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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-12-09 - Orange Coast Pilotea eat earc s • ' .. DAILY PILOT Supervisor Schtnit, * * * 1oc * * * Kids Hurt in Crash TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER9, 1975 VOL ... NO. >43, 2 SECTIONS, ?I "AG ES • • • • Firemen Contain Silverado Blaze Ba11k Wins Plea Cella Checks Probe Denied By GARY GRANVILLE . Of tll• O•llr "llot Staff A move to subpoena bank re· cords tracing Or. Louis Celia's complex Cinancial political deal- ings was quashed Monday by a federal judge in Los Angeles. If t h e government wants Crocker National Bank to pro- vide copies of Celia's records for use in its investigation of the San- ta An a physician, it should reim- burse the bank for its costs, Judge J esse W. Curtis ruled. .. Subject or a subpoena quashed by Judge Curtis were bank re· cords covering roughly 30 personal and bus iness accounl'i controlled by Cella in recent years as he emerged as California's top political cam- paign donor. The bank records were sought in connection with a federal grand jury investigation of Cella's tax status as well as Medicare payments to two Orange County hospitals under his control until recently. Seeking the sam~ records and already in possession of some as a result of executed search war- r ants is t he Orange County Grand Jury. The county jury is investigat- ing possible fraud, embezzle- ment and grand theft allegations as the result of the use of camouflaged hospital funds purportedly used to bankroll Cella in his political and business ventures. In seeking to have the federal subpoena quashed, Crocker at· tomeys argued that it would cost the bank an estimated 1,000 man Or::eoi _Coast W~ather Fair skies through Wed· nesday but patchy Cog near the coast in the morning hours. Highs Wednesday, 68 at the beaches rising to 75 inland. Lows tonight 47 to SJ. INSIDE TODA V ~rtd of ptrju'll conviction. /Of'Tnn Coli/ onua Lt . Gov. Ed Rdn«ke u pondenng where to go from here A5 Index NY-s.rttk • Al ,,,_,.,,.. ...... AU a.-llefMKll •• Ntf!La"*" an LM..:J: AU Mev• .. AU Cat • u , ............. A4 a..lflM Hit Ow'•! 1i. QtuMy A11 °"""' . , ... Clf'I • .,.. Q911.-H ., SV1¥1• Ptr1ff AU ~-ICM Att =:: .... •••• ............. At All ................ AIJ ~ AU ""--AH·U •-'• •• ..... ftlllll •• hours and $12,500 to meet the sub· poena's demands. And while government al· tomeys argued there is no prece- dent for demanding reimburse- ment of costs, Judge Curtis said the subpoena placed "an onerous burden on people who are not s uspected of committing a crime." "IC you want that information, you can make a deal with the <St>e CELLA, Page A2) Sch~it, 3 Kids Hurt · In Crash Orange County Supervisor Laurence Schmit and three of his children were undergoing treat- ment in Westminster Community Hospital today a fter being in- volved in a two-car collision in Garden Grove. The extent of injuries to Schmit and his children were not im- mediately known. However. a spokesman at the hospital and Schmit's chief aide Loren Norton said the injuries are not believed to be critical. The 35 -yea r -old county supervisor reportedly was dri v· ing the three children, Joseph, Cheryl and Jean, all teenagers, to school s hortly before 8 a.m. when his station wagon was struck broadside at Springdale Street and Garden Grove Boulevard. Early reports indicate the im- pact rolled the station wagon over on its top trapping the supervisor and his three children inside. After being freed by police and fire personnel called to the scen e the Schmits were taken to Westminster Communit y Hospital where the supervisor. complained of a severe hip pain._ A hospital spokesman saad Schmit and his son were undergo- ing X-rays late this morning. -The accident report bad not been filed at the Garden Grove Police Department by mid· morning. · ·MIA Promise WASHINGTON <U PI) -A House subcommitttt bu re- turned frorn Paris with a North Vietnamese promise to account for Americans missing in In· dochina along with a request that the United Statea lift its trade embargo and provide re· constn.action aid . .• Bombing the Flames ') Delly ,,. ......... .,, ••cu..i 1(-- CANYON BLAZE BOMBED WITH FIRE RETARDANT FROM FOUR-ENGINE PLANE Thi• Paytoad from Aerial Tanker Dropped Neer Santiago Canyon Road Busy Line -Phone Call Traps Robbers LOS ANGELES CAP> .:_"I've gotta hang up. We're being robbed.'' Richard Whitzman of Washington Quilt CC>. in Seattle ttrovgtrt-l.; e-e B i ti man. ttre bookkeeper of the company's Los Angeles branch, was kidding when Billman abruptly ended their long distance telephone conversation Monday. Whitzman tried to call back . got no answer, then phoned Los •• I Angeles Police, officers said. Pohce went to the office and arrested three men after a tense confrontation in which they al- legedly held five employes hostage for a brief period. "ll was pretty tense." said Of. ricer Doug Urschel. "One of the men had two male hostages, but he decided to give up. But the two others were holding two women and a man hostage, and they came out with guns to the .~ women's heads and said if they weren't allowed to leave, they were going to shoot them. ·•we informed them that we don't bargain with hostages. 'I'hey finally saw the uselessness of their situation and threw down their guns." The men. identified as Percy Starks, Adair Singleton and Paul Williams, were booked for in· vestigation of robbery, police said. Couitty Canyon • ·Scorched. By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Oft"-Daily Piiot Slllff Hundreds o f firefig hters worked until almost midnight Monday before fully containing a major brush fire that burned across 1, 700 acres of Orange County's rugged canyon areas. The blaze, which broke out ear· ly Monday in Silverado Canyon, was finally halted by an army or 1.000 firemen just as it topped the ridge of foothills overlooking east Irvine and El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. ( Add1tionaJ story, photos Page A3.) Today, county fire officials said the fire could easily have been much worse 1f winds were stronger perhaps rivaling the 1967 Paseo Grande inferno that burned 50.000 acres m the same general area, des troying 66 homes. Two dwellings and a guest house were destroyed in Mon· day's blaze and there were only two reported injuries -a Mod· Jeska man who broke his leg and a volunteer fireman sent to the hospital with an eye cut. The fire was triggered when a bottled gas heater exploded in the bedroom of the Fred Meyling home in Silverado Canyon. No one was at home at the time. The names spread rapidly but quick response by the Silverado Volunteer Fire Department and the nearby U.S. Forest Service (See CANYON, PageA2) Ocean Search Canceled for Mesa Couple The search for a Costa Mesa couple, missing at sea after their 20-Coot sailboat was found partially submerged with the body of their son aboard, has been suspended. Orange County Harbor Depart· me nt s pokes men in Newport Beach said the sea search was canceled Monday. The victims are pre s um ed drowned, spe>kesmen said. Mis.sin~ are Steven Miller. 