ~
already autbd'ti&H tbe deal. , a...it... c, .. ~ ...,.,
In quoaUonlnc t.be legality, :C.:.r. :; ==
Silla and Burton conteoded that DMllll...._.. ••,...
the new deal m~gbt be detrimen· ' :=: at,t =:* .......
tal to lrvlDe resident.. aince ' ..._. ... , ""'"',...
Virgil Hughes, 52, a migrant
farmworker employed on a local
farm, said he was outside the
Dundee Baptist Church on Sun-
day, pennlle9t5 and unable to re-
member the last time he had
eaten. A passerby suggested he
try the church kitchen, be told
police.
· Hu«bes said he walked tbroulh Huabes was taken lo police
· mornln,." Smith aaid.
. (lff.JAILED,PaleA.l)
IRWD la aaentially giving aw~ : ::n j! =: (heJ.E~ALITY,Pap ~). t • .._ __...._
' I
( r AZ DAILY PILOT Wednetday. Ncw.mbet ~. U175
Juvenile ProBlems
~
'Ref onn Bill Carries Complications
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of, ... 0•11• ,. .... -
The City of Newport Beach, ~ with the reat of the state,
faces some major problems
when lbe juvenile justice reform
bill becomes law at the first of
the year.
That was the consensus of a
panel of experts who met this
morning to discuss Juvenile
justice with members of the
Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce.
The panel consisted of Dr. Alan
Zelzter, a political science pro-
fessor from Cal State Fullerton;
Sgt. Mike Blitch, head of the
Newport Beach police depart·
ment's juvenile djvision; Bruce
Malloy, a member of the Orange
County Probation Department
who works with juveniles, and
Dr. Bruce Wright, a political
science professor from Cal State
Fullerton.
The problem!> foreseen by the
* * *
Bergeson
ColllDlent
Gets Laugh
Marian Bergeson, the school
trustee who polled 35,000 votes
as a write-in Assembly candidate
earlier this l'JlOnth, got an en·
dorsemenl for her next cam-
paign today.
Mrs. Bergeson attended a
·panel discussion on juvenile
justice sponsored by the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Com·
merce and made a few oooerva-
tions about the use of continua-
tion high schools during the ques·
lion and answer phase of the
program
One of the panelists, Bruce
Malloy of the Orange County
Probation Department, was ob-
viously impressed with her re-
marks, bul apparently didn't
know Mrs. Bergeson.
"We need people like you in
Sacramento.'' he said. The au-
dience chuckled. P\Jzz.led by tht'
reaction, he added. "Seriously, if
I knew your name, l'd vote for
you."
f'rOWI Page AJ
TREES ...
Greek, the city ·s supenntendent
of parks.
The council ai.ked the men to
again look at the tret•s, this time
with the view that they should
save as man~ as possible They
were asked to return to the coun·
cil with a recommendation.
While the council held off ap·
proving thl'." total request by the
Irvine Company. it agreed that
the trees blockml( the proposed
East Yale Loop road should be
cut down.
The council also de<-ided to ap-
point a committee to study the
eucalyptus tree problem on a
citywide lcvp). looking at the
other eucalyptus tree windrows
in the city <most notably in
Northwood I
The council asked anyone in
lt>n•stt•d in serv1n~ on such a
comm1llt'l' to ('untacl one of the
council rnl'mbl'r<; AppointmcnLc;
'nil be mode ut the nt'irl council
rtlt't-ling, Dt>c 14
Penalty Upheld
COLUMBl'S. Ohw <APl The
state Supreme Court in a un-
animous dec1s1nn today upheld
the ronstituttonahh or Ohio's de
ath penally 1mpo ~ on Carl L.
Bayless, convicted May 9, 1974, 1n
Akron o( two count<; of aggravat
cd murder. There are 61 inmates
on death row al the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility in
Lucasville and at the Ohio
Reformatory for Women.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
T'°I~ n.._.,,_. '"4'\t Oe•l'jl PH"t w.f" °"f\.1#1\ t O"" h•"""'" I~....... It"•\\ t\ ~bf """"'1 bw I.._ Qr•'°!•r
1_, ... ,. ~1f)ll'loll\1ft1J (o-..o•"'t Sfoo.t'1'' .. ftij·hO"\A"'
0u&•1 "' • ., ¥ii0t\(t•1 ttrw ~-" r:,, t..h 10-Ca''"' Nll \.t l"lf,.w 004'1 O.r~u I\ H4r1fttlf'tqtrw\ .,. ... h -=~·I"
f.t" V•Otv Ir• n.-\A~l,OM" Viell•, •f'l ~"""'fl'l•ft.-*""' "-wt"'l(O•' A'l•,..,...••P"Q ft.,.I•,,.
'"'-" 'I r•f01•'"'"" ,.t,1•d•Y\ ~ ~_.,. l,-.,. Cl" ""'•r'l.t' ~1\f\•~Q ••• ,,, t\ .ti l~ W... I R•y
\.11,.•t C:-41\t• M• # (.tllll'•ft ... ,..,.
..... ,IN w, ..
Pu ..O•fl'lt •M ~wew.~r
JtO· • (llf., .. Y Y•t• l>ru• ,_.,., ,.~ C.""••I M9~r
'"*""•"••••ti fdlff'.'
,~ .................... ...
M•"•O·~ ffj1ll'W
Clt•rlo•" '---"~ ... ~ ..... ""''' •"' ..-•""•'1,,.. !ctOor•
Olllcn
(O\" AA.tu l'MW•" "•y\tff'•I l<fO~fMr•c"' 1'hVtt..,.v••\lr,.t >tuntl'WltMhMf"I Htllt)fMP\f)ovlh•••J ~l•O.M ti: V4'11f''t 1\)0t l fl P•1 Po.ct .. , ~ .. ,. 01• .. ,, .. ~~
Telephone (71'1642-'321
Claulfled Advar1llJ119 6-t2·567e
SMIClllrbltc• Yttle' ,.._.. (Mfo f' 511·6310 .
'"Oitf\'•" (1.,...1\,,. 416.ot30
eoo-;.1Q11l tt1• .,,.,... , .. ., """''"''"° eo-f>Mli• ... MW'\ \ftrl•\ lllU'\t••110f'\ MIWI_.
m•tttr •• •d•1rt1umtfU\ "•'•'" ~., tt , •• ,,....,,.,. t'll'ltf\-'vt ,,.•t1•t eumt""" of <..,,.,.,,,, ,, ... ".,
r-toM tlA\\ _.,, ••• t•llf .tt r-Mtt -M. C•'""'"'• \v'H''''"" bv .,,,., u u~ MOftl9'1'r bf flf\All U St f"Moftt'-1' "'ltlt•ry -'\ltMh~'\)J .,,..,_,,.,., --
' I
group will result Crom the re-
forms brought about by the
Dickson bill which is aimed at
altering the detention methods
used in handling offenders under
the age or 18.
Blitch noted that in Newport
Beach in 1975. about 2,500
juveniles were detained by the
police department. More than SO
percent of them simply received
counseling at the police depart·
ment and were released to their
parents within a few hours o!
their arrest.
This will change because the
Dickson bill requires that so·
called status offenders -those
who violate laws that apply only
to juveniles such as curfew -
cannot be held in a secure facility
such as a holding cell in a jail.
Under the new law they will have
to be taken to a "crisis resolution
home."
Blitch told the small audience
of 20 that this means that about IS
percent of the juveniles that were
held and counseled will either
have to be released or taken lo
such a home, of which there cur·
rently are none in the county.
Malloy said the probation de-
partment is trying to get the
County Board of Supervisors lo
designate the county's McMillan
School as a crisis resolution
home.
Hinshaw Fate
Turned Over
To 12 Jurors
By TOM BARLEY
Of U.. D•ily Pli.4 Sl.aH
The jury began deliberations
today in the second Orange Coun·
ty Superior Court trial oC
Congressman Andrew Hinshaw.
Judge Frank Domenichiru sent
his panel of seven men and five
women to the jury room after ad·
ding two more br ief instructions
to the directives they received
before final arguments were de-
livered Tuesday.
Both Deputy District Attorney
William Evans and defense at-
torney John McNicbolas ap·
peared lo give s~cial attention
to prosecution witness George
Upton during their Cina! appeals
to the jury.
McNicholas asked the jury to
reject th.at testimony because
Upton. a former key aide in the
office when Hinshaw was county
assessor in 1972, acted from
motives of personal ambition
when he recruited office staff for
Hinshaw's congressional cam·
paign.
Hinshaw's alleged role in lhe
diversion of county manpower
and materials to his election ef·
fort led to his being charged with
conspiracy, grand theft, em·
beuJement and misuse or public
funds.
McNicholas asked the jury to
remember th at Hins haw's
s ignature is not to be found on
any one or the pile of vacation
slips and overtime checks sub-
mitted by assessor employes that
worked on the campaign.
Fro.Page A l
SMEAR .•.
am sugges ting that such action
results in a crime and should be
subject not only to a fine but to
the possiblity or that particular
candidate being unable to take
office," he said.
Carpenter said that one way of
insuring the accuracy of an en-
dorsement is to reqwre written
aulhorization for the use of the
~ndorser's name.
Carpenter also suggested that
in cases where a subgroup of a
political party gives an e ndorse
ment to a candidate of the op-
posite party, the legitimate
status of that subgroup should be
established in a written
authorization from the sub-
.croup's party county chairman.
He explained that in the re-
cent election, phony organiza.
tions were set up to give the ap-
pearance that candidates were
receiving support from the op-
posite party.
"Where a candidate wishes to
put together mem~of another
party to support him.11e should
be required to show in all ad·
vertising the exact number of
such persons who have given ac-
tual written authorization for
such use,'' he said .
"The standards I am suggest-
ing are aimed at protecting the
public from confusion, last
minute smears through deceitful
methods, and hopefully will re·
duce the activities of those? 'hun·
gry' candidates who will suy and
do anytbln.c lo win an election.
"We need truthful and elhlcal
caodJdates and those not meeUng
these standards should not be
elected."
But Bhtch said such M facility
is an inappropriate place to put
some kids "who through an ex-
cess of spirit or bad luck have
been picked up for a curfew
violation aod who are having no
real social or emotional pro·
blems that need resolving."
Overall, Blitch said the thrust
or the bill Is lo r emove the
responsibilily for a juvenile's ac-
tions from the family and place
that responsibility within the ex·
isling institutional structure,
particularly with the probation
department.
The bill. he said, will force
status oCfenders into these homes
or will put some offenses now
considered status offenses into
the category of juvenile law
where penal code violators are
hand.led. ·
And in some cases, the new law
will push juvenile violators of
certain laws s uch as murder, into
the adult system where he says
there. is virtua11¥ no hope of re-
habilitation.
Wright suggested that the con-
cept held for the past 20 years
that criminal beha .. ior is the re-
sult of an illness ought to be re-
examined.
HOWARD HUGHES (IN HAT) TALKS TO ENGINEERS INSIDE SPRUCE GOOSE IN 1947
Same Seats Remain In Giant Airplane, Now Being Con1ldered for Navy U••
He said that an answer to the
multitude of problems sWTound-
ing the way in which juveniles
are handled might be to insist on
a system or punishment with the
idea or getting youthful violators
to take responsibility for their ac-.
tion.
'Goose.' to Fly Again?
Navy Eyes Old Hughes Plane /or Experimems
All of the panelists agreed that
the responsibility concept has its
roots in the family and com·
munity.
Malloy said there are two pro-
grams designed to meet that kind
or need in Newport Beach -The
Youth Employment Service, de-
signed to give teenagers jobs.
and the Assessment and Treat-
ment Services Center, which is
used by the police department as
a counseling diversion program
for youthful offenders who night
ot.herwise go to Juvenile Court.
He noted wryly that both are
privately funded and that one,
ATSC may close within a month
for lack of funds and that YES is
in a constant state of financial
trouble.
f'ro..Pag~Al
BILLING ..•
ing a citywide trash collection
service, instead or the existing
practice of each homeowners as-
sociation contracting for service
on its own.
If a citywide service is initiat-
ed, the city would have to charge
residents a trash collection fee.
The council recently decided to
ask the water district to combine
the two billings.
Eberling agreed it appears
there would be a savings, but in-
sisted that with the water dis-
trict's accounting problems, it
would be ~mpossible.
Nlllle Women
Stage Protest
LONG BEACH (AP) Hidden
29 years in a cavernous hangar,
Howard Hughes' giant wooden
flying boat, the Spruce Goose. 1s
back in the public eye -and gov-
ernment oCficials say they m ay
even try to take it aloft.
The late billionaire's Summa
Corp., the conglomerate that
runs Hughes' empire, released a
series of photo&raphs of lhe plane
Tuesday, including one taken in
1947 s howing Hughes talking to
technicians ins ide the big
machine.
It was the first public glance at
the plane since it made its lone
flight, skimming along 70 feel
above the water for less than a
mile, on Nov. 2, 1947, with
Hughes at the controls.
Since then. it has been locked
in its hangar at the harbor here
under 24 -hour guard.
The only outsider known to
have seen it regularly is a fire in-
spector on monthly rounds.
One official said despite lhP
long sleep, the plane -actually
called the Hercules Flying Boat
-"is in mint condition."
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration and the
Navy say they are interested in
the Goose as part of a vehicle re·
search project.
Adm. Carl Seiberlich said,
"We are trying to decide if a
large seaplane is viable as a
future naval vehicle."
Other possible uses reportedly
include a mobile launch bed for
intercontinental ballistic mis-
siles or as a test site over water
for experimental nuclear pro-
pulsion.
The craft -which is not really
made of much spruce, it's large-
ly plywood and birch -became a
point or honor with Hughes, who
was criticized for its multi-
million dollar cost.
Fro. Page A J
The 200-ton flying boat cost the
government $18 million and
Hughes, who designed it
personally, many times that
amount.
"I have put the sweat of my life
into this thing," Hughes told a
congressional inquiry into the
plane.
"If it fails, l will leave tbis
country. And l mean it!•'
The craft is actually owned by
the government, the General
Services Administration, with
Summa paying $800 a month to
rent it -plus untold main·
tenance and hangar costs.
Its eight engines are said to
have been fired up once a month.
NASA research engineer John
McTigue said be was "surprised
al the shape il 's in after 30 years."
"It has been kept in a fairly con-
trolled environment. They have
air blowing over the surfaces
continually, trying lo keep· the
temperatures or the vehicle and
the air exactly the same so there
will be no condensation or cor-
rosion," he said.
No agreements or commit-
ments have been made about re--
surrecling the Goose but
estimates to ready the plane for
flight range Crom $3 million to $5
million.
The three-story tall plane, 220
feet long with a wingspan of 320
feet, was built of wood to save on
metal, scarce in World War II.
The plane was designed to carry
7S0troops.
The GSA acquired ownership
of the plane in 1949 from the War
Assets Administration, which
fi nanced Its construction.
The GSA said it really wanted
to sell the plane, not lease it, but
"the difficulty was there was
very Jillie market for it except
tor Hughes."
F,...PageAI
FAIRVIEW CASELOAD. • •
.. But we are restricting ad·
mission to those we can provide
good programs for," be em·
phasized.
Since his accession to the
direct.crship after gaining the ear
of Don Z. Miller, California's de·
puty director of health, Dr.
Levine has undertaken a major
housecleaning job at the hospital.
He has pointed out the hospital
is understaffed to such a severe
degree that often only one
psychiatric technician (PT) is
available to care for 20 clients. as ,
they are called, rather than pa-
tients.
The age r ange of these
physically and mentally han-
dicapped ranges from a few days
into the seventies or eighties.
Standards applied in staffing
and accrediting California state
h ospitals were attacked at
Tuesday's press conference both
troublesome for parents to han·
dle.
"We had at least two·babies ad·
milted last year who are not
mentally retarded. T hey had
neurolo'1:ical handicaos." be ex·
plained. "One is no longer here
but there is Nancy, we're trying
to J(et her out now.''
"The effect on institutionali%~
babies Is devastating. They·
quickly 'learn how' to become r~
larded," Dr. Levine addect. J
"One recently that particular·
ly made me angry involved a kid
th ey tried to 1tet i n for a behavioral disorder ... he only
has a hearing disability." .
BELFAST, Northern lreland
(AP) -Six women wrapped in
blankets but wearing no clothes
began an outdoor vigil here today
to protest conditions which they
say Roman Catholic prisoners
face in a Northern Irelandjail.
The women, between 24 and SO
years old, huddled under blankets
in a tent set up in west Belfast's
Catholic Turf Lodge area, vowing
they would fast while keeping up
the demonstration for a week.
LEGALITY.
part of \ts district.
• by Dr. L<!vine and State Senator·
elect Paul Carpenter.
Despite skepticism by parental
groups and the hospital's five-
man Advisory Board, Dr. Levine.
is proceeding with his met.hods of
improving treatment and care
programs at the Costa Mesa
hospital.
He says many more who live
there could be handled through
regional centers, which general-
ly operate on a county-level bas~
or over several counties in the
case of smaller, rural counties. _.
The demonstrators said they
were patterning their action after
14 prisoners who are refusing to
wear prison clothes at Maze
prison, to protest. the ending of
political prisoner status by
British a uthorities in Northern
Ireland.
But Lansing Eberling, IRWO
board president and a vice presi·
dent of the Irvine Company, in-
sisted that the council would not
object to the agreement if it real-
ly understood it.
Lansing proposed a joint meet· •
ing between the I RWD board and
the city council. The council
agreed to meet with the water
district board, but a date has not
yet been set.
Gag Snagged
Youth, 11, Can Be Named
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U .S. Supreme Court
today struck down, at least temporarily, an
Oklahoma judge's order limiting news media report·
ing or a case involving an 11-year-old boy round delin:
quent by reason or second-degree manslaughter. -
The court set aside a "gag order" imposed by
Oklahoma County District Judge Charles E. Halley,
which prohibited news reporters from publishing or
broadcasting the boy's name or photoJ?raph -even
though both had been widely displayed before -until
he was 18.
The court's refusal to go along with the Okla-
homa judge was in keeping with its htling last sum·
mer in a much-publicized Nebraska murder case. In
that case, the Supreme Court came close to outlawing
such reporting restrictions. '
: The boy was arrested lasi JUly and ·later fou nd ·de-
linquent by reason of second-degree manslaughter in
the shooting death or an Oklahom a City railroad
switch man.
Alter 1nittat reporting about the case mentioned.
the boy's name and displayed his picture, Halley Is·
sued a pretrial order banning such mention.
c
The Santa Ana Democrat, cur-
rently a state assemblyman, at·
~acked both priorities set, rund-
rn g methods and a recent
approval of Fairview by the Joini
Commission on Hospital Ac·
creditalion. Representatives of JCHA
earlier this year rated the.
hospital as one of the highest in
the nation in its treatment and
therapy progr ams in addition to
hundreds of gr aded support
services.
"We are outraged at the sta.n·
dards of care in the caurornla
State Hospit a l system1" As·
semblyman, Carpenter said.
He char ged the private agency
which operates on a nationwide
basis waived particular licensing
standards to allow hospitals to
continue receiving federal aid
funds.
If JCHA standards are not met.
these funds are cut off.
·'The State of California bas a
conflJct of interest in setting stan-
dards and examining its own
hospitals," Carpenter asserted.
Not Jong ago, Dr. Levine set up
an ad hoc committee to review
procedures at Fairview, which in
recent years has worked w\lh a
system of 10 speclal procrams,
each devoted to a spedfic ban·
dicapped group by age and
ability.
The Untvel"sity of Illinois
graduate had alrea~ introduced
a plan to reduce usfiottranqulllz·
ing drugs on pati nts, bucking
the system before Dt. Toto wu
deposed.
He · cbarced in 1 a recent in
terview state hospit.als have ac·
tually been used! as dumping
grounds for unwanted ban·
dicappe d .children too
(.
His own youngest chilci,
Steven, 6, is mentally retarded
and his treatment and educa-
tional therapy programs are
handled by the Orange County
Regional Center.
Fro.. Page A.I ..
, ..
JAILED •••
Nonetheless, the mlnister fll~
a complaint, and Hughes was ar·
rested on burglar y charces.
"I told the man I would stand
up wit h hi m in court," Mr.
Lockwood said. •'I told the fellow
that J was m ore concerned that
he find God's plan for life.
"I've given my life t.o helping
others," the mlnlsttt said. "I
don't want him harmed, but 1 feel
as a Christian that I have a duR
to ~lety to apprehend those if'·
volved in criminal acts."
Mr. Lockwood said he would,
ask the state attorney U Huehn
could be r eleased on his own rj-
cognizance. He also hid he-'s1'\t
vited Huahes to Jo1n him f~t
Thanksgiving dinner.
Said Huc bes: "I wW never 19
into another church."
I ••
·Kis8ingen Real
ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) -·
U.S. &!cretary ot Stal~ H~
Kllsin1er bH anifed her. wtth
his wile N anc1 for a flve-dar vacation.
Wednesday""'
Closing Pric~ NYSE COMPOSUE
IJ
•
TRANSACTIONS
Wednesday November24 197fJ l /N OAILYPILOT
Top of the Heap
Ma Bell's Dimes
Keep Piling Up
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
The cocporatlon that continues lo make more mon~Y'
than any other 1s your old friend, the telephone company.
known rorrnally as Amencan Telephone & Telegraph, in ab
brev1ated fashion as AT&T and more fam1harly as Ma Bell.
By whatever name,
1t gets to keep more
money than anybody
which may not be sur
pnsmg when you bew 1n
mtnd that 1t has 115
million phones workmg
for 1t every day
Money
Tree
Both Exxon and General Motors (GM) will take m morft
money this year than AT&T Each will collect more than $40
billion m revenues whereas AT&T's take will range between
$30 and $35 b1lhon However. neither Exxon nor GM, even
with spectacular fourth quartets, will be able to catch the
phone company when 1t comes to aftertax profits, what
businessmen calJ "the bottom lane "
FOR A WHILE, SEVERAL YEARS AGO, 1t appeared
as tf the 011 comparues especially Exxon, m ight soon sur-
pass Ma Bell m earrungs Indeed, m 1974, w1th the Arab
pnce increases b1llowmg its sails Exxon sailed to net pro
fits of $3 14 billion, JUSt shy of the $3 16 b1llton logged that
year by the phone company
But 011 company profits have not advanced s1g01f1cao.t1 y
since then And AT&T has spurted ahead, g1vmg 1t a com
manding lead
Ma Bell has now reached a new kind of Stratosphere - -
it's earnmg, after taxes. Sl b1lhon every three monttis.
