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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-12-06 - Orange Coast PilotI 1·~1r.,ine Air Crash Kills 5 . .. . ;""> ' .. Kalmbaeh's Son Top C.01•rt Baits Saves Woman Texas Killer's ort· Fire uest·ed Death. MONDAY AFTERNOON, DEC EMBER 6, 1976 l/Ot. 4', HO :Ml, l SfCTIONS, U PAGES o.11¥ 1'11<14 , ..... -· • SAVED HIS NEIGH80R ,Newport'• Kurt Kalmbach ixes Texas Slayers D eath 1¥ASHJN01'0N (AP> The 0-.E. Supreme Court postponed t.Qllay lhe excculton of a Texas mlmierer who did not want his Hheduled Friday death in the electric chalr, delayed. ·lfhe high court delayed in· definitely the execution of Robert •cell W.hlte, a JO.year -old drifter from Waco, Tex., wh<> 8*S he deserves to die. ll was the second lime in four ctilYs lbal the Supreme Court de· llied lhe execution of a prisoner . 1l4to wanted to die. On Friday, ~ ~ustices postponed the firing uad exec ullon of Utah erer Gary Mark Gilmore, bad convinced state officials • et him die. White's attorney, J .E . athy, asked the court for to challenge the state's de· penalty, the indictment that 1ed White with murder and • elhod of Jury seJectloo used ite's trial. !White does not want to appeal, •bOwever. In a Nov. 23lettertothe S(jpeme Court, White sa.ld, "Mr. •mathy ls acting against •)' etpress instructions and detires. (See DEATH, Pqe.U) Wo1nan Rescued In Fire • By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ti.e O~tly l'li.1 Sufi Newport Beach firemen today credited Kurt Kalmbach, 27, son or Herb K almbach, formcr- personal attorney to President Nixon. with saving the life or a neighbor who was trapped in her burning apartment. Firemen said that Eileen G. Smith. 58. or 1820 Park Newport, J306, escaped with Kalmbach 's help, suffering only singed hair m the Sunday blaze that did more than $75,000 damage to the apart menl complex fo'are Department spokesman Art Morton said today that Mr:. Smith 1:. confanf'd lo a wheel chair due lo a recent m1ury and s he couldn t open tht> door to her apartment lo esca!X' fame:. and smoke from the 12 45 p m rare. Morton said the fire apparently started in the bathroom while Mrs. Smith was fixing lunch an the kitchen. She told firemen she started down the hall when she flri.l smelled s mok4! but was turned back by names She said she then tried to call the fire department, but the smoke was too intense and she <See RESCUE, Page.U) HBPolice Seek Sniper Huntington Beach police were preparing t o evacuate a neighborbood near the intersection of Clay a nd Huntington streets this morning after a two-m an city survey crew said they'd been shot at. Details were sketchy, but police reportedly were planning to evacuate the neigbborbood and send ln their Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT> squad after the surveyors said they twice heard a shot followed by the sound of aometbin& whining by them. One unidentified police officer sa\d there ls a third· atory apartment, ap· parenUy occupl~ by three men Crom which the shota could have been fired that would be the focus Of the police operation. I Fires ' 'I .. At BB orker8 ,. -·-:...~ Dolly ,.li.t SUit l'!WtO FIREMEN STAND BY AFTER OoUSING FIRE THAT FOLLOWED PLANE CRASH Twin Engin'1 Craft Carries Five Men io Death• Sunday in Irvine -, Crash Clue Hunted In Plane Wreckag e By HILARY KAYE Oft ... Dolly l'llo4 St.ti An airplane that crashed in Irvine Sunday afternoon, killing two Newport Beach men and three others, will undergo a close examlnatioo beginning today, in· vestlgators said. Miss M.W. "Wally" Funk, a National Transportation Air Safety Board Inspector, sa.ld sheit does not know yet what caused lhe twin-engine Aerost.ar to crash; as lt attempted an emergenc)"1 landing ;n a new industrial are~. about one mile away froml Orange County Airport. But she said the wreckage at.. the crash site has been removed to be scrutinized by her team of inspectors. The 4:15 p.m. crash killed att five on board, including piJot. Edward Plsoni, 45, of 2209 Cliff Orlve, Newport Beach; J ames Shortrldae. 37, of 1815 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach: Jerry Bell. 33, of 14692 Hyannis Port, Tustin, Roser Barnett, 36, of 3211 s. Artesia, Santa Ana; and Uoydt Jennings, 21, of 14552 Raintree Lane, Irvine. Pisonl Is a land developer and president of the Newport Beach firm, R e alty Development Corporation. Details on the other crash victims are atlll unknown. AccQJ'dloe to witness account.a, the plane was flying south towarda Oranae County Aii'port when th~ pilot suddenly bankeda U>e craft to lhe left and Ulen nQl'e dived into a mound of dirt just f~t from buildings. The. plane w~s about 50 reet up when the dtve began, witnesses said. The crash site was of! Aston Street, near Alton Street, in the industrial complex. A small fire bumed in on~ or the engines, but was quickly put out by firemen. Three of lhe men wtl'• i)itched out of the-cab\n by t.be impact and were round near .._,e wreckage still strapped to their seats, police said. tOne of the two engines on the ~e apparently failed just prior the crash. A Fountain Valley pie, Austin and Jan Owings, bbth s tudent pilots, told in· vesUgators they heard an un· i~ntified pilot tell the . control <See PROBE, Page Al) GOOD GRIE~ .' .., ' 0,._,LV 18 SHOP'PING DA.VS a 'TIL CHRISTMAS .1 i - ! : c i . Terminally Ill _ Diver Takes 'Final Swim' NewPort Beach police sa.ld to· day they believe the body of a scuba diver. round off Corona del Mar Main Beach. is that of a terminally ill Garden Grove man who had come to the beach to take "one la&t swim." Det. Sgt. Ken Thompson said they believe the dead man is ~nnelh I~. Jcmea, 2' • .Qf,~ard-. ... Gove Grove, who was teported misslng by his sister on Nov. 30. An autopsy was pending today. According to police reports. two divers, Ray Brackelsberg of Fullerton and Robert Hagedorn of Anaheim, were diving at lhe south end of the beach at about 9:30 p.m. when they found the body of a scuba div« about a quarter of a mile fromahore. Tbe body was retrieved by divers !rQlll t.he sheri&f'.e Harbor Patrol. Thompson said the tentative idenUfication ia b4sed on Lbe fact that Jones' car was found at the main beach par~ Jot Friday and that He had told his sister juat before disappearing last week that be was rolng to go for "one Jastswim." Sbipect Killed •• I. • SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -An W\!dent10ed man w11 )dlled and Michael Darden, 23, of San Fran· cisco, wu wounded When police uld officers Interrupted a burglary at a prlva~ home Sun· day. Missing Woman H11nted . ~ ~ ~ NEW YORK (AP) -Police." have broadcast a 13-state alarm \ for the missing wife ol former-~ Nixon lawyer Leonard Garment.,~ Soap opera writer Grace G.at"'' ment, 49, was last seen Friday ar~ ternoon at Pennsylvania Slatled~ and her husband reported her~ mlsslnR Saturday. · Garment, one-time counsel tor: former President Nixon d~ the Watergate investigation. is a'fl U.S. representative to the UnU ... -, ed Nations Human Rights Com·+. mission. • J' His wife writes for the daytime• television series "Edee of" Nieht." l A family spokesman said that> Mrs. Garment failed to show up! Friday for a psychiatric appoint~ ment for treatment oR depression. \ The missing persop alarm pu~ out by police described. ber as ~ foot -4 •. 115 pounds, with browti\ hair and hazel eyes. When las~ seeo. she was w.earin& a pb\IC. turtleneck swt6l~r. "!tatks, and ~ brown fur coat. " .. iJ Accident Kills 3 . 'l PALM DESERT <AP) ~ Police say three persona. have•: been killed In ·a colllalon lhal oc.!· curred when the car ln which': U)ey were ridin1 ,a~'}U>llY lumecl, '1n front of a track. • ~. Co at_ t Weat h e r Sunny through Tueaday with local winds. SUghUy wa11mer day1 with hlibs ln the 70.. lows ln the 40a, I NSIDE TODA. Y Did Howard HaglanmllU Ult a hol/ l•"otfc1 Tto0 /"'1Mr maploft• IJaue IOrft· t•n o book moktng CIMIC cJafm. S.c.P.oft .«. •••ex . =:..;..k~ 1.."' .. """""" .. Att =TIM AU 1..M ... ff AU AU Cal~I At ............... M,IM o..tlM ..... =c-t.. A' OMll!Cl AU •t·I 0-_.. All ,_.., •At+ .. ...... ,... ................ ~· ............. MT~ II ......... ,. Atl 1'llMwt AU ~ Att ...,._ M ........... .. ..,,. ..... -~ . .. I • . '· •A% DAILY PILOT s Monday December 6 1976 Carter Says No to 'Snre' Tax Cut PLAIN S, Ca, (AP > President elect Jimmy Cart.er c:tisagreeing with tus neWlY ap'. pointed budget director, sald to- day a tax cut 1s not a virtual cer- tainty next year. Carter said It ls too early to tell what steps might b~ needed to s timulate t he economy Carter i.aid he is not convinced yet that cutting taxes is the thing to do. "l 'm deliberately keeping mv rrund open," he declared "I have adv1i.ers who arc leaning all <lit ferent directions, but l '11 wait and see." The president·elect said he will consult closely with Congrei.s before deciding what to do about the economy. Thom a s •'Berl'' Lance, Cartt-r's choice to be director of the Office of Management and Budget. said Sunday that a tax cut early in the new admm1stru- Air Bags Urged ... . For New Autos WASHINGTON (AP> Trans portation Serretarv Wilham T Coleman Jr said to day auto makers will not be re qu1rcd lo mstall air bags on new cars but will be urged to make them a vailable as a low·cost op· lion Coleman. in announcing his de· cis1on. said hP will begin dis · cussions with auto makers lhe A"WIN-10 S tarting 1'011n9 Ian Locklear, 4. 1~ running for president of the L:01vcrs1 ty of South Florida student g<)Vt•rnmt>nl A special ~lu­ d('nt at lhl· university. Ian bm1sts an IQ between 160 and 169 Ci ty Closes Ponw Strip PALO ALTO <AP! &ven· teen mcti.sa;tt.-parlors and nude dance studio!> have been shut d owu by local autho r1 t1es because Of '1 CIVIi laWSUll alJejt iQi both rC'd light and fair bus1 ness practtct• \iolatwn.'> ·sexu:il 1>•·rvers 1o n or whatever n ature you C'a rl' lo '1t'scribt-was ~01n ~ rm inside the massage parlor~ fo1 a pn<'e, · said Dennis Lempert. Santo Clara County deputy d1stnct al tomey Bombs R u in Stores LONDONDERRY, Northern Ireland (1\ P l Bombs wrecked Londonderry's dowTltown o;hop· pmg district Sunday a few hours before 10.000 Catholics and Protestant... marC'hed for the cause of p eucr in Northnn lrrland The bomM and result mg, ft res destroyed 16 stores and damaged six others No one was Injured. OlllANGI! COAST DAILY PILOT f~(')'~(N\I O••••P iot _.,.,..,.._,,." ,,~ r;: ~ .. ~u"'..:;.~:O •~~:=',,,': =.::;:: fNN4~ft M '\t'(IAly frl"OV~ I l•fto l')f ,,,....,. ....... .... ...,,. ""'""" .... ,11\f."""40" "". ~ '°"' tt ft '¥• ... I V••• \olfOljl"CM(' 'l••!~f •M '~·••'-f'I s.~.,_, .. ,, .,~··•""l·rl'M •d• """' ,. 9"1hl·'""'d ~t~r'+f\ _,,., \.""•'' ,...,. ~;~n:~\~~1::.!1.~,'.-:r~:.::,:1¥ Wint I•~ .... rt .. -fllt~tt .. nt AM Pvtw•..,.., >•c•" Cwrt•r yi., P,•\•O•~t Mlilt c,.,,.,., Mlneq-r ,_."''' ..... ii ld tl)r Ttr.t""'f'.a M~l'llt ,..,.."' .. ., f'4J(dt"lif' O•rlf\ M """ lltldllll,. ~ ...... A\1 dMt JllMU41,.. l•ter' OfflcH "'-'• ...... lltWttl -Sl•M l ... .,... ...... llt•O-"\I,.., "=~~:!~,.:i'::~~'::':;:,'• ••U•~'·­ T•l•llf'On• (7t4)M:M321 CIHtlfled Adv•rt.IWftg ~ ~•N<•V•llto;~Othc• 51t-t310 ~,.~ \4A c•.,,..fll .. •n.o.30 '"Of1'\ NerurtOt•,... c~ .. ~,,1., M0-1HO ~ ..... lt'6 Of-{Mtl l'IM1ol\•"1 0.-~t' .. M9' \~t UIV\4t'M"""' ...... ''""" ., .... ,., .. ,,..."'' .. ,.,._ "''" .. ,.,, .. .,, •• •ltt.•vl , •• ,,,., .. ,,.,.,,~ et _.,.._ ""-•,,. '''" Mt'•r. .. , ... CH•• -.._. ~·~:-.:1• •t 1:.'.'11' .~·a"~.:W4;":.: .• rt1.,-: --··-t.J•-· week of Dec. 20 in hopes of get· ting the necessary agreements. He set as a goal obtaintng the agreement o f at least two manufacture rs to market air bags on at least 250.000 cars or various sizes in 1979'-model cars and on another 250,000 in model year 1980. Coleman s aid the air bags must retail for no more than $100 for both the driver and front-seat passenger and for no more than $.50 for the dnver onJy. Half the 250,000 annual output would be equipped with dnver· only bags and the other half would have driver-plus- passenger air bags The secretary said he expected the negotiations to be complett!d by Jan. 5 and said he would re· r ommend to Congress shortly thereafter what further action to take. Coleman estimated the pro- gram would cost about S86 million. The public's share of the cost would bring in S38 million The secretary said he expected the auto makers to pick up the re- mauling $48 m11l1on and said he felt this request was reasonahle i.1nce domestic auto makers re- ported a corporate profit or near- ly $4 billion the past l2 months. However, he did not rule out the possibility that partial financing of this $48 million could come from other sources The secretary also called on automob~le ins urance companies to reduce casualty premiums on cars equipped with air bags. Coleman said he was con· vinced air bag devices -which protect automobile passengers without the passengers ta.lung any action such as buckling seat belts -could save many lives. But he said requiring all cars to be equipped with air bags prd- b ab I y would be counter- productive al this time because a· large segment of the public does not understand and opposes the controversial devices. A firm Transportation Depart- ment decision, he saJd, could lead to a public outcry that would force the next secretary or Congress to reverse the decision Coleman also declined to re· commend· that the federal gov· emment put pr<?ssure on states to adopt laws requinn~ that seat belts be used. He noted the de· partment had been ur~mg states to take such action smce 1973 but only Puerto Rico had adopted mandatory seat belt use law~ lit> did dirt'Cl. howrvcr thal seat belts be 1mprovt-d in con\c menct-. C'omfort and rcllab1llty Coleman held pubh<· hc•unnJ;?'i on air bags in Aul!ust llC' s:ud h1-. study convmct'd him Jlr trng!'I are both technoloR1cally and economically feasible· Ill' ~aid he wa~ equally certain tb(• <lev1c:c!> would not be act·cph.'d IJy most Americans today Fro. Pa~ Al PROBE • • • tower. "I have one enRmc out," minutes bef o r e the plane crashed. Owings was practic1ng on the airstrip and Mrs . Owings was m another craft getting gas . Pisoni's plane had taken orr earlier in the day from Guaymas, Mexico. From the fis- hing gear found in the wreckage, officials speculated that the men had just returned from a short fishing vacation. ''It looked like they were just five guys who hod had a great time down in Mex lco," comment- ed an Irvine Police officer who was at the acene. The plane was registered to the Sun Valley Corporation in Idaho, but officials said they did not know if the craft wac; leased or owned by Pisonl, who was report· ed to be an experienced pilot. U.S. Aid Refu8ed WASHINGTON (AP) -Philip· pine authorities are upset by a se· quence of events last week which they Interpret as a heavy-handed State Department eftort to bTeak a stalemate in negotiations over U.S. military bases in The Philip- pine.. The Manila aovcmment hu rejected 1 U.S. proposal ror fl billion ln U .S. aid ov r the nt•t five ye1ra In ret-um ror continued U.S. use or mllltal')' bases. ' Uon 1s "virtually certain." But al an Informal newt con- Cerence today, Carte" declared: ··tt•s too early to decide. I wouJdn 't say 1l was V\rtually cer- tain, although 1t is one of the possibiltties." Carter did say that a perma- nent or temporary tax reduction is possible "if the economy needs stimulation, and I think at this point 1t appears that way." Another oplion, Carter said, o.it~,.,..,.si.""hoto RESCUED Mrs. Eileen Smith, being helped here by Newport Fire Information Officer Art Morton, was rescued from burning apart· ment by ne ig hbor. Fro... P age A J RESCUE_ ••• decided to get out. Becasue she is confined to a wheelchair and due to the heavy smoke, she was unable to open herfrontdoor, Mort.onsaid. Kalmbach said he was leaving his apartment, next door to Mrs. Smith's, when he saw the smoke and heard her fumbling with the door. He said her wheelchair was stuck on the baseboard or the threshold and he helped her over it and took her to an apartment down the hall. Kalmbach said he went back to his apartment, where his wife was calling the hrexlepartment, and got a blanket for Mrs. Smith and then dosed off a fire door in the complex hallway. Kalmbach said his wire and her girlfriend were.unable to go out through the hall after calling the fire department because the smok<· wa!'i MJ thick, ::.o lhev went out to their balcony anc1 C"i1mbcd down In all. <!l fin• 11<-partment men wt're called t11 tht· blaze which took 20 in111·;1l·~ to control. Morton said th'.. flamc•s were con· fined to Mrs Sm 1th 's apartment although tht· ('om mor• arl'a:> or the l'Ompll'x !>llfft•r t•d heavy ~moke oama~l' Mort.on said residents <JS well a:. firrmen surrerccl from i.mokt· mhalation and heat exposure amt one fireman. John Mattson, wa~ treated and rt>lcac;ed from Hoag Memorial llosp1tal when a p1e<'e of glass from an t>xploding win dow imbedded 1lst>lf in his knee. Two of Mrs. Smith's neighbors, Nathan and Frances Krause. both 78, were treated for smoke inhalation by paramedics who said the couple also suffer from heart problems. A total of six fire trucks as well as the paramedics worked at the fire scene under command or Battalion chief Phil Hayden. are proerams to put people to work. He said it will be dlHicuJl to meet bis goal or reducing un- employment by 1.5 percent dur- ing his first year in office, but promised lo make effort to do so. The nation 's unemployment rate stands at 8.1 percent, or about 7.8 milhon people. Lance told the Los Angeles Times that a tax cut of up to $15 bUlion possibly in the form of a Open Letter rebate on 1976 income taxes - probably will be proposed by Carter. He suggested that a tax cut will be part ol a package to sUmulate the economy that will include a jobs program and tax investment c redits to spur in· du.slr1al expansion. Asked earlier on CBS-TV'• "Face the Nation" about the possibility or a tax cut, Lance said that other possible economic stimulants "are so limited th ( think you have to consider that almost a certainty." Carter bas said he would COQ· sider a tax cut if the economfo signs indicated a need for onl# after he takes office Jan. 20. Tho Ford administration has p .... posed a $10-biltion cut in income laxes next year, built around a proposed $250 increase in the Pl't· sent S750 personal exemption. Gilmore: 'I Wish to Die' SALT LAKE CITY <AP! Convicted killer Gary Gilmore. hts desire to face a firing squad at sunrise today thwarted by his mother's appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, wrote an open letter to her today saying, "[ wish to be dead. We all die. It ain't no big deal." The letter r eleased today hy Gilmore's attorney said , "I would like to talk to you and to see you. but for some reason I can't, so I am sending lhls letter to you. so that the newspapers and the media will get thii. message to you.'' The NAACP Legal Defense Fund filed the appeal in behalf or the mother, Bessie Gilmore. Now Rocker Died Of Overdose MIAMI CAP> -An overdose of heroin probably was the cause of rock gu1tansl Tommy Bolin 's death in a Miami Beach motel, of- ficials say. .. Autopsy studies are continu- ing, but prehmmary results arc that his death was due to an over- dose of narcotics. probably heroin," Dr. Roland Wright, Dade County's chief medical ex- aminer, said Sunday. Bolin, 25, of Beverly Hills. was found dead Saturday when Miami Beach polie-e and emergency medical teams were called to his room at the Newport. Resort Motel. Court Backs Death R11:ling ROME CAP) -A Rome ap· peals court. has upheld the con· viction or an 18-year-Old youth who said he killed movie director Pier Paolo Pasolim during a fight over Pasohni's homosexual advances. The youth, Pino Pelosi. had been found guilty of murder and given a prison sentence of nine· years and two months. The ap peals court reduced the sentence by two months. Defense attorneys claimed that Pelosi first acted m self· defense and then ran over the body or 53-year -old Pasolln1 while n eemg m Pasohm's car They had asked that lhc cilar~es be cnanged I rom murder lo manslaughter • living in a Portland, Ore., s ub· urb, she is crippled with arthritis and has had her phone d1 scon nected. "Please disassociate yourself from the Uncle Tom NAACP. I don't know how the NAACP got to you, but please don't let them use you as a sympathetic na- tional appeal," wrote Gilmore, who was once again in the prison infirmary today. "Mom, they have no concern for you or for me. Jn fact they arc less than concerned about any white person," Gilmore wrote. "Please, Mom, just accept the fact tbal 1 don_'~ di.aqree wit.h the law and the sentence that has been imposed upon me, and I wish lo be dead. We all die. lt ain't no big deal. Sometimes it~ right and proper. •• • . Please ae· cept my rate," be wrote. , Ernest Dean Wright, I'>lvision ef Corrections director, said Sun· day Gilmore was transferred to the prlson infirmary because Warden Samuel W. Smith was concerned tbat he "may have something p.Ja.nned" for today when be was to have faced a fir· i.ng squad ror murdering a motel clerk. Gilmore's attotney, Ronald Stanger , said his client was "stilt angered" at the court action his invalid mother initiated Thurs- day. The execution whic h Gilmore sought as quickly as possible was stayed for a third time Friday by the U.S. Supr<'mc Court. at her request. Gilmore turned 36Saturday. Wright said orficials feared that if Gilmore remained in his maximum security cell , other to mates might attempt to slip h1m drugs. He was hospitalized last month after he and his girlfriend. Nicole Barrett, took overdoses of sleepmg pills in an apparent suicide pact. Wright said Gilmore would be more isolated in the infirmarv. where he had been kept under round-the-clock superv1s1on until three days ago. "In the next three da\ s, Gilmore 's "talus m;w chanl!l' drastically." Wright sa.111, refer ring to possible furtht'r drlayi. tn his case Attorney General-elect Rolx•rt B. Hansen said Sunday thot transcript" requested by the U.S. Supreme Court were complett'd and would be filed by Tuesday. Attorneys s ay the high court could take weeks to d ecide whether to grant an appeal, an<I 1f 1t did su, a final Judgment could take more than a year. A, WlrfllM\O EXECUTION DELAYED Texas Kiiier Whfte •• Frora Page A I .DEATH ••• ~ • ,.J expticltlytoid hlm thatl dld 'lPl wl*h any federal appeaJ of ~Y soh whatsoever. "l am mentally prepared t.o6c- cept the jud1ment or sen~ imposed upon me," said Whlt«i, a death row prisoner at. Hwttsvillit, Tex .• ·for the pa1t two year,s. "Any delay now will only lnfijct needl~s mental bvdshlp en • me." Oiltnore was to have dled et sunrise today, and would have become the first criminal execut- ed in the United States since 1987. His death was stayed at the re- quest of his mothe r. Dessie Gilmore or Milwaukie. Ore. "' Jury Rides · Death Vo;d ' WASHINGTON . (AP) _,i The exclusion of even one' prospective juror lor general scruples against capital punishmen t ' automatically voids any death penalty imposed in a trial. the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. In a 6 to 3 vote, the court threw out the death penal- ty sentence given to con- victed Georgia murderer Curlew Davis. The unsigned opinion· said the Georgia Supreme Court was wrong when It decided that the improper exclusion o( a prospeeUve juror in Davis' trial did nol deny him the right to be judged by a cross·seclion of the community. OBESITY, A MAJOR HEAL TH HAZARD By IOI McCOMCHIE If all the· deaths from cancer were eliminated, TWO YEARS would be added to mans life span . If all the deaths related to OBESITY were eliminated, an estimated SEVE N YEARS would be added to mans life span. YOU can control your health rather than allow your environment to control it. · .. PROGR E SS h as virtu a lly eliminated the necessity of walking Mort.on said another or Mrs. • Smith's neighbors has taken the fire victim In until other Jiving arrangcmentfi can be made . running, lifting or climbing . One modern machine TV holds people In "captive idleness" for an average of twenty-one hours a week . . I sn 't it about time to DO something about it? FRIDGE BROUGHT HER COLD CASH "Jusl 10 minutes after our paper was delivered, I sold the refrigerator." 'lbat':o; the quick sales success story told by the Newport Beach woman who plac~ W s od in the Daily Pilot: IS' Whirlpool Refrlg, w!1cemaker S7S. xxx· )()()()( If you have 'an applla.nce you want to convert to euh, call 642-M78. We make Jt easy fM you to put a few words to work ror you, in the OaJly Pilot IT"SAFACT The first ot 1ts kind, exclusively for men. MOM-STHMUOUS Aerobic and Isometric Exercise .. rTWOIKS Combined with nutritional guidance, improvement In muscle tone, circulation. posture and weight are realized. 1rs GUARANTIED , Results are guaranteed without shots, pills, starvation diets or strenuous exercise. 396 I MocAITHUR I LVD. ·SUITE IOI MIWrOIT llACH MAYO BODY CONTROL CENTER A IQUSTIC APPIOACN TO PHYSICAL RTIIESS FOi ''Uft" Carter, 1Ferninist ••u Split? "'WASHINGTON (AP) -Ana· tionaJ femm1st leader says the it0mance between the women's ..niovement and a once-ardent eaitor, President-elect Jimmy Carter, may be cooling. And the rumored appointment John T. Dunlop as S~'Crctary or bor could mark the start or en bostilit1es between minists and the new ad inis tration. says Kare n row, president of the Na· !fOnal Organitat1on for Women Ms OeCrow said Sunday the appomtment or Dunlop would be "a direct ins ult to every woman 111 the United States " A~ W1"""'91o Monday. 0.C.mbef e. 191e o-.1L v PILOT AS ·Croted Yells 'l..,.p' ,. Ex-con Talked Out of Leap By J ACK CHAPPELL Oftto• O•ll• r1""Steff A man threatening \o jump from the tower of the Hotel Laguna was talked down by a Laguna Beach ~lice sergeant Sunday after lhe despondent ex- convict had wavered on the nar- row ledge for 40 minutes while a crowd across the street yelled "jump." Police Capt. Neil Purcell credited Sgt. Bruce Briggs with saving tbe life or the 40-year-old Portland, Ore. man, who Purcell said was d espondent over a divorce and drinking. Dunlop is the favored can dldate of the leaders or or garuzed labor. They remember that he re s ign ed fr o m Prcs 1d<'nl Ford's Cabtncl this }Car aft er lord vetoed a bill long sought by fie unions that would have e'< pended picketmg n ghts al con ~uction sites. SMOKE RISES OVER PEARL HARBOR AFTER SURPRISE ATTACK BY JAPANESE IN 1941 Thirty Five Years later, Memortea Are Like 01d Wound.a to Those Who Were There Sergeant Briggs was able to establish a rapport with the man and eventually talked him off the four-story tower of the landmark hotel, Purcell said . Shortly before stepping from the ledge, the man threw an emp- ty beer bottle at the crowd gathered across the street. No one was bit. although police sajd the crash of the bottle brought an immediate and eery silence. t·But Ms. DeCrow and other femini st leader s reme mber Dunlop for what they s aid was his opposition to a ffirmat1vl' ac Uon rules that would huvc re· quired federal contractors to hire more woml'n . Thev are distressed that Cartf'r is apparently rons1dcnng Dunlop for the Cabm<'l post "Ir 1974, I d idn't even know who Carter was, bu' he made a special trip to Cahfom1a, to a NOW confenmc<' to have lunch Wlth me lie told me then that women's equality would be one of lhP maJOr 1>r1orit1M of his ad m1mstrat1on 1f hc were elected 'J)res1dent." Ms DcCrow r<• called Si n ce Carter 's <.'lcct1on. though, the s hoe has been on the other foot, she !'ia1d Ms DeCrow said she has been :.eekmg a meet .ing with him, to no avail, to urge lhe appointment of sccretanes of •Lebor a nd Health Education and •Welfare who, 1f nol women, al l east are sympalh<'t1 c t o .women's i:onls · Ms. DeCrow said that women will hold Cartrr to a higher stan ctarcl than lhL'V would Prl.'Sid<.'nt t 'ord her a us(; .. fo'nrd didn't pro ftlJfie uii the ROM' (j ardc·n l:Jrlcr did." They Still Remember Pearl Harbor S urvivors R ecall 'Day of Infamy' llONOLULV <AP> Pearl Harbor. like the Alamo and th1· Maine . wa s so m e thing America'os were determined lo remember. It occurred 35 years ago Tuesday and for those who were there the memories are ltkt: old wounds, vivid and deep It was Dei:. 7. 1941. 7·55 am local time ··What do I remember" Gee, I ~olta think back." said Joel Bachner. falling s ilent for a mo- ment Bachner. or New York City, I'.\ president of lhe Pearl Harbor Survivors Association, a 7 .000· member group which returns lo Honolulu every fifth year. "f remember one of the ensigns pacing around, shakmg tus fist a nd shouting. 'I'll get you Japs.' Even at the time, it sl'emed very theatrical," said Bachner, who watched the attack from the radio room of the USS Caltforma in Battleship Row . They wonder. sometimes. th~ survivor:. or the attack. what others remember. what others forget. The memones are slow com1ns: back now for iiome of them, hut they remember. the} remember. UC Irvine Minorities Meet ·for Services Minority studenL'i at UC lrvtn{' will meet with campus ad ministrators this w~k m an at tempt to improve the trouble ridden special services program at UCI. Th<' i.tucf('nts art• requesting That the pos1t1ons or director and assistant director be filled immediately. Bernard Clarey saw puffs of anti·aU'craft s moke as he ate breakfast. He put his wife and 15-month old son tn his car and headed for the harbor. "My son heard us talking,'' Clarey recalled. "He started cry ing. He could tell from our voice:. that something was wrong." Clarey, now a retired admiral. made 1t to his submanne, the USS Dolphtn. He :.t.ood on 11.S stem, taking potshots at diving Zero fighters with rus 45-caliber handgun. "Even 1f we didn't do mueh good, we got a lot or sallsfacl1on from it," he said. laughing now at the fuUllty of lhe gesture ''But the shock or the attack wa:-. something we never gol over. It melded us together, as well as the country " The men in the harbor knew almost immediately that the at tack was for r eal. but ror other:. the realization took lon~<'r. Many thought it was just another . but more realistic practice by tht' Army Air Corps Sergeant Briggs brought the man to the Laguna Beach police s tation and late r he wa s transferred to the UC Irvine Medical Center. "He said all he wanted was help," Purcell said. The former convict had an in· t ense distrust of police and Sergeant Briggs was the only one able to get through to hlm, Cap- tain Purcell s aid. After once getting him down from the roof of the hotel. the man at first refused to get into a pohcecar. Sergeant Briggs talked with h1m a nd was able to get him tn voluntarily. Later, at the station, the man refused to go into the police de- partment o ffice. After 15 minuCes. Sergeant Briggs was able to persuade him to go insidl' to fill out the nt;cessary reports. Captam Purcell said officers did not feel it wise or necessary to handcuff or use force on the man. At one point while officers and Laguna Beach fireme n sur- rounded the hotel, the despon- dent man asked that a female psychiatrist be brought for him to talk to. A~WI ........ KING OF HAWAII? Dictator Amin Amin Claims Draft as King From Hawaii NAIROBI, Kenya (AP> - Ugandan President Idi Amin has received a leuer from 175 people m Hawaii urging him to becx>me their king and liberate the Pacific is land state from American rule, Radio Uganda :said today. Amin is "seriously studying'• the request, the radio said, and will soon contact several revolu- tionary leaders in tbe world on the matter. He also Intends to oonlact U.S. President-elect Jimmy Carter as soon as be takes office, s aid the radio, "because he is sure that Carter, being a popular and loved leader, especially by the blacks, will solve the problems of the Hawaiians." The radio report gave no in- dication of the identity or the 175 claimed to have signed the letter to Amin. #Mental Tests The special serv1ce.c; program was created to he)p minority stu· dents adjust academically and socially to campus life. That admimstrators furnish a full accounting of the funds spent. both from federal and un· 1vcrs1ty sour~es. · That a student advisory com~ mittee be formed to help operate the program until a director can be found. The g roup would stay together after that period as a permanent advisory group. "We thought the guys were putting on a good show," said Lorena Dams, who was a nurse at the Schofield Barracks Army Base north of Pearl Jl arbor "Then a couple of bombs fell into the wards, and we knew It wasn't run and games." Authorities were unable to find a woman psychiatrist but sum- moned Dr. William Rout and his wile. But it said the leU.er urged the- Ucandan leader to t>ecx>me king .. because he Is one ol the world's most popul a r leaders" and because he has ''almost suc· ceeded" in achieving indepen· dence for Scotland and Wales after sending telegrams to the British government. I Orde r e d for Rape S us p ect A man JCl'U'>l'd of altt-mpt1ni.: to se"<uallv assault two 13 vear old 1i:1rh ~\ h11 lllt•llllfll'd him JS thc•1r .1ttJCKl'r in JO In mt• pJrk h.1s bl·t·n nrrl1 rt•d l11 uncfrr1:0 J"'' rh1atr1c· tl•,tinc OrangL' ('nunt \ Sup•:nor Court .. fud~L· Jame·-. II \\Jbv.orth namc•d t v. o ilol'l11r' v. ho v. 111 c·' amtnl' r:mll YI dli.tm l\ollhopp. , J.1. nf \nahl·1 m . ;ind rl'pon tn thr l'OUrt Ofl lht'll fi nding' l>t'C' 20 \ • Kollhopµ r .i('l':O. rhar~l'S or kid n.1pm._: ,1 ,saull with intt>nl 111 nimm1t r.tp•· M'X µ<.·nl.·rsion and lc•v.d l'onrtu<·I Tht rh.11 J:t•s 't<·m from an JI l"jtt•ll lfH'llh·nl 111 1 IJI v.irri Parl. \U>o ·•,, v. hu1 1 v." \oung i:1rl' '"'''' cir •l<!l't·cl 111t11 .111 1·ndosun• ,o1 I.nit• f><•lf1I .inti Jilt ~···tll\ milt• to·d ~ \Ian Held in Thrf>al .. .. f'\YETTF.Vll.U :. "II C' li\PI Tom m v Joe f<orrt•ll , 26 d c;eori.:1.1 m .Ill wh11 ,tlle~!'dlv thrt>Jlened th1· hrr or l'rf'l'>1<knt t'lcrl J1mm\ <. Jrtl'r 1s he1ng ht>ld hrrr on a charge• nf k1dnaptnJ:? J ) man ;rnd ordnlni.l him to dn vr to I Cart<.'r s homl' tov.n. a11thorit1c·' ~· •f t1 :, J ,. But students say that the pro gram has been poorly managed and they are insisting that a permanent director be named 1mmed1ately to run the pro gram The program has been without J permanent d1rertor for almo~l one \'ear Amalia Mend<'t. a coun;ehng ps.} cholog1st. rf.'luc· tantly as:-umed the f.IOl>l or aclml! director this past yt·ar, but ~ht• resigned reC'ently Those Cows Do1f'L Moo SACRAMENTO (i\Pl Jlt>rds o r l'OW~ j.lraZIOj! plar1dl~ alongside l\\o 111 terstale h1ghwa~s ht•ri• caught motorists' t')<'S The cows c;omc with h1~ eye:., some with s1l<'t.' somt-with ma rs pamtl.'<1011 their sides and olhl•rs JUM plam silly looking wen· cardboard cutouts. S<'t up bv student voluntN'rs as part of a one -day art pro Jf'Cl Sunday c all ed Celebration of Wonder /\Jtogethf.'r. 4. 000 bnghtly painted cow cutouLs wc·rt• propped up along In terstates 80 and SAA Crash Fatal To IJuntington Drive r , 20 A 20 year-o ld llunt1ngton Beach woman was killed rarly Sunday when her car craiihed in- to a utility pol<' Poltec s<11d that Kam Lorraine Houchen s uffered massive head m1un es itnd rac(at lacl'ral1ons in thl' J a7 .1 Ill al'Cldent dl Brookhur~t Street nL·ar Banning 1\\rnuc• m Jlunl1ngton Beach Sht· was th1· cl aughter ol Mr .ind l\11<; Jc·rn D llouc·ne11 of !Y7A20lymp1<' Or1v1· Polit<' said sht· was dnvmg alom· Jt the time The power pole shl'ar<'d and fell on top or her ear from the force or thl' impact Officers said today they didn t know what caused Miss Houchen s car to go off the road and strike tne pole. She was treated at the scene by paramedic units and was pro nnuneed dl•ad shortly afterwards al lloag Memorial llospilal m NC'wport Beach. ;!lollfl Old St. Nick? t bad Healy of Mis!lion Viejo was a bit too ;voung to understand nboul Santa Claus and t :-his Yuletide involvement. Cba4'. 10 months. was one of the youngsters at the Mission Viejo Christmo~ Parade Sunday He is the son of Mr. and Mrs Cho.rles Healy. \. . The attack lasted less than two hours. but 2,335 men were killed and l ,143 were wounded Ken Murray of Honolulu stood beside the Pacific commander-in chief. Adm. Husband E. Kim mel. as the gloomy and silent ad maral watched lhe progress of the attack The battleship USS Arizona was sunk. taking more than 1.000 lives. Three other battleships went down , four more were damaged . two destroyers wcr<' demolis hed and 188 i\mcn can planes were destroyed "i\11 we cou Id do was stand around dumbly and watch," Murray recalled . "Suddenly he reached up and with both hands tore the four-star boards off his shoulders. "lie went mto his office and camf' back weann,:t his two star boards. lie knew that wa:. ht'> ""an song There w11l 1>e.ceremonies Tm•-. oay. slllrttng al dawn at the Na llonal Memorial Cemetery of th(• Pacific and ending wtth suniil't service~ at the gleaming wh1h' memorial that straddles the s ub merged hulk of th<' Anzona Even so, Sergeant Briggs was lhe only one who could really get through to the man, Purcell said. Police and firemen blocked off the two south-bo1JJ1d lanes or South Coast Highway near the hotel As other police stood on the roof, Purcell and Briggs stood on the ledges forming part of the tower facade just below the m an a crowd formed across the street on the sidewalk. Captain Purcell said the man had first gone to the bar or the hotel, had a drink and asked the bartender how high the hotel was. Finishing his drink, he as ked how to get to the roof. Then he disappeared. The tense incident was not without its lighter moments. however. At one point, as police and fire units. red lights flashing sur- rounded the hotel. the man asked for a beer Anxious officers dispatched a bus boy to the bar for the beer. but bartender refused to draw the brew for the under.age lad. "We had to send a uniformed pohcer down there lo get the beer ." Captatn Purcell said. I , 1 \ 11111 I liri-.1111 .... '-Plfll -.h1111. Ii nn1 \'OllC '' n-.t with l:t'k gold 'lwrm ... I )l hl·at..:h· paillt\.d C1111..,t mu~ t rec 1\r (.'t111cllc. ~t uc!Jcci with 11111111111 ~tncw-.. ~q:\O cndt. If Amin lakes over as lting, the radio said, the petitioners in the letter reel tneir case for indepen- dence Crom the United States will receive wide attention. The United States colonized Hawaii without any agreement being reached, the radio said. The United States closed its embassy ill the Ugandan capital or Kampala after Amin expelled the Marines who guarded it and; detained 112 Peace Corps volun· teers for two days lo make s ure they were not Israeli agents. The United States. however. has n ever formally broken diplomatic relations. T rain Derails CULPEPER. Va. (AP) - Three cars o f a Southe rn Railway passenger train de· railed today south of Culpeper and authorities said about 25 passengers received mostly mmor injuries. 73Jell <ll!alheJ <JtewfitJJ/ 35 f mh1on Island Newport Sf>och. Coht Q2660 (71d) 644 24Q4 ( A4 DAILY PILOT Mondar. December 6, 1976 Jost Loses Ground e ~ I r with Tom arphine Japan Votes for Middle of Road, ~ YULES PAST: Clearly, time does fiy and it hardly seems possible that It wu three years ago when the Energy Grinch stole Christmas here along this best of all possible coasts. You remember Christmas or 1973, don't you? That was the ,year everybody got in line to get gasoline so you could go get m line for Christmas shopping. That was the year the Energy Grinch told us to tum off those Yule lights to conserve energy. It was pretty bleak that Christmas. In fact, it hardly seemed like Christmas at all in '73 with few YuJe Jjghts appearing upon the waters of Newport llarbor, in the, hills of Laguna Beach or on the streets or our towns from Seal Beach to San Clemente. ONE OF THE CASUALTIES of the so-called Energy Crunch was the f'orty Miles uf Christmas Smiles, a contest wherein all the coastal <•ommunities competed to sec which one could be the best lighted for the Yuletide season. Perhaps it is somewhat ironic that the 'Forty M ilcs of Christmas Smiles actually got its mspira· tion during a nother period of dif· ficult national t ames -the Great Depression. TOKYO (AP) -Japan's Liber al De moc ratic party, shaken by Lockheed and other money scandals, took a sharp re· buke from Japanese voters Sun· day but apparently managed lo hang on to the govemment. The opposition Communists also lost ground badly. The Liberal Democrats tailed to gain a majority in the lower house of parlia:nent (or the first time in its 21-year history. But thei r op position remained divided, with voters turning to several small middle-of-the-road parties ins tead of the larger Socialist and Communist groups. THE COMM UNISl'S, who re· gistered sharp gains in the last election, dropped 22 seats this time, the only opposition party to lose ground. The results s hould please the United States, whic h has watched former friends and client slates in As ia swing either sharply left or sharply right. It also could mean closer Japanese r elations with China, strongly favored by the opposition. But it m::iv have spelled the end of Japanese Prime Minister Takeo Miki 's short reign. With 511 lower house seals at stake, the Liberal Democratic party (LDP) won only 2A9, seven short of a majority. But LOP headquarters announced today that eight persons elected as m· dependents had joined the party. giving the Liberal Democrats 257 TANAICA Af'WI........., MIKI seats to 254 for the Qppositioo and remaining independents. Some independents join the LDP after every election because nooaf· filialed members ol parliament have little power. HOWEVER, THE T(Yf'AL was stm in sharp contrast to the 51- seat majority the party won in the 1972 election, and was far short of the 271 seats needed to assure the Liberal Democrats of the chairmanships and control of all parliamentary committees. The extent or the conservative humiliation was also shown in the popular vote: or the 56.5 million votes cast, the LOP won 23.6 million or 41.7 percent, 5 per· cent less than it got in 1972. "I reel the Liberal Democratic party gave the impression to the people we lacked self-reflection over the Lockheed incident," Miki told a news conference. ASAHI, JAPAN'S biggest newspaper, called it a "landslide defeat" and predicted "major poet~JecUon turmoil." Miki was re.elected to the lower house, but the setback to his party will probably result In his replacement aa prime. }1linlater by bls former deputy and longtime rival, Takeo Fukuda. The Socialists won 1.23 seats, Komeito (Clean Government) SS, the Democralic Soclali3ts 29, the new Liberal Club 17, indepen- dents 21 and the Communists 17. "THE ELECTORATE bas said •no' t o both extremes in politics," said Mild. "But we mwst regard this election as a crisis for Japanese democracy, one which demands change· and reform." · He said be bod not yet decided wben to caJl a party conference to choose a new party president and prime minister. But be in· dicated be wants lo remain in control lo carry out reforms. The results appeared to spell the end of Miki's tenacious uphUI struggle to remain in power. Named prime minister by elders nf the oartv ln 1974 to restore its battered image after the re· signation under a cloud of Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka, Miki was done in by the Lockheed scandal. He vigorously pushed the in· vestigalion of charges that the U.S. aerospace company spent $10.2 million, including at least $2 million in bribes, to sell its planes in Japan. Beadg Cargo King Kong's bead is loaded on a cargo plane ror its trip Sunday night to Paris where the entire supermonkey will be assembled for a Champs-Elysees promotion next Sun- day for the French release of the film ''King Kong.'' MiSsionary Killers Huntfd in Bushland SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) -Troops and police combed lbe bushlands of western Rhodesia below the Zambian border today in search of a black gunman who ambushed aod killed three Roman Catholic missionaries. The sole survivor of the attack, a nun, told police the gunamn said be was a nationalist guerrilla. She said be demanded money, then opened fire wilb a machine gun. Back in those years. the economy of this coastal region depended heavily upon tourists a nd day visitors who, in the warm summer months, would visit and drop a few dollars into local cash registers. Cash now, how ever , departed abruptly when the chill winds began to blow across our sea and sand. Hughes: Half ·lunatic? THOSE KILLED WERE the 71-year·old retired bishop or Bulawayo, the Rt. Rev. Adolph Schmitt; Father Possenli Weg. garten and Sister Maria Francis. The survivor, Sisler Ermen- fried Knauer . said the gunman, dressed in camouflage uniform, stopped their car near Lupani, on the road bet ween Bulawayo and the Victoria Falls National Park. Indeed. Christmas-time didn't draw too heavily in the visitor de· partment along our coast. Shop· pers tended to gravitate to the big business complexes of Santa Ana or Los Angeles. There were no Fashion Is lands or South Coast Plazas or Huntinhtton Cen· ters along the coastline an those years. THUS IT WAS that a group of hardy coastal pioneers from city governments, Cha mbers of Com· merce and business got together and devised the Forty Miles to bring a little coastal lure into the Christmas scai;on. And over the years. the Smiles contest did lure v1s1tors who en· Joyed the lighting displays. The ene rgy flap of 1973 has ap· parently put a pe rmanent blackout on the Fort> Males of Christmas Smiles a." at no longer seems fashionable It's a sad de m1~e because an many quarters 1t · 1s still felt that the '73 call to black out Christmas lag htanJ{ was calculated more to ereate a na· t1onal attitude than to consent' 1•Jt>ctrical JUICE.' Let ·s race at . those Chnstmas lights aren't the ht'avacst riraw . you're going to get on our clt'c tncal energy sources What would actually be nice 1:. to see the coastline hghtcd up hut with some conservation prac llced an the hours 10 which the Yule decorot1onr. are displ ayed . Th(' energy C'ompanies arc 9<111 pump1n1,: publlclt) on con.serva- tion wh1l'h i!) fin•' Rut you s tall .it't plt>nt)I of JJUsh for 'iuch ap ph ;mn•i. a:oo turn cl r)'tc·~. r1111ker'I powt'r tool-; and the ltkl' \ ou are l<'ft wondl•nn~ how much of our pr1•r10U-'I national ener.-;y gets con!>umt'd when a ('1 t1un nod.! oH for a little shuteye under thc-hoardryer while the tele\ 1,ion pla>-5 on and on into the n1~ht. Thot wn!4tf'd JUI<'<' probablv would have power<-d '-' whole lot of h:ippy Chrai;t mas la~hLc; NEW YORK CAP) -A new book says Howard Hughes' last 15 yea.rs were a "sunless. joyless, half-lunatic life" during which the few aides who saw him may have been more loyal to others. Excerpts from the book by James Phelan. "Howard Hughes -The Hidden Years," appear in the current issue of Time Magazine. Similar descriptions of Hughes' last years were re· ported Sunday by the New York Times from its own sources. THE BOOK IS BASED on in. formation Phelan obtained from HuJthes' personal servants, Gordon Margulis and Melvin Stewart, who took care or his personal needs and carried him from place to place aft.er he was bedridden by a broken hip. Margulis, 45, who got elose to Hughes as a Las Vegas busboy delivering food to Hug.bes' pen· thouse, and Stewart, 49, who met Hughes as his barber and later became his nurse, are each to re- ceive a third of the royalties from the book, Time said. Time says that in the book, Stewart and Margulis concede that Hughes' botel·room prisons were set up of his own volition, but they ''imply that the aides and doctors made no attempts to persuade him to change a way of life in which he was literally wasting to death." TIIE TIMES' SOURCES were quoted as saying that in the last 10 years of his We, Hughes spent almost every minute in a bath.robe in hotel rooms, behind Jury to Grapple With Death's Cause RIVERHEAD, N.Y (AP! -A grand jury mustdecidewbethertois· sue a murder indictment against a man charged first with assault then with homicide after the woman he allegedly attacked wa~ derlarcd dead while still attached to a respirator. I lenry F. 0 ·Brien, Suffolk County district attorney, said he expects the case to center on the cause of death ...!--the many blows to the woman's head or lhe disconnec· lion of the respirator. "IT'S A VERY serious pro· blem." s aid county medical el(· aminer Dr. Sidney Wember~. .. The district attorney, with the medical examiner's evidence. will try to prove lhat the person dted of the blow. "I am C'onvinced she dJed from the blows to her head But I am also sure the def ensc will contend she was not a murder v1ct1m since machines were keepin~ S<'lme of her other orJtans going .. Karen Pomroy, 17,o(fi,hp. was lo bC' huned today, <it the s<im<' time a Suffolk County ~rand Jury hert' w:i5 scht•<lulNJ to act on a second-degree murder charge aulnst Walter Burton Carey Ill, accused of beating·her with an iron railroad spike last Monday. On Wednesd ay, shewas placed on a respirator. Her parents agr eed to make her organs available for transplants if she died. ADDITIONAL TESl'S showed she had no brain waves, indica· hons of m ental activity. When her death certificate was signed Thursday, she was still bei n g s u s tained o n t h e respirator The machine was ms· connected a s hort time later. after her organs were removed for transplant More Midwest Snow? "'"'"'• Albv<l•l"r a .... ""'"""'<!" 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In lhe "'°""'"'"' -,.,,_ 1•'-V•ll•v. lo ,..., lO 1n ""'wlncl Df"4Kle0 .,.., OI San IH•-dlno Yalloy, 10 ,...., «I In IM Mof.,., n I• •)II\ ,,.. ,_, O.t<rrl~. alld II•.,_ al CleatM\ -In Ill« ctit\ltl M<I In lt<mfOltlt ••llO•. co .. tal •~a•hft-• ~¥ Tut\Mv wllll lliOI>\ Ill 11• ,.,., l lOlll .. .,,..,,. w ind• n•aM •I'd mwnlno lloun H IQM T .....,_..,. I~ IM 1'1110 IO\, CG41•1•1 ltml>'t••lurn will ·~ Ht•Hll •S •"0 H Inland l•m· !'MAlll••• will rena<> l>el•et" '9 .,.4 ,. lN "'•tor l•l'lll>'tralull wlllbe ... Su~ ttfoon, Tld~• MONDAY ~Ol'ldlOW J Up m, Ol '-COlldlllQll •"Pm U TUUDAY ,,,.. -' ,, • '"' , f nnl lllQll I ; fl o l'l't. • 0 ~l°'f J U•m. OS , ~"'"' 10.t••·"'· ,. ..,,,It'\ •• ,. "'" "". "'"" "'-1 rl-Jl .. 0.1'\., Wt\., II a.I'll. windows covered to shut out light and prying eyes. The former servjltlls describe Hughes as booked on drugs, at first tranquilir.ers and later a clear fluid be injected him.self by hypodermic, Time said. And the magazine said the two verify re· ports that be neglected his ap- perance until his beard bung to his waist, his hair halfway down his back and bis fingernails two inches long. He was so obsessed with con· lamination from germs, Time says, that secretaries who typed memos that eventually would go to Hughes had to wear white gloves. When he was being lifted by an attendant, he would put a tissue on the palm or the hand that grasped the other person, calling it "insulation," the magazine said. STEWART RECAILS that he was first called to cut Hughes' hair in 1961 and, after a wait of several hours, was ushered into Hughes' presence. He said he ex· p eel ed an appropriate billionaire's hideaway "with Re mbrandt paintings on the walls and exquisite furniture." Instead, Time quoted him as saying, he found a skinny, naked man sitting on an unmade bed. "His hair hung about a foot down his back. His beard was straggly and down to his chest." When Stewart started to put his barber tools on a chair, the magazine says, Hughes s houted a protest and ordered an aide to "get some insulation for our friend to put his equipment on." Stewart says he later received $1,000 for the haircut. Got a problem? "We told him we had no money with us, that we were mis- sionaries just out for the after· noon," she sajd. "THE TERRORIST replied that as we had no money he would have to s hoot us. Ile began gunning us down, starting with the bishop.'' Si s t e r Erm enfricd was wounded in the leg but said she escaped by rolling under the car and reignmg death. A few hours before the killi,ngs, Rhodesia's five Catholic bishops issued a statement condemning the "unspeakable brutalities and murders" being committed in the name o f .. J ustifiable warfare." Then write to Pat Dunn -Is an over.zealous billing computer bugging you? -Have you waited too long for a mail order item you paid for months ago? -Are you getting the runaround at city ball? For help you can count on, tum to .Pat Dunn. Pat wlll cut red tape, getting the answers and the action you .need to solve your problems with government agencies and businesses. · Mall your questions to Pat Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coast Dally Pilot, P. O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Be sure to include your telephone number. Even If you don't have a problem, the At Your Service col- umn Is Interesting reading, dally except Saturdays DAILY PILOT 642-4321 , • ' I \ Annno Cache Fo11nd· LANCASTER (AP)-County . arson experts were to be dis patched today to examine boxes labeled "napalm" and "hand .arenades" found in the desert 25 miles northwest or here. Sherlrf's deputies sealed orr lhe ea Sunday afternoon after two ers discovered a box of .30 aliber machine gun ammurulaon ear the California Aqueduct Investigators said it appeared e boxes had been buried but ex posed by wind and rain. The area is sparsely populated. Dftldt ca .... f! T old ARCADIA CA Pl -Stranl-(ula· lion was the cause of death of a 26-year-old pregnant woman who apparently h ad surprised a -burglar in her home. Authorities said SWlday that Renee Fane, whose body wJS £ ___ s_1_a_1e ____ J .Jound wrapped in a blanket un· der a bush near the Pasadena .Rose Bowl Saturday , was choked '"'to death with an electrical cord • which was still tied around her n neck when a hiker came upon the body. In custody was Emery Sowell:. Riddle, 24, a Pasadena han dyman who has been booked for investigation of murder and kid napang. T ax Br~ak Mulle d SACRAM ENTO CAP> -A San Francisco state senator said he would introduC'e a const1tut1onal amendment today designed to lower taxes on single-family, ·owner -occupied homcs. To Tie the K11ot 4PW1ro-10 Li ndsay Wagner , who portr;.iys lhl' rol1• of Jamie Som- mers in the television sc·rics ... Thl' B1rn11c: Womun." and a<'tor Michac·I Brandon ~11 <' :-.hov. n to~t'lhl'r annuunnng tht:ir t·ngagPrnenl !11 hl rnarril·d lat<·r this month in Los Ang des. Transient~ Blamed Fo r SF Crime Rise SAN FRANCI SCO I AP> !>own and-outers\\ ho fhlC'k to SJn Fran· <·1sco looking for · somcth111 g lmghter'' ma} account for the city's rise in random. vrolent cnme, say:. Mayor Georgt' MosconP In an interview an The San Franc:isco Ex.trnincr Sunday, MosC'onc and Quentin Kopp prcsuknt or ltll· Bo<tn.l of !-.upcrv1~ors. agrl'l'<i thal mcrea~ang unemployment Jbo 1s a factor. <·onC't rns J'•ined lhl·m hen• and Sen. John Foran, <D·San Fran· cisco> said has propo.s.tl would "set a lair balance between laXl'" on homes and all other propert)- by recognizing that a person ' owns a home as a necessarv means of shelter and Lhcrl"fort· ·.should be taxed at a lowc·r rol111 • than commercial property ·· f''RI crime ... 1ut1st1cs shnw thal lhl'y have reall.v walked into murder un the rise an San }o r.111 .m ,., i•n l!rt'al<·r prnhlt•m 1'1S<'O "h1le 1t 1 .... cl<.>1·n•Js1n~ 111 i\nd ~0. Pl'Oplt· <ir•' d1,11.gtnjl in other c1t1cs 1)f s1m1!ar i.1. 1· lo dru~'s .mil do.l"IJ'. the kan1b of Moscone said there have hN·n :n things th<1t dru~ p1•opk do and apparently mot1\de:.::. k1lllni:s people are m.il.mg cnmc a way Oj ai Fir e Baited '. this year. or hfc .... "I Tlll~K Vl-:RV dC'arly ll1<1I MOS('ONt~ NOTED that more I l l , I I t J OJAI (AP) -Fire fighters have controlled a fire that buml'cl 2:50 acres of dense chaparral an J pnme watershed area northwe'L oCOJai. More than 100 firemen from ./J;>s Ange les and Ventura coun ties and the U S. Forest Serv1C'1· hacked a s1x-mtle·lon(( fire lan1· out of the brushland ~unday to slop the blaze from sprcadinl! the city as the reccptade for rwu rramcs Ul't! bt in~ 1 eportcd since pie from all O\ er the cuuntr y, a year ago when the Police from rural communillv .. and Department stopped 1t.c; practice otht•r r1t1Ps. that ha\l' found of running a warrant check on nothing but dc!>p.Hr a11<1 per!ions "how1tnessedor report· somehow or otht'r thmk th1-r1• ed crimes might be som<'thing hnghtcr for "We've got a state. an my op1- t hc m in San FrJnc1:.l·11 nion. of fear and anxiety among Mosrone said. pcQple an San Fr.inrasco that as Thc•n they find nut lhJt ~o rnam unparalleled an my cx1>er1ence." othPr pt'<>_!?k who hJ':.: the .. Jnll' _K_·o_pp_s_a· ,_d. STON EWA PLA N E glazed with water proof, lead free glaze, one u1 o kind pots J/A\IHl ·t/Jl~·o\ <JI H l '<rtT/·;U.'i 11111'/'I SA VE~~ 60 % HEAVY DUTY MACRAME $ 00 4 FEET LONG & $9.00 VALUE ON SALE FOR OTHER SIZES FROM 99• • JUTE 80' LB. WE ALSO CARRY DO-IT YOURSELF MACRAME SUPPLIES BEADS ON SALE LARGE lW' REG rs, ge WOODEN BEADS .... NOW LARGE CERAMIC REG 60c 35c BEADS ........... NOW Monday Decemb"r 6 1976 Sa n D ie o S rfaools Students Split On Smoking Bit SAN DIEGO (AP> -A popular song of 1973 advised agamst lighting a cigarette in the boys' room because "smokin' ain't at. lowed in school." Not so in some suburban San Diego high schools, where students <'llll puU away in designated areas. "I THJNK PARENTS were against 1l at first because 1t was :.o foreign to their experience," said Ward T. Donley, assistant superintendent of the Sweet Water Union High School Dastr:ict, whach operates eight tugh schools But students who want to s moke will !and a place to do 1t even ar there 1s no sm okrng area. some students poant out. "I FEEi. THATwilhoul a smoking area we would still have pro- blems of smoking in rest rooms," said Jim Clowers, 17. a Chula Vts· la High School senior who helped get the rule initiated. "If we have parents' permission to smoke, as I have, we s hould be allowed to do so.~· But Brad Bickel, 17, and also a senior at Chula Vista, disagrees· "The dec1s1on allowmg smoking on campus in m y mand is a harmful one. I feel 1l wall promote mor e and more or the already widespread use of tobacco among younger people.·· DONLEY AND OTHER school officials insist the policy. which the school board officially adopted an the fall after a spring trial, b~ helped solve problems. "lt 's cleaned out the rest rooms and decreased the number of suspensions," Donley said. "Non-smokers wanted it as much as smokers because the smoke and the congestion in the rest rooms were so heavy." RHONDA MILLS, 17, also a senior. said she is opposed for two reasons· .. First, as everybody knows. s moking is harmful to health and contributes to cancer. Secondly. smoking not only affects one's ::.elf. but those around tum who don't smoke " Donley said her comment on the health question hits the nail on the head "It 1s a health issue. really," he said "It got the smoke outdoors and made rest rooms available to those who needed them ... THE POLICY AlLOWS smokmg before and after classes, dur· mg a morn in~ break and al lunch lime in certain outside areas Fire regulations prohibit smoking an any building used by slu denL'>. The district has about 11 .700 high school pupils and Donley estimates 3,000 lo 3,500 smoke on campus . "THERE'S NOTIDNG in the policy about having to have parents' permission or bemg a senior or over 18 or anything like that." he said. Dc:.pale controversy, the concept seems to be spreading. FRANK THORNTON, the Patnck llenry principal, backs the smoking-allowed idea. "ll as too expensive lo enforce the no-smoking rule 1n I av aton es ... he said "To do so would require stal.Jonmg a special adult m onitor in each wash room.·· Police Hzmt Freeway Killer LOS ANGELES CAP> -Police are seeking the man who forced a car off a freeway and shot the driver to death Witnesses told police that a pickup truc k forced a white Cadillac off the Golden State Freeway about 9 a.m. Sunday. then walked up to lhe driver·s window of the Cadillac and fired three s hots. Killed was the driver. Richa rd Vincent Catuto, 41, of Gardena. DAIL y PILOT AG' Youth Gang Kil/,s Girl ROSEMEAD <AP) rollce say a gang or youths has robbed a d oughnut store and killed a lS-yea.r. old girl who worked al lb~ store. Four youlhs entered lhe :.hop Sunday night and one pulled a gun, police swd. Margaret Amy Bert. lhe attendant. was taken in the back or the store and shot . to death . T he r obbers escaped with an unknown amount of money Margaret's 17-year-old sister, Valerie, was In the front of the store at the tame of the shooting. 'Outer Space ' Trip R e late d By Frenchman SAN FRANCISCO lAP) - Frenchman Claud o Vorilhon wrote in a book that at happened about the little green men and the ladies in the bathtub and all -and 150 persons paid SJ a head to hear him say it. In great detail. Vorilhon told his hotel audie nce over the weekend tbat has adventure started October 7 when he found himself the guest of small m en with green skin and a nying saucer. SO, VORILHON SAID through a translator. there he was on lhe planet or Elohimss. And there wt're these robots. as Vorilhon said in his book. ··Beings from Outer Space Took Me to Their PlanC't. .. The Frenchman went on to re• late how the Elohimssian robots earned him to a machine where a nice looking girl appeared an a lighted cube. One of the robots asked him if the lady was okay. VORILHON SAID he thought the lady was fine. and the cube commenced cranking out five more or the same. making six in all. whom he took to tus pad and they all leaped into a bathtub. Charming, said Vorilllon. Eddie De Trinidad, the hotel's banquet manager, said he washed he could have given Vorilhon a cut rate on lhe g>O rental for the ha LI but he couldn't. De Trinidad said he believed in UFOs. TO SOMEONE SPECIAL- SOMEfHING SPECIAL SALE When you give someone a Singer sewing machine, you, re giving something really special. And right now, giving one is easier. With special low prices at every Singer Company store. ~~~~ 12 a~~~~ is1000FF i kl(,. l'klll ON AN ELECTRONIC ~ MACHINE. ~~ The Ath1•nJ • :ooo m3chinc is a mimk ~ Jt 311}' I'll.;. Uut now 1Cs ~I 00 kss. It ~ ~ --·~ 1T~ ~ ~ ~ ~ t" I f,;,,(\ I J> dll cl(llru111~ b1,in tlidt let\ }OU Jo Jlmnst any s11tch you can 1mJ~1nc at the touch of d but1on. We bchcvc it\ --- •f1.~M!~ ...., ...... ,....u...., NOW s1999S . . 1 - RlRA FREE ARM . j f ... I ....,. - MACHI NE. \ •• $65 OFF Rffi. PRICE. r. • • • • • ~ 1,.· Our Stylist • m3chlnc has a free arm \ for s;;_·ing harJ.10-rcach plAces. flexible strctch·slltchfs for I.ml.and stretch fabric stw1ng. a bu1h·in buuonholer. Carrying case or c:J1blne1 extra. ij NOWSJ2990 ' GET nus SPECIAL DELUXE CANISTER POWERHEAD VACUUM. LOWEST PRICE EVER. SAVE $30. Twn·m·onc c:an1srer for noors 31111 wall\ Pow<'rhcad fnr carrcts JrHI ruy,, W1 !11 pUc select or ninlrol lur ~II types of "irpcl\ \'_i A6 =DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE A Critical Decision ~. The Orange County Grand Jury is right in urg· · ing county supel'VlSors to extend a ban on residential building to the full area a consultant has said is • seriously impacted by jet noise from El Toro Marine ~.Corps Air Station. •" The board is expected to wind up months of de· r bate on the residential building ban Tuesday amid heavy pressure from developers who want to build and sell houses in the area. So far the building ban has been strongly sup· ported by Supervisors. Tom Riley, who represents the atf ected area, and Ralph Clark. F avoring build· ,• ing in the impacted area have been the two , supervisors m ost remote from the area, Ralph ,. . Diedrich and Lawrence Schmidt. Presumably fated to cast the deciding vote is _ newly elected First District Supervisor Phillip An· I,. lhony. Anthony is in a hot spot because he had strong financial support in his campaign from builders and de velopers, and also has had the sup· port.of Diedrich. , On the basis of the expert testimony on noise im· ; pact, the board clearly should ban residential building • in the full noise impacted zone. Later on, it air traffic or other circumstances permit, s upervisor s can grant ex- ceplinns to their policy or revise it. . Once those houses are built and families are sur-1 fering from afrcraftnoise, 1t will be too late. ~. ~ SacrainentoFreshIDen -=. Among the 18 freshmen Assemblymen on hand ~tn Sacramento to help get th~ 1977-78 session of the state Legislature under way this week are two newcomers from the Orange Co ast. Both men bring youthful energy and useful qualifications to their new jobs. Mangers has had considerable personal involvement with the prob- lems of education at the local level. Cordova's ex- perience is in local law e"'°rcement and the ad- ministration of justice. · As new faces from districts long represented by veteran incumbents, they will be watched with special interest in their districts and likely in Sacramento. · _ . We wish Dennis Mangers and Ron Cordova well in what promises to be a dlCficult and exciting session. Paramedic l,imits Orange County supervisors have adopted a policy on paramedic training costs that could place narrow limits on just who is eligible to perform the emergency medical care. The board agreed to·pick up the $2,613 training cost it now pays for both· city and county paramedics -but only for those who serve double duty as firemen. While all county paramedics except those employed by the city of Anaheim also.arc firemen at present, the board policy could restrict future job op· port.unities for nurses and others qualined There is an advantage in having a paramedic work as a fireman when he isn't involved in medical aid but surely proposals could be drafted for a paramedic to perform other city or county tasks as well. Ron Cordova, 30, representing the 74th Assembly ·'District and Dennis Mangers. 35, from the neighbor· ing 73rd District, are both Democrats taking over seats long held by Republicans. But both insist they'll put the wclfarcoflheirdistricts ahead of party politics. As county population grows, the need f qr paramedics will increase. Firemen are not the only group capable of performing emergency medical functions and supervisors should be flexible. careful - ly studying any proposaJs that would open the field to other groups . 'This concern over South Korea is fraught with peril, gentlemen. If we pull our troops out over there, they may pull their bribery team out nf Wash ington!' ' l I l I . . Nobel Win Recalls A. Lesson (SYDNEY HARRIS J When J woke up one morning and heard the news. 1t seemed as fantastic as ••• landing on Mars. But we have touched down on Mars , and last month my boyhood chum, Saul Bellow, did something we would have re· garded as equally improbable. more than 40 years a~o. when· we sat around our dining-room table and planned the books "we were going to write He still remembers the lilies or those I was going to wnle. until l learned that l had absolute- ly no girt for imaginative literature. Rul he ear- ried o n the promise. and, as you know, 1s the newest recipient or the N obe l Prize for l1tcraturi• How Car away and dream-Uke those days seem. when we were reading Tb o m <lS Mann a nd Jomes Joyce and Aldous Huxley, and even gushing over Ben He.-hl's one good novel. '"Enc Dorn.·· which spoke to us .:.o personally . Al the tamc-, Mly on<· American writer hild ever won the Nobel Sinclair l..ewi!4, wh o m we-regarderl il S a lightweight. which he was. IN THOSE DAYS, det:p m the Depression. we saw no pla~. heard httle music. treas~red our few thumb worn "Mode rn Library" softback books, and walked incessantly. across the park and back, all the while lalk mg about the abysmaJ state or Dear Gloomy Gus The Marines are l~g for a few good men. Bnng your own sheets . · C.H.L. (;tOOm'f Gus commtl'th tttt \ubtn!U•d by fl'ieltr\ Jnd do "o' ntc•u11rl1y reflect tM l/IPW\ or IP'\1' ~twu>aper Send '*°"' pel ptt•~ •o G•oonw Gus. O••IJ P•lot.. writing in this still barbarous country or ours. For my own part-since thjs is the most slricUy personaJ of all columns I hav~ ever written 1 am enormously grateful that I found out, at an early age, that whatever small talent I have does not he in any kind or im- ilginatrve literature. Growing up with Bellow quickly convinced me or that ; he was so much bet· ter m creating a fictional un- iverse. Thus, I was spared the agonies and contortions or so many writers. who attempt novels and poems and plays. without the real creative spark that makes them come alive. Who nee<ts :mother second· or third-rate novelist around? Far better to do what you do best. however minor that may be, than try to become what God never equipped you for. 'l1IIS IS a lesson 1 have carried throughout Me. and it has spared me many pangs or envy and spasms of ambition. I learned early to be grateful for the little gifta I have been granted, to u.'