21. and his ware, Sberre, 21. The body of their 3-year-old son, Shawn, was found aboard the semi· subm erged sai lboat Sunday about one mile off Abalone Point, near Laguna Beach. Harbor Department Sgt. Harry Wright said if the young couple dad drown. their bodies maght be recovered ''in a week or two." Harbor Department and U.S. Coast Guard offac1als examined the craft Monday after it was towed to shor e but could not give an exact cause for the sinking. Wright said several experl· CSeeTRAGE DY. Pageil) A.2 DAIL y PILOT s Holdout rfests Nerves LONDON <Urn Trap ped Iris h Repuhlll'.111 1\rniy &nmmt"n reJet.'lt'd .rn clfft'I of food 1n ex<'hJn~<.· fur orit• 11( their h06tagt'S today. :-.purnc.'tl .i i.upply of watt"r and d1:-ruph'<1 thc.•1r hot line with µolH.'t• Ill :io 111kn::.ifying war of ncrvt•:> on llll'lr third d.1y under :>It' gt•. Tbe poh('t' rl't.1li.1tc.'<l b)-1..·utting ~ff elertrll'tl) to th..-ap.utmt•nt living room \\ h1·r<' the gunmen were holdm ~ ~1 r and Mrs John Matthews ll ldt tht• thn·c.· or four IRA gunml·n "1thm1t ltght-. or telev1s1on nt·"' nl 1 lll'tr onk.il The apartml'lll ht·.iting w..i~ working There wen.-fe.u ' dliil Rnlam·s most wanted man, :\11 c hael Wilson. had escaped dunng the chase mto the M .allht'"' apart- ment last S:iturday and was not UlStde .is ongmally thought. .. Wt• have not made much pro- gress, ·' a poht•e commander said. .. But I lt11nk they arc gradually being worn down <Jnd will coml' out l'\ t•ntually " The gunm1..•n. w1tho1it few.xi fur three days, rl'fuscd an 11fkr for a meal in exehang1..• for the rt'lease of Mrs. Matthews, 53. whose nen·ous cond1t1on l:> a caus1..· for police concern The IRA men also reject1..'d an offer of mon' water -thl· fir.st dell verv "a:. made Monda v - and disconnected the hot' tine when they did not want to s~<ik The J;?unnwn n·m•wt'<f tht•1r dP mand for J pJJnl' IO 0'. thl•m to Ireland Their rt'Jt'l'lHm of the Ill'" food for-hostjge JH opos~il t·.1me \'IJ the hot hnt• tt>ll•phnm• linking tht• living room rl•fugc with policemen out.sill<' It provided anothl•r negoliallon deadlock in thl' three-day-old polJce trap which Cit first was thought to have caught Britain's most wanted man . Michae l Wilson, among th(' gunmen. Wilson is wanted for tht> murder of ant1terronst crusadff Ross McWh1rter. a rofoundt•r of tbe Gutnm•ss Book of Records. who was gunned down almost two weeks ago. But the police said 1t appeart>cf there might be only thn•e men in stead of the four originally thought. It provoked speculation that Wilson escaped in the con- fusion of the c hase mto the Mat- thews apartm ent "lt·s possible," a pol.Jee com- mander said. ··w c·JJ only know if he·s in there v. hen ttus thmg 1s over · MrWh1rter·o; widow was to be . played tapt.'s of the hot-line telephone conversations in an at tempt to determine whether one of the trappt•d gunmt•n is one of the men who spoke to her bneOy before shooting ht'r husband. The latest hot line exchange'!'" police said. mcludl'd not only tht• food-for hostage reJc>rtion but also an I RA requt•st for a new portable toilet and a r('peal of the demand for a plane to fly the gunmen to l rel and Deputy Jss1st.1nt police> com miss ione r Ernest Bond said 4"arher that starving out the gang was one option und('r cons1dera tion. He said pol1et• might also cut off heat tn the apartment Safe Marriage Panel Meet s The Orange County Chapter of the Committee for Safe Mar nage., will hold an organ1zat1onal meeting at 7 30 tonight :it 18262 Bus hard St . F ount.11n Vallev. A propo..,.<'d "family b;ll of nghts" and appro<Jchc•s towJrd better marriaJ.:t' ~ind family rela llonsh1ps will bt• d1scusM.~. or gani1al1on offtc•1.1h said Those intert'!>tcd 111 add1llonol information mJV rail 9U8 2973 or 962 8046 • ORANGE COAST "'' (j1 •,. 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I>'"' f\; ..... wAtll .. ,,~ ..... ,._, .... , .... ,..,.... ... , . ., ..... ... \lf'i, "'''""' ~ .... n Ill•\'""•#• t ftil1~·•.Ul9 S,.001Pf -.(Iii VAtH y 1 I \ " f'dtr It "'° 41 S,.~ '-'•#9'\ I t .,,. t Tele-phone (714) MH:t21 Classified Advertlt•n.J M'l-5671 .u.0'11f'W<~ ~•f•ty Nil""" fh t SIHJ10 , ,.flt ' " ( .• ,,."'"'' 495 0630 f tM N01 tP\ Ot•r~,. c " t F 1 ,,_ ,..,,,,,,., S40·1220 Cotty••~"'' '' \ 0•...,.,0 c 1 f ·• P\,"O Ce _.nv ho """•' ''"" ,., ,,, .. .,.,, ... ,...,. "11,,,...,. ..,. ... ,,Or •d••th''"''"'' ,.,,, t ,.., I• ••Ptodurr1t 'l#•IP\•w• 1ttl •' ,., • '' n ~• f~~rrQftt 0*"'"' ~fONf t I•\\ f't•\t•t_. f'Atft At '"'~ tA ~ .. C....••'*'"'" ~""'''!''"" ,,, .. ,,,,, \.tl\ "~" tftt1 byM .. t \iii f}t'U4H .. tn•, tn1hl#'1,,.,..,t1n.t1104', .., 11,,_t,..y • ( lueSday. Decem~r 9, 1975 :t ~· Malpractice Furor Builds SACRAMENTO <AP> -- Callfornia's new medical malpractice law takt•s dfect f)·i- day, but no celebrations are planned. Instead. an insurance com- pany 1s planning a huge rate 10- crease. thou~ands of Southern California doctors an.' getting re- ady to walk out and tm1l J;,iwyc>rs are prepanng to file swt again~t the law. Thal suit may sun·et'Ci tn over- turning at least on<.• key prov1s1on of the law. stale Insurance Com- missioner Wesley Kinder said m an interview Monday The measure was passed dur- ing a special session of the California Legislature which ended Sept. 12. By Jaw, it takes effecl 90 days later. Kmder sa1d the bill eventually Tax Battle: could cut malpractice insurance / premiums by 30 to 33 percent •. from what they would have been without it. But he said its $250,000 Limit on awards for pain and suf- fering may be vulnerable. "lt seems to be a denial of eqqal protection." he said. "It applies to only one class of plain- tiffs. If I'm injured in an auto ac- cident. the s ky's the hmit, but not ma malpractice claim." The polit1c;.tlly powerful California Trial Lawyers A<;,· MODEL LAW SEEN IN MICHIGAN-A15 sociat10n. "hich fought the bill unsuccessfully m the legislature, is gettrng ready to battle jt m l'OUlt . '"\Ve are :,eeking the prop<>r cast>,"' said Pre:,ident Elml'r Low. .. ~A Game .. ~ lie said attorneys' groups are challenging malpractice laws in many of the 22 statl'S wt11C'h hav(• enacted them . ln Idaho, he s aid. a trial court recently overturned a Jaw limiting malpractice awards to $150,000. Of Chicken? From Wire Services About 9,500 Southern California doctors are awaiting Kmder 's dec1s1on, expccll'd <.·ar- Jy next week. on a 486 p<>rc·<.·nl premium increase by Travelt>rs Insurance which becomes effec- tive Jan. 1. Ford Signs NY Loan WASHINGTON (AP} President F ord today s 1gnt-d conJ?ress1onal au t ho r i z a ti on !or $2 . 