Thats so mmd boggling it's d1fftcult lo gel 1t 10 perspective
So look at 1t -$1 billion of profits every three months -1n
these ways
-ONLY THREE CYl11ER COMPANIES -Exxon. GM
and IBM -earn more than $1 b1lhon in the entire year
-Only some 300 companies take 1n as much as $1
billion m total revenues for the entire year
-The $1 b11l1on netted by AT&T every quarter exceeds
the total profits made last year by the nahon s 50 largest
transportation companies <a1rhnes r ailroads, shipper s.
truckers)
THE PROFIT STANDINGS AT THE END of the hrs l
nme months of 1976 were
AT&T
GM
Exxon
IBM
$2 7 b1lhon
S2 1 b1lhon
$1 9b1lhon
$1 7 b1lhon
Texaco $639 m1lhon
Two petroleum g1anlS, the world's largest comp..,.ter
maker the world's largest auto producer and, at the lop or
the heap, the phone company
AT&T's PROFITS IN THE FIRST nine months or ibc
year were up 21 percent over 1975 In the third quarter they
increased by 25 percent By the time the year 1s over, lhe
phone company will have approached the $4 b1lh on level tn
aftertax profits. and 1t will surely go over that mark m 1971,
Just a short time ago such a profit level would have
been considered unthinkable But mnat1on has numbed tt'le
mmd with strings of zeroes And no company rmgs up these
numbers with s uch clanking ferocity as Ma Bell And 1f you
ask her. s he 11 tell you We need e very dime "
Stock Market Stable
After Tuesday Loss
NEW YORK <AP > The stock market swung upward
today m moderate pre holiday trading
The Dow Jones average of 30 rndus lnal stocks gamed
66pomls to950 96 •
Gamers outpaced losers by a 5 3 margm among New
York Stock Exchange listed issues
The Dow dropped about 2 points at the outset but then
steadied and crossed mto plus terntory
Analysts said traders had been encourage d by that sta-
ble performance after the average suffered a 6 57 pornt set
back Tuesda v
'The underlying mood seems to be one of buoyancy, ·
said Robe rt Stovall at Reynolds Securities
~EW YORK l"PI
Ad .. 11('1"
0e<llM\ Urw:l'lar>~ Tott! IUUO\ N•w 1'16 l'I QI\\
Nrw 1'76 IOW\
p,,...,
foelhV <lny
-Miii 116 IAI
A\) •M
IM\ ll<>J Rli 1l I\ 11
WHl\T AMElt 010 NEW ... ORK IAPl
~d¥At'1Ct\
Ottlln<'\
Vn<hanqe<I Tot•I h\U4!~
NfW 1976 "ICIM N""' 1976 lows
Symbob
f'r""V fod~• <ltY )\! )M
'10 335
))A llA
O\~ ·~· 16 ,,
" u
,,,s .. t"'' ntutl 01\n Dt:NOS "' r\tUl'I
u,11 .. t..lt't 'w ,f '"' ,, f n 'tll, .t ,
.(b• 0.C.l•r•d Of PMd ·~tor th1~ Vt H 1UJ r
UV'"' ll (( l o ..... ,,,""' tJ" lfllJ 'ul tlf! I cJ " fjf nrl U1 I 1•4' rt t ''' Vt-tf' 4f ~ 1 t (11 1
\IO',Dtd n1'1• nt 1 nu1u, l0<'-p1 1t,, ,~ ·~ I ~ ''""JI f ~I utv 'JI. ,, "',, '' fh> o• 11th , v• v 1 '' •t C1PJi(1 nn ,,,, uro 1 l1lp•H (.tnl1'1 lOtl•q J" dll'\PI .. ii; 111 I t "•1o<• P• (J ,1 1~1\ u1' I\ t\o\ • , ,,., "'"'"'''"PMf'•MQt 71'ff•nn' m ttl ~:;.I~ ~-~, ~:. ,'t~ ,:, dPI 04' d fw .i-1 t Pt,,,, C') 1 n" '" tfl nf" 111itnr• /t 1 .,., 1tt .,,._ ot pitt 'tt\-Au1 t111rnu•"" dt ,~..,.., bY I iHIJ 1nfl t'°I" ,_..,,.,, •J mo"'"• 111 1 110 t tu 1 to IA>t \ t1t"ttr1c
NEW VOFI~ !AP) fne 1011ow1119 '"''. ~how' th• N•w Vc>rk Slock Ex'"""ll''
\,ffX9C\ ~no w•r-r4'nl\ thM hAvc OOM UC)
thi-mo\t AnO t1t>w" th" mQ\t tM\.00 on """~"' ;' , hAnq• r~f)Mdl .. \\ Of VOIUmf tor Wf!odn\dA 1 No \•curU ..,, trMUno t>Alow ,, ,.,,. lnc.t ~ Ntt And oorc•nt1tott c t\iU~\ ,.,. thto
C'llff"r"nt,. bf'tWl'lf't'I '""' Oflt't OV\ ( IO\I \g
orlc' l'lrtd to'1Ay•, A om prltt1
I Ntl\qAI• ( • 1 CllA\•Mlr l Venc» Co • CoA\l~t (i3, ~ Pf>M 0 .. ~ ~n~'\r..~\?
8 Con>AC Cp • !Cllltl\ DIA 1n MtQ"Tr l\m
II CMtttr Co 11 Wonch P,. fl IJ 8~1Co Pet ll L_,.Y)n~ Co
U Aulom Ind ·~ B•Wfl<I Fer 11 Cotl•r WAii 18 Sf>tl>WIO Air
19 8wl'\ Sh.,rf)t' '° Collt"' ill~
UPS s • J • S''I 10111 . ..
\
~ ... ,.
Vl
J
] . ,. ,,._ 11•.
&~ h'> I , ..
7.
ti t • DOWNS l•" l• 11 l .. 111. ,., . ,.
h\\ , ...
'''• ~ . , ....
10\/. ~ ....
8 .... 11 .,
" )() .... ,,.., ,,) ..
~"
'• UP
"" VII "" Vr> I• Up
' U1> ' Up
'" Up 7, Up
8 Up
• VD
• VI> I I VP 114 VD I\\ Up
r Vo
'' Uo ' Vp • Up ~ VP II< UD
'On• ,, . ,, "
11 ' lt.
l l I ,~ ~ •• Q I . ' A~
I I ~;
8,
1 1
11
1.
10
Pct Oii 1S 0
Oii ,, '
'' Oii It. ') Oii t i
II) °'' f I~ Oii SI ~ Off ;.
"" Oii ) , I Ofl 4'
'.. ()ff ~., .; g::. ~
'• OH •>
"' Oii • ' 1"r Oil • >
"' Off A,.7 '• Ott .A('
I) g: H
'" OI! ll•
W.On11Sday November 2~ 1976
JOE MORGAN
Reds' ..
NEW YORK lAP) -Second
basemanJoeMorganollhe World
Champion Cincinnati Reds toda)
became only the second man in
National League history to win
Most Valuable Player honon. two
consecutive se3sons.
Ernie Banks, former Chicago
Cubs shortstop, was named MVP
in 1958 and 1959.
In the American League, con
secutive winners included Jimmy
Foxx, 1932·33: HaJ Newhouser,
1944-45; Yogi Berra, 1954·55;
Mickey Mantle, 1956·!>7, and
Roger Maris, 1960·61.
Smcdl but Quick
Obscure Defense
Is Key for CM
By ED BURGART
01 lhe O•llY Piiot SUIH
During a s uccessful season in
which 1ls orren~e has consistently
drawn raves, the Costa Mesa
High defense lingers in ob·
:.curity.
The n<.1mes or quarterback
Dave MolHca and runrung back
Van Duddridge arc well known
around the South Coast League,
but mention such football un·
kno~ns as Dale Amburgey and
Chris Cathcart. and the average
football fan might Uunk you are
talki ng about Junior All ·
\merican prosperts.
ln faC't, no Costt1 Mesa
Must;rngs defensive starter
t•urned all·league honors either
e1n fi rst or second team And no
~1.irter v.eaghs mon: than 195
pound~.
Still. Costa ~ll·sa takes an 8·1·1
rN·ord 111!0 1-'riday night's 8
o'dock ~l·cond row1d CIF 2·A
playoff game ag:11nst Bellnower
at Newport Harbor High. And its
defc•nM' ha-; shul out two oppo·
nents and only allowed two of its
last s ix fol's to :-core• more than
nine' points
"Quicknt•,:-. as the key," :-.ays
Tom W:in-. Costa Mesa's dc-
fens1 H ' Mordinator "Plus, we
h aVl' grl'al 11ursuil ft 's seldom
when \.H' hJvt· only one guy mak
ing a lack le• l ':-uJlly, two or
thret ~U\' will J.!Cl an asst!>\ It's
gang tackllnJ? and our kids h11
with the be-;t or them ..
By h1tt1ng With thl' b<•-;t or
them . CostJ ~ft'sJ h.is n•u1..,t·red
23 of 39 fumbll':-.
"According to our figun•s, v.c
h3\'l' C3U'•ed 26 of th~t· fumbles.
either b' hard tackling or hv rip
ptni! Lhc hJll .iv. a}.·· savs Wan•
"'And v.t•'H• h.ad lO interceptions
W1· v. ant lo h 1' r fun on dt-fcns•
.ind V.l'·n · tr)1n,:: 11> ..,core 1f v.t
(" 1n 0111• or llll r ~o.t.Js IS lo ..,C(lfl•
on r:kr(•ns1•
In its :11 i plJ\l1fr w in O\l•r L.1
llabr ,·.., ~nnnr.1 tht• Mu:.lc:l!lg..,
ddt'n:-.1· hl11t·k1•cl ,1 punt for a Tl>
;md n•t'•H 1·rl·d t "'•l fumbll'S fnr
!'>l'l\f('~
To ..,tnr" 011 ddl•ns1•. lh•
Mu!'>t.in~' l1l..1· '" tah· advuntagc
of lh··ir l11wb.11•kl·r-..
· On uur .Jl1.1:111n('nl:;, v.c try ti •
pro11•ct 1111r lind>JCkl·r~. ·· sa y'
\\art• ...... tn to hm1t the or
"'""'' •' I 11w m ,. n tu l'ert • .un block
in1: :in~k.., '"th••) have to block
our clown llnt•mC'n th <10tnR thdl
(•Ur ltnl'backf'r' arc fn't' to mak1
I ,11 k j....,
Thal v. ,,, our philosoph\ <•I
thl' bt·~1nn1ni! or 1111' :.1•J<.<in \\1
Lakers' Rally
Def eats ~uck.s
'11 t. W 1\ l ' h. E f: 1 \ P > Don
Nt•bon, v..1 ... 11ng nn t1mt• rrtaalor
int; thl' r.Jg~t·d Milwauk<>c Ruck:.
with lht' s h It' t h.1t mad<' lht•
n o..,ton Ccll1,::-:.i dynasty. fell less
th.111 four minute ... ;.hort of a first-
n1ght SUCCl.'SS.
The Bu e ks. running and
fr•·l•lancanf: more than lht•y have
Ott T\' Tonlg•t
Cltanflft 5 at 8130
all season. m ounted a ll2·103
le.ad with 3 · 49 lo play Tuesday
night.
But Kareem /\bdul-Jabbar,
pouring in 16 of has 36 points in
the fourth quarter, and Bo
Lamar led a Los Angeles rally
that enabled the Lakers to nip the
Bucks. 117 ·114. and s poil
Nelson's first game as their
coach.
The Lakers moved on to
Denver tonight.
The Bucks' 16th defeat in 19
National Basketball Association
games ran their latest losing
streak. which finally cost Larry
Co!;tello his coaching job Monday
night, to seven games.
··11hlnk' we may have gotten a
little lucky tonight," sajd the
Lakers' J erry West. himself a
rookie coach.
lOSANOIElES (1111 l'Otd4 ~u ...... Abdul
·J~bOer l!., All•n .. Ch•""Y 4 w ...... r>O'otl II
·ra1um IJ Kut>11c' L"m•• I' N<>omtt""' Mll.WAUltEIE 11141 lldOU.,,,,,,, ~ 0-•ldOt'
2•. ~'"'"'' 8uclll,.fl'r" w1,,,,." n 0•'""" 9,~ • .,..
1. H•l~r 10. llOydl W•llonl. McOon•lt1' 1:!>1111\h
4
l O\A...,..I•\ • ~ 1' 71 J\ "'
knew then that our linebackers
were good athletes."
1 n their 5.3.3 defense, the
Mustangs start 175-pound Mike
Brantley as middle linebacker
and 155·pound Mike Teregis and
189-pound Jeff Frazier as outside
linebackers.
"We're not big enough to fit a
5·2 defense and take on a team
like Bellflower," says Ware.
"Since we 're not very big, we
stunt a lot and try to play dif·
ferent alignments up front."
Up front, the Mesans start
195-pound Steve Perez at nose
guard and 175-pound Amburgey
and 173-pound Troy Ybarra at de· •
fensive tackles. Also, 145-pound
Rick Lillie has seen action at
nose guard.
"Our nose guard always plays
on the center and we move our
tackles a round a little." says
Ware. "One of the ruce surpnses
has been Amburgey. He's show-
ing a lot of aggressiveness and a
good pass rush."
But the strength may be at end
where 168-pound Cathcart and
185-pound Stan Miller start.
"l think they were two or lhc
finest ends in the league." s ays
Costa Mesa's head coach Tom
French. "Cathcart probably
hasn't said more than 10 words
all year. but he never misse:. an
assignment and has good quick·
ness. He runs the 40 an 4.8
.. Miller isn't quite as quick as
\athcarl but he is stronger and
hJS good agilit)."
Starting in the secondaQ arc
Mike Snow. Rick Ayers .md Jam
I .a.I eune~M'
Yet. whl'n tJlkmJ! a bout the de·
fense"· strength. French can't
pinpoint one pl ayer <>r one area
··1 think it ~tarts with our de
frnsivt' coaches. Tom Ware and
Al Dies.·· says 1''rench "That
plus the fact our kids hustle and
play team defense Our kids are
all for on(' .inother and d11n't car~
who gets the glor).
Thl' glory has come an the
team's first winning season in
the school's 17·ycar history and
II:-first trip to po;.l ·M.•ason com
~x·tation
Morgan Selected
Morgan, who won convincingly
over Greg Luzinski m 1975, was an
equally impressive WU111er over
his Clncinnati leammate George
Foster this year in the balloting
by the Baseball Wnters Associa-
tion or America. The 5-7, 166·
pound mfielder collected 19 first-
place votes from the 24·man com.
mittee. The other five voters
placed him second.
"ll 's a real honor. I think of it as
being unique," Morgan said when
informed or his award. "Ernie
Banks was the only other guy to
win it two years in a row, but he
did it on a team that finished 1n
ninth and 10th place. Nowadays, af
a team finished last you wouldn't
wintheMVP.
"Errue was one or a kmd and I
think maybe this award is the
s arnething."
What first place votes Morgan
did not get went to Foster, who
fini s h ed second ahead .
Philadelphia's Mike Schmidt was
third. The first three were the on·
ly players named on all 24 ballot:..
First place votes counted 14
points, second place nme points,
third place eight points, etc.
Morgan rinished with a total ol
311 points. Foster hud 221 and
Schmidt 179.
The Reds placed three players
m the top four, as third baseman
Pete Rose finished fourth with 131'
points. Cincinnati's Ken Griffey
was tied for eighth. Philadelphia
had three players in. the first 10.
with ..(ia'rry Maddox fifth and
Greg Luzinski tied for eighth.
Cy Young winner Randy Jones
or San Diego W85 the only pitcher
in the top IO , finishing 10th.
Morgan finjshed fifth in the bat·
MVP
tmg race "'ii h a .320 average He
had 111 runs batted m, lOlessthan
Foster, the league leader.
Morean also hit 27 home runs and
stole 60 bases despite an injury-
pla1Ued season.
Cincinnati players have been
chosen the Nation~ League MVP
five of the last seven years.
Johnny Bench and Morgun each
have won the honor twtce and
Rose once. Interrupting the Reds'
string were Joe Torre of St. Louis
in 1971 and Steve Garvey or Los
Angeles in 1974.
o.lly Pilet !"Mio
FV DEFENDERS DON BOHAY (66), FRANK CHRISTY (79), BILL GRIL2 (61), TOM STALLINGS (78), MIKE MUSSO (47).
Barons' Defense Shiriiiig Trojans'
. . Power Grune Five Shutouts Capped by Los Al_ Victory
By ROGER CARLSON
0 1 lht O~tly Pilol StaH
Llke most explosive football
teams. the d e fense usually
doesn't get the play or notoriety
that quarterbacks, running backs
and recea vers get
And at Fountain VaJley High
where the Barons arc preparing
for their second round CIF 4-A
pl ayoff game agamst Newbury
Park at Orange Coast College Fn-
day night (8) the same has held
true forthe most part.
Fountain Valley coach Bruce
Pickford offers some insight into
a combination that has recorded
five shutouts in what is now a 9·1
season. the latest perfecto against
tough Los Alamitos. 21-0. Los Al
netted 110 yards and did not
J)('netratc past the FV32.
"We selected Don Bohay as our
defensive player of the week.''
s ays Pickford, "but really. we
would like to have picked the
whole damned unit. Getting a
shutout against a weak oprxmcnt
is one thing -gelling it <1gainst
LosAlamitos isanolher "
Two defC'ns ive aces Mike
Musso and Tim Bienek missed
the last three quarters of play
with injuries, but John Nicholson
and Bryan Caldwell came
through m s t yle.
··we were crying earlier 1n the
vear about the tack or depth. '
says Pickford. "However dunng
this season we'vf> played without
Mike Musso. without Bo Boxold,
without Ken Margerum. without
Gary Coleman. without Tim
Bienek and without Frank
Christy.
"But people like Caldwell.
Nicholson. Doug Thompson. Stan
Shibata, Brad Wood and Tim
Henigman have been doing a JOh
for us. It's one of the big reasons
for our success."
The Barons use the conven-
tional 5·2 defense with an ag
gressive philosophy, one whi ch
Pickford describ~s as a slant and
angle attack.
"The secret lo our defensive
Sports in Brief
success." says Pickford, "has
been the agility and quickness
with aggressiveness going lo the
ball. We felt we were in a mid-
:.eason blues after losing to
Edison. but in the Los Alamitos
game we played with intensity
We attacked and went after them
and I think that was the diJ.
ference.
"Our two subs -Nicholson and
Caldwell did fine jobs for us, but
there were more. Bo Boxold was
ferocious and Bill Grilzreally tore
Los Al up. Our secondar y,
especially Jeff Mason ... jusl the
whole defens ive urut was out·
standing."
The Barons have allowed 46
points an 10 games and the five
shutouts snaps the previous mark
of four when FV blanked four
straight)rvwe League opponents
in 1969. '
But when it comes to the matter
of shutouts . cll'arly lheNo. l effort
for a Fountain Valley team under
Pickford in the past 11 years came
against Los Alamitos, a highly re·
garded eleven which had such im-
pressive backs.
Marshall Fired;
Alexander Signs
CHICAGO -Herman Franks
was selected field manager of the
Chicago Cubs and Rob Kennedy
was chosen director of baseball
operations for the team today
Both appointments, as well as
the firing of manager Jim
Marshall, came al a news con·
ference today.
Marshall piloted the Cubs lo a
fourth·place finish in the Na·
tional League East this year.
Kennedy. 50, served as a Cubs
head coach in 1965, the final year
or the club's no·manager expcri
ment. He was named VlCe presi-
dent in charge of baseball opera
lions.
Borg A d.,a,.~e•
COPENHAGEN -B1om Borg
or Sweden trimme d Italy's
Adriano Panatta. 3·6. 6·2. 7·6 in
the opening match or a $60,000
round robin tennis tournament
Tuesday.
A~%ander to Teza•
PROVIDENCE, R.I. Right·
hander Doyle Alexander signed a
multi·year contract with the Tex
as Rangers Tuesday night.
Alexander was the eighth of
Jerry Kapstein 's 10 free agent
clients to s ign agreements within
the past week.
Alexander, the losing pitcher
for the New York Yankees in the
first game o! the 1976 World
Series. won seven or his last eight
omes durin& the past season
and had no·hltters going for a 5%
innings in l our of those games.
Dierker, a fixture in lhe Houston
Astros' starting rolalJon s ince his
days as a fuzzy.cheeked teen·
ager, has f alien VICll m lo the
team·s youth movement.
Dierker and reserve infielder
Jerry Davanon were traded to
!he St. Louis Cardinals Tuesday
for former Dodger s catcher J~
Ferguson. who will be expected
to give the Astros much·nee<IPrl
catchin~ help and added power in
the lineup. and young outfielder
Bob Detherage.
Nt"IC~mabe Salb
KOBE, Japan -Jo hn
Newcombe of Australja and Cliff
Drysdale of South Africa ad-
vanced to the semifinals of a
$100 .000 international tennis
tournament tooay.
Newcom be de feated Ross
Case. 6·2, 3-6, 6·3 and Drysdale
whipped Vitas GeruJaitis. 6-4, 6·2
in fi rst round matches at Kobe
City's central gymnasium.
IAU\'eg .. a.U.
LAS VEGAS -Forwards Sam
Smith and Eddie Owens com-
bined for 53 Points as run-and·
gu n Nevada -Las Vega s
destroyed a touring basketball
team from the Republic of China,
174-90, in an extubition game
Tuesday night. I
The taller Rebels hit 64 percent
or their shots. 71 of UO, and
passed for 35 assists against the
overmatched Chinese.
In Big Test
LOS ANGELES CAP) -John
Robinson, normally a man given
to understatement, reaches for
the soap box when he starts talk-
ing about ' 'power football."
"People don 'l seem to notice
what's required of coaches and
players when a team plays power
football," the Southern
California coach said Tuesday.
"They just think, 'Here come the
gorillas.' ·
"They don't realize what a
great deal of work goes into play-
ing that type of game, the techni-
que involved."
Robinson. whose third·ran.k:ed
Troj ans whipped UCLA 24·14
Saturday for the Pacific·B cham·
pionship and Rose Bowl berth,
said the victory was a matter of
wearing the Bruins down.
"We beat 'em with brute
force.'' he remarked, forgetting
technique for a moment. "We
overpowered em. ·
Tailback Ricky Bell. the focal
point of the Trojans' power I
formation, bulled and slashed his
way for 167 yards against the
Bruins, while the Trojans' de-
fensive line shut down UCLA's
vaunted Veer offense. ,
The Trojans' final two roes will
provide power-agains t.power
tests. Before meeting second·
ranked Michiga n in the Rose
Bowl, USC has the matter of
Notre Dame lo take care of this
Saturday.
"Notre Dame is big,
strong. . and good,·· Robinson
said of the 13th-ranked Iris h.
"We're not going to out·physical
Notre Dame
The Jr1sh, hound for a Dec. Z7
date with Penn State in the Gator
Bowl. bring an 8·2 r ecord into the
Coliseum Saturday against the
9.J Trojans.
Robinson was asked if he were
upset that, despite the victory
over second-ranked UCLA Satur-
day, the Trojnns remained third
m The AP football poll while
Michigan moved from fourth to
second yia a 22·0 triumph over
Ohio Stale.
"Naw·w-w." he replied, "it
doesn't bother me. I see a playoff
for the national title. We play
Notre Dame and Michigan, and
Pittsburgh (No. 1) plays Penn
State and Georgia. Who's No. 1
will be decided when that's over.