\e them to the fullest. and live hap- pily within the limitallons. But I am delighted that one of LL'\ was able to transmute those adolescent fancies into a supreme reality. There 1s no reflected glory. but a renecled. pleasure -that these two steeds d.id actually come out or the same stable. even though one of them lS Pegasus and lhe other Dobbin. Selalesinger Coadd BalanC'!e SeC'!uritg Tea• Will Carter Seek Hardliner? WASHJNCTON -The unex- pected but increasingly real possibility that hard -linin g James Schlesinger may become Jimmy Carter's Secretary of Defense poses the only threat to total control in the new ad- ministration by Carter's soft· lining national security transi- tion stair. Those transition staffers, an- nounced and unannounced, are d r a w n straight from the foreign p 0 I I c y n e twork o f young pro- ressiona l s who s huHle ceaselessly between the administra- tion, Capitol Hill. the academic world and high-priced Washington law of- fices. President-elect Carter's representatives during this inter- regnum, they are overwhelming- ly devout believers in arms con· trols, dctenle and reduced de- fense spending. Dr. Schlesinger, fired from the Pentagon by President Ford ror excessively zealous advocacy or a strong national defense, is ob· viously not part of the network. Rather. his nominalion to his old Pentagon post-much more Like· ly to day than anybody dreamed possible a month ago -would seriously menace the network's domination or the Carter ad- ministration. ACCORDINGLY, lhe continu- ing mystery or how much of An· napolis and rural Georgia re- mains in the President-elect will be partially solved in his selec- tion of a Secretary or Defense. Thal choice will set the tone for national security policy difficult for Carter to change in the foreseeable future. Position~ in what Carter in- siders call the national security ( EVANS-NOVAK ) "cluster" -top jobs at State. Defense and the National Securi· ty Council-are likely to be filled first. Others prominent in this clus ter are positioned to Schles- inger's Jeft and are all veterans of the Kennedy-Johnson ad- ministration -inrluding Cyrus Vance, Dr. Harold Brown. Paul Warnke and Prof. Zbi(lniew Brzezinski. The impression made Q1l Carter by Schlesinger during a two-hour briefing before the second presidential debate has been lasting. Consequently, a Carter insider who two weeks ago TU.Jed out Schlesinger as un- acceptable to liberals now con· s iders him the front-runner. But Carter's men are worried by such an appointment on two counts : fir s t , that th e Democrat.le party's left wing would r evolt : second. that Schlesinger would prove less moderate than he now sounds in talking to Carter agents. T H E FOR E I GN polic y network would prefer anybody but Schlesinger. Only he has the knowledge and determinaliqn to c lean out the experien ced Washington hands who dominate the transition machinery. Typical is Anthony Lake. a former foreign service officer i.n charge of State Department transition. Lake, who served un- der Dr. Henry Kissinger at the National Security Council CNSC> before resigning because of the Cambodia bombing, is a plainllff in the Kissinger wire lap case. So. even some Carter aides con- sider Lake a s trange choice as the President-elect's emissary to the man he is suing. More significant than the in- delicacy of Lake's relallons with Kissinger are his 11ofl-boiled views on foreign policy -views reflected in two of his transition assistant•: Dan Spiegel and Paula St.em, foreign policy aides to Sen. Hubert Humphrey and Sen. Gaylord Nelson. respective- ly. Also on Carter's State Depart ment team is ex-foreign service officer Richard Moose, a Senate Foreign Relations Committee staffer whose investigations in Vietnam and Laos made him a folk hero to tbe anti-war move· • ment. WALTER SLOCOMBE. a Washington lawyer who served on Kissinger's NSC st.arr and is an ardent arms control advocate. 1s on Carter's Pe ntagon transi- tion team. Slocombe is an at- torney for another NSC alumni, Morton Halperin, in his wire tap • lawsuit against Kissinger. While filling no formal slot, Halperin is in close contact with Lake . Slocombe and his other friends in the transition operation. Most ominous to hard-liners is the assignment of Ba rry Blechman. defense expert at the Brookings Institution, as transl· tion representative•to the Office or Management and Budget COMB> in charge or Pentagon spending. Blechman has been a principal architect or the Brook- ings plan for a reduced defense budget. SOME OF the Carter transition .staffers at the Pent•gon - ootabJy Phil Odeea, a former Defense Department systems analyst, and R. James Woolsey, former Armed Services• Com· mittee· staffer --are non· ideological technicians. But nowhere on the Carter transition staff is there a bona fide bard- Jine skeptic or detente. Since Jimmy Carter enters the White House with little expertise on vital national security ques- tions, be will have lo rely heavily on staff advice. That may ex- plain why this ex-naval career of· fi cer is seriously considering a former Republican Secretary 0£ Defense as a badly needed coun· terweight to dominaUon by the foreign policy network. Release of Tapes To Take Five Years WASIDNGTON -The public has the mistaken impression that Jimmy Carter, once he's in- stalled in the White House, will be able to release Richard Nix- • on's tapes and records. They con- tain many dark secrets that still hang over the Nixon years. But our sources say it will take at l e a s t f ive Once the courts clear the way, GSA is drafting regulations that would permit the ttlease of almost everything contained in the tapes and papers. The Archives plans to assign JOO workers to do the cataloguing. Butt.his exhaustive chore would take until about 1981. Senate Turnover Significant year s, even with favora- ble court rul· ings. lo break loose the con- 1 rov e r s i a I tapes and let- ter s. Jimmy Carter wi ll have little, if anything , t o say about it. Some 900 rolls or tapes, con- taining the conversations of Nix- Eventually, the Nixon papers and tapes will be open to the public, the courts willing, ln 11 different cities. The only material that would be withheld would be Nixon 's pcrsorrnl papers. Ruch as letters to his wife; military secrets; informs· lion that might interfere with a fair trial; documents that violate the Privacy Act, and perhaps a few other categories. Gathering to orflant7.c for ., new two year legislative session, California's state senators face M unusually tumultuous opening this week. This because of the inordinate turnover in membership which stripped thnt house or a substantial segment o~ jts leader ship. It started last spring when Senator George Moscone left to bec o m e Mayor of San Francisco. T h e n Senator s Clar e Ber- ryhill, Donald Grunsky. Joseph Ken. nick, Robert Steven s. Howard Way and James Whetmorc nnoouncbd their retirements. Next Senator Anthony Bcilenson declared (or Congreu and !inolJy three senators. Randolph Cotllcr, James We<lworll\ ond Jack Schnde railed to win tbelr te· election bids. Those eventll have ltn tb Senate wilh,, thffe ncandtA Of\ fbe Rules Commh.t and five in ( EARL WATERS ) chairmanships or important standing committees. This has opened the door to a loto£inlight· mg among nol only the surviving members but involves the newly elected on~. IN FOaMER days s uch ;a change in membership, which although it didn't often happen in so large numbers, would have created hardly a problem at all. For until recent years the selec- tion process for cornmltlce chairmanships, and membership too, was almost totally based up- on seniority. A retiring chairman wa s repla ced a l most automatically by the next rank· ing member and usually without regard to party affiliation. Senjorlty selection was 3 food ay11tem for it avoided lhe bitter- n~as whlcb develops amo111 tho memben u they en1a1e ln tree for allJ to secure d lred com· mlttee ~salgnmenla. It also uaually hsu\led in the most knowledgeabl e. by reason or their legislative service, being given the r esponsibility for leadership. THE HM court ordered reap- portionment, stemming from the one-man, one-vote decision, re-· suited ln the first inroads against senJority. The new Senate was all but overwhelmed by former A!i· semblymen who had won seats io the upper house. Having already gained legislative experience they were unwilling to start over earning seniority. A compromise was made whereby credit was given for their Assembly aervice. Today, however, scant attention is given lo seniority. Absent that. Republicans now being in the minority. are also given short shrift in ~he choosing or commit- tee chalrtnen. The first order or bualneSR wtll be to select a Prtsident Pro Tem, something which the Democrats with 26 votes out o( the 40. wlll do by themselve$. The office bas been l'lcJd for the pm the yeara by James M11lll or Sao Dte•o· till reelection will depend upon '1ll abUlty to uUsfY a sum. clent number or members in lheir ambitions for key po.'its. on and his aides inside the Oval That will be a dirricult task Office. remain under court seal. since the assignments are made Another 36 million to 42 million by the Rules Committee com-pieces of paper are also locked up posed of four other memberti in awaiting court action. addition to the President Pro • Congress has 1tlready enacted Tem. These are selected in party special legislation, givJng the caucus, two by the Democrats and lwo by the Republicans. government control of the Nixon There will be three vacancies on material. But the former presl-. the committee by reason of re-dent has successfully tied up t i r e m en t 8 • t w 0 b e i n g their release in the courts. Republicans. Mills' job will be to The most sensitive papers and make certain the Democrats all the tapes. meanwhilE', are elect someone supportive of him stored in the Executive Office and that, tr they retain holdover Building adjoining the White Senator Nick Petris on the com· House. The bulk of the material mittee, he too wlll back M1115• is ' kept under guard in the choices for the other committee~. General Services Administra- tion's warehouse in SulUand, Md. TllATMAV depend upon MiUs' abilily t o d e live r the .chairmanship of the Senate Finance Committee to Petrhs. Al 'the moment S<inlltor Al Alqulsl is -clalmine that post ll5 In the bag for hlmsclr. CompUc11tJrt1 the whole pro- blem is the duirc of some mem· ben to flay mu1lcal chllrs, lrad- lnf of what they have for some\hlnt els • Tb whole lhltll PJ!Omlaet a Jolly party when the ltTl-78 roll ls talltd. mE SUPRE ME CoUrt., If it airetl wilh a lower court rullng, could uphold Coniress U\ o few weeks. Or the Supreme Court 1 may ask for orol &fl\llDents a nd hold orr a ruling until next year. Even tr the ·Supreme Court rules against Nix.on. he can file a ·seconcf suit on constttutionel grounds ond Jtart ~ whole pro- cess over. This would extend the aecrec:y at least until the Call ~ .1978. Rut nothln2 is likely to be available durine JlmmyCarter'a flrt1t term. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Ho/lffl /Ii Wttd. Pllbfi,lln Thoma• lfrrulf, 1-~dUOf' norl>oro Krt1b1eh, Ed11onol Pogr t;dttor The editorial paic of lhc OoQy 1•11ot sf'C'k !I lo 1nforin :ind !<limul11tc readers by pr~entl6'f on tM• pa~e dlvtrll<' t'omm,•ntaf)' on toplrs of lnttrtst by syndictt· ('d ~IUIJ'nist. and <'ertoontsts. 'I provldln• • fl)rum ror rcndep' vlewg oad by p,_11cnhng thlt ncW•P3l><:t':1 opl11\ons and idt,lt• on current topic:.\ The t'dilorfaJ opinion~ of thr D1lryP11ot a_PVE!fir ooly In tht cdltorbl cotLl.nln ni t~c top or th" pd11.-. Opinions •· prC'11~r'<I h\ t hl' l'Olu mfft•tll nDd Cllr\Ooll1l1.~ ;1ntl l('t{1•r ~rllt'rs of 1h~1>-1n' n and no cndor!em<'llt lh<'lr vie~ t b)' tile Oaiq P1 ~hould !)(' n ~d • • Monday. Dec. 6,-une ' I Beach for Skin Buffs? L l I Secluded Strand Eyed 1 As Suit Optional Zone SAN DIEGO (AP) -A leader or those who like to surf only In what nature gave them says he's "cautiously elaled" lbat Ca!lfomia soon could have the naUon 's first state-operated nude beach. Jim Whitehead, regional superintendent of state parks. has asked Herbert Rhodes, director of the State Parks Department. to designate a mile· long stretch of beach as a "swimsuit optional" area. 1 RRoDES, CONTACTED IN SACRAMENTO,' =· said he would study the memo and consult with ~~illijiii,i.:"1"l'!" others in the department before approving or re- jecting the proposal Robert "Jake" Jacobs. chairman of the San Dtego County Nude Beaches Committee, said pro· ponenls of nude bathing "have been discussing the exact possibility of opening th1s beech area with Rhodes. "There is reason to make this beach a 'swimsuit optional' area." J acobs continued. "Popularity dictates it should be done. In the sum- mer, there are 200,000 nude bathers a month using state property anyway. They're already being pro- vided with state lifeguards." RHODES CAN RULE under the authority given by the slate Parks and Recreation Com· mission Lo decide swimsuit questions. Jacobs said he was only cautiously elated .o\l'Wln-lo because he feels designation or a state nude beach might prompt the city of San Diego to attempt closure or the country's only city.operated nudist beach -famed Black's Beach. A city report last month labeled Black's as the most dangerous of the city beaches. SAN DIEGO SHORELINE NUDE PARK SITE? \•.· ·~· 1'11 ... "It's unsafe because it hasn't been developed," said Jacobs. CITY FIGURES SHOW MORE THAN 113,000 nude bathers used Black's Beach an July, even though they had to cbmb down steep chffs to get to it. Black's Beach adjoins the state beachfront Whitehead has in mind for the state nude beach and J acobs said the access problems at Black's would be solved. llalhtrs would no longer have to climb down the ch ffs lo the 000-foot stretch or Silnd San Diego City Manager flugh McKinley backs the Whitehead proposal HE REQUESTED THE STATE earlier in the year to approve nudity on the part of the state beach next to Black's, but was told In a letter from Rhodes that past decisions had been "to rule against this type or special use " Jacobs said regardless of Rhodes decision, has group will keep lobbying for more swimsuit op tional beaches and will conduct demonstrations such as those or the past summer in which persons f, showed up on regular beaches for what were called ,.,1• "Barely Legal Swimsuit Contests.·· Participants wore very little. •1th- :,:: Parks Wrangle /<l ~.Delays Campers ~ •> t Cl•" SACRAMENTO !AP> It may be harder to 11 • reserve a spot at Cahfom1a's 6,000 state park sates after Jan l because of a legal battle 1nvolv1ng 111' companies that make the reservations. state of '"1 ficiaJs say 1 1 T1cketron. wh1rh makes the computerized re •II servataons at t50 statewide outlets under a 1971 • contract with the <>lJk. has gone to court to block a }(\ new contrart with a competitor. Select A Set of Phoenix. Arrr. ·"1> AS A RESl'LT. TIIE STATE will have no ••·11 private contral·t artrr the first or the year unl1l the dispute 1s settled. off1r1als !'>ay Larry Paynter. 4'pokcsman Cor the state Parks and Recreation Department. o;aid that starting Jan l the state wall use rented computers al the Department of Motor Vehicles But they aren't as sophastacated as the com panics' computers Rt-ser vat1ons can ~ O l/TIJOOR.'; stlll be made by writing C' the Department of Parks and Recreation. Box ( 2.390. Sacramento 95811 1 STATF. OF•'l<lAUi SA\' T llE l'Ontract with Sf-ll'<'t A St•11t would save lhe !.late about $1 million ovt'r its f1vt· \ear hf<' Rut T1cketron filed r;u1t last June an San Fran •• •t c1sco Superior Court contendinJ( the compct1tive 1 • b1dd1ng procedure was 11legal ••• The court agre-ed to the state's posataon in Oc •: tober. but Tacketronanteodstoappeal f'.'l ' Quentin Kopi>. head of the San Francisco ~ .. Board of Supervisors and the attorney represent 1110. ing Tacketron. said the company spent millions 1m proving its system to handle the business and has • ,., made no profit from the contract o11it Hal Isenberg, a department spokesman. said 11 the OMV system "won't be as sophisticated" as ~1r Ticketron but will s<>rve 00 percent of the areas ttl"• where ticket sales arc luJ(hest, the bag cities l11n Jet Boats Cross Bay .·ut td'T •• 11 •lfl .,. • SAN FRANCISCO <AP) Jet rer ry service across the San Francisco Bay from Marin County to 111 San Francisco will begin Dec 11, Golden Gate .,. Bridge d irectors decided. • The $4 2 million gas turbine Marin will make the trip from the $18 million Larkspur terminal to San Francisco in 32 minutes al a service speed of 25 ,-knots, officials s:ud '. It OPEN SUNDAY 11 A.M. fO 5 P.M. 1912 HAllOI llVD. State Mulls Plans to Grant Nude Beach Status • Surgery Lawsuit Moved SEATTLE <API A $1 malhon damage ~wt against Valley General Hospital in Renton filoo by a woman who complained that a surgical clamp wru. lert inside her after an o peration has been transferred to a court here from California. The woman. Joyzelle Clanton, said the clamp was left inside her after an operation in May, 1974. She sajd it was not discovered until October 1975 She filed suit an California las t July Monday. DIK:ember 6. 1976 DAILY PILOT A 7 Getty Pay Late? Heir's Ex-mat,e Seeks Funds SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Jean Paul Getty Jr., soo or one or the world's wealthiest men, bas been sued here for allegedly (ailing to pay $160,000 into a trust fund for h1s four children over the last eight years. Gail Harris Getty of Lo6 Angeles. his former wire. and Placer County Superior Court Judge William Newsom filed the swt. Newsom was her attorney in a 1966 djvorce whkh came after a 10-year marriage. THE TWO PLAINTIFFS are trustees or a trust (und for the ~hlldren: Jean Paut' Getty Ill, 20, Aileen, 17; Mark, 16; and Adriadne, 14. James Mart in MacGinnis, an at· FOOTBALL CETSBOOT tomey tor Mrs. Getty, said Getty, who lives in London, had not· paid anything into the children's trust IU.nd since a $3.674 payment in 196'7. MRS. GETTY, DAUGHTER .of U.S. District Judge George B. Harris of San Francisco, estimated her former husband's Income last year was $1 .3 million. The suit claims Mrs. Getty re· ceived no alimony under the divorce agreement but Getty had qreed lo put a fixed percentage of his income into the children's trust fund. Mac i nnis said Getty's income would increase to more than $5 million a year in the next few years. Getty's billionaire father died June6. against the hospital and DETROlT (AP) Ors. Ronald Burke and Culture in downtown Allouju Rao Detroit is outplaying She alle~es th~t the sports in suburbia -at defendants negligence .feast pro football. h as r end e re _d h er The Fisher Theater in per'!'anently disabled Detroit's inner city sold an~ ~ncapable of eammg S.,600 season tickets for a hvmg for the rest of her its cultural season and as life· still counting. She recently moved to The Detroit Lions, who the Seattle ':'re a fro'!' fled to suburban Pontiac. Torrance, Cahr. T he swt had a rinal season ticket was transferred ~t the count or 48,862, down request of the hospital. rrom last season. DO VOU ~~ 'OUR OIA...aHC'S VALUE REC[Nl\.Y INCAtASE07 We 111.nOw tf\e~ ~ ~u,~• aoor..,.. are ooncerntd • ._._.. 6"c11ohot1 Of tr"8 _..,,Mon ............ """"''°"I'"',......,.. IOOIO<l"'O °' o<-•• "'•)-Ul"'IJ f"'ti8 O'...,. ~•ri'9~ Of~ fn 11'°"'9 At •ff.ti h~ the WllHt Of An _ .. e ._ ...... ""In, ......... _ ot _....,, .... ,IO Cflee~ ""'1-... ,.,. -0t 10 ••""' the ld•nllly ~ 0t COlllll\ICtlOn ot the "'°"" In the .., •• , Olio.& ~ PROFESSIONA\.. .JEWELERS INC. ---JCWtL£H!> -l1lMULOG1S1~, -0~$1GNC~~ • 714/963-5625 20902 Brookhursa Street, Suite 201 Huntington Be.ich, CA 92646 Sheers and separates of So,.nata® by Three Flaggs Refreshing new look I or ch1f f on tops and soft separates. Pastel prints of polyester veiling white separates of Klopman's performance tested Sonata®, a textured knit of Dacron• VIII polyester. Sizes 8 to 18. $34 $34 $16 $16 $28 Coat, Coat. $42 Print shell, Long skirt, Long skirt, $28 See these, lots more in, Town and Travel Dresses •DuPonl registered trademark ir COSTA MISA (714) 642-3177 SP!CIAL HOLIDAY HOURS: Shop Mon.-Fn. 10 am-9:30 pm, Sat. 10 am-6 pm, Sun. 12 noon-6 pm: Sat., Dec. \1 end Sa\., Otc. 18, 10 am-9:30 µm; Sun. Oecembor 26, 9 am-6 om; Bullock's South Coast Plaza. 3333 Bristol, C. M •• 556~l l • A '· • ' . .. A• DA.IL v PILOT Monday, December 8, t976 HARTFORl> (AP) - Mailing liquor across st.ate ·line5 Is aaainst the law but a nationwide distiller says it has a legal alternative fOC' the Christmas sea.son. A gift service for dis· tilled spirits similar to a common arrangement for sending flowers Is being introduced by Sea· gram Distillers Co. m Co nne c ti c u t, Massachusetts a nd Rhode Island on a test basis, the cornpany says. The Telephone company used to advise digital dialers to let their fing~rs do the walking. Som e Sao Clemente callers s ay it's hardly worth the trip. According to Pacific Telephone records, San Clemente has one oC the smallest toll-free dialing areas in California. Some 95 percent or Paciric's exchange areas orter a wider calling radlus. A PACIFIC REPRESENTATIVE TOLD the San Clemente City Council that the city will have to put up with its diminutive stature at least another couple or years. John A. Gueldner said stallsUcs show that lo enlarge San Clemente's toll-free calling area to in· elude either Laguna Beach or Mission Viejo-EJ Toro exchanges would cost most telephone users more than the amOU(lt they pay in long distance rees to those areas. Gueldner also said too rew San Clementeans make calls to the other exchange areas to justiCy would rail because Pacific's figuring was based on the PUC's own rules. The rules require that a number of calls be made to nearby exchances before lhe telephone company can consider selling those exchances in a loll-free packace to another exchange desiring an. nexation. Lane wryly suggested that the city nees to mount a campaign lo get its residents and busl· nessmen to make toll calls in order to change the , statistics. · Di Gio\lannl, exasperated, said, "It took us two years just to get this explanation. We'll all be dead and gone and broke by that time!" Gueldner said Pacific intends to conduct periodic surveys to keep tabs on the San Clemente dialing patterns. THE f'lUMllH~ HIATIHG All COHD. m ... -.. y.--• Servko 111 You' Are~I Ml65t0NVIEJO .,,.·n;-C..ow"' C.tO••"•no t , t ' ... " 1.-"··, 495-0401 COSfM10Es~ UH H__, 8 •vd , 5' I 642· I 7 51 .,,,,\, Retailers in the three . expansion. states can arrange gilt. COVNCILM EN, WHO CLAIM THEV'VE been ce rt i r i c ates Co r waiting two years just to get PaciCic to make a customers for any ol the study or their calling area, were chagrined. They company's brands, re· say San Clemente's small calling area hurts busi· deemable throug h ness. Whv_do out-of-town visitors enj~y staying at The Regisny Hotel? "Notice how well he comers. . . " DAILY PILOT participating retailers in When Gueldner argued that San Clemente was the three states. not unique in the size of its calling area, Mayor B. lntlle Patrick Lane asked him, "Whal you're telling us is ...._ _________________ ,__ ________ that there are others as miserably situated as we w1LsoN R/v STORAGE MOTORHOMES CAMPERS BOATS • Resident Manager • Dump Station • Trash Bin •Wash Area• Bottle Gas • Fenced • Paved • Lighted SPACES START AT $8.50 PER MONTH (714} 531-7900 I 6 790 SO. HARBOR BL VD. SANT A AHA, CAL Just Morfh of w....,. oa Harbor It.cl. ldlilld THE ~ WHIMG MAH You 'II F ind H appy H olidays at L ido S hops A T THE ENTRANCE OF L IDO ISLE TEN SP ECIAL HOPS WITH JUST THE RIGHT GUTS FOR·YOUR HOLIDA.Y LIST l ido ~ra"'ll"el •ervtce. tine . plus HAPPY HOLIDAYS ORA WING EVERY WEEK FROM NOW UNTIL CHRISTMAS ~1 $100 ~ REGISTER TO WIN ONE HU NDRED CR tSP ONE DOLLAR BILLS FILL OUT COUPON BELOW AND DEPOSIT AT ANY PARTICIPATING SHOP NO PURCHASE NECESSARY --------------------------- ENTRANT MUST BE ATLF.AST 18 YEAR. OF AGE. NAME-----~~-~~-~~-~--~~ ADDRESS_~-~~~-~~~~~~~~~- CITY -~------STATE-~-ZIP __ _ PHONE -~~~---~~---~~­ ORAWINC K£LD FRIDAY AFT£RNOONS- WlNN£1tS NEEO NOT 8E PllBS£NT AT DRAWi are?" Gueldner replied, "That's about the way it stacks up." Councilman Tony Di Giovanni was appalled that there appeared to be nothing the city can do about the s ituation other than rile a complaint with the state Public Utilities Commission. Gueldncr sai d such a complai nt Monastic Phone Listing ·Attacked WASHINGTON (AP) -Women's rights ad· vocates have ask~ the tederal Communication Commission to require free listings for married women, either on the same lane with their husbands or separately. Telephone companies now charge for addi· tional listings. The charges range from 27 cents a month in ;New Jersey to $1 a month in New York. T HE COMPLAINT FILED WITH the FCC asks in erfect: Why should a married woman have to pay to have her name in the directory? She already knows her own telephone number. It is the people who want lo reach her, and don't know her husband's name, who need the information. "Monastical U.S. directories are the typical and inevitable outcome of current telephone direc· tory policies," the complaint said. A SP OKESMAN FOR AMERICAN Telephone & Telegraph Co. s aid that allowing free listings for additional members ol a family would increase the size and cost or directories. 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I 1111 • dr.1p1•1\ f.ilnrc-. 1nc l111lmi.: l11\1111rnr-. .1111tq1w '·'''"' nnw 111,1 <.I l'I \,11cl C 0111p.lf1• 1·1 '"" hl•rt• 11p 111 ~ I Ill I \ .1rd Bc•,u 11111 ''''"m mal..t·' rh.1111·rw-. 111 Ill \.11111 cl1·111r ( ,,11 no\\ tor .t lrn• 1•,11111,111· Now have your fine fu rn iture complete ly custom re-upholstered to look better than new at 1/i the cost of new fu rn iture. For over ha lf <1 century Beacon's c..raftsmen have been · famous for fine quality upholstery at great sav ings! ~:~~L $J99 sq. yd. QUANTITIES LIMITED Now on HWC1.ll' ''EI ()or,1do" 1CJ0% nylon carpet in ijflfijeous A1tec Cold .tnd Frrnch Olr\f' lOIOr'> DouhlP 11111• bcH.I.. A trrrtf1c buy -plu~ p.1ddin~ and installation Al\o chcxxe from hundreds of other c .upets al Beacon·~ I~ pnce'. CALL NOW FOR FREE AT HOME ESTIMATES The name you can trust COSTA MESA (714) 542-1476 1 "' ; Ill • z Cot a prohlem ., Tl1e11 u nl<' ltJ /'at Dunn Put u 111 cut red tapt'. gl'tt1m1 thl' m1swers and ac11m1 1111u • 0 I I' I need to solt <' 11wq111tw-; rn government w1d bust ;' MH. Mail your que.~lw11s tu Pat Du1111 At Your Service. Oro11gc Coast Oa1/y J>1lot. P.O Hox 15&!, Costa Mesu. (,'A 92626. lndude your tl'lephorte 0 A c ~~' r I I I number. The column appears doily ezcept Saturdays. l! llqlff'• Aflantdalltly Cl~r DEAR PAT: Can you locate the addr e!>S of the National AssociaUon of Aid Jo'at American~. and tell I.. me where I can write to conla~t the mail order clothJng pattern firm affiliated with this group" An item about this appeared in the Nov. 12 Daily Pilot, and my mother would like to 1nqutre about ordering patterns. K F , Costa Mesa Tht> Associaled Press lracked down your in· formation, and A YS verified it. Karen Jones, a dlredor of NAA •'A, says you can contact lhal group by wrtllng to Box 263, Milford, CT 06460. Wrile to tbe pauern firm, "Abundantly Yours," al Box 1?1, An· dover, CT 06?32. SprKCe lip ChristJRGS Tr~ ' DEAR. PAT: I've heard about a fre!.h Christmas tree prl.'servation recipe that calls for bleach and corn i.yrup. A fnend told me that you had published the ingredients in the past \\all you J repeal 1t? :$ L.R .. Costa Mesa • The formula calls for one gallon of hot water , ·two cups of while com syrup, four teaspoons of bleacb and four teaspoons of mlcronbed Iron or one iron capsule. This i.olutioo should be used to water the tre-e In a Christmas lrtt holder after m aklng " fresh cul on the trunk of the tree and a few cuts Into the bark. *Trappers Trade Solution• DEAR PAT I know it's common knowled~•· 2 that gophers are too s mart to be trapped, and I have h ad no problems with them myself. Your recent A YS items on this subJl•Ct brciughl to mind an adull babysitter's experience. She hvf'd next lo a largt•, commercial property. Its gophers were '"' adinJ! her backyard. One or her frtl'.'nds recommended · I conventional traps baited with cotton balls soaked in a strong musk pt'rfumc. She used llai Karati and dug the traps in each rughl. Within three nights she had trapped severaJ gophers, and eventually solved her problem. My ~on venfied the demise of a num ber or gophers. Maybe the musk odor duplicates the scent of gopher mating signals. L I" . Huntington Beach The-pe-rfume-theory is tops with lbe surprising , number of A YS readers who have offered gopher conlrol suggestion!!. Most report that lraps, Oood· ~ Ing and poison are inefftttlve, and that cats don't do , the trick e-ilher. O.W., Cosla Mesa, the origlnat que~lloner. did drop a note s aylnJ: that my cal "sounds likt a love-." and that ber cat only brio~ liumb to her . Kinky Tall ls "Siame11e If you pluse ... or if you don't pleue." and she's better orr wllh her good-natured cat and hl5 llurd presenls. V.W •• Costa M•a. SMg,gests bllr)'lng empty beer bottles in a row, leaving lwo inches of the neck exposed. She aays thal tbe wind howling In the bot· tJes keeps lhe gophen away. Could it be lbat the gophers may 'd f'clde lo move on out or plty for un- scented people who have dru.nk too much beer? Deaths Elsewhere BL'E'\OS AIRF.S I \Pl J oao Goulart. 58, former prt':.l dl·nt nr Brala l oustl·d in a 1964 military coup, died early today at his r anch in the ,northern Argentine pro- vmce of Corrientes. SAN JACINTO (AP) - Herbert McNabb, the . S a n .J a c I n t o c 1 t y manager . dled of pneumonia while v1~1hng relatives 1n Toronto. 'Canada McNabb, a former r.1 ar1ne orf1 r<"r. was flown to Camp Pendleton ,for treatment at the re· g1onal medical center 'But he lapsed into a coma and died I ! CHICAGO (AP> Joeepll Cbar1n Fu.co, 1 74, an associate of the UL T1-lllCHIOM NMllALHOMI Corona del Mar 673·9450 Costa Mesa 848·2424 llU HOADWAY MO ITU ARY 110 Broadwav Costa Mesa 642-9150 WcCOIMIClf MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494-94t5 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Cap141trano 495-1776 ,ACW.C VllW MIMOllAL ,,. .. Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac1hc View Onve Newoort. Cehforn11 644-2700 rtll,AMILY COf..OMtAL '41MHAL. HOMI 1901 Boise Ave. Westminster 893-3525 SMfTMS' MOltTUAIY 627 Main St Huntington Beach 53M539 SMITH 1VTHtU. I.AMI OUtl WISTCLJflfl CHAP& Mortuary••~ 427 E. 17th St., Cotta Me11 L1le r r1 ml' ~ \ ndacatr leadrr Al C1pone. d!l'd Saturda~ SHARON. Mass. <AP> Walte-r Grlrrtn. one of the nallon 's oldest prac- 1.Jcu1g phys1rwns unul h(.• retired an February, as dead at 102 SEATTLF. <A P> Ralph Lomn, 89. \\ho took part in reindeer raising, gold mining and bush a\'tatlon an Ala.'\k;;i 's ~old rush days, dted Saturday Mflt•H F"£CJEAI(" H(AO\r ,.,,.,_,"' l.•~ •till\ ( t ftJr"'•1' Pe\Wl'd a#lf•Y Qlw'emf)Pr 1 1~f• t,urYiYttd bv wlf~ Hfl>t*r\ H• rt)'\I \On Jllll'•Y' MM~· ,,, ~" O!"'QO tJ•uQM-r \.f1'dl Rf)...,.rttut M l l\ A"?"i•' r1ranfJt1•1.1'1"'~' lll11a1n AOt."f'.llf' f)r'u~-, h # ,. Hl>tb\t f)f '"'"' "'•OAf'I c.,,..,..,.,.o,. ~•rw1<P'I. .,. .. ,. """''d M'>NJ•v 0•' •mbPr • •••• •t 10 00 ,.,,. "'' PAt1f1t· V;e"" M11tm0f'lll P•t• Pac.•ttr V1twMor1u.ryd1re<ton ltlUllN 011 £0Mu .. o H 1t t[S["4 ••\lclont of tort>"• 0-1 M11 C1lt10..-,,1,. P•\•if'd ••AV 0-C.f"'~' ' ,.,. S.Utv·~M bv wit,. ''""'e' R1•"'" '°" Eo A•*V"' Jr \ltU~r Marov-f"I•~ laurit"°" Of "'9vAIJJt. OM Qrel'\dd•uqMrr Mt""""••I Wf'Wi(f\ TU-\d•Y Of'ttMbtir 1 8t It 00 AM•t P•c1f1( Vltw Ch•oel (rf'fNift()n, IM'lal ol \41a llv "'"'"'< Vl•w """-'•I Peri. T'-••mHit 'Uotif\ll <Of"lrll>Y !..,.,. lo Hoao ~-'-I "-1•1 tn .......,...,. of Dr Ed,,..ul'd H 11-n l'atllo< Vlt• Mort<Mrydlrtclon. . ANO .. ISON llOIEllT J"Ml!S ANOl.llSON Jll. rttlO.f\t ot Co\1• M•'• c..11torf\1A P•\\tc:t /J Wtl"/ 0,..c•mber 4 ,,,,. Sutv1¥'fl'd by ,.., .. o.er~nl\, Mr end Mr llobert J And••\'>n ot Cool1 ~ llr'0"'9r Mlc!Wttl ,.lld.,wn, 1-,1,1on Sh8ron &nd Kttht.,.tn P•ttrn•I Qt4M'Cfpef.-nt' Mr .tnd Mt\ ... .,,,.., An df'r\On of Nttw Vnr• "'~'"'"~t t)tM\Ofalrtf'r °'' "' PAIM of Nf"W Yortl\ Rowry Tuo\Oav O.ctmt>er I al 8 J> PAA Mtt\S to 00 14 M W•dn,.,d_.., O.um~· • •t S1 JoM T"" 8•1111•1 Church. lnttrm.,.I 01 (;ood 'l!w-•d ""'•!try 81111 Btr~Mon CO'>i. MfoV> fluntr•• Hom~ dlr.ctor, JOllOAN 11£VA MAltlE JOllOAN r!Kldtnt of Mufltl"tlO<> BH<h, C.lltor .. I• .... ..., •-• O.c•ml)ll• s t'1& S<i•Vl"-1 by llu•-d O"kllt Jordan of Hunt11>91on 11 .. , ... c.. Fu ... rel MNIU• -· clO 0.ttml:Mr • •I t :00 PM 0.11 l'lroadwo O\topel tnttrment <II H••hnf llt" ~l"O'IOI P1rk hH Br'-IY Mot1~ryOlrttlort •OUOUINNIC l'llANCOlt L.. 80UGUE .. Ne!t. r••I ..... of C...tl MtM, (l ll!Ot"n!I P .. - MO O.C.embe• S. 1'16 ,,.,,.1.,.., tw "" wolt H-ltllt llou9uo"llK 91 c.otta -Go • d1uo•1tr M rt A P 111111..it of ...... YOf-. lhrH qro~tf'\ S.rpltt\ wltl De "tlO Wt.clllt\00 Ot<fml)jtf I. lt1' •I 11 00 AM P.tcltlt Vt.w ClleP'!I Tiit ltl!lllY "40tlh In 11t;1 al "-"· untrlllull°"' ""'" 1llf MM9 It Tiit HNfl AU0tletltfl W TN l(~y ,_ .. ,..., tntotl!ltftl ""'"j( v .. w ,,.._l•I l"ttl!, "'<Kiii< View IHft\lery.Mtt< to'l .~ M""d•y December 6 1976 DAILY PILOT ..41 C,r •01 t4 (;U(l<•J\t Y Special Fare Flap Airline Pays Penalty Mi I ki n_g School 1 ~n El~rtH O r. P at ri c k llillary, 53, is new prc!>idc•nl of the Republic of lrclJnci lie was only l'Undi<lale for ·lhl' post. U r I No LOS ANGELES tAP l Nat1nndl Atrltnc•!> Inc wtll t lt·MI) warn ru.)tunu:rs .n Lhl' futurt• \\hen one of ib ~pec1al "no frill'>' airfare packagt•s Y.111 tnd, and will PJY a $10,000 ciVll pl•na.lly as part of a shpulated agret•mc·11t to a l'Onsumer SWI llouston with "no rnlls .. durinJ! the tnp Tht• .11h t•rt1scnw11l:. i.aad thl' fare& were good through June 17. 1971i JERKS ALLOWEIJI ~ J But National then reeeavcd pt•rm1~-.1on from the C1\1I Aeronautics Hoard to d1M'tmllnue thC' :.pt>dal fares on May I Tht• suit \\a~ hJ-.ed on ataonal ~ ad\•ert1~1ng lu~t Man·h ul !>p(!CIJI lowc•r r<itl'S for Monday through Thur!-tday fl ight:. from Lo~ Anp,efr~.to The com P•tllY flt.>w LhO-.l' .... ho hml purchased tackl'ts tn advance .it a lower ratl' bt•t" een Ma} I and J ulll' 17, but never adn·rll'tt'<I the nt•Y. trrminat1011 dute. --------------------- American Savings pays the highest interest and more ... compdre with your bank. (iettmg the most for your money is what saving 1s all c1bout. De5igned for the serious sover. American's Guaranteed Growth C~rtificates pay the highest interest ullowed by law-htyher than dny commercial bank! lntere!>I is compounded daily and your account is insured by an agency of t11e fedl!r<.11 government A Guaranteed Growth Certificate of $1,000 . or more. entitles you to our compk.,te Americ,m Saver Services package But. don't take our word for 1t .. here 11 is in dollars and cents Compare American with your present bank or Savings and Loan · . -. ... COMPARE -.··. ·. . ·coMPARE. . . HIGH INTEREST compounded daUy · 9YEARS $1,000 BECOMES $2,008.57 71•'" annu.11 rale B 06"o annual yield. 6 10 vears. 51 000 minimu•n • 6YEARS $1,000 BECOMES $(591. 93 111nu 11 r.11. 8 ll(, ilnn 1,11 \'•<'id 10 v"ii' ,1 000 m1nirn 1rr • 4YEARS $1,000 BECOMES $1,349.82 71 i • ,111nual rnlP 7 79°~ annual yield 4 years or mo1 P $1 .000 minimum • 2 1/2 YEARS $1,000 BECOMES $1,183.81 6 l .;inn11alrate 6!lB~ .. annu<1ly•Pld Y"''' orrr,.·111• s 10011111111mr1 . • '"'' , •• , 1 •, n11101u1d'l'' ,J ,i1v 1 .irn rH1tc.11rd 1•i ti.ll" 1• (1 w1 1r-t1 rni11r11 1 •1 I 11 '• I• 1 .11 1•"l"l,it1on~ , .. q111rn ~ul1st:int1dl 11.1. 1<•• I Ji• 11,111·( le 1 r ,111~ "'I •I ...... 11 lrCJlll C• •l1ltCJlll JCC.Ounls SAVER SERVICES FRE~ with $1,000 Growth Certificate FREE-over 62 checking account All Amencdn ~dvcr ... '1vt1 r 1>2. t1H.' 1th~1ble for freL' c hl't k111g through .1 rnc1Jor slute\.~ 1111 • b,rn k l\o rrnrnmum bald nee required Social Security direct deposit ["~~· ... ~J .. ~ Safe deposit boxes ~ Travelers ohecks ~ ~ Checking accounts with a ~ major statewide bank Money orders U .:j ~ Notary service ~ Trust deed and note collection ~ ~ Check-a-month plans ~ Save-by-mail service no ~Transmatic savings/loan payments Now, Free Trustee Fees on tax-deferred IRA and KEOGH accounts. December 31st is the deadline to save on '76 taxes! E.'1TC .... . '., ·~ ...il !; '1 I ~ \ SAFE SINCE 1885 Move up to AMERICAN SAVINGS AlHAMUA ,, 'r ...... n 'I "A~"~·· ?Rl ~ II .UCAOIA 'l 1nr ~ ,..,,,., ,.,. 1v1t ,,,.;r" 01 Hunrrni1on O• ~ t• ~/\)ti A/USA 333 H CtltU\ A., '" lnol~•ll C•nl,, 11' •76~ 1£V£mKILU q~.l~ W11\h11t Iii.,! •l R l•n O• l i~r l IUlNA PAU M.' II I• P1l•r•J A•• •I ~ '"'' P1•> C~nl•• , .. '7 2~01 CANOCA,AU 6$JI FAllb·~· ~~ 1ft &allb100\ $Clu••• ·13).1fU Assets over $6 Billion strong Convenient ottices•serving Southero and Northern Callfornia, Including: I COSIA MlSA HUNTINCTON BEACH ic. " MnHl"l>t¥• • At• 1•th ( t .• 1 ·~ >' t "~"r"' A~ 1• H 1nt fl'''" l'ltu !Ill 11~ '•~OCI (l·•I" tll•I ~I " > u•oUt uovc lUlWOOO • Pl~I i.~•d•n { • • l!•>d ~ ~ ,,. •• 11 l'ol Al'll' I',• ti H '',, t Alf'1 ' ·I~; 1) 1' tO\ hf10' l 1•'"' 11 ( trtJ r CHNOAl[ tl IJ) WS 66SS • 411 •1 ~lJ JI J~ ~(I~~ AtM1'1 81v'1 I ANCASllR '"''It• ot lt••ntlon Ot l!O!> W Unc~\I" 81\11 11 f•rn 11 L• llO<f $1 • l41 88 14 l•ftl of S•tll ~ H"J ) 18-0~1 '1•8 41 l I MAW1NOIN( • lA l'tJ(MI( I .'tAS S HAwlllotllf' Bl•d f"\ N H.1• •nd• 81•d ,,.,, 11 S.aundo B .1 111111011 81.11 · J;b tS!.6 (i}9 1:.81 LONGIUCM HI Mlf ll'l £ 8road1uy 7...,q~ \~n J1•1n10 (f at blw l0<usl and Pin~· 06·3611 °""'"'~"' • 11 l•l q1 1 ·n~ LOS ANCH£S OOWNIOWN HOI l YWOOO ,'1 ~ 11.11 St 11 &1 ~I (,,I !•?I 1~00 N V•"• 51 btl«••~ lOS ANCHl$-WILSHIRl C(llH• ~unv• 11>111o11,_.J lil¥ff llll \IW i\lltrt 111,~ 11 (•I• ·•~ •11 m1 ., ~l4 ~ wrsT LOS ANCHES UNCHO PAO 10'01 W p.,~ 111•1 •I 0.•tl <Od • ~ qio1 IOltlU l8;S C•Q • C •r• o Pd ll•Ar P.x11>r Cn4'1 ""'• 4~o 1671 MANHATTAN IEACH '01 l•hnh8ll1n ~•atll 8fvd 11 ~111h1lla" ~ • !><!~~I fllOlllClAIR 413} t• ''•'A,. 11111ntcl111 rlA/I 171J I 'I J83) MONTROSC 1114 ~onolulu A•t w•\I nl O.•an v1-81••1 • 149 &t~4 "OllTMRIDQf 1'1410 H •ohll SI •••t ol lt""PI A.-• ~~f f 1:7 llCMIWAl• 114111 f fl1 rCtA1\ ""'' tar1n& 1'n•w•I• SQ • 86~ J •q~ PAlMDAL( lR~l\0 H H1nlh Si l l I 1 •l•"r Palm11lt Pl111 180~1 qi I •• '4l0S VUOlS rsum 7209 Vt A An.;c 1~~ 1n lunad• l~y Ctnltt JI I /~~I PASADENA 210 s ltk~ "" " ()'I f.'AI Al•~ \11 1616 acllOllDO IUCN t600 S Pmhc Coul ""'' 1n Rivtffl V1il1gt· JIJ 6171 SANTA MONICA 7621 Wthhttt Blvd 1t 26th St · 828.6060 SUI. ICACM 10~~ P1c1l1r Co.\<l lh" '" S.•I 114>i'~ CtnlM • \11 88~~ SM£11MAll OU' I' 100 V"lt"J ~'' 1 •I Sfopul..-d• • 781 flJC,O ' IARZANA ~·f, Rrv1• Blvd I"'' Mtlh ft! V•n•,.u I ,,1 ·~~I ~~RO l(MPlC CITY 41.ll I It\ lunH Or n•J• 1,,1plr City 81,' ~3~ q~nl !HOUSAND OAKS I'll H Moo1p11~ Rd tn l.~nt)t V1ltlft li!dll 1~~~119/ ~6~( lO .. ANClSOUTH UY ClllllR I noo s M IWtllonw' 81.,.., II RH01ndA RtlCh Blvd • JIO ~~JS WHfntU Ul'TOWN 11103 C Phll16'lph1J ~ 11 Buehl Av• • q~~ I $'1 WHlntU [A$f 1~12~ I l'lholl tt 81¥<1 l'""t l'IMl•uod S110pp1n1 ''"''' • 691 o~ss ... • •I .. ... ~· .. .. ·. .. ' . . , A J3 DAILY PILOT Mond1y December 6, 1976 Sun Kisses 'Sunkist' Fair Wind Blows for '85' Series Racers Sparkling weather with an ample amount or wind from the right direction proved to be made lo order for the first weekend of BaJboa Yacht Club's SunJust Series. Eighty f1 vc boatt. in 11 c;lasses turned out Satur day for the centerboard division sailed on coursei. inside the bay. and 72 keel boats in six classe:, rompc•d over an outside course Sunday as the breeze whistled up over tht' IO-knot range Lar~e~t c l a:,ses we re the d1 v1s 1on s of Performanct' Handicap racing 1-'leet yachts with 24 in t'la:,s A and 2J tn Class D Clai.s A wtnner was Jack Malhnt:krodt of RYC in his 41 foot sloop Swift Class B winner was Sunkii;t, a new San· tana-20 sailed by Scott Schock. BYC. lns1de classes, Saturday lHl~TlE h~I t P'"'''°"' R"Ot1 V•.n T A·tt BYC J Wor & ~d<"' W1U l•mol•ton Ii vc U•'t; ~A •1 l P•u Mu<O'I• llVf" 1 M1\.• "" C10 NtiVC LA\E A 8 •1 \ M dtt1n N 11114mv.n SVC LA~fU JOPlUS•ll '"''"''~""°'"eve METC.ALr •O ' Ide •''°'" ovc. l.Ooe,W•ll-1,BVC LIOO 14'1 "II ' J .. c. MrCl•NY, 8YC 7 Qo-\ Wtl>!l eve I Chao. fw1thotll It.'¥'( ; Don Sloul')htain 8VC S Al Oh~son. BV( l I 00 118 111 J I °'111 A.inH"d LI VC 1 l'rMj r.,.O"I 8 VC J ~rQO" Ol••fon\ bVC SABOT I\ 1111 I St~ ... R.)00\ NHl'C 1 CtMY ~IOUQfllc>n eve I O.v1d ~r•ncno ltYC !.A80f 8 \1 I JOoM "Or,,,..,. BCVC ~A80f C fl J 1 (h, ,._, ICf1\'t(nw°'ter 8YC t M•ill' MftrM::l•r BC"f'C ) OV1\ • iip.)"'tl .. Hr n V'( MOl H~Rt, \A60T 1bl I JM"Qu1r Srn11f'y BYC 7 M..uy J•n~ lvlf' eve. Outside classes. Sunday ElCHEll \ ,, 1~1 t Alll.tlV"' R111 (I"'" frttH"r'C 1 8111\ Bon qoq., ,,.. ~·rwrr NH'Y( l Sr.tl'\ft•IW' "''' 0.Mlflt:, bVC l.UOE A\ '• / t I C,.rM+tum Ruth ... •lS"'-"'lt N ... VC 1 Con Pl-rm,...,,. °"" R•ll•UO Cb"'· J """'"' Kill r u,_...,.,9 NHYC Christmas Postage Stamps Here's a Christmas time-saver for you from Mutual Savings: now you can avoid the long lines at the post office. Purchase your Christmas designed U.S. Postage Stamps at Mutual Savings. There 1s no service charge or obl1gat1on A special Christmas service for you MUTUAL SAVINGS •no io f " IUOC'•I 1..,,, Corona del Mar Pt1Af' A f1') 1 \w1U Jae~ M411hnO~rocn 8VC 1 A 111 kfllh (telaf\d, f\Yt ) Soar"• Al•• lr•<"11 PVC, 4 l11tnM"" Jell WH•o. eve, S C.tM)i#Oi)•n, Atch Al\<ht"\On,rtttJOBVC P>iRF 8 11JI J \unlml 5cOll Schoo 8VC 1 F•1<WUI""'· 8oO t •1rw .. AtN:r ">\VC ) ff'"• M6ru S.rry ~\On, 8VC ~. M•r•UO.' fury (AtrO<I VYC s M••• wn J• ... S. vvc BOATING R'100ES 19 •SI I Conll•CI 8ooW•-\SY( '>ANT ANA,, Ill I Nonamo. Rl...OlO<• ... rt SSYt 5 TeaTnS Make Sweei· l''ive Southland college sailing teams survived the preliminaries of the Sweet Trophy Series for the sloop championship Saturday and will m~t four northern California teams and the University of Hawaii in the ftnals next Saturday and Sunday. skipper Steve Was hburn and crewmen Tom Burton and Rick Korblulh. Alao scoring 10 points was Long Beach Stale with skipper Bruce Golison and crewmen Steve Kent and Scott Mason. UCLA with Mark Rastello, Skip Beck and Alan Jewett were fourth with 11 points, and Orange Coast College with Bill Wheeler, Jeer Weiss and Robert Kenny were fifth with 12 points. Top team among the southern schools was San Diego State with skipper Mark Reynolds and crewmen John Buchanan and Bruce Gresham They scored eight points in the eliminations. The series is being sailed in 30-(oot Shields Class sloops. Second with 10 points was UCI with Clwbasco Wins Yule Regatta Chubasco, s ailed by Eldon Foltz or Capistrano Bay Yacht Club was the overall win- ner in Capo BYC's Christmas Regatta for yachts rated under the Performance llandicap Racing Fleet system. Second overall was Elusive. sai led by Harold Day. Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, and third was Gandalf. s kippered by Dave Wheeler. Capo BYC. CLA.~\ l Elu\1Y" 7 ContAq1ou\ l(fon l(ul'\n Caoo BYC. l. Ar•~' 8oo Bur'-nart OPYC CLA!tS8 I cnub.t\t') 1 ~" J W .. M,.rn St•I' M 1kf WAtMn CMIO e"c t ASS (. ' St>• urdun H4"Y "'"°' Caoo llVC NO SPINNAK E PS I E•pe<t,. '"'" 0o>n S<~I.-Ct>OO BVC 1 Jolnt Vrtnlup• 11, Fran• Ht.Oen. C.•PG SVC 1 AdlO\. qol.tnCI Ci~rbr•tht. (ADO l\VC OPPORTUMITY Boat Law Group Backs Changes The National Association of Boating Law Ad· m1rustrators has gone on record favoring the in- creasing of the minimum a.mount of reportable pro- perty damage m boating accidents from $100 to S200 and extending the reporting deadline from five days to 10. The resolution will be presented to the U S. Coast Guard. Other key resolutions adopted by the NASBLA at its 1976 conference: Call upon the insurance industry to take a more active role in boating accident analysis by placing accident reports in the hands of their policy holders. Ask the insurance industry to take a more ag- gressive role in reducing boat therts. Veto the idea of a federal visuaJ distress signal requirement on s mall inland waters, leaving that to the states· discretion. Ask the Corps of Engineers to study Auxiliary locks for pleasure craft at river dams. Assign NASBLA's aids to navigation commit- tee the task of developing a uniform marker system for commercial fishing apparatus. Favor the numbering of all non-motor-powered vessels. Ask the Coast Guard commandant for a formal statement or policy on state registration and taxing of federally-documented vessels. Twist's 12 Collects in Nash Romp George Twist of Newport Harbor Yacht Club won the NASH Trophy, symbolic of the Lehtnan-12 class cham· pion.ship. in a fi ve-race regatta sailed Sunday at Newport Harbor Yacht Club The regatta drew 20 entries and was sailed oo inside the bay courses Ln sparkling clear weather and winds ideal for the oopuJar dinghies. The Lehman·l2 1s a fiberglass dinghy creat ed. in the 1940s by the late Barney Lehman. lac> H..,. ltOOl\V ""'"n•r~ l, Ueof'9t rw .. 1. NHVC. 1 8r•dWMel..-. &VC:: 3. eltl s,..,u, NHVC. 4. Tom Si<•hlll, NH'l'C, S. Jeff Mtrt<ktl, NllVC .,., ....... ">"'''"'~, .. -~ .. , .. ,,,j. 14 "~'"''W'i• .:...,. ..... ,. • "''"'" • ..-iu f11)n1 ...,411 ,,,. ru-nOK:I ""'•••V luyt..v •t """'' -t~ ... t:rWini.1.,!tbtchon .,"-"'"' ~ • !>.,._,. liM"" .. ,_,_, ·-~·· n. Uffte 014 f'ldln ......... ~ ..... DAVE'S CAMERA '"*""..._.... ..... 474 E. 17 ... STR&T. COSTA MISA ......... c-of IF"IM st. Newp ort Nursery 1500 east coast highway newport beach 644-9510 CHRISTMAS TREES LIVE and FRESH CUT GREEN OR FLOCKED POI NS ETTI AS ALL SIZES MANY COLORFUL GfFTPL.ANTS . WREATHS GA AL.ANOS ..,">0 GO ~~~ (1)~~ MISTLETOE AND HOLLY DECORATIONS FROM AROUND THE WORLD 9 i ft CQrliFicd't4. L.__ _____ ~ •PfllSOHAL CHAllGES•MASTE II CHAllGE•IAHKAMElllCAllO Open Week Days 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Sunday 9 to 5:30 AMUNG 'S A name in california Horticulture since 1920 7867 [dSI Cod~! Hw~ f;•I f 7'-J 5010 knO<'ks often wh<'n you use result ~Nlin~ Daily rilot Cluss1rie1I Ad~ to n•ach the Oraniie Coast 11'\Jrket Phone li~2·56i8 2 people for the price of 1 or 2 years for the price of 1. GIVE A LEATHER SHOULDER BAG rJ,;J~~ 894 Our Rev . 11.9 7-12.9 7 Long·losti~. luxurious leother fashioned into shoulder bogs wrth the designer look. Com· portments golore let yov corry all thot yov need ond be ever·\O orgonrzed Buy twol One for a glft ... one for you. Join today! Only 2 weeks left! Now that's really a 2 for 1 offer. This holiday season we've got Quite a Christmas present for you. Between now and December 19th, 2 people can get our special one-year membership for the price of a regulsr renewable plan Or. 1 person can get a 2-year membership for the pnce of the hrst ye49r alone Here's your chance to tnm down and frrm up with a friend at the Holiday Spa Health Clubs. Or. 1f you prefer. shm down by yoursolf. Ellher way it's a great 2 for 1 otter We've got everything you need to build a new you. The tales! exercise equipment Steam. Sauna. Whirlpool Plus a real treat for the gals Jazznast1cs (Fun group eic.erc1ses done to uptemp0 music). Hurry. This special hohday offer is limited. Join before Christmas and avoid the holiday weight. "Cause a better tomorrow starts today:· Announqlng our newest locatJon MrVtng the North .Mt West v .... ,., 9143 DeSoto Av..,.,. at Nordhoff 2f3-882-59f2 AnelMlm ._,.. Lone haoh Nor1h a W.at YlllleJ ~ W..t .... tw 510 South Beach Boulevard 17031 Ventura Boulevard 4101 Allantie 90\ltevanl 9143 De Soto Ave. 67~7 W..tmlnstltf' lwenu. South of Lincoln Avenue Weal of Balboa eom.r of Carson at Nordhotl Weatmlnster Center (714) 82&-0381 (213) 9~30 (2131428-8874 (2131882·5912 (71'4) 8~·3387 C.et..... """""tit• hMtt Or~ Hoetrwoe41 2300 HarbOr Boulevard 18585 Main Street 622 East Katena Avenue 7080 Hollywood BIVd. Harbof Center Main St. at Beach Blvd West of Tustin Ave Corner LIBrH Ave. (714)5•9-3368 (714)842·1451 1714)639-2441 lnMulrMedlcalCenter (213) '46~&308 Hol~ SA!~!;!!!l~10~,Ubs ----, . \ l ,. , ~. :i • •• .~. ., '\. • .1 "( .· •• l \ ... I' Monday's Alternoon Price8 ~ NYSE COMPOSITE ·. ·TRANSACTIONS s DAILY PILOT A J J Wash Out Shampoo Test Frizzea By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Does 1t make unydifferencewhichshampooyou use .. It makes a considerable di((erence, of course, lo the pro.. ducers. With Americans spending more than baJr a bllllon dollars a year on shampOOS, Procter & Gamble <P&G) cares pll561onately whether you buy Head & SbouJder1, and Clairol Ill New York will worry if you don't u11e Herbal Essence. To r em ind you lo make the buying decislo.n ln their favor, P&C spends more than $10 mllUon a year toulina the virtues of Head &. Shoulders. while Bristol-Myers, tho corporation that owns Clairol, must spend clo,,e lo $.S mUllon ptol'JloelnC Herbal Essence. This persuasion works. Or else tbe pro- duct works well enough for users to repeat their purchases. Maybe bolh. Money Tree In any case. these are two or tbe winners in tbe contest for- your shampoo dollars Head & Shoulders is the most popular shampoo in the country And it has been so far a lotof years. lt.s marketsbare has been shaved reeently, but it still does about 15percentof the total business. Add Prell's 7 percent and that gives P&G a shiny 22 percent of the hair shampoo market. Herbal Essence, which Clairol makes with a heavy whiff of fragrance, is one oC the fastest growing brands in lhe field. Only five years old, it's already in third place wilh an 8 per. cent shareofthe market. BUT DO ES IT MAKE ANY difference to your hair which shampoo you use? Consumer Reports, that redoubtable magazine that tests products and rates them by brand. investlgated shampoos in its November issue. ll ident.Jried quickly the contents of s hampoos: ''Usually. just water Clots of it), detergent, foaming agents, a dab <or two or three) or fragrance and an im· aginative variety of other stuff of little or no value except ln selling points." IT'S THE DETERGENT THAT gives shampoos their cleaning ability. Consumer Reports was unable to develop any laboratory lcsls that could effedively evaluate shampoos. It s aid, in ef· feet : What's good for one person may be bad for another. So what it did do was to test 77 shampoos by giving them lo 217 men and women totryfortwoweeks . This is the kind oftest a manufacturer might make, using the results only ifits brand came out al the top. INTHECONSUMERREPORTS'lest,lhetwobrands re- ceiving the highest ratings were Head & Shoulders (the cream version, not the liquid) and Protein 21 for dry hair. The magaz.ine found there is a sharp split between what men and women prefer in a shampoo, but these two brands were liked by both sexes. With Head & Shoulders. the panel thus confirmed a verdict already rendered in the marketplace. That's not the case with Protein 21. a shampoo marketed by the Mennen Company. When il appeared, with the promise that protein would give hair new body and bounce, Protein 21 rusbed to an 8 percent mark et share. It has now dropped back lo2 percent. For Consumer Reports; then. this shampoo test provided no clear·cut answers. It spilled out the judgments or its panelists and ended up advising its 2 million subscribers as follows : ··Don 'l believe the ads. Just trust your own hair and your own instincts." Small Gain Due For .Yule Buying Es timates indicate total retail sales during the holiday season in California will climb 7 to 10 per cent ·over last year's holiday sales activity, according to Security Pacific Bank. Jn issuing its annual forecast or 1101iday spending, the bank's research department said the estimated increase in consumer spending will mean a ·•r eal" gain or 2 to 4 percent tor retailers. . • CALIFORNIA CONSUMERS ARE EXPECTED to be somewhat cautious in their spending during the holiday period and may not be swept up as much by the spirit of the !leason as they were last year, the report said. While personal income has grown in recent months and consumers have been able lo recover some of their former purchas ing power. the bank's economists say they e xpect shoppers will be less prone to impulse buying than they were this time last year. Researchers attribute this more cautious attitude to several factors, including continulng concern over a r eturn to the double-digit inOation rates of a couple of years ago and the pcrsistenUy high over-au job· less rate. Retailers apparently are in much the same mood, as evidenced by their careful appraisals and constant monitor- ing or inventories. The bank's researchers say merchants hope to keep just enough on the shelves to meet expected de- mand. This raises the possibility that, ar merchants have mis - calculated and demand exceed s projections . some shoppers may find empty shelves before the season is over, the bank says. ft:s for whal California consumers are buying, thr. bank s researchers say some of the more popular Items will include home furnishings, small appliances and men's and women's clothing. They say more casuaJ clothing should sell particularly "."ell this season, as .Californians adopt more relaxed and anformaJ dress styles m the omce as well as at home. TO\' SALES ARE EXPECTED TO DO well thlsseason· children and cautious spending usually don't go together ai thls time or year, the economists say. Jn all. the bank's research indicates that retailers can expect a modest Improvement in hoUday spending thi!t season bu~ should be prepared for mor e sophisticated lllld cost·consc1ous consumers. · Rossmoor Reporta Profit Rossmoor Corp .• Laguna HJll1t, has rePorted net Income or $1,547,000, or~ cents a share, on revenues of SSl .964,000 for the year tnded Sept. 30. Net Income included a loss from operations , other than write-orfs, of Sl,841,000 or 59 cent.a. These results compare with a prior.year loss net ottaic benefit. or 19,379.000 or $3.02 a share on re~enues of $39,821,000. Fiscal 1975 results included a loss from opera· Uons, other than wrtte<Ofls, or 12,104,000 or 6* cents. Operating r"ult.s for the fourth quarter ahowed a net lou of $1,810,000, or 58 centa a share, on revenues of •.oci,ooo. compartd with a net loss of $8,815,000, or S:Ul, on revenuct of SJ.0,832,000 ln the lil<e period a year u rU.er. Construction Increases Newl"taldenlial construcUon acUvity In Calllomla coo· Unued to Increase during October, accordlna to BanJt of America. New hou11 na starts ln October increased to a snsonally adjusted rate of 226,000, M Increase or 7 percf!nl from the re· Vised 211,000 rate for September. Bank economists aaid actual boualnf ~taru In tbe .Ute for the Hf.st to months ot 1176 were up eo t>ercent front the same pet1od a year qo. AJ2 DAIL v PILOT BOOMER AttJou1! Yoo NEeo 10 S01t.D UP YOU~ CO~FIOEHcE ! Monday. Deoembet 6, 1918 INSIDE WOODY ALLEN t. ~~ )OU ~O~/,Y '70\l'f'" '11-l!UI( ~1$0F Me, VJ()()O'f, ~e yov o.Jt,, Y .CUOU) M€ A~ A~ A66~1'. .. ... 6u'( ~P C?olJ.JtJ, ~MA Ver?-( 5eN<;rfiV€ &VY. FUNKY WINKERBEAN .. - TANK McNAMARA • ~NANCY I . ' . •.r---. Ori. SLUGGO, ARE~T T HE 5NQ\¥i::;_AKE5 ~ ~ .TODAY'S CBDSSWDID PUZZLI • UNITED Feature Syndicate ACROSS d~•S 1 s-r••nl 48 H"uotlllly , "" 5 f•rllltll••llt '""'otuous sou nil SOSn•01•t1 . 10 Sutt .. "''th n·ember tnret Uf 5 t ( "''' '""" lrur H1\lmtx..tt' 1• tn tne out 52 Btvn<l•' 15 Tnuttr ort 55 '""' '•"''''°" 51" M lo< I 6 food llCM> many • llClf' 59 SuDUQueM •. 11 V"fy 'l'tOI) 105~ <l•"•nr.11 Acrol\ ,~ 18Re1Qlm 6 t Ca '"'" . comoltt•'Y ~OIO ..... 20Nom•fl.r t2 n .... ,. prr . ~i-•" \. . aon . ')') Cll\\11 M • 6JS..ynQ . 23 Collt 9f' E• ra IOh••" . Cf'tttr\ f.5 81..,d tlt•U . 24 5 H CllfU f>f> W1~k ll<l •l1 # pllf1l ...... n, Stronghold 61 M1iet ll.ill·l"o ?8 C11rcatu1"\ DOWN J2 Aatd\111~ S monel I · ll<1rl 3JE1eclr" ~I t 5 p11y .. un1I •fl9hl J'i Bae~ ,.,,., • ;' n~tlilf' iJJ Al :.16 No'H M:lirn .~ U•' r . tnr on1• '.1 w.~r llu• ~Pl I J8 Ventur I'd 4 ~w1tortt1 ~ 4Q •rll Ta 'l ( tllf~'''""'f'f 1llr,.1nf' In Imm di 4 I K 1ln11•r IJ0l'"1 t.i C111~1s 43FIOOO Ind I l .1lllf' oa1 IS llbb .• g 8 A Orot1~11 •!>Onei.tor tsre ADbr tune 10 hie A A . '< w. 1307~ D A r I 0 'O 'G iT A L I & I MIOl~I T H w £ 5 T ~ T I s f AIM• • A N [ [ s ~ l A T I• l '" ! p ( . ,. 0 C D D A 5 I ' [ ~ ' l s w,. • ( s I ' (,I l f • ' v,. k ' ,. .... 5 I Po\ f I t f s c p • I 5 l r I f D < I • p A• 1t ,. p , ,. ••S s 0 <.OO '•I a t 5 ( ()1111 f , ( u :Lt I) ~t I ~ A T !J .. s T 0 'P .... ... ' l 1•111•1'10 It\) 1 1 To .. arcl tne IT' OU th '7 Sh.p s OI loCe< t3l~eao~· 19 Ovt•s•Otll :' 1 <0un9 a"•mal ;'4 lOSlbl•Qltl· nMS ')5 Hon(Ju Cl·•• ~ tOI'\ • f The end of Jf StreH 19••" 39 l~lhe<J 42 C111an D'I \CIUbb.,Q 441na · Het uo H LauQh rudely •9Can~aa s cao•ta1 SI Ground swell 51French11 tn essPs SJP I tree 5• Anc•e"' i' 1 vo.in9 o• G1eek wallt , IH1110DCdrt 5~fOursomt uly lnlormal ?9 Eur n&l•On 56 011 couotry ComD lorm 57 Shop ol 30 Plant fungus 1492 J 1 So1ltd Wlllt se Weaoons lly n n Slang 9 b posure to • 4 6 Au• al d•~c>t pe11I 3• E.shm1tt<1 60Harem room '4J6C.t., WHelJ 1'i€ ~HA9'1<: P16!7. .. J. C.Rte'P. by Tom Batiuk by Jeff Miller & Bill Hinds $ECOND-~i. 1f\NK ... by Emie Bushmiller PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS MISS PEACH l I • A p.'1'}4 U tl' S- A PVICE fc/2. Bai' W1TH p~oBL.EM; ~mt 61~L~. ~ ).- r ,[?'Q --~ THE VIRTUE OF VERA VALIANT DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK SO WHA,... KINP OF A"" Ot...CeR HAV e ~GOT, POCTO~? GORDO MOON MULLINS LET'S GET SOME: BEFORE" THEY Go BROKE! by Charles M. Schulz ...---------, 0 by GeorcJe Lemont -rHE!:N ee:L.1eve Me, YOURS IS A. esA.u-r.1 by Gus Aniola by Ferd Johnson THE GIRLS ,..., Hrlvllfe~ lkuUt "Oc~r. 1r you're ~1111 undecided ahou1 whnl 10 get me (or Chmt mM, they Jlway' have ~umcthing nice." by Tom K. Ryan DENNIS THE MENACE by Mell t \ ' APW1.-1o 'Entehbe' Stars Elizabeth Taylor and Kirk Douglas are shown in a scene from the ABC TV movie ''Victory al Entcbbc," now filming in Los Angeles. They play the parents of a 16-year- old Israeli hiJacking hostage 'Jaws' Peril Bond LOS ANGELES 11\P) -A new menace for J~mes Bond· Jaws Not the maneatin~ shark, but a giant. who uses steel choppers to destroy his enemies The roll• is bc1r.~ played 1n the 10th James Bond · film, "The Spy Who Loved Mc," hy an American actor named Richard f(jel , seven feet. t\\ o inches tall and weighing 315 pounds lits intended victim 1s Roger Moore • . (~ I t ' , )110 8t1\I~ \I !>'' 11 It tell "•h 111. '"THE HEXT MAH" CRI P:U s,ar/.-_. IM n "THE MAN WHO WOULD 8£ klNG" t H U f/W.:.:.l+le SO. COAST PLAZA 141U"11t1S1 ~61111 ,.,,,.,,..,, 11MARATHOH MAH" lilt 110. 0 ,., \\IM-t 1a.1 40 \ .... ..... " 141 • '" ,.~..., ' , .... ~·) "Al.ICE IM WONDERLAND ' IX; 1 a• n ,., '"4"'-' >a.• tt . , .. ,. "flCSH 60ROOM' t JI \.&f )V"'-1 U t U ... , ... CINEMAUllO · ftlf \t • .,," '* ··•>l \J ""'"··~ "MARATHOH MAH" !RI lto At I\ WU•0•1~ '., '"''" I It • le\ 0 t 01 tel\ ......... "MAUTHOH ION' (RI I I"•' 4\ ....... ,, '"' ,..,.,._, ·~ '., .. .. I I \.-1 .. Jt OUll 11 \~44f PO~•lO I 10 .. ,.0 •n•oo .• u..\o J OPENS TOMORROW thru SUN., DEC. 12 TICKETS $6.50 SS.SO Pf Df ,, .. ,.. ... Cf \(Hf DUL[ llA'ti p,,. 1 ., 00 p~ Wf'O O..-t •t OOPM lhori Owf ••OOPM f. t' , Oftt 'O •I 00 PM \•t l"t"f'\1 •1 oo•MIOOPM ..,_,"' )"' ,~ :'N"Jll"·J'ftlYlPM 'ti 00 OFll, 11 '1'0 I UNOIR $PH1AL 0•\COVNT NIGH! '"'' Ot< f l ....... , ... ,., ... , ...... "' ""•"'•fffilltp f•' r:, .. ·,$~~ 1'1ckeh on sale at Tlckeff'on, • ..:...·j "' Mutual Agencies, Walllchs & ' _:.' Liberty, Long Beach Arena. .... :t ~ .. ~ t ~: J , f ;.~ :/. ' ' STAhlM• Dt_....DILllUW Tlcflet lnforrnatton (213) 437·2255 OON'TMtU 111r::e•1,.n.n r"Nlll..Y f!NTEATAIHMf:NT. flAflGAINl!llt•ll• \I \AMf )lUfl:T ("ti\.D'f(N~ ~I (\/t)t0N w01tl(~'1()P f' ~t•OCttrt "'' ,... • rn ,.,, lt71 WOILD H•UH SIA,._ CHAMf'IOtof Sil.YU MDAUIT lt76 OLYMPICS By lbe Allsoclated Press The following are Btllboard's hot record hits for the week e ndl.ng December 11 as they appear in next week's issue of BiJlboard magazine. HOTSJNGLES 1. TONIGHT'S TifE N1GIIT Gonna Be All Right -Rod Stewart <Warner Bros.) 2. THE RUBBERBAND MAN -Spmners <AUantic> 3. LOVE SO RJGIIT -BeeGees <RSO) 4. MUSKRAT LOVE -Captain & Tennillt' <A&M> S. YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE A STAR To Be In My Show -Marilyn McCoo & Billy Davis Jr IABC> 6. YOU MAKE M E FEEL LIKE DANCING - Leo Sayer <Warner Bros.) 7. MORE TllAN A FEELING -Boston (Epic) 8. NADIA'S THE ME -Barry De Vor:zon & Perry Botkin Jr. (A&M> 9. YOU ARE TllE WOMAN -Firefall (Atlan- llc) 10. NIGHTS ARE FOREVER WITHOUT YOU -England Dan&John Ford Coley CBig Tree) TOPLPs 1. STEVE WONUER -Songs In The Key or Life (Tamla> 2. ROD STEWART -A Night On The Town <Warner Bros .) . 3 BOSTON <Epic) 4. EARTH. WIND& FIRE Spint !Columbia) S. LED ZEPPELIN The Song Re m ains The Same <Swan SonA> EASY LISTENING '- 1. AFTER T HE WVIN' -Engelbert Hum· ~rdinck C Epic) 2. SORRY SEEMS TO DE T HE HARDEST WORD -Elton J ohn <MCA-Rocket) 3. MUSKRAT UlVE Captain & Tennille !A&M> 4. TORN BETWEEN TWO LOVERS -Mary MacGregor <Ariola America> S LOVE ME Yvonne El11man CRSO > SOUL SINGU:S I. DAZZ Brack <Bang) 2 CAR WASH Rose rtoycc IMCA> 3 F.NJOY YOl'RSELF Thl· Jacksons c Epic 1 4 HOTLINE S) Ivers <Cap1tol 1 5 KEI<;P ME CR\1N' -Al Gn·en IH11 ('Ot;l'llTRY SINGu:s I TlllNIN' OF A HENVEZVOL'S -Johnnv Duncan (Columbia> · 2. S HE NEVER KNEW ME -Don Williams IABC·Doll :l. GOOD WOMAN HLUES Mel Tallas! MCA> 4. LAWOY MISS CL/\WDY Mickey Gilley <Playboy> 5. lllLLBll.I. Y ll~ART Johnny Rodriguez (Mercury J A .. GHOMf MOllU" (GI V "lfGEHD OF SlHl'Y HOLLOW" "THE AMAZING OOSEAMANS" (G) "DOC SAVAGE" 41"'HOaMAMISTHATYour' 'lif.' •sHHlOC• HOLMIS SMAITU HOTI9" ~llf Llf\/ SHOPPINL CENTRE ORAN<..E ·~31 h/11 S'°' fRWY tMANCHfST(R E>U ca fRWVICllVOR E)(I A."SHOUT AT THE DEVIL" V -GOAT SCOUT AHO CATHOUSI THUHDA r •tufHY MALOHI" "THI llG IUS" Spc. .. 1 '"~ 12 JO 10 2 00 p m lnu,. 5-. & H.. ISl.25 Open Daily 12:30 p.m. "DAY DREAMS" A HOT HEW SICllHG FILM SHOWTIMES 7:30 & 9:30 Cf\t.\ 1 ltlCif_.f _., .. ~ _,,_.,°" •..C.. "9 .,.., Call 642-5678. Pul a few words to w ork for ou DON'T MISS ITU 8000 SEATS AVAILABLE ... _ --~Q.~~-B~ACtj AREN,,__.1.-~"-:.;.;;.;··"•""~;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;~;;.;.,__..;..;;;;=-.J ' Monday December 6. 1976 DAILY PILOT A J ~ L ltl. B d Insult Added To Injury Don't know llull lhc ubnormal feur of heights is common among midgets, but the re· <'t>rd shows one such man, who was only~ inches tall, s uffered greatly whe n raised lo any altitude over has head. lie married a woman of normal size. And the divorce pa)><!rs he sub- st.>quently filed indicate she took advantage both or his hlUeness and has phobia. Whencv<'r she wanted her way, he complained to the court, she picked him up and left him on the mantel unlll he gave m Start with the number 15,873. Multiply 1t by any single number. Multiply that answer by 7. Remarkable. what? All the numbers you get then are like the first number you multiplied With. In England. please note. the light switch 1s off when flipped up and on when flipped down. BAGELS Q. "llow do you took a bagel, ho1I at or bake 1P" A. Both Boil frri-.t, lht•n buke. Herc')) a nolt· from a young fellow who says ht.• could usl' a llllle <1tlv1t•t.• because h1'> girlfriend not only hroke off their engage- ment, but lhenccforwanl returned all his let· ~ers marked "fourth class male." Sorry, no "adequate advice 1.·omcs to mind. Just sym. pathy. History's first snowsh<K•s Wl'rc said to be smaJI pine trees lied lo the feet of early American Indians .Russian 1s not the first but the second Jan~ua~t· of about half of the people m the Sov 1et Union ll 's a sc1entif1c fact, too. that the watt•r ski Jumper lands with greater 1mpacl than does the l>now ska Jumper. R ED AND VF.LI.OW If a stranger shows up at a party weanng a red vest and yellow lie. lhl' other men thereabouts may l') e hJ m with a cert am susp1 · c1on. but the ~omen an attendance tend to be allracted quite favorably by this colorful cos tume. Or so reports a color psychology expert Our Love and War man says the> 1s the sort of mformat1on that's most valuable to swinging bachelors skilled m self defense. 8HOVTAT THE DE\llL no DUeH ESS "''° no DIR<rWATER f'O}(L. CIHEMACENTCR (PG l ua.tt t •• •Oaw\ r U.,_,, .,.,,,, .. t\• .-uotc.u.nt• '" ,,., COWARDS CINEMA •U1tOf Al1t.O•w\ CO\IAMlt<A \0 )101 CAR~lf "Er;,~('IIA Jf'THEY (R) lHr l.YPW~ ··(~ HARBOR TWIN "THE NEXT ,::~~~·. ··~'n-4 (,"''~:;'1~~. MAN .. ---- (CLOSED FOR REMODELING) "TIIE NISSOURJ 'BRlAKS" PLUS (PG) THE RETURN OI A '1ANCAUJOHOllV ' HUNTING TOH CINEMA tt•CH~ff\ttt flff 141 UOI 141 '011 TH[~~~--~~~~~~--.. OTHER SIDE THE RETURN OF THE \)1 A MAN (ALUO ~Sl MOUNTAll'i" (PG) PLUS (PG) "THE Plus nu: MISSOURI DOVE" --C-INEM--'A-W-lSl--'BREAKS ._,,, ... 1'tt\ftlt 4f•Ol.M ..... ,, fft , .. ,_, .. ,,. • U•H• t•J Htl "HOW FUNNY CAN SEX BE?" PLUS (RI "CAR WASH" ~ "The Next Man" PLUS (A) e man Wlo would 11 Kina ~~__,,;;.;.-1 "HORMAH IS ntAT YOU7" C,Gt "SIEX W1TH A SMILE" lRt "ROCKY HORROR PtCTURE SHOW .. "'PHANTOM OF ,ARADISE" + "SISTHS .. IRJ "SILB4T MOVIE" "IANAMAS" lPGI "RETURN OF MAH CAUED HORSE" .. MISSOURI tUAl(S .. CPGI "MARATHON MAH .. lRt '"THE HEIT MAH" l t ••••• ........ ,. .. "l U .. AWaf llSI lllLll" CAHllt•I PlU• aOLLIHAlL t•I -·-··111--MtOU'f AT nn D1Yll1,.., •11•• tt4 2400 GlUT KOUT I CATKOUSl TMUISOAY .. .,,., ··~·..,.....,. SJ1·9510 'UH~WH HH llllH CAHll 1•1 P\US IOlUHAll 1•1 llAU U IOOU e MAllUN N.UJITT ·~ ...... ............. OTKll Sii)( °' nu MOUNTAIN (l'O) ~1u• 5JI 9510 MUSTANG COUHTIT tot ..... -·-••111--.c. .. _ IH041T Af TMl DIYILt"' 531 gm GllAl S<OUT & CATMouSE TMUlSOA ..... , 11(1..., ..... ~J1 .g~ao ., .,,,,.,. ...... ·-··· Sl-4-1211 J&(l WIUON e lRA -INO lHl 1112 c•I PIU• JRHlll & lHl HAN 111 I UM•WU .. SI Sllll•" CAHll t•J •1u• aOlUHALL 111 --------,-Ml-II Oiiif Hfl I t•c;:: ::: . ,,,,..,..,.. 17HM2 l . ..OMlH1•1 2.·SHAM,00111 a.-Ll,stlCIC 111 '° ,.....,, ... ............ &CTIOH • d¥1HIVll • ltHCM l . ..OMIH111 527·222J 2AHU1l I TMl llAH1•1 ~.-WHIU LIHl flYll 111 .. , lllOOllll t .•SILlNY MOVll t".,9J. 2 • .Ut~ &LUI MMINl t,.I a . .a.mu ''° MAN '"' ( AJ4 DAILY PILOT Monday. DeceMber 6 1976 Unlucky Bengals Invade ~Oakland for . Key Game " , ~ CINCINNATI (AP> The Cm- tinnati Bengals, once one of pro football's unluckie:1t teams. can erase many memories of their painful pas t when they play tonight b efor e a nutional • television audience. , The Bengals, who have over· come a crushing series of bardBbjps, face one of the biggest t'8ts In the eight.year history of the franchise. A victory over the Oakland Raiders, who own the best record ·ln the National Football League Chis season. could set the stage 'for one of the strongest finis hes ·since the N 1''L playof( system was established m 1970 lf the Bengals. 9-J. c:an beat Oakrand, 11·1, and the New York Jets, 3·9, 1t would leave defend ing Super Bowl champion Pit tsburgh locked out of the playoffs for the first time in five years. The irony as that Pittsburgh, 9.4 has beaten Cm cmnall twice th1!> year and rive straight limes over the past three seasons The task will take a certain amount or luck. somethlllg that seemingly eluded the Uengals in their early days. The franch ise has recovered from severe personnel setback:. that blunted development of thl' .expansion team Among them · '. -Tile death or linebacker Frank Buncom on the eve or the 1969 season Ire died when a blood clot from a kne<' m1ury lodged m his heart "Thal was a real shock tn th<' team lit• was as good n plaH·r as W£• had," r e members \'l'tcr<Jn cent('r Boh Johnson "I h' wus All Pro "1th the San 01e~o Charg1m, · T'4.0 months later, :.tanclout rookie quurt<>rback Gres.: Cook su Cfe r cd a should er JOJUry against th<' Kansas City Chiefs and never regained the pasi.mg skills that helped tum wan the Ame ri can t"ootbull L<•aguc Jtook1e of the Year Award "There's no queMion that that really hurt this team. Paul Brown h<1s said that was the worst scthurk the franch1sc suf fered. Gren was our No 1 draft ch1J1cc that )-t'<ir and wus going to be our 'k nig h t 1n s l11n1 ng armor,· "Si,11d Johnson A career-<.•ndmi:i IOJury to promising s<ifrty Kcn l>yer in l970. Dyer nearly d1crl rrom <• broken neck art er tackling Cret'n Boston Seeks To Acquire Vida Blue I.OS ,, 'I;(; F: I. 1-:~ I 'p I nw Hoston Rt•d Sox "h11 "c·n• f1J1le1l m their attempt to land -.oml' of Charlie t'mh•\ -. top talt•nl "last se~on. now havc s1•t th1•1r sights on acqumng Oakland p1tchmJ! ace\ 1da Hlue Most bas eball off11·1al~ werc on hand Sunday for ba!'>cball'i. an nual meet1n$Zi. which om c1ally bf-gun toda,\ F1nlt'). whose A·.., h<1ve been depleted through de fecllons, was not dut• until T111•s da}. hv "h1rh time-tht• tradmg markN .,hould ""JO!! Into lull Rl'ar Thl• Hed Sox \lohO \\On thl· l!l75 American L1·..i~u<' f>('nn,mt hut shpP\'d 111 third plac1· th1 ., \ol'Ur. realiie th<'l "111 havl· tu mak<' :r.ome move~ to kl't'p clo..t• tu the 1976 c hompwn N<·" 'ork Yankee., Thi.' \' ank~ ~rJhbed two prize plums amoni: thl' frr•• a~ e n t s ~ I u i: g <' r H c· i:i g 1 f' J ackson and p1trhf'r Oon <:ullt'tl Ba lt1mor!'. Wlllf'h rin1<>h<'d ~econd 1n lh<' A l. i-:ast, 1~ <'on !11derably wt-~•kl'r "1lh th<' lo4's of Jack!>on. ~erond h.J',l•rnan nobh .. Grit'h and 20 ~amc w1nn1•1 'Wayne Garl<tnrl f" in I c \ d e <ii t HI 111· t Q th<' Yankl'eS. last June 15 for $1 5 · nullion only to huvf' the deal nullified by commil's1oncr BoWle Kuhn. The comm1ss1oner also I killed Finley's $2 million sale or outfielder Joe Rudi and reliever t Rollie Fingers to the Red Sox on 1the same day. Finley 1s suing t Kuhn and the case is .scheduled to ,goto court in Chicago Occ 13 ' • r North Dakota l i Invades U CI UC Irvine. fresh rrom a 108·84 victory over UC San Diego Satur • day ni&ht, takes on tough North •Dakota Uolverslty tooight C8) at Crawford Hall in collegiate : basketball play. , North Dakota, a perennial ,power io Division II basketball ls , rebuilding after graduating four starters from last season's 22·7 club. North Dakota fell to a ritrona : Pepperdine outfit, 82· 78, jn the Pepperdine gym Saturday night. tJCl coach T im TU\ figures to st.art Scott Jenkins, Frank Chandler and Sttve Rodgers In t.he front court and Kt-vln Oavl! 'and Louil St ph~na at the 1uarda. ~ f Bay running back John Brock Ulgton The premature retmiment of All-Pro deferts1 ve tackle Mike Reid m 1975. Reid. then 26 and also a No 2 draft pick, quit to pursue a musical career Johnson feels the misfortune helped form the backbone of the On T\I To1dgllt Cha111tel 1at8 Bengals, who are shooting for their fourth playoff berth in their young history_ "We ve had our share of good and bad," said Johnson "Thmgs hke that tend to ll'mper people They m ake you tougher and more resilient " Cmcmnat1's Ken Anderson was the NFL's top-rated pa.<,ser the last two s easons but lh1s year ranks a surprising eighth among A fo' C q u a r l e r b a l' k ~ w 1 t h Sports in Brief Oakland's Ken Stabler batlllng Baltimore's Bert Jones for the lead. The Bengals defense, with newcome rs including veteran end Coy Bacon and impressive rookies. Is mueh improved over' a year ago, howvever. Cincinnati ranks second de· fensive ly to Pitlsbl.\fgh in the AFC. Oal<land ranks a somewhat deceiving eighth in the con· f e rence , s t i ll s urrering statistically from a 48·17 loss lo New England nine weeks ago. Cliff Branch has snared 39 passes for 994 years yards so far, accountin~ for much of Slabler 's 2,520 passing yards Mark Van Eeghen . playing all season in place or injured Marv Hubbard, IS up to 843 yards r ushing, with 226 com.mg the last two weeks in easy victories over Philadelphia and Tampa Bay. The yardage is sure to come tougher tonight --------~ Bohick, Norton Ink . For Garden Bout NEW YORK -Duane Bob1ck will fight Ken Norton instead of Muhammad Ali Feb 24 in Madison Square Garden. Thl• contracl "as s igned today. This means Ali's wavenng re t1rement 1s s til l 1n effect. although he had s igned a con tract to fight Bob1ck pares with a 2: 15.21 mark set m 1971 by 8111 Scoby .Juhe Brown. a national col- legiate marathon champion from California St ate University at Northridge near Los Angeles. took the third.annual Women's National Marathon Ch am ~ p1onsh1p here tn 2 45 32 •P W•r•pt.,lo Trial Slated Co~la Cluuen JIM PLUNKETT (16) PASSES AS SAN DIEGO'S GARY JOHNSON (79) WATCHES. AMAR ILLO , Tex Pat tsburgh Steeler!> defensive tack It• Ernie Holmes is scheduled to go on trial in state dlstrict court here F'eb. 21 on charge s or possessing cocaine. WEST LAFAYETTE. Ind. Jim Young was chosen Sunday tc be head football coach at Purdue Univers ity. lie succeeds Alex Agase who was fired two week~ ago Chargers Collect OT Win The 6·3. 