3 1 billion in loans to N~w York City and asked Con~rcss to appropriate the money. In a message, Ford said it would cost $1 million to administer the loans dur- ing fiscal 1976 and $315,000 lo administer them during a budgetary transitional period Crom next July 1 through Sept. 30. The President signed the authorization as the ele- ments of a federal package to keep New York City out of default were coming together. The House was ready to approve a change m federal bankruptcy laws and the Senate prepared to approve the $2.3 billion ap- propriation . F rom Page Al , CELLA ••• bank," the judge said after up- holding the bank's motion to quash. Government attorneys said in a brief opposing the motion to quash that the bank's reluctance to comply with the subpoena is frustrating the government's in- vestigation and made reference to 17 auditors waiting for the re- cords. Bank officials made it clear Monday they were not opposed to furnish mg the records but only to dotng so Wlthout being reim- bursed. D••ly Polol Plloto lly R•cl'l<lnl Kwhler BRENDA LAWSON, 10, CARRIES PET TO SAFETY She Saved Her Bird from Silverado Fire WASHINGTON -Treasury Secretary Wilham Simon said to- day President Ford "ouJd rather see this year's tax cul expire than to have a new bill enacted v. ithout his reques ted S395 billion spend.mg ceiling. Sen. Russ ell Long < D-La.). chairman of the Senate Finan<'e Committee . w;irncd that Congress would not accept the spending ceiling before Ford had even proposed the fiscal 1977 bu dget. Other committee '.\1any d octors ha\'l' thrl'at<.•ncd to withhold <ill but emcqH'nl'Y services if the mrn·ase !>lands. /\ slowdown already has begun in ~ome areas. !i1m1lar to at•t1on'i taken by many Caltforma phys1- c1ans earltt.'r this yc;.ir 111 µrote-;t over soaring malpractice in- surance r ates. The absence of bank records notwiths tanding, the federal grand 1ury continued its in- vestigation into Celia's affrurs dunng the day. From P a g p .. t I Key witness as the jury's in- qwry enter ed its second week was Jerry Zanelli, state Democratic Senate caucus party leader. CANYON BLAZE .•. The new increase would raise annual premiums for doctors in the highest nsk fields. s uch as neurosurgery. to more than $36,000. Kinder ch:.ilknged it as t'XCeSSI V(' and IS rt'\'IC'WJng the company's def l•nsc of its f1gun•s ~ tat1on had 11nt•s ('Stahlt-.ht·d ;ilong the top nf thl· eanyun \\ 1t h1n .111 hour. A county f1rt' spok('Sman said :.it that point. the blaw ;.ippl•Url'd to be contained w1Uun Jess th.in 100 acres but then the wind picked up Hot a!>hes Jumped tht• f1rc lint.• and the blaze ract>d down Williams Canyon, Just off San- tiago Canyon Ro.id, and the whole hillside burst into n ames as sparks ignited explos ive man:ianita bushes and dry grass. Firemen tried vainly to save Rancho Soldona. a cluster of houses and barns owned by Phil and Sue Charlton on the s lopes of Santiago Canyon. The main ranch house. the guest house and all the out build- mgs burned lo the ground in less than 15 minutes. according to "ounty fire Capt. Brue<.' Turbeville. Then the s moke and n ames ap peared ominously on the hills above S1Jverado School and the children were evacuated by bus. They returned later Monday af ternoon when the fire was stopped and extmgwshNI only a few hundred yards away from the bu11tdmg. Fire officials said only a last- minute back fire and strong sup- port from crews saved the ':>Choo(. For the remainder of the da'. the school grounds were used a~ a landing area for tht' s ix v.all'r dropping helicopters used to knock down hot spots on the fire·s perimeter. As they landed, water was pumped mto their empty tanks and within minutes, the chopper'> were hack m the air. In the early hours, Wilh:ims Canyon was the hottest ::;pot on U1e fire line. A fireman on the scene s aid the names shot down the narrow ca- nyon like a funnel and Jumped across Santiago Canyon Road. By 1 p . m .. only charr('d skelelor.:> of trees were left in what was once a shady glen called Williams Canyon. · Firemen had saved the scat- tered houses and barns in the ca- nyon, 111cluding a suburban style house sitting by itself on a hilltop above the canyon floor. The names destroyed a colony of domestic bees in a canyon cleanng and swarms of the bees hovered around the smoldenng remains of their hives The prevailing wind carried lhe names out of Silvera.do and Williams canyons, across the facC' nf Santi ago Canyon's Oemocratsechoedhissenliment. t·a~tC'rn slope and into the dry b<:'d Long said the President's of Sanhago Crc>ek . threat lo V('tO the bill reminded Tinder dry grass, brush and hlmofagameof"chicken." old live oaks in the creek beef "l don't think you ought to spread tht' flames up the other challenge somebody to a game of slo1x's of Santiago Canyon, where chicken if you 're going to be the 1l centered in the Limestone Ca-chicken,'' Long added. n}on region -unpopulated and Simon denied Long's charge almost maccessible. that the Ford admmistrahon's Fire offi cials said the flames ins istence that any 1976 tax cut were stopeped by ground crews be coupled to a 1977 spending and dozens of aerial water and ceiling would destroy the con- Wh3tever his dcc1-;1011. hl' said, doctors are hkcly to be unhappy. From Page A l TRAGEDY • • fare retardant drops by a fleet of gressional budget process. ments were conducted on the aircraft that included helicop-"All we are asking Congress to boat and that 1t appeared possi- ters, twin-engine borate bombers do is adopt a joint resolution now ble the craft became swamped and a silvery DC-7 calJed "The to hold spending to $395 btllion" with water through the outboard Great White Hope." and decide later where cuts engine well. At the peak of the fire fight, would be made, Simon said. He said that a board was found nearly 100 pieces of equipment But Long said Congress would · in the water that could have pre- from the county. U.S. Forest refuse to go along with Ford's vented a swamping, but that ap- Ser v1ce and a dozen city fire de-plan. Should Congress then be parently the board had been part men ts were on the lines. able to override a Ford veto of taken off for maintenance. There was no panic. All the the $13 billion tax cut, Long said, For a three and one.half hour cr<'ws seemed to know exactly experts estimate another half period Mon day. searchers what had to be done and wher e to million Americans might lose scoured a 150-mile area, from do 1t. their jobs next year. Dana Point to the Santa Ana Shortly after noon, packaged Senate leaders, meanwhile, ex· River Mouth up to eight miles lunches and cartons of milk were pressed hope that a compromise seaward. Wrighl said the search delivered to the forestry station with Ford could be reached on turned up only a hatch cover and in Silverado Canyon so the men the tax cut bill to permit some mattress foam about three could eat when they got