Where we're ranked now doesn't
bother me."
Thursday's TV
9:30 a .m . (4 > -NFL FOOi'·
BALL -The Ouffalo Bills
meet the Detroit Lions at
Pontiac. Mich.
10 a .m . (2) NBA
BAS K ETBALL -The
Washington Bullets meet the
Suna at Phoenix.
12:30 p.m . (2) -NFL
FOOTBALL -The St. t..ouJs
Cardinals vs. DaUas at Irv-
ing. Teit. .
Mttwev,,. H )I )t JI 114
"'-'JIM oul ,...,,,. T<>l•llwl\ IO\ •-•tHt ~ M''"'"':',..27 A •.PJ
OellyPit9'"'"9
MESA STARS CHRIS CATHCART, JIM L•JEUNESSE (11).
Fer.-... Trabd
HQUSTON -Pitcher Larry
l
Owens, a 6-6 senior, se<>Ted 23
and Sam Smith bit 30. Guards
Tony Smith and Robert Smith hit
22 and 15, respectively The
Smiths are not related
S:JO p.m. (7) -COLLEGE
FOOTBAt,L -Texas A&M
meets the Un1versity or
Texas. • ' ~
•• It ..
'
Lag1lna/South Coast Afternoon
.Y. Stoeks
VOL 69, NO. 3.29, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1976 '
Minister Turns In Start,ing Migrant:·
DUNDEE, Fla. (AP)-A man
c:aught making a bologna
sandwich in a church was sent to
Jail because the minister felt it
was his Christian duty "to ap.
preb.end those involved in
1 criminal acts."
• Virgil Hughes, 52, a migrant 1 farmworker employed on a local
farm, said he was outside the
Dundee Baptist Church on Sun-
day, penniless and unable to re-
member the last time be bad
eaten. A passerby suggested be
try the church kitchen, be told
police.
Hughes said he walked through
an open (\oor and was fixing a
sandwich when the minister, the
Rev. James Lockwood, found
him and called police.
Oflicer Ron Sel.lgren said be
found no evidence of forced entry
and no burglary tools.
uue bad nothing on him but a
can of pipe tobacco," Sd.lgren
said.
But Mr. Lockwood said he
caught Hughes filling a bag with
IJ'OCeries.
"And or course I don't know
what else he was going to take, ..
be said.
Hughes was taken to police
headquarters, where he told
avthoriUes his story. Asst. Polk
County State Attorney Al Smith
then decided that he could be
charged only with trespassing, a
misdemeanor. Hughes was set.
free.
But Smith said Mr. Lockwood
called him later to complain
about the release. The minister
claimed that the church was
locked and Hughes broke in.
.. It's {ll'elty hard to convince
me or anyone else that a cburcb
sbouldn 't be open on Sunday
momlng," Smith sald.
Nonetheless, the minister filed
a complaint, and Hugbes was ar-
rested on burglary charges.
"I told the man I would stand
up with him in court," Mr.
Lockwood said. "I told the rellow
that I was more concerned that
he fmd God's plan for life.
"I've given my life to helping
otbers," the minister said. "I
don't want him harmed, but I feel
as a ChrtsUan that I have a duly
to society to acprehend those in·
volved in crim nal acts."
Mr. Lockwood said he would
ask the state attorney if Hughes
could be released on bis own re.
cognizance. He also said he's in6
vited Hughes to join him ror
Thanksgiving dinner.
Said Hughes: "I will never go
into another church."
Turkey Quake KiJls at· Least 500 ,
Kids Thankful
Third Gratkn Give Ret1JJons
The third graders in Kathy Allen's class at Aliso School
in South Laguna took a few moments recenUy to consider
what they're thankful for this Thanksgiving.
Holly Geissler was thankful for the friendship or the In·
dians and the Pilgrims; there wouldn't have been a
Thanksgiving if they hadn't made fri ends.
JOHNNY KREJSSIG GAVE APPRECIATION for bis
family, "because my mom and dad raised me from a
baby." He also gave no short shrift to food, "because it
helps me grow."
Robin Barbee said Thanksgiving ''is not just for din·
· ·ners. It's for love too." She thought we could all use a little
more love in God.
Roxana Andrews had some words for the simple things.
She was thankful for the trees because they give fruit and
shade, for the bir~s because they sing and fly, for the bees
because they buiz and make honey, for the flowers because they smell good.
DONNIE SEILER GAVE PRAISE for the basic
necessities. ''I am thankful," he wrote, "for my house sol am
warm. I am also glad for my food so l do not starve. I am alsc glad for my family so lean Ii ve."
Sports-minded Camron Blackburn was thankful "for
God making me a good soccer player."
Scott Richardson didn't like limitations: He was
grateful for the whole world. Wrote Scott, "It sure feels
good to be in a world!"
·1capistrano Growth
1Cut Rule Advances
By ANNE COOPER
Ol 1114 O•llY P1lol Swff
Despite emotional cl rums that
a proposed San Juan Capistrano
growth management ordinance
smacks of socialis m, planning
cqmmissioners voted 3-0 Tues.
day to recommend city council
adoption.
Co mmi ss ione r s Phillip
Schwartze, Robert Davies and
Phyllis Shainman also instructed
city planners lo prepare sup-
plementary matcnal for coun·
cilmen, evaluating cr1t1cism
leveled against the growth con
trol ordinance at Tuesday's
public hearing
Comm1ss1oners Grorge Riley
and John Taylor did not attcn1I
the meeting
The proposed ordinance. de
veloped by a special committee,
would reduce building penmts is-
sued in San Juan from an
average of 600 per year to ahout
350.
City Pl ann ing Directo r
Thomas Me rre ll told com-
missioners the growth manage
m ent controls, which the or
dinance would impose on re-
sidential development, would not
stop growth.
He said the ordinance would
further implement the city's re-
vised general plan and would as-
sure growth will not interfere
with San Juan's environmental
quality or semi-rural lifestyle.
cessing. carrying and interest
costs would price San Juan
homes out of the market and con-
sequently deter building.
"The ordinance places the city
directly between the producer
and the consumer and touches
every as pect of housing," he
said ... Private industry is down
the tube in San Juan if this or·
dinance is adopted."
Leona Fitzpatrick, president of
the San Juan Chamber or Com-
merce, said four of the five
chamber board members who
voted on Chamber approval of
the ordinance were VIOientiy op-
posed lo the proposed growth
control.
"'The ordinance does not con·
sider impact on existing San
<Stt LIM IT, Page A2 )
Police Auction
Set for Clemente
San Clemente wiil hold its
semi-annual police auction al 10
a.m. Dec. 4 at the fire station, 100
. i\ venidfl Presidio.
Among the unclaimed items to
be sold are bicycles, auto ac·
cessories, watches, surf boards,
fishing tackle, radios, a golf cart,
10 Hummel statuettes and a
personaJly autographed photo of
Mario Lanza.
Lift Flies
Down LB
Hillside
A construction forklift
careened wildly down a steep
Laguna Beach residential street
Tuesday after its brakes failed
and its dri v~ jumped for his life.
Driver Kenneth D. Merriott,
25, of 6242 Warner St., Laguna
Beach sustained minor injuries
in the mis hap. He was not
hospitalized.
The forklift came to res t
against the home of Wallace
Stark, 370 Nyes Place.
It had rumbled driverless 310
feet along Nyes Place, careened
up an embankment traveling
another 110 feet before running
back on the road, crossing it, run-
ning up a newly planted hillside,
smashing some lattice next to
Stark's garage and damaging
concrete steps.
The equipment stopped with
the forks just touching the roof
rain gutter of Stark's house.
The driver told Laguna Beach
police he h ad attempted to
cramp the wheels or the forklift
to run it against the hillside and
stop1t before he bailed out.
Pendl,eton's
Gls Seeking
Holiday Visit
Thomas Swann. a Camp
Pendleton private, can't make it
home for Thanksgiving. Home is
m Brooksville, Fla.
It's beginning to look like
Swann, and fl ve other Pendleton
marines who~ homes are in II·
linois, Virginia, Michigan, New
Mexico and Wisconsin, will have
to spend the holiday alone,
without the companionship or the
families they want.
All or the men have signed up
with the Interfaith Servicemen's
Center in San Clemente seeking
surrogate families with whom to '
spend the day.
By late this morning, they
were still waiting for volunteers.
Interested famiHes who'd like
to bring a serviceman home for
Thanksgiving dinne.r still have
time to call the center, al
492-1814, or come in tonight or
Thursday. The address is 1S4
Avenida Victoria.
.,. . ....,... ..
FAIRVIEW HOSPITAL NOW CLOSED TO NEW PATIENTS
Assemblymen Carpenter, Fairview's Levine Meet Preas
Patient Overload
Ended at Fairview
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 lhe 011ly ""°'Slaff
No new patients except for a
hand-picked few are being ad-'
milted to Costa Mesa's Fairview
State Hospital because they can-
not get proper treatment, acting
medical director Dr. Michael
Levine declared Tuesday.
And, he angrily noted in an in·
terview, the hospital is still try.
ing to find an outside home for
'NEGLIGENCE' CAUSE
OF MENTAL DEATHS, A5
one of two babies placed in the
1,700-plus-population who isn't
retarded at all.
''We had at least two babies ad-
mitted in the past year who are
not retarded at all. They had
neurological problems," the out-
spoken child psychiatrist says.
Appointed upon former
medical director Dr. Anthony N.
Toto's abrupt forced resignation
in July, Dr. Levine, 35, appeared
at a Los Angeles news conference
Tuesday with his announcement.
"Al the current time, we can
provide good custodial care,
food, clothing and shelter and
there are some islands of ex-
cellent treatment," be said,
speaking or certain programs for
the retarded and physically han-
dicapped.
"But we are restricting ad-
mission to those we can provide.
good programs for," he em-
phasized.
~ince his accession lo the
directorship after gaining the ear
of Don Z. Miller, California's de-
puty director of health, Dr.
Levine has 1.indertaken a major
housecleaning job at the hospital.
He has pointed out the hospital
is understaffed to such a severe
degree that often only one
psychiatric technician CPT) is
(See FAlllVJEW, Page AZ)
'IJUSH PICKUP
TO BE UTE
Trash will be picked up a day
late for Laguna Beach and San
Clemente residents whose
normal pickup day is Thursday,
because of the Thanksgiving holi·
day.
Residents of points between -
South Laguna, Dana Point and
Capistrano Beach -wiJl have
their Thursday trash carted off
Saturday.
Merrell also said residential
construction in surrounding com-
munities will keep San Juan
housing prices competitive,
despite the ordinance.
William Bathgate, former
mayor of San Juan, said the law
is, in effect, a no-growth or-
dinance. He said additional pro-
Laguna, Coast Panel at Odds
TWO C.4RS SOW
ON FIRST CAIL
"'The first call did the job. Last
year J advertised ln the Dally
Pilot, and sold a Pinto -also on the fll'St call.··
That's the advertising success
story told by a Costa Mesa man
who placed this classified ad ;
'75 Du!lt!'r, full y equip
Low mi, xlnt cond. ~
Call anytlmt-xxx-xxu
U you'd like to convert a car,
or anything else, to cash -can
642-5678. It pays to put the Daily
PUot to work for you.
•
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of IM O•llY ll'lleC ~ The honeymoon that once ex-
isted between Laguna .Beach and
the South Coast Regional Coastal
Conservation Commission is
over. .
A rarity among coastal cities
in its vigorous support for the
aims of the coastal conservation
acts, the Art Colony oow finds
itself frustrated and smarting as
a result of d~cisions of the staff or
the regional commission.
Recently. the regional com-
mission staff has issued opinion.-;
denying redevelopment projects
in the city's core.
The staff bas said lt will con·
Unue to recommend such denials
until thci city comes up with an
acceptable parking management
plan 1pelling out Just bow
Laguna Beach plans to cope with
its historically difficult traffic
situation.
An example is a proposal now
pending before the Regional
Commission.
( NEWSA.NA.LY I J
Harry Howard, a Laguna. John.~on follows a pattern set in
Beach develope,r, has sought previous cases:
permission to tum three aging "Until Laguna Beach assures
retail units along Ocean Avenue the commission that it bas adopt-
inlo a restaurant, a $40,000 job. ed specific implementation pro·
Additionally, three apartments gram (or dealing with parking
above the stores would be re-demand and traffic ln the
modelled with one being devoted down1dwo area, then no ln ·
to omc~/storage space for the t.enslficatlcms of existing use or
restaurant. new developments With lnade-
The city approved the project. quate parking can be approved.''
The shops are next to a city Runninl through recent con·
parltl.ng lot. They now provide no tacts between the city and the
parking or their own. Howard coastal commission staff ls a
had no plans to add parklnf, but pervulve attitude ol bostillty,
would pay in Ueu fees to help \he say dty officl&ls closely involved
city fund future pukme spaces. ln workinc with t.M ~clonal
A staff report oo tM project by bodf •
coastal staff plaQAOr_.Elgno_ TbeJ havo been aharpl)'
(.
'
~
I
critical of the commission stair,
but declined to speak for attribu-
tion on the subject.
However, Mayor Phyllis
Sweeney, in an interview did ac-
cuse the coastal staff of being un-
reaUst.lc on the parking question.
She said it is her impression that
developers such as ~ck Smith
who tried recenUy tO get a re·
development project through ,the
commission do Ceffl the stair is
biased against Laguna Beach.
Mayor Sweeney ~ed that had
the coaatal staff st.anda.rds been
epplied years earlier, much of
the upending ol f downtown area could not hav been done.
She cited Esbbac 's -the coo-
v era i o o from run-down
news~per buildin at ~t Forest.
Avenue lO a relmbwned norist
(See COAST A.i,,'Paae A!>
'
Damages
Reported
As Heavy
ISTANBUL, Turkey (Al» -A
major earthquake struck an area
of eastern Turkey near the Soviet
border today, killing hundreds
and causing widespread destruC-
tion, the Turkish state radio re-
ported.
The Kandilli Observatory iti
Istanbul put the magnitu,de al 7.6
on the Richter scale. Tbe ob-
servatory said the quake hit at
2:2Sp.m. (4:25 a.m. PST) and had
its epicenter in a mountainous
area or Van Province 900 miles
eastoflsla'nbul.
"It was the worst tremor to hit
Turkey since the one that re-
gistered 7. 9 in Erzincan and killed
about 30,000 in 1939," the Kandilli
observatory said.
A spokesman at the U.S. Na-
tional Earthquake Information
Center in Golden, Colo., said he
thought the quake caused "con·
siderable" damage because the
area is populated and-has many
older buildings. --
He put the location at about 20
miles west of Yerevan in the Sov·
ietUnion.
The impact in the Soviet Union
was thought to be minimal, ac·
cording to initial reports from the
seismic station in Tbilisi, Soviet
G . I eorg1a. 1 The Richter scale gauges the
energy released by a quake in I
terms of ground motion recorded
on a seismograph. Quakes of
magnitude 7 can cause
widespread, heavy damage. The
earthquake in Guatemala that
took 23,000 livest.his year had r~
adings as high as 7 .S.
A radio bulletin said 500 people
were killed in the district of
Muradiye and 25 in Ercis and that
95 percent or the houses were:
destroyed in those areas. :
Turkish news agencies report· ·
ed that at least half a dozen !
villages were wiped out.
Soldiers stationed in the area
were assigned to rescue work.
All communicatiions with the
provincial center of Van and its
outlying areas were cut.
''We are afraid the death toll is
high in Muradiye and surround-
ing villages," said Burhan Yavuz
Yilmaz. deputy governor of Van
Province.
The Kandilli Observatory said
Muradiye was at the epicenter.
The Province of Van lies on the
quake-prone Anatolia fault,
which reaches from .Turkey's
Aegean coast south toward lhe
Mediterranean and north along
the Black Sea coast. Then it turns
south, covering ea stem Turkey.
Orange I
Coast
Weather
Patchy late night and
early morning" dense fog
tbroueb Thursday. Tem-
peratures to remain about
the same. highs 70, lows about SO.
INSIDE TOD1' Y
Second ba1eman Jot:
Morvan of the Cinc:iuoo« Redl v the Naikmal ~ague'• moat
valuable plat1n .. again. Story.
~.
l•dex
..
.,
A"'ll •• ..
A4 Al aM ... ,
.... J At A~lt
M
""
A Z DAIL.,, PILOT L/SC W.on~ay. November 24. 1974
.-,.._PapAJ
UMIT .•.
Ju~n bwiness firms and currcnl
residents," i.he 5.a.ld. .. lo adch·
tioo, cu w~ expect busloas to locate in the city, if crowth ls
strictly controlled "
David Recupero, representmg
Glendale Federal Savings, the
holder of about 30 percent or San
Juan's undeveloped land
criticized the comrruttee report
I on growth management.
. He ~ailed clly arguments ra·
t1onahzattons and said state-
ments in the report are mlalead·
I
in&, g e nera lizations or un·
s ubstantiated . The economic
report is extremely s hallow he
said, and economic projections
very weak.
Recupero concluded by saying ·
~hat Glendale Federal is cxplor·
1ng legal aspects or inverse con·
de~naUon, which might be filed
against the city if the growth
management ordinance is adopted.
Eleven people at the public
hearing urged commissions to
recommend denial or the or··
dinance.
One or the l>iX residents to SUP·
port the comm1s:.ion's recom·
m~ndation Cor adoption was
Michael Berns, who said a ma·
jority or those opposing the or·
dinance were either from outside
the city or were real estate peo·
pie.
A SO· year resident of San Juan,
Larry Buchheim. said he is not
sure he can continue to live in the
city. He said he must pay taxes
based on the highest and best use
of his land, despite the fact that
his land is bringing in no income.
.. My lifeblood is lying out there
jn my fields," he said. "I wonder
what the hcll 's going to happen
three or rour years down the
road."
Santa Clmu
Lumbering In
On Elephant
Santa Claus will .arrive at
Laguna Hills Ma ll Friday morn·
Lng riding a creature that is pro·
bably bigger and weighs more
than all or St Nick's eight tiny re·
indeer put together
The unusual e ntrance, s lated
for 9 :30 a.m . in the s hopping
center parking lot between Searl.
and Harris and Frank, will in·
volve an elephant named Kay
which will be dressed as Mrs'.
Claus
After Santa arrives, Kay will
be ava1lablt> for free rides
between 10 :30 am. and 2:30 p.m
on Friday only. a Mall official
said
Along with Santa, the Centrv
Family Singer:. will perform and
the entire eve nt will be emceed
by KEZY radio personality J ohn
Peters.
As in past years. the man pla}.
mg Santa at rhe Mall will be 68·
ve a r -old Ma rtin Farese of
Laguna Beach. who is eminently
quahfled fur dl·alin~ v.1th eager
children
He h as 1 2 c tuldr e n. 49
j!randchildre n and a great·
grandchild
F a r ese, who firs t s tarted
portraying the Jolly Old Elf
while living 1n . appropnatclv,
Anchorage, Alas ka. 1s a native.of
~ew J ersev and spent 26 years as
a Rround!>keeper for thl' Doo;tnn
Red Sox proft>ss1onal ba:.eball
team
Ht>'ll be acting his annual role
• it lht? :.hopping center Monday
through Frida~ from 11 a m to
8 30 fl m . Saturday!> from 10
• 1 m tn I( 30 p m and Sundays
from 11 ,, m to 5 p m
Ohio to Rt'count
COLL Mill'S. Ohio IAPI A
recount of l'n";tdl'nt ele<'t J1mm \
Carter's 9.333-vote victory nv1•r
President Ford in Ohio will lleg1n
Monday. S<'crrt:iry <'f Stat<' Trd
W Brown said Tuc.!>d<•Y It 1s c~
peeled to take about a week to
complete. Carter won Lhc cle<'tlon
nationwide with 297 lo 2111 eke
toral votes. so a turnaround or
Ohio's 25 electoral votes still
would leave him with two to
spare
ORANGE COAST I r
DAILY PILOT
1'Mt l')rM'O" (.,.,, C'l!li••w ., . ..,, ""'t"' .,...,.,~ h,, ~
b1!Vtt'f'W>,_.,....,, p,.," 1\Ch1"'4''"'""'""tMn..~n.,... C"'4 l P.1nl · "'•"'l f'oft"O•""' t..ltrMt .,,. . ~ 1, ...._ , ••
0•1hl1 flil.-tj Vi Jlllj •Y '"'"°""" ;., ·11,, ,,., .... I
NI# 1 Jrrrf#i""M"'f """•th Hv!\.t·"'f'~ 1.,-,.. " • °""' I\" JI 1•"# h'll ..,,. \40CflPf\M"~ V°' hf I~
t .. .-,U"'•fi'•IWP'I ~\ltl"l(~,..,t A ''""'•'"'~•l •1 t '" ,,..,,~nit• I '•1•1•'1 ,.,, ,.,.1 '-"•'·'•' t~ Pf'"'" Do"' OU&*1•P11nq 01.-nt \ .. , J'\l v.,.. ti Hty
Sttkt (9'\t• ,.-,,.,,.. C•l•t,,,.,. ••'6>t.
1'•bifr1 H WHllf
""'' ra..-n1 ·~ Pwr _,..,
J•'' • CwtH \#•<• i:lT•\•f°>t"I "M {,.t,..,,. Milf'llllQIPf
Ttir.~UtlHWll
('111111•
~ ........... .._
M <lf\AQ•l'IQ f '11«
(:1',.af.f!\ M l.ff\ "•<'Mnl r-Man
•\\i\litf'H ~"•fl·~ f. 1'o1nr\
Leaun• 8e•ch Offlc:e n~ Git,,,.,..,,,. \1,....t
Mtlhl'M;I Addrf'\,l P 0 8o• ... •1•\1
Offices °"''• ,_.,..,. UOW••t 8.tv \lrf'f!f HUll'lt•l'\QtOI\ Dt1tf'I U8r) 8'-ACtli &ou1~V4'td ~ltbM.~ V•ll•v )001 & • ,..,., R,,,., •• S...n 0••4" ,,,. •• .,,
Telephone (714)642--4321
Cl•ullled Advertising 642·5'78
L1gune Beech All Oe9•rtmen11.
Telephone 4M-M66
,f'ftm ~An (l.,,.l'\ff>
415-ot30
Goo'f"•ll"'~ "" Ot•f'W'lft CoA" l'\1N1 Pil•f'WJ Cl'I""
_...,, ko "'*""'" ""'''"' •llu·h•t"""' r n11,,,. 4t """'H•t or •d•trti\tm•1111· n•·~•" ""''" Of'
f'll't f'ft(twr•rt ••l"•Vt '\U4"t•"I O•f'"11\\!t'11\ 1H ,..,,,Ql\t OWft"''
·~oM '''" lt''UUO• ••In "' (.~1· ..... , .. (.t11t9rtua \ubH r1•''"" bv ,.,, •• , ,, \ft
""9fttftllf """ '"•" " \0 ~'"'' ,..,,, •• ,. .... ~"°""'\.) )IP'f\4H\thty
Laguaa Pr.ejeet
Seniors' Home
Plan Delayed
The future of a controversial
senior cititens housing proJect in
the hills above Lagurfa Beach
won't be decided for another two
wee ks , Ora n ae County
supervisors said today.