260·pound Holmes was indicted last Feb. 11 by a Polter County grand JUry after local authorities arrested hjm at an Amarillo motel last J an. 31 Terms of the contract were not released . flowcver, Young, head coach a t lh e University of Arizona for the last four years. reportedly signed a five.year contract for $35,000 a year Morris ' 13-yard Rrm Does It to San Francisco Authorities said they obser\'cd Holmes hand a silver Mntamcr Of powder. later judged to Ix> ('O ca1ne. to another man. Holtz Denies R ... or LITTLE ROCK Lou llolt1. the coach of the New York Jet<;, said Sunda} night there was "no "av in this world" he could con template leaving his Job until he discusses the s1tuat1on with the team s management Holtz. 38. reportedly 1~ the No I choic e to s ucc,.cd Frank Bro\ le:. a-. ht' ad Coach Qf th1· \rkan~a~ HJwrhacks Haratlaon Report CL'LVER C ITY Lionel Orte~a. a 22-year old !>«'nior al lhe lln1ver!>llV or New Mexico. finished a 26-mile course hen• lo win the 29th annual Western lle m1spherc Mar at hon Sunday Ortega ·s time of 2 hour!>. 18 mmutes and 1R1 2 second.., com The Ganae Saver SAN DIEGO <A P> The fans and the players slept through th(• first three quarter s. But all wer<' a wake whe n fo urth.quarter E~•on Win• fireworks threw the game into TEMPE Dick Stockton de rare overtime play. in which San reated Cliff R ichey 6-1, 6·4 Sun· Diego triumphed 13 7 over San day to win the singles compeli Francisco lion JO the $20,000 World Clasi: Mercury Morris galloped 13 tenms tournam ent. yards in the overtime, only th<' In doubles competition. the fifth of the National Football $2,000 tea m pnze went to Fred f..:eague seas,on. to ice a 93·yard, Stolle. 38. and Newport Beach re-nm~·play dnv_e for a v1ctc;>ry that sident Roy Emerson. 4-0 They de-decided a series of questions for feated Erik van U1llen, 25, anYboth teams. Cha rlie Pasarell. 32. 6-1and7.5 F_or San Diego it appeared to decide that Dan Fouts will hold on to his starting position at quarterback, whale 11 apparentl)' decided that Jim Plunkett will Ix> out al that position for the 49ers ffurtaugh Bu..Wd CHESTER. Pa. Sports world figures. relatives and fr1eu<ts gathered today and paid lnbute to Danny Murtaugh, formet Pit- tsburgh P1rales manager / Services for thl' 59-y~a r-old Murtaugh were to be held near his hometown o f Woodly n Township, followed hy a Mass or Christian Burial at St. Peter and SL Paul Cem etery. The most exciting momenb an the first three periods rame m missed fi eld goals thrt•c by thr 49ers and two by the Chargers and quarterback sack~ Before he was benched, the Chargers twice knocked Plunkett down . And the 49ers put the stops four times to quarterback Clint Denver's J ack Dolbin block s an extr a pomt attempt by Jan Stenerud in the first quarter Sund ay and it proved fatal to Kansas City.as the Chiefs lost a 17·16 NFL decision. Holding is Tony Adams Refer to Page AlS for game details Longie~. a grand experiml'nl that flopped for San Diego The Junior varsity look or the game saw Chargers coach Tom my Prothro replace Longley ear ly an the third period with l''outs. the usual signa l caller. And 49ers coach Monte Clark decided to replace Plunke tt with Scott Bull for the game's finish, even 1f 1t was Plunkett 's 29th birthday The appearance of Fouls on the r1eld had a galvanizing effect on both the Chargers and the 49eri. The ball started moving. Less than two mtnules into the final quarter the Chargers began an so.yard drh e that culminated JO a two·yarcl race to right end by Bo Maltht•ws for the first touchdown o r the:-game. Ray Werschin g kicked the extra point The 49ers responded with a drive capped by Bull's pass to Paul Hofer, who ran in from the eight for the touchdown. An extra point attempt by Steve Mike- Meyer failed, but an offs ide penalty against San Francisco gave him another chanct', and M1ke·Meyer pulled out a 7-7 tie, putting the i:amc intoovc:-rtime The vic torv gives Prothro some breathing room. There's been talk of a coaching change ir the Chargers can't come up with an even season m ark. Wlth Sun- day's actfon. they are 6·1. whilt• the 49ers stand al 7·6 \.In Fraf"ICl\(.a o o n 1 O " .....,Q,~ I) 0 II I "II SO ..Malthf>W'''U" fWt-r\~ nQ ltl•" .,J:-Hof ft r t) o" fto,.,.. f\uU fM •• ~t t 1'1t• f \0 MGrt 1 l •un • )) \l'I .... ,, ,..._,. F-·r~tdi)wn •• ,, R~.1\,,_' v-tt•f "' P•"1'1Q t V '1 •• ~'"lurn t•'" .. "' P.,~ _.., 11 17 I '·'Ill Punl ',, ' .. t:umt>•r"' lf'I t ·~ 1n P1->n•lt1f' 'l<fff1· ',. ••I IHOIVtOUALLfAOUIS qUSHt ~C ~ ,,, r r11nt 1\ofO, Willlitm\ lh l(M 16c ~Vl" s "" nvtt 1 ,, S"n OifloQO voun1 " "'· MaU""°w' q ll Wood\'\''· /!AOf r•"' 1 11, Fouh 1 1~. L""Qlt ;1 17 AEC£JVIN(, s .1n fr.mr1 .. ro, Linh l St.. M•lt ... 11 1·1J ~·'"'nqlnn I 13, Holor I ., S•I\ 0•"00 Jo•,...r I 10, Yovng S &1. WO<>t.l\) 11 Cu• r,1,,, n PA~StNG Son f' '4int1c,t fJ, Ptun"""' 1 11 1 \(. SuH 1 ,. o. 'tt) w1111"'"' t 1,, l~ \rtn 01t·on. lonQl"'i J I o to ~nut.., 1 u (I w Faeilities Upgraded U.S. Strengthem Olympic Program NEW YORK <API The l~ United Slates Olympic teams may be the hest prepared m the country's history Sweeping changes in lht' pro gram by the USOC's Executive Committee were approved dur rng a two·day weekend session "We can't maintain the status quo." said Philip Krumm. USOC president. "I think we've taken a dynamic approach to i mprovin~ our program for athletes over the weekend." Part or that approach was ap· proval for locatin~ an all year training site at Squaw VaJley. Ca hf And Colonel Don Miller, the USOC's (,'xecutive director. said that he hopes to have three lrain mg center~ tn operation lx>fort• the 1980 Summer Games in Moscow "The s pecifics or our program~ art' sti ll an tht• development stage." said Millrr "Out we'd hke the governing bodiec1 of cnch sport an our organization lo de- termine the eventual scheduling and utilization of the faciht1es. "It is vital to our program to have national training centers available-to our athletes al no cost lo them ," said Miller, who announced that a contract for the utilization or facilities at Squaw Valley nearly was completed. 13 Is Connors' Lucky Number Squaw Valley was the site ror the 1960 Winter Olympics :md many of the facilities ulihzcd there still are available In ad~ 11on. cooperation or locaJ officials has been l(IVen toward prc:-panng programs and a dd1IMnal rac1lit1es Another maJOr item to help the athletes. announced by Krumm, was imple m enting a job OP· portunities program which would seek perm anent employment ln industry for athletes who have the potential to represent the na· Uon oo an lnternaUonal Jevel. ~ LAS VEGAS CAPJ -He may uttel' retirement now and then, but Jimmy Connors, the acknowledged king of challenge tennis, Is just ready for a holiday break after his hard fou"hl Sun· day victory over Vilas Gerulaills. 5-7, 7-6, 7-6,6·1, lnthesemlflnalsof the WCT Challenge Cup. It was Connors' lucky 13th, the 13th match\' he has won In this desert gambling spa without a lossi but it was not without chal enge as the man from the Eut made a valiant effort to knock Connors' challqe match record crow~askew. AfleT 12 strafght victories over such names as Rod LaveT, John Newcombe, Ken Rosewall and Gerulaitls himself, Connors was due lor a setback, and GerulaJtis made lt $ecm possible ln the first set wh en he broke Connors' tervice three times to set the estimated crowd of l,500a·stlr. Obviously hurt by the way the s mall crowd took to Gerul.SUs' success, Connors mlldel\ls move. He took the first threecamHof teCotW set. but CerulaiU• WU f<IUal to the task. He broke bacl , took th set to a tie at M , but lost to the mttre experienced "tennis machine" on the 13th point of the tie breaker. Frequent delays kept Gerulaitls off balance as Connors Jousted with the crowd, but he . seemed to keep his "cool." ' A Jast·minute subsUtute for Edd.le Dlbbs, who opted to avoid Connort and play In the Grand Prix Mastera In Texas , Oerula!Us ran out to a 4·1 lead In the third set, but was unable to hold the "old." 24·Year-old pro who wun't about to have his streak beaten. "You've 1ot a long way to go." eonn.,.. ah.outed el ~alUa, as the former prepared to serve a ~ ln the third set. · Connors won the set by mov· log Gerulailis back-and·lorth, then both player• held serve to send it lnto the tie·break·breake.r once again. . This time it only went U pomt.s. Connors again tbe winner. With the two critical point.1 go· lni against him, Gerulaitis lost his verve. and Connors wait.led to an e .. )'. 6·1, fourth ~el v1ctory to loC!k up the $50,000 pnze. In all. Connors won $80.000 ln rou.r daya, raising t\js career total h1"'e to $780 ,ooo. Accordln1 to Krumm, '° m~ industrial llrms have indicated desire to cooperate ln the pr gt'am. "We have realized lh,at w must do something to enable ou best athletes to contlnue compe ing after they complete their c !Pee educaUon," saJd Krum "This hasn't alwoya ~J>(X5!11bt due to finvncial prel\surei 0 alhJetcs ate setting older ea year. An Olympics is mainly for ~ men and women, except for somp or ouryou..oaer aw1mmers." - 1 I 203 Yards for SimpSon; .Patriots Make Playoffs The amazinf 0 .J. Simpson continues to break National Foot- ball Leacue records -and his Buffalo Bills cooUnueto lose Sunday, Simpson rushed for 111 yards in the flrst quarter and wound up with 203 on 24 carries, but the hos t Mia.mi Dolphins routed the· Bills, 45·27. Hurralo 1s 2·11. In another Important game the New England PatrioL'> clinched their flrst·ever playorr berth with a 27·6 victory over the v1s1ting New Orleans Saints Simpson's output was the sixth 200-yard plus efrort in his pro career, a continuing N fo'L record His 7S.yard TD on his third carry of the game gave Bw!alo a short llved 10-3 lead, but Miam1·s Fred- die Solomon provided the second half heroics. Solomon scored on a 79 yard punt return. a 59·yard run and a ..53-yard pass play. In other NFL games NEW ORLEANS AT NEW ENGLAND The surprlSlng New England Patriots rolled to a 27-6 victory over the New Orleans Safots. The win upped the Patriots' re· cord to 10.3 and with one 1:amc remaining, the wors t New England can do is qualify as a , wild·card team. Once again, it was quarterback Steve Grogan who sparked the victory, running for his 10th and llth touchdowns or the year, ty ing a r ushing r ecord by quarterbacks. The Patriots onl y held ;1 IJ·li lead entering the rinal period when Grogan scorl'<i on a 10 yard bootleg and threw a !:ilX·yard TD pass to Ike Forte. DALLAS AT Pllll.ADf.LPlllA -The Dallas Cowboy~ clinched their eighth NFL division cham pionship in the last 11 years by whipping the Philadelphia Eagles 26-1. Cowboys quarterback Roger Staubach completed 22 or 39 aerials for 253 yards and his !:ieven-yard scoring pass to Butch J~on in the third penod scnl the Cowboys ahead, 19-7. The final Dallas score came on a 10-yard run by Hob Newhouse The Eagles' only score came on a 20·yard pass from Roman Gabriel to Charley S!Tllth , and Philadelphia was only able to net 117 yards rushing. The victory guarantees Dallas the homefield edge rn the playoffs. TAM PA BA y -·AT PITTS- 'BURGH -The hapless Tam· pa Bay Buccaneers rem afoed winless by droppmg a 42-0 de- cision to the surging Pittsburgh Steelers. Despite their eighth straight \'iclory and 9·4 record. the Steelers, winners of the Super Bowl the past two seasons, may not make the playoffs. If Cincin· nati defeats Oakland and the New York J ets in its final games, the Steelers won 'l qualify. lt was never a contest with Tampa Bay as the Buccaneers onl y netted 11 yards through the air and 10!\overall Rocky Bleier ran for three touchdowns and Lynn Swann caught two scoring pas~es for the winners. HOUSTON AT CLEVELAND ·The Cleveland Browns opened a 13·3 lead early in the fourth quarter and held on for a 13· 10 "1ctory over the Houston Oilers Improving their r~ord to 9 4 and winninJ! their eighth gam<· 1n their last nine outings, the· Aft Wl,.epftOtn NEW ENGLANOS STEVE GROGAN (14) PASSES. Soccer Title to SF I' II ti H> FL PH I A (AP> t 'nl\t>r~1tv or San Franr1~co's And~ Atuc•Jihu !!cored tht: goal that ~a \ 1• th1· llon.'I a 1 O victory over lnd1.1n ,1 !-.unday and their sel'ond con-.t•cuuvc NCAA SOCl'er champ1on~h 1 p The goal was unassisted and was Atuegbu's 13th or the year He h:id assi'lte<.l in the only goal 1n the Dons· l ·O victory over Clemso n 1n S aturday'i. semlfina Is . fnd1ana missed a chance to tie the score at 42. 26 or the first half when freshman forward Rudy Glenn was fouled. Sophomore Cbarlie Fajkus failed lo convert the penalty kick, however, when his shot struck the cross bar and sailed over. AtueJ!hu .. 1 Junior Cro m Nigeria. ~a~ H>l<•d lhr touma· ment'11 lop 0H1·n~11.r player for the second str a 1i; ht} c.1r He scored at 35 34 of the f1rlll half. rlnin.: a JO .. .trd shot into the upper n~ht rnrner or the net Sports Calendar r ... ,d•y rt>oc 11 n;4'\lrf'lft),.IJ '11n t°"Htm,.f'\t,_ fOWIH "°"'"' l\r\n (l'"fr\"'"'',_ Y• 11.tr 1flfi1AI" A•v•rtv H •I" tnu,n .. y q rlt'I)" .., lnqlllw(W)d Al I) MMH'\ t ~r\lm,u\· '"' touf"n .. ., tHuntlf\1)tt)n BtAth ¥\ A~-At M tlll"lj\ ",,., f'1A~' I..,, ('°'~" '1t't M ,.,. ftt """'''""'''"' .. l01 04n-\ ... lll\-'t Mi,l'l•ftiw1• •Ii u"~'" futt .1t fu~ftl'\ HI M,-,,., Ott1 iitf fl. tvift Amo\t Tout~y tM11t,.r 0•1 "' l • ~•f'•t8•,~0 Am,1 t i WPft\lhnQ Hf"•OO,, ,,O\h VW>"I ,.., Kat11lfA is )Ot Foothill At M,,.,,,.,,V•• JO S.nCh,,,,,.,,ht al I("''""" notn.u. Sorc11t l4'qvn• """ " ·'' \. J dltf>4r' Ml\\lf\" Vill't" 1'1 PAC t • tbotl\ •' ll Wr'\t Torr '"c" •t ""wo •t HArt)or '1 lOt Nntthwlr# ;11...Utrt (Ji t II 101 U1lhallt lO• ft_.,._,.tt:Mll \.v1 Cl4"m@nttt '°",."'" l!louttf,-1n \11111.-v Y"t M1\.~1on ViortfoMI, ~~'"'" V' C~"~ M•'l.I ol 6 >Ol, Edl!<l'I ~t """"''" Hill' 10\lrM'f MltrtM W•~1m1n\tf*r ,,,,,.._,. L•Qu,.. Be.ecl\ .. t ,.,..,<tit,, Grov,. tl\urntoy. Mater Del •t RnMrt A.mitt foyrn~y. O<e~vl•"' l•O"' v•. HU<1t1nci1on llorto Olrl~ll.., .-t ~;trwrn (1tllfom1• CollftQ!lt n JO>. Or•11~ Coa\t °'' lit\ Anv-lts CC t 7 lOl. F uH,.rto" 41 r,olct." W"•l II 1ll \ftCCl>f (')tt)l'\fl rtfl1 Mllr Al MA-Pw1rn V•lflntia a\ S.U'I Ct.,.,._..t'lto lbOl"•l)I Browns got the deciding poin"' oo a 30 yard field coal by Don Cockroft with 10:28 left to play. The Oilers threatened when Dun Paslorini threw a M·yard TD bomb to Ken liWTOUgh with 4: IOremaininginthegame. Cleveland overcame a shaky first half 1t had lwo passes m· lercepted and lost two fumbles - but still held a 7·0 halftime lead on Brian Sipe's 37·yard TD pass to Paul Warfield. WASHINGTON AT NEW YORK JETS -George Allen's Washington Redskins remained in contention for a wild·card playoff spot with a -:rl· 16 rout over the New York Jets. Now 9-4, the Redskins are one gamt' behind St. Louis for s econd place in the National Conference Eastern 01\"I MOO. It was a typical Redskins win as the defense came up with six quarterback sacks. OHensively. quarterback Billy Kilmer was the star, throwing scoring passes of 16, four and two yards. Two of the touchdown passes came in the first quarter when the Redskins opened a 17·0 lead . NEW YORK GIANTS AT OF.TROIT -Ex·Costa Mesa High standout Benny Ricardo kicked a 43-yurd fi eld goal for Detroit, but the New York Giants rolled to a 24·10 victory. ThP Lions turned the ball over four times in the second quarter and the mistakes proved costly as New York opened a 17-10 halrt1me lead. One or the Giants' second period scores came on Doug Kotar's three yard run that followed a blocked punt by Brad Kousmo Ricardo kicked his field goal wi th six seconds left berorc the half. But the Giants put it away with a 67 yard scoring drive mid way through the third quarter. G R EEN BAY AT MIN- NESOTA -The playoff-bound Minnesota Vikings rolled up 414 . yards rn offense to tum back the Green Bay Packers. 20·9. The game's turning point may have occurred in the fourth quarter when Minnesota clung to a 13·6 lead. Packers quarterback Carlos Brown threw an apparent TD pass to Rich McGt!orge, who dropped the pass in the end zone The Packers eventually settled for a 24-yard Chesler Marcol field goal, and Chuck Foreman scored the clinching TD for Min· nesota w1lh 2: 11 left in the game. It wa s Foreman 's 14th touchdown this year. CHICAGO AT SEA'M'LE - Quarterback Bob Avellini threw three touchdown passes wilhi,n a lhree·minute period in the third quarter. leading Chicago past Seattle 34·7. The Bears overcame a 7·6 de· fi cit when Avelhni connected with James Scott on 63 and 30· yard scoring aerials after Doug Plank recovered a Seattle rum- ble at the Seahawks' 33·yard line The flt'ars upped tnc margin lo ?:Ii wht•11 /\VCllin1 round Roland ll arµl'1 OJ.lt:ll for <> 39-yard touehdow11 toss. Waymond Bryant's scconc1 interception preceded th~ scor1:. KANSAS CITY AT DENVER Jim Turner kicked a 20·)ard field goal With 8 m left 10 the game, helping the Denver Bron- cos nip the t\ ans as City Ch1efa. 17·16. The Chiefs led 16-14 at the half. but Broncos quarterback Craig Penrose got hot m the fourth quarter, hitting Haven Moses for a 27-yard gain. Fullback Jon Keyworth then ran for 31 yards, setting up Turner 's heroics. ln the closing mome nts, Denver needed a quarterback sack and three KC turnovers to preserve the victory. f llH,\111\ Qfiif,1dll1 Girl\f .. ldhM•"'Y ~l'W~t1 •4iitt0r'W" et M.a.nn.e Hyf\141\0tOtt f\ftA(" ti f nur- t .. tftV;tlt•v lbftth•t 1 )) \11t"'" AnA.41 f \l•ritl.9 Wlll\tmunt•r Al rn•\t'H'\ Ibo<~ ol ll (',olOOI\ WO\I Al Ml V.f' ll XII - W-tNY 10•< II W•tt r PoJ<t C.t F wmOtrutlt •If 4\t lo• """"I•• Coll• OOwllOn H••lll>• "'M•r• C.ftt••l 1 Uni"'"''•"'""""• Wrf'\lh~ £1 To,-o ~" (IHnt:f'ltP £di-el OAnA Hiii\ \Ol>flomo""''"" tl .,, ""'"'Ol>,.-t H•rbor frf')\" "'°"" JV •t E•otr•rtr.-IJ lOI w_.,, 1',,,-rMK•at M•til'\A 0 >OJ Sowt"w•\t•,-" anct M1r•Co•I• •t 0•-Co•l\I Coll- ' lOI Gol"'" Wt .UI S.nla Ana °""'I 1rw1t•llon•I on G••I• 1>4•'-11>•11 0•••~ CM•I M Ct'P'"' 141 w11t•A"••IGo4dlfll¥P\I u l!H G•rl• field llo<•o Co"'"" c1o1 Ml>• •I Minion Vt•jo S.,. c1...-e .. Ul\l_.ttt¥ lllOI~ al) I SI All popular make cars nnd trucks at competitive rotes. Ford, Buick, Cadil- lac, Chevrolet, Chrysler, Oldsmobile, GMC trucks. Many '77s on display ond ready for immediate delivery, or order now for early factory delivery. Free loan cars to lease customers. THEODORE ROBINS LEASING CO. [f "~"~milf 20:!!~:.:vd. 540-8211 or 642-0010 'i ~ .. .. . " Monday December 6 1976 IN CIF FINALS -The Laguna Bea ch High girls volleyball t eam will meet South Coast League rival Corona d(•J Mar in the CIJ<' 4-A girls volleyball finals Saturday night. The Arlis ls defeated Santa Monica to gain the finals and have an 18-1 record this year as league champions. Ft-ont row (from left): Wesley Weber, Karin Lane, Karen Lynch , Les lie Wendel. Chris Anderson, Nancy Tresselt. Back row· Sandy Conway, Linda Robertson, Patti ~ Huggins, Sue Wetzel, Dana Erickson, Dawn Spurlock and coach Georgl! Carey. Area Cage Lagunans Mature Fast· ()u1f its ' 1n Action Face CdM for Crown Unbeaten El Toro and winless Manna lhgh of Huntington Beach open up hostilities m tonight's firs t round o f lhc Westm1nsler ·M arina bai.ketball tourney. Both teams arc al Marina as El Toro duels 3·A power Lynwood and Ma rina meets Royal Hi~h of Simi Valley. Two other gam es are at Westni.nstcr High and another four tilts will be played Tuesday lo round out the first round or the 16·team tourney. La g una Beach , meanwhile. is al Garden Grove High tonight in that school's tourney, pitted against Walnut in an 8: 15 lest. In non-league action the Mission Vi ejo Diablos, seeking their second straight win, are at Oceanside for an 8 o'clock game. The pairings: WHlmlMt ... ·114••1•• T....,.,..y T•"'•ttt•t M.,1n1 8 lO Maruw v\ Aov•1 1 Et Toto¥\ L Yt'lwOOd 1'Ml91tl al Wulmlnll,.. 8 )0 W•\lm1n\tf"r ..,,w.,,, •. ,. 1-Lo\ Atam1tO\ "' l. 8 M1lh'4tlt ltHld.1., 411 M•rt"e 7 Fl Mn<tt-n.• "'LB W1h,,,,, 8 JO ~vriUnoton 5,.,.., h .-\ R.-,~ Tu.\d1y •t W t1tmfft\t.., 1 \11ttd Part1 v-. C"lmolon 8 10 Cou>1"1i1dft't M•r "'' E''""''" Banque t Summaries HtwpOrt Harbor t11qft Mo~· VAllJ,bl•· Al.m c, .• l'j(J14i Ml')\f lmDttWl"'it Oruc• (dldwrll, (•Pli&1n Chr1\(•ltt .. S.f)flomott F ooll>a n Mio\t V•luobl" J4Y VOfloll•i MMI fmorov,.d ltrtart t ( r '"'" (() C'Pl"ln\ Ryd" A.bbal" ctnd D•v•d HO\\. HuntlotfOft IUCh HI ... IJrti"'"•r. Foolll)•ll Ml1\t Vdlu•bl,. Kl"n C.r1,..~r (AC> td•"' Scott Y •nQ 6f\O Odnnv (vrr.tn M'°l'\I tmorov111>'1i l •m M l')nl•r"V"'1 Most v tluab1 ... b.\ ' o"""' (uf, '" D•ttrlct ~r•ihml" 'ootball Mnit Val•Jdbh• JOf''f AOdr1q"' C_.P1d1n\ If"'"' }ha' HrtorlJ •n I Jun•'· Din M0\1 I rnruovf"l'.I P"'ul MU\\O Mo.,t v .. lu.tblf b4t• Ant~l' Mitt Uf'10 f \IAftC,I H ifffrt S6pftornort Footb•tl Mo\t V•IU3bl• C1f'OrO• P1n<kn11y CAOf•1n Jo"f'IW.itt"'" Mo\t ln\C)o .• tlon.1 D••ul C•mp.,..11 Moo.I Im Pf'OV't'd. Aoy C•' '" r Frt1ttm1" Foot~1ll Mo\t v111...ar,1,.. r;uv Otou1n (An t••n 8oh l.a,-,mfr. M O\f llT"tO'Ovt>d Rotatrto Mer•o. By HOWARDL. HANDY Of llM O•llt P•let SIAll Lag una Beach ll1gh School 1~ the champion of the South Coast League but the C l F cham- pio n s hip could b e <Ulother matter. The Artis ts d efeated Corona del Mar twice during the South Coast U!ague season and ap- parently put lh<' Sea Km gs out of the way. Nol so. Coach C<.'orgc Carey's Artjsls will be playing in the Cl 1" 4·A fina ls next Saturday night and an old nemesis will be there to creel them. Corona del Mar 's Sea Kings toppled two-lime de fe nding c h ampion Louis ville Satu rday night to gain a spot op- posite the Artists in the championship game. For those who feeJ the third time is the charm, it could be a much tougher battle this lime around. But Carey isn't worried. In fact, he's en- joying the fact that the two teams will meet again. "Kathy <Bulmer, the CdM coa<.'h) and I talked about such a situation at the leag ue meetin g befor e the season began," Carey admits. "We both fe lt it would be nire to have it this way." llow about his Laguna Beac h t eam? What makes it click? .. I think the girls are playing together as a team much more this year , .. he says. "They have gained a certain amount or maturity now and have mental tough· ness and poise, something we have worked hard t o establis h." Laguna Beach has run off a season record of 18·1 in gaining the finals including the two wins .over CdM and a victory .over Santa Monica to avenge the lone def eat. The starting line up has three seniors, a couple or "I live In ~@®Mrru® ~LI@M®~ but bought my new car ln ~~~~from JOHNSON 6 SON" ':Al Johnson C, Son you're treored like o member of 1he rom1ly. JohMon C, Son was the first dcolcr wher<::> I qor what I wonted w1rhou1 o hassle Johnson C, Son qor me the kind of cor I wonted wrth the things I wonted 01 o price rhor was right Thor s why I recommend you drive to Johnson & Son Give 'em airy ' Alllert v. ltorMk GenenJ Dockman Webef Biead ~ ohnson&son 2e2e HARBOR BLVO COSTA MESA s~o-seao . junior s a nd a sophomore. giving Carey a firm nucleus for next year's tea m . CdM. however, will have all six s tarter s back for another year and all but Dale Keough for at least two more campa1gru.. Carey gives a capsule rundown on the Laguna Beach players CHRIS ANDERSON (Sr.) -She's probably one of the most powerful hitters in the Ctr'. ~he can hit any type of set and is also one of the tea m 's bes t setters. She's an excellent bl~keF and one of the key factors in Laguna's success. She does a good job of keeping herself together and playing team ball. DAWN SPURLOCK (Sr.>-The te am c ap- tain. In Carey's opiruon. she's the finest setter m the CIF. She has ex· ceUent bands. can make any type of set and ts a super defens ive player. She was All-Cl F la~t year. LESLIE WENDEL (Sr.)-Probably the most consistently solid player. Not fla~hy but very solid. LINDA ROBERTSON (Jr. )-A tall left.hander. She has improved as a pl ayer this year, es pecially in the backcourl. li er de· fensive work has im· proved, one of the items stressed by Carey this year. NANCY TRESSELT <Jr.> A very powerful !utter and an excellent server. Probably has the most t c:i m spirit of anybody on the team. KARIN LANE <Jr. J A very s olid pl a ycr and consistent. Good in the backcourt. and a good setter. One ot tht• shortest girls on the l<.><.1m but docs an ex- cellent job along the net. KAREN L Y NC R <Soph.) -Probably the most cool·headed playet- and a super learn player. When she makes a mis- take, it doesn't bother her. Carey expects greas. things of her in the future. ls very smart and does all facets of the game well. DANA ERIC KSON <Jr > A l rans re r to Laguna Beach this year. A fantastic altitude and gives tremendous sup- port lo the team from tbc bench. LE S f.JE WEBER <S r .>-Out with a sprained ankle for the playoffs but one of the top players on the team. Bask e tball JUNIOR VAR\ITY \on Cl•m•nl• U1 I IUI ,u11011 ... ('NJl'IOV I\. , I \I; I Mc.(Ar1hV Ou~•tt f8 I f I 111 8tMlt'IM 11 Mull1q.1n ••l C 111 1<.....:H f',,~1 r tO r, 1'11lOrf"'\ W"""' 11\1 v nt Kri.tr '>•n (lem"nh• ,,.onn11 'uo' S, MullrqAn " M1t on I , lllh 7, l1JHi·rrM ''''"''~ t-fAltl1me ~"'" C 1..,m,nt,. 31 7~. RARE SALE! \ 2 quarts: s 2100 1/2 gallon: 1845 You save $2.55 M l'mol Olmded~h ~~ 1976 Ptcld~Coip .. lt'f• AJ8 DAILY PILOT Monday December 6. 1976 Alamitos Race Entries Trout Tops Polo Team LMAlef91ttM•wi.tlwT_, a.w. ,,_ "'••'-.. , ... -u.u , .... 111uc .... 1n1••c..u1 ...... ................. " f'lan llACI -.a yer<b. J -....,. oe1m1ne. Pune sttoo. o.1m1,,. ~lc•'1JCIO. ¥'\\-. ll"""y ILlpl\em) ..._Nepe>lf\9 (Hertl lit 11t SIX'" llACE -«10 Y•rch l ,.., olcl 11111 ... Clelml"ll. ,..., .. SllOO, o ......... f>rl<•"*· By IY lleo-t (H•'11 O>er91loCMnu 11.1p11.e,.,1 TIW4 ""'S..rw IMllcl\9111 9IW 0-., •-ICre-r) S.•-OneTlme IC.111 S.llyS..llMt IG.,tel ltt Gelllomle SUnW!I,. CC.Ill lit OW0-"91e<1119ttt) tit 01 lit .. , Four Orange Coast College water polo players hav e been chosen to the All-South Coast Conference first team, announced recent- ly by circuit coaches. Oscar T rout, the player of lhe year, along with Steve Wyatt, Eric Elder and Jim Davidson were the OCC players honored on the first unit. 11• MIMOellesO... IBrookil 1•• ... 11' BecNlloo51\ '"'°"''' lie.., Too (l(nl9'1ll .._.,C.l ICC.rln•I 11• "°"11t!Mlnnte IW••al "' l'lc•!. 0...C.lle 10.tom"" I in Hly•Oe<• <C••-•I "' • -clll(eulcly IW••~l TlnyMlclt fWercl) Fl~YBut ILl ..... m ) ''"Too 1..o .. , (Rk.llercl•I in C.O Ooto's Pr1-., f8 roou 1oldl 1n ,.., .. 11i.1111e ,,. MIHOovbleSuw <Fr•vl ,,. 119 119 Picked on the seeond team from OCC were goalie BUI Rice, Greg Scott and Ian Crockett. ...... ""''• OoC.I"" f&roo•» 1("'9h1 Fllle ICC.rlne) E419ie Oen<er I Dreyer l OoAllH• IE•e•• IDelomlM I e.toft H Meyo (8roou l in lilc1o1e5l• '"-"' • •• -i.•tl< °''' rlt0U91t) ,,, l lt "' "' '" ... S•CONO llACI -JIO yercl\ l ve•r SIVl.llT" llACI -SSO YIM'C!1. J .,. •• ·~ -UI). "11-•llCt. Putw MOOO 91<1 ..... 0.M. PurM S 1t00. ~51\er (Clerlne) 1(111 ...... M4ilcl '"'«Mir) E*l,.,,.Gtrt !Myle\I Lei-IC.Ill l.l,.,lh RtO<trd• !Trt••urel '" Tllymu•~l IW•l""'I 110 ... "' 110 OCC's Pirates won the con(erea ce title a nd finished third in last weekend's state tourney. 1 It Ttvtt Oft') YU IW.,cl) '" Wtt'tll•n ~k f.&4.ttt) lmeTlf,y CTrHwrel LucllyCllMtt llroolt\I tit MaonFl .. r 18_1,.ldl 119 l(trns RochlWonq IM,IHI 1n Tw11t..c.t 1ceroo1•I "' 119 111 ... 119 FlratTeam Orange Coast -Steve Wyatt, Oscar Trout. Eric Elder. Jim Davidson; San Diego Mesa Tom Young ; Cerritos Vance Parmelly, Guy Haarlamert, David Kan· tor (goalle); Fullerton - Brian Hoppe , Dave Perry; · Grossmont John Peckham. 1 ..... 0C!Wrl~I t<ks .,. Tell !Cerdot• I Ello B-y IWerol Sll .. r Rlell• IH•r1 I ttt Clclofy IGertAI tt• Jetto~lo IH•ftl tit Tropc.8e•I tlt ..... "11 119 • AIM ~lltlOle 11• AIMEll•itl• Alco v-.1., '"'"•"' Qe Ca• Crist• IOrt .. rl ~\ttrGfoorQll" CMOrrt\Onl 11• Dr T-lt•u• IW•1""'1 "' \l1 '" R""'bllftE•u IC•lll •n M$. ,....,,..., IBrook"1t101 '" ltOHTtf ""'CE l!O y.rd• 1.,..,..r ~ Allow-e Pur>t \HOO Tot.-Freely IL•on•"ll -·Bid •C•rclOte l ~' 9.,, tCru91-r> T"lllO llACI -JIO v•nh 3 YN• old\ • uP. O•lrnln9 ,,,., .. ~JOO Cle•rnlf\9 Prlu UOOO nt =~~::.~F1~!~1 o.n.tys!>ter Cl<n1on11 OI.,.. 8111 Goodie ICerclot• I -"(lonllM•" t"'O.irl Mr. 81ect Dec• IRlcllerd>I in 8oy08oylMll<""lll • 54.LouhJr. IWet~I O..r,.,... 8en 1~1ornwl Hiit FlltM IOroyer I tn ""'"Your Pme f8 rook•ltt'f'I •n Lotw 0.Po•it\ rw noM I :~ Tonto\ S.ndy 8er !Rl<lterosl o.I R .. Comt1 IL•P"aml "' '" ~llTM llACI llOYArc'' , .. ,., -~ UP. C .. omlftO Pur>t $1900 0 •1""1"'1 Price '7000. HllO BloO (l(nlghll s.t•ml(e !Ore.er I 8•r F•me CA1<h•rCh·• Mr 8 Ber 10.lornt>ol Nos.cl Sono• IOrool<>) OneendO..ty IW••dl W1fCf\Cr••kCruc 'G•rt•t Eetle Lef\cllno IC•ll I Al~lilltlllle Rerqin !Herl! I It Hell.,. Tw"I (WrlQt>tl llt Mall's Coe>y IC•••oe•I '" ~Benito County f0.1omtw > 11• NINTH llACE lSO yafd\. l Yt>Or old\ £ uo Clalmlnq Purs. Sl900. C.l•IMiftC) Proc• $1000. H•r1 8•" (0.lombd I TO() Moontr fl '•ac.urt I lomeft'\ L"° Two IAouq~I Kt"em•lt •H•rU TO<\IO\ 8o J•"Qle 18roo'rt•ldl P-11\dl• ror~v•rl JollyS-w (Lil)ilaml ';l\1t!y0tt IW.rdl OJ•l CLecl\ IC•rC101• I P•tr (lal')()lt:tr CCltrt\Y.) "''° '"' .. "'• Rul•rk'\Vdn «Cruv~r) ,.,nv Ft-roc1ou\ fG•rtoi) ~Sir<'•"' IH•rtl Sl••w 8olo IBrOOO\I II~ 111 11? 119 119 Sec:ond Team Orange Coas,t. -Bill Rice (go~li.,), Greg Scott, Ian Cr.ockelt. ML. SAC -Scott Schulze, Dave Earwood; Cerri too -Norman Arend as, Jim Mc Donald ; Santa An• - Brian Pope, Garret~ Sl- iilgerh and: Fullerton - Tom Kersch : ·Gross~t -Robin Cardin. • • Player of the year Trout. "ll'TM llACli -000 ••rd\ ) ,,_ ~a. up F1lll" ~ "1ert\ Ctelm"'V ~-----------------•,----~---, Pvrw~ Cl•omln9Prf<US&!OO l'ef\CY"ll•lr IC••dOtel 111) ~°'GO IFr•YI 110 Yoll>l>eOAbCMPoolW••dl tit p_.-.uulMllt,,.lll '" MA VIII• IMylU) 111) Alamitos Racing .·Results .... s ...... v CIHr, Tr•cll "'ut. l'lllST llAC~ 000 vorcn l , •• , olC!1 & 111> Cl•lmlnq Pu,.e llfOO ~•Tloer IMyC.•I 1100 110 •AO .~(111<1\trO\I 1900 11 .0 '\World IO•Jlo<nlNtl 7 IO Tl--100l.. d• At14 'Ml Mltnd•1t•. q;f"QUf"'l t..•f· 111it IMr, Wltl\ller'• Gotd. s-<~ ~ .. I. >lll•luttl', Gel lle•dY, ~Of ""9<1\ , Sc••tc,,..d -w~ Ritter, ~·· w....i.r M•1t. Ju\l "'\l .... B.lMof\ Oo U lucte -.. v .... T._. • 1· ..... 111. ,..,.u .. .. 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Nftl ... , LH, YW e..t s..i. lcretttlM -O..r T 1-, II•"'-• Hy M41fW Alltft, Oyo.eeo ow. u •um -..... ,.., IU• a t• ............ '"',,.._ .... .. ~-'° t.• 1M f40 U t : •' Got three French hens you want to move by Christmas? Move them under our tree. On each Thursday through December 16th, the Dally Pilot will publish special pages to make it easier for you to convert your saleable items to Christmas cash. Buy a box under our tree & sell your toys, sports equipment, luggage, appliances, furniture, antiques, handmade & unique gifts and no matter what your business -we have a box for you! Putting a box under our tree is easy and Jnexpenslve, Rates are $4.00 for the smaller box to $22 50 for the largest box. BiG, BkG SAVINGS II you run more than one time. For more informatlon and to place your ad just can 642·56?'8 and ask for your Christmas Ad· Viser for more information. Your credit is good with us. we•n blll you or you can charge 'your-ad to Ye>ur Master Charge or BankAme'ricard. " . . I '. )1 DAILY PILOT SPORTS GoUToorney Set for ICCC Irvine Coast Country Club in Newport Beach will host the Bing Crosby pro-am satellite golf toumaD')ent for the third s traight year on Jan. 2 1 -22 with Ho ag Memorial Hospital as the beneficiary. A total of 72 teams pairing a PGA touring pro with an amateur will participate in the tourna- ment. The pros will be competing for $10,000 in prize money. The benefit event is spon sored b y the hospital's 522 club with all proceeds going to purchase needed equip- ment for the facility. For further informa- tion, call the tournament o(fice at 642-1463. <..1arence Campbel l, 72. recently was re-elected president of the National Hockey League for his Jtstyear. ,. . .. 642-5678 . , ., . •' I ·Area Goll Results l"VMtl.ISOUAll•oc f tetd Stro••' ro"'"•rnent A l'lffltl I H•n< y Ante/mo SO t ec-H••-. n. > Mer11.,. >ier\. So ' Row ... S•lllf\9 H II Ftooltl I ••• .,..,. s........ ,,.. 1 &tor•• w,...,.,, Sit 1 J .. ,. C...tor, ll. ' Er'-°'nott41dl, U. 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V•~r •I Wejl\lftftOI\ Mlnne"'t••t Pint-.. 51 Loulu t NV ISleftders It has been assumed that automation increases productivity, but businessmen find it also rises when jobs are designed so that labor has a greater sense of satisfaction and respect. Workday Blues Becoming Rosy By TERRY KIRKPATRICK At' a w1inn' wrtt_.. Some old notions about work are changing. Like the idea that labor and management must always be al odds. Or that a person will pro- duce more if he is placed before a biager, faster m achine. Or that many jobs always will be dull and routine, their holders con· signed to lives of quiet despera· tion. lo t h e ir s t ead, a new philosophy of work ls developing at hundreds of factories, mines and assembly lines across t.he country. For thousands of people. this new thinking about the purpose and design or their jobs has ended the Sunday afternoon knot in lhe stomach at the prospect or Monday morning. For many, the 4 p.m . race to ' the parking lot at the first sound • of the whistle has disappeared because the whistle, and the time • clock. have disappeared. For others, the end or the day now 1 means the beginning of class in the company school or lingering to discuss tomorrow's work. To many employers, it bas brought the pleasant discovery that fewer workers are calling in sick or showing up late or filing grievances or that output is rls· ing and the accident rate is declining. It was that way for Warren IUnks, president of the Rushton Mining Co. Three years ago, in the hot, gritty tunnels of the mine thousands of feet beneath Oceola l Mills, Pa .... • I ' I .. "We did what the boss told us lo do and only what he told us to do. If we goofed, it was his fault," miner-Mark Naylor recalled. AUTONOMOUS As in other mines. accidents and absenteeis m were rising while the output of coal was fall· ing, and traditional management methods weren't working. Hinks heard about something being tried in British mines, t he "autonomous team" concept, and jumped at the idea. In stages, on an experimental basis, the three seven· man crews that clawed at one of the mme's coal faces around the clock were expanded to nine members, each or whom was boosted to top s cale pay. On Mondays and Fridays, work in the exper imental section stopped and t he miners were brought to the surface for classroom instruction in each of the jobs on the crew and in safely rules. The three foremen, once strapped with the contradictory duties of pushing both production and safety. were told to help with planning but concentrate on safety. The responsi bi lily for how much coal was dug fell to the miners. They now had.the freedom lo make more decisions about their jobs and the knowledge to make them in· telligently. More important, perhaps, was that the mine's management was learning a new attitude toward \ BEA ANDERSON, Editor Monday. December 6. 1976 81 the miners. RECOGNITION "Generally the worker will reflect what management fee.ls. about him, and taking that same idea, we can say that the worker will also reflect the feeling that we have confidence in blm and we have trust in him," Hin.las told a U .S. Senate subcommittee last spring. "The bes t management motivation in any organization is that we emphatically recognize the value of the worker as a person and that we fee.I the miner needs to be seen as bringing to the job intelligenc'e. his attitude and feelings and beliefs, and not just bis hands and. feet and muscles." Something clicked. The number of federal safety law violations In the mine declined, but output from the mine has remained about the same. Tbe amount spent oo sup- plies and parts feU. And Kark Naylor changed bis mind. "We began to feel somebody up there trusted us," be told a JUo.- management conference. "The funny thine Is, in the new system, we Cthe crew) don't eet really tired anymore. We probably work about twice as hard as we ever did before, but we don't get tired." Hinks uses the term "quality of work'' when he describes the pro· ject. ANY OTHER NAME But the new philosophy of work on which it is based goes by a dozen other names and looks dif. ferent everywhere it ls put into practice. It has been called human re- source development, job enrich· ment, co-determi(lation, worker participation, industrial de· mocracy. Each is a variation ot the same theme: redesign the job -wl)o does what and how, who makes the decisions. Or adopt a new al· Utude or mutual trust, respect and goodwill between employer and employe and let job design changes follow. Or both, as was the case with Rushton. "This is a new kind of culture, in which everybody -worker and manager -comes to have a completely changed view of himself," says Ted Mills, direc· tor or the N atlonal Quality of Work Center in Washington. That group, funded by govern· menl and private grants, helps develop quality of work experi· ments sucb as the Rusbtoo pro- jecL Because of the diversity o• names for the concept, locaUng .the companies adoptlne it ls aometb1n1 like asking a haystack what it calll needles.before st.art-inl to Harcb for them, Mills saya. Confounding the effort ls the fact that many companies have experienced such a sharp in· crease in productivity alter in· sUtutlng quality of work pro- grams that they don't want their competitors to bear about it, be aa,ya. Others see them as a way to keep a union out or weaken an ex· i.sting union, and don't want their motives publicized. Nevertbeleas, Mills estimates that between 2,000 and 3,000 com- panies, large and small, have un· dertaken serious efforts to change the structure ol work - to make it more satisfying, meaningful and productive. VENTURES Most have gotten into the field ·in the past two or three years. A few ventured in a decade ago. · The enthusiasm in industry la not altruiatic. Executives ba..e fomad that it makes good busl· neu senH. That realization may have been induced by the recent nt'esslon, Mills believes. In the recent economic slump, when money for new machiaes waa tight, many managers turned to improving human labor in an effort to increase produc· Uvity. It cost very littJ~totry. Louia O'Leary, an assistant vice president in the human r~ source development department at American Telephone & Tele- graph Co .. said, "We do koow that there are productivity payoffs when work is designed properly." The company'• in· depth analysis of its jobs bas led to three baste concepts, loosely lagged modular, feedback and power to act. The modular ap· proacb is to make each job naturally complete. Employes who usembJe phone books, for example, are s ometimes U · aiped the entire book, A to z. i{'· stead o1 Just a part. InstaJtera may be aul&ned to a regular "turf'• or territory, where they become personally acquainted with their eustomen and get feedback from them. Graotm.r employes the power to act, to make declalons, giving enouaih re1ponaibillty "to really do your job," ia also a key component of the program, 0 'Leary says. "American industry and bull· ness have treated their workers as children ever since the start of the Industrial Revolution." Al Warren, a General Motors Corp. executive, s ays, "What we're talldn.c about u. whatever yau do, you ought to have the op- portunity to do it as an adult and notuacbild ... Carpenter Builds School Days Today's students are more concerned wfth providing services than spending I money on 1 expensive I· rock concerts, : says Dr. J William I Carpenter, " dean of college life at Golden West. I • ,.. BJ llAaCIA FOltSBDG Oflllell>elly ...... Mafl College Ute has changed. The words conjure up an image of pompon·rusUin1 yell leaders at a pep rally. Friday nilbt mix· as in the gym, sock bops and bootenanlea. But student. today are more interested in provktiq student services than 1pendine money on bit bashea like expensive rock ccocerts, Indicated Dr. William Carpenter, dean ol college life at Golden Wat Collete. Tradltlonal actlvltles like athletic contest. and drama pre- sentaUons remain, f1lllng an lm· pottaatsoclalneed. However, there la a new em· pbula on bulldln1 procrams to beJp papila llay in Khool and be IUCffaful wbUe there. "As a community college witb a diverse atudent population. we need to otrer both. 1bal'a what makes it rich and tun to work with. "lklt we've tone far llfield,"' be Hid. Comint to Golden Welt ID 1m. Dr. Carpenter'• rflllJ)OOl.ibllltles • dean of eollece aftaln In· dueled COUDMUnt ... IUpel"ris. =...-.=-Md.,.,....._, la a e--.ua reorpnl.ut.IGa· , lut ,.., bil daU• ~ wWa ·11te~oltllenewtWe. ''BMlellly, ..... ct-d can.c• life """ tile Ila• ot coat• maletiUOe open .._,, ... the ~ lldmlnlatrltiaD Mil .. TtM ,.,.,.. ca: ..,.. ... aMOtlate p ..,.. No ICS-at Cbapmu Oollet•*•wt llea.U, OD Illa b~kcrouncl to "lbilr• • balance betwwww a eon· e«s fot tbe unlqu..,.. ~ tbe In· dividual and an efficient opera- tion." A licensed marriage, family and chJld counselor, Dr. CatJ>en· t.er'a technique Is "to negoUate, lilten and feed back to get un- derstanding." In an effort to "build in some deeree ol aenslUvity," be takes a COUDHlinl approach to manqe- meat eince ''people appreciate belnC beard u individuall." Tbe dean encourages tbe de- velopment and maintenance ot special aerviees, like the women'• center, work·study, atbletle and veterans programs and Je1al aid, to meet the needa ot tbe student population. TaOVBLE . "A a.lpificant number ot stu- dent.a are bavtn1 trouble plus· ..., Jn and aeledlq what they wmttodo. "At Golden W ea4 42 percent ot the student. have an undeclared m~. "It seems to me tbat all of us .,. searcblnt for meanin11D our llvea, ••noted Dr. Carpenter. Tbe Nl'Yica be ii lawlwed IA .. .,. valuable for atudeb. Tbe.1 Oft tbetn a place to bn for belp." 1'IMt women'• e-. •• de-"'°l*l ill an au.a.pt to hW WOllMG ot all .... elpedailly U.O.. re·eaterln1 tb• aebool -, l•l Hkt a part ot U.. col· ... uperi.ace. It 1poqon workabopl P4 block·tcbedultd ti ... OD rape, ..., w-.. aad .,... .... Cl( WODMD'I awa.rea ... ..,,. worlt·ltlldJ ...,.,..... ... eludH work experiae., job ,uc.meat and volunteer wart to -.., create Job-«1-..ct I~ experiences," be said. Students select a job, reauter for academic credit, set up obJec· tives and work out ways ot learn- ing about "the world ot Wot'k. '' LEGAL AID The legal aid proeram otters a atties of workabops guided by lawyers focusing on avoiding legal dlfficwtiea. "A 1roup of attorneys in Orange Cowity puts in a apeciflc number or on·eampua houri per week to give JecaJ advice. "The flnt half-hour Hllion ts fr~. and a reduced fee schedule la available," explained Dr. Carpenter. Tbe cbUd care center ii 1ltuat- ed within tbe Grace Lutberut OtUtth across the street from the school. "It provides care for tbt cblJdren ol Golden West CoUeae MudentAt at reasonable rat.es so they can drop &hem ott aDd at- tend cluaes." The 1ebool'1 bealt.b center baa a 24-bour·•·day emer1ency telepbooe Mnlce, l'i• a mental bealtb te-. ot -~and P'rcbololilt. OD campus 30 boul'5 ..... Medical doetorl tre available ,.,. ...... ,.. ..... Dr. Carpenter allC> .,,...,_. tbe ,.,,... ... for ltUdmt ~­dal 1114, acholanblP' an4 loam, and IDnruet. He""' d.lNetlon Co the GPtr•· Uoa ot lervlffl' for tbe· ban. dicQDed IDd ....... Slll,pe1red. ··~ ...... tM lqeat coa11aaalt1 ~011•1• la.artn1- imJ)alred procram iD tM -.c...•• tlenoled. "It Pl'0¥1des lnterpn&a, aaa taken ID4 tpedalCGim ..... '' • . . . . 1 ft DAILY PILOT Her Guys Lined Up DEAR ANN LANDERS: You asked teenage girla to write and tell you the "lines" that were used on them by boys who were after sex. What a great idea! I'm no teenager <I'm 22) but I thought you might be interested in the "Imes" pitched at me over the past several years. Some of them were hilarious, others downnaht pathetic. The adolescent, non-serious passes started m the seventh grade with games like Spin·tbe· BotUe and Post Ofrice. Then there were those un· forgettable Scavenger Hunts -with kids pairing • off and wandering around in search of pink toilet paper and vegetable sieves. The serious, for.real lines started in the ninth grade. My favorite boyfriend was best pals with a guy who dated the most popular girl in school. He told me she "did It." That, of course, meant "it" was the thing to do. When he discovered that strategy didn't work, he promptly switched to, "ll you loved me you'd prove it." I told him if he loved ME be wouldn 'l make such demands on me. Finally he became adamant and said J HAD to give in because my stubbornness was lousing up his maturing process and giving him pimples. Weddings ~ and Engagements To avoid d1-.:ippoinlmcnt, 1>rospcclivc lmd1•s :.in• rc•n11n1kd 10 h.iv!· lht•lf \H•ddin~ :-.t ones with hlcirk and \1h1 l l· glossy phot oi: ro.i phs lo I ht· l>a i ly !'dot Prop le lh.·rrnrtmcnt one \ll•c·k bl'fnH· lhl' w<.'dding. 1'1ctures r cccivt:<l .lfH-r lh.1 t lime ''ill 1111l lie u:-.cd . For t•ngagcmcnt announrt•ml'nls il. h 11npl'ral1vc that th!' -.tor~·. al!io a<•t·om· p.11111•d lly a bluck ;111d \\11111· t::IO!isy pie· 11111'. lw s ubm1ttc:rl s1\ \l t'l·k:. or more h\'11111• tlw wcdd1nl.! chill'. otlwrn be il v.111 11111 lit• puhhshcd To lwlp fill rcqwrcm1•nh on ::1llh \\Cd· 1lan1! .incl <'nl!~tg('ment sl11111· .... form. arc ,,, Jll.1blt' Ill Jll Oa1lv 1'11111 uffttt'S. Fur- lh1·r quc:-.t10ns v.111 tic' Jn'v.l't t·d hy P('oplc lkp.Jrl mt•nt -.t<J ff mc·mlx·1-, .111;1:? -1321. Do Something Different for the Holidays I .. ~ To~ .. o coul\f' al )llP 101 1t.a1 " 11 .. oblr dollf''"'"("' o ..... lop your o~• ,.,r1 ••. duol•ly ond tmp,o.,,,. your oppf"a,on<,.. f"O\•, ~ noluro11y 1n o unique en•uo,,,,.,rnt tho I w r\ ~ for yov l n1oy the holiday• mart than e•rr' Coll lodoy for o complim•nlory onoly.,, & holiday cou"" Hhf'dul• John Robert Po-.vers The. School, fa< y°" Person.I ~~lopment ORANGE 3 Tow11 & Country • 547 8228 s'4.lbt.le sof1sL:u~ion in grey flannel ... bn ghtened by a scarf from Liberty of London JUSt perfect for Lhe oohdays. When I told him lo buz.z off he threatened to kill himself. The threat turned out to be as ridiculous as the rest of his garbage. Then l started to date a fellow who was ex· tremely considerate or my feelings but also very affecllonate. When l made my position clear, he d.ldn't pester me about sex. We necked a litUe, but he never tried lo step beyond the boundaries I set up. After a few blissful months, Mr. Well· Behaved informed me l was going lo have 'to share him with "Winnie" (a hot number) who wrote notes which made it olain she was readv willing and able to "fulfill" h.im. ' Off I went to coUeg<: -still intact but gelling curiouser and c uriouser . The second day on cam· pus I met Claude. He told me on our se<:ond date tbat dozens of girls had followed him from the swimming pool to his apartment, Justing after tus bod. Others were so aggressjve (and hungry) they knocked on his door with bottles they coul~'t open, dresses that needed to be zipped, furniture they couldn't move-anythmg to get. past his front door and hopefully into his bed. Then there was Horace, two y~an my junior, Philip ClaramlcoU, Gayle Ann Devlin Betrothed Devlin-Ciaramicoti Dr. and Mrs Bdward A. Devlin of Hunt· ing~on Beach have announced the engagement of then· daughter. Gayle Ann Devljn, and Philip J. Ciaramicoli Jr. Miss Devlin graduated magna cum laude from the College or the Holy Cross and is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. She also attended Marina HiJ?h School. Her fiance, son or Mr. and Mrs. Philip J . Cjaramicoli of Milford, Mass .. also graduated from the College or the Holy Cross and received his masters degree in business administration from the University of Massachusetts. An April 17 wedding 1~ being planned in St. Bonaventure Catholic Church. Huntington Beach • *. Ashley-Misiolek Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Ashley or Costa Mesa have announced the engagement of their daughter, Paige Ashley, and Ronaid K. Misiolek, son of the Leon M isioleks. also of Costa Mesa Miss Ashley, a graduate of UC D~vis tea('hes mentally retarded adults in Sacramento'. Her f1ance a student al California State University, Sacramento, Is a graduate of Costa Mesa High S('hool and studied at UC Santa Barbara A May wcrld1n~ is being planned in Sacramento 44 fashion island, newport center ...... .(Ann Landers~ Cosmetic Sur1?ery is the answer ... if you wish to look youni.;t•r ,1nd improve lhc appearance of your bod.>. who wanted me to "teach him" ... and Bernle, who wu dyiq to know ll a PoliUcal science ma· jor had anything that worked besides her brain. And Orval. a religious nut who bMi been instruct· ed by God to "show me the way.'' American Cosmetic Surgery Ctnter, lnr. • no: l.ltT . 1'0 ..... •.H ... 11\IK 1K.\''l'I \\I'. BKt:\~T • 1111~. r111c.11 ...... IO\I \UI . ~"I" PU.I.. Funny thlna. nothinK wore down my re· siat.aoce. The lines Just made me run in lbe other direction. No girl wants lo feel used, fooled or euy. Q ~.~~.!~,~:.~~.'.01 .1 :•'t~~:~'.1111~~c::::~·1~~' ~ \~ . ............. .. ..... ·~:.:::::: ......... .. I ~ AMUUCAlll COSMlTtC SUHHT cunu IMC. t 6~~2 llotw A•e 11_.,,.,,.., h1<h ltl 11~ When l finally said yes, It was because a sensitive and carma young man made me feel valuable as a human being. He applied no gim· miks, no hogwash. no sales talk. 1 made up my own mind. ll was beautiful. J'm glad I waited. - HAPPY PASTANDPROUOTOTELLIT DEAK HAP PY: I hope every young virgin out there wbo reach your letter will pay d ote atten· tlocl. Ab! The more tlllap clau ge -tbe more tbey uetheHme! What's prudish? What's 0 .K.? Ir you aren't sure. you need some help. It's available in the booklet: "Necking and Petting -What Are the Limits?" Mail your request to Ann Landers. P.O. Box 1400, Elgin, UI. 60120, enclosing so cents in coin and a long, stamped, self-addressed en· velope. Ta urus Get Most For Money TUESDAV,DECEMBE R 7 By SYDNEY OMARR ARlES (March 21·Apr1l 19): Emphasis on short trips, versatility, messages. the testing of ideas. Cycle is such that waiting is beneficial - means don't rush todedde. Refine techniques. TAURUS (April 20·May 20): Accent on finances, locating lost objects, getting the most for your money. You have more strength now than might be supposed. Know it and be confi· dent. GEMINI (May 2l·June 20): What had been an obstacle to progess is removed. Cycle is high: take initiative. Make new starts, get rid of burden not rightly your own. CANCER (June 21.July 22>: Light is thrown on subjed which bad been cloaked in m ystery. You obtain answers by getting to heart of mat· ters. Romantic interlude i3 in picture. A decision A TIMELY TOUCH OF CLASS.ANYTIME. FROM SEIKO. NATURALLY. is being made behind closed doors. · LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Accent on winning friends, influencing people. having wishes come true. Rise above tendency lo be' envious of suc· cess of others. Your own sense or security will be enhanced. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): Accent on com· municating with "boss." Job gets done and you deserve credit. Good news due your standing is elevated. Social activity accelerated. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 22): Long.range con. cepts, plans are spoUighted. You're able to get solid bold on what you actually need. Emphasis on readinK, writing, publishing, undertakin" pro- ject which adds to your overall understandinj, knowledge. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ): Jnvolvement, special relationship, significant changes, delving deep into what bad been a mystery -these are emphasized. Leases, taxes. finaMes affecting partner or mate surge lo forefront. No. YROllM-$1'5.00. ~t .. tnf•\' .. flf>f, blA(~ O;•J. HAH'OlCX '""' reu•t c.ry'\UI, ~oiv•litbht bt•"•ltt SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec 21): Be diplomatic, make concessions, improve family situation by purchase of gift. re membrance or special occasion. Accent on cooperative efforts, public relations. The Lady Seiko Ultril Thin Oua1z is so luxuriously shm. it's setting a nc.v standard or clegancc. /\11 thr vital quartz components 111 easily into its Ultn Thi11 CAPRICOR N <Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Go slow - moderation is key to progress. See situations, people as they are, not merely as you wis h they could be. Emphasis on health, employment, special services. case. Thal includes the tiny ballery that power:; the watch and assures l reedom lrom'windinq So, when you give the lnshionablc l ady Seiko Oua11;. you're selling a new :.landJrd or g1ft-givinri. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18>: Good Moon aspect coincides now with creativity, change. in· tensified relationships, the imprinting of style. Young person could make financial demands. SEIKO PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20): You find that what you own Is worth more than originally estimated. Get contract, agreement reviewed. Be confident. Your sense of judgment is vindicat· ed. A.H. WEINERT F'ine Jewels J2 F.nl>IOll 1,11)1>(1. N~wporl 0.-.Hll 1>4' 20'0 Free Health ·seminars A Comnmnity Forum for your education. and awareness in how to survive todays Maior Health Problems TMldcry. Dec11Rber 7 -7:30 p.111. Dr. U0Mt SllYer, O.D. Fnd lel Dr. Q.wy C , ... •· D.C. lridolo91 lly• A11alyskJ 11)1 •Rid r..erw t4111rfff••t Chl~OfN actor ,w.-nc1ay, Dec•.._ a -7:30 , ..... Guest Lechrer, Dr. Bernard Jensen, D.C., Nutritionist DOMHoltSJ.00 s......., •• UtRlt.d l'rff...tecl by COUTURE CHIROPRACTIC OFFICE 204JWISTCUFF Dll.-NEWPOIT llACH 6AS.5JOO Tew tws eel wt so yo.. wt• ra•11•1r to 4lfteM. SfftMg 11 lflftlted. HHlth Meys ••• HYPOGL YCEMIA-eLow liood s"P, lylh-.•wyc ....... -.c. "But J>octor, tr 1 have feeding~ are necessary. Whife the term •'low low blood 1u11r, ehouldn't The diet should aeneralty blood sugar" would s~m I be •ble to eat aJI the to indicate that a diet blgh aucar I wanU" As much be hlgh In rats ond protein In sugar content Is needed. u 1 wot)d (slow conver sion to auch Is not the case. The llke to tell energy>. Obviously, a diet Idea Is to mainUln a them yea, hlrb In auicar content healthy blood suaar level. the anawer would Just compound the not try to "catch up" with Js no. p r o b J e rn b 1 b e I n g ll'lsuJln produeUon. Candy Baatcally, coov«ted to slucose and and fruits with a bi1h Ry po c I y "burned up'' In the form or natu:raJ sugar content may cemta Is ao ene1'JY even more rapidly. btl an excellent source of ovtr·Hcr• An auacJc 1enerally quick enerfy for people t I o n 0 0«11.1'1 art~r the victim has wtth norma sugar levels. 1n 1 ult1s 1one without food for but lhey can be the b y t h 6 Mvtfll hours. At nrst he d o w n r a l l o f l h e ~ .. c. pancreas. may appe~r to be hYDo.rlycemlavlctlm. 'n\is surplus Insulin meal'lll lnto,1dc1led, aa a 1lurrlng ·~afure Intended for your t h at people with of •J>tec:h and t•neral 1Jands to fun ction hypoilycem\a convert dltorientaUon •l'e llJ(~y lo properly. but tl\ey must their food to energy much occur . £mot Ion a I have • normal flow of more quickly than normal ln11tab11\ty may •1so be nerve ltt)ulaes to do so. , · I n d I c a t I v e o f While all branches of the For lhis reason. frequent., hypoglycemia. heallnc art.a r~o1nlie lh&t lhl' nerve~ pa!'!! rlown the spinal column and cmeri:c throul(h nerve opf'ninii~ in the v e rtebr al', Ch1rnpract1r i'I the only br a nch wh o11e main ronccrn 1~ with the proper m aintcncnce of the rclallon~hip. Ir you lluffor from nypoglycemiu. ll 1s quite po11slble that you have a spinal s ubluxat1on Cmlsollgnment of th' vertebrae ) which h lnterfering with lbe now of nerve Impulses to your pancreH, liver, ot adrenal alands. An examln11llon b.v your Do c tor o f Chiropra c ti c ca n determln~ if 11uch Is the case. ~CMSUr74 Fiii UCTUU Pia.BM ._ .. s.....,.c•1u...-.....,uXNe ... • ....... ._.. Dt-,.C....,.11 ... ~.,.. ............ cMc ........... -·· .................. ....... ,.., ••• h .... • I \ I I t I I i ' i Women Bow Two of th e n ine young women pre· se nted at th e Camellia Debutante Ball ln Bel Air Coun· try Club were from the Orange Coast. They are Karen Lee Swenson of Mission Vlejo (left ) and Karen Anne Pruess- ing, Newport Beach, with escort Kelly Slayton, Garden Grove. The event was sponsored by Las Comadres, a Childre n's Home Society auxiliary. -PUBLIC PACKAGING SHIPPING CENTERS ~~ l=ltAGllF. HANDLE V\flTH CARE PACKAGING SYSTEM YOUR PACKAGING& SHlmNG MADE EASY! BRING IN YOUR ITEMS. WE'LL PACKAGE, LABEL & SHIP HIW '<>A~Kof'UCI MITHOD u.,.s .. c-11 c.m .... ~ .,_ _...,. (714) 751-7482 COSTA MESA 3042 EJfTEIPtlSE AVE., COSTA MW, Cl 9262' Holiday Happenings hew of Hte tremieRdoa rHpOnSe fo OW . TURQUOISE COM M UN I TY HEALTH PROGRAM: A panel discussion about Paramedics and What They Mean to You wilJ be present· ed by Hoag Memorial Hospital. Presbyterian. Open and free to the public, the meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 8, in the Con· feFence Center. Services performed, what to do when a cris is strikes and Hoajt 's role will be discussed by Joel Manchester, MD ; Michael D. Bear, MO; Linda BaldwUl, RN; Vicki Cleary, RN. and Don Jones, paramedic. As s~ting is limited, reserva- tions are necessary. !NDUSTRlAL NURSES: Com- munity Resources will be dis- cussed at the next dinner meeting at 7 p m Wednesday, D~. 8, in Mr. Mike"s r estaurant, Santa Ana. Speakers will be John F Von Glahn, executive director of Family Services of Orange Coun- ty. and Anthony X. Valles, in- formation and referral worke r at Orange County Department of Social Services. DOLPHINS: The Women 's Division, Newport Harbor Chamber or Commerce will pre· sent a Christmas luncheon and centerpiece contest Wednesday, Dec. 8, in the New porter Inn. Reservations may be made by GIFT LISTS? lmpon ed llohday r Jmlie\ Urand1cd Irish f-tu 11 ( .i~e' Blum'\ hne C"hoc..ola1c, 1-rcsh Roasted Nu1s ll~11d.wh1ppcd f uJ~e C.111 Pad,, llohday <.1rt~ ol f l'J I n~l1\h J.un SJn1pk1 , Our Ow n Un111u~' C'111llt.'<'.l1011~ plus l:xc.:lus1vc C JtJh•i: ll>r \I 111 Ord1'f\ LUMBERYARD PLAl• 384 FOREST AVf LAGUNA BEACl'I OPEN EveRv OAY WEO ·SAT 1119 p m calling the core omce at&W-8211. A M E RI CAN F I ELD SERVICE: Newport Harbor Chapter is sponsoring a cheese and wine party to introduce the international scholarship students. The event will take place at 6 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 9, in the Newport Beach home of Dr. and Mrs. Royal Tucker. INSU RANCE WOMEN: A luau themed Christmas <linner dance is planned by the Orange County members. The gala will begin with cocktails at 7 p.m. Friday, D~. 10, in the Moose Lodge, Santa Ana. Dinner. dancing and Hawaiian entertainment will follow. Members and guests are invll· ed to bring an unwrapped toy for the Toys for Tots campaign. CH APM AN WOM EN: The service group. comprised oC ad· minislrative and faculty women and wives or starr members, will have a Holiday Happening at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec.10, in the Santa Ana home of Dr. and Ml's. Ronald Huntington. HOLIDAY FAIR: Mucken- thaler Cultural Center, FuJlerton, is the setting for and beneficiary of a 20-day sale which ends Christmas Eve. Open seven days a wee.k, the hours are noon to s p . m. daily with extended hours unW 9 p.m. Mon- days and Fridays. COSTA MESA WOMEN: The club wlll host a Christmas party for Retired Senior Volunteer Pro. cram members in the clubhouse lrom2to5p.m. Friday,Oec.10. The Elizabeth Canepe Memorial Award for outstanding service will be presented. AAUW: A Leisure World home and garden tour is sponsored by the Laguna Beach Branch at 1 p.m. Friday, Dec.10. Tickets are $2.50 and may be re· served by calling Blanche Gar- rison, 837-9160, or Roberta Thayer, 830·5373. Proceeds benefit the fellowships procram. WORKSH OP: A self.defense workshop for women will be pre· sented al Orange Coast College Women's Center at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 11. Further information is availa· ble by cal ting 556-5557. MOTH E R S OF T WINS: Orange Coast members are plan- ning a children's Christmas party at 2 p.m . Saturday, Dec. 11, in the Edison Community Center, Hunt· ington Beach. A special program, A visit to Santa's Workshop will be present· ed by puppeteer, Jim Gamble. SPEOACULAR ,,_ T,...,.. H•• 911""4 t. ...... ti..lr fe lt•lon collectl•• ef .......... d ........ wfftt •-Cllri1 ..... TUl 94JOISE • MOTl4Bl Of PUil • CORAL ........ -..w-.. ... cw.n .~ . ......,.., ...... E.ACH WHtt WI WIU. OffH A WICIAL OH 5alCTID rt'IMS. THIS WHIC OHL Y 75%0Ff ALL LIQUID SILVH SALi H .00-' I I SALE u .oo r----------c:.,...,... _________ , : HOLIDAY SPECIAL! l 99.9% PURE SILVER i s·1 .. •I· I ..... ~ I a...i::ro" I l•~ one'"'' cu•1omet '-----·-...... -~--·------ LI NDA B LACK has .---------------------------------........................ ... re ceived the firs t Outstanding Physical Therapist of the Year Award in Orange County. Mrs. Black received the award from State Sen. Paul B. Carpenter ~ American Physical I o n b e h a lf of the ~~-3 Therapy Assn., Orange ~:I ' . County district. ' · r · The recipient is re· GIFT IDEAS FROM OUR ·" i.;...; habih a ta on services · coordinator tor the Visit. ing Nurse Assn .. lrvmc, and s ecretary tor the Orange County Council on Aging. NEWPO RT BEACH resident Kimm Kennedy has been initialed rnto Phi Mu Sorority at the University o r California, Da vis . S h e i s a sophomore m ajoring in en vi r o nm e ntal horticulture and plan. ning. BOYS DEPT. Levi's rugged oorduroy jacket Is tined with warm orion fleece. Boys $30.00 Student $35.00 Levi's· aPOrt shirt• In chect<s and plaids. Never needs Ironing. From $11.00 ryzzetta Bernarc1 - A Gift of Beauty . . . Give Her a CHRISTMAS GIFT CERTIFICATE From: Luzzetta Bernard Design Plaza Salon Only , t..vr.• famous cord )ean• with Improved etvlnkege control. In all colots. Boys $10.50 S tudent $13.00 DB llANKA~QllCAJID Levra belt In denlma and leathers with dlatlnctlve buckles. Frc>tn $15.150 "'.Uft:lt C'HA-"OC w..toWf Plaae 10081..W.e, Newport BHch, Cahlomla , Phone 642·7061 ! ..... ---------------------------------------- OAIL Y PIL.01 ... Tonight's TV Highlights KHJ 0 8:00 -"Dark Victory:• A Bette Davis tear jerker from 1939, this drama about a doomed young woman also stars George Brent. NBC 8 9:00 -"Cat on a Hot Tin Roof." A new version ol the Tennessee Williams classic with Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner taking the Elizabeth • • Taylor ·and Paul Newman roles, ~, Laurence Olivier as Big Daddy and • Maureen Stapleton as Big Mamma. ABC .fJ -9:00 -"Tobruk." Under· ground !Jghters launch a daring raid on Rommel's supply line ln this 1967 movie based on a historical incident with Rock Hudson and George Peppard. TV DAILY LOG MONDAY 11 EV8NING 6:00 o <mmmmll Nns CJ tUl C&1 m m Men a ca> Star Trek ({) r-r l'ylt D (13J ([)) Q)) ModtJ lll&llt r~I The Cincinnati Btneals vs. Oakland Rlidtrs trom Oa~land. D '--l• m P.nridae F lllllly aJ Ad.l•ll m Mt111~trship Appul/£l1ttr1c c.m""' m Uttle blUls -6:30- 0 l>imb! Cue~s 1tl(lude Na1al1e Wood. Otna Mefntl, CICiiy lJSOll. DorolhJ MoOlt, Mary Sluut ind Suvullo. It) ..., Griff di! Ml Men "1tfi9 SllGW ID hlllllJ Affair (11J l ,)~t mTOWlll~ 7:00 a all Cl> m News U lilntll* l6) My Tllf tt Soni f JJ To TtN Ille Truth 0 Cooc•"'"'*' m I LM l.lltJ m Tiit fll Q)CiMtft~ (HJ Andy Griffitll fllJ lhdkil/l.tllrer lltport/Mt111• bership Apptal m Dramatic Stria '1)Mdamshmlly -7:30-a ~itooi11 "1illt u aowcmc '°' Olftafl I •J The Odd c..te rtJ ,., .. Tlllt r .. m ""' l4ledl on m _., SHicm MilN '23 ($)Wild w.rw oi ... 2C Hocu's llelWtS m Clllantl 2t llllll&ht ''Ind ol lhe Came"" Oocumtnt'ry ol Alrrun wild· hie 1nd ~ plea for tonstrulion./ McMNrslrip a,,.,1 m Frielids tf Mn m f1isll &or• 8:00 O (J7l Cl) 1•1 Rhoda Rhoda t•Pf11tnces a ~wt1e Sflll•alion pain whtn she sees hu u lru·ged husband w1lh 11nolhe1 woman U U1 t•) (10) tm little House 1111 tM P11irit "The Bulfr Bors"' lh1ee unruly b1olhe1s amve '" Walnut Giove and 111oceed to leno111e lhe 1nhab1lants. but furn a ~mlul ltsson when lhey pick on lhe females 1n lhe Charl!1 lncalls family. 0 Mowit: (CJ (11tr) "ao, 1111 A Dolphin" (adv) '57-Sophia loien, Alan Ladd. f6) Morie: (e) (2111) "The h r,le Plain'· Cdra) "55-Cre2ory red. O Mme: fe) (2111) "Oar~ V'tdory" ldra) "39-Belfe Da••s. Ceoiee B<enl. m lfti1c11tc1 m ,,,"' abSOll (lf) M1¥it: (C) (2'iW!r) "Tiit S-· dowurs" (dri) "60-Robul M1lchum, Deborah Ken m '" ~ Cllnltidts m~....,.. '1) JlplMSI UnfNll l'rotrMJ -1:30-a IJ7.) CIJ Cl) Pllylh1 /udae Dul" puts h11 mother on a plant lo ~™t telahvts and lltt1 lurns sht's dii.embarked and 1s \1111 111 ~n fran· Cl'.itO-1n the hailer tou1t apartmenl of hti elderly mare friend, Arthur lan~ m ma-Wits 9:00 G JOHNNY CASH CHRISTMAS * Spto(AL WIHIS FAMILY, FRIENDS & MUSIC STARS Q (ff) r )l m llmii!D JOIUff'IJ C.tSll Ct1rislln11 s,.aaf Johnny Cash stars In a hohdlJ cel1b11hon of muSIC and f11tndlhip taped 10 and 1rownd Nnhv1fle. lennessee. H11 aur~ts include Ro1 Clerk, lony Orlando, lhe ~ev. Billy C•aham, Bar· IMta Mand1ell and Merle T11v1s. a (ta) 1 u crG1 cm 111e MM411 • 11iaf1t MoM: C.c:> (Zllr) "'Cit 111 A Hol Tia ... , .. (d11)-l 1U11nct Ohvfer , Nt taHt Wood, Robert Weaner. Maureen Sto leloo. Smovlde11nc conftlCts, ltttd, envy, lu)I. ""delusion and allttllon •mOfll family ~mbtri CHI 1 pllnta tion 111 Masmsi~ art bloucn110 lh• s.u1l1ee 1n the 11ew Pf0d11Cl1011 of ltllfltSltt W"ill<ams' dram1 8......, .._ ~ (C) (2tlr) '1*-'" (drt) '67-Roc\ Hvdwn, Ceor&t l't~rd. llltel Cietll. Goy Slc>Uwtll, Ji(-Wattoft, A lfOllp ol Ciii!1$11 and Pa1tS1111.-vndetciound li1111m allt!llp( • darlftl rltd Ofl Tob<u\ in NOii• Af1ial dulllll WWII. 1hm purpow 11 to •ut10, lht SOPOIJ llftt ol Romllltl"I ~ KolpS. m l..edles •l&M o. ... ,, • Witll , .. ,, lailty W RvtJt ~CNt Tonip t 1Dlltn~S'­G>Tllt~11 m C111t Uti\tlrul fD ~ ArtNAlllll ptrfor. MUU 11 Wolf Jrap "M•khail 8er11hni•or" Balle! supwlar M1khl1I Baiyshni\ov ma\et htS telt· YrstOll debut ptrlorm1ne selfchons llom live ballets. Three ballerinas lrom the Alne11un Ballet Thealle aret also IUlU!ed. (ltfl (I)) ....it: 11:) (21w) ~ Gui" QJ) Oiultl 10:00 0 LCSllAN SCMDAI. IN * El£CUTIVE SUITE U OD CI> (}) Cnutlwt S1il1• lhat blatk and wllile love atfa11 belwettl Btian Walhn& and Summer John.son •uns into 1 CflY 11u •Ilea she mtets his f>ll•"ts. HW'f Midi· SOA pa1nlully 111an1u to ta ke aJSlodJ of 8 J. wflllt l\IS dad 1$ II pr1$011; Howell Rulledae C41!1ts bKll to won M h11d nosed M e-m, and ltona Call IHlllS a $11oek1n1 "11th aboul he1 fuend Juhe. 0 D llews <lt ea,caill ' hllllllt m ltr1tl • """"'" -10:10-fD ~ .,,._I/A Tllltu'9 It llliaM StnU9 ·Conductor W1W1 Sos~vs\y lulls lhe Vienna Pl11lha1· moni< Orchntra in a t41ittrl ot Sh auss Music -10:30-m lctl1IS •1111 Allen a Tiit hlsWe Slory mmm1tews (.tt) l1ttn11lltul Priseft Ministry 11:00 U D m (fG) QlJ CJ) "4111 g (IJ:t) ti)) LM Amtrica11 Style ())Sa ... a m QfJNns G Ctlt~~ m 11111 "'mna11. MMJ 11art111111 Cl) TrtjaA WttW HiPiellts <Ill 00 St•"" ... SIJn -11:30- • All CS) ()) CIS Late Morie a ni cJJ Cit m .,., c.-. t{J Ille m ad D r-5""' of 5"""S ID"'-IHl lllt JOO Cltrb • ( 2tJ (t)) Sdttlc• rction Tlltltrt fl)lltwsl ...... ()tJ Mtw11: fCI "Ital tf htfJ• thi11&" ldra) '59-Hope l anee. Stephen Boyd Sul'f 1'11hr, lou1~ Jour~n. Joa~ Cnwfoid, Diane Baker. 12:00 Ill Im of lifoucllo llJ lrlorit: <C) "lht Monitors" (r.a 11) '68-GuJ Sloc~wtll. SI/Salt Oliver. Avery Schreiber. tarry Sto1th, Sl!erry J1ckson. Keenan Wynn. m Mowit: "Lon fr11111 A Slra111t1" (dra) '41-Sylv11 Sidney, /Ohll Hod1ak, John Howard. -12:30- D All·llltht Show: "CaUllO'a '70," •• /uflel o1 Ille Spirits," "Tiit ltt<ll Wollla11 .. aJ Movie: (C) "Orders to Kill" (d11) '59-Cddit Albt1t. l1lll1n Ci~. James Roberlson /usllce. 1:00 CJ 11°1> m "GJ Ttll!Olr" m '" nL C1u11 -1:30- D llnl • llJ w~ °"' • Alift fD....._~/ICCN1in1 CrasaRoH 2:00 fJ MoM: re) •t.,...IR at ertvlld Zere" (com) '69-Cene Barry, Keenan Wynn, IKk1e Oc Sll1n110n Iii M.wlt Oou~ltftat11t: "l1lc· llolt," "Jht lftlltn!MM:•" -3:30- D Noolllllllt . DAfTIMl MovtlS Olcotll• 7 ........ ,.. ~""·"'th~ .,.. ""''"" -----10:00 a "fll "' .... , a,.111" Crom) '40-Mtile Oberon, Gto111 Blenl "Tiit • Utlil" (myi) '46-Alan ladd, Veronica l ah (Ml HP ... utill'' (drl) '47- Jofn C!nbo. Yin Helhn. 11:00 D "lwtlfl h&rr Men" (d11) 'Sl-lltnrt Fondl. l,e I Cobb. IUO • "tilliNll, nt 11111" (dt1) '40-Soenctt Tr.cy, Rrta John IOll, Cllat1tt Cob111n l:lt QI a:> "lflt ltr F11111 0.1111 .. t" (d11) '~4-Will lloJeri Jf • ~ncy Olson. HO D CF.J "Tiit S..... D""'" (d11) 64-Wllll1111 Holden. C.,llClrlt, S..nlllll Yor• ,. al CC) "fer ... ""' n.t" (llM) '$9-,._io ltn11, ):JO • CC) "IM °" .. ·-w· Cdta) '5S"SPtnctr lrKJ •• "°"" Rr•~. Annt r11A(1J . . KOCE Television (50) ... ~ .. .. ... N DAILY PILOT TRE FAMILY ClRCtJS• ByBilK~ane ODOR AWARD REPERSED P UBLIC N011CE f.,.,..,. .• .,. .... ...,_ ... .,.._ -"On Dosher, on Ooncer, on Proncer ond Vix- en, on Comet, on Cupid, Ofl Donder and Blitten!'' "You didn't soy Rudolph." 1980 Election FRf:SNO <AP) -A $73,000 jury award acainst the city of Madera for Sctw11e treatment plant odors bas been reversed by the state's 5th District Court o! Appeal here. However, the court also reversed a dis- missal ln Superior Court of inverse condemnation 110Ught by the plaintifr, Michael J. Varjabedian, who lived near the plant. PUBLIC NOTICE Reagan Scoffs At Age . Issue NEW YORK CAP) -Former California Gov. Ronald Reagan scoffs at suggestions that he wiU be too old lo run for the presidency in 1980 and says if he had been the candidate against Jimmy Carter, he could have won. Reagan, who lo~l the Republican nomination to President Ford, srud in an interview broadcast on CBS' "60 Minutes" Sunday that he plans to remain active tn GOP politics but did not say in what capacity. Whether he would seek the presidency in 1980. he said, would depend on ''the circumstances of the time, what the issues are, who has come along on the political scene, what names will have risen to prominence ... "I think age would be the least of considerations." Artlllny Bawl Rase• BEIRUT. Lebanon CAP) -Moslem and Chris· tian villages traded artillery fire early today in southern Lebanon above the Israeli border, where the two sides have conunued their civil war tree of anterfere11ce from Arab League peacekeepers. A spokes man for the newly reor ganized Lebanese police force sajd one villager was killed and five wounded in shelling during the night. SICin~ Flu lfn~ertaln MADISON. Wis (AP) -Wisconsin officials are attempting to determine whether a hog farm employe was who was ill recenUy had the s tate's first known case of swine nu. "We've got two inconsistent tests," said William Schatz, coordinator of the state's flu im· munization program. "Our ofricial stand is: We JUSL don 'l know.