breaks. Congress to recess for Christmas miles off Dana Point. Mingled with the fire engines as planned. Wright said the S('arch party ZJnelli was reportedly paid by Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana. while it was under Celia's C'ontrol. for actually working out of county on political matters. It is alleged that the payments to Zanelli were disguised on the hospital records as payments for professional services never ren- dered. The jury is also investigating paym('nts to fictitious firms for ::.upplies never received. Bank_ records obtained by the county {?rand jury show that payments to the phony firms were deposit- ed m multiple accounts on which Cella had power of signature. Also called before the jury Monday was Pat Wood, a worker in the personnel department al Mission Community Hoopital, Mission Viejo, and Stephen Evans, former assistant ad· ministrator al Mercy General. NY Bankrupt Bill Pushed were Pacific Telephone and Democratic Leader Mike included two harbor patrol boal'i, Southern California Edison Mansfield and Republican a Newport Beach rescue boat, a WASHINGTON (UPI) _Con- trucks whose crews were trying Leader Hugh Scott s'B.!d they hope Coast Guard helicopter and a gress is working on legislation to to assess damage to utility poles that Ford would be prompt with New Port B ca ch Po I 1 cc make it possible for big cities to and other equipment. any veto so that an override vote helicopter. go bankrupt _ just in case the It was learned today that the could be scheduled immediately. The Millers, who were first re-forth coming s2 .J billion in ma in t e lephone hne from Press Secretary Ron Nessen ported missing by Miller's federal loans fail to save New Silver ado to Modjeska Canyon said Mon day that Ford in-mother on Sunday, moved to York from fina ncial collapse. was burned out in the flames stru cted Simon lo tell the Costa Mesa from Colorado only The last obstacle to the loan along with dozens of other phone Finance Committee that unless a three weeks ago. program -the will power of Sen. connections and electric lines. spending ceiling is included the They purchased their boat two James B. Allen ( D-Ala.} _gave By about J p. m ., firemen had President will st and by his vow to weeks ago, according to Miller's way Monday. He said he would the blaze cornered in Limestone veto the House-passed bill ex-mother. She said the trio hC:td no longer try to block 3 bill ap- . Canyon. on a ridgetop overlook-tending this year's tax cuts for in· gone fishing Saturday, expecting propriating the money for the mg East Irvine. dividualtaxpayers. to return Sunday. loan. Turbeville said back fires were -;=:::::::::::::::::::===========::::::::::::::::::::::::::================~ set to "cut off the head of the fire" and the lactic worked. pre- venting the fire from racing down lhe western-most slopes of the foothills into populated areas. TurbevilJe said today no ac- curate estimate bas been made of the total cost of lhe fire. Flve fire engines and half-dozen hand crews were due to stay on duty during the day to be sure the blaze 1s extinguished. Kidnap Victim OK TULSA, Okla. <UPI> -A 16- year-old boy abducted from a Wichita, Kan., shopping center parking lot was found unharmed Monday and a suspect was charged with trying to collect $5,000 ransom from the boy's parents. f?}M!)/,,U'Jtim;n ~ 6)/lu ~~ • ev AlexanClerSmithCarpet ~ an impressive and unique commemorati on of our bicentennial, beautifully boxedforgiftstofriends and formal presentations • (or y1111r ltnm('. o((ic<', qorr Taxes Due First Deadline Wednesday· • frn 'rhnci l,, fr,1f Prn,,1 nr '-Od,11 duh~. y11un1: P"llllll·~ OrR.11111t1tum~. b11,111C'>'ll .met tr.1d1• .1 ·«ll.IJ\l fJn'> • (11r hu~•n!'\' 11tfr,, ,1w.ird' .rnd c cm•;1.1tul.11ory prC\C'11l.1l11m-. Wednesday is th(' deadline for mailing the first install- ment of this yt>ar's property taxes without p(•nalty, according toOrange County Tax Colkdor Treasurer Robert Citron. JF P AYMF.NTS ARF.N'T rt-ceived or postmarked by Wednesday. a s ix percent cll'hnqucncy fee will be charged, Citron said. The tax collector srud as of DN· 2. about $46 million o(the first installment tot OJI ofS296 m1l1Jon ha<.I been received by his office . A TOTAL OF 466,000 property tax bills were malled out by Citron's oHlct> in October a11 thc first step toward aather- mg morelhan SS92 million an county property taxes this year . • • Ill HO llrH J1 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CAtlf'. 91677 • PHON[ 6 46-A838 -6'46·2355 f • I Tuesdat Oecember 9. 1976 o.-.1L v PILOT A:JI Fire Turns Breana Into Nightniare - BRAD, SUE AND COOPER CHARLTON VIEW WHAT'S LEFT OF THEIR HOME In a Fire-filled Canyon, a Family Loses a Dream In 15 Minutes &~ ·w@(ill[( ®@[(W O©@ The column appears daily l'X('ept Satur days and Mondays. / ,11 J ''"'' ' • ,,,,, \/1 \f/ ( \ 'I 'I, '11. / 1.c/111/1• IJPUI I 1 /1 pf 111 I I' I 1111 f 11 I Smoker•' Rate11 DEAR PAT. l s it just private residences that get premium re· ductions on fire insurance af the -occupants are nonsmokers ? I · have a friend who s ays his r ate '.is lower b ecause he and his wife do not s m oke. I own a tnplex. and whe n I asked my in· surance m an a bout a djscount because I don't rent to smokers. he said there is no such discount available. L . 0 ., Newport Beach In order to qualify for pre· mium reduction for nonsmokers , 1 the property involved must ~ a single residence occupied by the owne r, according to a n i o· surance company spokesman, who added that the pre mium rate structu re bas r isen on ren- tal prope rty ins urance and further increases are seen in the future. It appt'ar s that there's litUe likelihood of future non· smoker discounts for multlf ami- ly dwellings. ' Pedal Repaired DEAR PAT: Last year l or· d ered a $49 electro-Harmonix ''Crying Tone Pedal" for my son's guitar from War ehouse Music Sales of Fort Worth, Tex. When it was delivered, I found that the revers e sweep switch was broken off. Ware hous e Music Sales sent us an insurance form to forward to the post of· fice and asked that we ship the unit back for repair. It was re- ' turned last May, but we're still waiting for the r epaired pedal. L . L., Newport Be ach The repaired pedal bas been mailed to you. Warehouse Music Sales apologizes for the long de· lay. On Enryrlopedfa• DEAR PAT : Several months ago you published information in your column about a book that compared a ll the m ajor e n- cyclopedias. We 're thinking about b uy i ng a set or en · cyc lo pedias as a fam i ly Christmas gift, and I'd like to ref er to this book before making a purchase. Can you repeat its name? L. r.., Newport Bench Ask your r ("ference Ubrarlan to show you a copy of "General Encycl op e dias ln Print," published by R . R. Bowker Co., 1180 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10036. Tb.is book compares all the m ajor en· c yclopedias ln print on 25 characteristlu , lndudlng style of presentation, updating, n- IUJtraUODI and s uuested price levels. ' ••• i Congres·s Blast~d FLORENCE, S.C. <Urf) for mer C3Uforni;i Gov. Ronald Reagan s old Monday night the C\ll'Rnt Congress ts the most 1r- Santa Saved Mrs. Claw Helps This Year WASHINGTON <A P> -The government Santa Claus who in· curred the wrath of women's lib· bers last year when he put two mini-skirted volunteers lo work coll ecting money for the poor is back al his post. But this time, he's accom· panied by Mrs. Claus, clad in a floor-length e nsemble. "l volunteered." said Le <' Roberts. "l knew Santa had had trouble last year." With a w mk. she asked lo be addressed as ":vis ... The Santa r oaming the halls of the De p artme nt of ll eallh. Education ::ind Welfare •~ hc·r husba nd, Russell M . Roberts. lie scud he was instruct<.