At the request o! newly elected
Supervisor Phil Anthony, the
board agreed to wait until Dec. 8
to vote on a land use designation
needed to get the senior housing
project oft the ground.
Anthony told f el l ow
supervi$ors he needed more time
to study the Laguna Greenbelt
housing proposal, along with 13
other land use amendments pre·
Hinshaw Fate
Turned Over
To 12 Jurors
By TOM BARLEY
Of Ill• D•llr Piiot St.off
The jury began deliberations
today in the second Orange Coun·
I y Superior Court trial or
Congressman Andrew Hinshaw.
. Judge Frank Domenichiru sent
his panel of seven men and five
"'.omen to the jury room after ad·
ding lwo more brief instructions
to the directives they received
~Core final arguments were de·
livered Tuesday.
Both Deputy District Attorney
William Evans and defense at·
torney John McNicholas ap·
peared lo give special attention
to prosecution witness George
Upton. during their final appeals
to the Jury.
~cNicholas asked the jury to
re1ect that testimony because
Upton, a former key aide in the
office whei:i Hinshaw was county
assessor in 1972, acted from
motives or personal ambition
when he recruited office staff for
Hinshaw's congressional cam·
pa.ign.
Hinshaw's alleged role in the
diversion of county manpower
and materials to his election ef·
fort led to his being charged with
conspiracy. grand theft, em·
bezzlement and misuse of public
funds.
McNicholas asked the jury to
remember th at Hinshaw's
signature is not to be found on
any one of the pile or vacation
slips and overtime checks sub·
mitt.ed by assessor employes that
worked on the campaign.
And he reminded Jurors of Up-
ton's own admission frolt\ the
s tand that Hinshaw told him
after the Ne wport Be ach
Hepuhhcan took out tus filing
pa pers that a n y ass essor's
t•mployes who wanted to work for
him would ha ve Lo do so on their
o·wn time
McN1cholas claimed that Up·
ton, who has been fined and who
St?rved a jail term for his role in
the conspiracy, acted from
motives of personal gain when he
drafted assessor's employes to
work for Hinshaw.
·'He had the seventh spot on the
assessor's ladder and he wanted
the third spot.'· Mc Nicholas said.
"And he got it."
Upto.n .. compelle~ to resign
from his Job arte r being indicted
by the grand jury. is now work·
1ng as a used car s alesman
sented to the board today.
And the only persdn to speak al
a public hearing on the land use
cban&es was Si Slavin, president
of the Laguna Beach Council on
Apng.
Slavin, who said he would be
un.able to return to testify Dec. 8,
swd the council opposes t.be bous.
ingplan.
. Slavin contended thooe back-
rng the proposed 1,285-wlit de-
velopment have misrepresented
monthly homeowners associa-
tion fees.
And, he said , the area is too Car
away from shopping for a senior
citizens complex.
Slavin said he favors low·cost
housing for the elderly but not at
the risk that the senior citizen
could lose money on a home in·
vestment late in his life. .c ~ u n t y p 1 a n n in g com •
missioners two weeks ago re-
co~ men~ed against changing
des1gnat1on on the 472·acre
parcel from agricultural to re·
s1dential.
The project had been heavily
bncked by some senior citizens
groups and the Orange County
Senior Citizens Council .
Dul it was opposed by Laguna
Beach city officials, the Laguna
Beach Greenbelt and the Orange
County Housing Coalition.
Santa Ana developer Howard·
MilJer contended the modular un-
its to be built on hillside pilings
would sell for $22,000 to $26,000.
But a recent consultant's study
said the price would range from
$32,000 to $38,000.
Woman Jailed
In Shoplift
Orange County sheriff's of·
ficers cited a Laguna Niguel
woman on shoplifting charges
after s he allegedly took goods
from two Laguna Hills Mall
stores without paying for them.
Deputies said Virginia
Barbara Goshia of 24812 Calle
Viej.o is accused of taking cos-
metics and bikini panties valued
at $2.99 from the Sears depart-
ment store.
They said Mrs. Go.shia, 56, is
further accused or taking two
paperback books valued at $3.70
from Waldron's Book Store. In
both instances, they said, the
goods wer e concealed in her
purse.
Woman Hurt
In Accident
A young Dana Point woman
suffered a broken right leg and a
nine-inch gash on the same leg
Tue~day w~en her motorcycle
collided with a small pickup
truck backing out of a San
Clemente driveway, police said.
Jackie Conner, 19, of 34132 La
Serena, was in satisfactory con·
dition today at San Clemente
General Hospital.
The driver of the pickup, Keith
Jason Elliot. 23, of 1414 Buena
Vista, was not hurt, police said.
The accident w as in front of 1412
Avenida de la Estrella.
I'.-... Page Al
FAIRVIEW CASELOAD. • •
:ivailable Lo care for 20 clients. as
thev are called, rather than pa·
t1ents.
Th e age r a nge of th cs<'
physic ally and mentally han
'd1capped ranges from a ft>w days
into the seventies or eighties.
Standards applied in staffing
and accrediting California state
hospitals were attacked at
Tuesday's press conference both
by Dr. Levine and Stale Senator·
elect Paul Carpenter.
The Santa Ana Democrat, cur·
rently a state assemblyman, al·
tacked both priorities set. fund·
ing methods and a recent
approval of Fairview by the Joint
Commission on Hospital Ac·
creditation.
Representatives of J C HA
earlier t his year r ated the.
hospital as one of lhe highest in
the nation in its treatment and
therapy programs in addition tQ
hundreds of graded support
services.
"We a re outraged at the stan·
dards of care in the California
State Hospital system1" As·
semblyman. Carpenter said.
He charged the private agency
which operates on a nationwide
basis waived particuJar licensing
standards to allow hospitals to
continue receiving Cederal aid
funds .
1( JCHA standards are not met,
these funds are cut off.
"The State of California has a
conflict of interest in setting stan·
dards and examining Its own
hospitals," Car penter asserted.
Not long ago, Dr. Levine set up
an ad hoc committee to review
procedures at Fairview, which In
recent years has worked with a
.system of 10 special programs,
l'ach devoted lo a specific han·
dica ppcd group by age and
ability.
The University of lllinois
graduate had already introduced
a pl an lo reduce use of tranquiliz·
Ing drugs on patients, bucking
the system before Dr. Toto was
deposed.
He charged in a recent in.
tervicw state hospitals have ac.
tually been used as dumping
grounds for unwanted han·.
di capped chi ldr e n too
troublesome for parents to han·
d.Je.
.. We had at least two babies ad·
milled last year who are not
mentally r etarded . They had
neuroloaical handicaos." be ex·· plained. "One is no longer here
but there is Nancy. we're trying
to ~et her out now."
"The <'ffect on institutionalized
babies 1s devastating. They,
quickly 'learn how' to become re·
larded," Dr. Levine addec:\.
"One recently that particular·
ly made me a ngry involved a kid
they tried to aet in for a
behavioral disorder ... he only
has a hearing disability."
Despite skepticism by parental
groups 1 and the hospital's five·
m an Advisory Be>ard, Dr. Levine
Is proceeding with his met.hods or
Improving treatment and care
programs at the Costa Mesa
hospital. •
He says many more who Uve
there could be handled through
regional centers. which general·
Jy operate on a county·level basis
or over sever al counties in lhe
case of smaller, rural counties.
,
'
The Devil You Sag
Laguna Beach lfigh School drama stu.
dents rehearse Arthur Miller's ·''.The
Crucible," a tale of old Salem that opens
for .a t hree·nighl run Dec. 1. Players are
Chris Barnett (standing, at left) and Evan
Carlson, and the women of Salem (from
D•lty Pilot St~fl Photo
left). Maria Pignotti. Ann Dorris, Lelia Cole~an (front), Gretchen Almond and
Moruca Stodder. Tickets for the 8 p.m.
perf ormancc arc $2 for adults, $1 for stu· dents.
Soviet Policy
Expert Dies
Of Cancer
COAST AL PANEL. • •
Dr. Theodore H. Erb, of South
Laguna, a specialist in Sovtel
foreign policy and a retired Ai r
Force Colonel, has died of
cancer. Dr. Erb was 57 when he
died Sunday at Balboa Naval
Hos pital in San Diego.
Dr. Erb, a resident of Blue
Lagoon, was a poUlical science
professor at Cal State Long
Beach. Previously he had taught
at the Industrial College of the
Armed Forces in Washington,
D.C.; on the Chapman World Campus Afloat and at a USC ex·
tension at March Air Force Base .
Dr. Erb was the author of "Na·
tional Security in the Atomic
Age" and an original member or
the Los Angeles County Energy
Commission.
A 24 -year veteran of the Air
Force. Dr. Erb retired in 1964. He
had taught at Cal State Long
Beach for 10 years. He resided in
South Laguna for six years.
The deceased is :o;urvived by
his wife. Alma of South Laguna;
son. Theodore Salem Erb of
K ent, Washington ; and
daughter, Deborah Wallich of
Tustin.
Memorial service is pcndjng.
Burial is al sea.
Pi wt Off ice
Takes Holiday
The Laguna/South Coast ofrice
of the Daily Pilot. l 1R6 Glenncyre
St., Laguna Beach, will be closed
Thursday and Friday
News, classified advertising
and circulation calls may be
made toll-free to 642·4321 by
caJlers in the 494 telephone ex·
change and t o 495·0630 by
callers In all other south county
exchanges.
The n ewspaper will be
published both days.
Simon Visits Nixon
U.~. Tr~asury Secretary
Wilham Simon visited with
fo_rmer president Richard M .
Nu:on at his San Clemente
est~te, Tuesday. The topic of
thel.l' 7S·minute talk was not dis· closed.
'
and gift shop -as a case in point.
Mrs. Sweeney said she was
puu.led by the attitude or the
commission staff because she
said individual commissioners
have come to her and praised
Laguna's handling of develop.
ment.
Where does the ''hostility"
come from if it does exist?
Ironically, much of it stems
f~om a pilot project in which the
. city and the coastal staff were to
cooperate in aligning the city's
plans ::vid ordinances with the
proposed coastal plan .
At the city, a citizen's task
force. was formed and Douglas
~hm1tz, now the city's planning
~ector, was appointed to head
ll.
Disagreements between
Lagunans and coastal staff mem·
bers assigned to the project
became pitched, so much so, the
body abandoned the effort before
it was finished. The task force is
technically on vacation, bu0t
there arc no plans for it to return
to work.
The task force involved Mrs.
Johnston and David Smith act
ing executive director. '
Additionally. there's the m at·
ter of Bob Joseph.
Joseph had been the com·
mission 's chief Orange County
area planner. He was hired last
year as the city's planning direc-
tor. Ten months later , J oseph
was. fired. He was rehired by the
regional coastal commission
staff.
Me l Carpenter. executive
director of the South Coas t
Regional Commission staff de·
nies allegations or starr bias and
ill-will.
.. You're talking through your
hat. As far as I'm concerned
there are excellent relationship~
between all of my staff and all of
the members of the task force
and lhe city of Laguna Beach ..
•Carpenter said. •
Asked if he were concerned
that "negative experiences" on
the part or staCf members with
the ci.,y co~ld .!e~d to bias,
Carpenter said: It s not a con.
cern to me because I know
nothing about it."
Asked if he were concerned
because officials o( the city felt
the staH members could be
biased. Carpenter said :
"Nope, because the city now
has to conform to the Coastal act
of 1976."
That act require11 coastal com
munlties to comply wtth the ob-
jectives of the coostl\I plan.
Even wtlhout t he infiuence of
personalities, agreement on a
•
parking management plan for
Laguna Beach would be dilficult.
It would be difficult first.
because the city with its diversE;
eleme nts has been unable to
agree on an overall parking
scheme itself.
Mayor Sween ey double•
another study would help much.
"Wilbur Smith Ca parking con-
sulting firm hired by the city•
indicated a p arking lack durini
the summer . They addressed the
problem as one or hopelessness
which we all agree with. . '
"What was it, 600 s pace§'
short? ·
''Ok, suppose we had built th~
structure. That would b av£
added only 100 spaces so what
are we talking about, six parkin"
structures in the central basin? ·
"That's the question. I would
think that it would be in conflict
with the coastal plan and 1l cer·
tainJy would be in conflict witb
our p lan," Mayor Sweene),
noted.
She was critical of the com·
mission's denial of projcctt
which would have paid into their
lieu fund.
. "It's a matter of which com~
f1rs~-t.he chicken or the egg. YofJ
can t build the parking if yotl
haven't got the money and ac· c~rd.ing to the coastal com·:
m1ss1on we can't get the in·lieu·
money," she said. ·.:
The mayor took offense at.~
secUon of Mrs. Johnston's report
which said the "city is not com·
rnmcd to implementation or i~~ ..
own transportation element of
the general plan.
"Of course we're committed '' she said. '
. Mrs. Sweeney said a parking
1mplementatton plan is currenlly
before the city planning com·
rrussion, but she s aid s he worried
about a.ny such plan's accep·
lance, given the personalities in-
volved.
The mayor scoffed at a stat~
m~nt In the J ohnston report that
said the commission "has of· fer~ limited commission staff
assistance to Laguna in develop.
lng a parking management pro. gram." ,,
··1. really like that. That's i~ •.
credible. They're going to come.
down and show us what to do Bo
they really think we're jus.1
short of sta{( and that's why W<!!'
haven't come up with this pro-
gram yet.
"That's so naive," lbe mayor said.
7
'
Orange Coast
-EOlTJON
.VOL. 69, NO. 329, 3 SECTION$, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR NIA
T o day's Closing
.Y. Stoeks
WEDNESOA't, NOVEMBER 24, 1976 C
Minister. Turns In Star1'ing Migrant
DUNDEE. Fla. CAP)-A man
caught m aki ng a bologna
sandwich ln a church was sent to
jail because the minister fell it
was his Christian doty "to ap-
preben d those involved in
criminal acts."
VirgU Hughes, 52, a migrant
farmworker employed on a local
farm, said he was outside the
Dundee Baptist Church on Sun-
day, penniless and unable to re·
member the last time be had
eaten. A passerby suggested he
try the church kit<;hen. he told
police.
Hughes said be walked through
an open door and was fixing a
sandwich when the minister, the
Rev. James Lockwood, found
him and called police.
Officer Ron Sel.lgen said he
found no evidence of forced entry
and no'burglary tools.
"He bad nothing on him but a
can ot pipe tobacco," Sellgren
said.
But Mr. Lockwood said he
caught Hughes filling a bag with
groceries.
"And of course 1 don't know
what else he was going lo ta.Ice,"
he said.
Hughes was taken to police
headquarters, where t.e told
authorities his story. Asst. Polle
County State Attorney Al Smith
then decided that he could be
charged only with trespassing, a
misdemeanor . Hughes was set
free.
But Smith said Mr. Lockwood
called him later to complain
about the release. The minister
claimed that the chur ch was
locked and Hughes broke in.
''It's pretty hard to convince
me or anyone else that a church
shouldn't be open on Sunday
morninft,'' Smith said.
Nonetheless, the minister filed a complaint, and Hughes was ar-
rested on burglary charges.
"I told the man I would stand
up with him in court.'' Mr.
Lockwood said. "I told the fellow
that 1 was more concerned that
he find God's plan for life.
·'I've given my life to helping
others," the minister said. ··1
don't want him harmed, but I fe.1
as a Christian that I have a dut.Y
to society to apprehend those in·
volved In criminal acts."
Mr. Lockwood said he would
ask the state attorney if Hughes
could be released on his own r e·
cognizan ce. He also said he's in·
vited Hughes to join him fos-
Thanksgiving dinner.
Said Hughes: "I will never go
into another church."
Toll Kills 574 • ID Tt1rkey uake
Second Trial
Hinshaw Case
Goes to J11ry
By TOM BARLEY
Of Ille O•llY "I« Si.H The jury began deliberations
today in the second Orange Coun-
ty Superior Court trial of
Congressman Andrew Hinshaw.
Judge Frank Domenichiru sent
his panel of seven men and five
Fund Vse
Aimed at
Rent Cuts
By HILARY KAYE
OI Ille O•llY l"llol S-
The Irvine City Council said
Tuesday It will use federal hous-
ing money to pay for roads,
storm drains and other improve-
ments as a means of lowering
construction costs and, thus.
rents for future apartment
dwellers in Irvine.
women lo the jury room after ad-
ding two more brief instructions
to the directives they received
before final ar guments were de-
livered Tuesday.
Both Deputy District Attorney
William Evans and defense at-
torney John McNicholas ap-
peared to give special attention
to prosecution witness George
Upton during their final appeals
to the jury.
McNicholas asked the jury to
reject that testimony because
Upton, a former key aide in the
office when Hinshaw was county
assessor in 1972, acted from
motives of personal ambition
when he recruited o{fice staff for .
Hinshaw's congressional cam-paign.
Hlnshaw's alleged role in the
diversion of county manpower
and materials to his election er.
fort led to his being charged with
conspiracy. grand theft, em-
beu.lement and misuse of public
funds. .
McNicbolas asked the jury to
remember that Hins baw's
signature is not to be found on
<Stt HINSHAW, Page AZ)
It'• Ca t t!l .. 1tf1
Al"WI ........
Billy Carter, brother of the
president-elect, has caught
the poJitical fever. He's run-
ning for mayor of Plains,
Ga.
Epicenter
Destroyed
By Jolts
ISTANBUL. Turkey <AP) -A
major earthquake struck a
mountainous area of
northeastern Turkey near the
sOviet border today. killing at
least 574 persons and flattening
mud hut homes in numerous
villages. authorities reported.
Burhan Yavuz Yilmaz, deputy
governo r of hard-hit Van
Province, said first reports listed
500 d ead in M urad1ye, the
epicenter of the quake, 64 tn the
nearby town of Ercis and 10 in
Diyadin.
He said 95 percent of the houses
in those areas were destroyed.
Faruk Kaygisiz, director of
disaster relief in Ankara, said he
feared a high death toll because
the jolts were very strong.
The post office of Muradiye, a
township with 51,000 persons,
was destroyed and telepbone
communications with the area
were broken.
Soldiers were rushed into duty
as rescue workers, but Yllmaz
said they here hampered by a
gasoline shortage. The Red Cres-
cent, the Turkish equivalent of
the Red Cross, began sending
tents and blankets to the stricken
region.
""'~ FAfRVIEW HOSPITAL NOW 0..0SED TO NEW PATIENTS
AsHmbtyman Carpenter, Fairview'• Levin• Meet PreH
The council also said it would
spend additional federal money
to buy park land. also Wllh the
aim of lowering apartment rents
indirectly.
And, if any extra money comes
in to the city. it would be spent to
buy· land for either a student
housing cooperative or an apart-
ment project for elderly res•·
dents, the council said.
Sites have not yet been picked
out for the~e projecL-;, but de-
cisions are due by July t or next year. /
Carpenter Readies
Bill Against Smear
The tremors were also felt tn
the Caucasus Mountains of the
Soviet Union, but no casualties or
serious des truction was im-
mediately reported on Soviet ter-
ritory.
A s pokeswoman for the
seismological center in the the
Soviet Georgian capital of Tbilisi
said the ground shook in the
Armanian town of Leninakan,
which is just over the border
from Turkey.
Patient Overload
Ended at Fairview
By ARTHUR Jl. VINSEL
Of 111• O•llY Pllol S\.lff No new patients except for a
hand-picked few are being ad-
mitted to Cosi.a Mesa's Fairview
State Hospital because they can-
aot gel a>roper i.reatment, aci.Jng
medical director Dr. Michael
Levine declared Tuesday.
"But we are restricting ad-
mission to those we can provide
good programs for," he em-
.,hasized.
Siqce his accession to the ,
directorship after gaining the ear I
of Don Z. Miller, California's de-:
puty a1re~·tor of health, Dr.
The city plans to advertise for
bu.ilders and then pick wtuch pro-
jects and sites appear to be best
for the housing assistance pro·
gram.
The city already has in hana
S187,965. which tt will spend on of·
f -site improvements, such as
roadways, storm drams. sewer
and water lines
The city is also anticipating an
additional $60,000, wtuch would
be spent on park site acquisillon
at a difrerent location
No other money 1s authorized
yet, but city aides said today they
expeclthcre will be more money.
which could be spent to assist stu-
dents or seniors.
Students from the Student
Housing Cooperative Inc. spoke
at Tuesday's council meeting
again, asking that the money be
spent to buy land for the co-op
project.
Or:~~Q~:•st
Weathe r
Patchy late night and
early morning dense fog
through Thursday. Tem-
peratun!s to remain about
the same, highs 70, lows
about SO.
I NSIDE T ODA l'
Second ba1eman Joe
Morgon of the Cindnl)(ltl Reda
ti the Not0nal LtaUue'! man
valuable playn again. Stot]I(
8'. .
Index . , ""11 At •• A4 •• eM ... , .... ...
At-U ... A4
La~ling misleading campaign
materials .. a crime" State Sen.
Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport
Beach) said today be would in-
troduce legislation aimed at
curbing the use of "last-minute
smears t hrough deceitful
methods.''
Carpenter. in a release issued
through bis Irvine office, said he
plans to draft his bill with the aid
of the state Fair Campaign Prac-
tices Commission and introduce
1t during the 1977-78 legislative
session-.
The senator was highly critical
of the "unethical" campaign
practices used In recent cam-
paigns without specifying any
particular candidate or cam·
paign.
·'The voters or Orange County
Screams Rout
Robber in
Mesa Plaza
A young, would-be.robber w as
foiled by his victim's screams for
help in a South Coast Plaza park-
ing lot at noon Tuesday.
A second robbery attempt six
hours later at a Costa Mesa con-
venience market was more suc-
cessful . The bandit madeortwith
$49 from the till.
In the noon attempt Tuesday,
an Irvine school teacher was re-
turning to her car near the Sears
garden shop when a young man
she described as being between
lS and 17 ye~ old, approached
her car, displayed a knife and
Cold her t.o·•·a~oot over."
Her screams frightened" the
yooth, who ran off across the
parking lot .
Six hours later , a man armed
with a small caHber automatic
pistol, held up the U Tote M
market at 517 W. Wilson St.
A clerk described the bandit u
about six feet tall, wdahlng 165
pounds and between 2S and 30
yeanold.
deserve a higher level of cam-
paigning than they have ooen ex-
periencing in recent years," he
declared.
He was par liculariy criticaJ of
campai~ns that featured the "~!\·
appropriate use of names or m-
d i vidu al s. organizahons an<i
groups put together at the iast
minute by ,two or thr ee in-
dividuals saying they had en-
dorsed a specific candiciate."
Carpenter was the vicum of
mch ploys in the recent primary
and general election campaigns.
One candidate. Jim Slemons,
used material tha;. implied
Carpenter's endorsement in the
primary and a letter thai. again
listed the state senator 's endorse-
ment in the general election when
no such endorsement had been
given.