·· Schatz said a throat culture take n from ( ) Brodhead farm worker. /N SIJORT Don Harris. 23, gave _ positive indication of ----------- swine flu. But Green1 County authorities swd a blood test last week was negative Pailftet Kil& Pair, kif PUYALLUP, Wash IAP) -A 94·year-<1ld nurs· mg home patient shot two other patients to death atld wounded a nurse before l>hooting himself fatal- ly Sunday night. police said. ' Motive for the shootings was unknown said Puyallup Police Chief James Rooker. Jt also was not known how the man obtained the .32·ca1jber re- volver, Rooker said Identities ol the gunmon and the victims were not Immediately released. OWrac-Parlfl RalNe• PARIS (AP> As thousands chanted "Chirac! Chirac!" former President Jac ques Chirac transformed the GauJhst party Sunday into a new national movement pledged to combat the .. aangerous alternative'· or the Socialist· Communist alliance De C:aulle's Union of Democrats tor the Republic <UD R> vott'd 1uell out of existence at a pobtical rally billed as the biggest in French his- tory, then reoqtonl~ed under Chirac's presidency as the Rally for the Republic. ._,,,,,,. .. LftJel Lo., M~NTGOMERY, Ala. CAP} -Tests of milk ~ <llr samples from ncross the U.S. 3how only very. very low" levels of increased radiation In scattered locations a.'l a result or China's Nov. J7 nuclear blast, says an official or the Environmental Protection Agency. And the incr eased radioactivity, said Charles R. Phlllips or EPA's Eastern Environmental LabQratory here, J)Ol!es an "lnsJBJllficant" threat to hestlth. . 6-nno Nar....,. U.t PLAINS, Ga. <AP> -President-elect Carter who says he wants &op-appointees he can live with for four years. now hu narrowed his list of potentJal Cabinet nominees and undersecretaries to about 70 persons . . Arriving here $unday with dossiers on persons being considered, Carter aide Hamilton Jordan said John Doar was being considered for attorney gen~ral. Doar was special counsel to the House Judiciary Committee when It voted In 1914 to im· peach President Richard Nl1'oo. Jordan also acknowledged that Rep. Bob Bergland (D-Mlnn.), a farm oper1tor acUve membe.r of the Jlouse Agriculture Committee and POUUcal ally of Vice Presldent1lect Walter F. Mon· daJ~. I• I MODI the Candidates lo be secretary of aartculture. • $248 a Mere Trifle? . ' DE~ MOJN£S, Iowa (AP)-'hfelve members ol tbe Jowa attorney rencraJ'• olfice -on state time -win $248 ln a rad.lo Jackpot contest. Ia It pro-~r "Well, it's de mlnlmUJ CU111t la. Tlr1t'a LatJn for 'the law does DOl. CCIOC!em lllelf wttb trtlln, "' NldAlty. Gen. Rlchard'l\inlG'. He called the lnddeal a .. llr'ttti food t.rtck." PUBLIC NOTICE NOTIC£ TO Cltl:DITOllS SU1'5111011 COUltT Dl'TMf STATI 0, CAll l'DltNIA FOlt THE COUNTY 0,0llANGE Ho A·8'JU EH.al~ r\I MAAJDAI( S CON HEllV,0..Ctl\e<I NOJICE IS >4E'1E8Y (;t\/EH I~,,.... crHJltOf\ 01 •~ •bOvf' "•mt""O °""-~' UMI •It pPt"\On\ h•vlnq cl•im\ t\Ollt\\.1 the w id Ott•Otnt 4',. ff'Qu1t.O to fll~ t.r-m. •llP\ tM rtecrn•ry voucrwn In ttw!-°''''-• o• tnto ,,,..,.,.of me~.,. tiOtOcourt or to or.,.\f'n\ lhf'm withttw "«~'\wry YOV<.twr" to thifo unn."•on.G .ti I fte ol 11,. 01 SHE l OOH l FOREMAN AllOrMY •I uw, IUI Horth C~ntt1rv 8 1\lld • S.tttr• Att• (Atllom•• .,IOJ -~•(ft 1~ '"" "'"'' ... bv\J~\~ Of l'W-UIH,'lt\IQ"~d In •II m.tl '''"' oen••rti~ 10 '""" .,,.,,. t.M wid °" cecte.nt ••t~1n •our mOftt,,\ dfler tilt flr\I J)Ubf;c .tlU'>n ol It'll\ l"I011ff' O•ted NOv•mOt"r 1~ ••1• D.llHIElS CONNEll,.'f E '"<u•or of tn,. Will ot tnc 11t>ov,. nam~t1 decect."t SHELDON l . ,OltEM.llN AttOO'M•••u• ts• N"'1h C.•tury lltvd S.•l.a All.a, CAlllO•~I • '1101 AttwMv tor Eaecutor Publl\t'IM Or.onoc CO•ll D•Hv Piiot, No~llltlet n . 2~. •l\d O.omc.er •• I) "76 '"4·1• P UBLIC NOTICE CP .. 111' NOTICI! TOCltlDITOltS SUl'l!lllOll COUllT 0 P THE STATE Ol'CAlll'OltHIAl'Oll THE COUNTY 0, OltANGE No.A 9'M1 E\IAI~ of OUHIH AOTHACKER O NEIL •~•DUSTIN R O NEil °'<••MO NOTICE IS HEAEBV GlllEH 10 '"" •rtdltott of thit •OOv4' n11mf>d dl<~t ff\4\ ..tll pitt\On\ h•"•"O Cl.ti~ ~·"1'1 thit 'Wid deceMftt .,,. '.-Q"•red to ht• fhtm. t1ttfl't UV M<~u•ry voucnt...,, 1,, '"° olllu of IN cl"• 01 ·~~ -..,. t1ttt<1 <Ourt or to D'•Hnt IMm -N1t"1nto "kl'\Wry ¥OU<Mr~. to,,.. U"Ott'1tQnfd "''"' Tru\I O.~•l••>enl Ol I"" BMll< of H.......n, °"""' o .. v(' •• •w• Strttf. ~port &.ech C•t1torn1•. whtct\ '' I~ I>'•<• ol bu\lnn• ol tnf' u,..,.f\,_<I •n •It m•tt•rs ~ttA1n1no to t'W•'\t•t .. of wld ~f'cJ,.n\ wlt.,.tn '"'" m<W'ltrt\ 4'1tr tltr ''"'' publl<•Uon l)t t1"11( "ohu• 0..tl'CS HO•tmot• l!. 1'1' 8.4NI( or N(WP0'1t Ov C: J K1no ~pe<1at Arlm1n1\fr1ttM W1H\ (,~n"r.\I Powrh of trHt ,.~,,.,,. of tt\tt-,.bov,. n•med~<t""'" l!ltNl!ST J SCHllG. Jll. 1m l'M<Ar111u• lhd -....n 1 .. <11. C• noo 0141•7 .. _ CADOO. Tlll!TMEWAV, McGINN & MOllOAN IMtA*"lr1llyW•y, Sult• 110 """''"" o.t llt1, C. "2'1 "-" ,., ~-1•1 Mml•lftnttr Puc.41•htd Oron~ Co1\I 0111y Pllol, Howm~, n . 1f, •nd O.t•tnOtr•. 11, "'& "" ,. P UBLIC NOTICE NOTICll 011 OIHOLUTION 01' .. AltTNa lllHI .. PuClk notir• " .... ,.,., Qi .... ,,.., A()HALO RAJCtC a..cl JACQVELIH[ RAJCIC -GEAAl.D 6fll(EA IMJ CECILIA llETl(t!ll. ,,_rolof°"' doo"'l l>u\IM\\-f I ... fi<lltlOUJfo"".._ ""' \lylt Of CM SCl\001 Suoo4v Com-°""' II •H £ LIMO In A .... n .... O•v OI """twtm Counly of O•tft~ SI••~ ol (•1~11. Old Oft lllO Jllft CS.y <II~ ... l"mtt.r .. ,. flh\OIYt t"~ '•I d """"'~'o •NJ ,.,,,.,,..,. '""'' •••• '""" ., ~,, ... ,. 11 .. roln $ilod ~....,, lft ,,.. ,.,,.,,. wlll "" (C!'IO\IC1t<I l)y RONALD llA.JCIC ~ncl JAUNELINE AA)CIC. •tto "'111 O<IY Md~M•0-111 ll•llltlll•\ -clobl\1)4 flw ltrm andr•<•lv• all mor1lt\l)tYeoto h>IMflrm Fufll•r nollc~ I• h"••hv 01...,.. IMI '"" ..-,,,_., .. 111 not w ,,,._,lltt• ''°""' tru' CS.y Ot'I. fot M\V obH09tlQf'1 \n CUfft!d by, ... °'""'' In lhtlr .,_-.,,. or I~ Ow n•-of '"" ll•m. OATEO AT Nt "'00 '1 ll•.cll, Ctllton111, lhh h t d•y 01 Oe<.•mt>e•, ""· . CEllALO BETKt!R CECILIA 8,Tl(IE .. OUltANH.ltlll!Y &WAllltlN,9ttJ\ I'"~"" Or., Ste. )If -..,. .. k~. c.im • ., ... P\11111\1\od Or•~ , .... °"'' "llof, Oe<emoer•.1•r• .t01 .. 1• P UBLIC NOTICE S·VMI H01'1C! TO CltlOIT'OttS SUl'l!ltlOll COUltT 01' THI STATI Ol'CAll,OltNIAl'Oll THI COUNTY 0 , OllA.NOE: ... ~ EJltff-1 THEOOO .. E A POHTffll(; .... n.eooo11e AllERT PONTING. ... TEO-TINO. Of«•-H()TIC:fi IS HEAi.iV GIVEN ID lt!t <Adlt.n 91 ........... ftt~ ~· Ill.of ell.,.,._, llavlftt tlal"" _,,., lllt Jlld "<"'°'nt .,.. rtQul,_ IO Ill• tiwm, wllll lllt ""<•n•rv ·~ lft 111t off~o of fM (ltA of Ille ..... ffl• 111i.oc-1.orw.,.tW11tlMM.wl111111t '* .. .....,~. i.ttw ~ M lllUfflet Of COL OH !I. HealllNO S. l'llANKLIH, AllOIM'I' al Law, ,,, O.IM CAMI, .. ,.,. hlalld, Clllf•l'll• '*'· wllk h ''Ille pl1u OI ...,..,,.,, of tllt -rt/QMd 111 all malltrt ....,..,,.. 1114 lo \llo 1\111• of Yid MC......,._ wlllltr fOUf ,_Ill• efltr I ... fir" ~IHllO<I of tlll\ not lo OliltO Ho .. mbtr t•. 1U• MAA IONC POHTINO Ad111lnl\lr•l•I• Of t ... l!t1t1• of .... ·-""'"'"°~ COl..ONI'-M .. !lllNO $.""it.NICI.IN &"'"'""'' " l.I• SM OrW C-1 ..... l ..... ,Ctt~ • ., ... ......,, .., &•ltllllff1'1• l'l*lhO 0rlf! .. CN'I OellY Pllol l>M.1,U Jt,9',l"t •U.tl . . P UBLIC NOTICE ~.JHSI NOTICE TO CllfOITOltS No.A ... ..,. Wl'!lllOll COUltT 0, TMlf. STATE OF CALl,.DltflllA "°" TNf COUNTY OF 08ANGlf. In "'" M•ll•• ot .... E\I~·· Of MC ICEHOAIE AANO lOWE ...... known l\MACK A LOWE 0fOt14CL Nollce I\ "''"f>~ Cfl•tn ro c,..<llton N•IFIQ cl•lm• aqaln•I Ill• ••kl ""'-"· <tent 10 111~ \Old <'•'"'' In '"" olll~ of tne <ttr~ ol '"" •IOro\tld <Out'I or lo PreMnl fll<tm to tn. urd<t"l•ntd •I tht OlflC& of lltCH ... RO L. McMECHAH, ATfOANEV AT LAW, 3 1818 Caplur•no No UO. in '"" C•IY of SM\ Ju~n C11>htr1no, 1n Ora~ County. ....,Ith ••lier olll<t II ,.,. Dltc~ Of IJU>I. """of '"" vn0tr-t•01'~d M •If mMt•r\ D41'1tlnlnq lo ••Id ••lete S11<~ cl•lms with "" nooo~ry ""YC"-n """' ti. flltO o• O"t\tflt•d o elorflakl within '°"" month\ •lier ,.,. fir.I O\.Cllkatlor\ otrt'lltMfl(fl' Otlt<I Ho• n . 1'16. JOHNMtKEHOAllE LOWE E ••< \110< of , ... wlll ot '•Id dec11ct.nl lllCNAltOl M(M!CMAN AHwMy•ll.aw ~·m~.i.ir .... N•. tto i.M.1Ut11c.tpt\lre•M'-CA •HU "'*'~ 0••"9f Co••I D.i1, l'llol, Nov 1',•llcl~.6, IJ,20, 1'76 fill0.16 --• P UBLIC NOIK"B P UBLIC NOTICE PUBUC N011CE PUBLIC N011CE P UBLIC NOTICE • P UBLIC NOTICE ......... "UIUCNOnC• .,,.., Sltlt Oe!Mlrtmtnl ol Heolltl, Ofllu of Sltl"Wlclt Hnllll Plennl119 end Oevelopmenl llas re<1l•IHI • ........ I..._ It .-It• CH!lf!Ulltef -,._ p11ut1 ... ln>m Ille followt119 ""'° ~llw •P1>1l<t<1ls.. '9 cs.~ •fl .. Ille CS.I• ol ltw Dt~rtmenl'• receipt ... llltl\ Hollu, tllt •DC>lk41111 mey tl)plw for a C'2rtlflcMe OI Heed In AccordlflCll wllll S9ci'-411 Mid ... of tlle HHllll •nd Stiely Code a"° Ille rt9Ultl\Of1Spertl!lntnt lller91o. Al'l'LICAlf1' •• SI. P8Ul'l To.,.,. 100 a.v Pl•u OW~,CAtulO DATEO,.NOTIC• ()(lot.f 14, 1'7• Ocl*rU,"16 Od...,tt,1'76 octotllf u. m• Ortotltr2f, 1t16 No11tmw ·~· "" Oc-.r 21, "" PtlBLIC NOTICE ~JIU lilOTICC TO t1teo1TOM IUHalOllCOU•TOllTHI ST&n 011 CA'-1 l'OtlNIA fOOtt TM•COV•TYOllO•ANo& .... A.-m ••ttl• ol A'-l'IUO HOOSTON ~OWA1'0$. o.c ....... MOltCe 1$ Hllll!.&Y 0111.N IOt,_ ~ ... ,,, ........ 11<1_,,_ ..... .i1 --"'-••"11 <1•1-~11\t Ille""" diK9d•"'' .... '"ijl~ i. Ille ........ wllh tlle NCHWry vouc."""' In IN efft<e ef tM ci.r• ot ttw ........ .,... llllM_,., ..... Mfll 1~. wlllll.M .._...,, yewclleN, 10 "'" __,_..., MW. i..eiit'"M J-H £, Wll!lllt11tf ltlNl)CI. .. AN0&"50H. IOIO Noo1ll er .............. Olflee Dos m. Sent• Aile, Call-• tt701. Wlll(tl ,, "'--'-of Ml-et !M -~In ttl _,._ P9l'Ulftl119 lo , ... nt•lt ol Wld~. w1111111 four mont~.iw Ille flrsi 9\lbllull•OI thl•noO<a. o,.tw No.....,._.''· 1u• •MlltlAMA, aOWAAOS E•ecutrl•ol 1119 Wiii OI , ... ebove t11med CN<t*M• .,_l!,WllMI"' tf IUHD•L & ANDllUOM -N.--.., .... 121 ... U..CAmta fJl41U.t,,, ,._~IWl!H<fllf41 l'llbllslled Or• .... Cfflt O.lly "'lot ,_,,. u. "· •nd Dt< .•• '1, ,,,, "9J.71 P UBLIC N011C£ J PUBLIC NOTICE ~ NOtlCI T'OC••DITOtlt ............ l""rlw C.111'\ ti tJI• llMt •I Clll~--~ .. ~ 111 IM Melltr el 11 .. Ul•lt et OONAl.0 I!. Otflrl!NOAl.l. o.a. .... Not~ ,, llff .. y ,,_ .. t~ llt'llftl <ltlm• .. •lfl•t Ille ..,.. -.. -19 fl .. Y id (l•l"'t In Ille tft!C» Of V. C .... ti IN eleretall <_, .. IO ,,_Ihm 19Ille~ol1119 lftle9 of lllCHA.110 0 rll~ll. At. 1«'119y et 1..tw. 41'0 VOii 1(-A .... Sult• JU. In IM OIJ ol N...,,... IMtll, In Or-Ct<inlY. Wlllt l'I t.i~ ""9 I• IN 111.Mlt Of OVSJ-• ti Ill• lt'ldlt>IQNCI Ill All !Nlltf\ pert1lnl"11 lo wlCI ....... S11ch Clt l"'' wltll fllt lltOUt'Y' _,.,, lllllfl .. tllecl Of __ ..., .. .,Ortwld Wllltln f-"'°"llll -""' U.. 11"1 P\lllll<elloft Ol llllJ l\OllC .. Oettel Ho•. u. 10•. C. W. HOOlll 110 Admfni\tretor of llltl\llflt OI "lo cltOdtfll •totAllOO. ,llA.tll. ,,.-,·•I-I•• •ntv ... 11 ........ aw .. S•ltoMS ..._. ... <~.CA''* l'lioll~d Or•nae °"'" Olllly ~10f1 New "· •nd Dec •• 11, JO, ttl• ••• , .. P UBLIC NO'flCE OltANO•CDUNTY su .. a1t10• couaT'. ntCIYl<CffltrOr.-t. NOTICI TO CltlEDITOll1 Se'l1aMa.c..111 ..... 1efl7tt SUl'UllOitCOU•TOl'TII• PLit.tNflFF: SHA.RON LEG ITATI Oii CALIFOltNlit.l'O" FllAHKE TNE COVlfTY O"OllAHOE OEl'EtcOA.NT: R08EllT lt0f't'E$, N ... ,....., ooes I 1"""'911 x.1n<11 .. 1 .... E\lete of CLAltltE A, SMITH, SUM¥0Nt o.c...td. CAI•• Nvm"9r· ™IH NOTICE IS HEltEllV (ill/EN"' ll'e NOT1a1 Yw 11 ...... ~ ~ .,..,. UIGll°" Of tlle-ve NnMKl~I (-1 .,.., ...... ~alftM ---•II"'"°"' 114•1"11 cl•lms ~I -~ ""•-' ... ,, .,... ~ 1M Mid dee~ .,. , .. lllred "'II.. IOlllllto ll ...... ·-die .....,_.. tNf)'I. wllll IM '*"'""'Y .......... n. lro 11o1-. Ille o1ne1 ... , ... Cit•• of tht -.... AVttol Ual ...................... .. tfllt0COU'1. ot' (0 ll(eM1'1 I...,.,. wfffll... ,.,.......,, --. Mcl4tlr (9Mrl W.. W M<ttSMY "°UCllffl, lo IM _\I_ ~II • _,.., 4119 U•. ,..._... al t11e Olflo of JAMES M. 000~ ..... ,.. 41e JI dlat. Lt• I• 1-'-PORTIGAl and MAMMERTOO, At. .... ,1q., tor_.,. et Uw, '°21 E••I Altl ~lfeotl. I, TO THE OEFENOANT; A clvll SYllls llO·ln. S."•• An•. Goll,_• <OMCM•lnt tin""" llltO ly Dltfl .. Mllf '110S, Wllkfl Is lM pl.c• OI bu>!,_ ti 41t1ln\l l'OU tlle -•~-4 In .. , m•ll~ PWt .. ,,. t. II 1'0U wllh lo dtl.,.., ll'lb i.twwlt. lnolOlhe6$1•19ol MIO 0.<edtflt, wlllllft "°""""'· wl11\lj\ lO Otya•tt41flllh-._ .-u .. •Iler Ult flnl pUl>lut161\ ,,_, 11 wvt<I "" you. Ille w1111 11111 of 1111• notk•. C011r1 • wrlll•n plwdlfl9 '" •-I& o.tedHo,,.111berU, lt1•. 111t <omolelnt. Ut • JuHlt• Court • ......, ANNI& T. SMITH """' tlltwll111"9<our1 •w•lflff>~ E1W<11trl•6t lM Wiii 1114 °' c-.,. <Wll Of-1114 lo bt '"' oftlletbWefttmlCI~ .. ,..., In Ille dO<MI In r-to I ... JAMESM. DOOOS COf!ICll•fnt. wlllllft lO den tflw tllll PO!tTIOAl. ... NAMMElltTOM ~a •u•tvtdOllWOlll. A-.. ti U W b. Uni"' 'l'OU \0rt1PM(I.11-dllf..ift tin E.-4tll SlrM\ will De tnl.,ed 1;po11 •PPfltlllOft Of U. Slflt461•1n C>l•lnlllt -1hl• c-1 m•y .,.,., • SHtt All•, CA. t l705 fudrlm<tnf -IMI YOU tor tM ntllel clfo ., .. , tll•I n••tt1 -I• 11111 como111n1, wlllcll coutd -.. 1 ... EH<lllrla ,...,., I<\ 91r11hhment ol •-•· 11111"9 Pubf.-Or•...-C.ul 04ljly PllOI, ot _, O< ..,_rty ot' OIMf teflel - -· 2'.•lld Oe<. •, n , 10. 1'16 "™• Qllnltd In'"' como11lnt. <.If V.V wbtl 11 -It tM ~ti M P UBLIC NOTICE _., 1 .. !hit "'"""· .,.. --w 1''•"'•111 ,. l~al yur writ! .. -------------1 -M,lftAf, .... YWl .... 11111-. SUl'llllOllCOUltTOllTME Oelld Maf(ft)l,1'16 STATEOl'CAlll'OltNIAl'Olt •1LL1AMl .ST JOt4 ... °"1l THE cov .. n OI' o • A.NOil "" ~111ne C..tCW\, OeJMy N•. A..,Jll (SEAL) NOTICI! 0, HE A lllNO 011 l'tll\.1,.1.lllOWlt AMENO E • P ETI TION 110" •-u•u· ....otlATIE 01' WIL'-ANO COOfCf'-S fltttYe.tw1-1tte,. AND 110 • '-l!n•11s T•ST•MI N· l!Acl-..CA l AlltY AND FOlt AUTHDllll&lloaf ln>llll~ TO ADMINllTElt UNOlll THI A"'""'yw~elntltf INDI PI NDINT ADMINISTltATIO&f Pullll"'9<1 ~•no-Coa\t o.!ly P410t: GI' HTA1'1!$ ACT C,.aOeAH COOf HoY tt.,.,411\d Otc.e, tl, m• '8fJ.1w tttlTHO>. hlllt of HAZEL L. OILlMAH, Ottou..i. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tMI PUBLIC NOTICE MAOOLOH 0 . HOOVER •nd Cl''-JHO SECURITY PACIFIC NATIONAL HOTICI TO ClllEDjTOllS 8AHK, • Nellon•• 8•n~lnq ..t.'110<1• SUP'•1t1011 COUlllO,Tl41!: llOn, .,_flied lltrtlfl en.,,,_., pell· STATll 0, CAl"O"Nlll "°" llon"" Probalo o1 Wiii And Codl<lll ...er THIE COUNTY 0 1' O•ANOE lor luuanc.t of loiters Tufornt<l(o<Y to No. A ... tie Ille onlUOl\er Ind for 1utnorl1atlon lo E1l1lt al MILOREO &El/EALY aomlnlller , ... 111•1~ u11dtr the In. HEYN, a•a MILOAEO 8, HEYN, dt09flclent Admlnblretlon of E'1al" °"<HMHI. it.ct IPl'Olltll Co<i.1" el'M!q)rtltfell(;e NOTICE IS HE A EBY 011/EN 1Dt"8 lo wtllcli 11 mecre t or furfller <rlldllorsofllledllovenAtned- partk ut•rs, •r>d tllal fht! time tflCI f111c:e lllll 111 p.,\ont llavl119 cl•I"" -oelnst ot l\ffrl~ Uie ""'• ha\ beell Ml for Ille Hid clot<.ecMnl ••t requlrM IO fll• Oecfftllltr u , 1916, •t IO:OOa.m . lnl.,. lllem. *flh Ille Mcu \ary vouclleo, I" Cllllt't,_. of Ot-""enl Ho. 3 Of H id lltt offl<e of Ow cltrlC ol ,.,. -en- <.oCHt. ti 700 Civic C.nfer Orfw Wftf. In 111....icourt. °'"to f>'e wnl lllem, wltllflle 11\eCflyof Santa Ana. C•lll..,."11. nece1ury VOutMr\, IO 1"--"9ned OeledNovtmDe"•· lf7'. •• the low crlfl<• ~ WILLIAM v. WILLIAM ll. SI JOHN, SCHMIOT.,.. San Mlauel Ortwe. Suite County''"" >Co, N•-· llHCfl. CAllton\le WNO. MCICINHA ANO .. 11'TING Wlllcll f\IM Ol•ce Of butlMuof Ille un-u.,_.,, al u w -\19"td In •II m•lltt\ 09r\1lnlr>Q lo '-'·1!1911111 l'Mr !ht "'•tt of u •o "41<-nt, •llllln tour >411SWlllMre II~. """'th• •lltr lne '"" pubfltt.C•on of LAI Mt14n, C:.l~I• '9tt• Lhl1n0Hct T411: (JIJJ-tnf 0.llldNowmWr 1t, '"'· A~ltr. ....it ..... N ROllERT 8 HEYN P\lbfltllt1' 0ra"99 '°"'' D•lly Pilot. E <t<ulor Ol tne Wiii HoY,tt,30 •nc:I O.C.• t'76 .,11·16 ot IMeboftfttfl\flldtctdeftl. ' ' Wlllll,M II, SCHlilltOT -------------! Jll6S.ftM19Wt Dr.,Stofl•MO Ntw-1 l .. tll, CA, tl ... Ttl: 11141644-tlll P UBLIC NOTICE Alt_l .. l!uc~ Puofl\Md Or.nc,e Co.UI o.llY PllO', Hov.1', tnd Oec. ll. 10. 1'14 4'91·16 PUBLIC NOTICE ' I ' ' ' H~•' ltor s.c* Hoa•t for Saia. . . Mond•y. Decembor 8, 1978 • . DAil Y l"ll<"T 85 PUBLIC NOTICE 'Ole ....... ~ • '*' h Or.,. CCMllSJ DAILY PHDT CLASSIFIED ADS .............................................. 1002 1002 ~!~:.~~.~~ ........ ~~!!:.~~~ ....... ~.~!~!~~~~ ....... . Ho..HS For s• •....•....•.••..•••.... PUBLIC NOTICE l •l1UJ NOTICI! 10 ClllOITOllS Ne.A-ttU• SUPElllOlt COURT OP THI! SlATIOP CA\.IPOIUUA~ll THE COUNTY OP Oii ANOE ... Ill~ M•ll•f ol .~. E"•"• ot SAMANTHA C PlEUICHARP •t'IO k now "•• M R S WAT(R H PlEU IC HAR P. •IH "nown .t\ !>AM4NTHA CHlOE PLEUl(HARP. °"'-NOTICE IS HERES Y CilYEH lo t rf'dlto<s i..v•nq cl•I-11111,,., '"" 'Wi<t Ol'Cf°d91'11 to hit \•10 CldttM h°' t"9 olfl<eOl~cl.,lt ol tM••••......,<oun 0< to -m to Ille u-"Qned •I tM Olli<• of S E. y & c.C>Olt OGE, •tlor.._\'1 •I L•"· W•ler SI , In !lot C•l'fOISAHTACRUZ, SANTACRUZ C.OU..ly, wlll(ll ''"" of • ,. lho pt«• ol •~•nen of IM uncle I~ In •II rn.atttr\ ptirt11nl1WJ to \4• \fat•. Suet\ <f•~FWJ wUf\ the> ,...., ... w vouctw'r \ mU'\t bl tiled or prt1Mnt4'd 1 •fWH.a•d within four mOf'lth\ •ftt r the tint put>ll ... tlonol th!\ nollc•. O..teo N<l••mbor J4, '""-ETHl!L COOPE.R Adtnlnl\t,.ittrl• of tnc ,~,.t• at \&Id Ot< e~nt ST41C\.EY a COOLIOGli •tt-r·•l·UW SU Water SL $.tote Cnot. CA U0.0 """'"M<I O<•n<!" Co•il O•llY P~OI Nov 7' .• ...., o.c 6, n :>o ••1' -'• P UBLIC NOTICE D A . I L y p I L 0 T 'fw C. W It, flfld If, lrode If Wlflt o WOfll M 42-5678 ....................... IAIORS: A~l1en **Id ca..d& tt.lr ads .. ,, ..ct report .... ~ 1-clotely. Th. D41LY PILOT a1.-s WI· ~I I· \ \i TAYLOR CO. HJ-'·\ l.TOHS ~1 1 u·1· l !HH 4 llG CAHYOM TOWNHOM!S 0..... HOVSITUES. l~:JO Wake up to the sight of r efreshing green fairways from these brand new homes. Pool1 tennis cts & security. 2 & 3 Bdrms, 1 & 2 story models, for sale $118,500-1~9,500 or lease $700·950/Mo. See broker 22 Cyn Island Dr . 2111 s • ....,. .... ooc1 HIWP<>ltT CEHTIEI. M.I.. . 644-4910 ·~for .... flf'sf. coned IRHf"fioft °"'V. 1 ________ 1 GeMral 10021 GtMral I 002 ·······~··············· ··•·········•·••······· Pulbl11he!P''a Hotlce: All real estate advertised in tbls newspaper J.l> sub· Ject to the Federal Jo'a.ir Housin g Act of 1968 which 111<1kcs /t Ulegal to a dveclise • an y prl'· ference. limitation . or dacrimlnalion ball~d on ra<l4!, co.lor, religion, :.ex.. or nalional onl(m, or an 1aten11on to make a n such prerecencc. lim1la· tion, or discnminalwn." Luxurious 4 BR. home. Family rm. & formal dining. with view toward Harbor (sland. Boat slip. $325,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR This newspaper will not koow1ogly a cce pl any adverl1s 1ng for re a l estate which is an \'lOla· tionoflhelaw. J41 Boy~1df" Drivt· N B b7~-blbl G......... I 002 GeMrel ' I 002 t···~~········ .. •······ ·•·•·•·•··········•·•·· l'Ht:lllM~fot" Sale ••••••••••••••• •• •• •• • • POOL + VIEW! General I 002 Fme Dover Shores loca· ••••••••,•••••••••••••: hon. Truly fantastic 4 NORTH TUSTIH bedroom. tam11y room Large home on a lar~e pool home wllh e x - tol for ,:.a large family. 1 pans1ve view or lhl' Up. Br. lam rm, din·~ rm.. $)("r'Bayand sorroundrng Quiel res1denllal lol·Jl1on rouunlains. Entire home nr the 1uncl ion o f built around alrium and GG/Nwpt 1<·wys. $71.000 ova l pool w1lh unique THf HOMESELLERS cu!-.t.om founla in Co\'· 752•5353 ~rnd by clcJr, rl'lraclu· s..-yclean Don't miss this vacant, hke new 4 bed rm, 2 balh, family room. New plu!>h carpelS, fresh puinl and e verythin.J: ready to move in. Gre at Cosla Mesa loca t ion near schools. Asking $68.500. Call 540-1151 ~HERITAGE •..• REAUORS ble u om e. t "ubulous large m;1!>l<'r ~u1te with I~~~~~~~~--· G...-ol 1002 GeMral 1002 Gftff91 1002 GeMrol 1002 ..••......•...........••...........•...................••.........••. •··•••••·•···•········· rr·s FOi SA1lf The one you've all been walling for! The original Portofmo model home in Harbor View Homes! It's(fantastic! One or the largest lots, 2 swimming pools; loft room is finished out in brick and ba rn siding, everything is air-conditioned , upgraded and tastefully developed. You should see it! You should buy it! At $159,500, fee! UNl(.)UI: ti()Ml:i REAL TORS ~ 675-6000 244 3 East Coas1 H1qhway, Corona del Mar .iho 111 Me~J Vt>r,le .• 11 5'16 5990 Ge.wrol I002 1GeMf'al 1002 .....•.........•......•.•••.•..•.••..••.•..... DUPLEX, DUPLEX Two l ·bdrm. units offered at j ust above lot cost, by retired owner. $93,000. Fix up, add on, or tear down & re· build. 673-4400 G~ral 1002 G~rol 1002 ..•...••••••••••..•........•...•........••.••. DRAW AllG BUCH RETREAT CUSTOM -BUILT TO LAST· Exception a I C'UStom home. t>uilt by Leimke -Lath & 1>lastcr C'Onstrur Uon. Has potential for RP zoning on over lhrd. acre Jot. Bet.tulif~l 3 bedroom, f amity room home is in brand·new condition wi th many custom upgrades. Separate l2'x8' wotkshop. 12581 Newport Avenue, Tustin. CALL NOW 752-7315 DONALD M. BIRD Associates. Re a I ton 10021GeMral 1002 •••••••..•........••... ···················i··· Corona del Mar Estate Magnificent panoramic view from this "Top-Of-The-Hill" home. situated on a level two thirds acre. 5 Large bdrms., formal dining rm., 7 baths, 4 garages. AND a large heated pool. Wonderful privacy for the entertaining executive Ol' the large family. $265,000 Includes this most valuable land! H~ tuo£uolfo~ -1(4 olilUJo.lielt CORONA DEL MAR · 675-3000 G .... ral I 002 General 1002 ••.••••.....•......•.....•.................... \U,.ElltOll COUllT OF THE STATlOl'CALI FOllNtA Riii Tllli COUNTY 01' ORANGE No A .... 11 c L A s s I F I E D view. H"5 healed a nd filtered J:lcuz.t1 s pa + sleatu balh and garden are a . Kitc hen wit h breakfast nook and fam1 Jy rm W/WC\ b ar ha"e ~w or the bey. There are Loo many ameml1es lo descn~ th1:. rantai.hc COVING TOH CIRCLE! $41,350 JUST A LlTTLf IREAD Mesa Verde NOTICE OP NEAlllNG OP PE"TITIOH FOil "llOaATE 01' WILL AHO ~II LETTEllS TESTAMENTAllY .ANO 1"011 AUTHORIZATION TO AO· "''H ISTE ll UllOfll THE INOEPElllOEHT .AOMINISTll.ATIOH 0 1' ESTATES 4CT f PllOaAT~ CX>OE "tETUOI E"•l•OIGENE BOLLN Oe<~•­llOTICE I'> HERE&Y GIVEN U..t C.41LVIH H OCHSN(R 11•• l•INl-••n .-oii-t1t1on tor Prob.t1lfll ot Witt •nd IOt •\ C..U-'n(e ot Ll'ttfr, f t'\tamrn1M'f to ow P"hl1on.r •nd tor .tv1hor•t&ttOli to~ m1n1-..ttr '""" f'\l•tP und1•r t"t' lndr()r'n o,.nt AO"''""""~liOn t>f f \l•IM. Art tPrO(Mtf' C.O<k ,., 1tt ...,.Q) ,,.,fl',,.n(,. lo """Ith '' m•cM tor fur Iner u.&r•1rufAf\ And th.t• ·~ Hmt ano o••,•· ot nitM1nQ '""'Min'" towt\ Ot~n '"" tor On<.~~r u JW4, dt lO 00,. m. '" flv-C01Jrtroom n• OPPllr1f"t'\f"nt No. l 01 \~•d n>v'1, "' 100 r . .,,,u: """'"' Otlv~ Wti\t.'" 1,.._., C.•h of >""Int• Ana, C~11torn1.t Otttcl NO"•~rnll"r?7 1•t• WILLIAM E. St JOHN, ---------•I home to l~L Truly a good MESA VERO£ buy al $320.000. Decorator's c ho ice Super 3 bedrm + den. ~UPERB ,.~eatunna: 2 fireplaces. MES lot s of p::1n c l1ng , wallpaper, plush c~pts. -"•·~1• 1wc lge bcdrms. Just listed ! 1 1555 w. B1k.,, C.M. Don't mjss il ! Pri ccd on N•xt to M1rlt•I Basket ly S88,000. t.ocu tcd in1•--•5•4•9···8•65•S---•I M ~s a Verde . Call 546·Sll80. 4-PlEX Thi:. 1s what <·an'l b<' S 123,500 found ! Near Nt>wport 's Ba c k Ba y a b •Ji 4 1700 sq n. owner 's suite bedroom. family room , w1lh f1replat•e plus lhree fireplace, 3 bath, al only huge bed.rooms Three 2 $63,900! This end un1l bedroom, 2 balh apart· Townhome includes len-menls. 5 car garage . 1 Best buy in this VERY ms, Jacuui, poo •sauna. b1lhards & pnvak p.1rk. popular model Call lo· Call S46-2JIJ day.646-7171. ~"'._,.,,;,.,.,, n1rJ '"'· ,, I i :fiiitj le IH&ll VA Buyers TRANSFER MUST SELL 4 IR · 2 STORY POOL· $67,500 Sleps to pounding surf and crystal sand! Dack yard is pay area play ground. Wint.lin g wooden walkways tOSt'Cludcd en· try! Gourmet kitchen. Lavish hv. rootn with stcp-t.lown conversation area + C1rep lacl'! Sunshine bre akfasl patio', Pool • Jacuzzi - volle yball make lhis garden living a l its f inesl. Won't I as l. Ca II 847·60l0. will buy thtS ch::1 rmm1t :! br + family rm. tt111nl'. Lowest pnced $33,!llKl. Calf: 898-7855 or EX9UISITE BAYVIEW $147,000 lmrn.il·u~~~~tt.droo111. Z b.1lh homC'. 1-\tnla~l•« ISll.i!O .uldl•tl family room w1lh lw.1m1•1I 1·el11n1:-. • a111l In.uh ol panrhni.: l-.>1-.1\1·111111 ·• 11u1l'l 'In·· l cu11vt•111e11t l u l\C'huoi' and ~hupptn)l Won'l ).hl long.$7:1,!>11<1 C'u JI 640-6161 s COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE, ltlC. '°""'" Clor~ • CllUIKSHAICI( ANO ANTIN ~HERITAGE PRICE REDUCTION ASSUMABLE LOAN Large three bedroom Call Now Tree lin ed slrecl inl _________ _ Don't miss th1:. ckl!:inl Bluffs Lown homt•, :1 l~l' bdrms, 3 bas. frml din. lge FR. <:hecrful bm·k frplc, n-d til e roof. ~rated in bHI t•arlh lones. !>16·9491. EASTSIDE 2STORY A-u•tl.tw REALTORS IJaWlltlotro &t..a , S"ile 1040 .. _, 111111. C.tll..,n1~ t01t t Tit: 111tl6U 4141 • !\.......,, ....... ltlO••tr ~~~~~~~~~~I hOme plu.i-formal dining No money down. Many to choose from. Call for more informalion. lYmmrga•!•limm Pue.~ Ot.nO" Co•U 0.th' P1!0' MliAEDITH -1',ll,-0..: '·'"' _,, P UBLIC NOTICE s ,,,~ SU,.1.lltOll COUllTOI' THE ~UTE Ol'CALtl'OllNIA 1<()11 THl COUNTY 01' 011-"NGI! No 4- llOT ICI. 01' H[AlltNG 0 11 f'£TtTION FO• l'llO•ATf OP WILL loNO "011 l lTTlllS TCSTAMEM· TA•Y I I•• ol ll'JHN C OW .41110 ~ A.VA~4AtJG._.. _,, .t) i.f'i(twl'\ ., J~ F G4JlD&fS EST .A TE Formal entry into huge livinf room. Formal dtn· 1ng r oom. Go urmet k1lchen w1Lh breakfas t area . Huge family room wilh crackling rireplacc Walk m closet lll masler suite. Owner will help finance. Try $9,000 down Ca II 963·67t17. II" AVAiN-.U(,.H .. t·..o \flliow n ., .JOHN "'AVA!14A.UG "" .tf\'1 ... J f "'•v4'N•ur .... O.t•.t111,•1t l'f()ll(t I rlllltc8V GIVfN IMI W t\ l IA.._ f lt'.A.V4NAUC';M l'\A'\ h lH ,_.,.,,.,. ~_.1,U~ lltf' P,..bel• .. W\lt ~ '" '' 1•rv•~l,,tt•r\l•\t11t~ttWtW 1¥ Df'tit,..,,...., f'tf .. t nf• to ..-rwcn I ,..,..,., l()r '"",._, oerfl(.uf•rt M"'1 tn.f '"' .. .,,. -o•«• of ""~''"" 1"" ,.._ ""' ,....." ~..,, 0.c•mblf 1• 11f,., •\ tO 00 • "" '"' ttw ('IOUftroot"lt ot Otl'o.tt """'t M1' J 01 ~atO <&Uf'"t, ,., t('t) (.,.it 1------------, V"t•r 1)11.,. W••t In I,.. Coy at S<m• M.6 (•flfon\IA PUBLIC NOTICE °"~ "'""""~.,. .. ,.. , .. ,. WILLIAM C ii J°"N, lltCTITIOU••UStN&U C..-t• <••" llAMI ST41CMIUQ' "ll'•OllCLIN "'·Ne 11110 r ... fOll°"''flll ,,.,..,,, .,. dolltO"""' t»Ut. M.t-alvo """" "•-.CA MM OOUP'lllET SPEC.t ALTl!.S, 44111 ... _,,_. t19tit-r Ao•-y, lrYIM,LJl911\~ ...... 1-0 l)r-""'" 0..•'f P.1<>4 , ...... ll•Y W•l>\l•r • .._, "°" ·-,., JO -~ .. "'• '">,. ...... 1 ....... ""''1114 I+'• l•M Wtb<ler HU litb.bufll ,...,,,.. C.A~71' PtJBLIC NO'fl<·•: o., ..... I( .... W•b•l<I•,..., 116• --------------T:.,•:~~~~c~-.-~,,..~n SU,.l!:RIO•COUllTO,_ ~ ~·-" • -~ ~~ ~ .. CAUPOllltlA <ot-.. ed H \CK1•tton ott1er IMn " C:OU .. TTOPOll•U•OC _,...,_,., .. J•.r "W ,_ Web\t•r P.0 ... •llt s.-~~.CA.,,., n.., \t•t.fn•ftt .. , flhfd wttt't ........ ()ouf!tw C"'•\ OI 0.-Cou..n""...,.. -· ltl•. IW CJ••• C..""'' On n W..\. ~, • .,..,utt1•• GeMN--0.11~ ~ ~"1M(»j$ fMAlllllAOIEI -""'"' Or-Qe O>•" 0 .. 1,, Piiot I" t• IM ,...,,., ... ot i-..ttt~r ~, ll 1' •M f')pftt""""' 6 1l .. ~A~ll I( ~HV8ASH "" 4'1• 1' -,._,_., SH4110 N S '.'411114''4 NOTtCll .,.,. II••• .,..~ •-no. P UBLIC NOTICE ·-.... , .............. '°" _._ !------------,_ -..,.. llt••O •-••n Y•v ·•-''CTrnous aus111ns wt"'411 JI .. 'I" llud Ille ,.,,.,,......., N.AMIS'T4TIMl!lff .-. T"-totl-1"'1 pol\On l• doll'Q a.... AVl\01 UH•d ........ __ Et .,.""' trt_ .. ,..._ .. CIOlr ,..,.,. Ud "" ELECTRO ClfARMS, 6.JOe W .._I• .t -'IV. Ud r-C...SI Hte;tl\#.ty. He.,.~fl ~.a.. OI, -.. * JI 111••· LU I• Inform.tel.,. ~ -~· JOl\n A. Sl~lk 104 Hlohtimcl. 1. To ""' R••oonoenl ISH ,,,,,._.') ... _, B•otell. C4 tU63 SllAll()N s SHUllASll Tiii' 1)11,in.u I• co.flN<l9d l)y ... '" • '"" 1>'!11loO•••" II•\ 111-0 • 1>111111>'1 dh•IClu•I <nftC•f''""'O VO ... t m •rr•A ... v ... t'l\lfY Jot.ft A SlndtUAlr lllt • •rlllM •t\POll•• wtl"'fl JO IMf' of Tlllt Ualt~ftt ..,., nlf(I Wlftt ~ IM CMlt 111•1 Ill•• \ummon• ll V<-"" County Cler• of Oranc;ie COllfll\I Of1 Ho•· "'°" • ·-•.••16 b.11 Y"" lttl ID 111• A Wrltl ... ,.._ AMf2 "'i\NI\ W<h llmt . •OU• IHl.tvlt _., • l'\lbll.ntd Ortn" Cc>&~I 0"41y ~ .,,,.,..,•!Id IM , ... ,1 m•v •nlH • ludc;i-Nov. u. 72, n, •ftll O.t . •· tt1'. -ronr.1n1t10 lftll/nfll .. or at,,.,"' •lllt-1' otr\. cot't(.•,."'no dh,,tton ot or"DOtf'1r. r------------1 ,_., "'-'· cnilo cu•l""" cnlld 1uoooP'\; •ttof'n•• ' •••~. <•'''· •ftd PUBLIC NOTICE •uch OI .... relltt ., m•) C.. grtftlt<I b't 1-----,..,..-....------1 ,,_ <-1. "'"•<II <01110 tt\ull tn lf'lt CP•Jt24 4-1mhllm1Pnt of w-• 1•-•no f/f ,,_ NOTtCa TO C••O~ "'P•'CIO• .. l'f o• 01htr rttl•I SUP•lllOll eou•T 0, T .. IC ( llyMwl ...... _ .. , ... -H..... ITATeOPc.&\.ll'O•NIAP<Ml -· 1 .. 11111 "'atter. ,.,. ,-. .. 1'141iCOUlfTYOP08ANGE H ,,.,,.114ty •• Ill.ti yo1or wrllt•11 Ne.,.._,. -.tt....,,..,•Yltltll~,...._ l!IUtt el 1.AWIU!IN.A 1, E.AllL., Ootted.Auq.nl t, ttl6 DKM-l!iu ll HOTICI! IS Hl!lll!aY OIVOl ID tltt Willi.AM t . 61 JOHN. <"'°'tor1 ol ,,_ e80• ,..,,,_~ Ct•r\ tMt •ti .,.,....,. M'!Sno cl.itM •"'' 8rAll<I• T .... ,,. .. ,., IN SOHi Clt<flNM Ht '""""°ID II .. °""'" -· wllll -.. ,_.,., --~ .... 'The ,.._.,. end otlltf pemillieO INt Olllc• el IN <~II .e l1't -- 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 room or dee; ·Massive' tloor lo ceiling brick fireplace in sunken living room. Excellent OP· portumty lo assume e x· isune loon with low down pa.vmenl. Call 842·2535. off"' ur o."', _,,.,, l~r ,., r • [~.IHAUd 6 UNITS HUHTIHGTOHICH $112,000 Won 'l lasl lhe weekend! Jui.t slops lo beach from lh1 s e xcelle nt rentnl area! Super income of appro1umatcly $1150 per monlh ! Unheard of spen· dublc. Begin 197i wllh a lox Hhellercd income! For quick ai>poanlment C:lll 8'17-tiOIO •.•• ,,,,,.,. '·· .... ·. t' [~H~ltl 962·4471 (?:I: 546-8103 HEWPORT IEACH LUXURY Best buy an Baycrest 1 2500 Sq. ft. of pure class! Four massive bedrooms. wllh secluded master win~. Sunny counlry kitchen with all new ap- phances. including built· rn microwave oven. 2 Large waler heaters + + + decorator's de· LIRht. Don't mi<ss all this ror only SlJ!l,soo; Call 646·7\71. Of'ffJ IJLJ/AJ.1.S. fl IN rn f3.f ,., (( f [V8l- Exclusive Tustin 2 STORY. 2 Br. Condo w/Frplc & Air cond. Comm. pool, encl 2 car gar & patio. $43,950. THE HOMESElLERS Call 752-5353 Getterol 1002 GeMral 1002 ...........•...........................•..•... macneb /Irvine realty C.AHYOM C~ COO Views of ocean & canyon -warm woods, hardwood floors -French doors leading to deck, separate master suite + 2 more bedrooms, l g. patio on unus ua lly l g. maint..free lot affording privacy. Offered at $155,000 fee. Polly J ohnston 642·8235. (T68) 642-823S 644·6200 901 Dover Drh• H~rbor View Center Irvine at C1mpus Valley Center 752·1414 prim e b e a c h ne1ghbo~hoot.1 . Form al enlr)' to larRe family Hv· ing room. Bnck noor lo ceiling fireplace. Coun· try kitche n . Din e . fo'l ags tone terrac e. Hideaway master suite 3 bath':.. 22' family enter tainmenl r oom . Ma ny decoral1on lloms, 1.e. cus tom shutt er~ a nd drapes. Hurry ! Won't last. Call OOJ-7881. Jl'l/I Ill 0." < (lJN 10,.., '· MESA VERDE S Br: lge fam & 1tv1ng rm Pool & jacuzzi. Arross from park/nr g o lf course. Call 540-9922 Gr & ossoelores IHVESTMOW Invest lho~e dollars in hard·lo find income pro pcrty. T111·Lop quality un· its in good renlal :iren of Cosla Mesa . Ideal for Jive in owner or owners Two, 2 bedroom umt!I plus ne.x1ble ownc:r.s unit for $149,000 Call for de la1ls 673 8550 <Jiftf"-4 111~· I I '11r'\f'l 1• I' !~lfilHd YA Doll House 2 Bedrms, .\p1c and span doll hou!!c. Tennis & pool Jn s uper Townhouse a r ea. $39,500. Open House Sut/Sun 12 5 pm . '45·3474 .-1-11-. Harbor Vu Hills Shows like a dream. One owner. Many extras . custom carpelJi, drapes • wall coverinl!IS, 4 Bedrm. lge family room w/fplc. Blln kitchen with pass lhru window U> patio ant.I beautlfully landscaped yard with sprinklers A re.rt buy for il38,SOO. 644-7270 48EDROOM +DEN +GAME ROOM 2400 sq. ft. or living are::1 in this single s lory home IOt:'ated on V.. acre estate on a secluded trcc·hncd strcel. Many cus lom features inc lud in~ ;; fireplace in master suite Try S6,SOO down for tl11s uniqu e find . Ca ll 963 6767 • Oft"'i IU II • tt \ flJ'' t·l Bf fl(I' IESTVALUf IH BLUFFS! ONLY $59,500 "!Joli hoU-.l' .. 1:. lh1• uni way lo tksl·ntw our 11 " hslin~. N1·w er)JI, 111·\\ Ille', frc!>hly p;1rnt1•d & oJ•• cor;oll·d Lo.ids or t ret•,, ,\ r OM' bu~hl':.. Glose l" ~t honh & :.hop;;. 111 1·h111<·e E;i,h1dl· <:m.t.r ,\11·,,1 5-tS !11!1 I Reduced $10,0001 Vw" or water & ntlt}il lri:hl\. :1 bdrms .. 21 ~ bJlh!>, :-pin level. Vt!ry fir•" ,1 I l' e n l ara~c jl pa l 10 Coopcrat1 ... c scll<'r w1111---------- <1llow for some de~nrat ang cha nges. $133,UUIJ Call Lo sec. C. F. Colesworthv REALTORS 640-0010 GEORGIAN COLONIAL SIXIEOROOM HEAR BEACH "'•>rmal double door rn l.rY Lo cla~:sic old wor It.I Priced to Sell! l 'Nl\ t-:BSITY J>J\HK Com1• :-t•1• th1~ c·h:1rm1111•, ur1iirad1•1I l:i rntly h111rw liclur<· you huv. :! flo-dr111 , 21, IJa. I~ hv111)! -+ l.1111 rm, !pie', liltns, FA h t'.11. Laundry rm, patio. llhl•· u:ir,11.tc f~lb :i:128. rvcs c~IS 5:!.'l:s Lachenmyer Realtor charm. l.uri1e 11\1nuliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliilitiiiiiliiil.-. room w1t:i floor l o u:11tn11 fireplace Ba nqul•l ~111·11 """.,_......__....._,. ____ ,., formal t.lm111i: room " QUAINT COTI AGE con veniently s1'1 l11d1•cl Compll'ldy n·m1Kll'letl fro m b ui:e <·ount ry lt!Ok-. ltk" " 111dutc' J MUST SEl.l! kitchen Fam1lv l'J'u.tl fk'drm homt• 1111 h11i:1• l••I. OwME.R ANXIOUS e nte rla 1nm cnl room Nl·w "1t1•h1·n anti h.111t . Large 3 bedroom +den o verlook" i:rnuncli.. n1•w l'Jli>l.'l' .1ml 11;11111 home on qulel lree-hncd Guest QUJMl'" ~~l'l'I• ull !111n1" 'lo1•w 11,.1111 slrecl Profess1ooally ing oj)('n bann"ll'I 'l<11r~ $in.:11M1. lbndscitpe<I, <Wers11cd lo ma:.:;1\ t· lw1lr1111tn lol. Cus lom decora lor s wtes llu1 f~ 1111 th•'< drap<'s, no·wax floors "Gone With Tlw W11)tl and beautiful. new plu~b cha rmer <.:JJl'lt.1 71\lil rarpelln,1!. Sec I his home ""'" 1" o • 01 'it • , 1 • PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 647·5200 ~~~lat e l y• Call ~~ liDJEI_. '. j t;l'PJlllO•ll\fl<'ll lll•· ,. -WWWJ' _________ _ [~lfid PuTYouR · NEWPORT HTS. r\ d t•J 1uht t11 ~11111, Sp11l·11111i. :1 11H. :1 h.1 , 1•· hom1• ;> 1.-1'1'h'll .. :.111111 m1•r J:11r.11((' w11h 111 \l1•W I ~13\1,!'lllU! WA'n;Jl FOR 111E DAlLV PIUYI' CHRISfMA.5 TREE. EVERY TH\JRSUA Y TAX$$$ TO WORK Balboo lay Prop. Invest In n ('omt11min111m R•altors or sml hou!le & rcnl ll 1002 GeMral 1002 ou\. Units nn a v;i1l11 bh i--·*'-6•7•5··7-0•6•0•*--drom 125,000 to $.'i0,000 CENTURY FINANCIAL f'htd whut you "••nt 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• REALTOkS7~2 ~ l>mly 1'1lot l'1,1,-.1f11·t1 Chweral I 002 GftMrol I 004 .•...•...•..••.•...••.••..•................... 'iac~~!~~~~ 110111 ILllRS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE 51.AYtlW~ DVPUX II~ CANYON MIW OM MAmTI .-..Mi"' °" -mllflOd o4 ~ tllleduur'l,tr •11tMMtlllMl....,,IM ''-,_ .. -Ohr -""""° ""'-• ~,,.,..,. •--0'*! _, """' IM "' ... 0 1"' .m "'"" 11t 411 Otlw A-, h.tt OHkt 9o• lor"' •tHCt lMd lly 1118 C..ll!otllle M•. H11'111,....,. •••tll, C..llleMI• 111'1" of c.vt1 TheV """I Ill" lllW Ill '-• 'fllllltll •IM lli!IU ef ....,..,, of IN' C_, .itt1 Ille prOHf lltll'IO f• -h .,,....., __ lfl M _._. t9f1el1'o It 1l"90f .. \MVIO ... Clll'Y OI _..."' ~MllltettlM.t~"'""·llll"'I" petlll-r TM lll'llt WMlt • --,,....'"~er""' ,.,,., ,..,,..., '1• """'"", .. ,..If on lf.-r.v mey "'"' OltMJntll<•• ~ ~I~ tfl ,,,. Ill .,.....-el ~-.,..,.., .......,.,.,, .. 't ... Bubbling Fountain Greet3 You at Buae Front Courtyard in this 4 Br, Broadmoor JJl. Decor ative Maaonr7, Beamed Ceilings. SUdina Walls o Tempered Glass to ~aUo & Gardens. Formal Uving &. DininC Garden Kitchen w/Pass ~Bar· to Pool Area. Mstr Br Has •9ent One of a kind. Dramatic 2 bdrm. & den lower plus 2 bdrm., skylighted kitchen pen thous~. Reamed ceilings. Off-street parldng for 8 to 9 cars . Works hop. Oversi7.ed lot . $245,000-Fee. f'O' •••"'Pit, ••a C:C:P 412 10 llyOUllll ..IA~ O, Pl.IH4K•TT YI 41).40. .... C\llorOl .... WtlUf , , e11ucircft4Not.1• ,,,.....,.,..~.,,....,., ANfMf .ti Lew J.AMO O, PLVHILll T'f • ''" 61t.....,,.., Q'lltr O""' MAelAll PUIMK!lfl • WMtlll A.....,. ..... . ""-' 9"<11, CA ft... 41l0.W. .... ,PIO. a.-1 .. w Ttfl -7"1 .._........_,CA. ... ... , A"-yftrl.-..iiMMr 11141 ...... "*'Jlltll OtMte tHtt DellY """· ,....,.... °'-"' C-t Dll'>' l'llOI. ~ .....,.,._,0ec, .. u.10.m• ~· ~ .. ,.,,.,.,.",• • ..,, '• . ,,. -·~. Beautiful Tiled Jacuzzi. $295, • 881 DOVER DRIVE 631-)80() A COLDWIU IAHK• co. 644-1766 2111 IAH JOAQUIN HILLI 110. IN NEWPORT CENT£R ' .. OAILY PILOT Monoay, Decemt>ere, 1979 HouH• 'ors• How .. llw s. HI For $411!. ······················· ······················· ...................... . HcHIH• For s• l"Otl'" For s-. HOllHI For S• HCHIH• For Sole Hou:tel For Sdt att..r Reol btat~ ···············•·•···•· ................... ~··· ............................................... ·······~··············· •••·······•••·•···•···· Gt111enil I 002 1C11too ,...... t 007 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••• • • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • •• •. • • • Cotta MHCI I 0 .2 4 ._.'"9foale11ch 1040......,.°"leodt 1040 ~.~~ ..... ~~-~~ ~~.~~ ... ~~!',~::!~'!'::•!~ ...... ~?!! C~~-1 .. 00 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ''vr-''J 0 Storyta.olrCott099 SUPER DEAL ....................... • UV OWNF.R l'ho1ce K3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newly rcmodttlc d 2 3 OedrOom dl'n, «'<'ntr11I BAYFRO ... T OWNER LIQUIDA TIMG 4 l S. UK! T AHOI "CONDOS .. Oc11anrront l'roverly, Mtlll Verde, •3 Or 2 &. btwn c &. o Sb 673 3111;1 new de('()r. S«-t-lodtd blc Odrm. home Jusl • rew air. nrce fonn·1J \JI d f""ll -)'d bl\ru it>S,!IOO. Ownr Cot0M .. Mer I 012 !llJ8 9301 ~Jodi• from tho t>.1rh. t'onv11mcnl lo toh•irpioi.: & Olrlcf' hulldh1tt "'' • 8r•Chl & airy room'!, l..lcul:lr view. lu"ur1o1•1, ot-ean view 4'i ll&l'ie yard cucutlvuurcu:ei. An ,1111 4 Pl.EX ..••••.••.............. PRIVATE _______ , $'92.000. 1nvei.hn~nt •t ~1.ouu NORINS llAI." llLL GllUHDY * 494-t057 * HOUSIO&!.Gt "'SS $M.750. Vaca111 :1 IK.l;m Reattor __£5·6161 r .._ ho~ on lri.: '''' \111. \.; o..M•i / S.CW.d Oct• Vu On ch11nncl In NcwPort ma. to W1· 'm11"1\'' t.taU o.J:!aa. 1100 SHIMG I~ IBJIYIMG! HACH ACCESS MESA VERDE 4 llt Rectii.ced 3 ledr-M. 2 ~ to SI 09,500. S450/MO..ttt !>Yiu! conl rctr 31111 2t>.1 ccindOb "''rp nr lll'JVenly Vt1lll"ybk1 J1 to.i. lW'~> renovJh.od l'ric('tl .\tJrt $3!1,!I~ 'l\•r1na. 642-9604 916-141-8191 Thi• price 11 rl•ht, the Roy Mccardle lor11t1on 111 Rre Jt, the Realtor fl IO Newport tni1lr bdrm is icianl, the 541 7729 )anl 111 pool sired , the .c_o.st•o•M•e•s•a--·--·i I ~ n d 1 ., re e • l h e ________ _ NIM! IENTAL NOf•n LOC4Tll> HEAi HACH K.YD. fM ~UTIRIL HUMTIHGTON MACH. 3 BR'11, JA,<, bath with &!acb. Spuc. 4 br, 3 bu. Nl!w VJWl/u pl" Ukr fJrtpl .. c~ and tge dUlo d c n & Ha me rm . s,.w..~ •••••••••••••••••• • •• •• • var.ge. Cllnyon priVMC)'. Oourmot kit ch, brkts -----Ten super 11harp, b11< 1 ... 1 .. r • """' A 673~!> nook le frml din rm unit.:. in dc1wntown 1,·,.,1.1 .12111,.....,. gent _ · · · other lleol &tote M('!!J . Ju,.t six 1no" 11hl ,\ U~n Sunday 12 s. az •••••••••••••• ••••••••• ( .• I C.wt.'!l Royul. All wood. I Uanol Sl., $97,500. Ait ... ~_._1 .. u--· ully rl•nlcu 111 ""'" OUTST AHDIMG LIDO LOCA TIOM t:hurmlnU :i 11<.lrm l 111mr 1)11lhC"UOm11 un• two 11nd Fine Mt>Sa Verde 2 Story. Ull! nr.iphu·c·~ 11rt<.wo 5 Br. 2 '~ bu . many 644-7211 amenll1cs. $9ti,700 Ph /Jn NILEL Ul\ILl Y f.. A5SUCll\I [CJ 751·3930 µrln only ------ OHLY $105,00Q 4Sk FOi MUCI STIW4RT 516-1461 or tU-l5J2 lo11el homu w/2 car Aur , 613 7001 ._ .,..,. ... • $2000 per mo. ~1:'.,1M~1 lrn 11 tinc l lower floor · ForSo'9 I 100 l'1 11ld l>uh1 only. Cull "'' w/2nd lrplc .. ro11d)' \o llACH HOUSE ••••••••••••••••••••••• :i!l1ln•s11 1 completu. Lf(c street· Super a br +dun home. S.J Capo. :-i S1.1r t\dull (i)~~"Sirw;liiiiiiii) street lot, i.lnt view , w/cozy frplu. ROurmcl l'rk. ~hlH i\111eril·an.J. trcCll, privucy. Owner kitchen .. lt>ls or gluss. SlS.000 ... 92 !11111 , -1!1:1 ;!!)l I lo Thl• Trarl1t1110 111 ---- Spam. f'h-sh & Nl•w de 2 HR & GAR /\PT. 2 Cov l'Or in and out Sttll llmt Pullus, nit•l'ly rurn. So. or to cho~t' your rolor-. ol llwy Only ~101,500. Alll. t•urpcl and u1>plwnn·~ 67~1 3222 SALi IY OWHEl EASTSIDE t.O<.:A'rlON 3Br. 4l bu, rumpus rm, nlro l;ir114' lot. HV prlc'g.' Hui.ff'"'°" leach I 040 l"iM I 044 499 3!133 ----Pride or ownen.~1p ro~ Mobile. J\lo<l•tl.H Hume & L:~~~~~~~ EHDAHGMl!D only $72•000• Wo.n l lwil . Building Dl'l1H•rv Set· lncomt ,l"'O_... 2000 Coll 642-Jaso. Properly . ·.:. -· •r $lJl,500 Ph 642-5299 •••••• • •• ••• • • • • • • • •• • • •••• ••• ••• ••• ~· •• •••• • • --OWNER GONI!: V,1cunl. --------•I SPECIES II eA up. & $4!1'\" ,. 0•;)·7570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ou,.,... for frCi!ei.t. 01 rnlo SIJG.~ - WATI Rf"RONT ltOML REAL ESTATE bJ1·1400 •2000 s,Ft• m o\le Ill cfeJll' !) , bcdroum GlonmJr J.:IJnl. OPEN HOUSE 4Br&fam1ly. oc.~. newly pJmtcd & tJrJk•t f.rl/Sat/Sutl/Moi. $59.SOOAl(l ~6·3166 ell llreakl:ii.t nook + 2600L1ghlhou:1e La {hnml( room. cv1·11 "d1·n H.t> Vu lroodMoor Dona Poittt I 026 Living room rm·plJc·c HEW PETERS TOWHHOME fl. i.1unnini: Plan i\ mt.idl'I localt'd on J ml)sl dcl>1ra hie locution on i:ret"nbelt. lluycn. c·hou:e or n1Jor:. 1-\•w left l1k1• this & JUSl l15l~' •I O\:ean/rnnt lob tn Lbe lu:urt or Lai:una Beach, w1lh tremendous l'Ommerc1aJ or rciudl'n· l1ul p otenti a l . ror part1cuJ11.rs. cull llx41l 2 hr Cos\..1 Mcs.1 .. dull park.UJ.50. 648~173 ----ACftOCJe fonole 1200 •.....••••......•...... 71RAMDMl!W UMITS HARBOR HIGH 4 br ;!\,ba/frtµooltjul' ••••••••••••••••••••••• $7S,9SO. Turbell Jteullor?;. lmmac home. f n:.h Ocec.tViewD..a.a 842885-1 E/S4dt Costa MHa ~luxe new un1l11. !>till limo to choose color" .111•1 OPlJOOI>. nf CJCIJClS and olhd ex· 80 mobile fL\t.I' jCreai:c~ c I I ' n i: lo u I I d (' r • :I ~:q l'l~brr& nl'Jr Sallon !-.<•.\ lk.'JCh ·a IQ all ~ Charm1n.1: J lil•dru(l w1\h h,1rd,,.,011<1 lloor-. n J lJ1g Jot Full pr1n ~!J.500 ~1irun· 1111 .rnd 'ave Call 751 31!11 C SELECT I PROPERTIES HEWPORT HG TS '.J l1r t·~11•1n<lalll1" rn i.up1· 111.lrhtf , W/h.infwc,I rtr~. lt&U. wtw t'fJb Ext. nc S1>uni1>h h•xturc :.tucc:u. lg. trct"s & 111c·l'fy ln<.l~q11 lot Lots or r·rn for "t ru vch1dn + tllJI ~ur 588.000 or orr JACOBS RE.ALTY 67S-6670 BALBOA PEHIH. L'111y. updatt·tl :! odrrn SpJni'h. nt-,1r 111..•:il'll, ll ' lul A~l<1n.I: IJI rt't' '7H.~1 IJJrnt. new j)fu.:.h l arpcl Mr Dmta Pt. Morino thruout. Paneled family rm, 2 cr.1ckhng fp. party Mil' ,,,cuu1 & cu~t pool Slli3.9~. Well.on & (;o 675WOO BRAND NEW 2 Years new 2 Bed rms, den I'• lrnth!., fireplace:.. :o.p:n·aous. $112,500. World WI• lrolcen lalboo 673-4545 4 BR+ de Hu,.to(' A·t'rJme with ft owan \ 1ew near Marina. the ideal cnmbmaUon or 3 Bedroum, 2•2 h¥lh. a n c w 11 11 m c 1 n 11 n $79 soo e~t u1Jl1 ~hed '· 1w1ghlx>rhood, featuring J; all the lutcst kHc:hen up· AMCHOllAGI po intments. uvcrsi1.ed fMVISTMIMTS i<arJl(e, la rge room,;, 3 lmlhi-, Ml•f1 down wet· (7141496-7711 bar, mln1 oc~·an view. All -----------WJll<lni.: d1!>tancl' t o private beach. Only f'OuntainVal,.y 1034 $J65.0(.(). lee. •• ••••••••• •••••••• •••• Call 644-7211 NEW LISTING! 8.A Y FRO MT Costa Mesa I 024 1 fk.Jrm ... , 4 h~1lh~. new 1 • •••••••••••••• ••••• ••• nl'H'I 111'l'up1t•1l' 2 Story msm Catch tblS one bcfnn· 1t :o; published. Spcl'lacular 2 story with court)urd l'll try romplelc w1lh pond and sparkhnJt rountu 111 Grant recrcallon rnom, :l br's, 2 ba 's + roonth·s:. Jhb or ,,.,ooJ & .1:1.i:.:.. pie NOT A CREATURE tor l111Jt N11·1· wJter IS STIRRING \ u·w $211!1,:)IMI .,;3 :JtiW IA2 2253 t-:vc~ 1111, , Jcanl Mei..i VerJ<> C'Claras. i\ MUST SEt-;! :1 bt.-<lroom, rJmJly ruom al $72,!IOO. home with hreplaee lb 531·5800 associated reurly to move rnto ni:hl fntfl"l'lafionol Real no~• W1Lh a A re ~o l Estate Network r errcutronal patro.1----------1 1-ol·atcd '" j rl.'nl prut .. or - - ---BROKERS-REALTORS JOlS W l alboo •II JU I owncr~hlp neri:hhnr hcuJ<l TRYSJOOO OOWN 1 At only SG7 ,!ll)ll' <.:all End unit. 3 llH ('ondo, .S.16 Zll:l. huitc bonus rm & 2 l'•" n11 ' '' • " garai:e. S·IG,000. Cull ,~~.~~!~1~wS1~~,~~t~1!.: [~ ~I T:::~c~~l,r,-;-~ ba. lhl'UIJUI lll'W dfl\'l'Wll)' . ~ mm, many decor ilt'ms $6-$5 llt!W Ji.11111 111.\ldt• ,11ltl lllll $64,500 ~ 4·10.'i. Wl! 22'J7 ~ •. w I' •I I I 0 II ,. HE.AR IACK IA y Agt. I" nth C' a fl 111 i.: II I. I :1 tir den. 2''.! ba, 2 sty ----- SELLE It r.; u ll du G .t .., r r p I , HuntiftCjtOft leach I 040 11 N.wp0r1 11. hcaut1ru1 W110<1 ... 1ream ••••••••••••••••••••••• c.1'"' ~~ In u v. o c r $1,0 000 64o·8~n1 1.:111~1115 ANYTIME FtXER UPPER $36,950 11111 •l••1t1r.111n1 ,1;,; "' li1-hllul lo111 k I'·'''" .ore .1 o o rn p I 1 111 " n t I h 1 , 'f•t.1t1uu" l .... 101\ 1uv.n hum•· II '"" ,111• ''·'""" '"',,,It <t ', nl n•·~u1·\ li~·11· ' \11111 1 II 111<" l" I d t1fUt I 1'\ 1l1·dtu 1Ull\ & •• I\ 10 t I t1l Lfl lt·tl :-m •Ii• I" 111111 1~"·il•h• ....... 11 In nl{'l' ne11ihl>orhoocl Unoi.: }Our PJIDl & TLC '$110 1100 ttr••a. ask1ni.: ~ 'lSO Ai.'t 673· 7filll \lE.'°' \ VF:llUE :I Br 2 U.1. »II•"· 11r "·hoot-II} "" 1H• r I' 1 1 n <· u n I} 'fi'I ITil '°"' .. n.11,und••rour ll \11., I'll.OT < ltl<IST:\I \:-; TIU'..1-: t'\1•1\ lhUl'dJ\ 10 lho•I 1 ·1.1,,1(11·11 ~··<·11on Fut 111f111•all 1111r I hn,lf11." \11 \'1'"' •~lj ~.7K 1> .. n·1 oJrup lht• h111l' 1;N .1 UCUl!ST.4 <iranacla modt'I situated in pride of l)Wners h1 .11,•a. 4 1.i.rl(~ l>edr m ... fornu1I drmn~. r.am rm "' c·u-.lolll pool lJ hit' <.'JU t1>d,1y, IW:?·!l:t71 4 PLUS A POOL :-.h.1q1. Cl t'an, 1 ... 1m) h11nh• w ,d1i.hwJ,.ht•1. 11.hJ l.1r~,. hl•at,·d 1 u~tom 1-..101 I •1 UM· ) I' 111uot1. lll:l !1:171 1uh\l.tlh.1lo"" ""l lla1lv llWNEH S \ClllFICI·:• II \:! 'ii.ill f'llhl t'l.1 .... !o 1f1c1I \d J.11wr•st 11,11 ,.,J t1111il11 I '1\111,.. 11-1.' rttl7K 11rou n cl ' 2 b1·d 1110111 !; • .. -11/l.ll._f_K--&--~-,-N-.,.....,.----------, t·11u,,lry l'harrn k11d11•11 .,_, r , ., TYPES OF LACE + eJLln.: 11r1·,1. I .1\ 1111( U M P E S Y T A T T I N G I l T A L Y l l J l l ( T ( v A l r H c r y H L H A ij ( r 1 H r L L y R B r c N L B E A U R A R S P U H T 0 I G N V E L l S l N ulr y p E s) 0 s AM ( R N I N [ T 0 S ~ A A N H E C H N I T C N E C N E C N C ~ l 8 T H [ N S N I i 0 I ( r. V T S N V 0 S A l E E [ l S T ~ R L J A H t 0 T B C H N I T L H 0 T H A K l I S ( G N 8 P C U C N A C R 0 Y N M A l P l N R I I A Y N A ~ £ C ~ I S l £ S ~ U B I N U T S E H R M U H 0 N I T 0 H N R E B G E L L C A L S L E S S U R B 0 V £ N E T I A N C R l S ( A U A R 8 U S E C H L I V S n1truc11on1 H1ddoln words IMI-•~er , • watd, up, down 01 dltll'>f'allv F Ind •Kit #>d bO• Ir In, ~ mom. flulru holc'o11y Club Cwc1htlt'?;. O n ly ~1.000. Tar!)(,11 Heallor:s. rall 842·2561 SPECIAL Ju'<t 1n 11mr for lh<' l111h•la\ :t 3 llNlrm-.. I '• b,1lh, pool 0 1Nt)t'I" II> fl' ·•dy t.o move RtdCC1r1Mt 181 0 I MGCJl'Ollct at T olMri. Ft. Vlly 96~44'5 LACUESTA IYOWHH 1 blocks to beach N1•"" ultra. µlu11h , Juli) laodsl'Bl~:d 111<10 11q ll Gia:.~ & ccd.1rw00d PJllO homc-rrplc.: 2 bdrm·den l.:e m:u.ter su1\o I' + i :.toral(c tlhl .:ur.1ge 1\ ;omt•n1lll·~. 'rhr,, lo,cly 2 ""# ~tl~ N!WPOITSHOIES ~£·1~~ y 1• '• i·J :.b. Ill • P::..C• bdrm , 2 bath end unil 499·2900 Churm in"' h o me on --Prop rtlea can be yours 1r you NII ----------• " t60 "CRES • 00 0 I S89 900 beautifully landsrpcd ..,. 7Sl·lflO ... t uy. n y • IOl.2palJos,l~sundeck& rnmc agrHullurl· or 1•000UA1Ul.HtWP04Ut«ac,. red hill .;.ill!! .. · 5 52·7500 lln•Jm htHOl' for uuly ·~~~~~~~~~ S92.!>UO. l1 11 ·, rll\Jnt'll\st. vlOlan REAL ESTATE 900 G,,.,,,., . .,., • ~t 49~ \-47) '>•'I lJ•O vl<?w of oecon t'vt. :.uh d1v1st-0n l'.1hrurnp, dlivcwoy proYidcs am· Nl'11uda, :.hurt d1:0.l.mcc 6 7 SttP' To Sand pie park'g. Welkt.c)1)C>oli;, from I.as Vci:Js 17 U111t Mole1/Ai>l tennis & beuch. $69,9SO. IEVERLYCRES>OH $400,000.lJOO,oooDo""n Agt ti73·760t REALTOR 64S.24 I' Owner Curry &lont·c -----Agent 11'1':).4545 w e s t c 11 r r · H a r b o r 84asiness Property 1400 --~ Highlands, beuuurul 4 ........................ Comm ur Iles. Gro!>M'" o n ;N suN 12·4 l'M DA9 ZLER' !HI 15lh St. Hun\. &:Ach. IUnER ._ • 7l4/[>JG-82:>6or675·9JJ7 NO-bul lhcre is parquet Trcmcndou:. fcsling of Cor a""'pp'-t___ in the kilrhcn &: family opcness with rant118llc v11 RR. 2 BA, family rm, up· , . $000. mo. 3 Unit s. •rn graded laundry rm new fhc Mosl, soui:hl arter OOxllO lot. S80M tlrno custom ltitcheo. ApproJC . pilrt or Wtlll.hrrc Blvd, in :1111 m: W. Wiison. C :\I 2.000 i.q. rl. Prine. only . Ue.verly Hills. 1 i;torr 5'17 ·'1H:llturt.G~m.Ownl'I -framed hy 1,icumcd ceil· IY OWHER rm 11re11 This 2 bcurm , L nd rk 4 IJH & tam I"• lmth home also hall ~~&i~s.Jplc, 3 bdrms. r~l ~~Ill i.:a le. Call ltali:in t1h: entry & \\In· ----------! C 11 ~2.7727 f r ppt Lawlcl!ng + rncuanin~ "" · i\~'\ o 3 · 'l'olahni;: 5500 ~ll (l. Addi 1----------lt · t iunal :iooo i.11 ft. hldi.: 8 UHITS LIDO ISLI'> By owner 11,900 l>c1 fl land <loml Sunlo Ana. t 'lyc 2 bdrm 9till-Hol!J $?2 'ISO · dow planler. lkuulrfol . .. l!rel.'n wit locallun loo! ---------mj SPANISH STYLI:: wll qwck. 1 Pl.EX lh-d C;,irpct Realtors Sf)ill'IVll:> uwn1·r~ urul ha~ 1133·3380 Crple, balconu·"· PJtHl, c·nd. ~11r, pfu.,h t Jrpcl 1n.: Ukr 5Jfi I IK I ur ~~ WOODIRIDGE COAST RO YALE VIEW °Charm1nl( J bedroom custom home S11uc1uus hvrnl( room w11>e11med ce1hn>: & Fllt~PLAC .. > NEXT TO NEW Pl\ltK. Walk lo bc1.1t·h. shopping & bllbeS. $127.~ 49'-7222 111·0136 2 Hr, den, 2 Ba, Ii;. patlU parkini;. ~· .. r l>•1h· hy & 3 l·Lldrm. Pr\mc p rn Sl!>0,000.673·16JO owner. J11hn 1;amble, pc rly. ~l l!S,OOO; 1,.,. ------213·657·~ down UY OWNER. Nrwvorl ----- Terrace Condo. 3 Hr. 2 Ceme~ry Lots/ llU GRUNDY Ila. newly drcorat ed Cry,.. 1500 REALTOR 675-6161 $56.900. Oys, 5-10-1219; •••••••••--.•••••••1.1 •• l!:vs4!11-05.J6 Sacr1r1cc pric 1' lor 2 ccml!lery Ioli.. l'.1r1fic SHORECLIFFS View Call Loi.:ao t1oy~ Rare opportunity, ocean 640·215G, cvc:.i;.11; 11:n6. le Jelly view. Pri v beach. ----• _. B e a u t q u a I I t y Coftlnltrct ... • TRIPLEX PLUS HOME liatcway lo Yosemite Property in eiccclleut condition. Pictures av11l ReaJEstate by Mr.NAY Throw .i :.tone & h1l lhl' lakt• lrom lhls bcaullful ltJc·01l1on. It's in Wood hndl!e PlllCI'. JUSl aero"" lhc• i-tn '<'I from 1hc bcac·h clull. La r i:e :1 bdrrn home, formiJI drn1n~. famil) rm • atrium. drct m<111c \'aulled C'l'll· ---------~ angs. Acl :.non & )'OU l'an lath/plaster l'Onstr. Good P1 optriJ 1600 1112c lot. Rest neigh· ••••••••••••••••••••••• IEVERL Y CREEDON REALTOR 64$-2411 FOOTl.ALL TfME Don't rumble l'1rk u11 th1i. 3 bdrm value 1mel•d home 1n N . llunt'i.: rhCHIM' CUl'J)l'I l'oior .. Stk1.:JllO i~J:-REALTORS IUILDAILE l.OT60X221 Ganyon v1c·w~. c·ountr) ~l·llm1<. lcrr;icc1I le\ cl pad. S43.500. "Z" ltc;iltur 4!14 Kiili MYSTIC HILLS borhood-. Century 21 Marten lltal E stat e 640-SJS 7 &IS.KOO I. Jll(; CANYON C<.: Broad· rnorchome. Plan 2 •t8H. 2~'l RA, 3 t•a r )!or. Prnr. 1kc.. well lndscp<l, <'<ir lot, nr. 7th fairwuy. !I l:l>lm homes on slrcel Sl!4!i,OOO Owner !714 ) ••'4 16:17 for a11pt. -~ -- MED /DHTl ILDG Xlnl mveillmt S5C'lll,IJOO ~st Side CM 2Br, 18;,, ()""m•r Wiii hna111·<· !)'I It A. ,1pprov1:d, 3 Untt:., inl . i'r1n f11ll)'. eves (1,11()() :>Cl ft lot, plan!!, by f>I t I !117 owner a.ts.2345 WATCH F'Olt '1111': Di\11. Y 1'11.0T l'lllHST.:11/\S THl-:t-: ~:vim Y Tl IL' 1<:-.tM v -----Ii ullllS <.:osta Mesu. 2 hr. l ha. p vt patio, encl. i:a r u~e . $179,SOO. Owncrlluit 557-1694 ; 54fH.1!!50 B1·ad1. owner~ 11r1 n·1I low to i.ell (tull·k' <:11•at for htan1·r hnmr• or 111 vcslmcnt Cll'an & w1·1l kept. New 1111111 blind~ 11i~hWUlohrr, 1'11\'C:l l'U pa Liii 7141 91i11·4451> Woodbridqe Brand New 4 Bdrm Enjoy air <'Ond1t10nt'd l'Omfort. dramullc wind· Ing !.lairs to 2nd story. 4 V<>rsat1IC' bdrm ~. p:ir· quet entry & lus h bc1i.:e <'<irp<'ls F1e11ta family room, lolJlly delu"(c kllt·hen. rrn·att• ma~lcr 3 hr. 3 l>u. Sauna, SfJCl" l~ol'ular vu, i;re;it 1-;Xl'c home Sl ~S.0011 Opt•n ll11usc Sun I !i, 11:J3 (;oral, Ai,'l. 67J·T6111 Hl.UFFS Condo for sale .......................... 1111_ ........ .. by owner. Uy 11ppt lo pnncipals only. 3 Hr, 21:: UNLIMITED JOY & l'HO~'ITS' Hike trail to beach. No wax quality floonnA. earlh t.1nt>:,. bnrk rareplu1·c. I bdrm. or :l t u,•n. l'ror. lu ndsca prni.: l'rc~t 1 ill' ne11:hborhood One yr warranty 7111968·4156 TOTALLY Hl!W ! C'omplt•lcly rl'mo)l1d('tl \I. llh the l'>\·"l HrJftCI 111'"- l>lil10tone 11lu'h c·arp~·ts, niord11111\1n~ rlrnpl',, \l'l'Y .r ttra1•t1"' :J h<lrm honw 111s1t1c lr•ll'l 11cxt to l>l'uch. l'ru·cd lo .~ell'' flU8· -4456 LIGHTEN UP! nt•IJl ral tone' or )l'llOW thru nut. C1mt'I 1·olon•d l'Jrpt'lll. Taslcl ully de <'<1r.1tt>cl I htlrm, 2 s10ry Lu8h lanobc:111>m1?. :i t·ar )lar Super l'lcu 11 1 OOll <t 1: .... Xtras Galore I ll11hly upJ:raded b('.11 h Pnl?(!rly Truly beaut 1ful model S68,S011 t'Al.L !IG2 7751 INTEANATION.AL RIAL ESTATE NETWORK Public Notice bcrlroom $!18,950 SW-1720 TAABEU. "#I In Califomla" Distinctive Desi9n t;rc·t'ls )OU the: \'cry rno mc:nt )OU drne 11p 1h •'.\knor and 1nto:11111 JI' po1ntment" speak 111 rnn lt'llll)orary eU"l' J111J d11:111ly Ul•Unl' Hr1ml' J nort:\1S. 2 buth.~. l.1m rm. Tu JJ t'ond it 11111 S!m.r.oo '+573 CAMPOS Dt· IRVIHE !ll'l-::-.11>,\ll.Y llA M TOG I'M WOODIRIDGE W.irm1ni:tnn :'o1ntlC'I II tuwnhonw Xl11l lor;ilto11 l'l\011 .. ,• up~r;oclt•, 1111\o\ <'.ill Sll'V<', 121JJt/22 IOIJ8 nr 1714 )$~2 10'JO logwta Hiiis I 050 b:i. 11150 Sci fl. S99,500 ••••••••••••••••••'•••• Pirm. Call any~imc, Be:iut :J Hr. ('nlrl air. hui:e 1213> 726·7372·_ _ _ !?Ur, Crpll'. sprklr:., r lni.l' f:AST m .Ul-'F'S to i,hop:o., school:.. frwy. Tlll·Ll::Vl!:LCONOO !>17 4425 anyt1mt• J Hr, 2 Oa, nicely de· LQVEl.V 2 Rr & Den. 2 roratcd.qwcl cuf.de·sac. ea l h . v 1 e w c 0 nd11• secluded put10 terrace, $53.500 OwnerS81·7034 prin only . $78,900. ------752-0917 LCICJU'MI HIC)'lel 1052 Uroadm_oo_r _S_e-.. ,-1-c_w_P_l_an_ ····-·················· FIX & SAVE :tOdrm. 2 bath. arr c:ond Cur lot. I mmcd <K't'llP. •IOHDR!ALTY • G 11 I IC'ry nf 1 lomr~ 1714t831·941 I SEA TERRACE Garden llom<' l'lan J . '1J'\r . rarn rn1 i h .1 w l pnn l Prln o nl y $125.000. 493·0825 TWO•STORY NIG U Et, SllOH l<:S 3 Redroom plm. <kn 1-;:i1 clui.1vt uatc i.:uar<lcd area $12'J.500 JAY W. ")'i::AT.S REAi.TORS ,1~ 2.2:17 SEA TERRACE 4BR 2b.i JIOpulJr . J" Pliln Corner lot. 11u1c1 cul dc·:.ac. fw.1tetf pool uwalcU rn lhP prtv.itc comm ·I tc11111~ tourli. rel' l'.Cnl<>r \lo iilk lo Ll1•;11:h EN.JO\' Ttlf: t;oou Lit'!:: Sli!5,ooo t°Jll 4113 !Ill~ or •l!l!I 4!>111 RENTAL: 4. $1GS,OOO. lbr, r .. m rm, J ha. view (2l3)697·SHO Ei\STBLUFF' 4 Br & Fam rm with view. 8y-0wner. Pnn. on· ly. Call ~·9169 __ _ LIDO ISLE tharm111u hou.,._. on l.:l'Nl ~lrel'l. Fresh & !'lean. II rick I rplc., lots ul 11a 11 1•11 nit, upd;i I ed kill'hen :J Hdrm) • 2 llalh.,. S147,000 LIDO REALTY :tr;; \iu I ulu. '\.U. * 673-7300 * RS>UCED $2.500 Fk>autrlully df'tof'ld, 2br & d<>o home 111 Nwpt Shnrc•i. Ownl•r anx1n11"• ul(t l).U .300IJ or Ii 16 7414 STEAL!!! Molt\ tell-If ""lier!. Sll:!.500. Lu"<ory 2 bdrm. :i hath condo 111 pr<'~ligious Wc·stC'hrr IEVUL '( CRHDOH REALTOR 645·24 If 1.at.:unlt N1i.:uctl :tUI~ & 4BH from S~lto ~175, Go•"'"ment LAKE FOREST .AuwnaW. LoOIH l.uke Front 4 Ur. :J bu, .-.gg.'.}f~~gt-E't f'OOL HOME frplc . brand n 1•w IE >--·•"9 4c•• I bo Vi JI " va1lablu to unynne No 1 ..,.._ ... -...... l11r r cw omes, :i vacant. On y $85,00U I""' I 1 ... nl'w loan co:1ls. J..ow In· S R S 0 0 cl 0 w n ... rm p u11 uunu11 room Smart Knit! Jump Into This! SIZES Ar9entan Cluny 11ech11n ~ -B1nche Guipurt Spanish u 3 Dr. 2ba. highly up graded. ,.~amity rm & frml J;>in rm. $78.000. Ph 96.1..c324 terest. uva1luble, l:ike He~porta.och 1069 wrth loft and halh, pJua t 3 & Owner/Al!t'nt. 5'10·0!>!>5. •••••••••••••••••••••• '""I 27()() 'II rt v•1n.•nt over puymcn ll. • 4 ----... ~1 . ~ . .. • "' • bedroom homc11. hurry, 4 llt _ $88,500 F!EO THf DUCKS · $760/mo. Un1qul' llomr~. fashion's darling• Oo lot~ of olaces 1n lh•s 111w 111cker I 1 hll Ima~ a1e slimmer, y1t jarkct J11s comlml.>bty over rve1ylh1t1p Kn11 •I ul wo"tctf from lh~ rntt~r down. lntludong ~loevt~. PJtlrr" 11~9 M1\~\·~ Sit•\ 8 l 11 1ncl11rl~d 9375 a.20 i't lff e.,.;'-1Tf~-r.-Brussels Lille Valenc1 tnnes G Chantilly Maltese Venetian Tomorrow: London s~ i-.atl1v\-/J, £trs • That In triguing Word Gome wiflt a Cltudle ------·-·· CIAf I. ~&H ------ ·~':...i.:r!.o! ~ ........ '°'"' ........ ,,,..,. -· --------•1 call 002·5500 IELOW MARKET .. c r 0 m l h t• 1 g e . Reallors. li7~HiOOO. DOLL HOUSE Turtlt•rol'k investment waterfront <lu«'k. 2·s ty.' -~ I L' TAR•U. hur0 atn. AP11r11i!oe1I nt Bl\. & pltiyrrn. · 3 hu iv OWNER Tbe owner n .,urope " Xlnt rond. Wulk to pools. • says "8ell'' hll! Hansel $.<l0,000. Sclh•r liqoid11t1n~ lennhl & oectin. $96,500 R:iyfronl llll tollln11 Isle. andGreteldrcamhomc. "#llnCallfonNo" ut Sffa.:>t)(l' Tilc entry. C.4YWOOORULTY Tr:idi• o r f1oo nc e . Ile musl leuvc h l11 4 -------Spanish hrick fireplace. S:IOR,000 fi7:J -7770 or bcdrm. 2 bath home with OWNEll ANXIOUS. 110, Fornual dining. Family * 548· 1290 * Sl\ll 11123 45' pool nnd 11pA. You'll bouitht anolhcr home • room. Secluded mas t<>r - love all lhl' wood find Villa condo. 3 lx'Clroom!I, wrng_ Air concht1oncd SPV~Ll\SS lllLI .. Vu, :J bric k St'e l h1 s oo 1•i but~ 0 <'1 uxc hulll· EZ cure yard. Sell<>r Br 2 Ba. last l>rund n<!"" SanCi.n.nte 1076 portun11~ ins. Ca rp<'l:c. drai>t'!I. ''l'ry anxlou" • l"reshly ~U3e b~wncr MO 17SI •••• ••••••••••••••••••• showanU ell! 1:-'ullprll'e painted in!.ide Submit llV OWNl-:H lfl7 W ASSIC By Just $48,500. C1ll Tarbell. oHer lod11Y C:ill MW Newport· St7,soo 1\"c.>111da Ales"111dro. nr l G A RC l T ] Cl ~alters. 84M00t _ _ 7~~;~.,.) '"'"''"' """ l U + IOMUS ' (.'omwdl:I ilil,!JOll. Im· I I j j j1 j j J THE SEA Qulct hillside cul de rmr mac 2 br ._ den. rrpl. I R 0 ' F A t }. °'"'~ ....... •'" • ~ ............ !~.~~ ~ 1182 BalHI c~~::u~~~1~ 11!1:n~~:: ~~.l~~o:;~r ilpPI 492.~1 . • sl~n 8 song •round Lbl8 IJ MOU""'TAI""' Vfll!.MI ~ ---== •::m!!E>< kitchen • breakfast are:l. D Plan COndo 2 Dr. I'll .ba. I I Ii I bed rm g e m . Plullh " " c.,... • ~ • urpots,lushlandscpa& Survey lhc m ount1l1111 RARE UNIV. PARK M111111iricent BONUS· or<'nnv11'w,poo nrtolf superb decor m:ikc lhla from the matter bcdrm Chancellor 4 BR, 2,t Du. F1'MILV ROOM. ovct cour11c 159.500. vl ply, I L E R 9 E I •' "'~·-1.__, ...... _ po1i.... '" an excepllonol buy al oflhla be1utilu1$ bcdtm1 fsm·rm, din-rm, many 700 AQ, fl -r:11sed 075·35117 ,.,....,. '""" ,,,. ""' 3 b t ~ d a d h C' II r l h Cr p I a t 0 0 '. ------4 I I I I Chlcaoo h ..... very •m•rt m.~. • up a r a t upara Cll, on CUl·dC·88C. CaUH.'(lral bc11med cell THI Vll!W ...... dog.T~vt•uohthh'nto•llup . lhmpt n model In $71>,50<1 . Appl onl y . inti. 12 fl. wet bar At.ONt: JS WORTH •nci~for-." ,,. 11•blM"' O~ntrNt. F.aay 1.1ccr19 ~-9795 w /r"frl". S'"clutttd $115,rc:.~fovclnn()w I D y L F • G j 1U1 .. 10 all frC()waya at only ---" .. " _......, __ _ " . R It $90990 TURTLF.ROCK GLEN rrut•tM'. Tiered r('dwond o yalRQITVn I I I' I I. e ~=::-.... a:~,~ el y Rec:tC.r!)ttRealtol'll Pl3n If.~ on & Atrium dC<'ked lanai patio. 2200 ;it$49~mlnoao,f.Rtrell1,1 '°"*"•""°''""'"'Ne~hi... *.••-•1tn 833-.338-0 onl&tk>l,11v11il.Uec '76. 11q. fl. Plue -mut h t'11po,UC)'I. 1 4!13·2143 • II r I' I' I' I ll;~Cfl!C'lft had! SL29.SOO. 5S2·97QS more! Call fallt. 75~·1700 &!-t. .a...i._ ,-080 '•INfNVMtUfOUllUSIN --fJl'l"lllV •fl l ~l'•'H'l"lfl' _. • ..,.'"' IMUI $0UA•IS !~~~~~~~~~-The laste'll draw in the DAIL v f>IU>T [ 11 ······· ............... . • ONSCIAMfl( At()V1 umu I I I I I I Qlndo, •nal ltor}', 6XCI. Wc11~ •.. IA Daily Pilot OlJU~'T~tl\S TREf: e 11 •;1 ,'U OWNR 2br. ltood lot,\ion, TQ qu ANSwtt · • • -• • adJl t'On:IMW!_tll~y~. W .000. <.:laulflcd Ad fl bone EVJ.;RVTH'URSOAY • i il ;~ newly decor'ld. 1010' So. ~; 9e8., Alt f42·Gi78. ClasslriedScct1on , C>Jlc Sl $36.000. 5:58·1100. -------------· l 1 ,09 for ear.h q.11tern Add 351" each oaltern to1 fir<1<18~S amnall aod h•ndl1nv S.lld to• Alrco BroOk!i Neeotecrafl Oopr 10•, Oa11y P1101 Bo11 16J 01d Chrl n;a Sia New York NY 10011 Prrnt Name, Addre~<. Zip Pallern Numo1>1 MOllE than ever btl0<11 200 deslll'S plui J lrtt priottd In· Side-H(W 1916 llUOl(CRAn CATALOG' Hu mryth1n;!. 7~< Crocllet wll-S~uam St 00 Crtdlel a Warfrobt $1 00 Miity llftJ Gllllls $1.00 llolft Crocll1t $ t.00 kir + tlltlt took $1.25 l1dlfpol11t lool S1.00 fltw11 Crochet look SI .00 llal,,i.t Crtchtt lotl $1.00 lllltltlt Ondltt •• °' $4 ,oo ~'":::tt::"':o:r~ ··u·rc mpltlt Clft look . Sl.OC .. plttt Aftltm St4 S 1.00 2f1lzi lflil111 .!'IZ 50( ON of 11 QuUt1 II 50c Mum11 Qwllt Iott It 511' tUvlltt tar Todaf.JI 50c ,.... tf JI Jlrfr .... SOt lllMP ltl!O ))tr~. \lre4m· lin1·d 11nr f11~r, dr•· Ulnf lnr G 1v rhru rvrn1n~ lip rarz seam "'( ''' 11 1nl crult~ '1 Cltvtr I ~r'.f 1•!11·1 I Ill '""'F'll' w,11\I 1•11n1r1l l'<1ll~•ft !J ll'o l.'t) .. r· • \111 II !ti II I ·I IF, 111. 70 ~.,, I) lb~ I 141 If~'' 2J4 ~trd• 60 111(.h f4hr•c Ser.a SI 00 IOI 'at" Plllem ') l.d I 3' t lot rM b p 1l11m lo. • lu I rid~' a11m~11. 11,tndlin• Stnd to Ma11on Marrin Palte•n Onp1 44:> Oa11yP1to1 '32 Wtht 18th SI . New York NY tOOt I P11nt . NAME. AOOAESS, ZIP,'°( S il e a,,CI STYLE:•• NUMBER Dt row know hew t• 11t J I ••lltr~ f1H f St"• 111w for eur nt• f'lll·Wfftttr Pllltrn Catalos-clip u u,.11 l11JlN 111 ~ fr.. 11t1tern of rt•r ~lltlct. • • hnd 75-ftOWI II Saw -~ «nit lotll il.25 ~ Inst.Ht Monet Crtlla • 1.00 j ln1t1nl [u~IH toek 1.00 ,, ln1tant s .. 1n1 ···-t.00 I Othe..-1 ... e..... ........~.. HwetU•fwwl"-4 ......... u ..... "'" HwtU~ c..c1a........ Monday.Oecem1>41r8, tm OAILYPILOT •7 • • • •• • •• . • • . •• • • • • • • • • . •• •• •• •• • •••• •• • • •• • •• • •••• •• • • •• • • ••••••• ••• • • • ••••• •• • • •• .... •• • • •• • • • •• • •• • ...... •• • ••• ........a..cl 342 s __ ........ ____________ 1 ________ ;;;;;;..,; __ llcomtProperty 2000 G.w.. J102 fa• r•v~ UJ4 Int.. 324 ....... ~ 3252 ....................... ...,_,IWftftu..fww. .,,...h u.tw&. Apeilwwwat1~ •••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••• ••••••••••••••••• ...... , ........ ••••••••••••• • •••••••••••• ••••••• •••• Beaut•rut Condo tl B ••••••• •• •••••••••• ••• ••••••••• ••••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••••• 2Z4 Santa Alla ma. 3 bl', nu~:~;;,~;·;;:·:;;·~:;; Sunablnoy Sharp t;nd -..CDo•=ae Pler'7,lmlfrom~t!lln,3 ...._,.,.,... 3 107 CostaMHG J IZ4 CotfGM•to 'l t24 SUPl:I UNIT. S vainl/cpt. 1375. Isl. lasl PoOI 6 ~wood J.auo'. Condo. 2Br. Mii bllo~ •Bi-. Zba. view $4SO/mo. Dr. 2 &. 2 car 1111r.tac. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i' $100. Bkr~I• $ 4 8 0 m 0 Comm pool, do•e to Cold Really fully urpeud, pool, N &b * 2 yrs. old. Complete rec ll""'MON1' SllOnES 0 960-30'7&/640.ml frwy•. No ho $325. ~ 831 2100 jacu.cn, tC"nnuc C"ourt &! 2 JRarocelldn L !?-COME HOME TO foc1l1tle1. Priced •l ~ " n 67~ clbhscl Cu thy 8" '821 or u .. bWl ec •• - $2UOO.peru111t. l~ water, 2 '~ C,.pe Redec.Sbr,2ba,nucp~. ' MittkNt Y!.io 3267 IlobL~n11c963188l !.1arshal1Rlly 6154600 FOX HOLLOW VILLAGE Cod, 3 br. 2 ba. tam~. clrps fplc encl patio Woodbnd1c Twnhme 3 Br••••••••••••••••••••••• -3 Br 2 8a y llrl St t S.Cwfty~ WfA ed Im .1 ~ frpl,sundeck.2c11rgar. u 7 s /mo'. ee3.4569 2 Ba. A/C, upcrade~.l..1k,.ncwb11!3br,famrm, Ncw~br,l'ttba,nrbch ten'nii. &cbc~." 't'~JX'lc~ J._ ~ • • uat $600mo. Avf. Jan. S3l·954SAgt Nofee. l11ke&poolpriv 640-3M.: 2 ba, fprlc, hltns. 2 ('.U-Pvt piillo. trplt'. pool. patio di:.hw·sher. AS1u. • NW 9 T ....... Plac• 433 !i093 --gar Lge tncd yd. Kid~ uuna. tennh. c:-l ul> · , a · Lave on your own pnvate street in a 2 PrD,a..-ti9a ~PeMftMN 3207 Bonus rm. 2 Sty, clean. 3 31:: :lac':!i ~~I :cehl~a~ ok. Nf> fee $375 mo l&l hou~c , ~~ ~,~hoo!:1 & ~9~~:.. $400 mu. bedroom townhouse wil;h yurd & large 7Jl•t•10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bC', 2 ba. ow. fp. cplS, pie S39S ssz.0430 uft Pioneertuty,8424'21 shopg.~ ~. patio wood burning fireplace & at. '400 ouA1&U HIWPOC ••ac 1 tir. den. $300. Ut1l. pd. :S''l~~.czs~0~!;·4S69 7PM . · Hewpon hoch 3rn To~ IM Newly <lel·or .. 1 Br, steps· tachect garage. LO''fS OF ROOM FOR_ 4 UNITS KJ1.b/peu/sng111 ok Fee. gt, •••••••••••••••••o•••• UwfunU&Md , 3525 bay, ~C'h, yrty, rurn. STORAGE ANO HOBBIESt . M:sln Rental.a S40.S370 Sharp, tge s br, 2 ba, (2) 2 bdrm, l YI bath 11 A R 0 T 0 Y l N D •••••••••• •• •• ••• ••••• • ~~:>. 673·0072 . • COST A MESA C d9t M 3222 duplex. Cozy firephtt"C!, Condos. 1310. monlh. Eastblulf Exec. homl.'. Near South Coast Plaza, $100. Utll pd, Stv & refrig. Adults. $37S Just listed Two 2·bdrm orOftCI • dbl garage. Water pd Ev4!ll, 559-4536. 4br, 2bu, Cum rm. Soft Bradford Tnlu'e 3 UR Near water 1'~ec 621 W.W... Coda Mete 1 bath and0two 3·bdrm., ':; ••••••••••••••• ••• ••••• Jllr. Mlle Square Park. water. New crpts, drps, l"' Ba. newly decorated'. Main Rentals, MO 5370 6.46.20 I 0 · • balh. $l20,000. WiU ex •S. of Hwy, newer, 3 bt, Only s:us. 962-8624 • RIEHTALS * paint. Walk lo schools, Pool, lgc patio, l'hild OK. ---------cbangt, 21>1.t,fplc,lndry,nopets, h l 240 shops, tennis dub. $.130.mo.556 1977 2Brduplcx.Crossicl.to ,. __ toM ,.124~.u--,.124 ref .. ~ar .. $495.6756900 ~-·K 2BR,2'hBa ..•...... $525 $750/mo. Lse. ReCs. bt!uch. Yrly. Pvt party. vu. Ha • ,...._, • ---------• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l Br, den, 2 ba •. •• •• $475 640-677Sor645·2240 BRAND NEW J llr 2~ lia. S59-529lor673·l2(}1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plac• .. · • · ~ huge patio & back yard. ., • ..,.,, · • • • • • · • · · ~"" .. " • A . c .,. an11 ar . Prop-ti-:.q ~t. no be req d. Good neighborhood. 'I 2 BR. &den · ....... $4SO THE BLUFFS. $SOO lo $450 per mo. 634 82tl2, COf"OftO del Mar 3822 -· f>W.5449 Yrs old. $420/mo. Agt. 3 Br. F'R, 2 Ba.•····· $4!JS $795 per monlh 8·5PM. SZ.C-1012 Evs. •••••• •••••••••••••• ••• SMflSttlMQ! I I jQuall ~ BeCra•~ctknJubrhmfaem. Jrams"!!,n00e 4 BR, 2 ba, 2-story, with ~BBRR.2P~~~A ........ ~ ~ ... OW '"'Y'"'IL * Strptc.81hhm.~fr1)om DoWhhenefy --------- woo oul!1t~r!~, .. ac .. Duplex 2 Br, 1 ba. Adults 9&3·5678, Ask for Dick San Lu.is Rey • · • • · • $4i2!1 litG CANYON, $750 lo ---------i only No pets. $3SO. Call -----... --.. 4 HR, f''R, • · ·• ·'' '· • ~ S99S per month Apartlftenh fwftilMd 30 UMITS 673 9251. fOR LEASE.· 3 .. -'-m. 2 4 BK. · ..... " •••• · • '475 HASTINGS & CO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .. ~ .,.,.... 2 HR, den · • • · · • • · · • $385 Realtors 640-SSOO lalM>a Island 37 06 I A winning comblnollon of odun apartment tiomes wflh luxurv appointments ond UMDER 7x GllOSS 2 "-"'room. large o.v•n ba, brand oew, 1700 sq.ft. 3 BR ............... $425 --------'l1 ! :r::_,~-.. $ 12,500 ... r unit •x:u 5' r-Landin ho 5 BR FR HY Hms Carmel 3 Hr •••••••••••••••••••• •• • L.. "';: -~~-,,_ r-beamed living room, g~r. s~2sf:~_w{;cf;gr ' .......... +FR, n; park & school. :! BR Winter Rental, S225. !upert> retreotlOn at o premium 1oco11on. Tennis • gym • lhefopy S~ac1ous and well '!lain· large family or ·dining $SSO mo. 644•7770 mo. No pets. CORO NJ\ DEL MAR talJled. near park. F lex1· room, dishwai.her & gardener. No pets. 675.5217 2 Br Townhouse, Crplc. spo • swimming • bllllords. One & lWo Bedrooms. One 801h lf/T, f~m~O. fa'"k~W,S" G> o,;:za .... ble terms. Will Cl(· built·ins, fireplace. FORLEASE:3bedrm,2 Newport Shores J BR. 2 ----------1 Pool, lenrus, continent.al change. Washer & dryer in· ba, brand new 1900 sq.ft. Ba, near beh & tcnois, Costa Mesa 3724 be r I · I breakfast. Some ocean & eluded. Good location. Landing home w/formal ams, rp c in .11m·rm, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 $4.50 u Cat.alma views. Close to Im .Quail ~ S500 month. 640-8358 din. rm .• f.11m rm. wet ease . mo. mque S40.00 WEB< • UP shopping & fine beach. 550 Poularino Ave., Cotto MHO 7SHS995 • Pl 3224 bar.$S7S./mo. 111 c ldg Woodbridge, Briarwood <I Hom~. 675·6000 •Studio& l BR ApL'i 644•2611 ...... ................. ,..,, Pr ac• Costo Mno gardener. Nopels. Br 3 Ba, uva11. 12115. Bluffs l·level 3 RR. 2 ba. •TV•-Maid Scrv Avail __________ , ... --. ••• I LL-... _ ........ Ullfwtt.. ·apwti•• ••••·•••••••••••••••••• .. ll-..u.. "' ,...,-...... ._.__ ~ 7Sl-19l 0 ME.<;A DEL MAR, 4 Br, "~I ~·r mo . rent o r ls e. Lovclygrecnbell&pooL •PhonPScrv,Htdpool •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 1400 ooa1ut Ntw~ou llA<M J.'am Rm. bltns. fplc. dbl ·--•'•41-··1•6•1•1---i 213-682·32.45 Evs. S4~Agt 644'1133 23'76 Newport Blvd, CM 2 Br, bllns, frplc, pool, Cotto M~ta 31 24 .._.iflgton a.odt 3140 i:.ir w/opnr, rncd back yd LEASES llarbor Vw Home, 3 Br, 2 M8·9'75Sor&t5·3967 patio. sundk. $295. Adlts, •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 18 NEW UMITS ba·Carmel. $575 per mo. nu pets. Avail approx. T1 Brand new lux zer. lbfl, w/frwt tr~es. $400, 1st+ 4Br, 2ba, 4 blks from AYAILAILE• 644 7655 $225. Attractive 1 & den. I 2 I I 2. 6 7 3 -l 4 111 WHY HO Chld ~ ORANGE $100 cln. dep. No dogs. Wcstmnstr Mall, 1 blk to 2 BR, 1 Ba .•••••••••• $325 _ · · Patio. ((<ir. Adult, no eves/wknds. Sunken livlnl( room ~~~~Sol2; 1.ti:i:~1r. COUNTY 544·5100 schls, cul-d-sac. Kids 2 BR, l Ba ........... S35Q FANTASTIC VIEW, Rig pets. 2234 A Rutgers Dr. ---------• Cathedral ceiling OK $US Ph 848 9427 R B Ca T nhme 2 br 2 EXTRA lg. duplx, 2br, 2 bedroom H buths N t Stilltime to chooscrolors 3 Br. 2ba Condo. Eocl --·--·---·---1 28 •2 a ........... $375 n~on w.5441 • ' $175. Bachelor, all utll. 2ba, ocean vu, beamed s, 2 e w 0 w n ° r s 0 and options. Jo;)(cellent J>allO, ~ar, adults only. BEAUT. 3 Br. new tile, 2 BR. 2 Ba ........... $385 ~a.$ 00. 644 P a t i o + P o t . cell'gs, frpl. 2 car gar, Attached garage Beachwood Apls, 1913:! area. Wlllexcha11gc. No pets. 581·5851, eves d 2 BR, 2 Ba ........... S43S WATERF'f<ON'!' Condo. Beach comber re e pvt bcb privl $445 Y I Washer/dryer book-up Magnolia, H.B., orter a Z 556 __ ·7_627 ______ -t ~~~~s~':i/us:~i~~nrt!~: 2 BR,28a ........... $450 w/34'slip.Jbr,lba,dbl 631-2011; 547:2501; 675·3203 . • ry. Pvtyardwithpallo br , 2 ba, 1000 sq: rt. 2 BR, 2 Ba ........... $485 gar w/opnr Jse or lsc B71}.l060 AduJts. $3'15. mo. &ecurlty apt w /pool, pets, OK. No ree. 536-6670 2 BR, 2 Ba ........... S525 opt. S40-9ll9' ---------11 BR, s 1 v Ire r rig, FOXHOLLOW jacuzzi, A/C, d shwhr. R...taft/No fee/Agt or Agt .. 673·5744· 554·5337 2 BR, 2 Ba ......... cSS.25 -:--. ~ Cozy I br, patio. pool, cpt/drps. Gar. no pets VILLAGE · Adults only. No pets. NRSllOPPING 3 RR, 2 ha, gar. dr. 3BR,2lia ........... $395 lt\~°1LB~0UJ~S ~Rl· sing l e:-ok. $175. $270. 603 Mayigold, 62lW~i~6C.M. $250. Call new Mgr at. 4br/!b~js~5;~~ritts;: ~.n~s~~~~~~j17~hitd ~g~:~1a:.