>d by a hagh- level official to "avoid con troversy a l all costs" thu; year. That means the two attractivt• young HEW employcs w ho helped hi m gather donations last year will not be back. Roberts. for the eighth stra ight year, is ta king a 2 1 i-wc~k vaca lion from h is job as HEW's freedom of inform ation officer to collect d on ations of money. clothing a nd food from fellow employes for the capital city's poor. Mrs.' Cla us , he said, will help when she can. Sister 'St111111ed' ·'She's got a house and fa mily lo take care of and shopping lo do," said Santa, who relies on natural padding to fill out his red swt. "Last year 's controvers y wasn't worth it. I spent much of my time jus tify ing myself and the publicity probably made the dtffrrence or only $100 or S200. Robe r t s said he had asked HEW 's pro fession a l fe ma le e mployes who r aised the roof over the m ims kirted helpers last year to patch in on lhfa year's cl.· for t as a d em onstration lhal there are no lingering hard feel· mgs. ··1 don't have any commitment from them .'' he said. Last year Roberts was accused of "sexploitation " for accepting the services of the two young \'Oluntecrs, \\ho chose their own, costumes of short red suits with while t nm a nd matching red leota rds. The controversy erupted at a meeting be tween professional female employes and other HE W workers. The female employes accused Rober ts of "using s ca n- tily clad wom en to entice men to contribute." The other side s aid the outraged women were just being jealous. Reds Off er Return Of Vietnam Victim From Wire Services LOS ANGELES -The s ister of Navy Lt. Cmdr. J esse Taylor Jr., whose plane was shot down over the South China Sea off Viet· nam 10 years ago, said Mond ay she was "stunned " when t he North Vietn amese offe red to re- turn the bod y. Gwen Ch ur ch of Long Beach s aid the fam i ly origin a lly believed that he had been lost at sea and the body was not re- covered. Taylor was one of three US s ervicemen whose status was re· ported to President Ford by Chinese leaders in Peking on Saturday. In Washington , the head of a 12·member con g ressional de- legation to Paris said Monday that Vietnamese officials have p romised t o d o all they can lo ac- count for American servicemen missing in a ction in Indochina, but expect in r eturn a llrting of the U.S. trade embargo against Hanoi. R e p . G . V . ''So nn y,, Mont gomery (D·M1ss.), chair man of the House subcom· mittee on Missing Persons in Southeast Asia, and leader of the 12-member group to Paris over the weekend, called their session with Vie tnamese "friendly, l t-10,E YOU 'RE GeTTI~G VOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING DOME . OMLV 16 PA'iS LEFT.' forthright and constructive." T he Taylor family fu-st learned that there was a body last sum- mer when the North Vi etnamese offered to r eturn the lxxty then withdrew the off e r . T aylor's widow, Barbara, a nd their three c hildren, Live in Whit- tier. His father d ied in 1950 and n,&8 mother d ied in 1968. "Her reaction is like mine; we are stunned ," said Mrs. Church. "Ten years has gone by. We're going to be ex posed to this all over again. Ten years doesn't ease anything.'• Taylor , then 40, was on a mis- s ion from the aircraft carrier Onskany to rescue a downed pilot when his pla ne was hit and fell into the South China Sea on Nov. 17, 1965 Mrs. Church said. Attempts by the Navy to recover the body wer e driven back by fire from shore. Woman Eats Mate's Ears SALISBU RY, Rhodesia (UPI> -Black nationalist guerrillas cut off the nose, ears and chin of an African tribesman and for ced his wife a l g unpoint to roast and eat them , a Rhodesian govef1)· m~nl spokesman said. Six g ue rrillas e ntered a tribal area over the w eekend and de- m anded food , the spokesm an said, but the villagers refused. "ln re prisal, the t errorists bound Chiombe Mazvidza and sliced off his ears , nose and chin, using a knire and pliers." the spokes man said. ··At ~unpoint they then forced the victim's wife, Stena, to roast a nd eat the pa rts o f her husband's ra c('." More thon 60 vi113~ers, includ· lng the couple's ~hildren. were forced to witness the atrocity, U10 Santiago Family Loses Home By Wll.UAM SCHREIBER Ot l!M 0 .11., ~ .... sgtt Phil and Sue Charlton's little com er of parad ise on the slopes of Santiago Canyon turned into a livin g hell Monday morning. Theirs was one of the two rural homesteads gutted early Monday morning by the brush hre that swept out of Silver ado Canyon across the dry Orange County hills. Sue spent the afternoon fi ght· ing back tear s. Using a rusty stove bolt, s he sifted through the charred re mains of her home and all the fa mily's belongings. Smoke was still thick in the air and heat from glowmg embers was intense. A h alf.dozen cans of paint wer e b la zing in the front yard. "Everything's gone," Suesfild ''It was there a nd then gone, just like that. ''The most upsetting thing was losing the fa mily heirlooms, the kids' drawings ... " The Cha rltons considered their canyon home a refuge from the urban crush. T hey moved there fro m Miss ion Viejo l a s t Christmas Eve. Sue teaches al Mission Viejo High School a nd her husband works in the commercial and in- dustria l development division o! the Mission V1eJO Company "This place was a paradJse lo us and now I j ust don 't know what we'll do," said P hil , a burly but softspoken man . "All we've ~ot left a re the clothes we're weanng and a few a nima ls." Phil and t he couple's sons, Brad, 12, a nd Cooper, 10, were at home when the fl ames r aced across the hilJs toward their 50· year-old Ra nc ho Soldano. Sue was already a t work, but ~he rushed home when word came that some structure~ had ~en destroyed. "The firemen who came up here thought they bad saved the house so we left everything an. side," s he said. '"The n ever- ything went all at once and there was fire a ll a round." The old ranch house started burning under the eaves and