He noted that state and federal
laws require canidates to reveal
the-aources of contnbutions. but
there are no laws which regulate
the truth or campaign materials.
"Candidates have lacked self.
restraint and I believe the public
deserves a more common decen-
<See SMEAR, PageA2)
The Kandilli Observatory rn
Istanbul said the quake hit at2:25
p.m. (4:25 a .m. PST) with a
magnitude of 7.9 on the Richter
scale. Tremors came at hal!-
ilour Intervals for i.wo ilo\irS. the
<See QUAKE. Page A2j
1WO CARS SOW
ON FIRSI' CAIL
" ··111e first call did the job. Last
year I advertised in the Daily
Pilot, and sold a Pinto -also on
the first call."
That's the advertising success
story told by a Costa Mesa man
who placed this classified ad:
'75 Duster, hdly equip.
Low ml. xlnt cond. $2850
Call anyUme XXX·XXXX
Ir you'd like to con vert a car,
or anything else, lo cash -call
642-5678. It pays to put the Daily
Pilot to work for you.
And, he angrily noted in an in-
terview, the hospital is still try-
ing to find an outside home for
one of two babies placed in the
1,700-plus-population who isn't
.-etarded at all.
"We had at least two babies ad-
mitted in the past year who are
not retarded at all. They had
neurological problems." the out-
spoken child psychiatrist says.
'NEGLIGENCE' CAUSE
OF MENTAL DEATHS, AS
Appointed upon fo rmer
medical direct.or Or. Anthony N.
Tot.o's abrupt forced resignation
in July, Dr. Levine. 35, appeared
at a Los Angeles news conference
Tuesday with his announcement.
"At the current time, we can
provide good custodial care,
food, clothing and she.lter and
there are some islands of ex-
cellent treatment," he said,
speaking or cert.ain programs for
the retarded and physically ban·
dicapped.
'Goose' to Fly Again?
Navy Eyes Old Hughes Plane for Experimenl.8
LONG BEACH (AP) -Hidden Hughes at the controls.
29 years in a cavemou!I hangar, Since then, il bas been locked
Howard Hughes' giant wooden in its hangar at the harbor here
flying boat, the Spruce Goose, is under 24-hour guard.
back in the public eye -and gov-The only outsider known to
emment ofttciala say they may have se~ it re1ularly ls a fire In·
even try to take it aloft. spector eo monthly rounds.
The late billionaire's Summa One officlal sald despite the
Corp .• j the con.alomerate that , Jong sleep, the plane -actually nms H thes' empire, released a "'called the Hercules Flylnl 8oat series ot pbotocr aphs of the plane -"la in mint condtUon."
TueldaJ, including one taken in The Nallonal AeronauUcs and
19'7 showing Hughes talking to Space Adminl1traUon and the
technicians lnslde the big Navy HY they are interested in
mM:hl.M. the Goose a1part0( a veb.lcle re-
ll was the firat public glance at search project.
"the plane 1lnce it made its looe Adm. Carl Seiberlich Hid,
01pt, 1Jdmmln1 aJoni io feet "We are t.ry!a1 to dedde U a-·
above the water fOf Jess \ban a tarae seaplane t. viable as a
mile, on Nov. 2. 1947, wltb tuture navalvehicle." --·
Other possible uses reportedly
Include a mobile launch bed for
interconUnental ballistic mis·
siles or as a test site over water
for experimental nuclear· pro-
pul1ion.
The craft -which is not really
made of much spruce, it's large-
ly plywood and birch-became a
point of honor with llughet, who
wu crlt1cbe4 for its muJU.
milllon dollar cost.
The 200-ton fl)'ing boat cost the
1ovtrnmeot S18 mlltlon and Hu1bea~ who designed it
persooally, m•ny Umes tbat amount.
"I have put the sweat 0( my Ute
into this th1n1," Huabes told a
t8ee RUG BES, Pa1e AZ)
<See F AlR VIEW, Page AZ)
Bligh Diary
Snapped Up
For$90,730
LONDON (AP) -A small,
water·stained notebook used by
Capt. William Bligh as a log after
his mutinying crew or HMS
Bounty had cast him adrift In l\
rowboat, was sold in just ss.
seeonds for $90, 730 at a ChMstie's
auction today.
The leather-bound book, in
which Bligh noted every incident
\n his six-week, 3,~00-mile
voyage in the Bounty's launch
with a h«Jndful or companions,
was bought by Maggs, the Loo·
don firm of booksellers which re--
fused to say for whom it was act.
ing.
No Trash
On Holiday
Bec a u se o f th e
Thanlueiving holiday
Coata Meaans whose trash
normally would be collect-
ed Thursday should put out
their trash Friday in-
stead.
. And those with Friday
trash pickup schedules
should put out their trash
Saturday. City officials
sald it wlll be picked up
along with the trash lrom
pa.rt.a of the city that are on
t he resula r S aturday
schedule.
Altbou1b trash collec-
tors and mall m en will be worklnt Friday, fol.ks atcl-
ty hall will have tbe day
otf, ,Svlng them a (ou.r-d•Y
'lbanbflving holiday.
~ 2 DAILY PtLOT c WednHday, Novembef-24, 1078
Youth, 11, Can Be Named
WASHINGTON CAP) -Th4=.,U.S. Supreme Court.
today struck down, at Jeast temporarily, an.
Oklahoma judge's order limiting news media reJ)Ort· ·
ing of a case involvmg an 11-year-old boy round delin.'
quent by reason of second-degree manslaughter.
The court set aside a "gag order" imposed by
Oklahoma County District Judge Charles E. Halley,
which prohibited news reporters from publishing or
broadcasting the boy's name or photo2raph -even.
though both had been widely displayed before -until
hewasl8.
The court's refusal to go along with the Okla·
homa judge w as in keeping with its ruling last sum.
mer in a much-publicized Nebraska murder case. In
that case, the Supreme Court came close to outlawing
such reporting restrictions.
' The boy was arrested last July and.later found ·de·
linquent by reason of second-degree manslaughter in ! the shooting death of an Oklahoma City railroad
1 switchman.
Alter 101t1al reporting about the case mentioned
the boy's name and displayed his pictu_re, Halley is-
sued a pretrial order banning such m ention.
Forklift Careens
Down Hill; I Hurt
A cons truction forklift
careened wildly down a steep
Laguna Beach residential street
'l'uesday after its brakes failed
and its driver jumpedforhls life.
Driver Kenneth D. Merriott,
25, of 6242 Warner St., Laguna
Beach sustained minor injuries
in the mishap. lie was not
hosp italized.
The forklift came lo rest
against the home of Wallace
Stark, 370 Nyes Place.
It had rumbled driverless 310
feet along ~yes Place, careened
up an emba nkment traveling
another 110 feet before running
back on the road, crossing it, run·
ning up a newly planted hillside,
smashing some lattice next to
Stark's garage and damaging
concrete steps.
The equipment slopped with
the forks just touching the roof
rain gutter of Stark's house.
The driver told Laguna Beach
police he had attempted to
cramp lhe wheels of the forklift
tc run it against the hillside and.
stop it before be bailed out.
Fr ... PageAJ
FAIRVIEW CASELOAD. • •
Levine has 1.mdertaken a major
housecleaning job at the hospital.
He has pointed out tbe hospital
is understaffed to 1uch a severe
degree that often only fin e
J>Sychiatric technician (PT) is
available to car e for 20 clients, as
they are called, rather than pa·
tients.
Th e age range of these
physically and mentally han·
dicapped ranges from a few days
into the seventies or eighties.
Standards applied in starring
and accrediting California state
hospitals w er e attacked at
Tuesday's press conference both
by Dr. Levine and State Senator
elect PauJ Carpenter.
The Santa Ana Democrat, cur-
rentlv a state assemblyman, at·
tacked both priorities set, fund
rng methods and a rece nt
approval of Fairview by the Joint
\om m1ss1on on Hospital Ac·
cred1tallon Represen tat1 V<'S of JCllA
earlier this year rated the
hospital as one of the highest 1n
the natrnn tn lls trNJtment and
therapy progra r;~ In addition to
hundredi. or graded s upport
services
"We ar<' outraged at lhe slan
dards or care tn the California
State Hosp it al system," As-
semblyman. Carpelltersa1d.
He charged the pnvate agency
wtuch o~ralei. on a nationw1de
basts waived particular licensing
standard~ to allow hospitals t11
ront1nut.> r<'ce1v mg federal a1d rundi.
Ir JCHA ~tandards ,ire-not met.
thC<;(' funds .ire CUl Off
"The State or California has a
confli ct or intrrMt 1n setting st an·
dards and cxam1rung its own
hospitals." Carpenter asserted
'\ot long ago, Dr Levine sel up
an ad hoc comm1ttt>e to review
procedures at Fairview, which in
recent years ha<; worked with a
system of 10 special prol(J'ams,
each devoted to a specific han
dirapped group by ag e and
ability.
The University of rlhnoi!i
graduate had already introduced
a plan to reduce use of tranquiliz·
Ing drugs on patients. bucking
ORANGE <;OAST
DAILY PILOT
t~"'••"<Jlll f,,t '04•l•''•f4f w fft -.~ I\ l'\M
t'otw t tf\# flt"..,, Prt pub! IN t ,,,,. o-.. 0• '"'Y
(N'lot P\,t)t1,fll>•U)l'"ftf't'\04ft't ~.,..,,.~ .. l•v" 1tt11
p.~ .... ~ •• , ¥'11'1,11t' , .. ,. "'"~ ,,, .... lft# ,,
1\4 • ~~-, ... ,,, "" ""' ... ,..,,."'O,l'lln "'" .. ~ '""""' If•"" V•llp'f' It""" \~d'11•b.,..• 'li1t1t•.-A~t
t •'.W"'• fl. A~" ~ ''" co .. ,1 • •nQ' ,~ rww• •11 t '"" '' O•fl'tl•,"i•d \,.tY'ff ht ...,., ~4V' Tl'!.• ~ fW •041 Pvhh l\.ft' "' tt'll H \JO W'r<ll ,,.,.
\h -t (n,ht M • ,.. •f "' t f11\ti\ ..... ,, ....... p,.,,,.."' ""° ""'°'·""'
h(' .. (., .. , "' • ~ ,,.,.., drr""' •""' (,#-¥,,,, .w,....,..,
T"9mu & M-...~ ""•"'•••"41 t,,,,.,,
u .. ,.,., .. lH• It•<"""',. ,.,,,
A\\h1tnt Mi_.ft.qt"O €Ofl0f
Cott• "4H• Offfe• UOWt\t fttt' \t,_.,,
M..1111\tAddrt" ~ 0 "-• tW "1t1t
Omcu uo11n• &-1rr1 ', .. o-.,._,..VT• \tlflifrit +tvM~h-.c"" HtHAtt..-"..,..,'"t'd \.OdltNf' Vall•• HJO\ lA P•l .. 0..0
., \.I~ 01100 "'""""1'
Telephone (7Ul~1
CIHlllled Ad1r1nlelng IG>M7•
!:;'it'; !::!\ n;,:~~ c~~;:t,~~="~~:.
'"1Uer et •c.tVt,tl\fl"\U'''-M'•lft ,,UtY b4'
1tO'Od11c•4 •''"''"' \h(•41 ••'mf\\ltf'\ ••
coeyf1qM °""'''
~coflld <•tot• "''•o• •••d •• Co\ta ..._ .. C•flfOtl'tlt Sw•t<t•lll"" l)f' ,,.,,,., U to '""'"'flit,, •• ,...it '' •• ,....tP\ly mU1tary •l'IMll-~ ll"'°"IAlr
the system before Dr. Toto was
deposed
He charged m a recent in·
terview stale hospitals have ac·
tually been used as dumping
grounds for unwanted han-
dicap ped c hildr en too
troublesome for parents to han·
dle.
"We had at least two babies ad-
mitted last year who are not
mentally retarded. They had
neurolo~ical bandicaDS." h~ ex-plained. "One is no longer here
but there is Nancy, we're trying
to get her out now.''
"The effect on institutionalized
babies is devastatin&. 'l'hey
quickly 'learn how' to become re·
tarded." Dr. Levine added.
"One recently that particular
ly made me angry involved a kid
thev trted to g et in for a behavioral disorder ... he only
has a hearing disability "
Des pite s kepticism by parentaJ
groups a nd the hospital's five·
man Advisory Board, Dr. LevinP
1s proceeding with h.is methods of
impro,·ing treatment and care
programs at the Costa Mesa
hospital.
He says many more who live
there could be handled through
regional centers. which general·
ly operate on a county-level basis
or over several counties in the
case of s maller. rural counties.
His own youngest child ,
Steven. 6, is mentally retarded
and his treatment and educa·
lional therapy programs are
handled by the Orange Count v
Regional Center
,-,....p~AJ
QUAKE ...
observatory said
The Richter scale gauges the
energy released by a quake in
terms of ground motion recorded
on a seismograph. An increase of
one number on the scale, from 6.S
to 7.5 for example, indicates an
increase in intensity of al least 10
limes. Quakes of magnitude 7
can cause widespread, heavy
damage.
The earthquake in Guatemala
that took 23,000 lives Uus year
had readings as high as 7.5.
"It was the worst tremor to hit
Turkey since the one that re·
gistered 7 9 in Erzincan 11nd
killed about 3-0.000 in 1939." th('
observatory sa id or toduy's
tremor.
Turkish radio and television in·
terrupled its regular programing
and played only classical music
in mourning for the victims.
The province of Van lies on the
quake-prone Anatolia fa ult,
which reaches from Turkey's
Aegean coast south toward the
Mediterranean and north alon1
the Black Sea coast. Then it turns
south, covering eastern Turkey
Program Outlined
LONDON <AP> -Queen
Elizabeth II outlined the Labor
government's new legislative
profram in a speech read to
Par iament today. Jt gave priori
ty to a controversial bill setting
up national assemblies (or
Scotland and Wates but skated
over such crucial wues as the
economy.
Home .
Market
Shaky?
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Home
pnces m the metropolitan Los
Angeles area cannot continue to
increase at their present rate. a
leadJng bank economist said to-
day.
Conrad Jamison, vice presi·
dent and urban economist for
Security Peclric Bank here, also
warned thnt people who have
gone heavily into debt in order to
purchase homes could be hurt.
"Many people have bought
homes they cannot afford in the
belief that, it they wait, prices
will continue to soar and their
ability to buy a home will be even
less in the future," Jamison said.
"Also, m any people are buying
in the hope that later increases in
their income will rescue them.
And there is the common reeling
that, if the burden becomes too
great, one can always sell and
take a profit.
"There is an element of un·
reality in the whole picture,"
Jamison told a group or Glendale
realtor s. "and one can only
wonder when, and how, sanity
will return."
Jamison s aid prices for homes
in the Los Angeles area have
been increasing at a rate of about
$1 ,000 a month recently.
He said home prices in Glen·
dale are about 50 percent higher
than they were two years ago and
that the average price or a single-
family hom e in Los Angeles
County has gone up 24 percent in the last year.
"This boiling market has been
fed by rampant 'inflation fever'
and by specul ation," he said .
"Ohviously, this is a situation
that cannot continue indefinitely.
Eventually. something will ha•.:e
to give."
Mother, Kids
Tell 4 Weeks
Of Torturing
ANTIOCH (AP)-NancySams
says she was chained and mutilat-
ed with knives. a gun and hot
screwdriver by a man who held
her and her two children captive
for four weeks.
Police Lt. Ray ShiveJy said
Tuesday the 28-year-old victim
escaped Sunday and wa s
hospitalized with two toes and an
index finger missing, at least five
gunshot wounds, a sever ely
damaged eye and her vagina
sewn up.
J ames C. Lanier, 45, who had
been Ii ving with Miss Sams about
four months, was arrested at their
home and was booked for in-
vestigation of mayhem and as.
sault with a deadly weapon.
"She is critical but stable," said
Shively. ''The loss of sight in one
eye is possible. Her eye was poked
out with a hot screwdriver."
Miss Sams also had been beaten
about the chest and stomach and
herha1r was cutoff, Sh.ively said.
Police said s he told them Lanier
kept her chained at night, but re·
leased her during the day. She
said his vigilance relaxed Sunday
and s he fled in a car to a friend's·
home with her children, aged 3
and 5, and notified police.
The children had been beaten,
but not severely, policesaid. They
were being cared for by relatives.
Investigators said jealousy was
apparently the motive.
TONIGHT
C OAST C OMMUNlTY
COLLEGE BOARD -Regular
meeting, 1370Adams,8p.m.
COSTA MESA COUNTY
WATER DISTRICT -Regular
meeting, 1971 Placentia, 7 p. m.
"SATURDAY, S UNDAY ,
MONDAY " -South Coast
Repertory T heater, Tuesday.
Sund a v through Dec. 19, 8 p.m.
THURSOAY,NOV.25
Happy Thanksgiving!
Man Killed
On']~'
PORT ANGELES ,
Wash . (AP ) -A
cameraman involved in
filming a chase scene for
the movie "Joyride" was
killed when the car he was
shooting from overturned,
the state patrol said.
The driver and another
passenger survived.
Charles A. Parkison Jr ..
31, Sylmar, Calif., was
leaning out a car window
filming when the vehicle,
wblch was aupposed to
have gone into a skid and
slide sideways, rolled in-
stead, safd 1 state trooper.
HOWARD HUGHES (IN HAT) TALKS TO ENGINEERS INSIDE SPRUCE GOOSE IN 1947
Same Seats Remain In Giant Airplane, Now Being Conaldered tor Nevy UH
Fr._ Page Al
SMEAR ••.
cy approach in the campaign tac·
tics used on them.
"'When such violations occur, I
am suggesting that such action
resuJts in a crime and shouJd be
subject not only to a fine but to
the possiblity or that particular
candidate being unable to take
office," he said.
Carpenter said that one way of
insuring the accuracy or an en·
dorsement is to require wntten
authorization for the use of the
endorser's name.
Carpenter also suggested that
in cases where a subgroup or a
political party gives an endorse·
ment to a candidate or the op·
posite party. t he legitimate
status of that subgroup should be
established in a written
authorization from the s ub·
group's party county chairman.
He explained that in the re·
cent election, phony organiza·
tions were set up to give the ap·
pearance that candidates were
receiving support from the op·
posite party.
"Where a candidate wishes to
put together members of another
party to support him, he should
be required to show in au ad·
vertising the exact number of
such persons who have given ac-
tual written authorization for
such use,'' he said.
"The standards I a m suggest·
ing are aimed at protecting the
public from confusion, last
minute smears through deceitful
methods, and hopefully will re·
duce the activities of those ~un·
gry' candidates who will say and
do anything to win an election.
"We need truthful and ethical
candidates and those not meeting
these standards should not be
elected."
CM Tax Rate
Noted Wrong
A report issue d b y the
California Taxpayers' Associa·
tion, and reported in the Daily
Pilot, erroneously noted the City
or Costa Mesa 's tax rate at $1.44
per SIOO in assessed valuation.
The city's proposed 1976-77
budget did Indicate that tax rate.
but in view of unexpected in·
creases in assessed valuations
th.is year, the council voted to cut
the tax rate 12.5 cents to $1.32 per
$100 in assessed valuation.
The Daily ~ilot regrets the er·
ror.
Volleytennis
Signups Slated
Volleytennls for girls in grades
two through rour and volleyball
for older girls through the eighth
grade, will be offered in
December.
Registration for the two girls
leagues, sponsored by the Costa
Mesa Department of Leisure
Services, will be held Dec. 4 at
Costa Mesa High School.
Signups in the boys' gym will
be held from 9 a.m . to noon. For
further information, caJ~ 556-5300.
Mesa Man Reports
Paint Pump Theft
A Costa Mesa house painter told
poUce Tuesday somMt"le stole a
spray pump valued at $1,SJO from
the bed olhls plckupt.ruck.
Corl A. Bergstrom, 46, ()( 2056
Pomona Ave., told otncers he had
parked the truck outaide the Reef
Restaurant, 816 W. 19th St. for
about an hour Tuesday ntaht
when the lbeltoccuTred.
Juvenile
Reforms
Studied
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of llM D•lly ~llot SYN
The City of Newport Beach,
along with the rest of the state,
faces some major problems
when the juvenile justice reform
blll becomes law at the first of
the year.
That was the consensus of a
panel of experts who met this
morning to discuss juvenile
justice with members of the
Newport Harbor Area Chamber
or Commerce.
The panel consisted of Dr. Alan
Zelzter, a political science pro·
fessor from Cal State Fullerton;
Sgt. Mike Blitch, head of the
Newport Beach police depart·
ment's juvenile division; Bruce
Malloy, a member of the Orange
County Probation Department
who works with juveniles, and
Dr Bruce Wright, a political
science professor from Cal State
Fullerton.
The problems foreseen bv the
JUVENILE JUSTICE u~o .. 19;5··
group will result from the re·
forms brought about by the
Dickson bill which is aimed at
altering the detention methods
used in handling offenders under
the age of 18.
Bli tch noted that in Newport
Beach in 1975, about 2,500
juveniles were detained by the
police department. More than 50
percent of them simply received
counseling at the police depart·
ment and were released to their
parent& within a few hours of
their arrest.
This will change because the
Dickson bill requires that so·
called status offenders -those
who violate laws that apply only
to juveniles such as curfew -
cannot be held in a secure facility
such as a holding cell in a jail.
Under the new law they wfU have
to be taken to a "crisis resolution
home."
Blitch t old the small audie nce
of 20 that this means that about 15
percent of the juveniles that were
held and counseled will either
have to be released or taken to
such a home, of wh.ich there cur·
rently are none in the county.
Malloy said the probation de-
partment is trying to get the
County Board of Supervisors to
designate the county's McMillan
School as a crisis r esolution
home.
But Blitch said such a facility
is an inappropriate place to put
some kids ''who through an ex-
cess of spirit or bad luck have
been picked up for a curfew
violation and who are having no
real social or emotional pro·
blems that need resolving."
Overall, Blitch said the thrust
of the bill is to remove the
responsibility for a juvenile's ac·
lions from the lamily and place
that responsibiJily within the ex-
isting instituUonal structure,
particularly wlth the probation
department.
The bill, he said, will force
status offenders into these homes
or will put some ollenaes now
considered status offenses into
the category of juvenile law
where penal code violators are
handled.
And in some cases, the new Jaw
will push Juvenile violators or
certain laws such as murder, into
the adult system where he says
there is virtually no hope of re-
habilitation.
Wri1ht sugaeated that the con-
cept held lor the past 20 years
that crlmlnal behavior is the re-
suJt of an illness ought to be re-
examined.
,,,.... r,..e Al
HUGHES •••
congressional inquiry into the
plane.
"If it fails, I will leave thi4
country. And I mean it! · •
The craft is actually owned by
the government, the General
Services Administration, with
Summa paying $800 a month to
rent it -plus untold main.
tenance and hangar costs.
Fro.Page Al
IDNSHAW. •
any one of the pile of vacation
slips and overtime checks sub·
milted by assessor employes that
worked on the campaign.