~.::::::::~~ tt~. nicely dec;ra(~d~ :;1~~~ff~1~~;:2:gf; ~-2778 --B-,-...,..-·-o_M_n_o _ __. 962-1800 COSTA MESA ---------1 3 BR. 2 Ba .•••••••••. SISO ~mo. 752·0917 879·1060 Uni<tue low~r 2br, lba, 2 br, cpts., pool, pllli Y~··: Fr. Qlr/3br.2ba./Condo Br11nd new 4 Br + t'R. + 3 BR. 2 Ba .•..•.•••.. $450 Newpon Shores. A·framc rrplc .. So. of Hwy. S.125. 2 IB>ROOM ~1a!:r~.\3s-~. • 4 BR hou~e. 2 RR house & S33S/lst/ last/S('c/cln DR +2' 2 Ba, SSSO. 3 Br 30r<I Ur. 2' a ba •.••• S495 JBr 2ba new plush cpt. $165. mo. 1 br. Mature atl uul pd. ll.t & last + Aflo I ldnft Fent duplex. co~t.i \lt-!>a Catl 549-8655 2":o8a,$375.3Br2Ba. 3BR.2''zBa ......... S550 &drps .• Pool, tennis:. adults, no pets. Quiel, ~.clcan.Quidcplpre· Nochildren,nopels. N•crLok•Pri SlSS,000. Ownc_r._G4_~_1_1_1_1 '-~~~~~~~~~ _S'50 __ ._962_·7_85_9 _____ 1 3 BR. 21, Bu .••••••.. SSGO beach. S450 yrly. 642.3850 secure. P ond e ro::. a rd. 673-6216. Pool & Recreation Deluxe 3 br. 2'h ba, all. F •EX I 38R.21<:11a .•..••••. SSfiO orM.S-<»23 Mobile F.slales, 1991 ltStM-a...An,CM dbl 1. f 1 7 OUR...-L 3 BR. S600mo. Bach. in re· 3 Br, ar schls, parks bch, 3 Bk, 2,, lia ......... $600 Newport, 646·8373 2 Br, 1 bn .• sep: 1-car ..,...... gar., pa tO, rp c. 1 lJ S 110,000 · ar S200 mo. Pool access xlnt cond. Fplc, $435 mo. 3 BR. 21-"l Ba......... . ALL WATBRFRONT Hwofiftgtoe a.QC.h 3740 ~r:.g~~~~~a~~~~~ Brand news plex. 3 Rr, ~~7~ma, 536•3465 Ol" New hsuni;i-Prime loca _!?r both. 646-7589 Carol. 642-4000. 3 BR, 2~ Ba .•••••••• SOOC Ong Bluffs, spac. 2 br, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ag\ Ba, ownrs unsl, ulso l& a---------- l1on Xlnt income-3 br, family home. Kids VERT PRIVATE 4 BR. 2 3B:,2'hBa ......... 162S ba.D/R $625.640-8873 I Rradltgrdn aptw/pool. -~·--------• Br apls, no pets. (714,,_ ________ _ Termt.. Also Avl. new ok, refrig . s325 mo. BA. Crplc, cul·de-sac. 3B •2 Ba· ••••••••· Close,obeh Sl7Smo No 2 Br Townhouse apt, 1•,; 82'7·2479orS48-80'77 •L..1JeHewAph* 4 µle~ Please <'311for de 649 2022 or 675.0023. S425. 96J.8377 Bier. 4 BR, 2~ Ba.········ S47s WA TERRtONT pets l005 lzlh st 530.00zs Ba, frplc, end patio, l 3 BR, 2 Ba, paCio, chHdre 1·2-3 bedroom, chlldreo tails. 4 BR. 2~ Ba ...... •· .SS!lS UDO PENIN .• 2 & a den. · ' blk lo beh & shops. $325. ok, pet'• considered, Catl:898-78 55 or Rustic 2 hr $250. Ul1l pd. NEWERHOME <IBR.z,,............ over 2500 sq fl. of Loc)unaa.och 3748 673-7t83 ~~::~s-=· mo. dishwashers, carpets. Kids, pets sngls, Fee. Im mac, spac 4 br. 3 ba, 3 4 BR, 212 Ba .•••..••. $1S.5-0 ULTIMATE living. Full ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------•---------•drapes, closed garage. Main Rentals 540 s:no car g. Walk to schools & S<'Curity. underground 2hr. 2 ba. N orlhcn<l. 3 BR, 2 ba, serv. rm .• Lrg 28R, beamed c:lngs, close lo schools, super Jt .. "'<'c 3 "P. 1 BA, nu ~t;<'P$~1~51;: 1!,~r3~~.1,?27Pn.~cr parkmg & dockage avail. oceanfront, i:ar .• incl ha~~4 ~L~, drp::., 1750 ::.q. !>ngl slry, no pets , $200. nice • plexs, furniture ~..., .,, " .,., v $9t5 Permo .. years lea:ie ulll. Pvt pool, atlultt.,_:.__:__ 21»9·0Wallace646·8885 ava1lahle . Cal l k1tc:-hen. point. cpts. 963-3287 WontAFit hPond? 6mosloyrlse.<197_l2_47. Ncw3Br,2ba.rn>IC',deck. (714)847-7566,lOam·Spm. drps . SJ2S/mo. 963·4:>69 ---------•2Br lBa upper M<'sa 7d 4 B 2 21h R bl Lovely l·slory home with 1 • • • garag<'. S4SO mo. Ca II • • ay1'. 531 ·954SAgt. Nofe~ __ w;~ c~~~·fam r~. ~~;: :J bdrms. & a lge. paneled f1';~~h it. $200. Ul1I p:ud. b73.2099all? PM. Verde, <>a rage avail.•--------• Charming Mesa Verde. 3 Ph: 962·9S71. bonus rm. Lndscpd. buck 1'ce. Adults. s23r. No Pl!ts. --------- 1,r. ram rm. 2 'pies. 2 ba' -. -----1 yard with lush oreen, Mam Rentals, S40·5370 XTRA lge, 2 Br 2 ~ up· 8J3..8974 • 2 Br, encl. i:ur, patio, blk " · f · to beach, no pets. 205 15th Freshly cleaned & paint· lWOSty home 4 br. 3 ha & fish pond & lots or STEPS TO OCEAN suurs apt, stove, re rag, CASA VICTORIA St. 536-8729or536·171!1. <.'<.I 5135/mo. fum rm. 3 yrs old. Bc<iul. '1523 CAMPU5Dl:IRVINE privacy. Convenient to View, frpl, gar. l br. dsbwshr, dbl gar, wtr & 1 &2 BR, unC or furn, gas Lots for~-2200 400ll.,,. ;t.d~-..1~1-3755, 968·2720. good schools &shopping. S285. 494·5l84 gas pd. No children or & wlr pd. Adlts no pets Brand new, 3 bdrm apts, •••••••••••••• ••••• •••• C.M. 1 """"""° OPEN DAILY IAY & IEACH pets. 675-9216 Pool, rec rm, ;cc. gate. studlo · & conve~tional, 8 A M TOt; p M RE.ALTY 675 3000 Lower Duplex. 2Br, furn. . S25Victoria.642·89'10 Xmas move 1n al· Affordable 2 br S2l5. Kid:.. · · · · • 11:. ba. Forced <llr heat, 2 B~. 2 ba: Swedis~ frpl, ----------• lowancc, 2 wks free rent. Marlboro Cowrtry petsok. Fee Turllcrock 3Br 2ba auto cpt'd, encl gur. LR pvt cov d. patio. no child. or 2 BR. 1 ba, children & pets (710 847 ·'1566, lOam• Hori.e lover~ ht·r~ 1l 1~'' Mam Rentals. 540-~o i. pr k Ir i.. c ~I · d'· sac Newport Shores 3 br. lge patio, paved. North end, pets. $325. &i0-'72S6 OK. nr. So. Csl. Plaza 5pm. ~arce Back Bay vacant t•.1m1ly home. 3 br, kids & $290. 3 brT. 11. Kids & pets $49S/lse, 752-0428 fam rm, beh, tennis & close lo bch. Will 1:.c, no 3 br, 2 story, So. or Hwy. Call for appl. 979-1877 i----------- lot 66x300. Zoned A t, pets.~ Heacheomber. uk. Fee pool. 328 Prospect. S47S. dogs . Call 494-!JGOI OW. 1"P, AdullS·no pels. 2 Br Condo. Nr Wamer &: fully tcnccd. a!>kini.: only fe~ 631·20ll; S47·250l, Main Rentals. 540-5370 Woodbridge 3br. ~ ba. 962.6964 On the w"tnr, w-"~ Cove Eves. G44-4847. Adult E-side 2 br, encl Beach. $275 mo. S36·358S $.\5,600. C311540 ll51 879·1060 _ lake. pool. Jacuui. $450. .. ... uuwi gar, patio. Like new. N days. S36-S..56eves. ----2 Br, newly dccrt'd, pool mo 5511759. Ito m es for lease -Area Quaint 18r, fn>l c, 2 BR .• carp .. blt·lns, priv. pets.644-0878. 2Pn;1·n't~d· ncpwvlcpetn, fcrle:.>hdly lmmed occpy. $.125/mo S&S bu1l-t-Collegc Park $500A ·S2000Call 6mo. No fee. SJOO mo. Utll pd, 831 1676 declk, garage. Year le~se STUNNING lge 2 Br 2 Ba, 3~S ~1:.· frpl~:;::~op,ald. v " HB.546-8609; 962·7788 doll ho I 3 b gent. 73-0740eves . ...._anfront lbr g""at vu on y, S250 mo. e ... r. rd ~ mo 546·3166 _ use mmac. r. -:::::: _ _ _ _ ""'" . . . .. 644•2343 Mon. thru FrL, 9 w/paneled den. g n apt 847·5713 ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS --------i-i Clean, 3 br, 2 ba, R/0 . .!._ba.S37S.Eves640·l538_ ------~ $295 ulll pd. 536-0321, toS. Pool,S26S.710W.l8thSt -----Mesa Vvrdr 3 BR, 2 Ba. rpt.~ d~ 2 car gar ON PENINSULA 494-0687 ~orf deposit w/ad. 1 BR, pets ok, $210 mo. 3 Loh--Cotta Meta new crpt.s & drpe;. Sci? lo $345° 963-4569 531 9545 Colony 3 Br, 2 Ba, new Exciting 3 Bdrm home • -t VI fo 37 6 7 Cotto Mno · 3824 Blks beach, 328-l3lh St.. 2 .,a . nt 1 w 'oldAr apprec1ato. $450. mo A•it no fee crpU1/pu1nt, comm pool, wibcach & w.atcr across Mis"°" • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lg. 2 Br. l Ba, dshwshr 960-4832or213-431·S618 • ~ •1 • ' s..2 8826 dJy!t, 751·31119 _.,_. · tennis. No pets. $395. lhcstreet $49Q/roo lse ••••••••••••••••••••••• stove, drps, new cpts hou.~e. ~xt ~~Is hntcwer eH·~ s Shore home. 3 BR. 2 ba. 833.2Q48 wknds or aft 6 ESPECI;\l..L y LARGE Aliso Villas, 2 Br. 1 •~ Ba NEW beaut. apls, l & 2 paint th.ruout carport, DELUXE 1 br, frpl, full <'lm~t lan "'' ,,.,uJi .15 a . t t drps S335 -Bd & d F condo upgraded crpt & BR. Applications being fncd yd, wtr & trash pd, amenities w/full. rec. PdckJt:•' ur \<'P.ir.tll' 48R ZBA move in-cond nu pain ' cp 5' · LOVELY 2 sty 4 br. 217 4 . rm en. ront d N I 581·2726 laken, 1980 Anaheim St, $22S mo. No chUdren or rac1 ls. Sec to beheve? Call fo1 more mfor 1\11t Kids OK. SJ5() PILOT 963-·ISOO S3l·OS45 Agt No ba, fam rm. cpl. drps w/vicw of waler, boats & rps, ice oc ----C.M. 9am·4pm daily. peL'i. 675-3436 847-6407 h7371;01 Rf:;\Lt;STATl-:540.~ fee. thruout, ~rdnr rnl'l'd Spyglasslhll.S575/mo. HewportS.och 3769 545.3229 --------- Mowltaift De rt -ll U N T I N G T O N 640 00'14 -~gt .!:.1·~ -••••••••••••••••••••••• LARGE USTSIDE 3 BR. Dbl gar. 2 811, frpl<.· • • __ ......... • M • •400 :? br hou~e. hu1w ltv.rm.. llARBDllR AR F.i\. :1 UR, • --•-h 32 .. 1 .. -.-..-.-..-.-..-..---2 br. winter rental $300. Garden Apt. 2 BR. 1 Ba. 2 l:IR, encl gar. nr new 421 ~2th St. $335. Call ,.__., & frph-& hc.11 lh, blln 2 uA /h ' f I • .....,... ... -oc ... N t C l C d (213) 445·59G3 or (213 ) encl gar, no kids. $230 $250, Adults 645-7554• _546_·4_368_. _____ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• \M ~·M r.1d10 & in " w ui;e .im1) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ewpor res on o. mo.548-7529 ·-, • '. . room & rr11fr. near JBd., 2•Hia .. famrm, 447·~43 ---------• eves. GrttnVJlll•ylot l':.ived tCt\Om tompl rc>· schools.$42S/mo.Ci\LI. RENTALS rrplc ref tac. SS75;--. ----------12 Br. l'I~ bo. Vie rr.ad, \lt-w. \\'all( to Ski modeled Child or pct ok ·r () B I N R F: J\ r. T y LAGUHA IEACH S95 ooO 673 2332 BEACIU RONT I Br for LARGE 2 hr $210, no pets. LARGE 2br, 2 ba. $225. fn. Goldcnwcst & Warner. i.lopr s:1.100 $.~ mo. 91>3.5:13.1 846.137 l ... w E ALSO 3 BDRM. newer hOmc ~ · · • mature adlls. $225 mo. ~~2 Maple, 540·4484, fanl & sm. pct 01<. Call $250 mo. 494·3720 or -~Wl3af1er6~ \1onucelloTownoome. nu HAVE othl"r properties locutcd in Portaf1no ~ Avl.12/1 ·6/30.675-3824 642·6612forappt. 842·69653fterSpm. llcGllstot. crpt.~.drps&painl.3 BR, forrcot,flomes,Apt11.& Laguna. 2 Baths, ONTllEWATER *LAPARISIEHNE• Brand New 2 & 3Bdrm BRANDNewdlx.2br.2 SftAHISHSTYLE W-.cl 2900 2 UA. IJ3Slmo Uniqoe Condos. fireplace, ocean vl<>w. Park your Bay boat out· 2 Bedroom furn. $300 Apls. Fr pies, bit ins. ba, w/r,ar. adults , n 3 BR, 2 story w/frple. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jlom-.. <.A"·"'"'." 1 Excellent Cam . home al side your door of this lov. All 1 t F 1 Rarage, pvt patio. Nic:-e pets . .....,c: •-S29S. l!ll2 . ,.., '""""'"' Five bdrm 5450 mo, nr 1 3B h / t d e ec nc. 1rep ace. 1 .,,_ ~.,.,c: Ph _.,., "' balcony, patio, plusl\ f'\-t rty look1111; for rndt• . s.s56 mo. e Y r ome w 5 asne Heated pool. Adults. no quiet oc. '"'om~. WaJlace. 64S·33S6 crpt'<• & dbl encl. gar. n( Ownrrshlp lnfflmc un 2 llr, t ba. frplc. pat!o New I and 1p 8 c C ~ t glass. beams, warmth & pets. 979·1268or64S·l<!6(1 5SlMS28 Pct·<fhildrcn OK. 8kr. it,. Oranac Cl) onl'-T11 G.araite. $300 per mo. 632 Hghway, avail. ~c 4th. 4 BDRM & SWIM POOL. super decor. $695/mo, f If ; r lumer ~7 4579 897-8829. has ram. rm. & dining yearly lse. Across rom go course 2 aR t ba, pool. West-side. $195. 2 br, kids ok. Stove & SJ6.1484 or 847·4510 eves. S:.00.000 Or "'nukl <"ln • . PENINSULA POTNT 2<W32Santa Ana Av<' $210 mo. SlOS deposits. refriR. Fee • dtr vac nl P o~ l> LAHDMARK tm Limdlord pays for dJ Main Rentals. S.10 5370 2.Br, l"~ Ba, 6 blks lo Bch. "' I .i r _ r J llr, + ram rm, rrplc, pool 11crv1l'c. E'Cc:'. long 4 Bdrms w/balconies. BALBOA Day Club Hach A ts. no pets. 645·2610 Nr. schtlOls & shopping. inned or<o.irrll' 11.lO-ldtl patio. neu ~rhb, S395. 4 Br. 212 ba 2 Story, trs· termrentalal$575mo. Prei.uRious wood inlr & apt. avl. 12/23/ $400 mo E/SIDE hkr new ru~tic. l br, Bltns., D/W, cpt:>, $260.536·J835,536·1414. Wanl;;(Or ;.J•h 14Jlt>r re ~ ~ • ..:~ !Wfi(I pie gar· rrplc. patio MISSION REALTY exlr, beams & warmth 642·1,09'7 di d d It 1 ltd bod h 1 Edison H S $475 mo $1iOO yrly lse a I.!>, no pets. I br $205, rps ., gar .• a u ., no a a , "hr m11W11r1r1 2Br. rec.lttc Gar. <-odosed Stan,968·730'7. PhoM494·073 1 WATERl''RONTHOMES SortCt...nt• 3776 huge 2 br$2SO.&i6·050S pets.S48·429lor64S-~ Locjuna .. och 3848 '"<Ci' w out r1r<. 1 patio, mature adlls, ref, ••••••••••••••••••••••• d~ed back to 11tll1>r <Lift• S22.S 646 1078 1 BR Condo. pool, tennis. l BR. 2 BR & 3 br. bchrrnl, 631·1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pre·Chrilllmas Special! BEAUT. bra nd new 2 br. 2 F~U•I~) Pnn only. ko'< handball a. basketball on Cliff Or. 4942033 ; ~ BachclorApt. 2br apl.'lfrom$t90.Cpls, ba,hvrm,dinrm.Crplc, OCEJ\NVIEW 1064. NpBth 92f'ifi.1 fo: Side 3Br. 2 ba, gar. encl $3.'iOmo. 979·7888 (213) 876 2723 eves. 3276 l blk lo beach Sl3S. drps, kids ok. No pets. beam cell. bllns. J3Cuui, RENTAL )d, 2 k1d-s OK. no pets ---San Cleftwnte Adule11. 4lltHl3Sl Stove. 548-<H83 gur ., O<'ean vu. 642·7992 2 br hse w 1 lrplc & "··~ 3420 II a 3 1:J 2 lo HOMf: FOR RENT ••••••••••••••••••••••• --garuge. Walk lo bch. letwtllh S360 '"° · · r, ' ry, super SoMtttL-a 3786 2 Br w/"ar. 1230. New NICE l br, frplc. pool, Smart pct welcome. -nice townhouse $340 + LAGUNA BEACU NF:WCONOO. -~· " S448 ~::·~·::.:.d••••••• Ct>mer :t hr, 2 ba, rncl deposit. 842·2032. ist Quolit)' exec. home 3 28r, 2ba, Pool. SJ25. ••••••••••••••••••••••• crpt, IRc lncd yd w/patio. adu!L'>, no pets. ~30. mo. _~_1. __ • ------ ,,_. .._......_ pa110, fprlc .• boat/trlr BDRMS .• ram. rm .. 2'f.I Ph: 551-1364 2 BR. 2 ba on the ocean W11ter pd. 2224 "O" S48·47S7or646-37_,,_n __ ....................... .iCC'es. $42.5 m<1. 648 2700. ·~-balhs. 2 F'lrcplaces. All Furn. $700 .. unfum S600 Placentia, call bctwn 1·5 Studio 2 br, 11'\i ba, palm, &.oguno Nlpl 3152 lalboo 1"41ftcf 3 I 06 ---H.rtl•• 1242 blll·in kitchen with elec· 3 BR, 2 BJ\ w/frpl, next to Total security, elevalors. 6364120 ,1,_,/cpt, util )'Id, 'lUiet, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••• •••••• Great loc. for rwy:o;. sch I,,;, ••••••••••••••••••••••• lronic equip. Outstand· pool & rec area $37$. rec. facilities. 499.2835 .... ''" LG 2 1 2 ~ b C ., Br 11, Ba Fpl". 2 c"r shopng. 3 br. 2 ba. lfbl" Br 3 ba to~nhou•e ing ""ean and Catalina (7t4 )548·21125aft6PM ~-Al no kids/pets $225. . >r, ., q ondo. .. ' " p I T h .. ~ " "" "' 645-2825aft6pm Ot•canvu, frpl , Iii· gar, balance of wmtcr fli\r. 00 own ouse Spa~kJlng new <'ond: views. Home valued al San Juan Unfwnfstt.d -beamed cell'g. Brand nu. $.\SSmo.6731'900 847·l563or557·2t79 S470. Call "Lllu", $125,000. Rent for $625 Copitlrafto 3278 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 8.R,nopels.Adullsr>ref. $495.400·7437 8 d ' l(IDS PETS OK 846-1371 orlJ46..54S6eves. month. Good roforonce11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .n_ ___ _. llOZ Ref rig & Stove lncld. 3 r.,, en, rpl(', P0ll0, I rAnuif~l -111111 $185 968 On.0• partly futn. LEAS B t:astaide 28r, SZUS .,..,_ 3.244 MJSsfON 494.0731 Sh a r p II arbor Lane ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·mo. ..,.,.,.. $S7S. Adult"· no pets. 675-8258 .......... ••••••••••••• Home, 2 nr, 2Y.t cur NEED A RENTAi.?? t Bd, stv/l'efr/crp/drp. Wkdays: 2t3/367·0l77, 0-.Polftt 1226 LEAS~AVAILABLE 21h Br, 2 Ba. yard, garage. on ~ul·de-sac Weh.vethem-Util pd. Adults, no pets. wkrnds: 714/675-3624 Uv• In lrvlne V'lla•e. aarage, avail Im med, street. lo mamt yd, no llo4 br's 383 W.B3y $210. 548·9516 Nites: 675-241.8 5•••••1••••••0••••••9••1••f•,• We~·ve homes av~u.for $42.5 mo. 494·1320 an SPM pets, $375 mo. 496-0927 KIDS & PETS pac ous au u s ,.,. • WELCOME CHARMING E/s1dc 2 br, -..O.P..-.... 3107 Condo.3Br.2i.;Ba,1830 leueln•• LovelyVICtoriaBchHme. NEW3Br21hBaTwnhsc, "'-otOr eoo...w 2baonqllietdrive.LJ{. ••••••••••••••••••••••• sq. ft. Brealhlakln" view Walnut Square 2 br 2 frnlc• ., ocean encl dbl 0 ar, dshwshr, NEW ERA RENTALS """' ange '"' s vt ll r 1 1 ,. I ' '" 0 " 6312800 FEE 638-3300 most .. -...... 10,,,,-..,nt P ·pa o, rp •enc · itnr, $300. Penn. Pt. Nr 811y & of buch 'and harbor Ranch Cal.I omes vlew,MSQ.494·9333 drpe. frplc. pool &Jac. l · · · uvuu•Hu ""''""' $265.~2834or64.S·2767 ocean ~ Sr until June from LR & Ms tr Br. Deerfield Univ Pk ml Dana Hbr, sme pta LEASE TUSTIN 3 Hr 2 commonlles.Arelexlng c2l3)243S3l6 Ovtrslied 2 car gar. Culverdalc Col.Park 2Br+dcn,H"b11, olc.142S.493-4260. Ba. apt, adults & selllngwlt\SlreOITI!, 0-.Point 3126 ---------• wood Crplc & bllns. Up· Turtle Rock North End. ssso. tt'ld 16 & walel1ols.ond mojeS11c ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cotta Me-141 3124 Ptr & lowrr cpt'd sun-2 bdrm. your choice of 3 C&ll 49'1·1084. So.Ht LOC)llM 3216 c 1 ren over. no """""' Ex lge 2 br 2 ba frplc ••••••••••••••••••••••• d k Cl h 1 from•-un •~'"""" ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets. Rcdec. thruout ll'ees.Feo!Ul1ng.,.,.,..., d · . • Ad •1 • ec s. b sc. poo • _..,....,.,. u u•-l Fplc, bltns. pauo. encl .. -....... ,.. ressmg rm u tll + l °'·m L\ttlc Old House Ja"uz•1, sauna. tennis 3bdrm,yourchoiceof14 Lat-en-. 250 :Br.3Ul949thAve.,fncd Joc-souno._._ teenager. F'rom •2ss. ~ u .. .. •••••• d 1 lk gar, etc ..... 5 mo. i114) end .... -g ...... ....,,...,,. • Utll. paid Mature or re crt, etc. A.II for $495 mo. from$335. loS4'15 •••••••••• ••••••• Y • ocean v ew, wa to l38·l75" :V~. Sat/Sun e .. ...,111 ... ..,.,...,...... Gas & waler pd. 498-7379. tirc-d male only. No (710493-4900 4 bdrmyourchoiccof63BRX1Dt.rond.,closeto pvt beach. $400. (213) (2l3)922·28'1'9Mon-Frl. wltlsocloltvetaTennls, chlklrenorpet3 S22Smo trom$4SOtoSMO aehls Arahop'J. ctr. Lie. 786-33» gym.ondYOleyt)olot flul ... ottleoch 3140 NEWPORT SHORES 2llr, 2Ba, gar, blkll to ocean. no pelJI, yrly lsc $32$ m o. 645·3320, 637-7255 WATERFRONT NEW 2 br & 2 br + den lwc11ry a pts •Bulllm11 •Tr1tsh Compactor, •Wet bar •Fireplace •Private ~ach • Plexlglua encl. pnlios •Smoke del«U>ra •Sllpe avail. w tenants 919 Bayside Dr, 873-8414 192' Anobetm Ave , Exec hom e. Canyon Nof ea S'3.'50.0t--Ol22 Wa .. tw .. aiw 1291 ~I.,_.. 3106 ThOVloge.Moreot ............... , ...... . .,_ .. ,.. Vtew1. Brand new. up· ••....,..HUALTY l Br und k 1 .. "bk ~·-· ~·d· .. -· .. o 2b ...._...., FAMILY DeUJhl 3br, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• everyltllngyou'reloddng 2Br,2S.,bltns,~1Uo,110 .11 ~c .yry,• Is -uuu-Out. ~r. •. ,., ·-o ·-hlld At., .. lo tA bcb ut.11 pd •• ,..,...._ .. .._.. 3140 lning, ram rm. 3 car • ··-be.Oallf0t'delalls$3SS. Clea.n. a BR.2BA. cpts. 4 BR., 3 ba .• tund~ck, tor.FumlUrelsavolol*. pc ... , le ""' r.11c_n .. w • •nope~. •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• 1ar. SS75/mo. 4'3·7278 N F w l -..C5/u:MG78 drpa, RIO, 2 car gu. lrplc .. wubcr Is dry~r. One and Two Bedroom $250 mo. 5'8-37JO al\ 6pm S300mo. 6'1'3-ff30 S270, UUl pd. 2 br. M.H. 8T ••2 S Br~= f= din .............. 3252 UU/mo. 9G3·'5G9 162SWIYWcarl.yM. WI""'-... AOUllM'lg. 2Br,1 Ba, Hcl aar., $280 L!DO ISL£ WATEtt· Petok. Fee Of'D ].,.,. nn. Qule' atnet: \erUli~ ... ••••••~••••••••••••• $31454SAgt.,Nofee. A "'""'" omc 9:00"'8:00 mo. 1005 Alabama , ERONT a BR ' $700. mo, MalnRent.tl,S40·~0 •••••~•••••• .. ••••••••• d.s.~pool av1ILC111n" Ne1i3br, 'h baTwnhse.3 2Sly. 4 br, 2 ba, nu cpta, ~at Eatat.e 57s-333t •open ' ""' ' ' 544·5701af\cr5:30. Leue.6'73..sseGaft.lfpm NEW 3 Br. 2 ba ON the .... t to I l r D p I Now """"" . Mew,....leoch 1169 lake wJrant11llc vlcwt rea. • ., Of" )IOU movo n m n ro ana o nl drps, Cplc. OW. MM/mo. Ut~ ltla.nd. \RR, aom•--------.. 1$180. 2 br. 1arage, pool. STEPSTOOCEAN ................. _...... Cor lot, A/C 6 ~11 xtrH. tor&mos. bblllo. Marina. $475. + Dcp. 963..-S31·954S Agt. No fumltutt. $2S(), Utll. Pd. Kld.lok. l"ce Deluxe Nwpt. Shores 2 Beach cottage 1 br. $.525.(714)912-3114. 5Bl\.li.tba,famrml530 Call 8ob. eves fee. 613·3374,6739473 Maln R~ntale,540-5370 br.dpbc.714-870.9203 . SI n 1 I ea too t U o o. I BR. I beth '360 ('714 •840-41916. C • • , • Beachcomb"r· rce. IPYOU 3fCA~~·:::"F'r:S:S ForLeaaelnadultcomm.'.l:. .... mn 3400 1d~~k~•Cfar~~~~,·~~.v,: ~~=~~~$.HO. 1 br, 8yE1";:11 ;~o .~~~~53 :;,~i~ll i s41·2SO1; hlvo ~1trvtce lootttr or 3BR,2ba., FR$C2S 2 It as dtn rondo. l>'an· ......... •••••••••••••• luH only, '300 mo. Bkr. Main R~ntal&, 540-53'70 bedrooma, 2 baths. Nenr ---------· ·~Jo ae.11, r··~ In •d 3 JIR. 2 ba., FR "'° laa~ view. Clubftle • Nwpt Crest, beaut (um & 644-ZUl Mon. lhru Fri.. 9 n. w • s u n d • c k II • .BACH.ELO&DlJPLEX lo lb• D• 11 Pllol 3BR,2~ba.fam.rm., DOOi. SSZS. Pvt owner. dee. 3 BR, 2~ ba. Auto w5. NEW l br, trplc, beam fireplace, bullllna. No lltS/mo Jrly. l'S.9492 Omfl\ed Sfftlon • • • dia.nn.,2tol.SSSO. Jtefer to Monan:b Sum· Sar. opcnor. $145/mo. ceil, bltrul, -pool. volley f:i~· 127 '8lh Street, aft.U' 6pm °" wkndi. PhoMMi-5111. AO tN'hSHOOO Mil, 493..0:Ul. At& 648-12$5 ' Oua!Oed Ads 642-567 ball, gar. $23$ M2·6034 102 • . · \ • .. DAILY PILOT Mondey. 0-mt>er t . 1871 Add it... Build IL.Diaper it. .. Hammer It ... Carpel it ... Cement 1t. .. Wire it...Hoe it ... Clean 1t...M ove it ... Press lt ... Pa1nt it ... Nail it ... Plaster IL.Fix it. .. SERVICE DIRECTORY umb 1t ••• ate 1 ... pe emo e • .. . Root it ... Landscape 1t...Tile it ... Trim it ... Sewit .. . H'eu'I it ... Add It ..• Plant it ... Alter It... Learn it... Archltectud c.p.f S.nlc.e eo..trodor .••.............•••.... ···•···••••············ ...............•....... HMMc...., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• L.dM.... , .... /Papen'"J Pltn .... /R.,.lr • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• y,...s.nlc• Archllt!Ctural & St ruc QirpetManwitllayyour~ L~,.;M.JAHYCS Rt.<tln.ldSedonu,Ar14cuu• llOUSECl-l!:ANlNG is EKpr'it Landscupers P-..YowC•dte VRRYN~A'f PATCH tural Plans. Rmtll & 0 or mane. Repair~ & Atkh\IQJ'u.&dtt.?modehng pie will hou:.es1t & c1Jrr Our 8us1nes~. Call Spnnklers· ln.'\t111l & r<-· Avrv,ExtrlStyS345 JOBS&'J'EXTlJJtE Ucltlovlng. lrlounlng. tuvpina tnll'd, lie, honde:d. W1ntt'r raleli. 645511A new t'On"trucllon Rl!!>lc.I clc11mng too' Gu.ar 1A(lrk !G!-~73 L1r JH~ for ~15 lk pl.ant:. month J11n1ct''s flaggedy Ann• pair, Concr('lO & brick 2 Sty~llntr$4Srm ~e &st. 89lM439 Cum 01 ·111 nc.I ~.tr a 1 111b1gac•r1>11\in~:. t-'r ""' a~...ac0-1--or Ut<c . kd:. d vu ti attn~~ work. 845 7978 Malon.... Prices Incl mtr'l/lullor -~ ~~ 00~ ~n ~-~ ~ G 1-rdf n~ ....................... lll!liahle, ccticlcut, <IWll ~~ uur,u ... ~e~l. ....................... rrce 4t Yard Work ~ WvColreC3rpelClc.uu•rs Electr1c11l S<-n1cc Culb Handyman &Carpenter transp, rdercnces. Ann11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ted63&-?08SorSSZ OlJ4 P l.UM1Sl!:R·ltllpu1r, re· S«lploador. dwnp lruck, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Slcilm Clt'an or Shampoo SU. Lie C10315132. Cull Any & All home rep~1rs 1148·0047 • • J-'1re1>l11ces·l'll.Ulters Pt.'Tl!:RS PAINTING p I pc, In H 1ll I t1 t Ion de rn o 1 HI on, m isc. LOVJNC CARE. llot Al111>Upholstery All work 1Ul!·li233 fo'reee:1t 5411.0449 8rickCoocrete Patlo Expr'd ri.'as. rates. Crte sorvlccs. G. GiJl11y, 7Sl·39IO lunl'hes we'd with 1·ds <1uar ltt>rs/l\JC. Jo'reeesl IL • ..J.-~ u ce11Clral llouscclcan· Block Walls BBQPils est.Cllll Genes.52·~ 84.2·9315. Uphol--.. -.---c-,.-_-,-.. -. 00 ~ Reas Rat.c:.. 645·3716 mCJ•0·~ • -.., (f' I Re(, Eats 646-0464 • -· , -· -••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1n11 t: icient, Kehab c, Paint New for Santa & Tele•l11oft Repolr ••••••••••••••••••••••• llOLJDAYSl'l-X'IAL STRUCTUl<Al.. Sonny & Jer. F'ree ha&ul-t:xprd. !teas, Refs. fo'reeest.Slumpetone,tlll', Save Money. Lateiit ••••••••••••••••••••••• UAVENPORT&CHAllt Carpenter Shampoo or Sll.'11111 L'lc:in ENtilNcJ-;IUNG in&. l'luu11up. tree work ~®7 blockwalls, brick, plun· methods & old fastlloned CANOPY TV SVC co. Pn>fe!$1lona.lly cle1tned ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Rm:., hall or b,110 CONSULTANTG40.70:!0 for U!>able items. 1-'t-n -· ters. Quality work at ro· pride. Let me show you l:1t Rate Service forS35. Ph: U60·005 ... ccorae rllm<'r & ~.ns $15 9 S. S 37 · 7 39 6 o 1 ---cc~ I u I t1 ~s r cm o v c d Gener~l llouscdeuni~g as prices. Bob 750·93S4. why my work ls tho best. Ill (!'air rnccs ooo. Hl33 .. • ... .,.,..., G«dettl-~7 • .,..... There s 2 oC us, KO we re "''" .,.,,.., uow IS TH" TIME Add.~/thndl/l>urntt l'l.cn1> >N• """"" ··7 '""" twice 1.1s fo11st. Cull Debbie _.,,,....,.,.,, Call Calico 836 5555 " "' SmlJobs Lic'd~7 G!l32 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . -------Th for job st.-.•kcrs to check -Ctmrftf/Conc;~fe t::xix•n<'nerct Gurd(••llnR lluulmg, moving. cleanup or Joun, -193·3961S or Mo•incj Workmanship Guarn'd ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1hr 1)11lly Pilot H elp MINOR HOMJo: Ri':l 'Allt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Servi re l'lot C' ll•;inul)i. $7/up. Tree.work. He.is, "94 5&&9. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lntcrt l':xtur. )''rceest CERAMI C Tile. N<'w or Wunted clusslficallon. If Carpentry, Plumhin~ & DobSC'Jrc1,1t:onaetc lnc ~1wll1y Work Mike ~l.frec:cst8424.:97 _Janitorial · l''riendly ~ovingCo. l'iffi ~Yrsexp 642·0'.!95. rmdl. F'r est. sml Jobs the job yuu want II not (4>ramie Tile 540·~ General concrete work 548·20-l!I Hou.eca..:-.. ••••••••••••• •• •• •• •••• c1ent, fncndly service Pl .. --/R-I welcome SJG.-242ti afL 5 there you mlabt col\llidei-----t'oinmen:1al·Res1denll.ll .. .., . C 1 Lowest poiss r a t ea • ._ tpo r 1----------1 ff · 1 vi'c"s FINISH, lll-:MOOt::I. & <l91i005\I Ltc220'.*4l YAROCLEANUl'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mamt.'<i oupc w /K yrs 847.0992 ••••••••••••••••••••••• o enn yuur acr " Jtpr, Small Job~ OK '\low & c1lgc. <.;.ill Hun Want II UBAl.l.Y ~Lf':AN expcr. l<esld & e:omm't -PATCH PLASTERING Tl'ffSff•lc:e ~l!~tednc:te~~ryt.h;h~~: lfous. 979·03'79 •lles1denlial Concrete• 557·67CYJ HOUSE? Call G1n!,;h11m Re11s rates. 646·2SS8. r~/PaperilMJ *•A.LL TYPES•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642,..,.,.. I Joyd L>enrus Construe -Girl. Frei? es ts, 645 5123 •• ••• ••••• •• •• •••• • •••• Fr E MO 6825 __ ...,_•0 ______ _ H t: M 0 DEL JN G & oon 20 Yrs exp. fo45·5123 WEEDING ·CT.EANUPS . Have somettung you want •CUSTOM PAINTING• e(l ~l ' Jtemova l~. trim mini:. J\LTEHATlONS. Local. ------'--•Weekly Matntenance • SELL idle items with a to sell? Classified ads do 1 I E t R R l pruning, free est. Llc1d Have somelhin~ to seU? Reasonable ti73·130\J Sell idle items 642·S67K fo"ree est 542.9907 Duily Pilot Classified Ad. it well. 642·3678. ~Yi Br~~ s.i:.~20!v~ss Want ad results 642·S678 FUiiy insured 642·2624 C.1U$ifled ads dolt well. associated BROKER S RE Al TORS 101\ W lolboo Pl 1661 •..•.••..•••........... \ .,,m.,.acl l le\ cl !>mt.:h• ~:!511 1nd1Jdl'S Ulll 10 ----------11.11 t1<1r Vu•w ll<lml's \dlh nu IM'h 640 mM l flt !IM I lllk l•) 11\'h ~lllrt m o I " I~•· ,1\.1tl '•"' • Jll •Ii I" .11!.l> '11•p 1un1· ,\H' IWZ ;..'UI() '.I Hr z 1\,1 roomL l'lt•a rw"' 1 ph ... 11111h'rk. liltn .. I'\ h &. h,I\ \ t~V b-15 llliK 1 lor trapll'' s:lli:1 \riv t 111 1111 l .111 .11ln .i pm .1111~.l~lt. Dftue Office luildin9 TWOST()HY ,, . .,..port I 'l'lllU"ul.1 ~MJSq f't ca J.'h'!Or •\ar Cond1l1on1•(1 "11ln11l P,1neled U((icr•; f'~I<'\ ;Hur l'n\.ih: l!arkmi.: ,Janitorial St·nl<'I.''> l lillllt'~ t>7J S'i'IO after 4 J41 II R ok S351mn lnC'11M11·~ util p, t & quil't, Gt! Jue Ph 5311 1857 <lr•Hll!<' (.'ounlv \irport nr Jo'W) ,10(1 ~Cf. II ~000 "I ft qu:ihty nlr onl<,, IS' "''· II 1~,1l1c11l1n to~n :-." 1· r nu;s 1 111--.ur > ----------11111110 :!hr .!lo.1 II\· •Im hk for ~ 1 rn I .owndc'f V,1lley Ht•;ilty i52 1:1011 Foreign Car f<cpair'uusi ness for sale. Will 11<'11 part.'1 & equip Cheup for quit•k sale. 5411 13S4. .,.,.,1 l• nn1' ~'~'" 1'4J .w;; Fantoitlc Vitw 01•nrrnnt clpl' ;1 llr 2 ha lqtlf 'rll h\ ~>IHI \tttl ,. .. lllf.~ 3876 ········•••••••··•····· llt ...... "f'fl()'\, 1.11'(\lf\ :• hi 1h•11. I qil I" I 'h'fl' '" 11th ~\14:, l!l!I ~Iii 1'\Jll 1 )(·1•1_1n View, Lu '<llr} l'••nthou.'l' I fir, :!' • llJ, l'.1ntrv 1-:11•<' "1td1 l•'ri1h·. GIJJ:tl(L•' $'17~ llt>arh ucrM.. 1!12 :\59!l Nt•w t'f>ndo, 2 bdrm~ ;! hnlh), frpl , 11<'.1m n•11'~. '>Ul)('r O('l'Oll & ml \'l('W .o\dull11. no j.H.'L'I. $425 Mn 11:1..'I !1293 ------l'e:rCccl for one VH'W Short w.tlk to bt>.ac·h Sl7S mo ln('I ultl 492·11\!l!l or 4'12 -28!16 Souttl LCICJU"a 3186 .....•...........•..... BEDROOM EXECUTIVES! Wanl 10 movt-vuur offirt• •>V1 ur tht! bt-drilllm & 1ntn 1>rt·~l1AIOll' Ne:wport !'rnti>r :it ;i fr:1rtum of lht• l'Xfll'l'll'tl \'11:<1 '' Tht• 1-;11\•CUll\t' Su1l1• 111.1' ltlt· '""w~r Your orr1 .. 1~ r·t•nl 1n 1·ludc'. rt·1 .. pt11)n ~ 1• r' 1 r '" 1 no I t• r 1• 11 t' t' r"""'· pCr'<onal11.('d 4450 .........•..••••....... 7 () 0 0 S II f t (' 0 m · mcn•i:1l1W.1rrh11uM' hid~ on w 191h St, c.~ W11h 1 ac slorni;e urcu b<'hlnd. Su11 .. 1>le for t·t•mm'I •'-' wh:.e U'l'. $700 ix•r mn I m m l' d u c 1· 11 p a n l' y . I/ 1.',1 v \ front I r:i ff1t· l•h111w 642 <12l0 a:;k for .. :d Bucko Nl-:Wt•oRT RCll STORJ·: 2f.'JIJ \\On SI S270Mo .terry Wynn 12131477 7701 tl'le11h11nc cov('rt11tC. mtill Older hou1w ; A" is, 7008Q hundltn~. underl(rounc.1 ft. $250 mo: No lease al varkini:. J•m1tor ser vice, 2S28Newl)Ort Olvd. CM. nll ut1hlle<1 C'lct'J>l phont'. C;1ll 714 /640·5470 COMM f:RCJAI. STORE T 11 t-: t:: X t: C tJ TI VF. LACUNA tJEAl:ll SUITF: Approic 800 SQ. ft. + Sf,'7 San NtrolaH Or. Suite large storuge loft. lies 2 101;. N{'wport lk:it•h, Ca ronne~lng rooms. Onl· ----has fireplace. Ampll' LOCJ19"1 leach porkinit U!a!'e at ~Kl Ft"t Montfl ff'ee month, All ut1l. paid hy JIS To tl.10 Squure f\'rt ~.",~·s'~~N 494.0731 lrlenl for ~ lCF;CRF.A\1 PARLOR MAJOR fo'llANClllSE So. Oranize Co .. mojor shopping center. Owner. fl.1V.2.507 ufl 6/wknd,.,. MFG STEEL F.AI. $15,000 mo i.?r. Xlnt net 6000 Sq ft . Pully rquJpJ)<'l1 I.ow ovrrhe11d QJll fordet:ills. Xlnt buy. ~'I· 751·3741 PLANTS & FLOWERS Nt>ts $3.SOO. Mo. San l"rancli1co :style ttusy mull location No nearby competitions. Partnership l>plil. Good terms. Alll 837-4200 COCKTAILS Gros~ $15,000 Mo MG.'!tJy boo1e. Hushond & wife i1pall1ng. Needs 1t1l0d operator. Sutil(ellt e AM openin((, as no com· pehllon area. lAw down •TOP * payment to qualified *LOCATION* buyer. hgt. 9113'H200 • Redl K'ltate BrokN •Attorney • Acrounl.rnl Sut'ccss(ul retail or H.,._.r Stand scrv1ct• location Ill Lagunu Beuc h Ne w po r l PI er 1 n Free standlltll build ing I • ..:<'. 111.uct, luxunou" c1t 1•<:. 2 br, 2 h.1 opt (;0cK1 p11rkmp l';lcvntor to scenic priv mi:hwny exposure bch. Party & i:amt' room. lhlllc McCormack total sec. Perfect IMnll Reulty 494·7551 or wknd retreat ror 0the OPrk ~m lo r ri•nt dventurous udult. S51S. Laguna Beach area $50. mo. yrl.y. lse499•2835 mo. 494 1396 aft 6pm. ..,...,...,.. Fvrw11hed oru..fwnltlwd 1900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ltE EXCTTINC r ALM MESA .APTS. MINUTE.'> TO NM' BCH. 8:t('h, 1&2 BR. from $l9S. i\dulla, No P eta 1561 Mesa Dr. (5 Bllc.9 EHt of Newpnr\ Blvd.) 546-9860 .. Mew~Cefthr PRIME 01-'FlCF. S PACE Design Plaza Avatlabh: lmmcdaalely 49S Sq. Ft. • $.JOO Cell 673·!'1411 StLL idle Items with a Dally Pllot Classlned Ad. IQ..56711. ·~~~-------· Newport. with plenty ot parking. • 1:!4!1 Square foet Rusy year 'round. Gross· • On·s1tc parkll'.IR Ulll Sl~.000. mo. now. Will * Exeellent exposure sell for 29% down. Agt. • l.lirge sign art.!a 837 ..f200 REALONOMICS, Corp --.... -----.. -...... -_-,1-- Realtors 675-6700 ·~ ..... r nv. Prime coastal lc><:atlon in MARJNEORIENTED South Or•nae County. Space avl. ~sq. ft. S275 Owntl'll IUneu only re· ma. Loe. 900 W. Coast a&0n shop ror sale. Must Hwy in Newport Marine ue to apprreiPtc Oood Ctr. C•ll: Ktn Wll.t~I ~11. Low re nt. Al(l. 714~ l_11_1 _____ 1 8314200 ~-------~-(A LADIES DREAM ) Venture capital or short C\.llUvatJon ol &aonlH, term loan needed to Otth\ds &l JlOUllC Planll. markcl new giant acreon Unfurn. accom. avaU. TV. Just Perfected. HJ Cotta Meaa. $250. mo prom potential. Mr. &11-21131 bhm Ut 7 PM • Brown. 549-49$6 SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS Tr:iizic -Foray - Hehel -Gadfly - GRAFT News item : "The Policl' in Ch1eal(O huvc u very i;mart clog. They 1augh1 him to ~il up and heg for GRAFT. l"OUND: Fem. Sinooth· hair Collle. Vic. llell 4c Edwards, HB 841·0SM i Based on youi-produc· tivlty . Co mm + incentives & extra profil shanng bonus. On the Joli tra1n1ng. Tremendous pot<'ntl:il l o r each supervisory & manage· ment posiliuns. Must he per~on11ble & ambitious. For appointment only call 539-1113 BABYSITTt;R who can l ove 9 month old . Mature. r eliable. my home 2•n days 11 week, West minster I nols a Checo. 892·0560. -------1 BAHYSITTER Needed I or 2 days week. Salory open, references 552·3730 IART!NDER • Beer & wine nights, <'X· per'd, rail ~9·9H6 afl 6l'M. Mooftffcahten ~fillion OoTlar corp. n~ men & wom en of uny aize who enJOY speaking w/othcrs & who are bored w/lhe average run of the mill jobs. No actual selling in· \'olved & no selling :ip· COOKS Experience Preferred, But Not Necessary Day & Nite Shift.¥ Available Apply In Person Snock Shop Ho. 9 3446 E. CstHwy, CdM Equal Oµpor Employer pointments. Work w/oner---------- of the most popular & Couple. e lder ly needed successful products on 1mmed to ~arc for .older the market today. An in· man, seml·mvalld, ln ex· expensive product who's chng for rr:n & boai:d in name is a household lovely hm in San Diego. word thruoul the world, Perm position. Pleaso Work 1n u youthful. call Mrs. Ander son , frit•ndly utmosphcrc & 6 4 2 · 4 l 'I 4 bl' t we c n have fun while you earn !lum·Ipm ------ top pay You rcr<'IVC a ''PL Ad I I Id ~ l:Udrantecd r;alary + ex· '-~ l, n? c II ren o: lremely lilicrul cnm· pets. Expcr d lo mcc 12 mission & bonuH•S. Con-umts, un(, C.M. 2 Hr hsc tests & other incentives. excb m11mt & yard work. X I n t a d v a n t' t• m ..-n 1 Ownr 532.5939 possib1h11es tor both men CUSTOMER SE.RV. &women . DefJ•~ry /Hcrwspoper Pe[mancnt part·tlmej•h delivcnnc early morn~· J: LA T11'('1es to homes n Irvine/NB areas. M t be relwhlc & have de • dable transportation. Salary $275/mo. M6-0235 [)('liverymen for home ~· hv. LA Times. ' Bus Boys wanted days.1 ___ ea_ll_S.S_·_17_4_0_. __ Must be 17 or ovrr, neat DELIVERY Man for ear· appearanc~. Apvl>: lklb· ly AM. LA Times homo by Mc~~c s •. 3S3 .1::. Cst del. route. Adults only.~ Hwy Daily 2.30·3.30J>m. hrs. per iloy. Must halo Business mun seeks part econ. car No sollclli I( tame asso<'iatc. Earn or collf'cl 'g. Weslmi11· S500 per mo. &15·11112_' __ stcr, llunt. Bch area~. fl38·0126 l~mo~!>lrators p_url·timi. 2 & 3 ua:vs. l'ood. a • pliancc11, j e welr • roupon11. 830-9134 or c 1. Ject (213) 241>-7000. DIETCLERK J rart.dmt, Mond•Y th Thul'!lday, U :30am-6p!f. No experle.nce required I llVIRL Y MANOR Convalea~rtl Hoaplta1 3'4S2 VJa ~tradn l.aaun11 Jlllls 714183'7-sooo I F..qual Opportunity _J Emp~rM/F ' 1 ._.Wontflt 7IOO HflpWanted 7 100HelpW011t.d 7100 H.4pWMted 7100 HelpWa..tflt 7100 ...ipW°"t•d 7100 ···••••····••••·······• ..•.................•.........•..•.••.••...•.......•.••..••..•.•..•..•.......•........•........•................... DAILY PILOT .. Mondlly Oocvmbar 6 1978 OISllWASH l':H K1lchc11 G~Mr»I Ofhn Housekeepe,., part time lMpcr S1·~ the• Cht•f, PEASOHHEL CURil THE BALBOA INN lllS Bc•n Drown '11, ~1100 ~ C11t BUllY persuuncl uh: n~~ M~un S1. 67~ 11740 ' !~~l So Lu1<unu ·• wr.iutile• inlliv r>uti1•:1 DEC. SECRETARY -At.lure f:.-.pcr n\!c: Vror1c1l'Ol y 11. r1~urt:~ Inform.ii ore, c· \1 <'.ill H('vt<rly. 1145·!1HOO •'Xt I aft lO;im EXECUTIVE SECRETARY 1nl'lude l'Orn•,p • ltll111l lnt.cnor U\lt plonl ma1nt Kroup 1111 ... , wurkm.an~ tech Mu~t h11vc cllper & l·om p reporl '· hu') xtnt dnvini.r rn-ort1 Full phone!>, payn1ll (•'1~r time Call Muq;urct hdµful lll'11 ~ t> 11111g 768-0541 ~~t w11m t-:\p1•r Ill µc•n11nn1·l worlt J 11lus ----------I nt .. r v 11·w ln11. T111· .. w._.11 . & Thur~ !Ja m 3.JOµm . Apvly, N11ttonal Sy!!lcm" <.;orv, -131>1 U111·h St.N B. G,·rwral Ofll .. 1• KEYPUNCH DATAlMTRY Of'HATOR "·ro work w d1r1•<•lur 11/ R£CEl"TIONIST Tht• Jolly ltt>it'r, 1111· is L.ik111.: applt('utloru. ror 11 U;ita Entry 011erul0r \fin of l yri. t'\(Jt'r on the tUM 3741 or JH2 '" re 11111 red I' l' r m .i 11 I! n t r lime day shirt. i\tlvan, <'I! men t to t•o mp u le r 'lll4111Uf Sh 'lO, t ~11111c Work In luH•ly 1ww utn GS+ Joli H'fl"' \l'll ~;>;1>tr on µubl• '~'"'"' motlvJIOr. Xlnl l"O rux he•lpful. ~ml.' t~p NEED CHRISTMAS SS's? Tt.-;MPQHt\S OJ'F.NINCS ··o n. "eJIMM(" °'" 'j.rafon OfdaphoM Secy'• PIX Opercrton Sec,..tario w /.t. Typl1t1 A~counffnc) Clertl~ Nt:VEft A 1-'fo:I': Loe11IAre11:. TEMPO Tempor11rv Hrlp l7ll02 Sky P II rk If\ Ille Call 540-4455 Equ11l Oppor Employer Pit SalM, $40$70 wk up St:CtlETARV/(i1rl )•fl ~lln. l~dle11. i.ludenl!I d11y. Import Utstnb utor ~;~~~·t. ~54·7 Ut • Start~mo S37 8tl2l. RECEPTIONIST -SECRETARY, pt11mc IS 3011m to lpm Sktlli. nttdoo start $3 IMI p.-r '\ltrud.l\e, uver 18, fur l\r 21 40 SJC 4!1:.1 ~71 llEALTll SPI\ w~ w111 Ir.am riJ:hl per:.un fut SECRET ARY /Rcpt l'J:.y fun Joi> Mr Gwr t'on11truct1on oll1t'l' 1 lib•<>. 12 lhr!t I 7S:! 95tol Nwpt l!ch t-:>.('11' d uni) R t-:C 1-; PTI ON I ST f 01 med11:al ofc. T\•m1> fo1 :! nrt•d llPl>IY (711) ~IO~S m o s • P o ~ ~ I' I T St:rh R!!reµt for ,m,11 I thert'_.llter t::oqwr ,1>11• reai t'!tlJte rirm nr. o (' rr r1 &10.2023 l\lrpvrt 1-'rienlll). l'Oll 1:1."nrnl atmo:.ph1·rl· <toocl ~k1llHeq $SSO Mn t ,ii I O .. ve Carlson 1!3J U2113 100 hwetry 1070 Mbatl••CMn 1011 .•..•.....•••...•..... .........•......•...•.. •••••••••••••••••••••• Wonderland WANTED Orcr drof'l«r, hnld:J ~. K«>~ . , • or beer. new cond $200 ro t t:ASll UOl.LAR ti"73)27tJCullnl\lll\M Of Antiqu~s! P A 1" fo u v o u n ~ HUGE w11rl•housc .t l-:Wt.-;LRV. WAT<.'11£~. IAllllHGIROOl<S cr11mmt'd with uvt•r ~oo \HT OBJ ~c~rs CiOl.0, lrlN•I tor th m,,c .iph mustr bo\,•;;., Oll'kClu ~ILV~R ~1-;HVtt:t-;, :.m.ill patio;. ~lt' i:)\ju-. de<10 pt1111os. nrcu:. ur J.'l;lll': t-'URN & AN your ov.·~ Jta rdt!11 l:Jn•. 11..111 e lo<'k >1 . l'll-'1•1':.'> b45 2200 wnlerfullth1:.Chn:.lm.a•. i:r,1ndt11tlH·r ,·lucki>. Uvettock 8075 ~ 1444 (<1sdnat1t111 anh11ut•) ••••••••••••••••••••••• O Sl 000 W th Oi\I\ 1'001, TAUL.I-; Ver · ,ooo <>r He.: Mu11iun mu rt•, brolc,• '•" 11tut\!, ml11 :.1tlcru1I 1~menl'11n lnt."~~utto~··1 t11 r11k ft dilV\', blk rvr We ncl'fl spne·,· 1•"!1e':'"5; lllO~ 1 .Kr,t,rr 1w.it1c M01.i.!11 1!1dt1mi;. mukl• urr. tl31·1 <!3:.I , lo~ St .. Jr\Jn~. lei En.: Western (7 14) 11:.i!IOOO 7~·l177. Open Wl'<l . th~u :DI 11111 ------ ::0.ul 9AM to4 PM V1~1l. Kllnmort• :!W \•olt. 4KOl . . . Mite.ell~• 8080 wJlt dl'l'I ri ,. room \..'''"'" f~uropt un ,lrt , ex .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 1 k healer w / an. wutv ~t'n!<l\l' l' oc s,TRAl'll .St:TS "Mini thcrm11c1h1l. l'erfN·t h•r OOOt'ft('I Salltr) Sll(KH IO)t rt•ll'd Av111., N.1 llon.11 Sy~tl·m~ <'01 p .. opcral11r r1ol4i.1hh: lot . • ni:lit 111tl1v Puy "'111 l>c· ~UJ'U;E HCEr'TIOMIST S600 1-·ront orr1('1l :If) pcur:inn• & 1~no1111hty for ret·c1rt1on dei.k & ht.'O\ly phon~s. tt E Oevelopf.'tnt.'nt uH1t't• rwar 0 (' Airport. Apply Su1tr lCIO , 1201 UO\e Strt'l't, itcwµort 114!arh Sernce Stat1011 Atl!!n C.!J>Otltmoutc, Mi•ii.sen, Tnx". :J' X ti' ru:.tom offln• or 11rnull upl. ~o. <lanl, expH'd. l>uy & serio us inc1u i rtes. luyout with :.talion~. 97\l·:.a42al\crU:OO. .l::1·c). Full & µ1timc Ar•· S45·5::'1~·-vllltii;c. nwu11l,11ns, lun· I IA.I IJJ,,.. IMil llin·hSl :"l 11 'IY6'1•~ ha:.c•l'I on l''llllt'r ln•\•I RM or LVM 1ily, Shcll ~tution. 17lh & ncb, tukll. forc•t, etc N.il1onal t'll!Clr1c honw Irvine.NU Anlique tabk w 'k:.tf & 4 Wt1 rl h SIJOO ~ Mu :. t rood i.lll't•r, th1cknl'S'> '' I ~()\\ r\'t'>C )I I \I I t•e·nl Ole lh:«•·11t lo :17:.il -chairl>. $1:!5. Goo<l l'on1t sur:ri Ctl'c at S2SO d1JI , 7 • hl111Je $411 SERVICES'JA1'10'.\ 5361.'71!1<.:oll,•cn t;.i:!OlJll. 97ll23"2uftL•rti 00 Apply In f)C'rson XAM ('har~I! Nursc :1 ll Xlnl 5PM Monday thru 1-'rt· p;i~ Xlnt benefits Puso~ A~ncv \l·rnuntin~ Clk tu)(>.'>() :n:ia U1rC'l1 St /\ II ~e rNJnl!,. lo ~:!5 day, l7(M.2 G1lletle A11e, P;,irk Lido Con\. l~ntrr Irvine _N~wport IJc~ -~12 l!l}H RECEPTIONIST lmml·d openin~ for ~h.irµ n•ccpl al frnt dc~k 111 llunt1ngton Be:it•h area. Mon·f"rt 37 12111 week !'lush orfiN•' St11fll• 1yµ111.i. 1-:'tl'lnt rrin)(I' benl'f1ts If you like to m..-et IH'11plc & a ni. phont.':. we"' ant to talk t11 )llU C all MJ i:"' \'714 )S4 l 2641 S:.ile:.man s e\Cl> a "'l'l'k purt gr11vcyard. Mu~t lw Appiartett 80 IO , •• 557.0045 l'll!Ji.t' rall for •ll>11t 100 , Emplti}l r In 101• p,., ,onfll'I \)(1•nc·y Heta1m:<l 4111! E 17th Cu;.t.1 Ml''·' ._. _________ _, Sult!! 224 ll 12 1170 ~ .. __________ ...,~......-........ .... (• FINANCE SECRETARY •Imme d1.1l1· 01H•mn1: l•rr "l'l'r{'t,JJ y W allCHlnlllll: :ipl1tu<fr T\jllnJ.! 711 wp111 & Mlllh' :.l,1l"l1C'otl 1)111 llllot Xlot 1·11 IH'11e•llls Coll 644·3389 'II\ \I 111 NOll'I THE IRVIHE CO. ~"'° N1•11. 1.K>rt n ·nte·r Ur Nt·Wf)(•rt UcJd1 GIRL FRIDAY Ch~llen,.:1 ni po~1 t1 on I!. fa~t ~(OWIOJ: e·OrTii>Jll) 1 ,,,..,..,, tlult!!:-indo<l mi: ht!! hookl'1·ep1111l ~ l~ 11 1111( Sal.tr~ IJ,J,1•<l on .1l11ltly !'>3:.1 11J•1 tur .111111 I GIRL OFFICE Good Opportunity Typi"CJ & Bkkpq FwllTime ' 645-2444 Equ<if Oµpor l':mph1ycr ti J 1 r d r t' ' ,.. ,. 1 & General Offi~e l't•rm.1n1·nt p,111 t1m1• ,.,.M11ltl J\1 tlliun Dollar l'Cll 11 ._t,1rrm1: llt•W e,f' Ill I r \ 111 I' :'\ 1• t• ti t' 11 Manit·unht llus.\ '>alon Xlnt Im· (·all f> UI 117!1 I I.\ I HUH l·:s:-. ~; ll 1!11 ritm l-.•l(Un.1 Bt .11 h KITCHEN ASSIST. Nu~tl~<l. l'/l1ntc C'ook. Tut•s & Wed l'/llml· Ui'I· W.i!>hH. Xlnl lirnd1ts. Apply in person, fkverly :\1;rnor, 340 Victoria, c '1 LEGAL ADVERTISING CLERK l'osit1on now <1valfahle ror pdrt !Im!! J~)l:.lant lo l.c1:.tl At1\erl1sini.: IJ1re1· tor 25 huur' l'l'r "'(•ck mm1mum '\oon lo 5 oo 1•~1 Mon·Fr1 <it:nl'ral ur f1t·e but·k11round and h~hl typm.: !tk11ls 135 40 wpml r!!qu1rcd tl'm· ph:1!.1s vn aC'rura<'y I Typ1n~ t!!i.1 on I l! M Sl'll•ctric will he .1d m1111:.t!!rt'd lo .ill .iJ!(lh· l·ant:. Autum1Jb1le NURSES LVH's & RN's i::xiier pr c l 'd 3 to 11 shirt. F1t1m1• ur l'/ltmc Good stafling p,1llcrn Xlnt bcn1tf1ls Parit lido Co"" Ctr CALL642 8044 NURSES AIDE $35 l'rl\'.ilc L>uty Ll·-.:. Fec~ S32 Gcnt'ral 11<'51' Starr Heht.•f No t'el•s. L~scouhe Medical Scn·H·t's 351 Jlo:.p1tul Rt1, N.U. <Park Lido Med lJltli: I i\cros!t from lloa~ lloi,p. 642-9955 or 540·9954. l"O R l!:ST K OLSON Im" Rt'alwrs ,\ <.: 0 !. () W I!: L L 111\NK ~:It CO An t-:qual Opportunity Employ..-r RECEPTIONIST t•xp w I Rood IO~J I f "'' • ••• ••••• ••. •• ••••••••. Wngt•" + c:or:irn. A1J11ly llEFR1GERATORS 31._, liar ho!. l .M. WASIJEllS·l>fiY J-~HS SOCIADLt-: ASS<.H' lkcond1t1uns Hepros & n!'eded by E.Xl';C 1n l-'r1,>t D;imugc c;u.ir/Ocl. "'hsl1t 1-'Ully c.tp1tah,wll ~Yrs in Ora ngc Ch b u PP I'! P / l r m c DUNLAP'S 12 l3 l5~2 32!15 1815 Nt'"' purl Ill. C~t S I' II ,\ Y P A I N T t: R (;ALL S~ i7iiU llELPJ-:H, HI Yrs old n(I ('Xp ner. Sl.50 hr :.tart National t'h•l't nt• ho mt• 7ti!r-11749 fuod i,llc('r. th1rkn!!"" . ii I a I, 7.. IJ I a .. t.'. $4 0 T .. l~phoM Solicitors lfl!J.2J42allat) U\I Wo~k lrom your homt• T Jppan Uhl lh i•n sdr W 11 I tr u 1 n Men or dc.anm.: ll.illl!I! ~OlllX'r women 547·559-t .. yrs oltl .• \lnl. si:;u 1-'or Bcaulv Salon .\t- trJ<.'t1vc. ·pcrsonjble ----------1 C.:..it 11345 U:ll 1 TELLER G E. Eler l>ryt•r. llot point !SJ\ (l!J!i7 HE. Sales SUCCESSFUL Costa Me~a OrfirC' Gas Orvn & "•'nmore START NOW !!' W a~ h ~' r . $7 5 ea. Excellent 01ipor. for Ill · tiuar,del 5461\ti?:! tllv. w savlniLS & l•llln & o~w accounts t'•V<'r I' time tun.: ll·rm as l>tgnmrnt Bicycles 8020 •.•...••.••..•....•...• '"'"'·"'''" 1111-.1tl\•' 111111tl1•1I p1·01Jt1 tu 111 ll!!t·e:.:.ar\I lor or1·as1onal -----·----~~~-­ ~· 11 I I r o m m 1 ~ s 1 n n ~ 1:u11ranteeel. I pa\ all ad \Crt1sing. Would you hl.t• to be indcµende11t. "" ;\l~r look111~ o,•er > uur ~hould1•rs'.' orx•mn)( no-A uvatlahlt.' lur 2 l1l'·d H ... :.alt•s pcoµlc. Ask for J11ll l.Jch,•n m)!!r Jklitl N!!WJ)()rt HI n J (..' \I NC\N A i-·r(' i\l Te111vo O tempo llalc1gh "lira ml l'r"" 10 'fll'('(j Dike. 21' ~" frJIT)l', like Nl':W SXO h12·UIJX. tro.11111· "'""""'""'' 11.1 111111.ill~ k11011.n 111oel1111 lrnm '''" 111<· 1-'1 ,.,. 11.1rl< 1111: ,.., 11111 .... bt•fll'ftb plc.1.,,1111 .,urrnunchn..:" ~ 1t•l.1~e·11 .1111111"'''"''' ·"" t'Xll<'I' IH't' & 1111 "''111111' HAIRSTYLIST J.C.PENHEY CO. :!I Fash111n 1,J.1r1d Nl·wµort lit .11'11 ll.1-. 01wn111Jl Vur ~1111111<t••I Xl11t ••l•I"" l1tr ,111\Jlhlrll('llt <'.ill 1"1111 or l'.1rl Time II 1\1 HS'I 'a' I.I'.', r 1-;\t't'llL•nt wori..111.: 1·11n 11 011hl.111thni.: t11•n1·l 11' (:ill for a111111111tnwnl i H'J:I 1111 ~I~ ., I "" I I ',. .. l.1IJ1Jtll'"· ln• l,11u . .t 1111 por 1-;mpfov1·r M F ;;,\H/\<:1-; \l\l.t•: :uh 111 ,lht• Da1 ly l'1lnt hr111~ h.1p 1 II\ l1 ~11lh Tu pl.IC"l ~llUI ell .1 ... 1ni: 1·arcl 11hon<' ~U ~;711t•l<IJV TU!!"l.1) thru ~·r1d.1y 644-2313 ext 296 Equal Oppor Empl<J\'1•r Hair Stylist li111111•thjtl •ll'o\'lllllj: ·•I'll h 11111er..on ~11.:r ".1l,1r l<l'~I'> l1,11r St' 11111(. J3JJ ~ Bn~tul. So. L'ou:.I l'lalJ Mall, C.\1 5t0 llkllll HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC nt'l.'fif.'fl for :.rht1t1I cl1,lr11 l z.~-~r,,..rr'T?~ 1 to pcrfll<l'm rnN'hJntfJI Sell 0o JUIJ ~lo tOfttlrt lfwt' ,..,, •• , .. .,.,.,. 9"'"'1' tu•,, ... , "''' , .. ~ 51>1•.,..., Cl ,,,....., ~lot ..... d ocl ··~ "'" ~ , ... .,..,,. °" ~ ""*" .... bul e1f .. 11vo >Of.< fl'ltUOQe ,OyM•f'!if 11 •OlY IM Yt .. 11 \I tdof " qeocj ..,lh U\ y..., ton chaqe ,...,, ,..1 f>r pol t "" VOik Mot••• rl'l>Jlr on lhcwl h11s1·'· Ill' pee I m 1• 1· h ,1 Cl IC' ,,J f'tlWPm\'l\l tlOJU'I & I<' I l'JH trunsm1,,~111n:. & cl1t I,. r (' n t 1.1 I;., w 11 h I l.nowh·df.{1· of int«111.tl '11m llu ~tir1n 1.·11 ~1111·~ I Wtll $!1'1'1 Jl<'I' 0111 \fljll\ l ' pl,tr.1110 Sthool Ill" lrtol ·1~•'i:! (. 111 .. I '•'It .• '" s.111J11at1 l .q111111111 """""' ''"IH'111laul1• l1'• m I • • .11 tit' I 'I \ I " I ii \J 11 .I ti rl JI l 1• II I • ,\ ii u • tlllflh•,(11' "'"' ~ l.1ft111i.: ,, I • 1·•1 t1 ,..; 't· r,·1'"'"' lrt1m h>1~p1t.1l l>t ,. l.>t h I \\llrk 1: h1 .1o1.! l t.i 1 \ tt 1o11n1. ~fi ·~I t Hot~ Oe\k Cl~rk \1 11 t 11<· 1 'I>"' •I '\( H I r •1111 \\ I.. n ch .1. ,. ' 1 , 1111•,1 I •• ii I 1111 '"' "' \ II'\\ hi) ,.UCMl, •'\t !);!II 111111 I ....... I"' I I I\ •• Ill 1.tn 11 It 1•1 .11..111.,: 1111 111111..llll( t'\\lt I •"-r1•I' Ill t \1111 .tl,11\ \,l'l\e h \\ 1lt r1eulll •ii.I """' I l.1'"111·11 ,1rh •·II 1111 11 111' ''" rll II• in ... "' ·'"' 1t1·m ,111 .. t '.111 t~I~ :r1m1 .............. . .. • • • • .. • • • • • • • ,, It J.-1 I l•j •1 Ji I,., 'II • 4 11!1 "I lo\111 lh ,111 UH.ti I • • lh1 DoilV ,itot Clorutmos T rte • It t C • • • .. • 11' 11 h l h.1t"'•f.1 \ lrom • llw,iJ iJnuni: 1-:'<'rl.'llcnt l'IJln~IJny l>t'neftl,, Apply at tr<11ll dnk DAILY PILOT 330 W. Bay St .• CostaMHa 642-4321 Equal Opportun1t \ Em11loycr LEGAL SECIETARY Excdl!!nt vppor for St·1·rt'l .. ry "' ~ootl ~k 111:, Sh :;a, ty1>1111( 1~.,+ \'l'T)' pleJ,.. .. nt oh .. urround 1111(~. Salan Sl:IOO+ ltll .. '-'i.., 11\U\\ ,\..,..,( >< 11\ll.., P~IA~ftcy 3723 Birch Sl. N 11. 557-0045 100', J.:mpfoy1·r Reuuncd U!gal Tr:11nt•t'. Oright. >.Int typlnic i:.kllls for t•Jn•cr opport on MJ\li II t~ JX'Wnlcr 111 Nt>wporl lk"'''h. <'.:otatt• 11IJ11n1ni;:. .. urpor .citt· l.1"' pr;ict it" \I \G 11 t''ll<'I prcf .. rrc·<I nut "'" 1r.11n <.:all ( o 14 >R."!J ·~~1 l.111uor Sim t• w l>c-11 nc!!tb S;ilt·~ CINk Xt Ut•fl help '1.tl tir·•· 1wt11>k prd'<l \\ .111 tor ,111} hr,. ~:i.: 1M•r'tf •tr will trmn l'hone ~).:!8:!21 l.111u11r Slot e l'l .. rk F t1111t•, •'\µrd. ma lure. Im n ti 11 Ii 1.. 1\ µ I' I y 1 n pen.on. 11!15 W 19th l't. CM. LMDSP /D•siCJlter f U ti l I m (' $ 6 0 0 t t) ''IOI' mo <:.1 II \t.iri: II' fur • 111µt t>lli 74-11 Ur.et11111: 11.11 !.~round & Imo" h·ll1:e· 11t pl11nt matt'riul •W• \1.\IDS Wanted. 11.Jrl-Hir Inn Motel. llWO W II .1 I ho a H h cl , N ll h~S 3'11;.3 MAINTENANCE Part t1ml.', over HJ yr oltl RA;(.; Aph l.Jiuna l11lb 5111 6151 or Siil lll:J(J MAHICUJUST I" ttml· Mu"l hll\lt' ~omc folfow111 1: l1irh:111'1 Oul'lle·ttc· Snlon . 2110 "11·"1111rt C'tr Ur.;-.; II MASSEUSE ' ( h41<~ ........... < ... d : '· ~1~1','.~:·:::.·.~>,· :·.:;;:•; • ll!l·23> ror l!!l!1llmate Cull ,.., .. ,,. .. ,11 • t 1 me po!. 11 I 'l n • n t,,. ti.11 ploco to buy Of "" clollQ '"" °'~· C.oa» " 11,. Qo!ly ,olqt 642 -5678 DAILY PILOT ,. I"• ''"'" '"" 111 'I : ~as11agr. No 1•xp. l\L'l'. 11"'11 ·"''""'" • We train. Cllll 752!1561 .. •• 1llf f·L' ..... ,,. A I h \0111 .. " t 1111··''"""" \11\1 • r luf It 't 11hu ,. 111l1•r o1 ... lu1u ~ ,., • • &,.l1Mft \UUf' dlf • • • ................. W;anlad:< t24hrs>. 211 2 H11 ruor. C M 2930 W. Pacific Cm1:<t Hwy, N 1J. Mechanir tu wt>rk nn srn lruck:. part time . ()rofl ~mlln pnrl lime. 546~ 1~W0ttted 7 100H.fpWC111ted 7100 MF,N, perm p/time ror ••••••• ••• ••••••••••••• •••• ••••• •••••••••••••• l#A 'rimes homl' de Ji very Nurse~ '.92 STAFF POSITION AACN • I i I I s -' ... RecJlttered Hurw ... lactw1or·so...- ... 2 yrs. led1lct. Critlcal Can Experiac• Excellent professional career op· portunity. Irvine IOC'otion. Send re- ~umc lo . AMHican AuocJaH• of Crtffcal-Ccn MwMs 2192 M.tlft, Sllllt. 200 ...... CA' f26'4 111 Newport/C. Mesa Must have depend:.ibtc• cur &c be reliable. $275 to $3SOmo. S48·1740. -----1 Mfg wants bookkeeper, light. 7~·1234 Ask for Mr. Dale. r.1jmt Trne. ~m . Earn Sl75·S200 wk. Fuller .8.fush SaJes, S.SM~l • MOTOtl IOUTI dellverln• lhe Diii,)' Piiot to 1ubtcnbtr1 In South La1una and Laaun• Nlfuel Monday thro111h Frtday afternoons and Saturday a nd unday mornings. Oron earn· 1n~& 11pprux,mately ~ 00 per month SS0.00 (:Uh dcpo!!lt roqulrod Pbon~ 00·4321, a k ror cl~ulation HUR SES AIDES Expcr prcf'd Rayvicv. ('onv llosp. 2055 Thurm i\ l'l', C M Cl42 J!i05 HURSES AIDES All Shift!> E>.111.•r. pref'<I Wrll tra1n 11 m•l' 64~ 24 IO :-IL'HSl:'\li AIDES & ORDERLIES 646-:19:.!8. ('\ l'" ti73·-lf> 7i Lachenmyer Realtor Tl·:MrOnARY llELI' Call 540.4455 E11ual 01>ror Empluy<·r TRLER/P /TIME US ED. Hl-:ll U ll.T & t•uaranl!!NI. All I vpcs, 1•..irt:.. re1H11r,.. Tra\.11! ans al'ct•J.flt•il t;;JI 21111 .:-;.,;w t;Sl':L> IUKt-:.'>• lluy Seit Tr;1tle l\1rb & HL·p.ur,.. Skah'bo.irtls All s hift<;. CJJI or :..pply ----------1 llram·h ofr !>t.•t•I..., IM111el.1 It k T d I c r t '' " 111 I.. p1tlm('. Expt•r 1111'1 cl l'ont.1cl H1lelu T1·rr.11111~,. ( 'vC'le• & C11, :! 1811 Ncwj)\1rl Ulvd (' '1 ti40! i!JIO betwn9am Spm L1rlo Conv Center 1555 Superior .I\ Ill! Nwpt Heh 646·7ili4 <Wt-'lCE llf':LP, po~1t111n avail 1n "'c" port lh'h firm. 111\0I\ mg a \and~ Ht;staurant HOW HIRING Wa1lrcs~t.'s & Cook,. I•:\ 111.'f ti I lostt'S!W:. & ltu-, 111t H>14·7255 Certs 8035 \Vl""llcm F'etlt.•ra l Stt\ '"~s ••••••••••••••••••••••• :!Ml~: Coa~t lfwv, C'tl.\1 ~:qual Oppeir 1-:111plt1' •'I' l't•ople Call ChJrh•··i. ----------I Ch1h. S4U·0351. l hm.alt1y.<11 i..1t11•11,, mo-.l t'Olor ... l'F1\ Ill'): \dull tem Sis & 1111 71ill li7ti ul \tourk u1·t1\1llcs ;\J .. th .. ---------1 rt:MPORAl<V HOTWORKB> FOR YEARS? OOCJS 8040 ......•..•....••.••••.. IJ.ickground ufoni: w, tr k('y ci.pcr 1s dbirablc Will train for rom11ull'I onentctl procedure,,. Co paid l.i('ner1ts. Salaq open. Call 714/&t6-S07t; Em1e Ball, Inc. OPBtA TIOHS MGR. Tcmpre~s M1rr11c ll'<~ Ironic!.. GJrden Gro'l' Plant, 1s looking fur "" <rperullons m:•nal(t'r who will he rl'i.11 for alt mirnur. operations 111 cludin1: pro<luction con trot , 1111rc has1 nl! <'. :.torci.. l'rodut·t manufJrlur,•cl 1-; st.>m1 ronduct1J1 pro1lur11un l'(IWP for 11.t•I w.1frr pro c·e,..:.111,.i. :'\utnh!!r of emplo;>t'I!~ l!!'l!< than 100. Qu11llf1cal111ns rt•q 'If · Several yr;. Of Sl!(nifit:atll exl)('r m i.1tnl1Jr IYP<' ol po.s1t1u11. Senti rc~unw tu Tempre.:' M1 r rocll'c trumt.:.... 1~12 l\ null St, <;a1tll•n <:ro,e. C.illr !12611 Allt·nt1on Ila) 1'h11mp ... 11n f: o. E. RUAIL ASST MANAGER OrMGRTJlNE Pos1t1oos w/nallonal Jr Sportsw!!:Jr chain !.IOrl"i Salary commcn ... uratl· w CX!>f.'r. Xlnt l>1md1h OpJ>l)rtunlty for atl' anc'!' mcnl Apply in 1~·rMlll PE1'Rrr-;·s . 11 7 W!'sl mins t er Ma 11 . Westminster. Wot ncd ,\houl 'I c:.lint.: '! ln .. h !::>ctkr 1'u1r. Al\C' $..'.O & UI) :>l&I". Ch.amp luu·.s .it11; 781:.l t'V!!:> & wknd~ Come wh .. n· 1t ·-; 1·11111 fortablf' w1w11m1·n \\ lio POODLES-R.PEOPLE umler ... t.!Oll Ynu 1111 ha\\' l\lldrs 17M IS4ti-284ft '1"11' l.t'l Ol"f"I C I:'; m t Y 8045 O\EHl.OAl>1111t1h .. mlo e o ~ • • \.\Hrk •••• •• • •• •i • • • ••••• • • 1-'llt-:1'. tu l:onel llome. lf(oauu/ul pJrt l;N man ..,hcphl•rd Uot.:'· 1\pprol< Ii W('l'ks ""' .'i Ill X!W.5 •Jr :;JI 211;.1 office overload f\imiture 557-0061 lletatl !<al,·-. 1n t\11.,..,1,,11 lnll'r\'lt'W hn. •1 J :to Vu.!JO. a PP"'' ~ hr:. per .n23 H1rch St, N 11 8050 ••••...••......•.•••... "k, no clqwr nee .. mu~l .. ---------·ID.1nil>h )1utlr·rn Dinini: bt· ·"ail llt.'l 111,1m & 7 11m Hm Set, < ·u..,t•lnt m.1111· Aµply JI l'hotomat Tow 'frock ()rl\cr want !J' & 'i t·11m·h wrlwn-. Corp . 76111171. ed. Exper only G&W w /Jnt1q11e t.:old .:lass Towing 1000 Irv ine . t,1bl<':1, M:ci.:navn'< TV· Nplkh. ,11tn•o ron~oh• 111 ";i I nut RH 3· 11 Churi:e Nurse. Full or µ lime. -----------1 LVN 3-11 Mcd1 cations . l"ull nr p time .\frs.1 errfr t:onv llo,p. f.61 Ct•nkr St, c ;\f :;.JS·s.585. TRAINEES V.1nrt v of JOI.I!< .S. 'hilts N!!ed c:1 r & phone Noe•\ ~r req'•I Shurt •'< Ion)( ll•rm a~:.1gnm1•nts 1·abincl: ll1 W <!.5" TV nevrr 11\<'<l : 16 cu n. r1·t ri1:.trrcc7.cr I. II tluors hkl' 11cw &12·01:11! **I BUY** l'nrt tim1• :1",.l ml!r. fur Sates lady ':'/11Jl.S of ••xp<·1 Chrt,llu11 ,\pls. Bkkpg •m:n!!d I arl llmt·,-"." l'<' ~r 1251 hr.:h ~dw11l s t udcnts ·"'"'er A Fee 1\I T1·111 p•1 O tempo <;ood usL·cl Furn1lurt• & l\µplianc·('s Oil l wilt \I'll or S~:LI. for You MASTERS AUCTIOH •'\IJt'r'ICn ' Call •197 2S111 646..a686 & 833-9625 1'1\HTTlME:i·!ll'M Xlnt l'ay to Sol hr. 675-71!lfi Ony HJI :tt>.'iGe\'c-. . PEOPLE PF.RSO~ 1';\l'r nt<ed~ p1litnl' a\ "'"' 111 1<h~fl• .. upply. Ful ly 1·ap1t.chtl'tl. ti7:1 222:1. ---- PHONE SALES l'hont• Sul('S p C'uµle mnle or frmJle, 16 tu GS year.\ or age. Guarantl'\.'<l wai.:1•1> or comm1:.sions. 2~.o 1-:a:.l 17th SlrC'l'l, Suitt! (), l:o!lln M1>sa, tx•twe!!n 5:00 & 8:30 pm ti4'1·42ZI 1':1111.il Opportunity 1-:mplO\'t'r SALES PART· TIME FRI.SAT & SUH. AFTERNOONS Our program 1!1 flex1hle. TEMPORARY 111-:LI' Call 540-4455 E~wal Oppor Ern11lcr}c:r you ran wnrk J•Jrt tame TrH<'I \J!l'lll L''J'l<'r'rl nl'ur home in a ma1or M'i n 1 yr <'xprr '" tlepl i.t.orc & sl•.11 pur,..m· r>omrst.1 c & lnl1·rn;1 outside llC'tl\lltics ticmal Tickellnl( Lk.,1ra lkmnnslrate a rev•Jlu hit•• pBch lot·atum. ·C'.tl llonury t.:ookm~ utensil in Owrwr f.4-t 7371 a ~tol'e near ) ou $-1 511 · pe1 hr + honus . In UTOTEM terviewing Wed U<'<' H ' s C311 121:11 477·850!'1 or HETAll. C'Lf,ltK . W11nll•d Opportun1ll<' (714) li7:1 [,.lll! aft GP M for ad' ant.:t•rnt•nl avail Salt•swomun w;intc•d for 01rr111ng~ m «11 .. 1.1 \11•,a Laguna ti<' a eh wnmcn 's 1\11uh1•1111. li arclt•n t; r11\11 11pp11r«I st•1n'. l'fl•t1'lt.' &We11tminstef' e·all wkel)l> afl Ilium 642·7702 494 ROHi WAITtti.<:;s. C>(per'tl. ~\VE! NL•w & Ul>l'<I furn. .1ppl 's, m>'>t' Wll"111':. [k1r~ain No11k. '•m l Stores S I.'> & Hit W 19th.CM lil27!130& ~>Ill :12fi2 W 1-; lltJY THE CONNECTION FUHNITUllE TllA'I' IS l lldc:·a·IJC'ds from Sl!ilJ Wood l!ame <;«l-. frnm S:IRS, anti rnul·h rnort· "The l.1ltll' W.irch1111"" that undl•r !<1•11~ tht• !tlOr!!s th.it v.on t l;e· un derM1lof 7351 lll•1l. tl111l I.. 1111 Sat &S11111i.:1 11-12 l!/;11 7' lirantl nt•w 11111t'h Custom lt11.,l/l1rn l\ ... k 11111 S750 U...t 11! r 1111) :u:!7 Sandwich Delinry f/trme. Apply, !147 W 'Fem mornrng,. 9 30 l!llh St, Costa ~e~u fvnMtutt 1050 PLUMIER, REPAIR noon Xlnt p/time IK•~ Waitress expC'r & c<'1<1k 1·x ••••••••••••••••••••••• F/Ume. s Yeari1 min ex· lnfo·Call M5·0t45. per New family 11lyh-1k Ftrr Salr Caplmn N('mO per. Call 536-14S2. Santa Clausci.. All shin" II restaurant The N1•w Wulcr bed. like Ol!w. -----------1 J\IBll N(I cxpcr nee Call Yorker. 42!! F:. 171h SI 9GO ll:l:J PRODUCT MGR. 714 53R 2368. CM MS l070 _ UNIQ U .. : wii•krr. de· Tcmpress Mieroelec· ----------I w c 11 l ti e r ~ t r 1 p roriitor r1111ch /du\I hed 1 tronics. Garden GrO\I<' J1;urneyman or Trninr•<' fl l>y 31~ ri 4 po\lrr '"" pfant1slookmgrornpro SECRETARY Union :.hop. C.ill 1111 s11:n with full 11.ll·ker duel manal(ebr to .• ~ro lmm-"'1"·t•• ""'"''n1n" reir appt. 17141751·5'\.4!! runopy Grt•l.'n and whit•• mole & esta • prt ... uct ""u" .. ,~ ,. ----e•otton pnnl t'UlJh1on II line or Terton valves & 111dlvldual W/l(ood rom WOMAN I M 11t 11 r<' for 1n polyuretha11<'. Us<' 011 fittinRs. Uuties wall In· munic<Al1on skills lll'BV} vum•d work m ullract1v• ly as display 111ccc. Mui.t rludc eatablishi n g t.clcphoncs. mus l be able Sandwich Shop, Aft 1>CC. Cost SJSO .. mu~l icllll re11pr esentat1 ve sa le11 lo work under prc,..i.url.', nooo/~vcs. 536·2'148 $2U01ofr. t\.10 :!H<Ki e\ll!n force, expanding producl typing 70 wpm & dtl' - --- ---'"!!" 31111 Wl't•kt·ntl~ base &. gcn·1 sales pro laphune Women, 25 & oldt'r l• motion or lhe products Call 644·3389 work for hou.secleao1111 Xlnl oppor. w/a divL.,1on flAM 'lllNOON '>VS. 1'1T1mc , .:d hr! CON .. 'IS(.;ATEU I\ i;tock or !iOfas & lo\ l''l'<.1t8 & sl~pel'8 & g11mll 1tcls. i\11 fl<'low Wholc.,ule. Mllbl Sell 1142 I 2'14 of a well estab'I NYSt: THE IRVIME CO. 67_S_~_J ____ _ co. Qu•llficRtlons Req · d sso Newport ~ntcr l>r WomPn n{'f'(!ed ror hous1 BackfU'OUnd In enginel!r· Newputl &•11t·h clran.in·• service. call ina & mktng of industrial E 1 n... t: I " Tm: CONN F.CTION 7351 ·Untt t •. µrodU<'t.s. Send res ume ;qua v,..por mp oyrr RoWM.'s Rog Mop to: Tcmpress Microelcc 548·0757 trorucs, l2Bt2 Knoll St, Oarden Grove, Ca 92641. Attention Ray ThomP!lon ~o __ E_' __ NOTICE how Dally Pilnt Closs· Wed lda display lhnlr met1ncct with legibility and Impact? Our ads, we 11'9 proud to aay, really &el reaulls . P h one 642·~·· Jleil Ave. II B. SECRETARIES u--..._..,;;--Hid b d bl / Lel(•l·Many to $!JOO ._......_w ("a· e . uc 1:recn liookkeeper to $ll00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• vmyl. dbl size, perfect EDlployers P,iy AJl fo't.'c~ ......... IOOS cond S75 Gold urm Lt. R · d A •••••••••••••••••• ••••• clu11r. Sl~ 640-0327 a ein ers iency ---- 4020 Birth St. Ste IM VI C T R 0 I.,,\ I 9 I 8 Cmplt bdrm set $COO 2· Pc Newport Beach 83.1~100 Rrun!'wlck lwo needle :.ecto'I '200 Mis<' hllchld Calf for Appt/btah ·a,, noor model H~s stor;ire it<'mK Cnll ~6·6251. --!!pare for rc('Ords l\sk· ---- You don't need o aun lo Ing uoo .oo l'hont' HorHs 8060 "draw taal" when you 6.1l·ll49 ••••••••••••••••••••••• plae!e an ad In lh• Dally ANTJQU F. For Sale. 2 p0nlcs & •how P\)ot Wanl Ads! Call now SLEIGH BED $25. quart~morac. -&42·MTll. M2·7SS2 Call847 1091. WANTED l.ic &•nd .:as rern.: 2 I.: \111) I 1'11.11 r::., 5411·1011:! morn~ l'\'l'S TOP Cl\Sll UOL.LA R PA I Q 1-· U R Y 0 U K JEWEL.RV. WA1'CllES, lrVtnl'Co11stCou11try AKT OLIJ ECTS, c:OLl> Club Membership. SI L. VE R S £ fl V IC ~: . $4.S<> 7S2· 786.'i f'INt-; i"UHN & i\N-REMODELING 3 h;;.t•s TIQU£S &t52:.l00 1n l:dM. Ca binetry , LUGGAGE TAGS appr,. · ~ .. r dr.;. llr ('O' l·rin~"· !!le .\II to l!ll I H73·2l>Jll or eve:.. ti73 2430 (rom )OUr bu~lllC!>!< l'artl Sc:nd orw <·arcl for t'HC'h tag plus 0111• :.pare W1• 1 .. ---------rct urn pnm11nt·ntty WOVEM WOODS scull"(! uttrut·trvt• tag & 500/oto800/o 0ff slrap, mct'linJ.! u1rh~e I U rt'<1wrcments f'rct •Ot:LIVl':RV• wnt Jo:.-; & thdt' l'·or u •Al-:1-'0HE pcr.sonahrt'd tai: ,.11t'fw,1• l'lllUSTMA.'i * wa It 11 a l>l' r. I ab r1 e or i-&l.5-•K950 .. ____ 11.33•·-9·7•7•0 "lJjy lilo ' 11uPt"r & we wall back & tnm your ta!(• Or try two card!> baclc tu b:11:k PRICES: S2 <'nor :ti$!) .i S lai:s Sl ft() ra 6 !ltag:.$1 SO!!J. IOormor~SI IUc.1 Sales Ta\ lnrlutkcl NOCJ\IW '' Or;1w )Our own 11r send nam1'. ;i1hln:l>~. phone & we'll n\iJkt• c1nc t .1rd per (Ill( l\dtl 'J.!t' l'H('I\ St·ntl r:h!!l'k or money or. tlerlu PILOT PRINTING I'() llo,; IS.ill Costa ~h·-..1 , CJ 92626 tirewnod for snle from olive lr('c. <.:a ll afte1· l!l'M. 557 H3.'l3 I 2 round this. SS & S25 i har l'hatrl> $10 2 tent:. • Slo li>UPI & $50. Po1t t> µewnlcr SlU. 3 TV Ira)'> s:-i 17" U&W po1 I., TV $75. Oil paml '~s · h'>l olr t;-1:! :.1:.151 DHVt:H $75, Roaster & <:nll lt'll'l'.l St2. llolh t''· l' c I I e• n t t: o n d 1 l 1 o n • &16 4757 POOL T'Ul,E. Cues ~ IC.ir k (:d cond. $125. l'h 552 7723 Got two turtle doves to sell by Christmas? Move them under our tree. On each Thursday through Decembe r 16th, the Daily Pilot will publis h s pecial pages to make it easier for you to convert your saleable items to Christmas cash. Buy a box under our tree & se ll y our toy s, s port s eq uipm ent, lu gg age, appliances , furniture, antiques, handmade & unique gifts and no matter what your business -we hav" a box for you! Putting a box unde r our tree is easy and inexpens ive. Rates are $4.00 for the smaller box to $22.50 for the lar gest box. BIG, BIG SAVI NGS if you run more ' than one time. For more information and to place your ad jus t caJJ 642 -5678 and a sk for your Christmas Ad·Viser for more Information. Your credit ts good with us . We'll bill you or you can charge your ad to your Master Charge or BankAmericard . , \ ' •JO DAil. Y PILOT Mond1y. DIK'ernber 6 1CJ76 Tn.clu 9560 Auto,, Imported A.uto,, lmporftd Auto,, lmpomd Auto1, UHd A,a,to,, U1td -...... -----.. -~--...;._..:;..:;...;._•_0_9_0_"-ot ___ "_°"""' __ _.;,·""""'•-o-t-o-1Mo ____ oo_rc_l_:.*"_, I ~;;::·::·.:~ :·:,:~~ ·,.:·~ iMw ............. ,; ·12 ~;~ ;;.::· .. ~l~O v.:;,:;:~ ...... ,.i1o cdi: .......... ;;·1s ~-.......... ;;;j •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sc ff 50 e.hell. w1d~ whl~. )i.lt.a~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••.,.,._- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~u ~1:;~ WR"'< L"'S JS s,·1ruccu, xtnl rood, 71 XK7 '""·"'ar Ri•d•nl~. HAMMOND (8 ) & 122 Lesllr $1395 HAMMOND SPINET "Top of Lint'" Aurora 2 m<>t> old $349S KNABE S'Z" Walnut Grand. rblt 1r~f\rl like n~w 12995 HAMMOND Con11ok Mdl "Regent" w tauto-van rhylhm Nt::W I only $4295 ~ IM .. ~A 5 25Cm.•!161,boll111UM<,n«'w n eed11 o tw ()Wner . ..,.,_ 1...,., 'I I ""''XI I rt '70 2 CS C • -.-(!) PIS, P/8 , AC. lmmi.ltiLI ., ... .ron<a .,....,, • 11 'OODolh:ci I'll lit·d,lo liUO OU!)\•4 M1che!hnt>,nl('CC11r. M29tl31ort;.\6l~ ii 0267 • blkl', bit. fully l'qU11>'d m1, $1~ or ht•i.t ufll'r 'PcN.I , l\•uthl'r &. low 280C 1975, 23.000 m l. ----">'. lhruout! '2500. MS· ..,. ' Sl!:ill t.73·21138 01 t-;H <:.ill !>411 47211 mllc.s cz.t~lo'Sl. rhoe. brn. real lelither. ·oo VW w/67 reblt ena ~-58~ t.i:J ~JU sunroof, stereo, lmadcd. 1''\llly rustom1ied body, Dodp tt3~11 BS r MUST SELL i:! 2002 Auw111allr. :ilr bi3 3434or67~3302 maiµi $'T50torr 640_·762t •••••••••••••••••••••••" '62 A 050. lfo11!-I au·, T 1. I) 0 d & :; l c r ~ u $400 CJll J97:! •, on l>(J(l•w Li: l~ltKlo.l C&:.ASSIC '12 C..mper. i11 cond, new 1974 DODGE DART •~117 11 w1p, Ii 1\I JUllJ, lll'W I fU ~-Qu,.,d._..,. be "'•ORTCQUPI KAM MONO M 3, Walnut w 'Rl•verb Spkr LoWTcy llolidoy Spinet Organ $695 ~5 ,,.,.,, 1111'' 111 rtll, l>l'll \Ir trd 2 TO CHOOSE MERCEDES IEH% v• Vt' 673.'~ -........ N~I rs ~ ' G.11'numph~tlirth1l.c. $17!1~ 11:.l olr. l'h 1 ti 7 o 2 8 o s L $3200. U 2 Tu ChoVIH' 1''ro~'./J HAMMOMD OIGAM & Pl.AMO CM'TR 2154 L Coad Hwy. CclM C•"4-IHO rc:11lch•an SS.SO 1>411478'.I '7l31)('S 1:.rw·ed,surlroor ,, /R ds Lo d d '72 vw 4'1 I l d Cadillac AutomJllc s m"l'll V , ,,.. ~l>t' 011 ter. a e ~ \ x n con . ri.ldio, h •.it('r, pwr. •le <'1111~~11711 f9tii1~rL~';'.1d. l ownH Onl( owner. restored to QulclcuJe,Sl•OO. init + brolcci..ttlrC'()nd & For S.1h·. 1J KJ\\abJk1 Vani '570 mml cood. $l4•500 Firm 5'ST·2808 Quali1y and Prlco Hn)'I top. SPOTLt;s8t•1 400.l:ood1·11nd ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7J Ul\VARIA·4 !>JM!l•d, ~~4 >~~~·homin.on, '64 VW Sqbck. xlnl cofld. Guaranteed Hti3LPE). · '"' %0 I I'll J 975 GMC .11 r t on<I. & bl~reu -thru out, 13.000 ml on . AWLY $2691 l Mlie .. laMcMK 8080 Sportin9 Good1 10'4 Motor Ho,,.1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sc:ail./Rent 9 I 60 Scar11 floor model i.u New !>ks tiu.1t:.. Mt.l' !!, $50 •••••••••••:••••••••••• tarnp with nt:w ultra Day~ il3J !11131 , 1.·\cnin,t.::. Beaut 211 U111lornut viillt't butlJ Has ht'cs K-17 72.11 Motor ll11mc 101 n·nt IJrnp as well und timi· . . Daily wkl), mlhly Sit>~ bwlt m E.u:ellent mn1.ll t l_>M I', St·t •>I lcl\ ham.led 10 11.1:. .. ten>t1, uir l'Olld, lion "20 110 l'h , liolftlu~ l'rWStl'unlrol 7till07~ • .. . • ", l G..16 7235 b313149 . --- ;.hb•t rr .. --1.-1 I t TV, Radio, "' "" t!l'ter, 1.1 u iu H'~ St 8098 works $50. King !>Ile< In, ereo walerbed $115 W .ii.her ••••••• •••• •• •• • •••••• • 1.·h:ctric dryer SI 25 Complete St1.•n·o tor :.Jlc nefngcrawr $75. D<>l4bl1. m cabinet + "pcJkcrs ::.ill u bed $50. Ca 11 962 >1!14 S.lOO &I I 71>55 ur 00.'J·87J!j a ft er IJ PM 26' GMC MOTOklfOM J-; Slp:. b Wntr rate::. I'\ t ply 113:1 ltllb, 642 -llfJ7 Nwpt Rent Nl·w 23· 1"1reb.ill, ~1.'IC cont. ltrnlh of win dow~ &. l'OUnlcr ~paCl' 6'15~ I $950 ... Lc.ising S~c:i..ll1sh "" SURFER VAM <~l'l'M I. ·75 28(6, 22K mi, loalll•d, n!b t eng. · 4""''2145 Prctwcd RJtc' M.Aa9UtS TOYOTA• •• :,unroof, e tc, cream. --MISSION VIEJO ~.\I Aulotnat1c. :.11r <'ond., ""c p 7c.,7866 •73vw•--'74 ZQ02 1 i.peed, stereo & $13,;JU.> vt ply. ..... ...., Ldlgc\l \clcU1llll 811•21,0 ... 9 5. I 2 I 0 i.unroof, porthoh.·~. de bW\I'OO(. llH22). Xlnt condition int f N & u J .. IUX\' trim, chl'U111c wii c '57 19051.. Completely &ext. $2l()()or best. 0 C:.ld~laC\ 1:,c --~ wheels & Ii tral·k s len•o. '7.t IJAVARIA 11 speed. Ile.st ored. Both tops. __ o!f!.r.6732319. O r.,ni;c<.:ounty 99(d' ((11<\!I) Jlr concl. & :.unrool 73l-0599or 213/699 1343. • •• 'Ji SADOLEIACK t:J.il!Lfo'M I. ·~ VW Con,•ert Mags. Open ~uridJy ••••• •••••••••••••• 11 , VALLEY IMPORTS ·73 Mercedes 280. 4dr., radials, tape deck, vttry Cadill~c '70 Ford Country S11uJr' pcrrect. Lu m1., n ew deJn.$1950.675·1058 • Wgn OnA(o\\nr , Alra:l, 831-2040 4,5.494' '75 2002-AutomalH'. :ur M1chel111 tires. like new Master Dealer SIOOO. S56 7248 uft 6 rond &stereo (034\l lhruoul. I ownr. $7800 1966 VW BUG 2600 ll.1rbor BIHi. ---:-7T 2 Ford vans '64 & 65, '64 6'15 1554 or S3l·3374 Pvt. New scats. S600. Cmt.i Me\.i 540-9100 'il Torino, aulo, I'S,.~\~. SJ00 b!.t oHr, '!iS $!l'J5 b"l '7:> 5301,\ Full power &. Ply (114)763·3705aft. 6. rootl, $1700 or oHCK offr 893·33-IO :11rc11nd C900MVGl ------------Nabe 5590183orC41 3Stll 2 TO CHOOSE '70 221(SE, brown. rogoac. 2 TO CHOOSE rs ·73 Dodge Surfer V.in air. aut&, am.rm. Pvl t969 J.'ord 500XL Al6PJ i• 25,000 ml, p S, P /U, u1r '76 2•w• ... • •peed, 'ter•·u ply 494 3165 1973 5.-•-... _ cac11•Dac bucket. ~nl&. i.lmst ~' auto, AM /1''M 8 trk .,.,., .. " " ' -r-• -enc tires & brki.. $750. s l c r e 0 . l' 0 m 11 cal>selle, air cond. & only .67 M BZ Ha re 300 S EL 4 speed, 8 track \ape & biJ..8031. •• • • l'UStom1.ted 111/0Ul. Mu::.t 800 miles. (5337 ). !''ult Pwr. Sharp & clean. low mtlcs. (313J ES). r DHILL l'l{ESSES Ur;.indNcw Jlca\y Dul) llJI£ pn l'l' a II mudc+ .. GE AM/FM l'Sht Sc<in niog n1d10 New 1·011d S80 54H 74011 ~ee'675·2020 SAOOLEIACK lkstoffcr.547·5801 '75 ELDO Cad Cvnvl973!---TD9 1'as11.Countrv· GMC l.;Jtt.• '7:1, >.Int c·rirul . VALLEY IMPORTS ---1973 41 Z..4 Door w/maKS plus all extra!!. Squire., New llros, Alt., ::.Iv:. 6, $1!1,:!UU l ~I! 'ti8 Chev V;in 1/1'. •inly 831-2040495-4949 '73 MBZ Silver 450 SEL Aut om atic, stereo & Whtw/rct.lmt 673·6451. P IS: I /B, xlnl. con*.,..1 Boob & Marint Equipment Polan::., ,'\lli /l:j:J 2(il6 56.WO mr Xl nt cond Full pwr. 46,000 mi, good ~.OllOmlles. (947JGT>. -------Ask g. $2595. 963·7586 ..J•I• --Stsoo l'h9625!1:>0 cond. m.ikc offer. SADDLEIACK •111ELDORADO ,.11 S:int:i Fe l-'re1ght S.ilvag1.· .••.••.•••..•.......... D111t·':-HV lkn(:ih ------976 BMW 2 ~7 5801 " 5A<'re~ ·75 '7ti modch , I ' 200:, 7000 mr. -------VAWY IMPORTS Only 19,000 m1, JU.~~ like U..Coln 99..S-- ln lnl' 55!1 1116 Autos Wont~ 9590 Juto. air, sunr'f, ,\M n t MG 9742 811-2040 495.4949 nA~.:1 M1irht'lrfin Tl rres. ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• :.(Crt.'O cal>s 673-0324 """'ute y pe ec car. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $5.500. firm <Lie. '70 l\lARK Ill, 1 owner. :lllJll S.mt.i fo\· ;\ 1.L •• , L \ Boob. Powtr 213 5tt.K l:.!55 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9040 SofJs, "<lra l'ham .. 1111• JO' J Elo'l-'HI 1-:s rum, Ollom.in:.. h'itli l'llll ,.,) bnd,t.:I' ~1>orl11sher lJbles, IJmtJs & mor1 !-'re.sh Wolcrtwn V 8 s trom lr,t.: home on El ~!'.um loJn AYti.11HIOOO Niguel t;ulr Couri.c . f>ropt'rt) T .i' Furr<' Sate ·n t::xplorcr. 26' lUM mi. -1-10 Dot11w l'ng M.iny xt.ra:. Lo.idl·d Mu.,l :.cc Sll,500. Ph. ll-IG5185 ;ift 511m 405·1490 &yhncr '76. II! I O. 130 llP Volvo, trlrlfull 1•:10· For rent 20', M1n1 Motor For i.alc, l2X20 Hug. Rusi \.J'>I>. ~200 ti:J!I ij!.l(Jo rfays Homt. l·omp. l'(jUIP color. new rnncl , ::,1:15. Hon, 1!11 ~IOG C\ e" Very dean !)ti2 tilll:J 675 5653. • :i:I' Owt·n Sporlfi:.hcr, Traders, Tra•el "70 PICKETT \II' IHl•I tlrJfl lnlt t,11Jll' \djU!'.l.Jhl\· .. tl!l'I I 1 a mt• cu~I StlU mu:-,t :.di S 10. ti Ill 2110!· •'\Cnlll);~ .1nrt W•'1•l.t·n1b !'\Upt.·rt.>ly •"ilJtp'tl. 11r1v ••••••••••••••••••••••• t>l). 111l'al lor harbor '5!1 AIHSTH t::AM lid nw~t-., •ir .,porllii.11111~ cond. '\lust Sl'l' 11 to 'Int 1 nnil S:!:t,5HU bclieH•1t' S2250 1;.ll> 3051 1.\.l 15'.2 ~1·1 •oo 1 l ~IQ U ~: "11 k1·r tl1• \\'()'\; S·lllO t-,\ 111rud\• 1or.i1or tmwh 1l,1\ hl•<l i 2.'>111'. "1151!0 l1rm ll IJ) :11 1 II I IHl!>ll'r ell' 1>1~1IS1:1i. Ml!n w11h full \\ ll•kcr . ('a11opy c;rl'en and wh1ll· Boots, Sail 9060 ,·otton prtnt t·uch1,>n · ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1n pol\ urethan<• l'M: on llob1c Hi, I rlr. rtl·W trans & ly a:. rhsplay t>1t.·1·l· :'ltu .. 1 murc SI A:!5 6'11.i ll:.!5~1 or "l'I' t'11~I S:l50 m u:.t ~I'll 5111 7505 ::>200 'l1fr. (i IO· 280li e \ c ll In.I:" <10!1 W<'1°kl'llrh WATERBEDS From SI l'l lll 1ompkt• Fr.sml' n'c1 m.11 11111·1 11· 1111 .. ll•· u .• ~ ... 111 .. r NIIMI\\ 1lh 11.1111-1 1;!J.11 l:~t '1.llM: \\1lh twaler •'< cll'll\1•r\ Wt"'l'o.\ur<Ha gl.l'~:.ltJop, l'l'1•ry't.vl1·rh··•"1J11~lt·~ ... :?I". ,,11 1,, o f! 1ilr 1\11u.ifh'an·11 x.m r111 •• w ~ltp::>:.!;,011 i;,;1 ;x~>K 13· 1975 I luntl'I I lk•Jul f1bcrgld:.1> ..,\\ hn,t.:, lnnt a tint I GreJt for 'm:itt c.1r!'. or tho:.l· who l1k1· 11 lr:t\ el 11.l(hl Sip::. · adults. 2 kid!>. W:ill•r. 11·l box, 2 hurnl'r ~l11v1· Absolutely mus t "t'C $2.000 &10-0027 Auto S.,.vice,Parts & .AccenoriH 940 ....•....••..•......... SJ\ VF: WITll USEU & ltl-~Ul 11.T 1-'CJRt-:tGN c \I< I ',\I< rs • Met'hJOlt,11 • 1-:lt'clnl'll I • llod> l':irts IMl'OHT 1\l;TOSUl'l'L\' Hll N :\1.inctw ... l\·r. A11aht•11r1 77(i :JOO .Auto1 for Sole DY~I,\ c;y~ 1111..1· Ill'\\ I. \...,EH '\o l:!l!r.I l<.11•1• ••••••••••••••••••••••• oni.: ~3!111, \lu:..t wit $2:i11 t.'QUI PIH·d 1 1-·c; (.' u Antiques/ l'h 752 1120 $750 l'h 1,11; 11111~ Classics 9520 Ul'Y \IY (.jrc1.·n & or.llll!l' \nt1r1uc llonl' l>rJ\\n W.1(1·1 W.1i.:on for an I 'n11 .. 0JI ('hn .. tmJ,. Gitt \IJkt·~ ,, F.111la.,lll' S1i::n 57>:! il~ll 8081 ....••..•..••..••.••..• ORIENTAL RUGS W \ ~ T P " r " 1 .1 11 ~ <'h1n1·,l· .11"' r .• , ... ,,,, .\bnncr '.II I A>.11h·1l 'Int umrl. 1'111,1t•• J'.nl' 5;1J.51JO t ,! 1'111.11 ill!lll i-: II I l. s () ' I 'I . I •I I I lTlll"l' I .11 1' :-.:.! I IHHI of It• r b ~ , 11! '.Ill "\ 1•' & wknrl' II Ft: "111i1Hloll \\ lrlr 1 •n l'r .ti 11111 'p.11 ... '1• ,1 I ., I I 11111 I U JI\' ~IWt> d l h1•rn' \\ nt r pm e SI 11.'>ll 111.11 11111 .............