the fi re hoses pumping water onto the flames burned in half. In 15 minutes, the house was gone, leaving only a tall rock chimney and an old porcelain bathtub standing above the ashes. A guest house and two barns on the prope rty a lso burned to the ground. Firemen were helpless to save them in the race or the wind-whipped n am es. "The goats and chickens sav(.'d themselves s omehow and the seven hors es we re moved. Bu~ wl" Jost the rabbits and the pig," said Sue. "They were penned in anddidn'thaveachance." - The family cat, Etcetera, also dJed ln the fl aming house. Phil and his sons fled their im- provised fire line as the blaze m· tensif1ed. "The fl am es m oved into the house so fast they wdn't even bum the pan of dog food on the porch," said Sue. Cooper lost one or his most treasur ed possessions in the fire. a junior fi rem a n's badge given lo tum after a fi re prevention lec- ture at ha s school. A friendly <'O unty firem a n rum m aged around in has car and found him another one Monday. The Charltons hope to rebuild their canyon sanctuary but it is only p a rtly co ve red by in· surance. "You can't really live up here in th~ canyons without worrying a bout fires like this," s fild Sue. "We knew it could happen bul hoped it neve r would." The Charlton's friends and ca- nyon neighbors have offered to ta ke the family in until other ar - r angements can be made. 0,Jlly Pilol PllOloi by Racl\ard ICoellle• LADY FIREFIGKTER WADES THROUGH CHARRED BRUSH TO KNOCK DOWN FLAMES Not AH of Those on the Silverado Canyon Fire Line Were Men akeup wealthier Every morning, daily interest is added to every Los Angeles Federal Savings Account. Passbook Savings -Certificates of Deposit- Investment Certificates All at highest rates EXAMPLES OF ANNUAL INTEREST RATES 5%% 61/2% 73A% Pl\\ttoo'-Kc&Vftt '90 "''"'""''" r.,,,1 ltr 1t,, 04 QfllgM1I• i I O('M') OlllMt. '"ttrt\1 <Of"IOO\lnd'd nr mM1t 1 ,,.,, m.ttwnh, cl.It,,. ••'"d''"' '"' htne ••ffll tfttflt\I c~O('l(Jftdfd d11lf f6f lftlf'\t,..~t (l'tlll•U'" \I 00Q (It m .,. 6 10 'I••• t"'"'· ,,.lrrr\t r lf"l~ftdfd d111y uu y1tld ot ovt k)'\' o• •r\o14"rttt. Of Plntd Y•ttd ot 5:39% 6.72% 8.06% l.M Ano•lff '•de,t1C $1.,.1rtq\ raubOOk AcCOUf\tt t '" tMI •1thd• 1wf'\ ti •"f hl"'f' W•lf\ fwtl 1nt•r· ""' com('f't\Jf'ld@d O.l•fy ('t11M11:t~W' nt O,..ott••• ,,..,, lf'llw•I~'""' '"'''''' Ml"' ,f 0f'lr•,.t ""'"" N• w1lt\l't•,•n ~' ·t tn .... f,n1fy b•tl ''°' \(.t'llfdA"' ,. a I~ ff' t"'"' Pt Ch1•ll ~·_·:1 I''"""' 1 H 'th • f ' P'lp f I'll ,,_ ,,,.,,. ot oepou• .,.,11 t>t u1t•~"''•'"1) "' 11'\n r ••11••""'' >•" ,.~ t "''' "••'•. I•" 90 <So\ 1ttt1n \t. Newport Beach Office 3201 Newport Blvd. • 675-4500 (Across fro m City Hall) Head Office Dow ntown· Los Angeles Federal Savings and Loan Association On e W1lsh1re, Los Ang eles 90017 Other offices throughout the area raponsible one ln the history o( ihenaUon. spokesman :said . t l ·-- -... ' A:.t OAIL y PIL01 * T•JMday Oecembet 9 197'5 .Just ~ Coa ting,~~!_ I ~.,· ~(? ' "~~' "W'ith Tom arphin~ Quizzing The Veep Pt nuc <·L \TTt-:R"-· "1c•· 'Pr\.'s1d ent !\t•lson Hot kdcllt>r was m our r t'li!IUO today for ltat· i urpose of heannJ,! from the pt•o ple. He had .1 pant I mdudmi.. three Cabmt•t ortacers \\Ith him i\J I o( this proves our \ 1t·t-prcsa 1lt'nt 1s a 'erv bra Vt' man The purp0se of th1:. ~alht•nn~. hl'ld at the Los Angdes ton' l'n t 1 on C t.• n l t.' r . "' ~1 s to t .t k t' test1mtin) on Vw <'und1 t10n of our country 1n th1• \ll'l'"' of t'<"onomw rt.><:overy. natural n·~<mrct• <fr \ ~lopmt .. nt .met t ht• t·m·iron mt•nt :1 r1d t'ummunit' bualdrng Jtlll !-.nn.d progr.1mo.; An off1c1al pl'L'ss relt'<l'il' fro111 t he \\ l'Sll'rn f-\·d 1·rtil Ht•1.non.1l ('rnanral t'ncour agt•<l tht• puhhl' to :.Ht ml l ht· 't",,tofl and offt·r t•11111 nwnts .1s tulH' p1•rr111!'-\ 11f this H l1llll1.', l/11• I 1'~111 t• <II I II I Ill 1111 how tht.> \\ holt• thing turm'<l out ll startt'd ••t !J .i m ll mJ\ stall lw gcnng for all 1 kno't\.. ~ant t lht· ~oH•rnm l'nt d1dn t "Ug~l''l \\ hl·n \t \\Ould qual ht•u nn~ from pt•11 pit• PEOPLE \.\HO ATif'\OED \H·r(' tnld an ~uh .inn• tht·y c.J gl'l tht' chance to J !-.k quc:-taons ur make commrnh to thl' v11·l' prl'· ~ident and hagh ft•1h•r;.il offu:t·rs JS t1mt' p(•rm 11.., \\'hen you sun(') t•oncl1l111ns 1n our ('ountry totl.I\ good t'llllt•ns m.1y :.tall ht• :.ish ang qul·sl111ns c>r' m.iking comm1•nh rwxt spnng 1f they kl'C'p lilt' ll\l'l'l111g gcung that lun~. , E\'en 1f yuu l ~1 .t .1"1<k q11Ps hons bt•fort• tht' pant•I lakt• t."l'Ullomar rt•cm t'r) or social pro gTam'>. 1t should be noted t hat ThomJs S Kkppe, our secrC'tary of the DepJrl mt·nt of thl' Inlcnor. \'as one of the p.inelJsts mv1tang citizen commentary. lhs depart ment 1s the frder JI outfit current ly pushing for offshore oil de 'dopml·nt along our coastline. If t•nough of those ant1-01I peo· pie show u p to talk at the 1·om ent10n center. you t'an figurt.> llr. Rockefcltcr will not make tt homl' fnr Christmas. (1...EARL \. IT IS RARE fnr .1 \ IC't' prcs1d1•nt of th1• t n1tt•d 'l.tlt'' tn s h o\\ up hefort• a throng 1n L1ml'S lakt• tht•st• and lht•n <1:.k lt' a~:.el"1hled tf they have any questions Thas C'(Parlv illustrates th~•l -~r Hc•l'l-.l'frll~·r h~•s rourage It • f)r11t1aill) also undl'rsrores t111· f ,1<'1 th.it h•· n·,111) 1sn t runnm~ ;if ,1r rt• l'l1•1·t IC>n . Ir lhe fornrn 'cir.ms Jnv k1n1l of \'n>Wd , 11 's po· sahll• sornt· Cjlll''tlllll'i might he .1skl'd that llw 'au: prc·s1dL•nl , (OU(dn t JnSV.t'r. \n~ pollt1nan running fur an~ thing from tloJ,!C'att·h1•r on up tlm•sn t \\,ant to lw ,1skt.•d ques- tion' ht· <'•Jll 'l .insv. t·r. Wh t•n ~ ou 11• 1n pollhC's. thr rule of thumb as lo J.!IH' em an .1 n s v. t' r ''fly :.ins v. l' r Just hl;.ilhl'r .1wJy untal they gl't '"t•ary nf hl•artn>! ~our grt•<1l : round tones and huve forgotten .. \~hJl tht•) ,1skPc1 an the first • pl c.t(l~ • Bl'T FOR HF.A \'E~'S SAKE, : whatevt'r) ou <111. don't JUSt stand up there 1111 t h1• pod a um and : mumble, '' f d<1!l I know the • ~nswer lo that nrw ' ~ :\tr Rock<'fC'lln hnv.e\t'r 1s tn a most un1qut· po"111.,n ~inn· he t 1sn 't running to pn•»1·rv1• his JOb. After .ill. hl' <.l cw sn I rc·.11ly need s the mont·~. ... Beirut ToH Rises Christia~ Pushed Back to Sea BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Chrisltan gunm~n "'1th their back~ to the Medlterrnnean held off Ca~rce Moslt-m attacks in Beirut today after what the state radio C'alled the "worst and cruelest night l1f ftghtlfig" an the eight·month cavil war for control 1>( Lt!banon. The lwo-day death count rose to about 160. A polil'e off mal who counted lJll' dead said hun· <lreds more were wounded. TllE CHRISTIANS BA1TL£D against an en· l'trchng assault by Moslem and leftist forces m the downtown hotel and commercial d1stncl . A spokes man for the nght.wmg Christian PhaJange party :.aid Phalange fighters held out and evt-n retook pa rt of Beirut's small, ravaged J ewish quartt•r. which nao been overrun m we Moslem at- tJck ~1 ondJy. Half a dozen maJor fares were set after rocket and mortar exchanges, 1ncludmg one 10 the 500- room Phoenic1.i Hotel where Christian m1llhamen were bes1e~ed . IS ATE~1PORARYLOCALtruce, army troops took 1>' l'r the fire-damaged Phoerucia and ~vacuat· ed Christian gunmen. sta!r and guests. Interior Minister Camille Chamoun told newsmen at the presidential palace that army armored units were taking up positions in the seaside battle zone, but persons in the area saw no sign.s of army intervention. Associated Press photographer Zuhari Saade was wounded in the leg during bitter street fighting that ignored the presence of about 200 army troops and a bal!