And he reminded jurors of Up-
ton's own admission from the
stand that Hinshaw told him
after the Newport Beach
Republican took out h.is filing
papers that any assessor 's
employes who wanted to work for
him would have to do so on their
own time.
McNicholas claimed that Ur-
ton, who has been fined and who
served a jail term ror his role in
the conspiracy, acted lrom
motives of personal gain when be
drafted assessor's employes to
work for Hinshaw.
''He bad the seventh spot on the
assessor's ladder and he wanted
the third spot," McNicholas said.
"And he gotit."
Upton, compelled to resign
from his job after being indicted
by the grand jury, is now work·
ing as a used car salesman.
Evans countered with the
argument that Upton was
nothing more than Hinshaw's er-
rand boy, "who did anything JUI
boss told him to do.•
Evans reminded the jury of
testimony by several of more
than 50 witnesses that Hinshaw
called for a list of available as-
sessor's employes and put check
marks against the names of thos&
he wanted to work on his cam-
;>aign.
"I ask you to fix the
responsibi li ty where il
belongs," Evans said. "And it
belongs right on the shoulders of
this defendant."
Judge Domenichini said he will
give the jury a four-day
Thanksgiving weekend break if a·
verdict is not reached today.
Jet,s to Probe
Atom 'Clou4'
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
Federal A vlation Admlnlstratton
will put special monitoring.
equipment aboard selected bilti.
altitude commercial flights tO
make certain that radiation
buildup is not high.
The radioactive cloud from
China's r ecent nuclear test ,
which was over northwes t
Canada Tuesday, was moving
southeast at an altitude from
40,000 to 67,000 feet. Most com-
m ercial passenger planes fly
well below 40,000 feet, an FAA
spakesman said.
However. the Concorde cru.iJes
at nearly 80,000 leet and, poalbly
could intersect the radioactive
cloud o n its rtlghta from
Washington to London and Paris.
Penalty Upheld
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-The
slate Supreme Court ln a un·
anlmous dectslon today upheld
the constltottonallty of Ohio's
death penalty lmpoaed on Carl L.
Bayless, convicted May 9, 1974;
in Akron of two counts of •c·
pavated murder. TI»ere are &1
inmates on death row at the'
Southern Ohio CorrectlonaJ
Facility In LucasvUJc and at the
,Ob1o Reform~tory fOf Women.
Or~ge Coast
EDITI ON
• Today'~ los ing ·
l .Y. Stock ·
f
VOL. 69, NO. 329, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA W EDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1976 N TEN CENTS
Newport Hopes for Gas
Newport Beach cit~ coun-
cilmen would like lo turn a pro·
blem into a profit if they can get
state officials to give up the
rights lo the natural gas pools in
West Newport.
The gas, which has been seep·
ing out of the ground for years,
became the subject of a city-state
project earlier this year when
both agenlces agreed to a $20,000
exploratory drilling project.
The wells were drilled in an al·
·tempt to bleed off the noxious gas
that has been seeping out of the
ground in the Balboa Coves area
and In the so-called Cagney tract
between West Coast Highway
and Hoag Memorial Hospital.
The rotten egg smell that has
plagued the area for years is the
result of that gas seepage. 1t is
considered both a health and
safety hazard.
Geologist George 1-ebal who
handled the drilling project re-
ported to the city council.Monday
that he bas drilled five wells in
the area, two or which bave been
dry, and by bleeding the gas out
through the wells, he baa reduced
the problem in the Coves.
Some homeowners in the Coves
had installed burning devices
near their homes to bum olf the
gas. The city baa installed a lar1e
burner at the entrance to the CoV·.
es aJid in hit Monday report.
Zebal said an of the burnen but
one have gone out since the ex·
pJoratory wells were drilled.
Zebal said that two of the wells
have been flared, or lit on fire, lo
bum of( the escapina gas, but be
Sale Profits
recommended that the city sell
the gas to the General Crude Oil
Company which operates an ad·
jolninc oil field.
In order to sell the gas, Zebal
said, the city must first get the
state, which owns the Cagney
tract, to relinquish its rights to
the underground reservoir.
He said the city will have lo in-
vest about $50,000 in a com-
pressor and a line lo carry the
gas to General Crude's land.
But, be said, the volume of gas
expected to be produced by t.he
underground reservoir , will
offset that In vestment.
Zebal said it is impossible to
estimate the volume of gas to be
tapped, but he pointed out that
since the first well was dug in
(See GAS POO~, Page Al>.
Ttirkey uake Kil]s at Least 500
Serond Trial
Hinshaw Case
Damages
Repo.-ted
As Heavy
By TOM BARLEY
Of Ill• D•llY Pilot SIOH
The jury began deliberations
today in the second Orange Coun-
t y S uperior Court trial or
Congressman Andrew Hinshaw
Judge F rank Domenichim sent
his panel of seven men and five
Juve nile
R eforms
Studied
By J OANNE REYNOLDS
Of I ... D•llJ Pilot SI.tit
• The City of Newport Beach,
along with the rest or the state,
faces som e major problems
·when the juvenile just.Jee reform
bill becomes law at the first of
1the year.
That was the consensus of a
1 panel 1&f experts who met this
1m orning to d1 scu:.s Juvenile
'justice with members of the
: Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce
The panel consisted or Dr Alan
Zelrter. a pohllcal l>c1ence pro-
fessor from Cal Stale Fullerton:
Sgt. Mike Blitch, head of the
Newport Beach police depart·
ment's Juvenile division , Bruce
Malloy, a member of the Orange
County Probation Department
who works with 1uvcmle1;, and
Dr. Brucl' Wright. a poht1cal
science professor from Cal State
Fullerton
The problems foreseen by the
group will result from the n ··
forms brought about by the
Dickson bill which 1s aimed al
altenng the detention methods
used in handling offenders under
the age of 18.
Blitch noted that m Newport
Eeach in 1975, about 2.500
juveniles were detained by the
police department More than 50
percent or them simply received
counseling at the pohce depar\·
ment and were released to their'
parents within a few hours of
<See REFORMS, Page AZ> /
Oran!!~ Coast
t.c .• 4_ -=-~
\Vea t h er
Patchy late night and
early morning dense fog
through Thursday. Tem-
peratures to remain about
the same, .highs 70, lows
about SO.
I NSIDE TO DA~
Second baseman Joe
Murf1C11 of the Cincinoa.H J«dl
ta the Natumal League's mo3t
valuable player,. again.. StOf"JI,
B6.
I ndex las
"''" ,.. •• •• ,..
•tt .. , .... ,.. ,. .. II •• ,..
women to the Jury room after ad·
ding two more brief instructions
to the directives they received
before final arguments were de·
livered Tuesday.
Both Deputy District Attorney
William Evans and defense al·
torney John McNicholas ap-
peared to ~ive special attention
to prosecution witness George
Upton during their finaJ appeals
to the jury.
McNicholas asked the Jury to
reject that testimony because
Upton. a former key aide in the
office when Hinshaw was county
assessor in 1972. acted from
motives of personal ambition
when he recruited office staJf for
Hins ha w's congressional cam·
paign.
Hinshaw's alleged role in the
diversion of county manpower
and materials to bis election ef-
fort led to his being charged with
conspiracy. grand theft, em·
bezzlement and misuse of public
funds . McNicholas asked the jury to
remember that Hinshaw's
signature is not to be found on
<See HINSHAW, Page A2)
It.'• Cat.e Jafag
Billy Carter , brother of the
president-elect, has caught
the political fever. He's run·
ning for m ayor of Plains,
Ga.
Carpe nter Readies
Bill Against Smear
Labeling misleading campaign
materials '"a crime" State Sen.
Dennis Carpenter (R-NewpQrt
Beach> said today he would in·
troduce legislation aimed al
curbing the use of "last-minute
s mears through deceitful
methods."
Carpenter. in a release issued
through his Irvine office, said he
plans to draft his bill with the aid
of the state Fair Campaign Prac·
tJces Commission and introduce
1t during the 1977-78 legislative
session.
The senator was highly critical
or the "unethical·• campaign
Newport Nixes
Splitting of
Park Issues
Newport Beach city coun-
cilmen have decided not to split
the March park bond proposal in-
to two or more issues on the ad·
vice of a civic committee formed
to push the $7.1 million proposal.
practices used in recent cam-
paigns without specifying any
particular candidate or cam~
paign.
·'The voters or Orange County
deserve a higher level of cam-
paigning than they have been ex·
periencing in recent years," he
declared .
He was pah1cularly critical of
campai~ns that featured the "in·
appropriate use of names or in·
d1viduals. organizations and
groups put together al the last
minute by two or three in-
dividuals saying they had en-
dorsed a specific candidate."
Carpenter was the victim o(
such ploys in the recent primary
and general election campaigns.
One candidate, Jim Slemons,
used materia l that implied
Carpenter 's endorsement in the
primary and a letter that again
listed the state senator's endorse-
ment in the general election when
no such endorsement had been·
given.
He noted that state and federal
laws require canidates to reveal
the sources of contributions. but
there are no laws which regulate
<See SMEAR, PageA2)
ISTANBUL, Turkey CAP ) -A
major earthqua ke struck an area
of eastern Turkey near the Soviet
border today, killing hundreds
and causing widespread destruc·
tion, the Turkish state radio re·
ported. The Kandilli Observatory in
Istanbul put the magnitude at 7.6
on the Richter scale. The ob-
servatory said the quake h.it at
2:25p.m. (4:25 a.m. PST) and had
its epicenter in a mountainous
area of Van Province 900 miles
east ofJstan bul.
"It was the worst tremor to bit
Turkey since the one that re·
gistered 7 .9 in Erzincan and killed
about 30.000 in 1939," the Kand.illi
observatory said.
A spokesman at the U.S. Na·
tional Earthquake lnfor~tion
Center in Golden, Colo., said he
thought the quake caused "con-
siderable'' damaee t>eca419 the
area is populated and has roany
older buildings.
He put the location at about 30
tniles west of Yerevan in the Sov·
ietUnion.
The Impact in the Soviet Union
was thought to be minlmal, ac·
cording to initial reports from the
seismic station in Tbilisi, Soviet
Georgia.
The Richter scale gauges the
energy released by a quake in
terms of ground motion recorded
on a seismograph. Quakes of
magnitud e 7 can ca u se
widespread, heavy damage. The
earthquake in Guatemala that
took 23,000 lives this year had
readings as high as 7.5.
A radio bulletin said SOO people
were kiJJed in the district of
Muradiye and 25 in Ercis and that
95 percent of the houses were
destroyed in those areas.
Turkish news agencies report·
ed that al least half a dozen
villages were wiped out.
Soldiers stationed in the area
were assigned to rescue work.
All commu~cations with the
(See QUAltE, Page Al)
'IWO CARS SOUJ
ON FIRST CAIL
"The first call did the job. Last
year I advertised in the Daily
Pilot, and sold a Pinto also on
the first call."
That's the advertising success
story told by a Costa Mesa man
who placed this classified ad:
'75 Ouster, fully equip.
• Low mi, xlnt cond. $'l85!>
Call anyUme xxx-xxxx
Ir you'd like to convert a car,
or anything else, to Ctl!h -call
642·S678. It pays lo put the Daily
Pilot to work for you.
AP Wlr""'°w
FAIRVIEW HOSPITAL NOW CLOSED TO NEW PATIENTS
Aasemblyman Carpenter, Fairview'• Levine Meet Press
Patient Overload,
Ended at F airvieiv
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of Ille D•llY Pilot Si.ft No new patients ex~ept for a
hand-picked few are being ad·
mitted to Costa Mesa's Fairview
State Hospital because they can·
not get proper treatment, acting
medical dir ector Dr. Michael
Levine declared Tuesday.
And, he angrily noted in an in·
terview, the hospital is still try-
ing lo find an outside home for
one of two babies placed in the
1, 700-plus·population who isn't
retarded at all.
"We had at least two babies ad-
mitted in the past year who are
not retarded at all. They had
neurological problems," the out·
spoken child psychiatrist says.
'NEGLIGENCE' CAUSE
OF MENTAL DEATHS, AS
Appointed upon former
medical director Dr. Anthony N.
Toto's abrupt forced resignation
in July, Dr. Levine, 35, appeared
at a Los Angeles news conference
Tuesday with his announcement.
"At the current time. we can
provide good custodial care,
food, clothing-and shelter and
there are some islands or ex-
cellent treatment," he said,
speaking of certain programs for
the retarded and physically han·
di capped.
"But we are restricting ad·
ml86lon to those we can provide
good programs for," he em·
phasized. •
Since his accession to the
directorship alter gaining the ear
of Don Z. Miller, California's de·
puty director of health, Dr.
Levine has undertaken a major
housecleaning job at the hospital. i
He has pointed out the hospitaJ.1
is understaffed to such a severe
d egree that often only one
psychiatric technician (PT) is
available to care for~ clients, as
they are called, rather than pa-
tients.
The age range of these
physically and mentally han·
dicapped ranges from a few days
<See FAIRVIEW, PageA2>
Bligh Diary
Snapped Up
For$90,730
LONDON (AP) -A small,
water·stained notebook used by
Capt. William Bligh as a log after
his mutinying crew of HMS
Bounty h ad cast him adrift in a
rowboat, was sold in just 56
seconds for $90 ,730 al a Christie's
auction today.
The proposal goes before
voters Mar ch 8.
City councilman Paul Ryckoff,
originator of the idea ror an open
space bond election had asked
earlier this month that the open
space acquisition measure be
separated from the park im·
pr ovement portion of the
measure. He did not bring the
s ubject up Monday when the
council voted unanimously to ac-
cept the measure as proposed by
the bond election steering com-
mittee.
Minister Busts Vagrant
The leather-bound book, in
whk h Bligh noted every incident
in his s ix-week , 3,SOO·mile
voyage in the Bounty's launch
with a handful or companions,
was ):>ought by Maggs, the Lon·
don firm of booksellers which re-
fused to say for; whom it was act-
ing.
The 16-member steering com·
mittee is headed by John Stuart,
who managed Ray Williama' suc-
cessful city council election cam·
paign last April .
The $7.1 million would be used
to purchase about 150 acres
throughout the city and lo im·
prove existing parks.
Members of the steerlne com-
(See PROPOSAL, Page A.%)
Hungry F anmrorker F a£es Prosecution
DUNDEE, Fla. (AP) -A man
caught m a king a bologna
sandwich in a church was sent lo
jail because the minister felt it
was his Christian duty "to ap.
pre heqd t hose involved in
criminal acts."
Virg.H Hughes, 52, a migrant
(armwdrker employed on a local
farm , said he was outside the
Dundee Baptist Church on San-
day, pennilcts and unable to re-
member the last lime be had
eaten. A passerby JUlftsled be
try the church kitchen, he told
police.
.Hughes said he walk~~ . '.
an open door and was fixinl' a
sandwich when the minister, the
Rev. James LockM>Od, found
him and called police.
Officer Ron Sellp-en aald he found no evidence of forced entry
and no burclary t.ools.
"He had nothlna on tdm but a
can of pipe tobacco," Sella'ren
said.
But Mr . Lockwood said he
caucht Haibea lllllna • bac with irocertes.
"And of ex>urH J don't know
what elae he was «olnc to lakt,0
besald., J:lupu wu Uken to pollce
t
headquarters, where be told
authorities his story. Asst. Polle
County State Attorney Al Smith
then decided that be could be
charged only with trespassing, a
mlldemeanor. Hughes was set rree.
But Smith said Mr. Lockwood
called him later to complain
about the release. The minister
·c:latmed that the chUfch ..was
locked and Hughes broke Jo.
"Jt'a pretty bard to convince m• cw anyone else that a church
shoUl'dn 'l be open on Sunday
momtna." Smith aaid.
•. • , ~JAILED, Pa1e A.%.J.
Apart from navigational
calculations, Bligh jotted down
·rough sketches of some South Sea
ls lands showing his boat's route
through the Barrier Reef and
along the coast of Australia to
safety in Tim or. • •
Bligh also set down some of~
thoughts and fears during the
voyage. •
"We now anxiously pray to
make land . . . no sight of it," he
, wrote juat before reacblng
,Tlmor . And "kind Providence
protects us wof\derfully, but Jt is
. a most unhappy situatloo to be ln
a boat among such discontented
people who don't know what to be
1 at or what ls best for them," be
™*eon another occasion. d .-•'(~ .-a Fl•f
•
~ .tJ% DAILY PILOT N
City Improvements
• e Collneihnen •
Eye Federal Funds
By HI LARY KAVE
Ol 1,,. D•ll• l'llolS1411f
The Irvine City Council said
Tuesday it will use federal hous·
ing money to puy f<>r roads.
storm drams and other improve-
ments as a mcuns of Jowenng
construction costs and , thus.
rents for future apartment
dwellers in Irvine
The council also said it would
spend additional federal money
to buy park land, also with the
rum o( lowering apartment rents
indirectly
And. if any l'Xtra money comes
in to the city. 1t would be spent to
buy land for either a student
housing cooper .ill ve or an apart-
ment proJCCl for elderly n•:.1
dents. the council said.
Sites have not yet been picked
out for these projects, but tJe.
cisions are due by July l of next
year
Thl' city plans to ::idvcrtisc for
bwlders and thl'n pick which pro.
f'rorw Page A l
SMEAR .•. ·
the truth of campaign materials.
"Candidates have lacked self-
restraint and I believe the public
deserves a more common decen-.
cy appr oach in the campaign tac-
tics used on them.
"When such violations occur, I
am suggesting that such acLion
results in a crime and should be
subject not only to a fine but to
the possiblity of that particular
candidate being unable to take
office," he said.
Carpenter said that one way of
insunng the accuracy or an en-
dorsem ent is to rcqwre written
authorization for the use or the
endorser's name
Carpenter also suggested that
in cases when• a subgroup of a
political party g1 V<'S an endorse-
ment to a candidate of the op-
pos ite party, the legitimate
status of that subgroup should be
establis h e d 1n a writte n
authorization from t he sub-
group's party county chairman.
He explained that in the re-
cent election. phony organiza.
tions were set up to give the ap-
pearance that candidates were
rl'ce1ving support from the OP·
posite party
"When• a candidate wishes lo
put together mt•mb<>rs of another
pe1rty to support him. he should
be rcqu1n·d to shov. in all ad
\.ert1s1ng th1• t''<JCl numlxor uf
such pNsnn'\ v. ho have ~!Ven ac
lual written authoriiwt1on for
'll<'h U<\t' ' ht• ,,11cf
'Th<" 'land.m.b I Jm suggest-
ing Jre a1ml'd al prnte<:llng the
public from nrnfus1on, la.st
m111ute s mt·Jrs through dt.>ct•ttful
methods. and hOJ>dully v.111 re-
duce th<' at•t1v1t1t's of those 'hun
gr)· c;1nd1datt.'s v. ho v.111 say anc1
do an\lhing to w 111 an election
'"Wt• net•d truthful and eth1Nl
candidates <ind tho:-.l' not rnf'ctin~
thesl! standard:-. should not ~·
t>lectt•d ·
GAS POOLS.
,\u~usl .q1proit1m.stl'I\' 13 n111l1nn
ruh1c ft'1•1 of ~··~ h.L, b\•cn 11r11 dur rd
Ue said l hal 1£ tnc wf'fl\
produce f!a' al th1• r11ll' of 300,000
rub1r feet pt•r 1!.1\. th1• 1·1tv v.111
(',tm $105 ,t dJ\ If lh" vrodurtion
l!tK'' up to ~.00.000 ruh1C' fet't a dJ~ 7.ebal saicl th<' r11y·s earn
1n~s ""' br $700 wh1rh '>hnuld >:rl 'rOU vour m11n1•v hack
<'nunC'ilm1·n. who c;a1d thf'y
""t'rr conn•r 111•d about the
fnre<'a't nutural gu' shorta~e ar.;
well .is with the set>page pro-
lilcm. told City Man;iger Roh
Wynn to open negot1al1ons wi th
state oU.cials
fMf't't~"'ftt•IC\•1tP,1,., '"'"'""",.. '""""' t .. ,...,., ..... ,.., '"" • l •"' .......,,.,..~ ,, .... ,,..
f t t ,.,,~ "' 1 -. • •n.t• ti• t f, ,.,,. t •
f',,,I i"•"I "",,.. f '' "V 'Vlil'\ I• , .. , I'~ {It,.
AA.•94 .. No,.,. Ill f\· I " It jtll•IWI' ~ f¥ f • P' 'kJ.'\ tt " 'I H••w ft• l'I .. .,,,,., ..... ., V tUl'll' .ffft1
I •U·r"•tl,..t ""' ''""'"'°''' l\'11111)'' ••'1 '\,rot• '°"" \C.UM1~"'"'' \A'\ol',,'' t~l \.;,l'Yt .. 1\ '""' CW ,,, 0 .. 1 I •'"' •""I t: ,.._, \ t lll W.\I o .. ,
Str-,.-41t '"'' • ¥• t "' • ·~·, t. ;1ii
•tMf t N w .. ,. ,..,# ,,,., ..... t,.
'"'. c ....... "''--p,,, .. ,,.1'11 .. ft.J ~ "'"-""""•,.,
' . '
"'•"'•\ 4 M"9..,.~_. Alti4ill•~1ttQ ( t ""
C'-•rlu W l .. , ••rt\•"411,. "'" A'\'-I tnt M•"t•Q••tl) I M w
Ofllcu (°A~ ffl Mr'\• 1 )(\ 'hflo'\I "-'t \tr-i
' 41'f\IPI .. M•41 t; 1 tM r,1,.""' ff<fl \11 ... f
t4uf'ft ~l(W'I '''41( I'\ ''''' bio·.t n l)r\,1lt'V'4'ft ~ltb:: ~::;;~f',Qfl~~~ 1:A~U 't~«l
Teltpho"e (7U1642-43:11
Cl111llltd Advtrlltlng 842·567e
C~vriQf'lt ,.,,. (')rAfU]• 'f\•~I ~1+""1"" C'n"'
t'liit"lf' Nf'\ N w!\ !il•v ,.. llu\t'"'''""' .,_1,,,, •I
,~4H.,,. ,., .td'lftrfj • .,,,It" "t,.,,.,. ,., ... b"'
""ft'"t11•t•f ""''"•'-'' ,.,.,,., o+•m''''•" •• ftf\Y'lfa"I ')'lllt'f\•r
~ .,l\d tftt" ltG\ttQ• O••ll ~· (,,,,,. M-U
C•llt"""" \"n "'~' •n ~" A"••" '' \0 "'°"'"'• by rn•H •' \0 m."""' '"''*t•rv OJll\llM llOf'li\ \._\ \6 "'•"tf'lly
jecls a nd sit es appear lo be best
tor the housing assistance pru-
gram.
The city already has in hand
$187,965, which it will spend on o!-
1-site improvements. such as
roadways, storm drains, sewer
and water lines.
The city is also anticipating an
additional $60,000, which would
be spent on park site acquisition
at a diUerent location.