•......... •OVER 711CMtS• IN INVl-:~TOHY \:'llTIQUt-:8 & Cl. \SSlt'S From Forth 1(1 llvll., Royl·l'~, from $500 tc ~.OOOrars BUY·SELL TH1\DE ELZ FARGO & CO 8:l05 Main Samia /\na IOtofi. Mon Sal c111 ... (•d Somla):.. * 547-'709 * CASH FOR CARS! '7o BMW2002. S1lv1·r, U nrei.tored '58 M G '75 VW.SllperClean! Xln\ 0119JSM) 644 su5 or xlnl cond. $3200, or bcsL Tov S Doll;ir $ pJ1d lor :\Int cund M.i.:nelle. 4-dr sedan. cond 6000 mi. $3l50. Ph 640-59$7 olfer. 615·1690 1 lt'Jn used c<1rl>, truck., & 171-1>ti73·152l. llum, .:ood 1 S600. 645 6106 _960-__ 2680________ Mere "'9 Corvellei.. i\&k for l'.1ul .,,,, 9 .. ,. • ,. p ·nt '73 sedan I>cV1ll<-', orig. wy '7.i MG M1dl(ct, x1nt cood, "" ..,.. &..<acquer ai ' owner, most extras. ••••••••••••••••••••• • O'Neill. Capri '715 /\M/l"M radio, very lo radials, no dents. nooo Mi, $4200. u~l-l600 MU<T_._., HOW.ARD CM•rol~t ••••••••••••••••••••••• S900trirm.67S-67$7,; .,,.,. °" -11 ._.... m1, must sell. $2650/bi.l (8·5 wkdays) Mere Monterey Cstm N~i~l~~~~~~b r 1973 CAPRI orr. 963-2140 'WSTATION WAGON HT, Cull pwr & air, era... COUPE. 4 s peed with MGI 9744 $1200. 1972 CADILLAC cnttl, air ride, new ASJ Wf~ I'/\ Y TOI' DOJ.l.1\H FOlt TOP USIW CAltS FOllEWN. UOM ESTIC or <..: L1\.'iS 1<.:s If 1 our nH· 1:. c..:lrJ l'flo:in ::.ci? us hrsl. IAUERBUICK l!l25 ll,1rbor Bh d Costa .\11',a !:17!1 2500 WE RUY •USEDCAltS& TR UC.: KS• Come in or Call FREE Appraisal Grotti CM•rolet llfll I Beath Bh•d llu.nt1nl(ton Bc<H'h 847-6087 * 54,_3331 1'01' DOI.LAH P/\11) l:\1:'11EOIAT£LY FOR ALI. l"OHEIGN C1\HS C/\LLOllcOME IN Tosi::..: us NEWPORT IMPORTS JlOO W. C.:sl llwy. N f\ 642-9405 TOP DOLLAR PAID FORCLI-:1\N IMPORT CARS 4UMODELS ~ 18835 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH 842· 7781 -S40-0442 I BUY JUNK CARS radso. l517JLUL ••••••••••••••••••••••• 49-1-2305 DEVIUES bltd i i r cs , lo ni,1', M~~Ys ~~~9a5TA ·~~,~~: tr~~k~~~t~::,; '66VW BUS. T~H~fhoose from . ~~-bst o.rr. P~~ MISSIONVIEJO hardtop. $2880. Ph Allwint~17:99-<1M9 $800 OHLY$2998 '73 Montego GT. Mint.' 831-2880495-1210 <1968164 MARQUIS VOLVO 1-vlly eqpd. Ong owner. Datsun---9720 Opef -----,-7-4-61 Vol•o 9172 MISSIONVf&JO $3500. Ph &iG-4332 days. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••v••••••• 131-2110 495-12.1 O 6T3-5613ev~s. Sales & Le-aslflCJ TOP Dollar PauJ On ALL Trade· ins NEWPORT DATSUN 888 DoYe Street Near MacArthur & J a mboree Roads 833-1300 DRIVE A LITTLE ••• SAVE A .LOT S llOP &COM PAH F. IARW1CK DA TSUM San Juan Ca pislra no 831-1375 493.3375 TOP BUYER S<.!c us £1rst, & lttst ! Tot> dollar paid for 1mPorls . COSTA MESA DATSUN 2845 Harbor Blvd. Costa Me::.a 540 6'110 1972 240Z, J\MffM, air. mdgs, undr f'l, hdrs. S3675. or be:>t orrcr . 5S7·99'l2 19711 01'1!1 Wagon Auto. economical $850 49-1·3197 494·0628 '11 VOlVO Cainaro 9' 17 ~~ ••••••• , •• !!.~~ .•.......•...•...•..•.. Porsche 9750 '70 Camaro. VS, auto., '75 MUSTA,..G II radio, PS, air, radials, 4 spc«l. radio & heal~r .. good cond. $.2000/ofr. Cll0275). Check lhjs prl~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1973 PORSCHE 91 IE TARGA HERE NOW 64~8586 CVl!S. at 511pe1..'<i, air cond., stereo. •MEW COLORS mags. Buy or X LNT lease plan. <GOOHPC>. •MEW MODB.S SADDlEl.ACk !luge savings on all re· VALLEY IMPORTS maining new 76s & 831-2040 495.4949 Demos m 1itoek. ----MARQUIS VOLVO 7' brand new couch MISSIONVI EJ U Chevrolet 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1975 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO Custom Rust,bm. Ai..k 831-2880495-1210· '"Nllll'--.~ mg $750./bsl orr. IS40-3327 -Ill -----ORAMGE COUNTY 1972 Porsche" IT VOLVO 5 speed. silver w/black EXCLUSIVL'LV VOl.VO t'---------interior, air cond., tnaJ:J> "' -------- & p w r . w i n d o w s . Largest Volvo Oe1l1ff Don-t Stt Us Fi"t ••• U9SF'TI). in Orange County! M SH U•Lad!!! SA.DbLEIA.CK BUY or L~ASE ''If y-... Don't VALLEY IMPORTS DIRECT ' vw u 1-2040 4'5-4,49 ~·f'4'· •'W19JJl.•Q c~~':'a.. '70 !IUT Targa. Clean, ex-~ l.._ 4 ~ J 'l1 ~ t .J You'-P:t'--tr as. 5 sp. S inst, .. ._. ... ~~--'-"!I ... _.• rw ~"11 AM t FM . $6USlofr . 2025 S. Manchester TooMuc !11 OMLY$ZS91 MARQUIS VOLV~111 M.lSSlON VIEJO 811·2810 495-1210 '66 Mustang l'Onvcrtibte, cmplt.y rCl>lorcd. Coll~~-. tors item. Trans & e~ ovrbaled. new paint "tr( t op. $1995/bei,l o(r~ !162·5374. -------'7'1 l\lu!ilanJt 11 ; 2 + 2. aulo.; only 20,000 rn1, Xlnt cond $2450. Eves 67$-1318 :,, OldamobU. 9955 ······················~ '73 Cutlass Supreme, a.k cond, xlnt cond, $3000-;o 67S.!M17 aCl SPM. '69 Cutlass Sln. WfW, $1050. (213) ~94 -28&1 da)'ll, (714) 962·4673 ev;,c: $40-2499. 631-0283 Anaheim 750-2011 CONNELL ""°"' 9723 Porsche 73 91 ITTanJa 1972 VOLVO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Like new, fully eqpd.. 145 WAGON CHEVROLET Sharp '73 Cutlass s cp(i. J.ow mi, fully cquipped,1 ow n e r. 83 0 ·524S ev/wknds. fcrran '64·330 GT. Xtnt. l'vt. Ply _!.71<1!_~·~:__ r New Borran1 wire Automatic,AM/FM,roo 2828 JlarborBlvd. wheels &l-t 93811 1;,..2.0054 ·73 91<1 2 o, 5 spd. FM 18 tr rack. 1700G I U). Hus un· COSTA MESA ster /\ppear. grp. Al believable low mlleaj!e, 5<16 1200 1966 Olds Vista cruiser Wgn w/air Sb~. 55ti 1!7W loys, Gm . .xlnt. cond. in unbelievable condiuon --------- SS.500. 759·0400 a£t6PM & at an unbelievable '72 Chevys. Mus t sell. Pinto Rot 9725 ...............•...•... 99ij l'\I l'l' 11111_\ h ill ;1111 ~ l \.\II f'OH l:c.Ml 11 ... ·11111111 rl'lll.!• Ir tr" & 't"H ' '> 11, Oilil4 l'.111111 \..tl.111).11 .111 \111,t 'di Lk''l 11lh·1 t;:n 1.t~lti MODEL A l'SBD Al:TO 1'1\HTS 68 8.50 Sl'YOF.R Convt. Xlnl cond. SUIS<l Mom Ol'l'<is lar~er car. 673 0193 price! Best offer. Knl!wd ~t •••••••••••••••••••••f'• '65 9l2·5 spd .. overall ssr ~ OHL y $3998 Wgn or 40r Impala. Gd '76 Runabout, G cyl, pwr, 111 ·, loak, Sli~/ Ooc:lu 1'1.'.ll \foc.llol 1\ 5 Window f>.W S125__ _847 0037 L'out>l' w rumhlt; ~~·11 :\1ECllANIC want.. run restored. Newcng .. rare MA.19UISVOLVO cond, many extras. air,3600m1,t denl s.1000. ~:~.~firm. 496-7620 MISSION VIEJO 58l-4771 or best offer. 673·~ ~"'" I ' it t luu "'.' ,J., .t\t'' In 1111\HI 1·0111l1t1u11 .111<1 11• J-.onabl> ~1n< •·11 l'h11n1· "31 :\I l'l 9070 "J('w modl'I 1\ t'ni: lun ninl! repairable or '69 124 SPYOER n1ng g11ud. but n1.•<•ch wrt•rkl'<ll·ar:. K-i7 1!Y.IS I 536·91!62 -----831-2810 495·1210 i4 Impala. 4dr , Ht. l\C, ·73 Pinto Stn. Wgn. i.\C, Roll1 Royce 97561---------1 Pwr., loaded, xlnl. $2950. very xlnt C'Ond. /\sklng •...................... !><•mt• work $2500 ,\flt'r --------\IOllHI-'(; 111 '""'ut ~--t>I H.I' 111 1.1 \t'S'''' 1'1•11 11 11 t.11 l1\1·.tl"1,1r1I Ill l'tl \\\I.I ltt ,l\llllf t11i.:ll ;, :1011m CJll !111:11!!25 11r WAHTB> '68 P1;.1t 124 Cpe. Good •••••••••••••• •• ••••••• 494-4825. $1950. 968-247\ #l DEALER IN U.S.A. Ml.ts!cal IMtnnuts 8083 •..•.•................. l'onn ~1 111 0 \I 111< 1·1<·1 1111t,1n, • '', lh•nt • <1n•h 111in, $1~10. I' I' .•. I.! 1.!.111 ..,1<;,1-.1 St>ln'11•r !\1h1r "111l1 Of11•r 1111 11·1'" l nnH· • .,. :11 1 ... 11 1:11 "''''"'' '-1:'>1111 bu\' ,ill Iii I :."I 11 ~II' ur :-.ult• I 11' \\ >1nl1·1I In \1·wpor( .'' ,..,11 li11.1t \'.tll k.111 'I l'l.1 ·.x1. l,l~ltl \'ti ziw, Tran'90'1otion Offlc~ F..ntitvre & c;;.;;;::s~;i·······. Equipmtnf 8085 Rettt 9120 ...............•.•...•. ..............•.•..•..• 4!13:1«JS '(ilior 'li\I EICammo, cond .. F'!'v't t Casscttc . 4 Whetl DriYH 9550 t'l;•an, lll'ason,1bll'. $950. 494·R.">f!6 K~ •••••••••••••••••••• •• • 6'12·2073 1-tonda 9727 \\.'Jtl t•nn.,utrr r . u ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1970TOYOTA LAMOCRUISER S l ll: k ., ,h I fl I .1 d IO & A.utOS, lmporttd ht!Jh1r (umptt'h•ty 0\1•r ••••••••••••••••••••••• hdUll>fl lllS;lk. :(VI Audi 9707 ONLY $29.98 MARQUIS TOY OT A \tlS~ION \'11-:.10 8 3 1-2180 495-1210 ....••.•..•.....•.•••.• ·73 1\ud1 1001.S st•r1<'s. ~nod 1 ond. a!.k1ni: ~2(i:!S fi.111 II 12, fl7!\.:;~1114 lrGnd Mew •7 6 HONDA Cars OVER 100 To Choose From! UNIVERSITY Oldsmobile Honda CCll"'S • GMC 1''7:1 Jo'iml .I" 2:;11. ,h 1 7!'1 Audi H)IJLS ~lvr hlu Trucks i\ultt 11.1n'. pwr hr .1k1·' r\ir. 'krt•o. i.nrr · lliM "'1 ~Harbor lllvd. 1ilt llil7 lllll:! Must i;ai•ullli.!l%J!lli:I CostuMe:.a 5Hl!JG'10 Trucu 9560 ~~~ ••••••••••••• !?.1.~ JfJ9MK 9730 .....•..••.•••.••...... . ....••.....••.•.•••..• 1974TOYOTA PICKUP W /SHElL SADDLEBACK Silver £lt>auly. 3.11 Sedan w Roi ls IJ ri 11 $3900 S:l6~ ROY IRR CARVER ROLLS-ROYCE 1"40 J~mllorH HewPOrl&u<11 l.__ _ __, ~· I ClOSIO SUNOlllYS Toyota 9765 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '11 TOYOTAs HERE NOW •MEW COLORS •MEWMODB.S Uuge Savings on ALL n· m111ning new 761 4 '11\'l'll. r.11J111 m,1)! wht-cls & owrll'r drnt•n l!l60.11TI BMW ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dcrnos ,68 Giiii\ The Better Barg;iin Karmann Ghia '735 t.; X 1-: \' I I I \ 1-. CONl"EH 1-:~n: 1n:sl\ 77"' 13" llllJ \i,.t orr ~7moday" IHM EXECUTIVE ll11ntl.i -•c,11 1:h111<11 t• >.Int roml \ ,.(•d 11nly nnr1· -;.150 f1rni li7:t t 1% Typewr1lf.'r. ll.1ve Jll"t 'il lloncla 350CI. S.1!'111. purrh•t&<'l.I n••w Sclectnc ·;o ll11ml11 3.So SL ~ 1110 S300 (.'Jll Mon ll33-85r>t 6i3 27:16 ht•fori• 5 Jl)pm ONLY $2998 MARQUIS TOY OT A. MISSION Vll'.:JO Blt-2880 495·1210 'ti7 t-:1 Camino 1'1S, I' ·11. uuto .. 11r rr>n d . new t ra11~. new radial J21 V !I Owner SOOO 751 1163 Pets 8087 CZ 2.'iO M X 71, "<'1,lom r1tl ••••••••••••••••••••••• th•n, "<lr.8' Otf"r' lhiy!>, Dat.~un ii P1cku1) \\Ith <\KC 1-'crnak M111rnlurc ;,40 3,.1K:I 1-;1, ... ti75 .. IM4 Camper shl'll Sl9'J5 Pvt Sc.•hn11111.l•r l"rmalt• ~·h 1 pt)' M2·2102 a... •~ 1• i l \.un.ih.1 125 Enduro. -c .... mp. v.:aul <'1:>1an~ reblt cn1o:. run!o ~ood ·73 Datsun £' U tlS,Ol.l(J m1. Ml 3002 B!'st offer lii:J flli!l new s hoekl>. 1:0011 Mnd PJMM & °'9•• 1090 -- -76R·_l296 ____ _ , •••• ••. ••. •• ••••• ••... '73 :'ltontc .. ~11 Col;i 25 l n als ;---II AM M 0 N 0 I' I p £ 1>1kl' 50l'C Xlnl l'nnd $225. 611 Chevy r .u With shell. S:Wi &1611 VS. AT, PS. Pll. l\C. new ORUAN w/T111H' Dc<"k -tir es. a ir shock s, Xlntcond.$ll00.4\J5·4742 Two JION OA Tr11ll OO's, $1200/best o£r.631·2053or Give A Gift--ll'si. thun lOOO mi on each. 497.2451 s:>!-0. uch Call 540·7744 --------Of M•lc 111 ~!M 01111 ·so El Camino, 6 cyl, 4 ~pd Sear '!\ 1pinet .orj!ao. 2 -. --lransmlu1on. R iii Runs lcey board. chord pedal~ M!'sl Sell 7~ Yomoha 100 real good. $600. Ph Like new con1tlt1on Enduro SL le1:al. gd 547 3182 Moved. to small home, rond ~ ()(r fl7:l 3ZU -. ---------cc-d S300 --t» El Camino. 4..~pd .. 350 ~ ~orr room. '15 Honda 250 XL Xlnt eng .. AC. Q 1mJl('r ,hell. • c:ond. $.'IOO. $1800. 831-2300 S.WW,Moch'9tes 8091 675 2..'91 --- ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Chevy •• T. PS. rs. SINGO FIH A.RM NOTICE ~T~'5s~~w tires, 2!1,ooo O E~T GZ..:A K UIUVt:: how OallY Piiot Class· Newest m oth•\ c u11cd ifl~ ad11 dlllplny their '73 Fnrd Ronrh~l'CI G1' & I Ii.: ht I y I . Stretch met1sucs with le111bihty Auto, P /S, uir. r /dl11c 11lllcht•s, uutnmalic: but· and lmpud? Our ;.ids, we brk:1, /\MiF'!\1. 351 enf(. tonholts. bltnd hems. 1&2 art! proud to llCIY. really new lirt':1 & 11ho<'kl! ~ OHdlc dl•cornhvc, Clt'! lll'l result• rhon(' Coll dy8 97S 128l. uft $144-l'h S.'1 0053 "2 5678. Spm. 962 3705 '77 BMWs HERE NOW SEETHE ALL HEW 320i TODAY Xlnt. cond VNy lo mi MARQUIS TOY OT A 17 '1965 MtSSfON VIEJO --~50t_I. 4-! ~-- -Ul-2880 495-1210 Mcnda 9738 -...........•....••..... '74 Mazdil RX3 Coupe, 4 spd, under wmty, very clean 837 .3202 '75 CELICA 4 11pd, m 41(S, lHrack sten"<>, AM/fM radio, many Xll'/\S, xtru clean. Make Ofr. 751·21>29 S A. D 0 L E I A. C K ~~~.s.~:.• •••• !?.~~ '76 Toyota Corolla. Silver , xlnt l'nnd Must :.ell $2600 1714 H94·71311 VALLEY IMPORTS . Bl 1·2040 495.4949 CREVIER $1 Sf & HOAOWAY SANTA AMA 835·3171 THll U~TIMATI 01111/IHQ MAC:ltlHI •USED IMW11• ·73 Bovar1a-(906l.VY) ·752002 . (629NBK l ''16 2002A (0491l) Cloaed Oft S..ltdays ORANGE COUMTY'S OLDEST 1961MIZ190SL COUPE ROADSTER ll11rdtop. Orlginal lcolher & 7 1 ,1100 m i lel' M UST St l';' (016NLt~). SA DD LEIA.CK VALLEY IMPORTS 831-2040 495.4949 ..... •SALES •SERVICE •LEASING Onneas Definry ~rvice & parts now open on Sat's 8 to 4 for your qmv~ience. 1974 VOLVO 164 SEDAN. Automatic, pwr. steering, air cond. & stereo. Extremely low milesgo, (061KTQ>. ONLY$4998 · MARQUIS VOLVO MISSJON Vli-;JO 811·2880 495-1210 1971 VOLVO 4 cyl. couJM! w/overdrlve & le ather int erior. f33lONG I. 'fl'li.s t'conomy car can nciw oo l>ou.J(hl rcor • OHLYS2491 MARQUIS VOLVO MIS$ION VIEJO 831·2110 495·12 I 0 ------- MAKE OFFER ~!~~ ...•..... !!M '72 Monte Curio. P/S, '· P/B, factory uir, tilt whl. •76 Plymouth Fvry I owner 640 0633 Grand Broughom •• ----Sedan. Spilt pwr. s~. '73 Blazer. /\C, PS, PB. air cond .. stereo t;idfo. Suspension, tires. all ac· pwr. windows & crut~e cess Xlnlrond 492·4100. control. (072POL>. I ·75 Vega folate Wagon. $4995 1 A/C, AMffM st~. roof ---------.. ........ rack, d1i.c hrk!>, ra«it1a1 11 .. •119n tires. Xlnl e:ond. $2450. Ph 5.52-3092 1976 ECONOMY CHEVETTE With only 1\.000 miles. (1!1862<11 Must ~<'II this wcckt•nd at ONLY $2498 MARQUIS TOY OT A MISSION VJF.JO 831-2880 495-1210 ATLAS . ·~1ltr /Plymout\l Open 1Ja1ly & Sun. ·n?10 PM 2929 llarhor Ill\ ti • • Costa Mesa L 546-1934 •• '00 lmp:ila, loaded $595. . ~ good work rar, ah10 up-76 Volare 2 llr, 11t1ck i.hln, right p111no, bsl orr. n & II. Only 3,000 m1 on 962·8000 car. Desperate, mus~11cll ·-----1 $3 100. wp 1 t rade. '75 Monte Curio. Low 548-14117. 1· m1k'I. vinyl top, e tc. p~ 9~,65 $4~. 1145· 7253 -.nae: -------····················~t·· 1975 CHIVROLET '72 LeMans. Imm:><'. ,!\Ir. IMPALA WAGON p/b. pi s. f~xecs persenal !J 11 11 .., 11 c .n g c r _cur. S21~: <193 3846.___.._ 0«'1u_xc (i0L40 .'il'nl, •oo LeMans. 350 c.;1 ~~ .. AMII-M ~lf'rco, foctOry w/Jlur11t 311fd trq[IS • air cond. & ltll(1!1tNl"fllCk· $4 25 / bs t o r tZU) ).oudMI !low7 MC/\). 594-0651 • __ ...... $_4_6_9_5 __ ·n Grand S11.f11ri w~11 ,full pwr, AC, lug rock. AM/FM s tereo rJUtlo w/tape deck + m'llny xtras. xlnt cond, SU.W. 830-0US J I ) . ... . • -..... _ -' . i . . ·\DAlllY .. .'.;Pl·LOT ~ Duntingt@n Beaeh Alternoou Fountain Valle I t • Y. Sto_<;ks * . ,, . . ~-· . ' . . . . . . ' . . . "' . . . \ . ' . -~ ... \ _,. --. VOL. 69, NO. 341, 2 SECTIONS. 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1976 TEN CENT I Huntington Plant's Neighbors Foul By RA\' ESTRADA Ol Ille 0 •11• ...... M.ott Foul odors. noise and pests are a recurring problem for res1 dents around the Oran'e County Sanitation District s Plant Number Two, Huntington Beach Environmental Council mem- bers have been told. About 40 irate residents who live near the plant, located at Coast Highway and Brookhursl · Street, told the advisory group the problems have persisted srnce mld·summer. The odors and flies are caused by drying digested sludge, ac· cording to William Fox, opera· lions manager for lhe s anitation districts. "We will stop drying the sludge there by mid-December," Fox said Friday. He said lhere have been a number of complaints about the problem. But apparently. few local resi. dents had heard about the de· ci!ion to stop drying s ludge at lhe plant, according to Margar et Carlberg, a council member. Fox said the decision lo stop the p~ess was made about a month ago. The digested sludge is dried and then sold to fertiliier companies, he a said.. Environmental council Cbaitman Keith ~er said the problem may not ooly be dry- ing sludge, but other operations a.swell. The noise problem com~ from a publte address system -.ed at nltht. LewingeT said. · Lewinger said he advised the residents to organize and attend the next sanitation directors meeting Dec. 9 al the Huntington Beach City Hall. "If that doesn't work, you should contact the regional Water Quality Control Board," headded. The council chairman also said, ''These residents are put Ung up with conditions they shouldn't have to. The district should admit their mi.stake. The people deserve an explanation." SWAT Team Called In BB Sniper Attack • --.> ... ·-~-~ O•lly l'tlol Sl•ff -· Ry ROBERT BARKER OI ll•o O~lly Plloo $t•lf A Huntington Beach man who told police he was shootini.t at crows, was arrested early today and charged with assault with a FIREMEN STANO BY AFTER OOUS.ING FIRE THAT FOLLOWED PLANE CRASH Discussion On Airport Postponed Twin Engine Craft Carries Five Men to 0!._athl _!undey In Irvine ___ _ Air Crash In Irvine ·under Probe By HJLAR\' KAVE Of,,,. O•lly l"ltee S~lf An airplane that crashed m · Jrvme Sunday afternoon. killing •two Newport Beach men and three others. will undergo a close examination beginning today. in vestigators said Miss M W "Wally" 1-'unk. a National Trans port:ilrnn Air Safety Board msp<'ctor. said she does not know yet what caused the twin.engine Aero:.tar to crash as it attempted an emergency ,landing m a ne w mdustnal area about one mile away from Orange County Airport But she said the wreckage at the crash site has been removed Ito be scrutinized by her team or inspectors The 4. lS p . m crash killed all 'five on board, including pilot Edward Pisoni. 45. of 2209 Cliff t>rive, Newport li<'acl\.. Jame!> Shortridg<', 37. or is1s curr Drive. Newport B<'ach . J<'rry Bell, 3.1, of 14692 lfyann1 s Port. Tui.ltn. Ro~er Barnell. 36, of 32l7 S ,Artell1a. Santa /\na and Lloyd J enninas. 21. or l \552 Ramtry Lant', In tn<' P'lsoni 1<1 a land dt'veloper and president of the Nt•wport Heat'h firm . Realty Developme nt Corporation Details oo the other erash \'1ct1 m11 are slJll unknown According to w1tneM accounts. the plane was flying south towards Orange County Alrport when the pilot suddenly banked the cran lo the te n and then nose dived into a mound of dJrt just (et>l from buildings The plane '¥8.5 about so reet up when the dive began, witnesses said. The crash sale was orr Aston Slrcet, near Alton Street, in tht' industrial complex. A small fire burned in one or the engines, but was quickly put out by firemen. Three or the men were pitched out of the cabin by the impact and were found near U\e wreckage sltll strapp(!d to their seats, police said. One of the two engines on the p&~e apparentJy failed just prior 1o the crash. A Fountain Valley couple, Austin and Jan Owings. both student pilots, told In· vestlgators they beard an un· ldaltified pilot tell the control tower, "I have one enaine out," minutes berore tbe plane <See PROBE, Page.U) f'I f GOOO GRIEJ: .' ONLV 18 SHOPPING PAYS G 'TIL CHRISTM,AS •1 i Texa s s ·tayer High Court Delays Second Execution WASKINGT<)N CAP) -The U.S. Supreme Court postponed today lhe ~ecutlon of a Tex86 murderer who did not. want his scheduled Friday death in lhe electric chair. delayed. The high court delayed in· definitely the execution of Robert Excell White, a JO.year-old drifter from Waco, Tex .. who says he deserves to die. It was the second time m four days that the Supreme Court de tayed the execution or a pnsoner who wanted to die. On Friday, lhe ju.lices postponed the firing squad e>C"~u ti o n of Utah murderer Gal'y Mark Gilmore, who had convinced slate officials to let him die . White's attorney, J .E Abernathy. asked the court for time to challenge the state's de- ath penally, the indictment that charged White with murder and the method or jury selection used at White's trial. White does not want to appeal, ·however. In a Nov 23letterto1he Supreme Court, White said, "Mr Abernathy is actang against my express instructions and desires I explicitly told him that I aid not wish any federal appeal of any sort whatsoever. "l am mentally prepared to ac- cept the judgment or sentence imposed upon me ... said White, a death row prisoner al Huntsville, Tex.. for the past two years. "Any delay now will only inflict needless mental hardship on me." Gilmore was to have died at SWlrise today, .and would have become the first criminal execut- ed in lhe United States since 1967. His death was stayed al the re· quest or his mother, Bessie * * * A"'Wtr-• EXECUTION DELAYED Texas Kiiier White Gilmore of Milwaukie. Ore. Pre par dt1on of an appeaJ in White's case' and Its considera· tion by the court could take several months. White was convicted of murdering a 7J.year-old grocery store proprietor in a 1974 hold·up. Two teen.age cu!ltomers also were killed during the robbery. Appearing at a New. 1 hearing ln which bjJ eitecution date was set, WhJte told the judge, "U any flJ&n deserves to dJe l tto for the crimea I've committed." WhJte said be wanted Texas to execute him at the earliest possi· bledate. * * * Gil01ore Tells Molll 'I Wish for Death' SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -tton•t know how the NAACP got Convicted killer Gary Gilmore, to you, but please don•t let them his desire to face a firing squad use you as a sympathetic na· al sunrise today thwarted by hJs tlonal appeaJ," wrote Gilmore, Discussion on the long simmer· ing debate over the future of Meadowlarlc Airport has been de· leted from the agenda o f tonight's Huntington Beach City Council meeting. City Administrator Bud Belsito· said the matte1 has been delayed for another two weeks. He said the city staff and the public will have ample 9P· portunily al that time lo reo~ a report on the airport issue de· veloped by tho city stall. "The city council has put in hours listening to the testimony, residents have toil ed for long periods to rlcvclop f .tcts on o:te side or lhe ether on the 1:;f:ue and th~ pilots and airport owners h:ive too much at stake for :iction to be taken without all facts being understood ... Belsito said. "On Dec. 20, the council wall be in a pos1t1on to decide on the question immediately before 1t revocation of a use permit and to make policy which will de· lermine the future or the (See AIRPORT, Page A2 ) Fatally Ill Diver Takes Fina/, Swim Newport Beach pollcc said lo day they believe the body of a scuba diver. found off Corona dcl Mar Main Beach, is that of a terminally ill Garden Grove man who had come to the beach to lake "one last swim." Det. Sgt. Ken Thompson said they believe the dead man is Kenneth L. Jones. 24, of Garden Gove Grove. who was reported missing by his sister on Nov. 30. An autopsy was pending today. According to police reports, two divers. Ray Brackelsberg or Fullerton and Robert Hagedorn of Anaheim, were diving at the south end of the beach at about 9:30 p.m. when they found lhc body of a scuba diver about a quarter of a mile from shore. The body was retrieved by divers from the sheriffs Harbor Patrol. Thompson said the tentative identification Is based on the fact that Jones' car was round at the main beach parltlna lot Friday and that he had told hls sister just before disappearing last week that he was 1oing to 10 ror "one Jutswim." mother'• appeal to the U.S. who was once again ln the prison Supreme Court. wrote an open infirmary today. FRIDGE BROUClrl' letter to her today saying, "l "Mom, thef have no coocem wiab to be dead. we all die. Jt for you or for me. In fact \.hey are DE'D COW r ~ C!H ain •t 00 big deal." less than concerned about any ~n '-..t/L:J. Tbe Jett.er released today hy whlt.e person," Glhnorewrote. "Just 10 minutes allcr our Gilmore's attorney said, "I "Pleaae, Mom, just accept the paper was delivered, I sold the would like to t alk to you and to fact thal 1 doft'l disagree with the refrigerator.'· see you, but for some reason 1 law and tbe sentence that has That's the quick sales success can't, so I am sending this letter been lmpoaed upon me, and I story told by the Newport Beach to you, 10 that the newspapers ·wtsb to be dead. We all die. lt woman who placed this ad In the and the medla will 1et this ain't no bl• deal. Sometimes It is Dally Pilot: meaaact to you." right and proper. · · · Pleaae ac-1s· Whi tt pool Ref rig. the NAACP Ltgal Defense cept my fate, .. be wrot.e. w/lctmaker S7S. ux. Fund fUed \he appeal in behalf of Emeat Dean Wrilbt. DMsloo xxltx the moU>er, Bessie GUmoro. Now d Correcliona direct.of, 1ald SUn· Uvtni ln a Portland, Oro .. 1ub-da.Y QUmoro wu transferred to U you have an lPPlimace 10U wb; ah• ta crippled wlt.b arthritis the prison lnfirtnary because w.nt to convert to c11h, calJ and bu bad her phone dilcon-Warden S.muel W. Smith w• 842-5678. nected. · eoneerned lllat be .:•may bave. We mate it eaay tor Y«t to put "Please dlnuoclate younel! • ~etbi.D' planned for tocla1 • & few wotdJ to work (or 1W. ln ll'om the Uncle Tom NAACP. I ( <See,GILMOaE, h&e A.2).. i.;;uat.___D_tllJr __ J'b_ct_. ___ ..., __ ' deadly weapon after allegedly shooting·at a three-man city sur· veycrew. Mark Allen Smith, 21, of 2801 Huntington St. was taken into custody less than two hours after the alleged sniping incident by members of the police Special Weapons and Tactics <SWAT) squad who had surrounded Smith's apartment. Officers said there was "no problem" in arresting Smith and he was taken into C"ustody without incident. Police said he had a .22 caliber nfle in hi:. possession. The 10-man team surrounded the new complex on Huntington between Clay and 17th streets at 11 a.m. after the three surveyors said they had be~n ~hot at while working in the area. Surveyor Christopher Salkel<t 21, of Seal Beach said he and his companions were working near the intersection of Huntington and Clay when he heard&a Shot followed by the so\md of a bullet · pass\n& close by him. He aaid he dove into a gutter for cover. His fellow surveyors, Rich BoArdmon, · 34, or Sari Juan Capistrano and Gary Harrison, 31. or Hu.'lUngton Beach said they dove behind a palm tree, hoping it would screen them from the sruper. All three said they saw a man dressed in a white T-shirt and white gym shorts kneeling on the second -floor halcony of the nearby apartment complex. When the man went inside, the three s urveyors left. but not after another shot had been fired which Boardman and Harrison said passed between them as they stood in the shelter of the palm tree. Police, led by Sgt. M.L. Sborg were planning to evacuate lbe neighbhorhood as the SWAT team closed in the apartment. Heir Kidnap Suspects Ask Dismissals A motion for dismissal of kid· nap a nd assault charges was filed today in Orange County Superior Court by lawyers for two men accused or attempting to abduct Newport Beach potato chip heir Jack Scudder. Also set for argument today in a criminal case that has been as· signed to Judge Richard J . Beacom 's courtroom ls a motion for suppression or evidence to be used by the prosecution against Wllliam Rudy Wesson. 44, of Tustin and his brother·in-law. Ricki Dale Sellers, 20. of Long Beach. Panels of prospective jurors were awaiting assignment lo Judge Beacom 's courtroom to· day In event that he denies the motJon for dlsmlual. It ls alleged that the two def en· dants kldnaped Scudder, M, or 14~ North Bay Front, Balboa Island, shortly after he left his dentist's office in Huntinaton Beach last August 19. They al- legedly 1ou1bt $250,000 in ransom. Scudder feigned a heart attack in lhe van aUegedly used by l\is two kldnapers and then fought his way to freedom. He will ap· pear as the key prosecution wit· 11ess ii the trial gels under way. Bombs lluin Stores , tONl>ONDERRY, Northern. Shorg, working from a mobile command post set up on Clay Street commanded the ten-man SW AT team and a force of at least another dozen offi cers aided by the police helicopter. HB School Contract Reached Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District of. ficials and teecher repre.sen· tativea reached a tentative con· tract agreement over the weekend. Details of the 1976-77 teachers· contract will not be released until next week, dlstrtcl and teacher officials said. The agreement ended a two· week ·o1d teacher work slowdown. Teachecs were pro· test1nc lhe alleged •low pace or three-month-old cont.tact talks. Many or the teachers refused to attend after-class activities dur· ing the protest. The distriet·s 350 instructors are expected to vote on the pro· posed contract before the end of the week, according to Keith McAffee. Huntington Beach Elementary Teachers Associa· lion president. "We are happy with the ten- tative agreement," McAHee said. "Negotiations ended at 2 a.m. Saturday with a tentative agree· rnent that will go .to the board of trustees for approval at a Dec. 14 special meeting," said Superin· tendent S.A. Moffett. Trustees will meet Tuesday, Moffett said, but are not expect· ed to discuss the tentative agree· ment. City Closes Porno Strip PALO ALTO CAP) -Seven· teen massage parlors and nude dance studios have been shut down by local authorities because of a civil lawsuit alleg- ing both red light and fair bus1· ness practice violations. · "Sexual perversion of whatever nature you care to describe was going on inside the massage parlors for a prtce," said Dennis Lempert, Santa Clara County deputy district at· lorney. A 15·day temporary restrain· ing order closing the parlors was issued by Superior Court Ju<.lke Peter AneUo In resP9"Je to the su1t filed by the dJstrict attorney Coast Weather Sunny throu1b Tuesday with local wtnds. SUgbUy warmu d111 with highs In the 70s, Iowa in the 40s. INSIDE TODA '1 Dfd Howord Ruglwa end hU U/c a hal/ JunoHc7 Two /(1rf'IWT •mplowt• bow writ· ''" a booJJ making that clolm. SH P.Qf• A4. lnde Ireland (AP>-Bombe wrecked ' Al'\'MrS.fVIH Londonderry's downtown sbc1p-' e=.':W. IM8 district Sunday a rew ~ ~· •• Alt AU A• before lO,tOO Clthollca and g:::- t!roteata11ta marched fot tho &:r;t .... cauae of peace •lo Northern ....,... ,..., Ireland. The bombs and ...Wt-=:-·"' ..... Art AU At •• AU All •1 • lnl nre. de1Lro..1ed 16 star. and --... . dam .. ~ Ax al.Mn. ' .. '----...... ---~ RESCUED Mrs. Eileen Smith, being helped here br Newport Fire Information Officer Art Morton, was rescued from burning apart- ment by neighbor. KKK Chief Hit in Head By Protester An unidentified wo man p ic ket proteting charges agl.linsl 13 black Camp Pendleton marines alleging assault on a 1:r o up of wh ite marines. slammed her picket sign over the head of David Duke, national director of the Ku Klux Klan Duke was uninJured The violence erupted bl'lefly when the group protesting the ch arges against th e black mar ines ~potted Duke and other members of the KKK. who held aloft the Klan nag. The picketers were members of the Committee Agains t Racism. a San 01cgo and Los Angeles-based group Picketers chanted "fr~ the blacks." "try tht' Klan •·Another woman p1cket-t~arner sa1d . "We cannot stand and wait until the Klan kills som<'One " Duke said the Klan members were at Pe-ndleton "to i.ecure the rights of white servicemen White servicemen in the military are not being given their rights " He charged that white soldiers were frequently the v1cllms of rac1aJ assaults Reft'mn~ t-0 the picketers· attack. Duke said. "evidently there is no justit'e whatsoever There 1s no law atiainst bf-mg a member of the Klan. Tht' dt'monstrat1on was broken up by m<1nne military pohce Meanwh1lt' Camp PPndleton Opt'ne<I a f::t('t ·find mg IOVC'!;tlR3 lion mtn the r harl:t'" agrun:-1 th1• IJ bl ark m arm<•, toda.\ Rocker Died Of Overdose MIAMI <AP ) An overdose of heroin probably was the cause of rock guitarist Tommy Bolin's duth in a Mlam1 Beach motel. of- ficials say "Autopsy studies are continu- ing. but preliminary rc>sults arc that his death was due to an over- dose of narcotics , probably heroin." O r. Roland Wright . Dade County's ch1l'f med1caJ ex ammer, ~aid Sunday. OAANQI COAST " • DAILY PILOT T~ oP•l\ot)" Cet\t D•H• •·•~ "'"tp'_.,,.'"' I\'"'" "'~, ......... _ ..... ,, 1\.pwOll""9dfN, .... ,,., .. ~ c .. ,, Pv.,.•\l'Wflllll C•l'ftlll•fllf ~•t• to•t-""' .t'• 0¥bttv.ct Me,., •• "''W4t" ,. .. ,..,, ...,. , .. ,. MiJi.-y ~.,,.,, lt....cf\.. ""'"''' .... 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':r.wM~:::'':: ~~ ' r ~ ... ,,,...,, ....... .,,.,.,o .. .-. •• _...._ '"•"' ., ...... ,_ ··~ •• '"'• WU C.111•••1• h-•trl•ll•• !rt ... ,. ... ~J,. =::~r-~.;~ -•Ir, llllflMr 0•1ty Pll91 PMtM by lllc•a•CI 1(-i.r FIREMEN SCALE LADDER TO ATTACK BLAZE Apartment at Park Newport Burns Sunday ~fternoon Neivport Wolllan Rescued in Fire By JOANNE llE\'NOLDS 01 IM 01lly P iiot ~ltf Newport Beach firemen today credited Kurt Kalmbach. 27, son o f Herb Kalmbach. former personal attorney to President Nixon. with saving the life or a neighbor who was trapped in her burning apartment. Firemen said that Eileen G. Srruth. 58. of 1820 Park Newpart. #306. e~capcd with Kalmbach's help, su<rering only singed hair in the Sunday blaze that did more than S75.000 damage to the apart- ment complex. Fire Department spokesman Art Morton said today that Mrs. Smith 1s confined to a wheel chair due to a recent injury and she couldn't open the door to her apartment to escape fames and s mok<' from the 12:45 p.m. fire Morton said the fire apparently started in the bathroom while Mrs Sm ith "'a~ foong lunch in the kitchen She told fi remen she started down the hall when she f1rs l smelled s moke but was turned back by names She said 11ht> then tried to call the fire dcpartment, but the smok<' was too mten'ie and she dt-c1ded to get out Bec:u;ue s he is confined to a wheelche1r a nrl d ue to the heavy s moke. ftie was unahlc to open her front door, Mortonsaid. Kalmbach said he was leaving his apartment, next door to Mrs. Smith's, when he saw the smoke and hurd her fumbling with the door I le ~aid hl'r wh<-elchair was stuck on the basebolild of the thrt>Shold and he helped her over 1t and took her to an apartment down the hall Kalmbach i..11d he y,ent back to h1:-apartment, wht>re his wife y, as calling t.he fire department. and got a hlanket for Mrs Smith and th<'n clo1.ed off a fire door in the complex hallway Kalmbach ~aid his wife and ht>r girlfriend were unable lo go out through the hall alter callin~ the fire department because the smoke was so thick, so they went out to their balcony and climbed down Jn all, 24 rlre department men were r ailed to the blaze which took 20 minutes to control Morton sajd the n ames were con· fined to Mrs. Smith's apartment aJtllouah the common areas of the comple x s uffered heavy smoke damage. Mort.on said residents as well as firemen suffer ed from smoke inhalation and heat cxpogure and one fireman, John Mattson, was treated and released from Hoag Memorial Hospital when a piece of glass from an explodJng win- dow imbedded itself In his knee. Two of Mrs. Smith's neighbors. Nathan aod Frances Krause, both 78, were treated for smokt> inhalation by paramodics who said the couple also suffer from heart problems. A total of s ix fire trucks as well as the paramedics worked at the fire scene under command of Battalion chief Phil Hayden. Morton saJd anotber of ¥fs. Smith's neighbors has taken the fire victim in unlil ot.her Uving arrangements can be made. Theft Suspect Dies ASH FORK, Ariz. (AP) -An armed robbery susped, Wllliaffl A. Corley. 16, of Santa Cna, was killed and another ~uspett , Michael A. Malvlni, 15, of SM Jote, was injured Sunday ni1ht· wbm their 1tolen car was forced olt Interstate 40 by 1 hifhway patrol car • mile weal of th1a northern Arizona eommunlty. •i.ld the Artiona Hi~•>' PaLroJ. '· SAVED HIS NEIGHBOR Newport's Kurt Kalmbach Fro• Page A J PROBE • • cr ashed. • Owings was practicing on the airstrip and Mrs. Owings was in another craft getting gas. Pisom ·s plane had taken off ea rlier in th e da y from Guaymas, Mexico. From the fis- hing gear found in the wreckage, offl<'ials speculated that the men had just returned trom a short fishing vacation . .. rt looked like they were just fi ve guys who ha d had a great time down in Mexico," comment- ed an Irvine Police officer who was at the scene. The plane was r egistered to the Sun Valley Corporallon in Jdaho, but officials said they did not know if the craft was leased or owned by Plsoni, who was report- ed to be an experienced pilot. f',.._PGtJeAI GILMORE ..• when he was to have faced a fir- ing squad for murdering a motel clerk. Gilmore's attorney, Ronald Stanger. s aid his client was "still angered" at the court action his invalid moth.er initiated Thurs- day. The execution -which Gilmore sought as quickly as possible -was stayed for a third time Friday by the U.S. Supreme Court at her r equest. Gilmore tu med 36 Saturday. Wright sald ofnclals feared that If Gilmore remained in his. maJtimum security cell, other in- mates might attempt to slip hlm drugs. He was hospitalized last month after he and his girlfriend, Nicole Barrett, took overdoses of sleeping pills In an apparent suicide pact. Wright said ClJmon would be more isolated in the lnlirmary, where be had been kept under round.the-clock supet"Yialon until three days ago. "Jo the next three days, Gilmore's status may change drastically." Wri,ht said, refer· rin1 to possible further delays fn hllcue. Attorney General-elect Robert 8 . Hansen said Sunday that transcripts requested by the U.S . Supreme Court were completed and would be fUed by Tuesday. Att.orneya say the hi(h court could take weeka to decide whether to 1rant an •ppeaJ, and Ult dld to, a fin a\ Judsment could take more than a year. Fair"le"' Chief: 'Hospital Needs Supervisors' By STEVE MITCHELL Ol llW o .. ,,, ~s~ Gov. Edmund Brown's ap· proval of a plan to add 700 employes to the i.tate's 11 mental hospitals, annO\lnC«l over the weekend, was met wtih with en- thusiasm today by Dr. Michael Levine. cruef admirustrator at Fairview Hospital. But the newly appointed ad- ministrator said that unless there are significant manage- ment changes, an increase in Weekend Traffic Toll at 8 A rash of weekend deaths in Orange County continued Sunday when two people died in separate traffic accidents. The two de aths, one of them on the San Diego Freeway near the San Juan Creek Bridge, brought the county's weekend traffic toll to eight. Killed in the single car crash on the San Diego Freeway early Sunday morning was James Arnold Moy, 38, of 1340 W. Lam- bert Road, La Habra. According to a California Highway Patrol spokesman, Moy apparenUy fell asleep while he was driving south on the freeway near San Juan Creek. The victim ·s car struck an abandoned car parked on a freeway should er, th e spokesman said. Moy reportedly died in Mission Community Hospital about an hour alter the pre-dawn accident. A few hours earlier, Richard Blom, 30, of 318 15th St., Seal Beach. was killed when his auto was struck by another car on the , Garden Grove Freeway in Orange. According to an accu:tent re- port, the car that struck Blom·s auto continued on its l a .m. Sun- day journey without stopping. Saturday night, a 71-year-old woman died two hours all.er be- ing struck by a car as s he crossed Ball Road in Anaheim. Anaheim police said Dorothy Taylor, 3411 W. Ball Road, Anaheim, was crossing the street in !root of her home when hit by a car driven by Gilbert L. Golden of Anaheim. Mrs. Taylor reportedly was crossing Ball Road in mid-block and Golden was not cited. ln a freak accident in Buena Park Saturday afternoon, Blanche Orosco, 49, of SS49 Los Palos Circle, Buena Park, was fatally injured when she tumbled out of her car as it backed oot the driveway at her home. Police believe M rs. Orosco was au.empting to close the door or her auto from the driver's scat when she fell from the car shortly before 4 p.m. The woman died ln La PaJma Community Hospital about rour h~rs alter the accident, police said. staff would not, by Itself. 1m prove service. "l couldn 'l be more pleas ed al the governor's action ," Ur Levine said today. "I need lo compliment the governor on his rather rapid response to action ... Levine said h e didn't know what the breakdown would be for Fairview Hospital. saying the plan, to be initiated by next June, is more complex than "just dis· hing out a <'ertain number of employes to each hospital." Levine said he would like to see more supervisory perso nnel added to the 1, 700-patient facillly in Costa Mesa. "A state program five years ago wiped out all the supervisory positions." he said. "It divided the hospital into 10 programs, which was a good idea, but 1l wiped out all the supervision. "We have no supervising social wor k er , no su p e r vising psychologist, no supervising teacher. "Give me f ive m ore psychologists and who's going to supervise them?'· he asked. Levine said these departments are currently operated by pro- gram managers, "who may not have any expertise ln a teacher or psychologist's background." "The program reorganization did some good th.ings organiza· Uonally, but it wiped out all the professional supe rvision," he said. "That's what I'd like to sec reinstated under Brown's sta!- ftng plans," Levine said. The governor's action Satur- day will result in staffing levels about equal to those required by a bill Brown vetoed last Sep. tember. Brown said he dl't'ided to ex- pand stare levels after recent pilot programs invol\.'ing larger staffs resulted in improvements in the functioning of clients. Brown a lso s aid recent changes in the Department of Health and mental hoop1tal ad- ministrations convjnccd.h.im that the facilities would be well run and the additional personnel pro· perly utilized. Nader Vrges St,eel Probe WASHINGTON (AP ) Consumer advocate Ralph Nader says the Justice Department should open an antitrust in· vestigation of recent price in- creases by the steel industry "Nol only would you uncover whether the antitrust laws have been violated, but your invesliRa· Uon would a lso help emphas iie the close relationship between corporate concentration and in- flation," he and associate Mark Green wrote to the Justice Department. Several major steel companies recently raised prices by about 6 oercent. 2. Hunted in Theft RIVERSIDE (AP> -Police were seeking two men they say µose<i as policemen lo trick Arden Lust , 60, into showing them where he had hidden Sl.040 and then r obbed him. I I . ' APWI""""' TV WRITER MISSING Grace Garment Police Fear TV Writer Abducted NEW YORK <AP) Police have broadcast a 13·state alarm ror the missing wife of formtr Nixon lawyer Leonard Garment. Soap opera writer Crace Gilt'· ment, 49, was last seen Friday af. ternoon at Pennsylvania Station and her husband reported her nussinR Saturday. •' Garment, one-time counsel to former President Nixon during the Watergate investigation, ii a U.S. representative to the Umt· ed Nations Human Rights Com- mission. His wife writes for the daytime television series "Edge 6f Night." '• A family spokesman s aid that Mrs . Garml'nl failed lo show ~P Friday ror 3 psychiatric appoint m e nt f o r tr eatment 'of depression. The missing person alarm ll'iit out by police des cribed her :is ~· foot-4. 115 pounds, with brovm hair and hazel eyes. When Jut sl'en. sh<' was wearin.i:? a pldk turtleneck sweater, slacks, and u brown fur coal. Fro• Pa.-A 1 AIRPORT • • airport," Belsito added. , Homeowners have argued that the planes are too noisy and that the airport operator has faileQ,to comply with applicable city Jal.ts and conditions of th e use permit. The pilots and airport oper*r ha ve ar~ued that the airport. \las there first and thal they have made a conscientious effort to obey laws and to comply with ci- ty requirements. A matter that is scheduled fer tonight's agenda as the issue of . .- pay increase for City Attoroqy DonBonfa. Counc il members balked on giving Bonfa a raise on Nov. 8 when they increased the salary of l2 other department heads. At that l ime, Councilman Richard Siebert leveled criticism at Bonfa 's performance. Siebert. said that he wanted the city council to l ake a look at the facts before making a decision on Bonfa's pay in two weeks. · The regular meeting of the cit y council is scheduled to begin at 7 P m. in rouncil chambers follow- ing a study session at5:l0 p.m. OBESITY, A MAJOR HEAlTH HAZARD ly IOI McCOHCHI! If all the deaths from cancer were eliminated, TWO YEARS would be added to mans life span. If all the deaths r elated to OBESITY were elimi nated , an estimated SEVEN YEARS would be added to mans lite span. YOU can control your health rather than allow your environment to corurol it. (~~2 PHONE: 752-5155 I~· b~~MAYO BODY CONTROL PROGRESS has virtually eliminated the necessity of walking running, lifting or climbing. One modern machine TV holds people In "captive idleness" for an average of ~ I twenty-one hours a week. ~~ I s n 't it about time to oo '::: I ~ " . .. t..T 1 CENTER· fOl llDO .. ITWOllCS Combined w ith nutritional Improvement In muscle tone, posture and weight are realized. lrs •UAUNTllD guidanc;e. circulation, • I Rosults are guaranteed without shots ... pins, starv'1tlon dleta or strenuous exercise. . ·-' 3961 Mec.AITHUI ILVD. I sum IOI MIWPOIT llACH . .. - something about It? .. ~ MAYO BODY CONTROL CEJtTEI l IOUSTC .,,.ACI TO PllYSICAL nnew RI "Uft" "' ' I I i , Irvine VOL. 69, NO. 341, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .... Today'!j Clo!IJiug N. 't'. Sto<:k!i t MONDAY. DECEMBER 6, 1976 TEN CENTS 'Sniper' ~aptured in HuntingtoD Be~ch By .ROBERT BARKER Of lho D•ll• "llotSt.H A Huntington Beach man who told police he was shooting at crows, was arrested early today and chari:ed with assault with a deadly weapon after allegedly shooting at a three-man city sur- vey crew Mark Allen Smith, 21, of 2601 lto.ntinglon St was taken mto custody lci:.s than two hours aflcr the alleged sniping incident by members of the police Special Weapons and Tactics ($WA.T l s quad who had surrounded Smith's apartment. Officers said there was "no problem" in arresting Smith and he was taken into custody without incident. Police srud he had a 22 caliber nne in has passess1on The 10-man team SWTounded the new complex on Hununi:ton between Clay and 17th street:. al 11 a.m. after the three surveyors said they had been shot at while working in the urea. Surveyor Christopher Salkeld, 21, or Seal Beach said he and has companions we re workmg near the intersection or l lunhngton and Clay when he heard a shot Officials. Probe \ ~-I -.. ,. -... ~ ·--...:::....,._ D•l•r ,.1101 S••ff Pho•o FIREMEN STAND BY AFTER DOUSING FIRE THAT FOLLOWED PLANE CRASH Tw1n Engine Craft Carried Five-Men to Deaths Sunday In Irvine Court Order Halts Texas 'Execution WASHINGTON CAP) -The lJ.S Supreme Court postponed jtoday the execution of a Texa..'i murderer who dad not want ha s •scheduled f"taday death 1n the •electric chair. <.lel<1yed. I The high court delayed an 'definitely the execution of Robert 'Excell Whal<'. a JO .year-old drifter from Waco. Tex.. who ~ays he deserves lo die. I IL was the second time l11 four days that the Supreme Court de layed the ell.ecution of a prisoner fwho wanted to die On Friday. th~ justices postponed the fin~ s q uad execution of Vtah murderer Gary Mark Gilmore. who had COO\'tnced state ofCa caal!> to let htm dat' Wh ale '!-attorney , J F. Abernathy. asked the court for Ume lo challenge the slate'> de· ~lb penalt' the 1ndlctmcnl th<1t charRed Whale with murder ancl tht-mNhOd of jur~ .,ell'<'taon used al White's tn;il While does not want lo appeal, howe\ er In•• Nov 23 letter to the ~reme Court. White said, "Mr. Abernalh> 1s artan~ 8Ji:a1nst my express anstrucllons and ctesarcc; I exphcally told ham that I dad not wi!'h any federal appeaJ of any sort whatsoever. ---------------- KKK Director Hit By Woman Picket An unidentified woman picket protetlng charges agains t 13 black Camp Pendleton marines alleging assault on a group o f white marines. slammed her picket sign over the h£'ad of David Duke. national director or the Ku Klux Klan to- da) Appea/,s Court Nixes Farr's Comempt Rap LOS ANGELES CAP) -A California appeals court ordered the Manson trial j udge today lo vacate a contempt sente nce against reporter Wtlliam Farr. thus £'nding Farr's five-year bat· Ue to protect his secret sources. The California 2nd Oastncl Court of Appeals ruhng was an- nounced by the court's clerk, Clay Robbins. who phoned Farr with the news. director of the Ku Klux Klan, to- day. Duke was uninjured. The- violence erupted briefly when lhe- group protesting the charges against the black marines spotted Duke and other members or the KKK. who held aloft the Klanfla&. The picketers were members of the Committee Agatfls t· Racism, a San Diego and Los Angeles·based group. Picketers chanted "free the blacks," "try the Klan." Another woman picket-carrier said. "We cannot s tand and wait until the Klan kills someone.·· Duke s aid the Klan members were at Pendle ton "to secure the rights of white servicemen. White servicemen in the military are not being given their rights." lie charged that white soldiers were frequently the victims of racial assaults. Referring to the picketers' a\tack, Duke said. "evidently the re is no justice whatsoever. There is no law against being a member or the Klan." The demonstration was broken up by marine military police followed by the sound or a bullet passing close by him. He said he dove into a gutter for cover. His fellow surveyors, fiich Boardman, 34, of San Juan Capistrano and Gary Harrison, 31. or Huntington Beach said they dove behind a palm tree, hoping It would screen them from the sruper. e 5 County Men Die In Plane By HILARY KA.VE 011119 D•llr ,.llot 51•0 An airplane that crashed in lrvme Sunday afternoon, killjng two Newport Beach men and three others, will undergo a close examination beginning today, in· vestigators said. Miss M.W. "Wally .. Funlc, a National Transportation Air Safety Board inspect.or, said she does not know yet what caused the twin·engine Aerostar to crash as at attempted an emergency landing in a new industrial area about one mile away from Orange County Airport. But she said the wreckage at the crash site has been removed to be scrutinized by her team or inspectors. The 4: 15 p .m . crash killed all five on board, including pilot F.dward Pisoni, 45, of 2209 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach; James Short.ridge, 37, of 1815 Cll.(f Drive, NewPOrt Beaoh; Jeny Bell, aa. of 14692 Hyannis Port, Tustin, Roger Barnett, 36. of ·3217 S. Artesia, Santa Ana; and l.Joyd' Jennings, 21. of 14.552 Raintree Lane. Irvine. Pisoni is a land developer and president of the Newport Beach firm , Realty Development Corporation. Details on the other crash victims are still unknown. According to witness accounts. the plane was flying south towards Orange County Airport when the pilot suddenly banked the craft to the lert and then nose dived into a mound of dirt just feet from buildings. The plane was about SO feet up when the dive began. witnesses said. The crash site was off Aston Street, near Allon St.reel, in the industrial complex. A small fire burned in one of the engines. but was quickly put out by firemen. Throo of the men were patched out or the cabin by the impact a nd were found near the wreckage still strapped to their seats, police said. One of the two engines on the plane apparently failed just prior to the crash. A Fountain Valley couple. Austin and Jan Owings, both s tudent pilots, told in· vestigators they heard an un· identified pilot tell the control <See PROBE, PageA2> "[am mentally prepared lo ac. ccpt the Judgment of sentence hTtposcd upon me." '>aid What£', a ckath row prai.oner at Huntsville, Tex.. for lht' past two years "Any delay now will only inflict needless mental hardship on me " Gilmore was to have died al IUhrise today. and would have become the first criminal execut- <See WHITE, Page A2l Although the text of the ruling was not immediately available, it was believed that the three- Judge panel held that Superior Court Judge Charles Older was improperly trying to prosecute Farr twice for the same offense. In a hearing Nov. 23, Justice Mildred Lillie asked critically how many times Farr could be punished. Older vowed to send the re· porter back to Jail for refusing to reveal which of the 11ix trial at· tomeys gave him Information for a story published during the 1970 trial of convicted mass murderer Charles Manson and three mem· bers of his cult. 3 Adnrl.nistrators Get Salary Hike Or~~:c41:ast Weather Sunny through Tuesday with local winds. SUghUy warmer days with ttigM In the 70s, lows in the 40s. l~SIDE TODA\' Did Ho1DOrd Hughes end hu hit a half lu11otic? Two former employei haue wnt· ten a hook making that claim. &e P.age A<f. , lade~ ., ... AU At .,.,. AU AU A• Al AU "" ll Farr .served 46 days behind bars ln 1973 but was rele8$ed by the U.S. Supreme Court pending appeals. "The one good thing that has come out of the whole ordeal. I think." said Farr afterward, "is that the courts are now con· vinced that the protection of news sources is a sacred com- mandment to reporters and no amount or time in jail will get them to break their promise." Now with the Los Angeles Times, Farr covered the Manson trial for the Lo:t Angeles Herald· Examiner. School Plan Upset WASHINGTON CAP> -The Supreme Court today vacated a sweeping school desegregation order for Austin, Tex., and sug· teated that the Jowcr couru should adOJ>t a more limited inte· ar•tion plan. Salary increases have been given · lo three Irvine Unified School Dis trict administrators. The raises were approved by trustees during executive sessions at their last two meet· ines, according to district. Personnel Director Dela ine Richards. Super intendent Stan Corey's salary was increased from an an· nual $40,000 to $44,000. Marilyn .... GOOO GRIES: : ONLY t8 • SHOPPING DA'/S .e 'TIL CHRISTMAS If ' • I: j I . I t • ... \ % ... • ' ,_ ~ Harris, assistant superintendent for educational suppe>rt services. was raised from $30,000 to $32.000. Richards• salary was in· creased from the $27,800 he re· ceived as a school principal last year to his current P>,000 as the district administr ator in charge or personnel. While trustees were raising salaries, they also lowered one. R1ymond Edman'a salary was decreased from an annual $32,000 to S31.000. Richards explained that Ed· man's job classlflcatlon was changed. He was previously a de· puty su p erintendent, with responsibility in several areas. Now, Edman Is considered an a11slatant sup erintende nt In char1e of plannin, the educa· Uooal program at future school facllitiea . "When his job cbanaed to al· aistant auperfntendeot, his 1alary had to 10 down tbo, to match," JUchards expl•lne4. The 1alary or Gene Mattlin•, the new district bu1tae11 manateT, was also COldlrmed bt lru1teta. Hartline la earnlnf -·$31,000 per year. All three said they saw a man dressed In a whl~ T-shirt and wttite gym shorts kneeling on the second-floor balcony of the nearby apartment complex. When the m an wentlnslde, the three surveyors left, but not after another shot had been fired whicb Boardman and Harriaon said passed between them as they stood in the shelter ot the palm tr~. Police. led by Sgt. M.L. Sborg were ptanntnc to evacuate the nelghbhorhood as the SWAT team closed In the apartment. Shorg, wor.klng from a mobile command post set up on Clay Strffl commanded the ten.man SWAT team .and a force of at least another dozen officers aided by the police helicopter. Air Crash OMty~se.«-.. RESCUED -Mrs. Eileen Smith, being helped here by Newport Fire Information Officer Art Morton, was rescued from burning apart· ment by neighbor. Traffic Toll Reaches Eight On Weekend A rash ol weekend deaths In Orange County contipued Sunday when two people died in separate traffic accidents. The two deaths, one or them on the San Die10 Freeway near the San Juan Creek Bridge, brought the county's weekend trafClc toll to eight. Killed In the single car crash on the San Diego Freeway early Sunday morning was James Arnold Moy, 38, or 1340 W. Lam· bert Road, La Habra. According to a California Highway Patrol spokesman, Moy apparently fell asleep whUe he was driving south on the freeway near San Juan Creek. The victim 'a car struck an abandoned car parked on a f reeway s h oulde r , lhe spokesman said. Moy reportedly died in Mission Community Hospital aboqt an bour after the pre·dawn accident. A few bo11r1 earlier, Ric~•rd Blom, 30, or 318 lSlh St, Seal Beach, was killed when bls auto was struck by another car on the Garden Grove Freeway in Orange. (See TOLL, Pa&e A2) Rocker Died QI OverdQae • M~Ml (AP) -AnCMtdoe~ot heroin probabll was the c.atWe of rock (UitulaL Tommy Bollrl'I dutb in a Mt a ml Buch mole!, of. JlclalsSQ • "Autopey sLudla an. conUnu· me. but preliminary , .. uita are that hi• death was due to an over· doH ol DJfCO\ICt, pr9bably h•roJn," Dr. ftol.00 Wrl1bt, PaM Count.Y's ehlet ~al .x· amlner, said Sund~. Woman Rescued In Fire ~ By JOANNE llEVNOLDS Ofllle 0.lly ,., .... _ Newport Beach firemen today credited Kurt Kalmbach, Z7, son or Herb Kalmbach, former personal attorney to President Nixon. with saving the life or a neigtlbor who was trapped in her burning a partment. Firemen said that Eileen G. Smllb, 58, of 1820 Parle Newport, t306, escaped with Kalmbach's help, suffering only singed hair in the Sunday blaze that did more than $75,000 damage lo the apart· ment complex. Fire Department spokesman Art Morton said tod:iy that Mrs. Smith is confined to a wheel chair due to a recent injury and she couldn't open the door to her apartment to escape fames and smoke from the 12:45 p.m. fire. Norton said the fi re apparently statled tn the bjlthroom while Mrs. Smith was llxinC lunch in the ldt.c:fMD. ' Sbe told firemen she started down the ball when she first smelled smoke but was turned back by n ames. Sbe said she then tried to call the fire department, but the smok~ was too intense and she decided to a:et out. Bttaaue she is confined to a wheelchair and due to the heavy s moke, s he was unable to open her front door, Morton said. Kalmbach said be was leaving his apartment. next door to Mrs. SmUb's, when he·sawtbe smoke and beard her fumbling with the door. He said her wheelchair was stuck OD the baseboard Of the threshold and be helped her over 1t and took her to an apartment down the ban. Kalmbach aaid he went back to his apartment, where his wife was calling the fire department. and got a blanket for Mrs. Smith and then closed off a fire door in the complex hallway. Kalmbach said his wife and her girlfriend were unable lo go out throush the hall after calling the fire department because the smoke y.oas so thick. so they went out to their balcony and climbed 'down. In aJJ. 24 fire department men were called to the blate which took 20 minutes to control. Mort.on said the names were con- tmed to Mrs. Smith's apartment althouah the common areas of the complex surrered heavy smoke damage. Morton said resldenta as well as firemen auff ered from srnoke inhalatlPn and heat exposure and <W a£SCUE, Pa&e AZ> . Al DAILY PILOT Missing Woman t • Hunted NEW YORK CAP> Police h;.ive broadcast a 13-!Jtate alarm for the mi.ssmg wile ol former Nixon lawyer Leonard Garment. Soap opera writer Grace Gar ment, 49, was last seen Fnday af· temoon at Peon:1ylvanla Station and her husband reported her missinll Saturday. Garment. one-time counsel to former President Nixon during the Watergate investigation. is a U.S. representative to the Unit· ed Nations Human Righl.s Com· mission. His wife writes for the dayt.Jmc televis ion series "Edge of Night." A family spokesman said that Mrs. Garment f:uled to show UJl Friday for a psychiatnc appoint· ment for treatment of depress a on The mas:.ang person alarm put out by police des<.'nbed her as 5 foot-4, 115 pounds, with brown hair and hazel eyes. When last seen, she was wearing a pink turtleneck sweater. slacks, and a brown fur !'oat District, City Set Meeting Irvine City Council mcmb<>rs and Irvine Jlan<.'h Water District d1r<'ctors will meet informally Tuesday night in an attempt lo improve communication between the agencies. The meeting w11l begm at 7 JO p m. at the new city hall, 17200 Jamboree Road. The session 1s the result of a conflict that arose at the la~l council meeting, when council members r ealized they were un· aware or many or the water dis· tnct 's activ1t 1es The IRWD 1s involved in an an nexat1on agreement with the Irvine Company and Oran~c County Sanatalaon District #5. But council members said they knew nothan~. or little. about 1t Council members and the IRWD board president. Lansing Eberling, said lhey hehevcd both agencies would benefit if they had an informal !>CSSaon to iron out diHic ultic-; and lo discuss common problems and interests "I see this meeting as a good !>tarting poinl to"ard l\\o wa) cvmmuna\'alion," Eberling <.'Ont mented todoy "J expect 1t to go a long way towards ht>lµang the <.'aly ;1nd the IHWU underst.ind each otht•r ~ problems and needs and to !-.ee which areas can be worked out mutually. 'he added f'ro111 r • .-;\ J PROBE • • • tower. "I have one engme out. ' m 1 n u l t' s bl' I " r (' the p I an l' crashed Owings was practicing on the Jarstrip and Mrs Owings was m .inolhN <-rar1 l:<'lllng gas P1son1·s pl.me had taken off c .irl1 c r in the day fr o m Ciua> mas. Mexico From the fis hang gear found In the wreckag<•. orra<.'1als <,peculated that the men had JUSt returned from a short flc;hmg vacation "It looked like they were ju\l five guys who h3d had a great tame down tn Me'C1co," comment rd an Irvine Police orfker who was at the seen<' The plane wa'I reeistered t.othc Sun Valley Corporation In Idaho. but officials said they did not. knqw if the craft was lea.<1ed or owned by Pi~oni. who wa.s report· ed lo be an experienced pilot. Of!ANQE COAST DAILY PILOT 1"i" 'lt.4ftQA C<M\t 0•111 ,,Oet w.t .. _....l"-I•,~ D-"'°dO~,,.,..,, Pf~' 1\~l)l~b'ttN()r~ ~,·~·~:.~..::.:... '"r.::,"t!.~.: ...... ... _ MK-, "°"'41"""" loKllf1:- 9•1ft "•"••· ,,.,.~ ........... .,., .. , .. l-loo<ll,_11\~ A-~ltdl· , .... ·~·-._..,.Md......,., n.. :.'::.c...':"'~=~i.=' ... ~.:a..-"'"" ... -·-,..,_.,..,_,_ ,., •. °"'" Y\ct ..... i-. .... ..-.. ~ -··-· .... ~AM.,_ ,,_. ........ 1: .... °'"""" ~ ·-"-"'"•••fll•Mt~f'llt~ ... a.e .. C..•• ..... "'"&=~-. ... !::;-....... t<J.i ·~11 ... .=:!... $o4111-~Yt110 Jttf<Wl"ot ..... ··~°'-"-' Te19Mne ~)911-U21 Cl1a~UY~~ w..i.--.v.1it,_Ollk• Nt.Q10 ,___,_Cl_ ·~· ~'r: :.:~ <>:.:. ~.::.~:.= "'tllor or tdvtr111fl9..,t• ...,,,,. fl'\tf "-"''tf•Cte ...... ~ .. ••u••• ,...-fll!lulff •• ..... ..,,..,_ .. tm:.:.~".::::~~"~".:1.~::. ~':. ~r....·»::::..:~~ ,..,..., .. ,, ......... .. Tax Cut Uncertain Carter Keeps 'Open Mind' on Economy ,.,. tlrl,.tpNlft TV WRITER MISSING Grace Garment Fairt1iew Chief: PLAINS. Ca. (AP) - Praident-elect Jimmy Carter, disagreeing with h1s newly ap- pointed budget director. said lo· day a tax cul 1s not a virtual cer- t.runty next year. Carter said it is too early to tell what steps might be needed lo 5llmulatc the t.>eonomy. Carter said he is not convinced yet that culling taxes is the th.ing to do. ''l'm deliberately keeping my mtnd open," he declared. "I have advisers who are leanir.g all dif- ferent directions, but I'll wait and see.'' The presidenl·elect said he will consult closely with Congress before deciding wbat lo do about 'Hospital Needs Supervisors' By STEVE MITCHELL Of the O~lly Pilot Si.ti Gov. Edmund Brown's ap. proval of a plan to add 700 employes to·the state's 11 mental hospitals, a nnounced over the weekend, was met wtih with en· thusiasm today by Dr. Michael Levine. chief admirustrator at Fairview Hospital. But the newly appointed ad mmistralor said that unless there are significant manage- ment changes, an increase 1n staff would not, by itself, im· prove ser vie,e . "I couldn't be more pleased al the governor's action,'' Dr. Levine said today. "l need lo compliment the governor on has rather rapid response lo action.·' Levine said he didn't know what the breakdown would be for Fairview Hospital. saying the plan. to be initiated by next June. is more complex than "JUSl dis hing out a ~ertain number of employes to each hospital." Levine said he would like lo set' more supervisory personnel added to the l ,700·patient raciltty in Costa Mesa. "A stale program hve years ago wiped out all the supervisory positions." he said. ·•it divided the hospital Into 10 program~. which was a good idea, but al wiped out all the supervision. "We have no supervising social worker . no superv 1 s1n~ 'Wish to Die ' ~ Gilmore Tells Mom in Appeal SALT l.AKE CITY CAP> Convicted killer Gary G1lmon-. tU6 desire to face a fn'ing squad at sunrise today lh1A <1rted by his mother's appeal to the US Supreme Court. wrote an OJll'n letter to her today saying, "I wish to be dead. We all die It ain't no big d~I " The letter "fcleased today by Gilmore's attorney said, "I would like to talk to you and to stt you. but for some reason J tan't, so I am sending this letter to you. so lhal the newspaper!> and the media will gel this rnessage lo you ... The NAACP Legal Defense l"und filed the appeal in behalf 1>f lhe mother, Bessie Gilmore. Now living in a Portland. Ore, sub· urb. s~ is crippled Wtth arthnt1s and has had her phone dascon nec-ted. .. Please disassociate yourself from the Uncle Tom NMCP I don't know how the NAACP got to you, but please don't let them use you as a sympathetic na· tionaJ appeal," wrote Gilmore. who was once again In the prison infirmary today. "Mom. they have no concern for you or for me. In factlhcy are less than concerned about any white per son." Gilmore wrote. "Please. Mom, JUSt accept the fact that l don't disagree with the law and the sentence that has been imposed upo11 me, and I wish to be dead. We all die. It ain't no big deal. Sometimes it ls right and proper. . . • Please ac- cept my fate," he wrote. FRIDGE BROUGHT HER COLD CASH "Just 10 m inutes after our paper waa dellv~red, I sold the refrigerator." That's the quick sales auccesii story t.old by the Newport Beach woman who placed t.hls ad in the Dally Pltot: 1S' Whirlpool Refrlg. w /lcemaker $75. xxx· )(l(JCX 1l you have an appliance you w&nt. to convert to cash, call 6'Ni678. We make lt eosy for you to put . a few words to work for you, tn the Dally PUot. psychologist. no supervising teacher. "Give me five more psychologists and who's going to supervise them'!·· he asked. Levine said these departments are <·urrently operated by pro· ~ram managers. "who may not have any expertise in a teachC'r or psychologist'!> background." "The program reorganization dad some good things urgamza- t1onally, but it wiped out all the profes:.1onal supervision," he said ''That's "hat I'd like lo :.ec rl'mstaled under Brown's staf- fing plans," Levine said . Heir Kidnap Suspects Ask Dismissals A motion for dismissal of kid nap and assault charges was filed today in Orange County Superior Court by lawyers for two men accused of attempting lo abduct Newport Beach potato chip heir Jack Scudder. Also set for argument today in a criminal case that has been as· s igned t o Judge Richard J . Beacom's courtroom is a motion for suppression or evidence to be used by the prosecution against William Rudy Wesson. 44.. of Tustin and his brother-in-law. R1ck1 Dale Sellers. 20, of Long Beach. Panels of prospective jurors were awaiting assignment lo Judge Bea<.'om 's courtroom lo· \lay m event that he derues the motion for dismissal. It is alleged that the two def en· dants kidnaped Scudder, 64, of 145 North Bay Front, Balboa Island. s hortly after he left his dentist's orri<.'e in Huntington Beach last August 19. They al· legcdly sought $250,000 in rnnsom . &udder feigned a heart attack In the van allegedly used by his two kidnapers and then fought his way to freedom. He will ap· pear as the key prosecution wit· ncss if the trial gets under way. RESCUE ..• one fireman, John Matt.son, was treated and released from Hoag Memonal Hospital when a piece of glass from an exploding win- dow imbedded itself m his knee. Two of Mrs. Smith's neighbors, Nathan and f''rances l\l'aust:, both 78, were treated for smoke inhalation by paramedics who s aid the couple also suffer from heart problems. A tot a• of six fire trucks as well as the paramedics worked :it the fire scene under command of Battalion chief Ph i I Ila yd en. Morton said another of Mrs. Smith's neighbors has taken the' fire victim in until other living arrangements can be made . Flip Slightly Injures Man A 23-year -old Tustin man escaped with minor Utjuries an Irvine Saturday after his pickup truck swung wide during a right· band turn and flipped over. Mtcbael Victor Cruz, of 13922 Tustln lt:Hl Drive, reportedly complalned of pain in the left. shoulder and was treated and re· leased at Tustin Community Uospllal. ' Police utd he waa turning from San Joaquin onto Sandburl Way about 5:53 p.m. when bis truck bit a divider and over · turned, cauatna m~ordamageto the truck. I the economy. Thomas ''lh•rt '' l.ann•, Carter's choice lo bt· dir<•ctor of lht• OCC.ce of M anagemcnl and Budget, said Sunday that a lJX cut early in the new adm1mstru- tion is "virtually certwn " But at an informal news con· rerence today . Carter dcclurc..'<I . "11 's too early to decide I wouldn't say 1t was virtually cer- tain, although it is one or the possibilities." Carter did say t~at a perma· nent or temporary tax reduction is possible "if the economy needs stimulatl9n, and I think at this point it appears that" ay." Another option, Carter said, are programs lo put peopll' lo work He said it will be dlH1cull to meet his goal of rodueing un- employment by 1 5 percent dur· mg his first year in office. bul promised to make effort to do :.o The nation's unemplo) ment rate stands al 8 1 ix·rcent, or about 7 .8 m11l1on pC<lplc Lane~ told the Los Angeles Timt>s ltlat a tax cut of up lo $15 billion possibly 111 the form or a rebate on 1976 1n<·onie taxes probably will be proposed by Carter. He 1>uggestcd that a tax cut will be part of a packitge to stimulate the economy that wall mclude a jobs program and tax tnvestment credits to spur in· dustrlal expansion. Asked earlier on CBS TV':. "Face the Nation" about th{• possibility of a lax cul, Lance said that other possible economil· stimulants "are so limited that I think you have to consider that almost a certainty." Carter has said he would con sider a lax cut if the econorrur signs indicated a need for om• after he takes orrice Jan. 20. The f''ord administration has pro. posed a SlO·bilhon cut in m<.'om e taxt>s next \'ear. built around a proposed S2So increas<' 111 the pre sent $750 personal exemption Fatally Ill Diver Takes 'Last Swim' Candidate Arthur I\ Flctc·h<'r, deputy assistant lo President Ford fur urban affairs, is an an- nounced c·andidate for the job of Hcpul>lican National Chairman. Ile says the party needs a n administrator to help it win elections and not argue over philosophies. Newport Beach police said lo· day they believe the body of a scuba diver, found off Corona d<'I Mar Main Beach, is that of a terminally ill Garden Grove man who had come to the beach to take ··one Jasl swim." Del. Sgt. Ken Thompson said they believe the dead man 1s Kenneth L Jones, 24 , of Garden Gove Grove. who was reported missing by his sister on Nov 30. An autopsy was pendmg today. According to police reports, two divers, Ray Brackelsberg or Fullerton and Robert Hagedorn of Anaheim. were diving at the south end of the beach at about 9:30 p.m . when they found the body or a scuba diver ahout a quarter or a mile from shore Frone Page AJ TOLL ... According to an arc1dcnt re· port, the car that struck Blom's auto <.'Ontinued on its I u m Sun day journey without stoppin,:: Saturday night. a 71·ycar old woman died two hours after be· ing struck by a car as s he crossed Ball Road in Anaheim Anaheim police said Dorothy Taylor, 3411 W. Dall Road. Anaheim. was crossm~ the strt.'el in Cront o(her home when hH hy a car driven by GallJert L (;olden of Anaheim Mrs. Taylor reportedly was crossing Hall Road an mid-block and Golden was not cited. In a freak accident m Buena Park Saturday afternoon. Blanche Orosco, 49, or 5549 Los Palos Circle. nuenn Park.