-dozen a rmy armored vehicles. THE LATEST ROUND of savage battles began Saturday night after a massacre by both sides in which police said 128 persons were murdered. Besides the hotels, the seaside battle zone in-~ludes the main commercial district and the bank- mg district, once the !inancial heart of the Middle EasL An estimated 700 Moslems pushed ahead in a pincer movement that virtually surrounded the Christians, cutting them off from the Asbra!ieh, their stronghold inside the city. NOWProtnt The Na ti on al Organization for Women is asking Presi- dent Ford to withdraw Supreme Court nomination or John Paul Stevens because he said he would be more concerned about dis- crimination of blacks than women. Hoffa Case Testintony Wednesday 'Rock Doc' Se me need POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. <U PI} -Dr. William Abruzzi, the "Rock Doc," was sentenced Monday to an indeterminate ,rison term of up to fh·e years on a charge of sexual abuse mvolving a female patient m h.is office. Suspect Rips Off Clothing in Court From Wire Services DETROIT -A New Jerse} Teamster who last week refused to testify before a Detroit gra nd JUry probing the disappearance of former Teamsters union pre- sident James R. Hoffa will be back before the grand jury Wed- nesday, his attorney says. Wilt:am E . Bufaltno, who repres ented Stephen Andretta dunng h1s last grand jury ap- pearance. said Monday he ex- pected a court hearing to precede Andretta's grand jury testimony. ROBERT C. OZER, chief of the U.S. Organized Crime Strike force, said last week that the gov- ernment would seek lo offer An- d re t ta immunity for his testimony. Bufalino s aid he would oppose the move. Hoffa vanished July 30. There has been speculation that Hoffa was slain, possibly by opponents \\ 1thm the Teamsters un1on. The FBI on Monday dropped obstruction charges it filed Saturday agains t Andrella's brother and two other New Jersey Teamsters. The trio had been accused of refusing to ap· pear in a federal court-ordered laneup of poss ible pnnc1pals in the Hoffa case. VERO BEACH, F1a. (UPI) -A 30-year-old fruit picker accused of hacking a young woman to death and attacking two motorists, ap- peared in court for arraignment Monday, ripped off his clothing in front of a junior high civics class and screamed "I am the Lord The sentence was im· posed by Dutchess County Judge Raymond Aldrich, who refused a defense ap- peal that Abruzzi be con- tinued on bail pending the outcome of a n appeal. Abruzzi earned the sobri- quet "Rock Doc" during the Woolstock music festival in 1969, when he treated a number of pers ons attending that event. Messiah ... crucify m e, crucify m e '' Jasper Mines is charged with the Nov.. 13 machete slaying of .Marie Hartnoll, 20, of Satellite Beach, Fla. He pleaded innocent by reason of insanity Monday and Judge Royce Lewis set a ten- tative trial date or Jan. s. MINES' ATTORNEY, public defender Russell Peterson, was filing motions for dismissal of the charge and for a psychiatric ex· amination of his client when Mines s uddenly s tripJ>4id off his shirt and trousers and con!ronled the spectators. !'Crucify me, crucify me," he Nader Evldene~ DES in Pregnancy Tied to Sterility WASHINGTON CUPU -Ralph Nader's Health Research group said today there is new evidence indicating that male children whose mothers were treated with the drug DES during pregnancy may be al· fucted with sterility and testicular abnormaltties. The organization, in a letter to Health, Education and Welfare Secretary David Mathews, urged the government lo warn doctors not to prescribe DES to pregnant women without telling them shouted. ''just like: Christ." Members of a junior high c1v1cs class, laking up the front two rows at the Indian River County Circuit Court a s an educational experience, gasped. THREE DEPUTY s he riffs seized Mines, put his clothing back on and handcuffed him. Judge Lewis warned Mines he would be removed from the court if there were !urlheroutbursts. But minutes later, Mines screamed again. "1 am the Lord Messiah. You have crucified me already.'' Lewis issued a second warning and Mines remained silent for the remainder of the hearing. In addition to the Hartnoll girl's murde.r, Mines is facing charges of attacks on motorists Chester Smith and Daniel Butch. Mines allegedly attacked Smith with a machete after the latter puUed to a roadside to assist Mines, whose van was stopped. Butch sustained a fractured skull when he stopped his car t<> id Smith after the attack. AN OFF-DUTY d eputy sheriff who saw the two injured men dis· covered Miss HartnoU's body in Mines' van. Renew Talks-- Brezhnev WARSAW, Poland <UPI> - Soviet leader Leonid 1. Brezhnev called today for a breakthrough in the deadlocked Moscow- Washington Strategic Arms Limitation Talks. The Soviet Communist Party General Secretary also proposed Europe-wide meetings on power, transport and pollution. ( IN SHORT ) Brezhnev, urging creation of a post-Helsinki "spirit of mutual trust," made the remarks in the course of a largely conciliatory 25-minute address to the Polish Commu~t f arty Congress. 11.S. Veto Lauded By United Pren lllternaUonaJ Is rael expressed satisfaction today for the United States veto of the propQsed U.N. Security Council resolution condemning Israeli air s trikes against Palestinian targets in Lebanon. The United States cast the veto Monday night after the Council meeting in U.N. Headquarters in New York refused to add a U.S .