No other money is authorized
.vet, but city aides said tOday they
expect there will be more money,
which could be spent to assist stu·
dents or seniors
Students from the Student
Housing Cooperative lnc. spoke
al Tuesday's council m eeting
again, asking that the money be
spent Lo buy land for the co-op
project.
Mike Ruggera, presidenl or the
co-op, said after the council de-
cision that he is happy they gave
the students some consideration,
but adm itted he was hoping for :l
higher funding priority.
He said that until more money
comes in to the city from the
federal government, he will con·
tinue to try to interest ro.unda-
f'rottt Page A l
Nonetheless, the minister riled
a complaint. and Hughes was ar-
rested on burglary charges.
"I told lhe man 1 would stand
up with him in court," Mr
Lockwood said. "I told lhe fellow
that I was more concerned that
he find God's plan for life.
''I've given my life to helping
others," the minister said . "l
don't want him harmed, but I feel
as a Christian that I have a duty
to society to apprehend those in·
volved in criminal acts."
Mr. Lockwood said he would
ask the state attorney i! Hughes
could be released on his own re-
cognizance. He also said he's in·
vited Hughes to join him for
Thanksgiving dinner.
Said Hughes: "I will never go
into another church.•'
Oil Price Mulled
KUWAIT {AP) -Ten Arab oil
ministers m el'ling here have
been unable so far to agree on
v.hat 1ncre:1se in the pnce of
crudt.' oil the Orgamzallon of
Petroleum Exporting Countnes
should set when it meets Dec. 15.
Uooa iJ\ helping the students start
the cooperative housing project.
However, Ruggera said that it
would take al least a year before
any foundation money could be
obtainl"d.
Conunission
To Continue
Sewer Talk
Alter starting a disCWISioo of
the proposed Upper Newport Bay
sewer line, members of the re-
«ional coastal commission con-
tinued the hearing on the project
again Monday.
The permit for the sewer, filed
with the South Coast Regional m June, is set for reconsideration
next Monday at the commission
meeting in Torrance.
Commission &pokesman Mel ·
Carpenter said commissioners
decided to take the extra week
because they wanted some
specific information about the
electricity consumed by the
pump used by the existing sewer
• line whkh would be replaced by
the proposed project.
The project. to be built by
Orange County Sanitation Dis-
trict Five, would have a greater
capacity than the existing line
and would use gravity instead of
the energy-consuming pump.
As originally proposed, the
sewer line, which will be put in
underneath Back Bay Drive
between the Dunes Aquatic Park
and Big Canyon, was opposed by
the Friends of Newport Bay.
Because the group·s opposition
led to opposition from the coastal
commission staff and other re-
gulatory agencies, officials at the
sanitation district agreed to 12
conditions to satis fy the environ-
mental concerns.
Ray Williams, who is a direc-
tor of sanitation district five and
a me mber or the board or direc·
tors or the Friends. appeared
before the commission Monday
to explain why the group now
supports the project.
He said com missioners wanted
to find out exacUy how many
kilowatts a re used by the existing
pump and how many more would
be used H the pump we re
enJaried instead of laying the
gr:wity line.
HOWARD HUGHES (IN HAT) TALKS TO ENGINEERS INSIDE SPRUCE GOOSE IN 1947
Same Seats Remain In Giant Airplane, Now Being Considered for Navy Uae
'Goose' to Fly Again?
N~ Eyes Old HugMs Plane for Experimems
LONG BEACH CAP) -Hidden
29 years in a cavernous hangar,
Howard Hughes' giant wooden
flying boat, the Spruce Goose, 1s
back in the public eye -and gov-
ernment officials say lhey may
even try to take it aloft.
The late billionaire's Summa
Corp.. the conglomerate that
runs Hughes' empire, released a
series of photographs of the plane
Tuesday, including one taken In
1947 showing Hughes talking to
techni_i:ians inside the big
machine.
It was lhe first public glance al
the plane since it made its lone
flight, skimming along 70 feet
above the water for less than a
mile, on Nov. 2, 1947, with
Hughes at the controls.
Since then, it has been locked
in its hangar at the harbor here
under 24-hour guard.
F,....PageAl
filNSHAW. • any one of the pile o( vacation
slips and overtime checks sub-
mitted by assessor employes that
worked on the campaign.
The only outsider known to
have seen it regularly is a fire in-
spector on monthly rounds.
One official said despite the
long sleep, the plane -actually
called the Hercules F1ying Boat
-"is in mint condition."
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration and the
Navy say they are interested in
the Goose as part or a vehicle re-
search project.
Adm. Carl Seiberlich said.
"We are trying to decide if a
large seaplane is viable as a
future naval vehicle."
Other possible uses reportedly
include a mobile launch bed for
intercontinental ballistic mis-
siles or as a test site over water
for experimental nuclear pro·
pulsion.
The craft -which is not really
made of much spruce. it's large-
ly plywood and birch -became a
point of honor with Hughes, who
was criticized for its multi·
milliop dollar cost. ·
The 200-ton flying boat cost the
~overnment $18 million and
Hughes, who designed it
personally, many times that
amount.
"I have put the sweat of my life
into this thing," Hughes told a
congress ional inquiry into the
plane.
The craft is actually owned by
the government, the General
Services Administration, with
Summa paying $800 a month to
rent it -pl us untold main-
tenance and hangar costs.
f'roaa Page Al ·
PROPOSAL
mittee are:
Per Trebler of the Parks,
Beaches and Recreation Com-
mission; Brenda Ross of the PB
and R Commission; Bill Agee of
the Planning Commission; Don
Mcinnis of the City Council;
Jackie Heather, chairman of the
Planning Commission, ana Gary
Lovell or the PE and R Coin~
miss ion.
Also, Marilyn Hendrickson of
the Bicycle Trails Cjtizens Ad-
visory Committee; J udy Cooper:
Jean Hart; Evelyn Hart of the
PB and R Commission; Jea9
Watt. president of Stop Polluting
Our Newport"; Jill Durk~. and
Bill Frederickson of the Plannin'
Commission.
Other committee memberlf
are Steve Johnson; Paul Balalis
or the Planning Commission and
Mike Johnson, chairman of the
PB and R Commission.
Fr .. Pllfle AJ
And he reminded jurors of Up-
ton's own admission from the
stand that Hins haw told him
after t h e Newport Beach
Republican took out his filing
papers that any assessor's
employes who wanted to work for
him would have to do so on their
own time.
"If it fails. I will leave this
country. And I mean it! ·'
Former city councilman John
Storer is honorary vice chairman
of the group. ·
FAIRVIEW CASELOAD. • • McNicholas claimed that Ur-
ton, who has been fined and who
served a jail term for his role in
the cons piracy, acted from
motives o( personal gain when he
drafted assessor's cmployes to
work for Hinsha w
into the seventies or eighties.
Standards applied in staffing
and accrediting California state
hospitals were attacked at
Tuesday's press conference both
h\· Dr. Levine and State Senator·
deet Paul Carpenter.
The Santa Ana Democrat, cur-
rently a state assemblyman, at·
tacked both priorities set, fund ·
1ng meth o ds a nd a recent
approval of Fairview by the Joint
Commis s ion on llos pit.il Ac
cr<:'d1tation Repres!!nlal1 \·es of JCll1\
earlier this 'ear rated the
hospital as one of the hjgh<'st in
the nation in its tr eatment and
therapy programs in addition tn
hundreds o f graded ~upport
c;erv1ces
"We are outra~('(f at the stan
dards of care in the California
State Hos pital s~c;tcm 1" /l.s
!>emblyman. Carpentcr sa1d.
He charged the private agency
which oper ates on a nationwide
t>asis waived particular licensing
standnrds to allow hospitals to
continue rcc£1i ving f<:'dera l aid tu nets.
[( JCHA s tandards are not met,
these funds are cut off.
"The State of CaUfornia has a
eonfli ct or interl'st in setting stan·
dards and examining its own
hospitals,'' Carpenter asserted.
Not long ago, Dr. Levine set up
an ad hoc committee lo review
procedures at Fairview, which in
recent yl'ars has worked Wlth a
system or 10 special programs,
each devoted to a specific han·
dieapped group by age and
ability.
The Universitv of Illinois
graduate had already introduced
a plan to reduce use of tranquiliz·
ing drugs on patients, bucking
the system before Or. Toto was
deposed.
He charged in a recent in-
terview state hospitals have ac-
tually been used as dumping
grounds for unwanted han-
dicapped children too
troublesome tor parents to han
die.
''We bad at lenst two babies ad-
mitted last yur who are not
meqtally retarded. They had
neurolo~ical hondlcaos," he ex-
plained. "One Is no lollger here
but there is Nancy, we're tryin.C
lo Ret her out now.''
"The erfecl on institutionalized
babies is devastating. They ·
quickly 'learn how' to become re·
larded." Or. Levine addeq.
"One recently that particular-
ly made me angry involved a kid
they tried to ~el in for a
behavioral disorder ... he only
has a hearing disability."
De~-pitc skepticism by parental
Jn"oups and the hospital's five-
man Advisory Board, Dr. Le\'ine
is proceeding with his methods of
improving treatment and care
programs at the Costa Mesa
hospital.
He :-.ays ma ny more who live
there could be handled through
regional centers, which general-
ly operate on a county-level bas is
or over several counties in the
ca5e of s maller. rural counties.
ll1 s own youngest child,
Steven, 6, is mentally retarded
and his treatment and educa-
t 1onal t h erapy programs arc
handled by the Orange County
Regional Center.
#'ro111 Page A I
QUAKE ...
provincial center o! Van and its
outlying areas were cut.
"We are afraid the death loll is
high in Muradiye and surround-
ing villages," said Burhan Yavuz
Yilmaz, deputy governor of Van
Province.
The Kandilli Observatory said
Muradiye was at theepicenter.
The Province of Van lies on the
quake-prone Anatolia fault,
which reaches from Turkey's
Aegean coast south toward the
Mediterranean and north along
the Black Sea coast. Then it turns
south, covering ea stem Turkey.
Gag Snagged
Yout"' 11; Can Be Na~d
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court
today s truck down, at least temporarily, an
Oklahoma judge's order limiting news media report-
ing of a case involving an 11-year-old boy found delin-
quent by reason of second-degree manslaughter. -
The court set aside a "gag order" imposed by
Oklahoma County District Judge Charles E. Halley,
which prohibited news reporters Crom publishing or
broadcasting the boy's name or photoJ(raph -even.
though both had been widely displayed before -until
hewasl8. . .
The court's refusal to go along with the Okla-
homa judge was in keeping with its ruling last sum-
mer in a much-publicized Nebraska murder case. Jn
that case, the Supreme Court came close to outlawing
surh reportin g restrictions. . ·
' The boy was arrested last July and iater found de-
linquent by reason of second-degree manslaughter in
the shooting death of an Oklahoma City railroad switchman.
Alter m1t1al rep0rting about the case mentioned.
the boy's name and displayed his picture, Halley is.'
sued a pretrial order banning such mention.
•
Froaa Page Al
REFORMS STUDI~D. • . t
their arrest.
This will change because the
Dickson bill requires that so-
called status offenders -those
who violate laws that apply only
to juveniles such as curfew -
cannot be held in a secure facility
such as a holding cell in a jail.
Under the new law they will have
to be taken to a "crisis resolution
home."
Blitch told the small audience
of 20 that this means that about 15
percent of the juveniles that were
held and counseled will either
have to be released or taken lo
such a home, of which there cur-
rently are none in the county.
Malloy said the probation de·
partment is trying to get the
County Board of Supervisors to
designate the county's McMillan
School as a crisis resolution
home.
But Blitch said such a facility
is an inappropriate place to pul
some kids "who through an ex-
cess of spirit or bad luck have
been picked up for a curfew
violation and who are having no
real social or e motional pro-
blems that need resolving."
Overall, Blitch said the thrust
o( the bill is to remove the
responsibility for a juvenile's ac-
tions from the family and place
that responsibility within the ex-
isting institutional structure,
particularly with lhe probation
department.
The bill, he said, wiJI force
status offenders into these homes
or will put some offenses now
considered status offenses into
the category of juvenile law
where penal code violators are
handled.
And in some cases, the new Jaw
will push juvenile violators of
certain laws such as murder, into
the adult system where he says
there is virtually no hope of re·
habllltation.
Wright suggested that the con·
cept held for the past 20 years
that criminal behavior is the re-
sult or an illness outht to be re-
uam~ed. ·
He said that a n answer to the
multitude of problems aurround-
ln« the way ln which juveniles
are hand.led mlg~t be to insist on
a system of punishment with the
idea of getting youthful violators
to take responsibility for their ac-
tion. Alt or the panelists agreed thae
the responsibility concept bas it;f
roots in the family and com-
munity.
Malloy said there are two pro-
grams designed to meet that kind
of need in Newport Beach -~
Youth Employment Service, de ..
signed to give teenagers jobs.
and the Assessment and Treat.-
mcnt Services Center, which ~
used by the police department &Si
a counseling diversion program
for youthful offenders who rugbt
otherwise go to Juvenile Court. "
He noted wryly that both are
privately funded and that one,
ATSC may close within a month
for lack of funds and that YES~
in a constant stale of financial
trouble. "'
* * *
"' Eager Voter
Wants Marian·
• I
In Sacran;iento
Marian Bergeson, the school
trustee who poUed 35,000 votes
as a write-in Assembly candidate
earlier this month, got an en-
dorsement !or her next cam-
paign today.
Mrs. Bergeson altended a
panel discussion on juvenile
justice sponsored by the Newport'
Harbor Area Chamber or Com-
merce and made a few observai..'
lions about the use ol continua"'
ti on high schools during the que1t·
lion and answer phase or lb~' proeram.
One or the panelists, Bruce
Malloy of the Orange Countf.
Probation Department, was ot.::
viously impressed with her re.
marks, but apparently didn'"~·
know Mrs . Ber geson. ..
"We need people like you in
Sacramento:" he said. 'Jbe au••
die.nee chuc«Jed. Pualed by the reaction,~ added, "Seriously, If
J knew your name. I'd vote lot
you,"
Saddleback ff •r11oon
toe k s
..
VOL. 69, NO. 329, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1976 TEN CENT~ 1 --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.;,_~~~~~~~;..;..:::..::.._~:.........:...;..:...:...:....::...;..;.:..;:.;..:..:;..:.:....:.~~~~=-=-:...:::.::.:...:....:..:
Minister Turns In Starving Migrant
DUNDEE, Fla. (AP) -A man
caught making a bologna
sandwich in a church was sent to
jail because the mln.ister felt it
was bis Christian duty "to ap-
·J)re bend those involved in
criminal acts."
Virgil Hugbes, 52, a migrant
farmworker employed on a local
farm, said he was out.aide the
l>undee Baptist Church on Sun-
day, penniless and unable to re·
member the last time be had
eat.en. A passerby suggested he
try the church kitchen, he told
police.
Hughes said he walked through
an open door and was fixing a
sancl_wich when the minister, the
Rev. am es Lockwood, found
him a called po · ce.
Off\ r Ron Se en said he
found eviden of focced entry
and no rglary ( ls.
"He had nothing on him but a
can of pipe tobacco," Sellgren
said.
But Mr. Lockwood said he
caught Hughes filling a bag with
groceries.
"And or course I don't know
what else he was going to take,"
he said.
Hughes was taken to police
headquarters, where he told
authorities his story. Asst. Polk
County Stale Attorney Al Smith
then decided that he could be
charged only with trespassing, a
misdemeanor. Hughes was set
free.
But Smith said Mr. Lockwood
called him later lo complain
about the release. The minister
claimed that the church was
locked and Hughes broke in.
"It's eretty hard lo convince
me .or anyone else that a church
shouldn't be open on Sunday
morning," Smith said.
Nonetheless. the minister flied
a complaint, and Hughes was ar-
rested on burglary charges.
"I told the mall I would stand
up with him in court.'' Mr
Lockwood said. "I told the fellow
that I was more concerned that
he find God's plan for life.
"I've given my life to helping
others," the mutister said. "I
dOJl'l want him harmed, but I fed
as a Christian that I hav~ a dut)
to society to apprehend those i'l
volved in criminal acts."
Mr. Lockwood said he woul(
ask the slate attorney ii Hughe/
could be released on his own re
cognizance. He also said he's in
vited Hughes lo join him fo1
Thanksgiving dinner.
Said Hughes: "I will never ~
into another church."
T11rkey Quake Kills at Least 500
Accord on Raise
Teachers Pay
Pact Advances
After four days of negotiations,
)t appears no agreement has been
reached on Saddleback Valley
Unified School District teachers'
demands for agency shop and
binding arbitration.
However.Dis trict Supt
Richard Welle and Bill Mecham,
·president of the Saddle back
1 Valley Educators Association
: (SVEA), have reached a tentative
'agreement on much of the I employment contract proposed
1 by the teachers .
Man Killed
On 'Joyri~'
PORT ANGELES,
Wa s h . (AP> -A
" c'am~ral'r1\n · 1n~ot~e<f fn
filming a chase scene for
the movie "Joyride" was
killed when the car he was
shooting from overturned,
the state patrol said.
The driver and another
passenger survived
Charles A Parkison Jr ..
31, Sylmar, Calif .. was
leaning out a car window
filming when the vehicle.
which was supposed to
have gone into a slud and
slide sideways. rolled in·
stead, said a stale trooper.
Hinshaw Faie
Turned O ver
To 1 2 Jurors
By TOM BARLF.Y
Ott ... D••I• l'•le!Su"
The Jury ~gan deliberations
today in the second Orange Coun·
ty Superio r Court trial of
Congressman Andrew Hmshaw
Judge Frank Domeruduru sent
his panel or seven men and rive
women to the Jury room alter ad
ding two more brief in.<>tructions
to the directives they received
before final arguments were dt>-
livered Tuesday.
Both Deputy O"istnct Attorney
William Evans and defense at-
torney John McNicholas ap-
peared to 10ve Sl)eelal attention
to prosecution wUneu George
Upton durlna their (inal appeals
to the jury.
A copy or the proposal and
agreements reached so far were
distributed lo all schools today as
Mecham and Dr. Welte entered
their fifth day of one·lo·one
negotiations.
Agreement apparently has
bet>n reached on the trus tees' pro·
posed four percent cost of lhring
salary raise. with it and other
economic benefits retroactive to
July. However. the teachers re-
quest that their salary schedule
be compacted from 12 to 11 years
was deferred in the discussions.
District officials estimate this
request could cost more than
$200,000.
Under the tentative agreement,
fourth, fifth and sixth grade
teachers will work 305 minutes a
day, compared to their proposal
of a 260 minute work day similar
to that for teachers at other grade
levels.
Lower-leve l students have a
shorter school day. Although in·
termediate and high school stu·
dents have 305 minutes of classes,
they rotate classes allowing
teachers a conference period
While fourth, fifth and sixth grade
instructors teach for a longer
period. district officials have con-
tended they have less pupil con-
lact-t>ecause"they teach only one
group of students.
However. the agreement also
says that a task force will be or-
ganized within five working days
after the contract is signed lo
study the workday for these
teachers. It also says that $85,000
will be earmarked for any rcsult-
1pg pro gram approved by
trustees.
Teachers also proposed that the
district hire no interns. According
lo the tentative agreement, this
subJect will be reviewed by
Mecham and Dr. Welte within a
month after the contract is
signed.
Other ten la ti ve agreements
were reached on transfers, leaves
and evaluations. lt also gives the
SVEA the right to consult. on
educational objectives, content or
courses, curriculum and tex-
tbooks and have a member on any
committee deadling with these
sub1ects.
The tentative agreement also
specifically states the association
agrees there will be no strike,
work stoppage, slowdown. picket·
ing or r efusal or failure to
perform the job.
If this agreement is broken, ac·
cording to the proposal, the dis-
trict will have the righl to
withdraw any rights. privileges
or services provided the associa·
ti on.
_,,_
Christmas Royalty
This attractive ensemble of El Toro High
School coeds is the field of candidates for
Girl's League Christmas queen and her
court. The royalty will be crowned at the
annual Christmas formal on Dec. 10
aboard the Queen Mary. Tickets are on
sale through Dec. 3 at a cost or $22 per
couple. fhc candidates include senior
queen candidates (lop row from left)
Cathie Van Liew, Hope Moylan, Michelle
Dramis. Lisa Patterson and Cathv Ar·
royo. Junior princess candidates are (mid-
dle row from left) Jackie Morris, Christy
Long and Joni Caldwell. And sophomore
princess candidates (at bottom from left)
are Wendy Seiders , Diana Morris and Joe
Dee Green.
Smear Tactics Lashed
Carpenter to Seek Campaign Deceit Curbs
Labeling misleading campaign
materials "a crime" State Sen.
Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport
Beach) said today he would in·
troduce legislation aimed at
curbing the use or ''last-minute
smears through deceitful
methods."
Carpenter, in a release issued
through his Irvine office, said he
plans to draft his bill with the aid
of the state Fair Campaign Prac·
tices Commission and introduce
it during the 1977·78 legislative
session.
The senator was highly critical
or the "unethical" campaign
practices used in recent cam·
paigns without specifying any
particular candidate or cam-
paign.
"The voters of Orange County
deserve a higher level of cam·
paigning than they have been ex·
periencing in recent years," he
declared. ·
McNicbolas ask~ the jury to
reject that testimony because
Upton, a f91"mer key aide in the
office when Hinshaw was county
assessor in 1972, acted from
motives of personal ambition
when he recruited office staff for
Hinshaw's congressional cam·
Bike Trails, Parks*!
He was particularly critical of
campai~ns that featured the "in-appropriate use of names of in-
di vi duals, organizations and
groups put together at the last
minute by two or three in·
dividuals saying they had en·
dorsed a specific candidate."
<SttmNSH AW, PageAZ)
TWO C.4RS SOW
ON FIRST CAU
"The first call did the job. Last
year I advertised in the Dally
Pilot, and sold a Pinto -also on
the first call.''
That's the advertising succ.,-ess
story told by a Costa Mesa man
who placed this classtfied ad:
'75 Duster, fully equip.
Low ml, xlnt cund. $2850
Call anyt ime XU·xxxx
Jr you'd Uke to convert a car~
or anything else, to cub -call
M2-5«78 't pays to put the Daily
Pilot lo work for you.
"
Aliso Corridor Eyed
By KATHY CLANCY
Of, ... O•llY Piie! S\afl
Aliso Creek, which curves
through the Saddleback Valley to
the sea, eventually may be
bordered wilb tnLiJs and dotted
with parks, an Orange County
stair report says.
The preliminary Aliso Creek
corridor plan, presented to coun-
ty supervisors T~esday, calls for
more than 28 miles of horse and
bike trails, stretching from the
Cleveland National Forest to
Aliso Beach.
It calls for public ownenhip of
722 acres immediately bordering
the crffk, along with another 557
acres of park and bufftr area aJona the 19-mile at.retch.
••
In addirton, county planners
have suggested that 3,400 acres
should be maintained as open
space and another 2,575 acres
should be allowed for carefully
cont.rolled development.