· wus fatally m1ured when ~he tumbled out or her car as al bucked out the driveway at her home. Police believe Mrs. Orosco was attempting In close the door of her auto from the driver's st•at when she fell from the car shortly before4 p .m The woman died in La Palma Community Hospital about four hours after the accident. police said. IT WORKS The body was retrieved by divers from the sheriff's Harbor Patrol. Thompson said the tentative ' identification is based on the fact that J ones' car was found at the main beach parking lot Friday and that he had told his sister just before disappearing last week that he was going to so for "one last swim." Body Found Beside Lake Identified A sear ch and rescue team or gan1zed by Orange County Sheriffs officer!\ found the l>Qd y of a 20-year·old man Sunday m lhe Irvine Lake area. two wcl'kS after he was reported missing from his home in Orange. Coroners officers identified the body as that of Michael John O'Brien. The cause of death has been listed as suicide pending tht' outcome of an autopsy which •~ under way today. OHi <.'crs s airl they found the badly deco mposed remains about a mile south or Irvine Lake. close to the spot where O'Brien's .abandoned car w•s found Nov. 24 . · Orficers said an investigation of the victim's background strongl~ supports the theory thill he took his own hfc. U.S. Aid Refused WASHINGTON <AP) -Philip· pine authorities arc upset by a SC· quence or events last week which they interpret as a heavy-handl'd Stale Department effort to break u stalemate in negotiations over U .S. military bases in The Philip· pinC'S. The M anila government has rejected a U.S. proposal for $1 billion in U.S. aid over the next rive years in return for continued U.S. use or military bases. Fro111 Page Al WHITE ... ed in the United Slates since 1967. Hts death was stayed at ll\e re· quest of his mother. Bessie Gilmore of Milwaukie, Ore. Preparation or an appeal in White's case and its considera- tion by the court could lake several months. Whit<" wa s con victed or· murdering a 73·year·old grocery store proprietor an a 1974 hold-up. Two teen-age customers also weTe killed dtrring the robbery. Appearing al a Nov . I hearing 111 wha<.'h has cxecutaon dale was· set, White told the Judge. "If any man deserves to die I do for the crimes I've com milted." White said he wanted Texu.s lo execute him at the earliest possi- ble datl' Nader Urges~ Steel Probe Wl\SlllNGTON CAP) Consumer advocate Ralph Nader says the Justice Devartment should open an a ntitrust in- vestigation of recent price in- c-rcases by the steel industrv: "Not only would you uncover whether the antitrust laws have heen violated. but your investiga- tion would abo help emphasize the close relationship between <.'orporate concentration ancl in- flation," he and associate Mark' Gr<'en wrote to the Justice Departm_N•l. · Several m:.i1or steel companies recently raised prices by about G ocrcenl. OBESITY, A MAJOR HEAL TH HAZARD ly IOI McCOHCHIE If all the deaths from cancer wer e eliminated, TWO YEARS would be added to mans life span. If all the deaths related to OBESITY wer e elimina t ed, an estima ted SEVEN YEARS w ould be added to mans life span. YOU can control your h ealth rather than a llow your en vironment to control it. PROGRESS h as virtually eliminated the necessity of walklng running, lifting or climbing. One modern machine TV holds people In • "captive idleness" for an average of ,. twenty-one hours a week. ! . I sn 't it about tim e to DO something about it? MAYO BODY CONTROL CENTER A IWJSJIC AmlKM TO PtfYSICAl nTNESS FOi "UfE" Combined with nutritional guidance. improvement in muscle tone, circulation, posture and weight are reahzed. rT•s GUARANTEED Results are guaranteed without shots, pills, starvation diets or strenuous exercise. 3961 Mec:AaTHUR ILVD. SUITI IOI MIWPOIT llACH t .~ i } ' ·. MonJay'tt Closing Price~ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS °"°'"'Ofl' lrci..ot tr-•..,'""~-York 11110 ... 1, "••Ille Pll'N &Mlon 0.1ro11..,.. Cl,.<•1111<111 •I•<\ •••~•-,_,,.. •r Hi. H•'""''' "•Ml<l•llon of S.CIW•U .. Oor•i.n •All 1n.11rw1 Mond1r. Dec1mbe1 15 1976 DAii. y Pll.OT A J • Wash Out Shampoo Test Fri zzes By MJLTON MOSKOWITZ Does it make any d.ifferenc~ wh.ich shampoo you use"! It makes a considerable dtlterence, of course, to the pro· ducers With Americans spendlna more than half a billion dollars a year on shampoos, Procter & Gamble < P&O) cares passionately whether you buy Head & Shoulders, and Clairol m New York will worry lf you don 'l u5e Herbal Essence. To remind you to rnakethe buy Ina dec1s1on m thelr favor. P&G spends more than $10 million a year louting the virtue$ oC Head & Shouldel'fl, while Bristol-Myers, the corporation that owns Clairol. must spend close to SS m1lbon promollnJt Herbal Essence ~· This persuas ion ·' ~ Money works. Or else the pro-, · duct works well enough Tree for users to repeat their purchases. Maybe both In any case, these arc two of the wlnners m the contest ror- your shampoo dollars. Head & Shoulders is the most popular shampoo in the country. And 1t has been so far a lot or years. Its marketsharc has been shaved recently. but it still does about 1:; percent of the total business. Add Prell's 7 percent and tbatg1ves P&G a shiny 22 percent or the hair shampoo mark et Herbal Essence, which Clairol maxes with a heavy whiff of fragrance, ls one of the fastest growmR brands in the fi eld Only five years old, it's already in third place with an 8 per cent share of the mark el BUT DOES I T MAKE ANY difference lo your hair which shampoo you use,? Consumer Reports, that redoubtable m agaime that tests products and rates them by brand. investigated shampoos In its November issue It 1dent1f1ed quickly the contents ot shampoos· "Usually. JUSt water <lots of 1t). detergent, foam mi; agents, a dab (or two or three) of fragrance and an 1m · agmat1ve variety of other stuff of ltttle or no value except tn selling points " IT'S TUE DETERGENT THAT gives s hampoos their cleaning ab1hly Consumer Reports was unabl~ to develop any I aboratory tests lbat could ertectivety evaluate shampoos lt said, in ef. feet: What's good for one person may be bad for another. So what 1t did do was to test 77 shampoos by g1vmg them lo 217 men and women totryfortwoweeks This as the kind oftest a manufacturer might make, using lhe results only 1f It!> brand came out at the top IN THE CONSUMER REPORTS' lest, the l wo brands re ce1vmg the highest ratings were Head & Shoulders <the cream version, not the liqwd) and Protem21 for dry hair. The magazme found there 1s a sharp split between whit men and women prefer in a shampoo, but these two brandS were liked by both sexes. With Head & Shoulders. lhe panel thus confirmed u verdict already rendered m the marketplace That·s not the case with Protein 21, a shampoo marketed by the Mennen Company. When it appeared, with the promise that protein would give hair new body and bounce, Protem21 rus hed to an 8 percent market share It has now dropped back to2 percent For Consumer Reports, then, this shampoo test provide;'<! no dear·cut answers. It spilled out the Judgments or 1ti. panelists and ended up adv1smg its 2 m111lon subscnbers a~ follows· "Don't believe the ads. Just trust your own hair and your own m!ltmcts " ·Small Gain Due For Yule Buying Estimates indicate total retail sales during lhe holiday season m California will climb 7 to 10 percent over last year's bohday sales act1V1ly, according to Security Pac1f1c Bank. ln issumg its annual forecast or hohday spending the bank's research department said the estimated mcrea~e in consumer spending will mean a "reaJ · · gam of 2 to 4 percent for retrulers. CALI FORNIA. CONSUME RS ARE EXPECTE{) to be somewhat cautious m theu spending dunng the holiday per'iod and may not be swept up as much by the spmt vf the season as they were last year, the report said While personal tncome has grown m recent months and consumers have been able to recover some of their former purchasmg power, the bank's economists say they expect shoppers will be less prone to impulse buymg than they were this time last year. Researchers attribute this more cautious attitude to several factors, mcludmg contmuang concern over a return to the double·dl('1l mflat1on rates or a couple of years ago and the persistently high over·all Job- less rate. Retatlers apparently are m much the same mood, as evidenced by their careful appraisals and constant monator- mg of mventories The bank's researchers say merchanL'> hope to keep just eno;.igh on the shelves lo meet expected de· ( CONSV~IER ) mand This raises the poss1bll1ty that, if merchants have mis· calculated and demand exceeds proJeclions , some s hoppers may find empty shelves before the season is over, th<' bank says As for what Cal1fom1a consumers are buying the bank's researchers say some or the more popular item; will mclude home furnishings. small appliances and men's and women's clothing. They say more casual clothing should sell particularly well this season, as Californians adopt more relaxed and mformaJ dress styles in the office as well as at home . . TOY SALES ARE EXPECTED TO DO well this seruion: children and cautious spending usually don't go together at Utis time of year, the economl.sls say Construction Increases New residential construction activity ln Calilornla con· tJnued to Increase during October, according to Bank of America., New housing starts in October increued to a seasonally adjusted rate of 226,000, an lncrease of 7 percent from the re· vtsed 211,000 r ate for September. Bank economist.a said actual housing starts ln the state lor lhe first 10 months of 1976 were up SO percent from the same period a year ago. t .4Jf OAILYPILOT IOOMER ~HoLP! You Ne~o ro S01L.O UP YOUJZ CO~F10£~CE ! Monday. Dtcemoer &. 1m INSIDE WOODY ALLEM Jo I(~ you f'lit'06A8t, y vo.i ·,... -rnoJ K ~1sof ~ WOPot, ~e you ""'11.:y t'.'UOUJ M€ A> A~ A6eN'f. .. FUNKY WINKERBEAN . . - ------- .. 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'c.-r H ~ll!t 1 J l er;.,.,, C'vcr "'"''"""'"'"~ q(,,, .. , ,,,, OQl/IN ? t VQIJMj ,. m,1 1 •Hail ~ 4 I Ci\I 01 Qtll· I 'l ()lllV ~r~, .,, 9n1 i!>H·"dll<I·• ') lll'Clan o.il.11 ~ ,,.. P•N ;'!) The ~<Io' J v. ~r 1>~0111 • •,,., lorl~ "( mola"'''' lrlo,.,141 l ( "~'$ 1 h olt oar ts 8 A 0ro11~h t~•e Abbr 9 ( •POSure IO pprol 11 Vnuo9 O• ;>8 [ v•l'Ot'dn ·IY 2:l ! u• f'31o(•n Comb lorm JO f'lan1 fungus 3 I Soiled with liy 3!.h 34 C \l1mol1"'1 I -11.. 1Qa ~ l'J l o••t .. o •' < •e11n l>I' ~tr1,100"1!1 H in a .. · Het uo H' dUQh llJdP.ly •ti C'ariddd ~ CllO•lal '>I Gruond 'WPll !>7 Frenth 11 1nen ts 53 PI ,,,,.. !>4 J.nCtl'/11 t.roei.. "'~ti. !,~ r °"'!tome lnlOfmal 56 011 CO\llll!Y !i 1 Sh toot 1492 !>8 Weap011s $11119 f,0 H<1rem room f $ECOND-~1. TANK ... by Emie Bushmiller ~-·.·~~ > • ~-,._... • -.. "T' ,_, PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER As GAit!' 15 TOLD TO 'fMPrf 1115 POCKETS &fTHE POLICE OfFICElt, rr·s APPARENT TllAT HE'S CAAR:YING A, lAR.Eif AMOU~T OF CA5+4! TUMBLEWEEDS .. .... ~·~ MISS PEACH I ' J l • AP.1~UR'S' A PVICE Fofl. B<;'i( W1TN p£08L£Ab ~rrtf Gl~L~. ~ > • I) I ~-. .... ~ s..~ ...... "" -4,c l~ -:\\ 5 ~.;~ ~ .. ;;:c ~N ,....l.\E --: G.T. DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK 5 0 WHA"f'. K I NP OF AN UL.CE!R HAVE: .r <:SOI, POCT'OR? GORDO MOON MULLINS Li::r's ~ET SOME BEFORE: THEY Go BROKE! by Charles M. Schulz ----------. ( I by Harold Le Doux by Mell L.ovl Yf'T' ANOT\-ar, ANO UT ~OMf.ONW ANO ANOTMn' •«. HOWl\119£ I ,,. YIT ANO'Tl49[ AlAO LOY&~ ANOTMIA:h FINO OUT JlAST" WHAT AN THl!tE ,_, c>OI NG lf'IGMT .... 0 ' by Rodger Bradfltld by GeofCJe Lemont '"f'HE:N ee:L.1eve Me, YOURS I S A eeALJ-r .' by Gus Aniola by Ferd Johnson THE GIRLS ~Novllfe~ IJdNt r Laguna I South Coast • Al'ternoon ~ N.Y. Stocks ·-- VOL. 69, NO. 341, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OEC6M,6ER 6, 1976 Disputed CUSD Vote Off·'·to Co1il·t . . Wmaan Picket KKK Director Hit Over Head An unid e ntified woman picke t pro let1ng c harges aga1nst 13 black C.'.imp Pendleton marines alleging assault on a group of whit e marines, slammed her picket sign over the he•d of David Duke, national director of the Ku KJux Klan to- day. SC Beaches Again Hit 8ySewage The city of San Clemente had another sewage spill today as electrical outage cut power to the pumps and raw sewage backed up and flowed onto the beach. City M<1nagcr Gerald Weeks said 1t was e~ta1matcd about 50,000 gallons of sewage were an \'Olved. Weeks said the 1nt1dent oc curred at :.ibout 7 a.m. when an O\Jtage cut service lo the main Jiimp station at North Beach. Power was restorc.'<1 at a bout ) 7 30a.m. · The incident 1s the !.evenlh e;ewage spill this year for the ci- t y, which has been sl:lppcd with a series or sanctions by the San Diego Regional Water Quality Control board designed to force akl-upgnuilng ..oC lhe towa 'll ' sewagesystem . The sanctions include a ban on • sewer connections, a provision due to be reviewed by the re tdonal board in a meeting next Monday. Jl is unknown how the latest In· cident m11thl affl><'t lht• board's dehberau on!I San Juan Man Target of Sniper in HB 8 .)' ROBERT lMRKt:R Of th• O••IY Pilot ~I.tu A Jlunt1ngto11 Hl'ach man who told J>OlaCt· h<· \\a:. Shoolln~ ;1t C'rnws. wa:. arr<''llt.'d ••arl\ t<oday and C'hBrJ:t•d ~11 h a~'laull with a de1:1dly ~ t>l•pon Jftt>r allc>i.:c•dly ::itw10tin~ Jt a thrl•t• mJ11 cil) :o.ur vey L're" Mark All\·n Snuth 21 of 26lll Huntini:ton St w;" t.iken 1ntCJ c~Wdy le,., lhjn t"o hour:. aftt•r the allt'1:ed .. n1pinl( 1nc1dent by m('mbero; nf tht• poltL'C Spt•c1al Weapon ... J nd 1 .wtwi; <SWAT1 squad "hn hMI o;urrnundNI Smith s apartrnt'nt Officer:; s aid th<>rl' was • no problem·· in a rrc!tltn~ Smith and he w .is taken into cuic.tod v wtthout 1nc1el1•nt Police :-aid he had a 22 caliber n fll· m h1' pOSSt>!\SIOn The IO-man team c;urrounded th~ ne w complex on llunttngton between Clay and 17th streel'i ut u.a.m. afte r the thrt>e survcyor:i. said they had been shot at while working in the area. Surveyor Christopher Salkeld , 21, or Seal Beach said he and his companions were workinl( nea r the intersection of llunUngton and Clay when he heard a shot followed by the sound of a bullet passing close by him. lie said he dove into a gutter (See SNIPE R, Page A2> FRIDGE BROVGHT HER COLD CASH • "Just 10 mlnut~ after our paper was delivered, I sold the rtlrtgerator. ·' That's the quick sales success story told by the Newport Beach woman who placed th.I! ad in the \ DaJJy Pllot : tS' Whirlpool Refrlg. w /icemaker $7 s. xxx-xxxx It )'OU have an applin.nce you , want to convert to cash, call 6'2-56'78. We make ll easy for you to put ll (fw words to work for you, In ·the-Dally PHot. \ Duke was uninjured. The violence erupted brieay when the group protesting the charges agains t the black marines spotted Duke and other members or the KKK, who held aloft the KJan flag. The picketers were members of the Committee Ag ains t Racism, a San Diego and Los Angeles·based group. Picketers chanted "free the blacks," "try the Klan." Another woman picket·carrier said, "We cannot s tand and wait until the Klan kills someone.'' Duke said the Klan members were at Pendleton "to secure the rights of white s ervicemen. White servicemen in the military are not being given their rights." He charged that wtule soldiers were frequently the victims of racial assaults. Referring to the pic keters· attack, Duke said, "e vidently there is no justice whatsoe ver. There is no law against be ing a m ember of Ute Klan:· The demonstration was broken up by m arine military police. Meanwhile. Camp Pendleton opened a fact-findmg investiga- tion into lhe charges against the 13 black marines today. Court Order Halts Texas Execution WASHJNGTON CAP> -The U.S. Supreme Court J>05tponed today the execution or a Texas murderer who did not want his scheduled Friday death in the electric cha ir. delayed The high court delayed tn· definitely the execution of Robert Excell White. a 30-year-old drifter from Waco, Tex .. who says he d~erve-s-to die. It was the second time m four days that the Supreme Court de· layed the execution of a prisoner ~ho wanted to die. On Friday, the JUsl1ces postponed the finng s quad execut ion of Utah murderer Gary Mark Gilmore, who had convinced state officials to let him die. While '~ a tto rn ey, .J.E Abernathy, asked the court for tame to challeng~ the slatc·s de- ath penalty. the 1nclJl·tment that charged White with murder und lhe method of Jury selection used al White's trial White does not want to appeal, however . In a Nov 23 letter to the Supreme Court. While SaJd, ··Mr Abernathv 1s acting agamst my express 1nstruct1oru. and desires I ophc1tly told him that 1 did not wish any feder al appeal of any sort whatsoever . "J a m mentally prepared to ac ccpt the judgment of sentence am posed upon me.·· said White, a death row prisoner at Huntsville, Tex .. for the past two years. "Any delay now will only innict needless mental hardship on me." Gilmore was to have died at s unris e today, and would have become the firs t criminal execut ed in the United States since 1967. His death was stayed at the re- quest of his mother, Bessie Gilmore of Milwaukie, Ore. Preparation of an appeal in White's case and its considera- tion by the court could lake several months. White was convicted of murdering a 73·year-old grocery store proprietor in a 1974 hold-up. Two teen-age customers also <See DEATH, Page AZJ Rocker Died Of Overdose MIAMI (AP) -Anbverdoseof heroin probably wu the cause of rock cultarlst Tommy Bolin 's death ln a Miami Beach mot~l. of· flcialsuy. "Autopsy Jludies are continu-lna. but preliminary retJults are that his d eath was due to an over- doae ot narcotics, probably heroin," Dr. Roland Wright, Dade County's chief medJcal cx- amJner, said Sunday. -. .. _ ,., . -• ' ·---~ Dally Piiot Sl•tt Plloto FIREMEN STAND BY AFTER DOUSING FIRE THAT FOLLOWED PLANE CRASH T~n Engine Craft Carried Five Men to Deaths Sunday In lrvlne Examiners Eye Plane Wreckage By HILARY KAYE 01 , ... Dilly 1>1191 St.ttt An airplane that crashed in . Irvine Sunday afternoon, killing two Newport Beach men and three others, will undergo a close examination beginning today, in- vestigators said. Miss M.W. "Wally'' Funk. a National Transportation Air Safety Board inspector, said she does not know yet what caused the twin-engine Aero5tar to crash as it attempted an emergency landing in a new industrial area about one mile away from Orange County Airport. But she said the wreckage at the crash site has bet?n removed to be scrutinized by her team or lllSpectors. The 4 .15 p.m . crash killed aJJ five on board, including pilot Edward Pisoni, 45. of 2209 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach; James Shortridge, 37, of 1815 Cliff Ori ve, Newport Beach ; Jerry Bell, 33, of 14892 Hyannis Port, 1'usttn, Roger Barnett, 36, or 3217 S. Artesia, Santa Ana: and Lloyd' Jennings, 21, of 14552 Rainlree Lane, Irvine. P1soni is a land developer and president or the Newport Beach f irm, Rea lty De velopment Corporation. Details on the other crash victims are still unknown. According to witness accounts, lhe plane was flying south towards Orange County Airport whl'n the pilot suddenly banked the craft to the left and then nose dJved mlt• a mouno ol dirt Just feet from builqlngs . The plane was about SO r~et up when the dive began, witnesses s8Jd. The crash site was off Aston Street, near Alton Street. in the 111dustr1al complex. A small fire burned 1n one of lhe engines, but was qwckly put out by firemen. Three of the men were pitched out oft.he cabin by the impact and were found near the wreclcaRe !!till straooed to <See PROBE, Pase AZ> In Wheelehair Newport Woman Rescued in Fire By JOANNE REYNOLDS CM, ... Dilly .. , ... Slall Newport Beach firemen today credited Kurt Kalmbach, 27, son of Herb .Kalmbach, former personal attorney to President Nixon. with s aving the life of a neighbor who was trapped in her burning apartment. Firemen said that Eileen G. Smith, ~.--Of 1820 Park Newport, #306, escaped with Kalmbach's help.. =f.ering only s.iqed hair U1 h day b~e that did mca-e than~ damagetotheapart· ment coaaplu.. Fire Department spokesman Art Morton safd today lhal Mrs. Smith Is confined to a wheel chair due to a recent injury and she couldn't open lhe door to her apartment lo escape fames and smoke from the 12.45 p.m. fire. Morton said the fire apparently started in the bathroom while Mrs. Smith was fl x111g lunch m t.hekitchen_ She told firemen she started down the hall when she first smelled smoke but was turned back by names. She said she then tried to call the fire department, but the s moke was too intense and she decided lo get out. Becasue she 1s confined to a wheelchair .ind due i.o the heavy smoke, she was unable i.o open her front door. Morton srud. Kalmbach :;aid he was leaving his dpartmcnt. nexi. door to Mrs Sm1th ·s, when he saw the smoke and heard her fumbllng with the door. He said hl'r wheelchair was stuck on the baseboard or the threshold and he helped her over 1t and took her to an apartment down the nail. Kalmba <'h said he went back to his apartment. where his wife was calling the fire department. and got a blanket for Mrs. Smith and then closed ofr a fire door in the complex ha llway D•tly "•IOI St•tl ,.,,.to SAVED HIS NEIGHBOR Newport's Kurt Kalmbach Kalmbach said his wife and her girlfriend were unable to go out lhrough the hall after calling the fire department because the smoke was so thick. so they went out to their balcony and climbed clown. In all, 24 fire department men were called to the blaze which t ook 20 minutes lo control. Morton said the fl ames were con- fined to Mrs. Smith's apartment although the common areas of the complex surrered heavy s moke da mage. Morton said residents as well as firemen suffered from smoke inhalation and heat exposure and one firem an. J ohn Mattson, was treated and released from Hoag Memorial Hospital when a p1e<:e of glass from an exploding wm dow imbedded itseU in his knee Two of Mrs. Smith's neighbors, <See RESCUE, Pa~eA21 County Roads Deadly Weekend Traffic Toll Climbs to Eight A rash of weekend deaths in Orange County continued Sunday when two people died in separate · traffic accidents. The two deaths, one of them on the San Diego Freeway near the San Juan Creek Bridge, brought the county's weekend traffic toll toelght. Killed in the single car crash on tbe San Die40 Freeway early Sunday morning was James Arnold Moy, 38, or 1340 W. Lam- bert Road, La Habra. According lo a California Highway Patrol spokesman, Moy apparently fell asleep while he was drhlinc south on the freeway near San Juan Creek. The victim's car struct an abandoned car parked on a freeway s houlder , tbe spokesman said. Moy reportedly died in Mission Community Holpltal about an hour after lbt pre·dawn accident. A lew hou.ra earlier. Richard was struck by another car on the Garden Gro ve Freeway 1n Orange. According to an accident re· port, the car that struck Blom's auto continued on lts 1 a.m. Sun· day journey without stopping. GOOD GRIEF= .' f' ONLV 18 SHOPPING DAYS tt 'Tl L CHRISTMAS .' l - • .. • :t i I • ! t a ; :~~b,-~~.0~.~~ ~5::'eo1't~""~""Afll~IM~llJll·IW},...., __________ -:, I Saturday night. a 7l-year-old woman died two hours arter be· ing struck by a car as she crossed Ball Road ln Anaheim. Anaheim police said Dorothy Taylor. 3411 W. Ball Road, Anaheim. was crossing the stceet in front of her home when hit by a tar driven by Gilbert L. Golden ()(Anaheim. Mrs. Taylor reportedly was croeslng Ball Road in mid-block and Golden was not cited. ln a freak accident in Buena Park Saturday afternoon. Blanche Orosco, 49, of 5549 Lo!l Pal~ Circle. Buena Park, was ra~ly Injured when she tumbled oQt ol her car as It backed out the driveway at her home. Police believe Mrs. Orosco was attempting to t lose the door or her auto from the driver's seat when ahe tell from t.>ie car shortly before4 p.m. The woman died in i,. Palma Community Hospital about four hours after the accident, police ,W,d •.. ' ... Flip-flop Angers Teachers The Capistrano Urufied School District trus tee eleetion. once overturned by a r ecount, 1s now headed ror the courts. Tonv Leon. ores1dent of the Capistrano Unified Education AssoeiatiOn (CUEA) said today tbe teachers group wrn contest the recount which replaced William Manahan with Jan Overton as the trustee-elect. Manahan, a teacher in the Sad dleback Unified School District, had initially been declared the winner in the general election. The ei2ht·vote mar.itin Manahan was believed to have won by changed in the recount and Mrs. Overton was dec lared the winner by three votes. Leon said the teachers believe votes were counted during the re- count process that s hould not have been. Jn a lette r to the board or supervisors. the teachers asked that the election results not be certified until an explanation is i:nven by the Registrar of Voters for differences m the mactunc L'ount vers us hand count by an election board. During the hand count, ballots which had been marked twice, once in the blank write-in s pace. and once in the space after Mrs. Overton's na me. were con- sidered as voles for her. During the machine count earlier, the double marked ballots had been rejected. Leon said he has been in con· tact with the association's at- torneys and he said if the board of supe!"VlSOrs goes ahead wittf the certification, the association will .seek a res training order lo keep Mrs. Overton off the school board Court Rejects ,, Farr Sentence 1 In Contempt I •l LOS ANGELES (AP) -A ~ California appeals court ordered ~ the Manson tria l judge today to vacate a contempt sentence ag ainst reporter William Farr, l thus ending Farr's five-year bat· Ue to protect his secret sources. The California 2nd District t Court of J\ppeals ruling was an I nounced by the court's clerk. Clay Robbins. who phoned Farr ., with the news . Although the text of the ruling , was not immediately available. ! 1t was believed that the three judge panel held that Superior Court Judge Charles Older wai. improperly trying k> prosecute Farr twice for the ~ame offense In a hearing Nov. 23, Justice Mildred Lillie asked critically how m any limes Farr could be punished . Older vowed to send lhc re- porter back to Jail ror refusing lo reveal which of the six triaJ al· torneys gave him information for a story published during the 1970 trial of convicted mass murderer Charles Manson and three mem· bers of his cult. Farr serv~d 46 days behind bars in 1973 but was released by the U.S. Supreme Court pending appeals. Weather Sunny through T\Jesday With local winds. Slightly warmer days with highs in the 70s, lows In the 40s. l~SIDE TODi\ \I Did Howard Hughe• end h~ 11/e a half lunatic? Two Jorm" tmplo11e1 have wnt- ttn a book making that c.Jmm. See l?OJJ• A4. Index / I ..... I j 1 A.I DAIL V PILOT L/SC Fro• r~ A l ~SCUE ...• Nathan ond fo'rance11 ~rause . both 78, were treated for smoke &nbaJatioe by paramed!ct who said the couple also suffer from heart problems. A total of i.ix fire trucks as well as the paramedics work<"d Jt the fire scene under command of Ballahon chief Phil I layden. Morton said another or Mrs. Smith's neighbors has taken the fire v1ct1m in until other living arrangements can be m;1de. Laguna Cops Jail Pair In Burglary Two Los Angeles men were ar rested by Laguna Beach police Sunday after a res1dent called saying he'd just seen a man dis appear out his bed room window .R1c~ard T Mesqwta, 18, and Richard J Segel, 21, were both held today w1lh bail set at $10,000 Mesquita was booked on suspi· cion Of burglary, JX>SS~SiOn of stolen property and possession of dangerous drugs. Segel was booked on suspicion or burglary, possession of stolen property and possession or a syringe and nee· die. Police recovered $198 1n valuables. Police S~t. David Avers said Property valued al $135 is still missing, Sergeant Avers said. The incident occurred <1l the Lewis residence. 875 Coast View, Laguna Beach. Brandon LC'w1s told officers he had met the men earlier in the clay when they v1s1ted the home. Police believe a pamting was taken al that time through what Sergeant Aver~ termed "fancy footwork" as the men lert Police said they captured Mes· qwta arter a short foot chase. Segel was t aken into custody after being located i.1tting in a car near the home. Heir Kidnap Suspects Ask · Dismissals A motion for dis miss al of kid· nap and assault charges was filed today in OranJ:e County Superior Court hy lawyers ror two m en accused of attemptmg to abduct Newport Beach potato chip heir Jack Scudder Also Sf'I for arJ?umcn• tod;n• 1n a cnminjl ca~-.' that h..is been· a<. s igned lo Judge Richard J Beacom"; courtroom IS cl motion for suppres~1on or ('\ 1dence lo bt· used b) the pro!>ec uuon against William Rudy Wesson. 44. of Tustin and hi' brolher tn law Ricki Dall• Sl•lll·r~. ~ of Long Be:1<•h Panels of pros1)C('tivc Jurors were awaiting as:.ignmenl lo Judge 8eacom ·s courtroom to· day in event that he denies the motion fur d1sm1ssal It 1s alleged that the two def en dants kidnaped Scudder, 64. of 145 North Tiay Fl-ont, B:cilboa Jsland. short!) uflcr he left lus dent 1st·., offi<·c in llunttn.-tlon Reach last AllJ:U!>l 1!> They al lt-gedl} sought $250.000 1n ranc;om Scudder fc1gr.1•il a h<>art attack 1n the van alle"edly w.ed by h•~ h•'o k1dnapers and then fought his way to freedom He w11l ap· pear a!I the k~v prM~ution wit ness if thl' trial l!Cl'i undrr way Bomhs Ruin Stores bONOONDE-RRY. Northern Ireland 1 A l'I RomlK wrecked Londonderry !. downtown shop. pinf? district Sunda)' a few hours before 10,000 C.1tholil'11 and Protestants marrhed for the cause o( peace in Northern Ireland The> bomb!\ and re>sult· mg fires destroyed 16 stores and damaged six otht-rs . O"AHOI! COAST 1. $t DAILY PILOT f~ Ot•Nll' C.'M\t 0.•ly P1tiwt -."'~If\,, """' D•"'°"UW~•ff' **'"\' ''f'fM•"""'1httw0r•rWJI' (~\I Pl,,.,H\11'11'\q '"""'rfll\t \ift:att ttf' l>l'JllWI"'-•'• 9'11.,.•\f\tltt AA&flldh' 1"4,01.10'\ fo<M• ,.,_. ~t• ..._.U 1l+41-•H#1 ~~u flt M1f#ll•,_.,.Of'I ...,_,, ... 11...,, '"'" 'IAll•Y hw•l"lf' \•i:tdleb .. II YA 1•'¥ ~"'" L.,,.,..4"'•""" \out,.Cwu A\l"tt•~~·"'' ·~ I (kffl4i"'-f1 \Al-.tfft'\ ~ ~'t\ ,,.. pt °"' ... I ou,_lhfllt~ •• .,., l"t •t J)I 'IW ~t ... 'f S,,,. .. , c~'•• AA# • C.iillf..-l'W•.,•>• ..... ,.. ....... "' • -~f'llt 4-.d "''bl•Wr , .. -~ ,_ V-t•Pu .... "' •"Oc:;.fll+l•Hi.~11t~t ................ " .. t .. ... ,_,......, .... .,..,.. .. -......... .... Q~lff'\ .. lMt llt)t ..... It "'*' 4\\•\fltf\t Met'laq "'I Jtt<tl' '-~~nc.•.!:.~~.~~ MA1l•"4 AM•f'\.\ ft (') It-• ... thU ouie.1 (.tot.ta..,..,• JllW.~IM¥5it,.... H~, .... ~ .. Mf'I ,,.J.tl&Mfl ...... •M4 ~,• .. <•Y•lt•• tt,.,tJ.._,,.... ., ~ 01,.,., ,., ... ,,, TelepllOne (1t•l~1 CIH tttled Adll8ttltlftg "°'"7'1 La91o1ne l •u h All Oepett-1111. T•l•pho11e ......,... ""'"'~(Wt....., .. •M-ONO O...•itlll ,.,. °'' .... Cb•••_,,,,,,,,.~ PM'Y Nil ,..'lf'\ \tor..-t, tthntf' .. loft\ ,..llOf'lAil "' .... , ., .......... "'.""' "*'•'" ~·,. •• ••tt•fllVCtO •lt"•lil\ tOt,••• .. ,""htlltft •t t .Vf60M • ..,,,.,. ~~r;:.",,~ .. \::::~1: .. ::·".,:'c~::, ~-:. -lhl' h moll t• M -·~··· Mllilt t• .. 0.,.IJOft•U .. _"'V· Tax Cut Uncertain O.tll' P1!9' St.IH Plloto RESCUED Mrs. Eileen Smith, being helped here by Newport Fire Information Officer A rt Morton, was rescued from burning apart- ment by neighbor. Carter Keeps 'Open Mind' on Economy PLAINS, G•. CAP> - President-elect Jimmy Carter. disagreeing with tus newly ap· pointed budget director, said to- day a tax cut is not a virtual cer· talnty next year. Carter said it is too rarly to tell what steps might be needed lo stimulate t he economy. Cart.er said he is not convinced yet lhat cutting taxes is lhe thing to do. "I'm deliberately keeping my mind open," he declared. "I have advisers who arc leaning all di!· ferent directions, but I'll wait and see." The president-elect said he will · consult closely with Congress before deciding what to do about the economy. Suspeet Held Thomas "Bert" Lance. Carter':s choice to be director of the Office or Management and Budget. said Sunday that a tax cut early in the new admuustra- tion is "virtually cert.am." But at an informal news con· rerence today, Carter declared: "It's too early lo decide. t wouldn't say It was virtuallY ccr· lain, although it ls one or the po6SibUIUes ..• Carter did say that a permu nent or temporary tax reduction is possible "if the economy needs stimulation, and I think at this point it appears that way." Another option, Carter said, are programs lo put people to work. He said it wtll tie di.rrtcull w meet his goal or reducing u{l· Stabbing ViCtim 'Stable.' in Laguna A 27-year-old man who col· lapsed in a pool of blood at the feel of a Laguna Beach police of· ricer making a post·midnight fool patrol or an Art Colony cove was reported in stable condition today after t reatment for numerous stab wounds. Terry L. Zimmerman of Whit· tier remained in the intensive care unit of South Coast Com· munily Hospital. Laguna Beach Police have ar· rested Willlam J . Sheely, 25, a transient from North Cnroll.na, booking him on suspicion of as· sault with intent lo commit murder. employment by 1.5 percent dur· mg his first year in office, but promised to make effort to do so The nation's unemployment rate stands at 8.1 percent. or about 7 .8 million people Lance told the Los Angeles Times that a tax cul of up to $15 billion -possibly in lhe form of a rebate on l976 income taxes - . probably will be proposed by Carter. He suggested that a tax cul will be part of a package lo stimulate the economy that will include a jobs program and tux investment credits to s pur m dustrial expansion. Asked earlier on CBS·TV's "Face the Nation" about the possibility or a lax cul, Lance said that other possible economic stimulants "are so limited that l thmk you have to consjder that almost a certainty." Carter has said he would con· sider a tax cut if the economic signs indicated a need for one after he takes office Jan. 20. The Ford administratton has pro- posed a $10.bilhon cut in income laxes next year, built around a proposed $250 increase in the pre· sent $750 personal exemption. Terminally Ill Diver Takes 'Final Swim' ' t. t l ·~-1 ... ~t TV WRITER MISSING Grace Garment ,. Police Fear TV Writer Abducted NEW YORK !AP) -Polite have broadrast a 13·state alarm for the missing wife of form~r Nixon lawyer Leonard Garment! Soap opera writer Grare Gar- ment. 49, was last seen Friday tlf. krnoon al Pennsylvania Station and her husband reported her missin~ Saturday. ' Garment, one.time counsel to former President Nixon durin(( the Watergate investigation, iu1 U.S. representative to the Uni{. ed Nations Human Rights Com- mission. Gihnore Tells Mo1n Police Del. Gene Brooks said Officer Roland Maus had dnven w the Cress Street-end and was descending the stairway lo the beach when Zimmerman clutching his stomach staggered up the steps. Newport Beach police said to· day they believe the body or a scuba diver, found off Corona del Mar Main Beach, is that of a terminally ill Garden Grove man who had come to the beach to lake "one last swim." Hjs wife writes for the daytime televis ion series "Edge of Night" 'I Wish for Death' SALT LAKE CITY <AP> Convicted killer Garv Gilmore, his ctesirc to raee a r;nng squad at sunrise today thwarted by tus mother's appeal lo the U.S. Supreme Court, wrote an open lette r to her today saying, "I wish to be dead. We all die. ll ain't no b1~ deal." The letter released today by Gilmore's attorney said, "l would like to talk to you and to see you, but for some reason I can't, so I am sending lhjs letter to you. so that the newspapers a nd the media will get lhis message to you.·· The NAACP Legal Defense Fund filed the ap~al in behalf or the mother. Bessie Gilmore. Now hvmg in a Portland. Ore . sub· urb. she 1s crippled with arthritis and has had her phone d1scon· nected. "Please d1sassoc1ate yourself from lhe Uncle Tom NAACP l don't know how the NAACP got to you, but please don't let lhem use you as a sympathetic na· ltonal appeal.·· wrote Gilmore. who was on~ :iga1n in the prison infirmary today. · Mom, thev have no concern for you ur for me In fact they are less than toncerned about any white person." Gilmore wrote. "Pleas~ Mom. JUSt acrepl the fact that I don't disagree with the law and the sentence that has bf-en Imposed upon me, and l wish to be dead. We all die IL am't no big deal. Sometime5 it 1s nght and proper Please ac· cept my fate." he wrote Ernest Dean Wnght. Division of Correrllons dirf'clor, sa1d Sun· day Galmore wa5 transferred to the prison infirmary because Warden Samuel W Smith was roneerned that he "may have something planned·· for today "'hen he was to have faced a fir mg squad for murdenng a motel clerk. Gilmore's attorney, Ronald Stanger. uid his client was "still angered" at the court action his invahd mother initiated Thurs· day The execution whi ch Gilmore sought as qukkly as possible was stayed for a third time Friday by the U.S. Supreme Court at her request. Gilmore turned 36Saturday. Wright said officials feared that if Gilmore remained in his muimum security cell, other in· mates might attempt to slip him drugs. He was hospitalized last month after he and his girlfriend . Nicole Barrett, took overdoses of sleepin g pills in an appar ent suicide pact. Wright said Gilmore would be more isolated In the infirmary, where he had been kept under round-the-clock supervi5ion unW three days ago. "In the next three days, Gilmore's s\atus may chanl(e drastically.'· Wright said. refer· Capo Home Burgled Burglars who twisted o(f a door knob to gain entry have stolen stereo equipment, a radJo and packaged meal from a San Juan Capistrano home. Orange County sbertlf's officers said the break· ln occurred al th• borne or salesman Gary M. Newton, :Ml. or 31761 Vla de Linda, while be and hia ram ily wer e on vacaUoo.. The lou wu valued at $.'5'00 • ring to possible further delayli in his case. Attorney General elect Rohert B. Hansen said Sunday that transcripts requested by the U.S Supreme Court were completed and would be filed by Tuesday. Attorneys say the high court could lake weeks lo decide whether to grant an appeal, and if it did so, a final judgment could take more than a year.. * * * Froaa Page A J DEATH ... were killed during the robbery. Appearing at a Nov. l hearing m which his execution dale was set. White told the judge, "Jf any man deserves to die I do for the crimes I've rommitted " White said he wanted Texas tt) execute him al the earliest possi- ble date Fro91 Page Al PROBE • • • their seats. police said. One of the two engines on the plane apparently failed just prior to the crash. A Fountain Valley couple, Austin and Jan Owings. both student pilots, told in· vestigators they heard an un· 1dentiried pilot tell the control tower. "I have one engine out." minutes before the piane rrashed. Owings was practicing on the airstrip and Mrs . Owings was in another craft getting gas. Pisoni's plane had taken oH earlier an the day from Guaymas. Mexico. From the fis· rung gear found in the wreckage. orficials speculated that the men had just returned from a short fistung vacation. , "It looked like they were just five guys who had had a great lime down in Mexico," comment· ed an Irvine Police officer who was al the scene. The plane was registered to the Sun Valley Corporation in Idaho. but officials said they did not know if the craft was leased or owned by Pl son I, who was report· ed to be an experienced pi lot. ~yFound Beside Lake Identified A search and rescue team or· ganhed by Orange Coun ty Sherm's officers found the body of a 20-year-old man Swlday in the Irvine Lake area, two weel<s after tie was reported missing from bis home in Orange. Coroners otricera ldentifled the .body u that of Michael John O'Brien. The cause of death has been Usted as suicide pending the outcom~ ot an autopsy which Is under way today. Officers said they round the badl)' decomposed remains about a mile 80Uth Of Jrvlne Lake, cl011e lo the spot where O'Brien's abandoned car wu fOWld Nov. 24. • Offlcen said an lnvesUaauon of t he victim's background ~Y aupporta the theory that be h1I OW~ Ute. Zimmerman fell m H bloody heap at Maus· feet. The officer summoned aid and learned from the v1ct1m that he had been stabbed by a man named "Bill " who had a southern accent The vil'lim. said police. also gave an accountm~ of the man's description c1nd clothing. Del. Brooks said he will be 10- terviewing the victim today at the hospital to find out what led lo the stabbing. Using a description provided by Zimmerman. omcers found Sheely nearby and took h1m into l'UStody. No weapon has been found. Pilot Giving MIG Details WASHINGTON IAP) · The Russian military pilot who de· fecled last September has told U.S. orric1als that the Soviet air force 1s preparing a new, more heavily armed MIG2S than the type he new to Japan Three months after Lt Viktor I. Belenko defectt.>d, he 1s being kept under wraps in Eastern Virginia. where intelligence of· ficials still are pumping the 29· year-old Russian for informa· tion. Among other things, Bclenko has described an advanred, more heavily armed model of the supersonic M IG25 which has nol yet appeared with Soviet combal units. Del. Sgt. Ken Thompson said they believe the dead man is Kenneth L. Jones, 24 . of Garden Gove Grove. who was repor1ed mtssang by his sister on Nov. 30. An autopsy was pending today. Accordln~ to police reports, ~WO divers. Ray Brackelsberg or Fullerton and Robert Hagedorn of Anaheim, were diving at the south end of the beach at about 9:30 p.m. when they found the body of a scuba diver about a quarter of a mile from shore. The body was retrieved by divers from the sheriff's Harbor Patrol. Thompson said the tentative identification is based on the fact that Jones' car was found at the main beach parking lot Friday and that he had told his sister 1ust before disappearing last week that he was going to go for "one last swim.·· Nader Urges Sreel Probe WA S HINGTO N CAPl Consumer advocate Ralph Nader !>ays the Justice Department should open an antitrust 1n- vest1gation of recent price in· creases by the steel industry. "Not only would you uncover whether the antitrust laws have heen violated, but your investiga. lion would also help 'emphasiie the close relationship ~tween corporate concentration and in · nation." he and associate Mark Green wrote to the Justice Department. A family spokesman said that Mrs. Garment failed to show up Friday for a psychiatric eppo~f· ment f or trealmenl of depression The missan~ per:i;on alarm p~l oul by pohce dcscnbcd her as·~· foot ·4. 115 pounds, Wlth brOWJl hair and hazel CVl.'S When la~t s<>en. she was wearing a pink lurtlenerk sweater, slacks, and 'a brown fur coat SNIPER ... for cover. llis fellow surveyors, Rich Boardman, 34, of San Juan Capistrano and Gary Harrisdr\, 31. of Hunttnl(lon Reach said they dove behind a palm tree. hoping 1t would screen them from ~e sniper. All three said they saw a man dressed in a white T·shirt and "tule gym shorts kneeling on the second·floor balcony of the nearby apartment complex. When the man went inside, the three surveyors left. but not after a nother s hot had been fired which Boardman and Harrison said passed between them as lhev stood in the sheller of the palm tree . Pohce. led by Sgt. M.L. Shorg were planning to evacuate the ne1ghbhorhood as the SWAT team closed in the apartment. Shorg, working from a mobile command post set up on Clay Street comma nded the ten-man SWAT team and a force or at least another dozen officers aided by the police helicopter. OBESITY, A MAJOR HEAL TH HAZARD ly 108 McCOMCHIE If all the deaths from cancer were eliminated, TWO YEARS would be added to mans life span. If all the deaths related to OBESITY were elim inated, an estimated SEVEN YEARS would be added to mans life span. YOU can control your health rather than allow your environment to control it . _;'_'~ PHONE: 752-5155 I~~• PROGRE SS h as vir tu a ll y elim inated the necessity of walking, r unning , lift ing or climb ing. One modern mach ine TV holds people in "captive id leness" for an average of twenty-one hours a week. ~ . .....-:MAYO BODY CONTROL .~,.... -~ 1' CENTER IFOt MDO rrs A FACT The first of Its kind, exclusively for men. MOM-STllMUOUS Aerobic and Isometric Exercise. IT WORKS Combined with nutritional Improvement in muscle tone . posture and wejght are realized. guidance. c1rculat1on, lrS GUAUMTllD R~ults are guaranteed without shots. starvation diets or strenuous exercise; 396 I Moc.ARTHUI ILVD. sum IOI HIWPOIT llACH . . . " \ pills. I sn't i t abou t time to DO something about it? MAYO BODY CONTROL CEHTEI l IUUSTIC lPflHC. Tt PMYSICAl RTIW fOI '\Jfl" ) I 7 Orange Coast EDITION * * *~ I I ,.l'uda)'~S (;)using ·' N •• Stoeks. ~ . ~ VOL. 69, NO. 341, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1976 C TEN .CE~ Carter Says No to 'Sure' Tax Cut ·~~1 PLA I NS , Ga . (AP) President-elect Jimmy Carter, disagreeing with his newly ap- pointed budget director, said to· day a tax cul is not a virtual cer- taloty next year. Carter said it is too early lo tell what steps might be needed to stimulate lhe etonomy. Carter said he is not convinced yet that cutting taxes is the thing t.odo. "I'm d~liberalely kee)>ing mv -- mind open,'' he declared. "J have ajJvisers who are Jean.Ing aJJ daf· ferent directioos, but I'll wait and see." The president-elect said he will consult closely with Congress before deciding what to do about the economy. · Thomas "Ber t" Lance, Carter's choice to be director of the Offlce of Management and Budget, said Sunday that a tax cut early in the new administra- tion is "virtually certain " But at an informal news con· ference today, Carter declared: "ll's too early to decide. I wouldn't say it was virtually cer- tain, although it is one of the possibilities." Carter did say that a perma- nent or temporary tax reduction is possible "if the economy needs stimuJalion, and J think at this point it appears tbal way." Another option, Carter said, -,. ~ o •• ,, ""•' S1~tt ..... 0 FIREMEN STANO BY AFTER DOUSING FIRE THAT FOLLOWED PLANE CRASH Twin Engine Craft Carried Five Men to Deaths Sunday In Irvine .Irvine Tragedy Probed Five Perish in Crash of Light Plane By HILA.RY KAVE Of lM O•llY PU01 ~1•11 An airplane that crashed in lrvine Sunday afternoon, killing \wo Newport Beach men and \bree others. will undergo a close examination beginning today, m· vestigators sa1d Miss M W. "Wally" Funk. a National Trans portation Air Safely Board inspector. s aid she does not know yet what caused the twin-engine Aerostar to crash as it attempted an emergency landing in a new industnal area about one mile away from Orange County Airport. ' But she said the wreckage at the crash site has been rcmo\•ed to be scrutinized by her team of mspectors. The 4 15 p m crash killed all W ornan Slallls KKK Leader at Hearing Ry PHJLIP ROSMARIN OI Ill• 0•1ly 1'11114 St.ti! rive on board, including pilot Edward Pisoni, 45, of 2209 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach: James Shortridge, 37, of J815CliffDrive, Newp0rt Beach; J eJ"ry Bell, 33, or 14692 Hyannis Port. Tustin. Roger Barnell, 36, or 3217 S. Artesia, Santa Ana; and Lloyd' ,Jennings. 21. of 14552 Raintree Lane. Irvine. Pasoni is a land developer and pres ident of the Newport Beach firm , Realty Development Corporation. Details on the other crash victims are still unknown. According to witness accounts, the plane was flying south towards Orange County Airport when the pilot suddenly banked the craft to the left and then nose dived into a mound or dirt just feet from buildings. The plane was about 50 feet up when the dive began, witnesses said. <See PROBE, PageA2) are programs to put people lo work. He said it wi ll be dilrlcuJl to meet his goal or r,educing un· employment by 1.5 percent dur· ing his fir&t. year in office, but promised to make effort to do so. The nation's unemployment rate stands at 8.1 percent, or about 7.8 million people. Lance told the Los Angeles Times that a tax cut or up to $15 billion -possibly in the Corm or a rebate on 1976 income taxes - probably will be proposed by Carter. He suggested that a tax cut will be part of a package to stimulate the economy that will include a jobs program and tax . investment credits to spur in- dustrial expansion. Asked earlier on CBS-TV's "Face the Nation" about the possibility of a tax cut, Lance said tbat otber possible economic stimulanls ''are hO limited lh1tt t th.Ink you have to consider that. almost a certainty." Carter has said he wouJd con- sider a tax cut if the economic signs indicated a need ror one after he-takes office Jan. 20. The Ford administratfon has pro-· posed a $10-billion cut in income taxes next year, built around a proposed $250 increase in the pre· sent $750 personal exemption. Staff Aid Hftiled Fairview Chief Wants Change By STEVE MITCHELL Of the O•ilY Piiot SU.ti Gov. Edmund Brown's ap- proval of a plan to add 700 employes to the state's 11 mental hospitals, announced over the weekend. was met wtih with en- thusiasm today by Dr. Michael Levine, chief administrator at Fairview Hospital. But the newly appointed ad ministrator said that unle::.s there are s1gnif1canl manage ment changes. an increase 1n staff would not. by al!>elr. 1m· prO\ e service. ·· 1 couldn 't be more ple<e>ed at the governor's action." Dr Levine said today "l need to compliment the governor on his rather rapid res ponse to action." Levine said he didn't know what the breakdown wouJd be for Fairview Hospital. saying the plan. to be initiated by next June, is more complex than "just dis- hing out a certain number of employes to each hospitaJ." Levine said he would like to see more s upervisory personnel added to the 1,700-patient facility in Costa Mesa. · "A state program five years ago wiped out all the supervisory positions," he said. ''It divided the hospital into 10 programs, which was a good idea. but 1t wiped out all the supervision "We have no supen'lsmg social worker. no superv1 s1 ng psychologist. no supervising teacher '"Give me five more OPEC to Meet BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) The price-setting meeting of the Organization of Petroleum Ex- porting Countries probably will be held as scheduled, the Middle East Economic Survey reported today. despite consideration or postponement ps~chologists and who's going to supervise them?•• he asked. Levine said these departments are currently operated by pro· gram managers, "who may not have any expertise in a teacher or psychologist's background." "The program reorgamzat1on did some good things organiza- tionally, but it wiped out all the profession al supervision," he said. "That's what I'd like to see reinstated under Brown's staf- fing plans," Levine said. Closure of School A Danger to Kids? By MICHAEL PA.SKEVICH Of 111• O•lly Piiot SWll A group of Harper School parents conducted a traffic sur· vey or Irvine Avenue today in an attempt to dramatize to district : officials the potential danger their child ren may face if they ar e forced to cross the busy thoroughfare next year. The inform al traffic count was in response to recent trusU?e declarations that declinl\tg enrollment makes it ine'rltabht that Harper and Balearic Schools in Costa Mesa will be closed at the end of this school year. If Harper is dosed, about 107 students. including 13 kin- dergartners. would have to cross Ir v ine Avenue to atten d Mariners School in Newport Beach. The remainder of the school's 3SO students would be transferred to Newport Heights or WoodJ~ Schools. The Harper campus would be taken over for some dis- trict offices presently on the McNally High School campus. Today's traffic survey by a dozen Harper parents was con- ducted between 8:30 a.m. and 9 a.m., the perif'li in which stu- dents would be crossing the street. A total of 666 cars were taJlied dunng the half hour period. At five minute intervals, a group or parents crossed the street and in one instance were greeted by a honk and a four- lette r word from a n irate motorist. The parents b elieve the street <See HARPER, PageA2) Fatally Ill Diver Takes Final Swim Newport Beach police said to- day they believe the body of a scuba diver. found off Corona del Mar Maln Beach, is that of et terminally ill Garden Grove man who had come to the beach. to take' 'one last swim." Det. Sgt. Ken Thompson said they believe the dead man .is Kenneth L. J ones, 24, of Garden I Gove Grove, who was reported missing by his sister on Nov. 30. 1 An autopsy was pending today. An unidentified woman slammed a picket sign over the head of David Duke. national director of the Ku Klux Klan, as nolence Oared braeny Lod1:1y dur mg Camp Pendlett>n heann~s in to chargeo; that 13 black Manncc; assaulted a roomful of whale Mannes they hehncd lo be klan members Grand Dragon Duke s aid he and h is followers were at Pendleton to observe the in· vesti~ation Military officers :.aid one space in the court hu:. been reserved for a klan member who was rirst on a waiting last Rhody said the klan intendetl tu show up every day the heanng~ are in progress. The heanngs arc expected to take weeks. Woman Saved From Fire According to police report~, ·1 two divers, Ray Brackelsberg of Fullerton and Robert Hagedorn . of '\naheim. wer e diving at the south end of the beach at about 9:30 p.m . when they found the body of a scuba diver about a quarter of a mile from s hore. The body was retrieved by divers from the s heriff's Harbor Patrol Tod ay's Incident followed a de m on5trat1on by about 20 picketers outside the mililary courtroom when• three of the 13 men were answering charges The demonstrators said they 'tel'e members or a San Diego and Los Angeles-based group ~alled The Committee Against Racism. Picketers circled outside the court and chanted, "Free the blacks. jail the Klan." Upon arrival of Dukl.', the cir cle broke as a woman picketer t'harged the KKK leader, shouted at ham and :;truck rum over the head with her heavy, two-by-two post packet. · Duke appeared to be momen· tarily stunned, but otherwise un- hurt. Another klan member, Robert Rhody, or San Diego. shoved the woman aside and traded punches W:itb anolh e r. m ale, d e- riionstrator. 'Pendleton military police, sw- inging batons, broke up the (igbL The demonstrators were husUM off the base. 'Jbe live kJan members were allowedtoste,y. GOOP GR.I EF= .' ,. ONLV 18 f SHOP'PING DAYS 4' 'Tll CHRISTMAS /; i i i i .. 1 0 ... -; -l <See KLAN, Page A21 Mesan Faces Murd er Rap In Stabbing John Lester Ford of Costa Mesa has been ordered to face trial Jan. 31 in Orange County Superior Cou r t on murder charges filed after he aJJegedly stabbed his sister's boyfriend to death. Ford, 22. was arrested near his home at 989 Victoria St. last Sept. 29, three days after James Hebert Jr. died of stab wounds at Hoag Memoria l Hospital in Newport Beach. Hebert, 26, of 1972 Anaheim Ave., Costa Mesa, allegedly was slabbed with a fishing Jmlle dur- ing an argument with h is girlfriend. Costa Mesa police arrested Kenneth Harold Reynolds, 29, of 1978 Maple St., Cost.a Me.sa in the slabbing, but released him later and arrested Ford. Police at first believed that Hebert refused medlcaJ treat- ment after the stabbing, return .. ini home several hours later. .,after losing a large quantity or 'blood. Police later aaid Jrebert could not have lived that long, after ex· aminJng the extent of his In- juries. They said they believed there was a HCOnd fight and inlorma· tlan rectived by officers lat.er led t4the arrest of Ford. · Judie James H. Walsworth set the trial date for Ford, wbo also faca pretrial action Jan. 21. He. ii held in th• count.¥ Jail with ball m It $150,000. • t ....,..,......,.,..... Al!8CUED -Mrs. Eileen Smith, beinc helved here by Newport Fire lnlormatlo.n O!f icer Art Morton, was rescued from bu.m.lni apart..· 'ment by neighbor. . . · -·· By JOANNE REYNOLDS 0t Ille O•llY Pilot Sl;otf Newport Beach firemen today credited Kurt Kalmbach, 27, son of Herb Kalmbach , former personal attorney to President Nixon, with saving the life of a neighbor who was trapped in her burning apartment. Firemen said that Eileen G. Smith. 58, of 1820 Park Newport, #306, escaped with KaJmbach's help, suffering only singed)lair- in the Sunday blaze that did more than $75,000 damage to the apart- ment complex. Fire Department spokesman Art Morton said today that Mrs. Smith is confined to a wheel chair due to a recent injury and she couldn't open the door lo her apartment lo esc11pc fames and smoke from the 12:45 p.m. fire. Morton said the fire apparently started In the bathroom while M.rs. Smith was fixing lunch in the kitchen. She told firemen she started down the hall when she first smelled smoke but was turned back by names. She said she then trled to call the fire department, but the ~moke was too lnteme and sbe decided to get out. Becasue she ls confined lo a wheelchair and due to the heavy smoke, she was unable to open her front door , Mortoo said. Kalmbach sald he was leaving his apartment, next door to Mrs. Smith's. when he aaw the smoke and heard her fumbllnt with the door. He aald her wheelchair was stuck on the baseboard ot the Uirahold and be helped her over Jt and toolt her to an apartment down th• ball • KalO'.lbacb a aid ho went back to bis apartment, when hb wtfe . wu caJUn1 the flre department, and got a blanket for Mn. Smlth &hen closed off a llre door in 'a'· ' I """ Oelty~li.IJtanPMt• SAVED HIS NEIGHBOR Newport'• Kurt K .. mbech the complex hallway. Kalmbach saJd bis wt!e and her girlfriend were unable lo go out through the ball after caJling the fire department because the smoke was so thick, so they went out lo their balcony and climbed down. In all, 24 fire department men . were called to the blaze which took 20 minutes to control. Morton said the names were con lined to Mrs. Smith'• apartment although the common area.a or the complex s uffered lloavy amoke damage. , Morton uld residents u well u firemen suffered from 1moke lnhalatlon and beat exposure and" one Ortman, John Mattson, was treated and releaMd h'om ffoai Jlemort.al HOJplt.t.l when a piece <See RESCUE, Pqe AZ) Thompson said the tentative • identification is based on the fact that Jones' car was found at the main beach parking lot Friday and that he had told his sister just before disappearing last week that he was going to go for "one last swi m ." • Theft Suspect Dies ASH .FORK. Ariz. (AP) -An armed robbery suspect, WillialT' A. Corley, 16, of Santa Cruz, was killed and another .suspect, Michael A. Malvinj, 15, of San Jose. was injured Sunday night whl.'n their stolen car was forced ofC Interstate 40 by a highway patrol car a m ile west of this northern ~rizona community, said the Arizona lli1thway Patrol. Co ast Wea th.er Sunny throueh Tuesday with local wlnds. SllghUy :warmer daya with highs in tbe 70s, Iowa ln the 40s. · I NSIDE TODA V Did HC1tDOrd Hught1 end hi& lilt a holf lunatic? Two fonntr tmplOJlt S booe writ- ten CJ book mak•ng that cJCJim. Stt. P.ogt A4. Index AZ DAIL v PILOT c Hospital Study Assailed Two stalew1de hu:.J)llJI a:.· soclat1ons cnt1c1.ct.'d the Stute Department ol Health today for its probe of 12 hos pitals that the department claims began to UM: or to mstall body scarutlnK equip· ment. Two of the hospitals Wldl•r in vestigation for allef(<..od v1C>lation of a l<1w wh1d1 went into effct•I Sept. 9 are ll oa~ Memorial H0tip1tal In Newport Beach a nd Santa Ana-Tustin Communit y Hospital A spakeii man for lloag said their scanner was ins talled and operating on Sept l , before the law went into errect A spokesman at Santa Ana Tustin said their scanner has not yet been installed. The California llo!>p1tal As· :.ociallon and the t;n1ted I losp1tal Association contendl'<i in a Joint statement th<.tl the dcpJrtmcnt was m1s inte-rprcting a nt'"' 'talc law 1n annoum·ini:: that 11 might fine the 12 Cac1ht1 c!> "The hos p1la I a :.soc1 at1on~ do not believe that th•' language 111 intent or lhl' µl .1nntni: law prtt h1bited ho~p1tals which bcliC'vcd they qualified for a cert1f1catC' of PXE'mption from continuing with lhe1r projects while thc·1r ap plications for exemption were-bt• ing processed ," the organi.ca tions said Stale h callh offir 1als an- nounred Thursday lhJt they were ordering 12 ho~p1lals that had be~un lo install or UM' Uw ~tan nl'rs to s how <'JU<,t· \.\hy tht•'\I should not h(' fined up to S2.sOO carh fo'rone Page ll I PROBE • • • The crash s ite "'as urr Astnn Street. near Alton Stn·et, 1n thl· industrial complex A small f1rc burned Ill one of the engines. but was quickly put out by firemen Thret.' of the men were p1tchl'd out of lh<' cabin hy the impact and were found n(';1r the wreckage s till strapped tu their seats. polir c st11d One of the I wo c•ng11ws on the plane apparently railed 1ust pnor to the cras h. A Fountam VaJlcy couple. Austin a nd .Ian owinlo'(s both ~tud cnt 111llll~. t old 111 'esllgator:. lhl'Y heard .m un 1clent1f1<>cl pilot ll·ll thl' l"ontrol lower, "'I have one 1•nt;inl' out. minu t e'> bc ro r c the plJnc crashl'd Owings "'a" praC"t1c·1ni:: on th" aJrstrrp and Mr-; ()\.\1111?~ "J'> 111 another craft ~<'tltng ,!!as P1son1 s plan<' hJd l.ikt>n off ea r Ii e r 1 n t IH• II a 'r f ro m Guaymas. Mext<'O f'rom the r.~ tung gear found 1n th•· wreckage offic1als speculatt'd that the men had Just returnl•ll from a ~hort fishing vat atton . "It looked hkt> lhev wrrc JU't five ~u ys who h,1d had a grt•.it 11me11own in Ml'X1C'o,'' 1·nmment ~ an l rv1ne Poll('c offlrer who "'as at the seen<· The plane wa~ re~1~tttr1~l tf1 tilt' Svn Vullroy ('orpnrot1on in l<laho. but 0Utt•1nls 'J1d tlw y did not know 1f lhC' nart wus h•;tSl'<i or ownt'd by P1snn1. wM wa, report· 1'<1 to tw un •''Jll'rtt.'111·ed p1le>t Dr. Riesen Rites Slated ~frmonal 'it>rv lCl~ for Or Ed· mund If Rwscn will he h<'ld Tuesdnv at 11 :t m at ra~1f1C' V1t'w M<'mortal Choip('I Nt'wport Jk•ach Dr. Riesen. J N1•wport IJear h dentist. du~d lac;t Monda} follow mg a heart alt ack He• 1s 'lurv1v(•d by his widow Frances, a son. Jo;d mund If Riesen Jr and grand daughter Oeborah Riesen. Dr. Ries en requested that his body he cremated and his ash"' :scattered at sea OAANQI! COAST DAILY PILOT ,.., t>t<'"'r ro•1.1 n.11" P""' * '"' *"': ""',, ·-t>t,....., t~ ~·W\ #Jf • \ I ..... 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''"'""M-"~t•v•rd 'Wltdl•O•t• V•11,.., J'">U • ~., ........ •t\.t"O• ... f'tM•n Tel•pllon• l1t•)M)~1 CIHlllflH AO.et1ltl119 W.1111 ~·= ::, °:t:~r., '::::.,=~·~,.<:=. M•1'tt ., e-.vt ttl""'f"h Pl•r•tf"I M•Y ... , •• ,•thl(•d wttfllowt 'o•cl•t ,.'"""''" ~f C..,., ttM OWt'ttf r.;~::,"'.1 •• \·,::::~~:,1=".:\~:::, ~,:. mM\tfUY b'f M•H U \t IMll.U,ft Mtllt•rf ... -..... u --·~·· Monday Decemt>er6. 1978 Loae-eost Plaa ,.,.... Pflfl«! A J Jury Rides Death Void WASHINGTON <AP> The exclusion of even one prospective juror for acneral s cruples against c api t al puni s hmt'nl aul011'1att<·allv \'Old~ any de ath J>C.'n~•ll~ 1mpO.,l'd in J trial. the U S Supn•mc C'ourt ruled today Air Bags Urged For New Autos HARPER ••• 1~ uns afe since driv~rs are I prepared for pedestrians. A Costa Meaa pollcem clocked the averuge speed or motun~ts u:.ina the )lrcet which d1vide!> Costa Mesa and Newpgtt Hench. A In a 6 to 3 vull'. the court threw out the dl•ath pt:n;1I tv sentence JU q ·n Lo con ~1cted Georgia murderer Curfew 011v1s 'fhl' uns 1j!rH!d op1r11on said the Gcor~ia Supn•me Court was wrong when 1t dce1ded that the improper exclusion of a prospective ·Juror in Davis' trial did not deny him the right lo . be Judged by a cross.section oflhe commun1ly. WA S lllNGTON (AP I Tra n ~portatlon Secrt!t:iry William T. Coleman Jr. said to· day aull) makers will not bl' re qu1tt:d to inst all nlr bags on nt•w c,.ars but will b~ urged to muke them available as a low.cost op· lion. Coleman, m nnnounc1ng his de· c1sion, said he wtll begin dis· cusslons with auto m akers the week of Dec. 20 in hopes or get- ting lhe necessary agreements. He set as a goal obtaining the agreement or at least two manufacturers lo market air bags on at least 250,000 cars of Gihnore Tells Molll 'I Wish for Death' SALT LAKE CITY CAPl Conv1cL('d kill er Gary Gilmore, his desire to face ll firing squad al sunrise today thwarted by his mother's appeal lo the U.S Supremc Court. "'role an open letter to her today saying, "I ~ 1sh to lie dead. We al I die 1 t ain't no big deal." The letter r<'l<'ascd today by Gilmore's attorney said, "I would like lo talk to you and lo see you. but for some reason I can't , so I a m sending this lt'tler to you. s11 thal the newspape~s and the m edia will gel this messai:c to you · The NAAC P Legal Deh:nsc F'und filed the a ppeal in behalf of Lhe mother, Bessie Gilmore /\ow Jl\mg in a Portland. Ore . sub urb, she is c rippll'd w1lh arthnt1s and has h;id her phone discon· nccted .. Please d1sassociatr yoursl'lf from the Uncle Tom NAACP. I Fro• Pogf! A J RESCUE ..• of J:laSS from an t'Xp)odmg Wtn dow 1mbedded its elf m his knee. Two of Mrs. Smith "~ neighbors. Nathan and Frances 1\1 aui.c. both 78, were treated for s moke. inhalation by paramedics who said the couple also suf!cr from heart problems A total of six fire trucks as well as the paramedics worked al th1· fire scene under command of Batta hon c hief Ph1l l1Jydcn. ~torton s aid a nothe r or Mrs Smith 's ne1J:hbors has takrn lht• fire \'l<'ltm in until othl'r lt\lng arrangem1:nts CJn tx! m~dc FRJDGE BROUGHT HER COLD CASH '"Jus t 10 minutes after ou1 paper was c!Ph Vt'rt'<I. I sold lh1• re!r1i:erator. · · That's lhe q111ck salt'~ -.un·t·~., story told by llw Nl•wport f11•,1t•h "'Oman who pla<•t•d lhls ufl 111 thl Dally Pilot · IS' Whirlpool qefr1Q w 'ic•m,aker S7~ xxx ll)OIX ff you have an appliance you want lo convert lo cash, call 642-5678. We make it easy for you to pul a h•w words lo work for you, m the Daily Pilot Texas Slaye~ don't know how the NAACP got to you, but please don't IN them usl' you as a s ympathetic na tJonal appeal," ""role G1lnHln '. who was once again m the prison infirmary today. "Mom . they have no concern for yl)u or for me•. In fact they arc less than concerned about any white person,'' Gilmore wrote. "Please, Mom, JUSt accept the foct that I don 'l disagree with the law and the sentence that has been imposed upon me, and I wish to be dead. We all die. It ain't no big deal. Sometimes it is right and proper. . .. Please ac- cept my fate," he wrote. KLAN .•. Duke said the klan was there ··to secure the rights of white servicemen.'' He charged that white soldie rs have been fre· quent victims of racial a'\sault on military bases Duke sought <• meeting ar. terwards with top Pendleton brass. Pretrial hearings today began with leg al maneuvering by de· rense counsel. Counsel for Sgt William Spencer, 23, of High Point. N.C .• won ci week's delay. ror his client. Spencer sought to retain anothe r military attorney, Capt. Wllhel m Bennett, to represf'nt him The C3Ses of two othe r Mannes. LCpl Bobby R Bishop, 23, of Bry an. Tex. and PJ.~C Donald R Hunter, 23, of Winston Salem, N C • were being heard today. Bishop's counsel. Capt. Daniel JI Konig, was argumg that all 13 defendant" should be provided an extra couns<'I each, since two prosecutors have been assigned to each man's case . Nader Urges Steel Probe WAS lll NGTON CAP) Consumer ad voe alt' Halph Nu<lrr says the Just ice Dc•p3rtm1·nl should open an antttrust in- vesl1~allon of r ecent price in creast•:-. by tht' ~tee I induslrv. "'Not only would you unrover whether the anl1lru..-;t laws have h<'en violated, but your mvest1ga- llon would also help emphasize lhe close relationship between corporate concentration and in· nation." he and associate Mark Green wr ote to the Justice Department. High Court Delays Second Execution WASHINGTON CAP) -The U.~preme Court postponed todlt'y the execution or a Texas murderer who did not want his sch~uled Friday death in the electric chair, delayed. The high court delayed in- definitely the execution or Robert Excell White. a JO-year-old drirter from Waco, Tex .• who says he deserves to die . It was the second time in four days that the Supreme Court de· layed the execution of a prisoner who wanted to die. On Friday. the justices postponed the flting squad execution or Uta h murderu Gary Mark Gilmore, who had convlnced state offlclals to let him die. White's attorney, J .E. Abernathy. asked the court for time to challenge the state's de- ath penalty. the indlctment that charged White with mltf'dcr and the method of j ury selection used at White's trial, White does not want to appeal, however. ln a Nov. 231cttertotho Supremtt Court, White said, "Mr. Abernathy It acUn• aeatnst. my express Instructions and des1AS. l expllcltly told blm that J dld not wish any federal ap~al or any sort whatsoever . "I am me ntally prepared to ac- cept the judgm ent nr sentence imposed upon m e." said White, a death row prisoner al Huntsville, Tex.. for the past two year11 .• "Any delay n ow will only inflict needless mental hardship on me." Gilmore was to have dled at sunrise today. and would have become the first criminal execut- ed in the United Stales since 1967. His d eath was stayed at the re- quest of his mothe r. Bessie Gilmore of Mllwaulde, Ore. Preparotlon o( an appeal in White's case nnd Its consldera Lion b,v the court could take several month•. Whlttf w as con vict e d ot· murdering a 73-year-old itrocery store p~prletor in a 1974 hold·up. Two tee n-age customers also were killed durlni the robbery. Appearlnc at a Nov. 1 hearing in whJcb hi8 executJon date was · aet, White told the Judae. "Jr ony• man deserves lo dlo I do for the crimes I've committed.·• White said he wanted Texas to execute him at the earliest pc>ssk· blodate • .. V41nou::. size!> in IU79 m1xkl t·ur<; and on Qnother 250,000 in model year 1980 Coleman s .11d the air bli~' must retail for no more lhun $100 for both the driver and frcmt !