Tuesday, the board, at the sug-
gesUon of Supervisor Tom Riley,·
referred the report to the county
plan~g commission for pubUc
hearings and, recommendations.
Officials of the county Environ·
mental Management Agency
<EMA), who have been develop.
tn1 the plan the past three years,
said the hearings probably will
begin ln late January.
The plan divides the 19-mile
5tretch into n ve a.tea.I of priorU.y.
the fiN£ o( which is the El TOTO
area.
Rob Patterson, an EMA pro.
ject manager, said county of-
ficials are plannlng trail areas to link up with other existing t.rails.
And at those links rest and
recreation areas will be · de-
veloped.
Patterson noted fllat of the en·
tire area, a11 but a small percent
ls st.ill owned privately. But as
development ls proposed, be ex-
plalaed, county omdals will seek
acquiatUon of choke creek land
areas.
And while t be hope ls to ma!~
U1n the creek tn lta natural st.a~
Patteuoa aatd, a portion
(See A.USO, hltAJ)
Carpenter was the victim ·or
such ploys in the recent primary
and general election campaigns.
One candidate, Jim Slemons,
used material that implied
Carpenter's endorsement lo the
primary and a letter that again
listed the state senator's endorse·
ment in the general election when
no such endorsement bad been
given.
He noted that state and federal
laws require canidates to reveal
the sources or contributions, but
there are no Jaws~hicb regulate
the truth of camp ip materials.
"Candldates ha e lacked sell-
rest.raint and I bef:eve the pu_bllc deserves a more mmon decen·
cy approach ln tb campaign tac~
ucs UJcd on them.
"When aucb vi at.ions occur, I
a.OJ suuestinc tti• ~b aetioo.
resulta In a crtm• and should be
~Slll!Aa, ~Al)
Damages
Reported
As Heavy
ISTANBUL. Turkey (AP) -A
major earthquake struck an are.<
of eastern Turkey near the Soviel
border today. killing hundreru
and causing widespread destruc
tton, the Turk\sh state radio re-
ported.
The Kandllli Observatory in
Istanbul put the magnitude at 7.E
on the Richter scale. The ob·
servatory said the quake hit al
2:25p.m. (4 :25a.m. PST>andhad
its epicenter in a mountainous
area of Van Province 900 miles
east of Istanbul.
"It was the worst tremor to hit
Turkey since the one that re·
gistered 7. 9 in Erzincan and killed
about 30.000 in 1939," the Kandilli
observatory said.
A spokesman at the U.S. Na·
tional Earthquake information
Center in Golden, Colo .. said ht
thought the quake caused "con·
siderable" damage because lhE
area is populated and has man>
older .buildines.
He put tbe locatlOft at •bbut.JC
miles west of Yerevan in the Sov·
iet Union.
The impact in the Soviet Union
was thought to be minimal. ac·
cording to initial reports Crom thE
seismic station in Tbilisi, Soviet
Georgia.
The Richter scale gauges the
energy released by a quake in
terms of ground motion recorded
on a seismograph. Qualces of
m a g n lt u d e 7 c a n ca u s-e
widespread, heavy damage. The
earthquake in Guatemala that
took 23,000 lives this year ha~
readings as high as 7 .5.
A radio bulletin said 500 peopJ
were killed in the district ofl
Muradiye and 25 in Ercis and tba~
~ percent of the houses werei
destroyed In those areas.
Turkish news agencies report·
ed that at least half a dozen
villages were wl ped out.
Soldiers stationed in the area
were assigned to rescue work.
All communications with ttie
provincial center or Van and its
outlying areas were cut.
"We are afraid the death toll is
high in Muradiye and surround-
ing villages," said Burhan Yavuz
Yilmaz, deputy governor of Van
Province.
The KandilLi Observatory said
Muradiye was at the epicenter.
The Province of Van lies on the
quake-prone Anatolia fault,
which r eaches from Turkey•s
Aegean coast south toward the
Mediterranean and north along
the Black Sea coast. Then it turns
south, co~f)fing ea stem Turkey.
Coast
We athe r
Patchy late night and
early morning dense . fog
through Thursd ay. Tem-
peratures to rem ain about
the same, highs 70, lows
about SO.
l~SIDE T~DJ\ l'
S•cond bo•emon Joe
Mur(ICm of tJw Cincim.aoti Reda
ii the NCltiortal League'1 mOlt
~uablc pla~n .. again. St"'1/.
84.
lnde~
' A 2 DAILY PILOT SB Wednesday. November 2A. 1978
Youth, 11, Can Be N amed
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court
today struck down, at least temporarily, an
Oklahoma judge's order limiting news media report-
ing of a case involving an 11-year-old boy found delin-
quent by reason of second-degree manslaughter.
The court set aside a "gag order" imposed by
Oklahoma County District Judge Charles E . Halley,
wruch prohibited news reporters from publishing or
broadcasting the boy's name or pbotoj?raph -even
thoagh both had been widely displayed before -until
he was 18.
The court's refusal to go along with the Okla-
homa judge was in keeping with its ruling last sum-
mer in a much-publicized Nebraska murder case. In
that case, the Supreme Court came close to outlawing
, such r eporting restrictions.
The boy was arrested last July and.later found de-
. linquent by reason or second-degree manslaughter in
. the shooting death of an Oklahoma City r ailroad · switchman.
Alter in1t1al reporting about the case mentioned
the boy's name and dis played his picture, Halley is-
sued a pretrial order banning such mention.
Ne-w Site Located
For Youth Facility
The Ranc ho Viejo Junior
Woman's Club and several com-
munity organizations have found
a new location for the In·
dividualized Task Oriented Pro-
gram (!TOP) Center for Learn·
ing.
Now. club leaders said, help is
needed to complete the building
soil can be used for the program
which helps children overcome
learning dis abillt1rs
The Saddleback YMCA has
provided l~nd adjacent to its
building as a site for the center as
well as a real est ate sales bulld·
ing donated by Lake Forest de·
veloper, Dave Young.
The bu1ld1ng was moved from
ils Lake Forest site to the YM·
CA 's land in El Toro with the help
of money donated by the Mission
Viejo Company
Now , club leaders said, a foun-
dation must be poured. electrical
wiring and plumbin~ installed
and the interior finished before
Sama Clam
Lumbering In
On Elephant
Santa Claus will ..trrl\C at
Laguna Hills Mall Friday morn
mg riding a creature that 1s pro·
bably bigger and weigh-; more
than all of St '11ck '<i eight trny re
mdeer put togt•ther
The unusual entrance. slated
for 9 30 a m 1n the shopping
center parksn~ lot betwet·n Sears
and Harns and f'rank. will in
\'Olve an elt•ph;int named Kay.
which will he dre-;scd as Mrs
Claus
After Santa arnwc;, K.iy will
be available for frf'e rides
between 10 30 a m and 2 30 pm
on f'riday onl) il Mall official
said
Along '>'1th ~ant a. th<· Gt.-ntr\'
Famil> S1ngerc; will p<•rform and
the t>ntire e\ ent will be <'mcl'ed
bv KEZY radio persnnahty John
Peters
As 1n past ) ear'-. the man pl av
ing Santa al the Mall will be M
vear-old Marl in Fare'><' nf
i..a.cuna Reach, who 1s em1nent1,
quahf1cd for dc,1hnR wtth eager
duldren
He h a.!> 12 r h1ldrcn. 49
grandchddn·n crnd J ~rcat
grandchild
F ~tre c;e, "hu f1r't :.tan ed
portra) in~ th<• l••lh Old Elr
"h1 It> h \Jng 1 n appropn a tel)'
Anchorage, Ala'>k.i. 1s a native or
New Jer!lev and -.p<·nl 26 vears a<,
a groundske<'pt>r for the Boc;ton
Red S<lx prof<'!-.~ mnal baseball
team
He'U be aC'ting his annual role
at the shopping <-enter Monda)
through Friday Crom 11 a m to
8:30 pm . Saturda)s from 10
a.m. to 8:30 pm and Sundays
from 11 a.m to 5 p.m
ORANGE COAST '~
I •JJ l\'I Q lt•ll
't\" O••"Uf'I (,,_.,,, n .. h1 "''"' ,., '" ""'l"I cf'll ,, ton. ., .... o,~Nfl"w• ~,.,.~, 11 ... ..,. ~~tNO• ..... .,..
r \•I "•O•I fl\•"l()f tl?IO•f\• ~"•t• ~·IN\\ tr•
t 1hlo,P1" 1 M !'tft"''" fl"f,..,.,,...," ,,. ,,'¥ !Jr l'O''"
~\A lflrril"'#O')I'' "••t f\ H ll"fl~"4f 1'\ ~ • .. r °"""
'" ._ !i/141•,,, I•..,,,.. \•Ott''"O t \ VAi •• "'"'
I \•Joi\ t A",, " \tovll"I (n4\I A '""°',. ••Q <W"•l •1
I " t tNblt\1'141\) \•l·.1•f;l~'f'\ •"'1 \t."""A'r\ f ~
,, ~ P.l' n.1ftl '"''\II ~ .,,, \ ~· '~ w,.,, ""'"
\rt-f ( '''• M• ~ (• '"'"'"' t'hlt
..... ,, H .......
P••\•,,..."I A"d ·~N \IW1
hO 119 Cw..-. v *' o .. ,.,., ... .,, .. .,., """'"• M.oot"lf<O•f'
fft•m•• •••••• ( .. 'If'
Tfltel"\.U A M"""""'._
M .. "•?·~o r 11 •OI'
("twrtn M \.•9" llt•C~ .-tUlf
4, '''*"tMA"',.1 ""'lfd1tf)r'
S•ddl•b1elc V1tleY Oftll;I J\101 L.a Pfl •o.-d •t \~or,.., ,_,H.,. .. -.,
Offk:h
Co\ft Mf-'4 UO Wt\I llU-. ~''"' MUll'ltuw1l.,.8f'•C'l'I 11lt\ftfl~hftou••v•rct l..•9~ .. ~tr. 11 .. Q~Y'f"t\t,...I
Telepllo11e (714)142""'21
CIH•lfled Advertllllllg "42·5671
'Mddl•t>M \I ""''~· ""~"""' °"''f' 111.t :no
r rnm hf\ Cl•rr.f'lll•
415-0l:»O
<»i>•"flf'' t•n °' .. " .. c~1h1 ''*'"'u''o C4m ..-111., No M"" "•t••\ lllu\t' Ot~ ,.,,,11.,,ltl
f'Pltltf., af' ftf•t f'tl\em•tU \ h•ft't" '''lilt" b• r •orodu<•d w1IP\01i111 •P•<••' p .. ,M1ut•"' et toOyriqN Ow"'•'
~~r;:,"',~'i:::!~T:u::·".:' ,~;~:, ":r:o
,.....,,,.,, •• by ...... u ,0 "'°"'"''' mi•lt•'• ctl:U1Mh~\i1 JO~l'lty
the building can replace the
three-bedroom house which is
currently being used for the
center.
About 100 children now are
enrolled in the center.
It is estimated, however, that
15 to 35 percent of all children are
arrected with a learning disabili-
ty. The Rancho Viejo Juniors and
Sister Paula Jane Tupa, founder
or the center , hope to establish
facilities adequate to help 500
children each week.
Persons interested in assisting
with this project are asked to caJI
586-6664.
F ro..Page A J
IDNSHAW. •
paign.
Hinshaw's alleged role in the
diversion of county manpower
and mate1ials to his election ef·
fort led to his being charged with
conspiracy, grand theft, em-
bezzlement and misuse of public
funds.
McNicbolas asked the jury to
r emember that Hins haw 's
signature is not to be found on
any one or the pile of vacation
s lips and overtime checks sub·
milted by assessor employes that
worked on the campaign.
And he reminded jurors of Up·
ton's own admission from the
stand that Hinshaw told him
after the Newpo rt Beach
Republican took out his filing
papers lhat any assessor 's
employes who wanted to work for
him would have to do so on their
own11me
McNicholas claimed that Ur·
ton. who has been fined and who
served a jail term for his role in
the conspira cy. acted from
motives of personal gain when he
drafted assessor's employes to
work for Hinshaw.
"He had the seventh spot on the
assessor's ladder and ht> wanted
the third s pot.·· McNicholaR ~aid
.. An d h<' ~ot 1t "
Upton. compelled lo resign
from his job after lx-ing indicted
by the grand Jury, I!> now work·
ing as a used car salt•sman
E\•ans countered with the
argu m f'nt that l'pton was
nothing more than Hmshaw's er·
rand boy, "who did anything his
boss told him to do ··
Roa d Signal
Plan Okayed
Th e Sa ddl cbu C'k Arca
\oordsnating Council (SACC>
has withdrawn its bpposition to
threr trafftc signals planned for
El Toro Road. between Rockrield
and Muirlands boulevards.
SACC originally contended the
signals, which will be placed at
entrances to the Saddleback
Valley Plaza and shopping cen-
ters across fro m it, would con·
gest traffic on El Toro Road.
The group reversed its recom-
mendation, however. after a traf-
fic engineer convinced members
that the signals can be controlled
to prevent problems
F ro.Page A l
ALISO •••
between the San Diego Freeway
and Muirlands Boulevard in El
Toro already is surrounded by
homes and the channel has been oaved.
Another area of pavement will
be in a flood retarding basin
through El Toro Community
Park, he said.
Patterson said the bike tralC
also will not be able to follow the
creek itself through Laguna Hllls
Leisure World because the com -
munity is closed to the public.
In tha t area. he said, the trail •
wUI skirt Leisure World, then fl
join lhe creek larlher !IQUth .
p ,...f!! ... A J .
SMEAR •••
subJeet Dai only to a ti.Oe but to
the poulbUty ot that ~rticolar
cudidatc betns unable to take
afflce," be •aid.
C&rpeilter said that ooe way of insdrine tho accuracy ot an en-
dorsement ls to require written
authorization ror the use of the
endorser's nam e
Carpenter also suggested that
in cases where a subgroup ot a
political party g1 ves an endorse-
ment to a candidate of the op-
posite party, the legilimatt:
status ot that subgroup should be
establis h e d in a w ritten
authorization from the s ub-
group's party county chairman.
He explained that in the re-
cent election, phony organiza.
lions were set up to give the ap·
peacance that candidates were
receiving support from the op-
posite party .
"Where a candidate wishes to
· put together members of another
party to support him, he should
be rf'Quired to show in all ad·
vertising the exact number or
such persons who have given ac-
tual written author ization for
such use." he said.
"The standards I a m suggest-
ing a re aimed at protecting the
public from confusion, last
minute smea rs through deceitful
methods, and hopefully will re-
duce the activities o( those 'hun·
gry' candidates who will say and
do anything to win an election.
"We need truthful and ethical
candidates and those not meeting
these standards should not be
elected."
Eight Board
Seats Ope n
F or March 8
A total of eight board of trustee
seats in two unified districts and a
college district ser ving the Sad-
dleback Valley and other parts of
the south county will be on the
March 8 ballot.
The Orange County Registrar
of Voters office has set Dec. 9 as
the date for filing to begin for
vacancies. The tentative closing
date is Dec. 30, but a registrar's
office spokesman said that might ·
be extended until after the first of
the year.
Three s pots on the seven-
mem ber Capistrano Unified
School District board, including
one supposedly filled in a special
election this month (it is still be·
ing rontested), will be up for elec-
tion. They re present trustee areas
in Dana Point, Laguna Niguel and
Mission' Viejo.
Two seals are also open on the
five-member Saddleback Valley
Unified School District board and
trusteeships representing Dana
Point, Laguna Hills and Tustin
are open on the Saddleback
College board.
ContfJustifJle Engine
A possible fuel leak caused the engine of
this car, owned by Robert Carr of Dana
Point, to catch fire Tuesday afternoon at
Rockfield Boulevard and Lake Forest
Drive. Firemen estimated $400 damage
was done to the engine compartment ·and
front tires of the 1964 model auto. There
were no injuries or problems reported as
a result of the !ire.
Homeowners Regroup
El Toro Plans New Community Association
Plans are being m ade for
reorganization of the El Toro
H omeowner s Association,
according to the group's new
president, Kristine Kister of Lake
Forest.
She said the need for revamping
such local organizations grew out
of the defeat of the El Toro.Lake
Forest Municipal Advisor y
C.ouncil proposal on the June 8
primary election ballot.
"Just because the MAC failed is
no reason for :ibandonjng the
concept of a united community,"
she said.
"I see us moving toward an'
area concept with a lot of work
and coordination between the
existing mandatory and
voluntar y homeowner s
associations."
Mrs . Kis l er said the new
structure for the E l Toro
association will be s imilar to thal
us ed to organize ,the new
voluntary homeowner group in
Lake Forest I I.
That group was originally
created lo give residents more of
a voice in local affairs than they
had with the mandatory
association, which is dominated
by developer representatives.
Sin ce, then, however, the
voluntary group has worked
closely with the other panel on
community activities.
"The voluntary group is
structured with a broad-based
representation through area
representatives,'' said Mrs.
Kister.
"At this point, we (the El Toro
group) are taking volunteers and
I hope to see us become more
formal with time -possibly
through elections of area reps."
So far, area r epresentatives
include Priscilla Hoel of Lake
Forest I, Al Regnier o( Laguna
North Homes, Ed McKean of
Republic Homes, Sharon Beda -4
of Cardinal Homes and Antoinett
Rydzeske of Lake Forest Gardens
Mobile Home Park.
Mrs. Kister said an outreach
committee has been appointed to
seek out people interested in
representiug their tracts on the .,
association board. /
According to Rob Smith.u'fice
president-elect of ~I Toro
Association, there is a need for
more awareness of development
in the area.
"We should have an area
planning r eview board consisting
of volunteers who would go over
the plans for developments and
make comm e n ts for the
Saddleback Area Coordinating
Council CSACC) review board,"
he said.
''I see us becoming stronger by
having a broader base of input to
SACC," he added. "SACC is the
vehicle for us to make our
concerns known to the county and
the SACC r epresentative lo the
review board needs more input
from us in the community."
Smith said every effort will be
made to gel the association
involved io the planning process
in the early stages, before the
decisions have been made.
The next m eeting of th.e
a sociation board will be Dec. 2 at
7 p.m. at Peoples Federal
avings and Loan in El Toro. The
public is invited to attend the
session and m ore information can
be obtained by calling Mrs. Kister
at581-5276 or Regnier at837-S244.
Fairview Closes to New Patients
Hospital Staff 'Too Slwrt/. to Provide Treatment
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 lhr Oa1ly P11o1 !>l•tt
No new patients except for a
hand-plckC'd few are being ad-
mitted to Costa Mesa 's Fairview
State Hospital because they can-
not get proper treatment, acting
medical director Dr. Michael
Levine de clurcd Tuesday.
And, he angrily noted in an in·
terview. the hospital 1s still try·
mg to find an outside home for
one or two ba bies placed in the
1.700-plus -population who isn't
r<'t a rd rd at all.
"'We had at leas t two babies ad-
mitted in the past year who are
not retarded at all . They had
neurological problems," the out-
spoken child psychiatnst says.
Appointed upo n former
medical director Dr. Anthony N.
Toto's abrupt forced resignation
in July, Dr. Levine, 35. appeared
at a Los Angeles news conference
Tuesday with his announcement.
"At the current time, we can
provide good custodial care,
food, clothing and shelter and
there are some islands of ex-
cellent treatment." he s aid,
speaking of certain programs for
the retarded and physically han·
dicapped.
"Bul we are restriclmg ad-
m1ss1on to those we can provide
good programs for,'' he cm
phasized.
Since his accession lo the
direcle.'rship after gaining the ear
............ ~
FAIRVIEW HOSPITAL NOW CLOSED TO NEW PATIENTS
A11emblyman Carpenter, Fairview'• Levine Meet PreH
of Don Z. Miller, California's de·
puty direc tor of health, Dr.
Levine has undertaken a major
housecleaning job at the hospital.
He has pointed out the hospital
is understaffed to such a severe
degree that ofte n only one
psychiatric technician <PT> is
'NEGLIGENCE' CAUSE
OF MENTAL DEATHS, A5
available to care for 20 clients, as
they are called, rather than pa·
tients.
The age ra n ge o f these
physically and mentally h an-
dicapped ranges from a rew days
into the seventies or eighties
Standards a pplied in staffing
and accrediting California state
hospitals we r e attacked at
Tuesday's press conference both
by Dr. Levine and State Senator-
elect Paul Carpenter.
The Santa Ana Democrat, cur-
rently a state assemblyman, at·
tacked both priorities set, fund·
ing methods and a recent
approval of Fairview by the Joint
Commission on Hospital Ac·
crcditatlon.
Representatives of J CHA
earlier this year rated the.
hospital a s one of the highest in
the nation in its treatment and
therapy programs in addition to
hundreds of graded suppor t
services .
"We are outraged at the stan·
dards of care in the California
State Hospita l system ." As·
semblyman. Carpenter said.
He c harged the private agency
which operates oo a nationwide
basis waived particular licensing
standards to allow hoopitals to
cont,inue receiving federal aid
funds. L If JCHA standarWJ are not met,
these funds are cut oil.
"The State of California has a
conflict of interest in setting stan-
dards and examining its own
hospitals," Carpenter asserted.
Not long ago, Dr.1Levine set up
an ad hoc committee to review
procedures at Fairyiew, which In
recent years has worked with a
system of 10 special programs,
each devoted to a specific ban·
dicapped group by age and
ability .
The University of Illinois
graduate had already introduced;
a plan to reduce use of tranquiliz~
ing drugs on patients, buclcing
the system before Dr. Toto was
deposed. '
He charged in a recent in 1
ter view state hospitals have ac-
tually been used as dumping
grounds for unwante d han-
dicapped children too
troublesome for parents to han·
dle.
"We had at least two babies ad-
mitted last year who are not
mentally retarded. They had
neurolotical handicaos." he ex-plained. "One is no lonter here'
but there is Nancy, we're trying1
lo get her out now.''
"The effect on institutionalized
babies is devastating. They '
quickly 'learn how' to become re-.
larded," Dr. Levine add~. ,
"One recently that particular-,
Jy made me angry involved a kid
they tried to gel in fo r a
behavioral disorder ... he onlr
has a hearing disability."
Despite skepticism by parental
groups and the hospital's five-
man Advisory Board, Dr. Levine
is proceedtne with his methods of
improving treatment and care
programs at the Costa Mesa
hospital.
He says many more who Uve
there could be handJed through
regional centers, wruch general·
ly operate on a county-level basis
or over several counties in the
case of s maller. rural counties.
Ohio to Recount
COLUMBUS. Ohio CAP) -A
recount o( President-elect Jimmy
Carter's 9,333-vote victory over
.President Ford In Ohio will begin
Monday, Secretary ot Stat~ Ted
W. Brown said Tuesday. It ls ex-
pected to take a boot a week to
complete. Carter won the election
nationwide with 297 to 241 elec·
t.oral votes, so a turnaround of
Ohio's 25 electoral votes stlll .
would leave Mm wtth two to
spare.