>t•at palosen~er a nd for no more thun $50 for the driver only. Half the 250,000 annual output would be equipped with driver only bags and the other half wou l d have drtv er·plus - passenger air Hags. The secretary .said he expect('{! Lhe negotiations to be completed by Jan. s and said he would re· commend lo Congress t1hortly thereafter what rurther aclton to take. Coleman estimated the pro gr am would cost about $86 million. The public's share of the cost would bring an $38 m1lllon The secretary stud he expect('(I lhe auto makers to pick up the re maining $48 million and said he felt this request "'as reasonable since domestic auto makers re· ported a corporate profit of near- ly $4 billion the pas t 12 months. However, he did not rule out the poss1b1llty that p<1rt1al financing of this $ol8 million could come from other sources. The secretary also called on automobile insurance companies to reduce casualty premiums on cars equipped with air bags. Coleman said he was con· vinced air bag devices -which protect~omobile passengers without. th~ passengers taking any action such as buckling seat belts -eould save many h ves. But he said requiring aJI cars lo be equipped with air bags pro· babl y would b e counte r · productive at this lime because a large segment or the public does not understand and opposes the controvers ial devices. A firm Transpartation Ot.'parl ment decision, he said. could lead to a public outcry that would force lhe next s ccretary o r Congress to revers e the dec1~1on Coleman also dcchn<.'Cl lo r e· commend that the federal gov- ernment put pressure on slates lo adopt laws re uinng that seal bells be used e noted lhc de· partment h ad been urging states to take such a ction since 1973 but onl y Puerto Rico had adopted mandatory seat bell use lnws He did direct, however. that seat belts he improved in conve· nience, comfort a nd r~liability. Coleman held pubhc heanngs on air ba.l!s in Auizust. He said his study convinced him a1r bag-; are both technologically and economically feasible Mesa lo Show Adobe Artioork An oil painting of Costa Mes a's Diego Sepulveda adobe will be wiveJled at Clly hall Dec. 12. at 1:30p.m. Artist Thelma Paddock Hope and members of the Costa Mesa bicente nnia l committee will place the oil. called "/\sleep in the Sun." in the lobby of city hall. Besides the Estancia adnhl' painting, Mrs . Hope will rfo, play paintings of hi:.toric Co.\ta Mesa scenes that have stn~l' cfo, appeared Crom the local area. The special program will run from 1: 30 to 3 p m . ""Wl""""'• TV WRITER MISSING Grice Garment Police Fear TV Writer Missing NEW YORK (AP> Police have broadcast a 13-state alarm for lhe missing wife of former Nixon lawyer Leonard Garment Soap opera writer Grace Gar· ment, 49, was last seen Friday aJ. temoon at Pennsylvania Station and her husband reported her missin2 Saturday . Garment, one-time counsel to · former President Nixon during ·the Watergate investigation. is a U.S. r epresentative to the Unit· ed Nations Human Rights Com- mission. His wi fe writes for the daytime t elev1s 1on ser ies "Edge o f Night '' A family spokesman said that Mrs. Garment failed lo :.how up fo'riday for a psyehiat.ric appoint m e nt for treatment of depression The miss ing person alarm put out by police d escribed her a!. 5· fool-4, 115 pounds, with brown hair and hazel eyes. When last seen, she was wearing a pink turtleneck sweater. slacks. and a brown fur coat. Mesa Slates Introductory Art Classes Courses in introductory draw- ing arc being offered ttus winter for ad ults and children in Costa Mesa . An introductory class in pencil. charcoal and chalk drawm,I! will begin Wednesd ay, Jan. 12 for adults a nd children al the Com- munity Recreation Center on lhe Orange County 1''airground::>. Class for s tudents 8 to 16 years old begins at 3 : 30 to 5 p.m. 011 Wednesdays. Adults meet from 1 to3p.m . on Wednesdays. Cost for children is $8 for the eight-week course and SIO for aduJlS Registration will he held Jan. :I from 6 to 8 p m . al the OowntC>wn Community Center, 594 Center SI F'or furth er information, c;ill 5.56·5300. While nlO!it drivers kt"pt wfth th(' 3~ mph speed limit, one motor ist was clocked at ~ mph and numerous othel"!I exceooed'40 mph. aceordtnlC lo olCicer Cl)'d~ F'oreman. •n 'l'he parenlll are hoping to J'lf'Ooo ve that extra pr ecautions such .. s a tralfic light or a crossing guard are nt't'ded for students solety. Trustees said they expect. t.b talce action on the planned closure or Harper and Balearic at their Dec. 14 meeting. • Trustees ore considering sett- ing the Balearic site in M~li Verde to City of Costa Mesa. BaJearic's 122 s tudents would be transferred to Adams school in Mesa Verde next year The projected changes were unveiled as trustees discus~ dechning d1slnel enrollment and new state ground rules for schQC)I s pending. Trustees said they wl)I have to cul expenses by closing, n number of district schools. Trus tee Thom as Ca'Jey said 1't> many as s even schools (200 classrooms> might be s hut dowri in the next two years. . Trustees already hav~ declared that Kaiser School fr. Costa Mesa will bec()me a rut · blown 6·8 grade middle school year. The expansion or Kaiser means Bav Vi e w. Woodl and an.ti. Lindbergh elementary schodts will be turned Into K-5 camp~es· with about 110 s ixth graders frottt those schools transferred ~o K~su. • And trustees say. if Harper aild Balearic arc shut down, thf'Y plan to a take another look al th'e possible closure of Bay View School in Santa Ana Heights. ' Mesa Plans Yoga Class The Costa Mesa department Qf leisure services is ~ffering Yoja classes ror beginners, in- termediate and advaneed $lu- dents. · · Denise Ransom instructs the eight-week courses beginning t,Qe week of Jan. J 0 al Wils~n Eleme ntary School. Beginners meet on Thursd ays from 6:30 to 8 p.m. and 111· termediale /advanced students meet Tuesdays from 6:30 to 8 p.m. . • Registration will be held J&JJll 3 from 6 lo 8 p.m. at the Downtown Community Center, 594 Cen"r ~ , ..... ~ For fur ther information, call S56·5300 Rocker Died Of Overdose MIAMI <AP) -Anoverdose16f heroin pr obably was the ~aus~of rock guita ris t Tommy Bolin''s death in a Miami Beach motel, of- ficials s3y. . ·•Autopsy studies arc continu- ing , but preliminary results a~e that his death was due to an over- d ose of na r cotics. probab_ly heroin," Or Roland Wrigl)1, Dade County's chief medical ~x­ aminer, said Sunday. OBESITY, A MAJOR HEAL TH HAZARD .. By 108 McCONCHIE If all the deaths from cancer were eliminated, TWO YEARS would be added to mans life span. If all the deaths r elated to OBESITY w ere eliminated , an estimated SEVEN YEARS would be added to mans life span. YOU can control your health rather than allow your environment to control it. PROGRESS h as virtually eliminated the necessity of walking, running, l ifti ng or climbing. One modern m achine TV holds people in "captive Idleness" for an average of twenty-one ho111r s a week. r;;i PHOHE:752-5155 t (. ..;:_;~MAYO BODY CONTROL I s n't it about t ime to oo .. ~'~ .... {. T~' CENTER "• MDO ·something about It? • . MAYO BODY CONTROL CENTER n·sAFACT A tWJSTt UNACM The first of its kind, exclusively. for men. MOM-STRENUOUS Aerobic and Isometric E){trcise. TO PtlYSICll flTllSS FO• '1lf£'' nWORKS Combined with nutrl tlonal Improvement in muscle tone, posture and weight are realized n'S GUARAMTEID g uidance.• c1rculat1on, Results aro guManteed without s ho ts. pills, starvation diets or strenuous exercise. ,..~•• 3961 MocARTHUI ILVD. SUITI IOI HEWrOIT llACH • Orange Coast EDITION * Today"s Closh1g 1 .Y. Stocks \(Ol. 69, NO. 341, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNJA MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1976 N TEN CENTS .: . Probe Launched in Fatal Plane. Crash ... ·---~ I O•llY l'llol Sl•fl Photo FIREMEN STAND BY AFTER DOUSING FIRE THAT FOLLOWED PLANE CRASH Twin Engine Craft Carried Five Men to Deaths Sunday In Irvine By IULARY KAYE 01 I~• 01tly Piiot SllH An airplane that crashed in Irvine Sunday afternoon, killing two Newport Beach men and three others. will undergo a cld!;e uamination beginning today, in- vestigators said. Miss M.W. "Wally" Funk. a National Transportation Air Safety Board inspector, swd she does not know yet what caused the twm engine Aerostar to crash as it attempted an emergency landing in a new industnal area about one mile away from Orange County Airport. But she said the wrcekage at lhe crash site has been removed to be scrutinized by her team or inspectors, The 4 ·15 p.m . cras h killed all five on board, including pilot Edward Pisoni. 45, of~ Cliff Drive. Newport lJeach: James Shortridge. 37 . of 1815Clirr Orive, Newport Beach. Jerry Bell. 33, of 14692 llyannu; Port, Tustin. Roger Barnett, 36, of 3217 s. Artesia, Santa Ana; and Lloyd' ·Jennings, 21, of 14552 Raintreo Lane, Irvine. Pisoni is a land developer and president of the Newport Beach firm. Realty Development Corporation. Details on the other crash victims are sUJI unknown. According to witness accounts. the plane was flying south towards Orange County Airport when the pi lot suddenly banked the craft lo the lert and then nose dived into a mound of dirt just feel from buildings. The plane was about 50 feet up when the d.tve began, witnesses said. The crash site was orr Aston Street, near Alton Street, in the industrial complex. A small fire burned in one of the engines, but was quickly put out by firemen. Three of the men were pitched out or the cabin by the impact and were found near the wreckage still strapped to their seats, police said. One of the two engines on the plane apparently Called just prior to the crash. A Fountain Valley co_upte. Austin and Jan Owings. both student pilots, told in· vestJgators they heard an un· identified pilot tell lhe control tower, "I have one engine out," minutes before the plane crashed. Owings was practicing on the airstrip and Mrs. Owings was in another craft getting gas. Pisoni's plane had taken o(( earlier in the day from Guaymas, Mexico. From the fis. hing gear found in the wreckage, orncials speculated that the men had jU3t returned from a short fishing vacation. "It looked like they were just five guys who had had a great time dowo in Mexico," comment. ed an Irvine Police officer who was at the scene. The plane was registered to lbe Sun Valley Corporation in Idaho, but officials said they did not know if the craft was leased or owned by Pisoni, who was report· ed to be an experienced pilot. ·NeighbQr Rescues NB WoDlan Tax Cut Uncertain Fire Hits Invalid's ( Dwelling Carter Disagrees With New Aide's View . I . ' PLAINS , Ga . CA P ) 1 fresident-elert Jimmy Carter. ~ disagreeing "1th his newly ap pointed budget director, said lo 1 day a tax cut 1s not a virtual ccr , tainty next year. Carter said 1t 1s I too early to tell what steps might be needed to stimulate the economy. • Carte~ said he 1s not convinced '\ yet that cutting taxes is the thing ,to do. "I'm deliberately keeping my mind open.'· he declared "I have advisers who are learun~ all dir- ferent d1rect1ons. but I'll wait and see." The president-elect said he will cons ult closely with Congress before deciding what to do about the economy. • Thom as •·Bert•· Lance. Carter's choice to be director or the Office of Management and 1Fatally Ill Diver !Takes 'Last Swim' l Newport Beach pohce smd to-Thompson said the tentative I day they 'believe the body of a ident1f1cat1on as based on the ract I scuba diver. found orr Corona de) that Jones. car was round atthe , Mar Main Beach. is that of e1 ma1n beach parking lot Friday lerminally ill Garden Grove man and that he had told his sister just who had come to the beach to before d1sappearinl( la.st week take "one last i-w1m " that h(' was going to go for "one Det. Sgt Ken Thompson said lasts" 1 m " dt~y believe the dead man 1s l(:(nneth L Jones, 24. of Garden (Jove Grove, who was reported r,llssing by his sister on Nov 30. An autopsy was p~nding today. According to police reports two da\ers, Ray Brackelsbcrl( or Ji)illerton and Robert Hagedorn ol Anaheim . were d1\'11lg al the south end of the beach at about 9 · :.> p m when they found the body of a scuba diver about a qu11rter of a mile from shore The bodv was retrieved by dlverc; from the shenrf's Harbor P~trol 'lbef t Suspect Dies A SH FORK, Ariz <APl An armed robbery suspect, W11liolT' "A. Corley. 16, or Santa Cruz. was !Wied and another suspect, Michael A. Malvmi, 15, of San .108e. was 1nJured Sunday nisht when their stolen car was forced off Interstate 40 by a highway patrol car a mile west of this northern Arizona community, said the Arizona llli.thway Patrol. Or~:£Ai ,Coas1 \\'ea th er Sunny through Tuesday with local winds. Slightly· warmer days with highs in the 70s, lows in the 40s. INSIDE TODA V Did ffOtDOrd Hughes em hu Ii/I a half h1P1atic1 Two Janner .nsplOJ!es baoe wnt- tm a book making tho~ cJaim. Se«. P.age A4. .. Intl@~ Woman Slams KKK Leader At Hearing By PIOLIP ROSMARJN Ot IM O••IY l'ltot St•fl An unidentified woman slammed a p1ckel sign over the head of David Duke, national director of the Ku Klux Klan, as violence nared briefly today dur-' ing Camp Pendleton heanngs in· to charges that 13 black Marines assaulted a roomful or white Marines they believed to be kl an members . Today's Incident followed a de· monstration by about 20 picketers outside the mlhtary courtroom where three of the 13 men were answering charges. The demonstrators said they were members of a San Diego and Los Angeles based group called The Committee Against Racism. Picketers circled outside the court and chanted, "Free the blacks, jail the Klan." Upon arrival of Duke, the cir- cle broke as a woman picketer charged the KKK leader. shouted at him and struck him over the head with her heavy, two-by-two post picket. Duke appeared to be momen· tarily stunned, but otherwise un- hurt. Another klan member, Robert Rhody, of San Diego. shoved the woman aside and traded punches with another, male, de- monstrator. Pendleton military police, sw- lngln1 baton a, broke up the fight. The demonstrators were bust.led off the base. The five klan members wtre allowed tostav. Gr and Dragon Duke said he and bia followers were at Pendleton to observe the in· veaU1aUon. Military officers said one apace In the court baa bttn reserved for a klan member who wu first. on a waltini ll5t. Budget. said Sunday that a tax t cul early in the new admirustra- lion 1s "virtually certa.m." But at an informal news con ference today, Carter declared· "It's too early to decide. 1 wouldn't say it was virtually cer- tain, although it is one of the possibilities." Carter dsd say that a penna- nent or temporary tax reducllon is possible "IC the economy needs stimulation, and I think at this point it appears that way." Another option, Carter said, are programs to put people to work. He said it will be dinicull to meet bis goal of reducing un· employment by 1.5 percent dur- ing his first year in office, but promised to makeefforttodoso. The nation's unemployment rate stands at 8.1 percent, or about 7.8 million people. Lance told the Los Angeles Times that a tax cut of up to $15 billion -possibly in the form or a rebate on 1976 income taxes - probably will be proposed by Carter. He suggested that a tax cut will be part of a package to stimulate the economy that will include a jobs program and tax investment credits to spur in· dustrial expansion. Asked earlier on CBS-TV's ''Face the Nation" about the possibility of a tax cut. Lance said that other possible economic ,1timulanls "arc so limited that I 'Think you hi,ve lo consider that almost a cerftainty." Carter has said he would con- sider a tax cut 1f the economic signs indicated a need for one • after he takes office Jan. 20. O••IY l'llOI Sutt l'holo RESCUED -Mrs. Eileen SmHh. being helped here by Newport Fire Information Officer Arl Morton, was rescued from burning apart· mcnt by neighbor. Staff Boost Hailed By Fairview Chief By STEVE MITCHELL OH ... O•llY 1'11411Si.ft Gov. Edmund arown's ap- proval or a plan to add 700 ('mployes lo the state's 11 mental hospitals, announced over the weekend. was met wtih with en· thusiasm today by Dr. Michael Levine, chief administrator at Fairview Hospital. But the newly appointed ad·· ministrator said that unless there are significant manage. ment changes, an increase 1n staff would not, by itself, 1m· prove service. GOOD GRIEF= .' ONL'I 18 SHOPPING DAYS 4' 'TIL CHRISTMAS .1 ~ i -.: "J couldn't be more pleased al the governor 's action," Or. Levine said today. "I need to compliment the governor on his rather rapid response to action." Levine said he didn't know what the breakdown would be for Fairview Hospital, saying the plan, to be initiated by next June, is more complex than ··Just rus- hing out a certain number of employes to each hospital." Levine said he would like to see more supervisory personnel added to the 1.700-patientfacility in Costa Mesa. · ·•A state program five years ago wiped out all the supervisory positions." he said. ''It divided the hospital into 10 programs, which was a good idea, but it wiped out all the superV1sion. "We have no supe;vising social worker. no s upervising psychologist . ·no supervts.ing teacher "Give m e five more psychologists and who's going to supervise I.hem? ·he asl<ed. Levine said these departments ate currenUy operated by pro- gram managers. ''who may not have any expertise ln a teacher or psycholo&ist's background." (See FAIRVIEW, Pace AZ) By JOANNE REYNOLDS Oft~ Dally 1'110' Staff Newport Beach firemen today credited Kurt Kalmbach, 27, son of Herb Kalmbach. former personal attorney lo Pl'esideot Nixon, with saving the Life or a neighbor who was trapped in her burning apartment. Firemen sai6 that Eileen G. Smith, 58. or 1820 Park Newport, #306, escaped with Kalmbach's help, suffering only singed hair m the Sunday blaze that did more than $75,000 damage to the apart· ment complex. Fire Department spokesman Art Morton said today that Mrs. Smith is confined to a wheel chair due to a recent injury and she couldn't open the door t.o her apartment to escape fames and smoke from the 12:45 p.m. lire. Morton said the fire apparently started in the bathroom whale Mrs. Smith was fixing lunch in the kitchen. She told firemen she started down the hall when she first smelled s moke but was turned back by flames. She said she then tried to call the fire department. but the s moke was loo intense and she decided lo get out. Becasue she is confined lo a wheelchair and due to the heavy smoke, she was unable to open her front door, Morton said. Kalmbach said he was leaving his apartment, next door to Mrs. Smith ·s. when he saw the smoke Daily Pilot St.Ill PMIO SAVED HIS NEIGHBOR Newport's Kurt Kalmbach and heard her fumbling with the door. He said her wheelchair was stuck on the baseboard or the threshold and he helped her over +aAd-took-her. to.an apartment down the hall. Kalmbach sajd he went back to his apartment. where his wife was calling the fire department. and got a blanket for Mrs. Smith and then closed off a fire door in the complex hallway. Kalmbach said his wife · arid her girlfriend were unable to go out through the hall after calJing the fire department because the smoke was so thick, so they went out to their balcony and clirnb<.'<l down. In all. 24 fire department men. were called to the blaze which. took 20 minutes to control. <See RESCUE, Pagei\2) o.lty "11tt ........ .,, ""-...-. FIREMEN 9CALE LADDER TO ATTACK Bl.AZ£ ~ • Apartment at Pn tte.rp,n aumed Sund•y Afternoqn \ • .42 DAILY PILOT N Hospital Probe Assailed T14o state"' 1dc hoi.p1tal at .. sociations crit1r1zed the State Department of Health today for its probe or 12 ho:.patuls that the departmet1t l'lu1ms begun to uM: or to lnst;1ll body scunrw1g 1.-qu1µ ment. Two of the hos piw.ls under in· vest1~ation for alleged violalton or a law which wc·nt into effect Sept . 9 are Hoa~ Memorial Hospital m Newport Jieach and Santa Ana Tustin Community Ho:.p1tal. A spokesman for Hoag i.aid their scanner was installed and operating on Sept I, before thl· law went into effect. A spokesman ul Santa Anci Tustin saad their scanner ha:. not yet been ani.tallcd The California Hospital Ai. soc1ation and the l'nilt.'<l l lospalal Association l'c>ntended in a joint statement that the department was m1sinterprctan~ a new state Jaw in announcing that al might fine the 12 fac11Jt1es ·'The hosp1t <t I ai.:.oc1ataons do not believe that the language or intent or the planrunf{ law pro· h1bited ho:.µ1t J b which bchcvt-d they qualified for a t•ert1ficate of exemption from t•ontinuing with their projects while their aµ plicutions for exemption were be· ang processt.'d," the organiza. tions s aid State heulth offit·wls an· nounccd Thursday Owl they were orckrinJ,! 12 hospatab thut had li.:gun to m<,tall or USl' the .scan ners to :-.how t'JU~l' why lht•y should nut hl• finl'll up to S2.SOO 1•arh According to Sh·ve Rurton. a Health Department attorney, the 12 facilities had ordered scan. ners but dad not h<Hc lht•m m uc;e by St•pl 9, lht• d J Y the· la.,.. took c•ffecl That meant that they had to ob tam an exemption from the de- partment before u:.mg or install· ing the mach1ne.s, he said The new law rcc1uircs hospitals to obta1 n perm 1ssion from the de· partment before building addi· t1ons or buying equipment cost. ing more than $150,000 Scannl'rs, X ray machines that department .spokesman Hob Nance said could eliminate lhC' need for ex· ploratory surger~. run betwct.'n $450.000 anct $700.000 Stalt' offi cial-; say th<' new law rs needed to prt•vcnt nvcrhu1lding of ho:.p11al fat•alitll'S and a pro· liferation or c?xpens1ve equip- ment, a development the~ blame for part or t h e lnt•rcase in gk) rocketing mt.'d1ral costs Dr. R e isen Rites S late d \fc-rnor1.il "'r'J<'t''-for Or Ed 111un11 II HH·wn "'II 11<• hclc.l ·1 ut•..,11.1' JI 11 .i m .11 Pac1f1l· \I•'" \11•m1111JI Ch.1pd '1,t'" port Ut•J1h IJr r<at'<it•n. J '\;1•" port llt•a('h dt.•1111,t dtl'c.l 1.i'I :O.tnnllJ\' follc1" Jn~ .J ht'.11 I Jtldl'k llt• 11' ~Ur\l\t•cl h,\ hi'" 1dn" Fr<IO('l". J "on, £<1 rnun<1 II Hll'M'n Jr an<f gr;wd dJuJi?hlPr Debor Jh H1l·::.l·n D1 Hit•wn rt.•quc11tc1I that his hod} bt> ('r<'m .1tt-11 and hi!> ash(.'~ -.(·al\erl'O ,,t M•;1 FRllJCE llROUG HT HER l 'l JLD CA.'iH Ju..,l IU m1n111r., af11·r our 11n1wr "·'' rl1·I" 1·r t'll, I '"Id th!' rt'frll(••r ,11 f •r Th,11 ' th•· 111111 I.. ';tit·~ 'IUCC'('<;' i<lor~ told In I h 1• 'Ii ewp<1rt tlc•arh l411m.1n "'ho placr<l lhis .id 1n th1· DJ1lv l'1l<11 1~· Wl'l1r1poo1 R"rr1Q. w iC••mf'kl'r VS u ·x. JC)( x )( If you ha' r an .11Jphancc H>U wanr to convert to c,1s h, call 642·~78 W(' muk" 11 t•as,y for ynu t<1 put a h·w words to 14 ()rk for you, in the Daily Pilot ORANOf. COAST N l•JJf rjQlt•ll l'to!~Ot •IW..,(l•"I O••''t P11"' w1t"'w~,,~, ,~ ~•Mii ll\f; H,.•·· "t" ~ 1\ Pvnf•"""9 b"t ftw Ort~ C .. \I ft11~1\h1"'q' ,,...,, .. ,.~ WNt!lftf" <ll(f1f,~ ,;1 1t\INl•f'•C1 Mf'l~h• l~•"IV1"' '''°"" ff)., (f' .. t• ,,.,. t ~.w ... trl f\. •'"' •-iw'•I ,,_.111' .. ' "' r~ 1,t1flll \lelle'lf 11 •At \•l'fiil"'-t:' IJ4<l~f itftO \<ffr'"41t•Al'f~ \.,,,"1"••"' ••·"C)f•'·)~l•t't t Of\ I\ f'\IM1\"'9'1 \.•l11•0.t'f\ ...,._, '.;wftY' ltt1111 f"'l~ .,. .. t .......... .,lf'lr1 j>l.-.t •• -· ))0 °t¥1\t "'"" ~ .. t C...\A ~·A Cr411J•""'••f'10• ..... ,.. ........ l't•o••ftt • ..., ~ N>t '-''. (.,, .. , v~ • "''"' .. "'' .tftlt ~¥''•' w,_,...,. lMMA\.HYlf ,,,.. .. T'-."'--\A M....,,._, MA"•l·~Cd'tor 0Ut'\HM U.t •• , .. ,..., trt.tt 4,t•\llllM ~""·"'···*"~ T•l•pllon• 171 •1.,.,.4.>21 Clu•ln•d Adnrtltlnt M2·Ml'I ~~ :.!'! o;,~':1:. (~:;!.:;,:~':1~1 "'''"' tr •tf••'f1om1rtn ~·'"" P'l\•t' e. "o•odut•d •1tr.tvt '"''.-f lM•"''h'•~ of U il"ltlQN••"•t lifoto,..d ,,.,, A•\t•t• t•lll'I •' C.111~• #Hu (•'ltouu.t ~VO\• t1fUIO'I D• ,.,,.., t1 \~ ~t~I.. bf' M•lf 4 .. lfWflUU'f" Mihf4'J ~··"'ft1~\\.) '°""•"tt\ly Trattk!Co11at F ro• Pap A J Parents Check Jury Rules Death Void RESCUE •••. Morton said the names were q.>n· tined to Mrs. Smllh'a apartrdlnl although the common an>u of the complex suffered he~vy smoke d amage. Harper Safety WASHINGTON (AP) - The exclusion of e\'eO one proi.pective Juror for genernl scruplt>s agamst cap ital punishment uutomatically voids nny death penalty imposed in u trio!. the U.S . Supreme Court ruled today Morton said resident.I as w,11 ns firemen suffered from smok (t IJ\haJat1on a nd beat exp05ure and one fireman, John Matt&on, wu treated and released from Hoag Memorial Hospital when a piece or a;lau from nn cxplodlnf wtn· dow Im bedded IUlolf in hill knM. .... """'""°'° TV WRITER MISSING Grace Garment Police Fe ar TV Writer Abducted NEW YORK CAP> Pohct.• h;l\·e broadcasl a 13 stale alarm for the missing Wtfe Of formt.'r Nixon lawyer Leonard Garment. Soap opera wriler Grace Gar ment. 49, was last seen l''nday af· ternoon al Pennsylvania Station and her hushand reported her missiniz Saturda v. Garment, Onl'·time counsel to former Prestdt·nt Nixon dunng the Waterg.:atc in\'est1gatw11. i!. <1 ll S. repr esentative to lhc Unit· ~'<l Nations Human Rights Com· mission. J-Us wife wrill''.> fur tht• d41ylime tele\ is ion scrae:. "Edge of Night '' ,\ fam11'· spokr!>man i.dld thal Mrs Garment failt-<l l<J !>how up F'nday for a ps~ c-h1atnc appoint ment for treatment of depression The missing person alarm put out by polil'c de.scnbed her as S foot·4, 115 pounds, with brown hair and hawl eyes When lasl sec·n. s ht.' v. as "-Caring a pink l\Jrtll•neck sweater, sl<tcks, and a brown fur coal NB Traffic Mee t Tonight Meml..ters of the Newport Drach city council will meet with their planning rommi!>::.wn and Transportal1on Plan C1til1ms Ad \'tsory Committee tonight to d1~ c·uss a new traffic anahi.1s of :-Irv. port Center · JOIOIOJ! ('JI~ oH1c·1.JJs al th« i JO pm spt•t·1Jl ::.<•s,ion 141'1 ht· 11•present.1t1\1'" of the· lntnl' Cornpan~ .,.. ho ..... 11 1•xplain tht• findings of t ht• I att'"t tom pan~ ... tudy of tht• cenlt'r The Ne" port C'c·nl<'r Traffic· Shirly PhaSl' I 11 " ant'\ aluat1on or IJ 1ntt•rs1·c·1111n~ ha~1·tl on 111 11mJte rk\'{·lopm.-nt nf the• <'t'nll'r a-. \\.ell a~ planncd rc~1onal ~roY.lh Fro• Page A I FAIRVIEW Thr proJ,!ram rror~antiat1on chd :.omc good t hmits nrgan1za 11onally, but 1t "•PNi nul all thc- prnfess1onal -;upf•n•1.,1on," h<· '<atd · That s v. h.1t I'd l1kf.' lo :oif't• r1•mstated uncler nrnwn's '\ttlf fani.t plans.·• Le' me s,ud Tex a s Slayer fty MIC'HAt:I, PASKEVICH Of IU D•llJ 1'1101 \l•H A group of Harper School pa.rents conducted a traffic sur· vcy or Irvine Avenue today in an oittempt to dramatize to district officials the potential danger their chlldrl'n may face if lht•y are forced to cross the busy thoroughfare next yeaf'. The informal traffic count was in response to recent trustee declarations that d eclining enrollment makes it inevitable that Harper and Balearic Schools In Costa Mesa will be closed at the end of thas school year. If Harper is closed, about 107 students, including 13 kin dergartners, would have to cross I rvine Avenue t o attend Mariners School in Newport Beach. The remainder of the school's 3SO students would be transferred to Newport Heights or Woodland Schools. The Harper campus would be taken over for some di!>· tr1ct offices presently on the McNally High School campus. Today's tra ffic survey by a dozen Harper parents was con- ducted between 1!:30 a.m. and 9 a .m , the period in which stu- dents would be crossing the street. A total or 666 cars were tallieJ during the half hour period. At fi ve minute intervals, a ~roup of parents crossed the street and in one instance were greeted by a honk and a four~ letter word f rom an irate m~on~ . The parents believe the street is unsafe since drivers are not prepared for pede5lrians. A Costa Mesa police man cloC'kcd the average speed of motorists using the street which divides Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. While most drivers kept with the JS mph speed limit. one molorist was clocked at SS mph and numerous others exceeded 40 mph. according to officer Clyde Foreman. The parents are hoping to pro· ve that extra precautions such as a traffic light or a crossing guard are needed for students safety. Trustees said they expect to lake action on the planned closure of Harper and Balearic at their Dec. 14 meeting. Trustees are considering sell- ing the Balearic site in Mesa Verde to City of Costa Mesa. Balearic's 122 students would be transferred to Adams school in Mesa Verde next year. The projected changes were unveiled a s truste<!S discussed declining dii1trict enrollment and new stale ground rules for school spending Trustees said they will ha\'e !O cul rxpenses by closing a number of district schools. Trustee Thom as Casey said as many as sevrn schools 1200 dassrooms> might be shut down in the next two yciJrS Rocker Died Of Overdose MIAMI <AP) -An overdose of heroin probably was the cause or rock guitar ist Tommy Bolin's death in a Miami Beach motel, of· t1clals say. "Autopsy studies are continu· ing, but preliminary results arc that his death was due to an over· dose of narcotics, probably heroin." Dr. Roland Wright, Oade County's chief medical ex· ammer. ~a id Sunday. High Court Delays Second Execution WASHINGTON (AP) -The U S. Supreme Court postponed today the execution of a Tex&& murdere r who did not want his scheduled Friday death In the electric chair, delayed. The high court delayed in· definitely the execution of Robert Excell White. a 30.year ·ol<J drifter from Waco. Tex., who says he deserves to die. It was the second Ume in four days that the Supreme Court de· layed the execution of a prisoner who wanted to die. On Friday, the justices postponed tl'le fuinR squad execution of U tah murderer Gary Mark Gilmore. who bad convinced state offlclals to let him dle. White 's attorn ey, J .E . Abernathy, asked the court for Um• to challenge the state'!! de- ath penalty. the indictment lhal charged White with murder ond the method of jury selection used at White's trial. White does not want to appeal, •however . In a Nov. 23 letterto the Supreme Court, WhJte said, "Mr. A~mathy is acting agaln11t my express lnstructJON Md desires. 1 cxplicllly told him that 1 dld not willh any federal appeal of any sort whatsoever. "I am mentally prepared lo ac- cept the judgment of sentence imposed upon m e." said White, a death row prisoner at Huntsville, Tex.. for the past two years. "Any delay now will only inflict• needless m ental hardship on me" Gilmore was to have died al sunrise today, and would have become the first c riminal execut- ed in the United States since 1967. JUs death was s tayed at the re· quest of h is m other . Bessie Gilmore or Milwauloc. Ore. Preparation of an appeal In White's case and its considers· tlon by the court could take several months. White was conv icted o f· murdering a 73·year-old grocery stort proprietor in a 1974 hold·up. Two teen·age c ustomers also were killed durinJZ the robbery. Appearing al a Nov. 1 hearing in which bis exeeuUon date was 8ct, White told the judge. "JI any man deserves to die J do ror the crimes I've committed.'' WhJte aald he wanted Texas to t'xecute him at the earliest possi· bledate. _ Trustees already have declared that K:ust>r School in Coi.ta Mesa will berome a Cull· blown 6 8 grade rruddle school year The expansion or Kaiser means Bav View , Woodland a nd Lindbergh e lementary i.chools will be t urn.ad into K·S campuses with about 110 sixth graders from those schools transfe rred to Kaiser. And trus tees say, if Harper and Balearic are shut down, they plan to a lake another look at the possible closure oC Bay View ~hoot in Santa Ana Heights. tn a 6 to 3 vote, the rourt threw out the death penal· ty sentence given to con- vict~ Georgia murderer Curfew Davis. The unsigned opinion sald the Georgia Supreme Court was wrong when It decided that the improper exclusion of a prospective juror In Davis' trial d..id not. deny him the right to be judged by a cross-secuon · of the community. Two ot M rit. Smith's neighbors, Nathan and l"rancea J\.rawt~. both 78, were treated for sm~e inhalation by paramedics who said the couple ~so suffer 1""11 heart problems. A total of six fire trucks as •bll as the paramedics worked at the fire scene under command of Battalion chief Phil Hayden. Morton satd another of Mrs. Smith's neighbors hu taken the fire victim in until other Uvlbg ai:angemenls can be ivade. Gihnore Tells MoJD Brdlets Fly 'I Wish for Death' At City Crew . In HuntingtotJ SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Convided killer Cary Gilmore. his desire to face a fuing squad at sunrise today thwart.1.'<l by his mother's appeal to the U.S. Stipreme Court, wrote an open letter to her today saying, "I wish to be dead. We a.II die. lt ain't no big deal." Appeals Court Nixes Farr's Wmempt Rap LOS ANGELES <AP> /\ California Appeals Court ordered the Manson trial Judge today to vacate a contem?t sentence against reporter William Farr, thus en<;ling Farr's five yea r bat· tic to prMcct his scrrct sources. The California 2nd District Court or Appeals rulmg was an- nounced by the court·.., clerk, Clay Robbins. who phoned Farr WJlh the news. Although the text of the ruling was not immediately available, it was believed that the three· j udge panel held that Superior Court Judge Charles Older was improperly trying to prosecute Farr twice for the same offense. In a hearing Nov. 23, Justice Mildred Lillie asked critically how many times Farr could be punished. Older vowed to send the re porter back to Jail for refusing ti} reveal which of the six trial al· torneys gave him mformat1on for a story published durin~ the 1970 trial of convicted mass murderer Charles Manson and three mem bers of his cult. Farr ser ved '16 days behind bars m 1973 but was released b} the U.S. Supreme Court pending appeals Ol<ler vow<'t.I to send tum back to Jail for lhc max- imum time allowed under law five da:,.s as further punish· mcnt. "The one good thing that has come out of the whole ordeal, I think," said Farr afterward, ''is that the courts are now con· vinced that the prott•cllon l)f news sources is a sacrt . .'d com. ma ndment to reporters and nn amount of time in jail will get them to break their promise." .. \ , .. , . I The letter released today by Gilmore's attorney said. "I would like to talk to you and to see you, but for some reason I can't, so I am sending this letter to you, so that the newspapers and the media will get this message to you." The NAACP Legal Defense Fund filed the appeal in behaU or the mother, Bessie Gilmore. Now ·living in a Portland, Ore .. sub· urb, she is crippled with a rthritis and has had her phone discon. nerled. "Please disassociate yourself from the Uncle· Tom NAACP. I don't know how the NAACP got to you, but please don't let them u.se you as a sympathetic na- tional appeal," wrote Galmore, who was once again in the pnson infirmary today. "'Mom, they have no concern for you or for me. In fact they are less than concerned about any wtute person,·· Gilmore wrote. "Please Mom, JUSt accept the fact that I don't disagree with the law and the sentence that has been imposed upon me, ~nd I wish to be dead. We all die. It ain't no big deal. Sometimes it is right and proper .... Please ac· cept m:v fate,·' he wrote. Ernest Dean Wright, Division or Corrections director, said Sun· day Gilmore was transferred to the prison infirmary because Warden Samuel W. Smith was concerned that he "may have something planned" for today when he was to h ave faced a fir- ing squad for murdering a motel clerk. t;ilmore's attorney. Ronald Stanger, said his client was "still angered" at the court action his invalid mother initiated Thurs- day. T h e exec ution -which Gilmore sought as quickly as possible -was stayed for a third time Friday by the U.S. Supreme Court at her request. Gilmore turned 36Saturday. Wright said oUicials reared that if Gilmore r emained in his maximum security cell, other m· males might attempt to slip him drugs. He was hospitalized last month after he and his girlfriend, Nicole Barrett, took overdoses of sleeping pills in an apparent suicide pact. By ROBE RT BARKE R ' . Of Ill• D•llY l'llol $\Alt A Huntington Beach man Who told police he was shootlng·11t. crows, was arrested .early today and char$?ed with assault with, a deadly weapon arter alleged1y shooUng at a thrce·man city s ur- vey crew. " Mark Allen Smith, 21, of 2601 Huntington St. was taken tnlo custody less than two hours after the alleged sniping incident by members or the police S~lal Weapons and TacUcs (SWAT> squad who h a d surrounded Smith's apartment. o rrieers stud there was "no problem" an arresting Smith sn'd he was taken into cust ody without incident. Police said he had a .22 caliber rine in tits possession. The lO·man team surround~ the ne w complex on Huntington between Clay and 17th streets'at t1 a.m. after the lhreesurveyo'ts said they had been shot at while working in the area. Surveyor Christopher Salkdd. 21, of Seal Beach said he and h1s companions were working ne1lr the intersection of Huntington and Clay when he heard a shot followed by the sound of a bu~t passin g close by him. '• He said he dove into a gutter for cover. His fellow surveyors, Rfh Boardman. 34, of San Juan Capistrano and Gary Harri~. 31, of Huntington Beach said ~Y dove behind a palm tree. Cente r Hears .. Outlook ~77 r' Four speakers will address t1'e annual meeting of the Newport Center Association Dec. 9 from 8·10 a.m . a t the NewporterIM ;. Spcakin~ on "Outiook '77" wih be lloward Cravens, vice- prcsident a nd economist for Union Bank; Roland Speers, pre- sident of Am cord, lnc.; Robert: Weed, publish er of the Daily Pilot anti Bradley J acob.1, Orange County tax assessor. • . Newporl Center "Ullployes should call 640·180l for reserva- tions. OBESITY, A MAJOR HEAL TH HAZARD By IOI McCOMCHIE If all the deaths from cancer were eliminated, TWO YEARS would be added to mans lite span. I f all the deaths r elated to OBESITY were eliminated, an estimated SEVEN YEARS would be added to mans life span. YOU can control your health rather than allow your environment to control it. .: .. PHONE: 752-5155 PROGRESS has virtu ally eliminated the necessity of walking, running , lifting or climbing. One modern machine TV holds people In "captive idleness" for an average of twenty-one hours a week. ( (. ·¥="'. -~ ~· CENTER !FOR MlMl IT'SJ. Fl.CT The first of its kind, exclusively for me n HON.STRENUOUS Aerobic and Isometric Exercise. ITWORICS Combined w ith nutritional g u idance, Improvement 1n muscle tone, circulation, posture and weight are realized. IT'S GUARANTEED I sn't it about time t o DO something about It? MAYO BODY CONTROL CEHTER A auusnc AnllACM TO rHYSICAl nncw FOi "UFE" Results are guaranteed without s hots, pills., starvarlon diets o r s tronuous exercise . ~.., ... 39'1 MocARTHUI ILVD. SUITE IOI MIWPOIT llACH . . . • 'r " . 1 \ ' .. r .. , . , --· Monday'., Clo ing Prices NYSE COMPOSITE I TRANSACTIONS Monday Oeeembof 6 1976 N DAIL'( PILOT A I I Wash Out Shampoo Test Frizzes By Mil.TON MOSKOWITZ Dot..-s at make any difference wblch shamwo you use• 1t makes a considerable d1Jrerence, of course, to the pro- ducers. Wlth Arnencans spending more than half a billion doll Ill's a ycur on shampoos, Procter & Gamble (P&G) cares pa:s1uonalely whether you buy Head & Shoulders, and Clairol tn New York wlll worry if you don tuse Herbal Essence To remind you to make the buying declS1on In their favor P&G spends more tban $10 million a year touhng the virtues of Head & Shoulders, while Bristol Myers. the corpontaon that owns Cl•urol. must s~d close to SS million promoting Herbal Essence ~ This persuai;ton .r :e. works Or else the pro- duct works well enough '> ~ • ' Money Tree tor users to repeal their purchases Maybe both ln any case. these are lwo of the winners U\ the contest for your shampoo dollars Head & Shoulders 1s the most popular shampoo m the country And at has been so far a lot of years Its market share has been shaved recently, but 1t still does about 15 perc.mt ot the total business Add Prell s 7 percent and that gives P&G a shiny 22 percent oHhe hair shampoo market Herbal Essence, which Clairol makes with a heavy wh1Cf of fragrance, 1s one of the fastest growing bran~s m tile field Only five years old, 1t s already U\ third place w1th an 8 per· cent share of them ark et BVT DOES IT MAKE ANY d1Herence to your hair which :ihampoo you use? Consumer Reports, that redoubtablemag1mne that tests products artd rates them by brand investigated shampoos m 1ts November issue It 1dent1f1ed quickly the contents of shampoos ·Usually, 1ust water <lots of 1t), detergent, foaming agents, a dab (or two or three) of fragrance and an 1m agmative variety of other stuff of little or no value except in sellmg pomts " IT'S TH E DE,.-ERGENT THAT gives shampoos lhe1r cleaning ab1hty Cons um er Reports was unable to develop any laboratory tests that could effectively evaluate shampoos It s aid, m ef · feet What s good for one person may be bad for another So what it did do was to test 77 shampoos by g1v10g them to 217 men and women to try for two weeks This 1s the kmd oftest a manufacturer might make, usmg the results only 1f its brand came out at the top IN THE CONSUMER REPORTS' lest, the two brands re· ce1vmg the highest ratmgs were Head & Shoulders (the cream version, not the liquid) and Protem 21 for dry hair The magazine found there rs a sharp split between what men and women prefer ma shampoo, but these two brands were liked by both sexes With Head & Shoulders, the panel t hus confirmed a verdict already rendered m the marketplace That snot the case with Protein 21, a shampoo marketed by the Mennen Company When 1t appeared, wtth the promise that protein would g1 ve hair new body and bounce, Protein 21 rushed lo an 8percen.tma.diets.llar~ It has now dropped back to2 percent • For Consumer Reports, then, thissbampootes~rov1ded no clear cut answers It spilled out the Judgme ts of its panelists and ended up advising its 2 m1lhon subs hers as follows Don t believe the ads Just trust your ow hair and your own 1nslmcts " Prospects Produce Widespread Gains NEW YORK (AP) -A mood of optam1sm over economic prospects helped carry the stock market to a broad gam today Tradmg was active The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks was up ll 22pomls to961 77 Advances outnumbered dcchnes by better than a 3 l margin amol)g New York Stock Exchange listed lSsues 1ltneric an Le ade r• M'Jtof .*'it och • Did Nc W YORI( 11\Pt M1tanc~~ Dl'cl ... ~ Un<h•n<Jed Tot•I JS~UfS N<lw 1''& n fl~• HOW t•lt. fOW\ WHAT AME)( 010 Nc W YORK lAPl ,......,, TOIMY cMV 01 Jl6 21'> 211 JJ8 3!0 IOU '1113 so 21 • • St o c.>ks I 11 The Spoflight NEW YORK IA Pl Salei 4 pm prl•" •M r>PI tl><tr>OO ot the llllte<> ~t ~< I ve New York Sloe.. Exchanqe bsur-<. tradlnq natlonalfv .at rnort t~ \1 Sot>v (;oro 319 100 Bl•~ It Uan"Amer 11• 400 21 1.. .tt VS lrKlu\t 71000 7>.. + >• Gulf 011 113 600 78~,.. I COmw cd \ '09 000 :n + '• FodN•I Mlq 1~5 200 16\lo -• Han-dyH3rtn 188100 101.•+, ._ T~KatO Inc 180 500 U t\ • Occ~n ~· 118 ti)() n -• Soul""'" Co f6q 600 16 • V.. Am Tel& Ttl 166 600 &l~ AllRithfl 1611 JOO 5'\o •• V8 EIPow 164 700 H + ,. SldOil C41 lSq 100 ll'• • '"' Brit ~t 152 700 17~• IJp s and Do"'"'' NEW YORK (APJ -The follow nQ fl\( \how> lr>e New Yori< !>fo<k E-.Mng1> \tot."\ anc:t w•rrdnh that nav~ QOn• up ttlt mo~• anti dQ..-;n the mo\t t>A\.ed on Pot<onl of th•nQU rcq<>rdlU~ Of vofvm!' ""No ~~r.~ lrilellnQ below,, arr '"'' J<> a N• t and pert~ntnoe ttwlf'1QI\ Ar" u " d fhrH\C.P bf!i1~tn lf\C' previous. <lO\ no or <• dnd fcxJllY • • p m prlt• l ~l<t l 1(4ly Ind 3 <Abol(;ab F ~ g:r~:~R~,,~ 6 Gell Dh~lp I Sl~M•Y 8 O>IM lw Cll ~ ~t\ J\h El 10 Un Cllrnmtc: 11 Emoi:1 11>• 1? 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Stoeks VOL. 69, NO. 341, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1976 TEN CENTS Jlisputed CUSD Vote Off to Cou1·t ... ... . _:,_ ,;::..._ D•lly Pll•t St•tt PllDlo Flip-flop Angers 'reachers The Capistrano Unified School District trustee elect.ion, once overturned by a recount. is now headed for the courts. Tonv Leon. oresident or the Capistrano Unified Education Association (CUEA) said today the teachers group will contest the recount whrch replaced William Manahan with Jan Overton as the trustee-elect. I FIREMEN STAND BY AFTER DOUSING FIRE THAT FOLLOWED PLANE CRASH Twin Engine Craft Carried Five Men 10 Deaths Su"day In lrvlne Manahan, a teacher in the Sad· dleback Unified School District, had initially been declared the winner in the general election . The ei~ht-vote margin Manahan was believed to have won by changed in the recount and Mrs. Overton was declared the wanner by three votes . NB Woman Rescued From Fire ~ By JOA!'INE REYNOLDS Of I~• 0•1ly PllOI St.Ill : Newport Beach firemen loclay ,credited Kurl Kalmbach, 27. son lo! llerQ Ka Imbach, former tpersonal attorney to President Nixon. with saving the life of a 'neighbor who was trapped m her 'burning apartment Firemen said that Eileen G Smith, 58, of 1820 Park Newport, JJ306, escaped w11h Kalmbach's ·help, suffering only singed hair tin the Sunday blaie that did more than $75.000 damage lo lhe apart· ment complex. .. ~re p~ar~!lle!'l :;~~e~m.ari 1Art Morton said tooay tnal Mrs lSmith is confinf'<f to a wheel jChair due to a recent inJUry and ti he couldn 't open the door to !;,er apartment tu escape fames and s moke from the 12 45 p m fire Morton said the fare apparently Sarted an the bathroom whale rs Smith was faxing lunch in e kitchen • She told firemen she started down the hall when she fir;.t ~melted smoke but was turned ~kby OJmes , She said she then tnt'd lo call lhe rire department. but the smoke wai. too intense and she d~ided lo (!et out Becasuc she 1s confmt'd to a wtlf'elcha1r and due to the hca\ y smoke. ~hl• wall unabl<· to o~n hi!r front duo1 . Morton said Kal mbach stud he wa:. leaving his apartmC'nt. nf'xt door to Mrs Smith "· when h,• s aw lht• s moke and h<.'ard ht-r rumbling with the door He ~aid her ~ heekhrur was stuck on the hu!>cboarcl of tht' threshold and ht' helped her over 1t and look her lo an apartment down the hall Kalmbach said he went back to hUI apartment. where his wife wu calling the fire department, and got a blanket for Mrr; Smith and then closed orr a fire door in the complex hallway Kalmbach said his wire and her girlfriend were unable to go out throuah the hall after calhnR the fire d<'partment because the smoke was so thick. so they went out to their balcony and chmbed <See RESCUE, PageA21 Orang-a Coast ts: 4~ ::zO 7 ~ \\'eat her Sunny through Tuesday with local winds. Slightly warmer days with highs in the 70s, lows in the 40s. l~SIDE TODA\'' Did Howard Hughe• end hit U/e a half lunatic? Two form.er employrs have wnt· ten a book making that c,loim. See P.O{le A4. ladex At All All AJ ... ,. Alt Alt •• A' ... All II In/tr Piiot Sl;tlf P"Ol• .... SAVED-HI& .N~l~OR Newport's Kurt Ka1"1baeti San Juan Man Target of · Sniper in HB By ROBERT BARKER Of 0•• 0•1ty ft1aot St.ff A Huntmaton Beach man who told pohC'l' he was shooting at crows. ~as ArrPsted early today and chaq~cd with assault with a deadly \\ eapon alter <1llcgcdly shooting at a three-man city sur vey crew Mark Allen Smith. 21 , or 2601 lllmtangton St was taken into C'ustod> less lhan t\\O hours after the alleged sniping incident by members of the police Special Weapons and Tactics !SWAT > squad who hacl surrounded Smith's apartment Officers said there was "no problem .. in arresting Smith and he was taken into custody without inC'idenl Pohct• said he had a 22 caliber nn(' 1n has prn1sess1on . The 10-man team surrounded the new complex on lluntmgt.on (See SNIPER, Page i\21 Examiners Eye Plane Wreckage By HJLARY KAYE Of the O•lly P ll_. St.Ill An airplane that crashed in Irvine Sunday afternoon, killing two Newport Beach men and three others. will undergo a clo.'le examination beginning today, m; vcst1gators said. Miss M.W. "Wally'' Funk, a National Transportation Air Safely Board inspector, said she does not know yet what caused the twin-engine Aerostar to crash as at attempted an emergency landing in a new industrial area about one mile away from Orange County Airport. But she said the wreckage at .. 'ffie crasn sffe has '6een removed to be scrutinized by her team or inspectors. The 4 : ts p.m . crash killed all rive on board, including pilot Edward Pisoni. 45, of 2209 Cliff Dnve. Newport Beach; James Shortridge, 37, or 1815CllfCDrive, Newport Beach: Jerry Bell, 33, of 14692 Hyannis Port, Tustin, Roger Barnett, 36, of 3217 S. Artesia, Santa Ana ; and Uoyd1 Jennings, 21, of 14552 Haintree Lane, Irvine. Pi soni is a land developer and president of the Newport Beach firm . Realty Development Corporation. Details on the other crash victims are still unknown. According to witness accounts, the plane was flying south towards Orange County Airport when the pilot suddenly banked the craft lo the left and then nose dived intCJ a mound of dirt just feet from bu;ldings. The plane was about 50 feet up when the dive began, witnesses said. The crash slte was off Aston Street. near Allon Street. in the industrial complex. A smaJI fire burned in one of the engines, but was qu.ickly put out by firemen. Three of the men were pitched out of the cabin by the impact and were found near the wreckaRe sUU straooed to <See PROBE, PageA2) .Leon said the teachers believe votes were counted dwinit the re· count process that should not have been. In a letter to the board of supervisors, the teachers asked that the election results not be certified until an explanation is given by the Registrar of Voters fpr differences in the machine count versus hand count by an election board. During the hand count, ballots which had been marked twice, once in the blank write-in space. and once in the space after Mrs. Overton's name. were con· sidered as votes lor her. During the machine count earlier, the double marked ballots had been rejected. Leon said he has been in con- tact with the association's at· torneys and he said if the board o( supervtsors goes ahead with the certification. the ¥SOCiation will seek a restraining order lo keep Mra. Overton off the school boiard. Rocker Died Of Overdose MIAMI (AP> -An overdose of heroin probably was the cause of rock guitarist Tommy Bolin's death in a Miami Beach motel. of· ficials say"'. "Autopsy studies are continu- ing, but preliminary results are that his death was due to an over- dose of narcotics. probably heroin." Dr. Roland Wright, Dade County's chief medical ex- aminer. said Sunday. Theft Suspect Dies ASH FORK, Arii. CAP) -An armed robbery suspect, Willian" A. Corley. 16. of Santa Cruz. was killed and another s uspect, Michael A. Malvini, 15, of San Jose: was injured Sunday night when their stolen car was forced off Interstate 40 by a highway patrol car a mile west or this northern Arizona community, said the Arizona Hl~hway Patrol. They had been accused or rob· bing a fisherman or S5 earlier in the evening at Lynx Lake near Prescott. Oally P1101 Pl!Otol Ill' Rlch.,d KH"ltr It's Smokey J(ilJ)berl)I efulng, 4, «• Mission Viejo, waving above, looks properly impressed at the annual Christmas Parade in Mission Viejo She was greetin2 Sm oke\ the Bear who was riding on a fire engine. Lisa DeSota, 4, below used a candy cane for a little quick energy as she depicted a Chris tmas gift. County RoadS· D~adly Weekend Traffic Toll Climb• to Eight A rash of weekend deaths in Orange County continued Sunday when two people died in separate traffic accidents. The two deaths. one of them on the San Diego Freeway near the San Juan Creek Bridge, brought the county's weekend traffic toll lo eight. Killed in the single car cras h on lhe San Diego Freeway early Sunday morning was James Arnold Moy, 38, of 1340 W. Lam· bert Road, La Habra. According to a California Hipwa.y Patrol spokesman, Moy apparently fell asleep while tte was drivin1 south on the freeway near San Juan Creek. The victim's car struck an abandoned car parked on a freeway shoulder, the spokesman said. Moy reportedly died in Miaalon Community Hospital about an hour after the pre-dawn accident. A few hours earlier, Richard Blom, 30, of 318 lsth St., Seal Beach, wu killed when his auto ' was struck by another car on the Garden Grove Freeway i n Orange. According to an accident re· port. the car that st.ruck Blom's auto continued on its 1 a.m. Sun· day journey without stopping. GOOP GA.IE~ .' ONLY 18 SHOPPING PAYS 'TIL CHRISTMAS - ,. f 0 • ... • ! c: • & Saturday night. a 71-year·old woman died two hours after be· ing struck by-e car as she crossed Ball Road in Anaheim. Anaheim police said Dorothy Taylor, 3411 W . Ball Road, Anaheim1 was crossing the street in front Ol her home when bit by a car drivtn by Gilbert L. Golden of Anaheim. Mrs. Taylor reportedly was crossin1 Ball Road in mid-block and Golden was not cited. In a treak accident in Buena Firep.Iace Sets Blaze Park Saturday afternoon. A fire that apparently spread Blanche Orosco, 49, ol ~ Los from a fault)' fireplace caused an Palos Circle, Buena Park. was estlmated S35,000 damage to the tat4lly Injured when she tumbled home of Harold Ellis al 23821 Via out of ber car as lt backed out the Navarra, Mission Viejo, Sunday driveway al her home. night. Police belleve Mn~ Oro.co wu Tiremtn said the roof of the . attemptinc to close the door of c uu ho her auto from the driver's seat ain1le-atory as e me was consumed by names when they when she fell from the car shortly arrived at the scene at about be(~~~~ died ln La Palma 10:3> p.m. Soon afterward. the Community Hoepilal about fOllr roof collapsed. a bole in the fireplace into a wau- and up into the attic. About 30 firemen brought the blaze under control in 20 minutes. One fireman, Roger Keller, suffered a sprained ankle when the roof caved in. hours alt« the accident. poUc• Firemen aald the blaze la __________ _... .. ...,.:-:-aaJd. ' believed to have spread through A spokesman for the CQUDty ·fire dep1trtment estimated thf d1mage at $30.000 to Che struc· ture and $5,000 io the content.s. He said firemen saved most.. or,.& the furnilure. # W ., ~I A2 DAILV PILOT 58 Klann er Bopped By Picket An unident1f1ed woman pickel protcting charges agaJnst 13 black Camp Pendleton marines alleging assault on a group of while marines. slammed her picket sign over the head of David Duke, national ·director of the Ku Klux Klan, lo· day. Duke was uninjured. The• violence erupted briefly when the. cro~p protesting the charges against the black marines. spotted Duke and other membera of the KKK, who held aloft the Klanna(. The picketers were members of the Comm iltee Against Raci..sm, a San Diego and Los Angeles·based group. Picketers chanted "free the blacks." "try the Klan." Another woman picket-currier said. "We cannot stand and wail until the Klan kills someone." Duke said the Klan members were at Pendleton "to secure the rights of white servicemen. White servicemen in the military are not being given their rights." He charged that whlte soldiers were frequently the victims of racial assaults. Referring to the picketers' attack, Duke said, "evidently there is no justice whatsoever. There is no law against being a m ember of the Klan." The demonstratioo was broken up by marine military police. Meanwhile, Camp Pendleton opened a fact·finding investiga. lion into the c har}:es against the 13 black marine.1 today. Froa Pase A J SNIPER •.. between Clay and 17th streets at 11 a m. after the three surveyors said they had been shot at while working in the area. Surveyor Christopher Salkeld, 21, of Seal Beach said he and his companions were working near the intersection of Huntington and Clay when he heard a shot followed by the sound of a bullet passing close by him. He said he dove into a gutter for cover . His fellow surveyors, Rich Boardman. 34, of San Juan Capistrano and Gary Harrison. 31 , or Huntington Beach said they dove behind u palm tr<.'e. hoping it would screen tht'm from lhe sniper. All three said they saw a man dressed in a white T.shJrt and white gym s horts knttling on the !'>econd-floor balcony of Ule nearby apartment complex. When the mun went 1ns1dc. the three sun l'yors left. but not after another shot had been fired which Boardman and Harnson said passed bet ween them as they stood 1n the shelter of the palm tree Pollce, led by Sgt. M L Shorg were planning to evacuate the ne1ghbhorhood as the SWAT team closed in the apartment. Shorg. working from a mobile command post set up on Clay Street commanded the ten.man SWAT team and a force of at least another dozen officers aided by the police heUcopter. Nader Urges Steel Probe Wi\S JllNGTO N (AP> - Conaum.-r advocatr Ralph Nader :.ays the Justice Department ~hou ld open an antitrust In· vf'st1gat1on of recent priC• In· <'ruses by the stet•! industry. Not only would you uncover \\hether the antitrust laW1 have heen \1olated, hut your1nvnU1a· tlon would also help emphasize lhl' clos• relationship between corporate concentration and In· flahon, .. he and associate Mark Green wrote to the Justice Department. i. . OAANQI COA.IT H DAILY PILOT , ... .,._WU o .. •r ..... , ........... cf\ l<e-· ~t'W4 IM '*-tn "''"' •OlilefttiNtltf' .. 0."""' C...\I Pi;ea1,"'•~ C.o'""•"• ......, ... Mtii..t•• ~~~·"::.::rt~:·~:.:'~'~ l•!A Y•ll•'I. t•~lfll• , ... ~, V•ttn eM ~~::i~~~~~~~,_·:r.::;:";t :;;:c,:~~~:."'..!1:.1'•:~~.: ... ,. """' ... "-·-.............. ,.,,..,_ JOC•"-C-Y1to"'•• ... "'MdGo_.,_.,... ,_ .. 11_ .... ., , ................... ................. °'*"''""-._ ....... ."'"'·~ M.tft .. ,.. .. ~ SeddletnclilV•~~ tU01 \.t .......... Mt, ___ '~,-,...,.., on1c .. Gttta "'"'• .... , ... , ... "_ """""""" .. It~ 11171 .. oc)I-·-'-"_. lk.u1: 11.io_.,,..11rwt Tel9'~• (114)~t QehtftM Alht"911!191Q."11 ---Yelloy-O!!i(• 611 .. 190 ,,,_l.M"-••t-Oqo OooY'1..,, ,,,. o. • .,.. eo.,, ,....,.....,. eo-..,., He Al-"' \tOf'I••• llf"'fr9'(..,., Nff~ I ~~~~;. ·:r~~~~·':.·:.·,~ ... :z::,::t~ :1 t_..,.._ ... ~::':.~',':."i.::!~T:11:!".:1(~::, ~·:. =:~~-~ :~:.~ -~·" ... 1111 •• , Tax Cut Uncertain Carter Keeps 'Open Mind' on Economy ~ ........... EXECUTION DEL.Ano TeHI Kiiier Whit• Court Halts Execution Of Slayer WASHINGTON CAP) -The U.S. Supreme Court postponed today. the execution ol a Texas murderer who did not want his scheduled Friday death in the electric chair, delayed. The high court delayed in- definitely the execution of Robert Excell White, a 30-year·old drifter from Waco, Tex., who says he deserves to die. It was the second time in tour days that the Supreme Court de- layed the execution of a prisoner who wanted to die. On Friday, the justices postponed the firing squad execution of Utah murderer Gary Mark Gilmore, who had convinced state officials to let him die. White's attorney, J .E. Abernathy, asked the court for time to challenge the state's de- ath penalty; the indictment that charged White with murder and the method of jury seledfon used at White's trial. White does not want to appeal, ·however. In a Nov. 231ettertothe Supreme Court, White said, "Mr. Abernathy is acting against my express instructfons and desires. I explicitly told him that I did not wish any federal appeal or any sort whatsoever. "I am mentally prepared to ac-cept. the Judgment of sentence imposed upon me," said White, a death row prisoner at Huntsville, Tex.. for the past two years. "Any delay now will onJy inflict needless mental hardship on me." Gilmore was to have died at $W\ri.se today. and would have become the first criminaJ execut· ed in the United States since 1967. HJS death was stayed al the re· quest of his mother, Bessie Gilmore or Milwaukie. Ore. PT'eparation of an appeal in White's case and its considera- tion by the court could take several months. While was convicted ot murdering a 73-yea.r-old grocery store proprietor In a 1974 hold·up. Two teen.age customers also were killed dunnf! the robbery. Appearing at a Nov. l hearing in which his execution date was set, White told the judge, "If any man deserves to die J do tor the crimes I've committed." White said he wanted Texas to execute him at the earliest possi· bled ate. PLAINS, Ga. (AP> - President-elect Jimmy Carter diugreelng with his newly ap'· pointed budget director, said to· day a lax cut la not a virtual cer· talnty next year. Carter said It is too early to tell what steps might be needed to stimulate the economy. Carter said he is not convinced yet that cuttine laxes la the thing to do. ''l'm deliberately keeping my mind open," he declared. "I have advisers who are leaning all dif. ferent directions, but I'll wait andse~." The president-elect said he will consult closely with Congress before deciding what to do about the economy. · Thomas "Bert" Lance. Carter's choice to be director of the Ollice of Management and Bud&et, said Sunday that a tax cut early in the new adm1nistra· lion is "virtuaUy certam." But at an Informal news con· rerence today, Carter declared: "ll 's loo early to decide. 1 wouldn't say it was virtually cer· Appeals Court Nixes Farr's Wntempt Rap LOS ANGELES (AP) -A California appeals court ordered the Manson trial judge today to vacate a contempt sentence against reporter William Farr, thus ending Farr's five-year bat· Ue lo protect his secret sources. The California 2nd District Court or Appeals ruling was an- nounced by the court's clerk, Clay Robbins, who phoned Farr with the news. Although the text of the ruling was not immediately available, it was believed that the three- judge panel held that Superior Court Judge Charles Older was improperly trying to prosecute Farr twice for the same offense. In a hearing Nov. 23, Justice Mildred Lillie asked critically how many times Farr could be punished. Older vowed to send the re- porter back to jail for refusing to reveal which of the six trial at- torneys gave him information for a story published during the 1970 trial of convicted mass murderer Charles Manson and three mem· bers of his cult. Farr served 46 days behind bars in 1973 but was released by the U.S. Supreme Court pending appeals. "The one good thing that has come out of the whole ordeal, l thtnk," said Farr afterward. "is that the courts are now con- vinced that the protection of news sources 1s a sacred com- mandment to reporters and no amount of time In jail will get them to break their promise." Now with the Los Angeles Times, Farr covered the Manson trial for the Man son trial for the Loa Angeles Jlerald·Examiner. 2 Hunte d in T heft RIVERSIDE (A P) -Police were seeking two men they say posed as policemen to trick Arden Lust, 60, into showing them where he had hidden $1,040 and then robbed him. Staff Boost Hailed By Fairview Chief By STEVE MITCHEU. °'"'-O•ltv P llel M.tft Gov. Edmund Brown's ap· proval of a plan to add 700 employes to the state's 11 mmtal hospitals, announced over the weekend, waa met wtlh wtth en· thuslasm today by Dr. Michael Levlne, chief administrator at Fairview Hospital. But the newly appointed ad· ministrator aatd that unleas there are sfgnlflcant rnanaie- ment changes, 1n lncreue in st.n would not, 'by .ltaell, Im· prove service. "I couldn't be more pleued at the governor's action.'' Dr. Levine said today. "I nf!!«I to compliment the governor on hi• rather ra~id responae lo actJon." Uvine said he didn't know what the breakdown would be for Fairview Hospital, saying the plan. to be initiated by ntxt June, is more complex than "ju.st dis· hing out a certain number of employes to each hospital." Levine said be would lllte to see more supervisory personnel -4ded to the l , 700·paUent facility Jn Colta Meta. "A state pro11r am five years aio wiped out ell the aupwvbory Po1lUon1," he saJd. "ft dMded UM hospital into 10 Pf'OIJ'•ma, which WU I lood idet •. but It wt~ out all the supuvtaton. ' We have no supervlatnJ eoelal worker, no 1uporvi~l.n1 p1ychologist. no 3Upervising teacher. "Give me rive more psychologists and who's going to supervise them?·· he asked. Levine aald these departments are currently operated by pro- gram manaiera, "who may not have any expertise In a teacher or psychologist's background." "The program reorganization did some good things organlza. tionally, but It wiped out all the professional npervlsion," he sald. "That's what I'd like to see. r~lnstated under Brown's staf· fing plans," Levine 11aid. FRIDGE BROVGHT HER COLD . i;JSH "J u1t 10 minutes alter our paper was delivered, I sold the refrigerator." 1bat•a the quick sales success story tot by the Newport Beach woman ho placed thia ad in the Daily Plot: 15' Whirlpool RefrlQ. w /lcemaker $7S. xxx· lUOCX H you bavt an •PPliance you want to convert to cash, call &U-58'78. We make it ea1y for you t.o put a few word1 to work ror you, ln UM Dalb' Pilot. lain, allbou&h tl is one of the pogsibillties." Carter did say that a perma-· nent or temporary lax reduct.ion is possible "if the economy needs stimulation, and l think at this point it appears that way " Another option, Cartf'r said, are programs to put people to work. He suid it will be difficult. to meet h's aoal of reducing un- employment by 1.5 percent dur· ing his first year in office, but promised to make effort to do so. The nation's unemployment rate stands at 8.1 percent, or about 7.8 mUlion people. Lance told the Los Angeles Times that a tax cut of up to SlS billion -possibly in the form of a rebate on 1976 Income taxes - probably will be proposed by For Park S ites Carter. He suggested that a lax cut will be part or a package to stimulate the economy that will include a jobs program and tax Investment credits to spur in· du.atrial expansion. Asked earlier on CBS·TV':i "Face the Nation" about the poulbillty of a tu cut, Lance said that other possJble economic stimulants "are 10 ltmlled that I think you have to consider that almost a certainty.'' Carter has said he would con- sider a tax cut if the economic signs indicated a need for one arter be takes office Jan. a>. Tho Ford admlnlstralion bas pro· posed a $10-billion cut in income taxes next year, built around a proposed $250 1n~rease in the pre· sent $7~ personal exemption. Greenery Offered By Viejo Company The Mission Viejo Company has orrered to plant trees, grass and shrubs and install sprinklers at the Alicia and Castille com· munity park sites if it will gel de· velopment rolling. The Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Council was told or the company's offer after learning that there might not be enough in the till to fully hnance the two parks. Even with the company's con· tributJon, which would amount to nearly $190.000 at Alicia and Just over $100,000 at Castille, council members were told there won't be enough to complete the Al1c1a prOJCCt. Despite the prospect of running short of money. the council voted 3·1 in favor or final design plans for the parks. reservrng final ap· provaJ until the first meeting of 1977. Bob Fisher of the Oran~c Coun ty Environmental Management Agency said the county has set aside $150,000 in state park bond act money for lO·acre Alicia and $85,000 in cn\'1ronmentaJ enhan· cement funds for rlvc·acrc Castill e. Added to the company's pro· posed contribution or landscap· Plaza Blaze Pinne d Down As an Arson Although investigators have pinned the blame for last week's $1.5 million blaze In Saddleback Valley Plaza on arson, Orange County Fire Department of· ficials today would not say how that determination was made. A spokesman for the depart· ment said he still doesn't know the specific cause of the firC'. However, he said, the investiga- tion is continuing. The Thursday morning fire ravaged Bambi's discotheque, a leasing office and the Horn of Plenty Gourmet Shoppe in lhe El 'Toro shopping center. ing services, Fisher said the Alicia fund falls $121,000 short or the estimated $461,000 needed for development and the Castille project comes out about $9,000 ahead ot its $177,900 projected cost. None or the cost estimates in· eluded park maintenance. a fact that disturbed Councilwoman Kathleen Kelly, who voted against asking the county for funding of tbe two parks. She said action on the projects, however desirable, should be de· layed until the maintenance cos- ts are figured. Mrs. Kelly noted that such money comes from the • county service area budget for the community. which is generated by property taxes. But Councilman Ted Keene argued that the projects should get started even if full funding Isn't available. Fro• PGfle A I PROBE • • • their seats, police said. One of the two engines on the plane apparently failed just prior to the crash A Fountain Valley couple. Austin and Jan Owings, both student pilots. told In · vestigators they heard an un- identified pilot telJ the control tower, "I have one engjne out," minutes before the plane crashed. Owings was practicing on the airstrip and Mrs. Owings was in another craft getting gas. Pisoni 's plane had ta.ken off earlier in the day from Guaymas. Mexico. From the fis· hing gear found in the wreckage, officials speculated that the men had just returned from a short fishing vacation. • "It looked like they were just five guys who had had a great time down in Mexico," comment· ed an Irvine Police officer who was at the scene. The plane was registered lo the Sun Valley Corporation in Idaho, but officials said they did not know ir the craft was leased or owned by Plsoni, who was report· ed to be an experienced pilot. Oalty,.leCS~tt-• RESCUED -Mrs. Eileen Smilh, being helped here by Newport Fire Information OCCicer Art Morlon, was r escued from burning apart· ment by neighbor. f'r u• Page Al RESCUE ..• down. ' In all. 24 fire department men were called to the blaze which took 20 minutes to control. Morton said th~ flames were con- fined to Mrs. Smith's apartment although the common areas. of the complex suffered heavy smoke damage. Morton said residenLo; as well as firemen suffered from smQke Inhalation and heat exposure and one fireman. John Mattson. was treated and released from Hoag Memorial Hospital when a piece or glass from an exploding win· dow imbedded itself in his knef. Two or Mrs. Smith's neigh~rs, Nathan and Frances Kraus!!, both 78, were treated for smoke Inhalation by paramedics wpo said the couple also suffer trom heart problems. A total of six fire trucks as ~11 as the paramedics worked at the fire scene under command of Battalion chief Phil Hayden. Morton said another of Mrs. Smith's neighbors has taken the fire victim in until olher living arrangements can be made. U.S. Ai d Re fused WASHINGTON CAP) -Phll\p- pine authorities are upset by a se- quence of events last week which they interpret as a heavy.handed State Department effort to break a stalemate in negotiations over U.S. mllilary bases in The Phllip- pines. The Manila government has rejected a U.S. proposal for $1 billion in U.S. aid over the next five years in return for continued U.S. use or military bases. OBESITY. 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