• sponsored amendment condemn- mg all violence in the Middle East. . Wallace Olllce Tlaelt. JACKSONVILLE, F1a. (AP) - A list of Florida contributors to Alabama Gov. George Wallace's presidential campaign was stolen during a break-in at his state headquarters, a campaign official says. Fitzhugh P owell said the break-in was discovered by a campaign worker who found the offiC'e door ajar when he went to work Monday. Morton 011 Book WASHINGTON (UPI) -One cabinet member has avoided contempt of Congress proceed- ings but plans to cite Secretary of State Henry Kissinger are still alive. Secretary of Commerce Rogers C. B. Morton and a House Commerce s ubcommittee re- ached agreement Monday on a subt>oena for confidential lists of Arab reques ts for American business boycotts of Israel. Morton at first refused the in- tormatioo and tbe subcommittee planned to seek a contempt cila· tionfrom the House. MEANWHILE, the New York Times said today a man, claim· ang to know the whereabouts of lhe body of Hoffa , took $10,000 of CBS News' money and disap- peared without furnishing the network with the promised in- formation. about the potential consequences for their offspring. CASES OF vaginal and cervical cancer among women whose mothers took DES during pregnancy have b een documented. Time for the 40-mile Smile. According to the newspaper the man said h is name was Chuck :\1edlin, later identified by the FBI as an ex-convict who had been in Lewis burg prison when the former teamster chieftain was there serving time for mail fraud and jury t a mpering. The T imes s aid Medlin pers uaded freelance writer Pathck O'Keefe that he could lead him to the body of Hoffa who d1sappeared las t July 30. Accord- tnl? to the Times, Medlin told O'Keefe that "Mr. Hoffa's body was encased in concrete, lying on the ocean floor in 12 feel of water two and a half miles off Key West." AFTER FIRST making con- tact with a magazine. O'Keefc brought Medlin to CBS News where last Wednesday night Medlin was interviewed on tape b y Morley Safer of the "60 :'vlmules 'program . DES, which stands for Diethylstilbestrol, was u sed to prevent miscarriages. It is also used in animal feed. Or. Sidney Wolfe, director of the Nader group, said a new animal feeding s tudy published th1s week s howed that 60 percent of the male offspring of DES. treated mice were sterile and that 66 percent of the male offspr- ing "had pathologic lesions of the reproductive tract including testicular abnormalities and ... cysts." WOLFE ALSO said a second study conducted al the Chicago Lying-in Hospital involving 840 pregnant women treated with DES in the early 1950s show that 24 percent of the male children had abnormalities of th e reproductive tract. Storm Takes 7 Lives It's time to help the Orange Coast put on a 40-mile smile to welcome holiday visitors from near and far. The Orange County Coast Association and the Daily Pilot are Joining with community organizations from Seal Beach to San Clemente for a reprise of the 40 Miies of Christmas Smiles outdoor decorating competition. c : Clucago. Hard Hit; Plane, 4 A.lJoard, Lost M1qll A ''>v'J1,i1ttf)1Jt" M 1111 " I llo 1 , .. l' t f\,,,.,.,.. "11 ,..,,, ',,.. j~ Ct'•,,..,,,, 4\ I flo.rl t1t'l'1 '" • t..w111 .. ~· -f)oinv.,r '·• r.-•• 1.t l'l , ,. tb .~~ \ 41 (-,..,llt,lulu "~ .._, •r\A" r •v •\ '" llW).I\ 1• ~"""' ID """ .. ~ ... ~ ... J• -y !t !f" S)Ol1'\ n ........ o. ....... ... II ,..~ ... Vt>r\ 1\ t)o> •~"OINI (1ty •' {j,n.ofl. )I J•1111m•..oir1r"Q\ Ill """..,.'"'"' ~, ~hi '" "' """"""' ., ' l"l>f'T._,,,., ,, Pl)rt 1.-.cf. Or• ;• P,.19 ~ ' Olllty r'li.t 0 .. •...., • .. c:. ............ lo.., II 41 'N 11 ,. , . H 1\ )) ,, ~\ ll •• ~ ,, ,, .. 11 lO 21 41 ,. \' ,, ,, ·~ ,. ~ •• .....,.,o •• u •,.t l.l)UI\ ,. 1't .u ·.-111 ·-· C•IY v )J ,,...,,,.,...,,..,0 .. '° ~·"'· \/ H 0. ~\II• t\QIOft ol() 11 II C:nlf f ornfa . S.,.,,,y end Wllfl'fl -·'""' Cl)nllf!U"d tllto119"°'-'1 ~11t"9"rn C•llfornl• ., 1W•,.elt1.,. """• "'ne COl'ldlllom kf'nt \•'*\ c1ur •nd nu~4 ttmM"'"""' Into ,,,. IOt Mrlrcury ••edlftjl\ In ft'\0\1 llrtfl ""Tf'n"I ,., hl9" •• In thf' PHI l"W """'· ,.,_.,.., H•Oh\ ._,.,,.In Ille llfQll ~ •1"11 mid-Ml\ tn mounl1IM. Ole trmpe,.lure reec!Wd ~I ""' l oc """i.' OYIC Cllfll•• Mondllv. fll'4 11 Umllflt ,...Slnt •H ... tdk tect ..,.., v.s.s ...... a,,, A~ fl"" IM .... \ of wlftd~ -ptl~ uo ,,, t.111<•00 Moftdlly •lld .. .,,, IM.i"Y n.. ••o•m WH Ol.wNld 10r "'~" ct.Mii' TN Co.1' (;u11rd wes (oncfUClll'IO ti\ •Ir u1ct u• uuc11 over l...1111• MklllQllfl tor 11 m 1n1nci twlft-4!1Di,. ~ll<tllll and Ille tour l*lttl•--'d 11t>otrd s.c.,_,. tlitc>uty r 1;, M41''"'1 Albr'fl "'flldtr'Qlltl 1.io lllAI 11 '"°" Ill , ... PllM 11.tcf Wf'Yl"9d Ill" ''llYl, ll•y proc.llfy .outd not lurvlvt tNt " f'elr and wer ... WedftHNY llOflt \'.,l11bi. winds "'°"' _.,. morftlnt !louf't HIVftj 111 tllt IOw 10'" COfllffll t"°'-flfllrtt Wiii ,.,... bel•••" so lllld 73 ,,,,.,,ct tffll• ,..,.cur" will ••"99 betw..11" Md e1 T"' ... .,., ltft'IP9rlllur• Witt 1111 S1. s-,noo-. T•d~• TUHOA'f '-COllCI lllOfl I t3 P m ll s.c.M 1o-r I,'° p m. I 0 WID"HOAV Fl"1111t11 i u •m •J l'lr\l l4W • S4 • m. '4 ~onci 1110" , SJ P m. 1 > s.tondlow -.. l)p rfl 1.4 SuflflW.6 •• m . "'' 4:uo m Moon rl\41t 11 ,, •.m., Mh II 2" 'pm. J Homes and businesses all along the Orange Coast wlll be judged by eommuntty groups and the beat In each division In each community wlll be forwarded to the Smiles committee by Dec.15. Entrants may specify whether they wish their decorations to be Judged In daylight or at night. Winner• wlll be •elected In the residential and commercial dlvlalons and the community presenting the brlghteat holiday amtle wlll be named "Chrlstma1vllle, 1975". To enter your holiday decorations return the coupon below to the Dally Piiot Public Service Department before 5 p.m. Mon- day, Dec. 15. Good luck. ---~~---------------~~-----------~---~--~~---~----v-. I want my home (or business. church. tc:hool. etc) to be JudOOd In w-40 Miles of 0Vistma1 Smllea" cort118tltlon. My name and eddress or deconitlonl I want Judges to ... .. lilted below. I understel'ld JudOlno 'Mlt be baHd on •PPM 9nC9 of this entry on O.C.. 18, 17 or 18. N,mM ............................................................ . •·•·•···••··•···················••·····•••·••••••···•·•• orv .. •. · · • ·: · · · · · · •. · · · · ·.. . ...•.....••...•••.....•. Zip •••••••• C>av ~ •••••••••••••••..• • • EV9. ~ ••••••• • ................ .. My entry should be Judged During the day 0 Aft r dirk CJ Mall Coupon To: -Public SeMce Dept .• Oeitv Pilot, P.O. Box 1aeo, Cotta MVSll CA 92828 .• l ff 11ghes Cover Feds Fight Spy Ship Tax Status LOS ANGELES <UPI > - Howard Hughes does not have a spr ship any more. The federal go~e~ment took it back and is trymg hard to convince a local tax collector he never had it to begin with. Coast Guard records released Monday cancelled the registra- tion of the Glomar Explorer to the Summa Corp., Hughes' main holding company. Moss Files Guilty Plea In Overdose The action is part of the confus- ing process of bringing the former spy sh ip, its cover shredded long ago, "in from the cold,.. and fighting orr an at- tempt by the Los Angeles County Tax Assessor to colJect $7.5 million from Hughes -whit•h would have to be paid by the federal government. I N WASHINGTON. the Securities and Exchange Com- mission Monday settled a com- plaint against Global Marine Inc. ot Los Angeles. When the Glomar Explorer was a top secret CIA project. the ship's cover story was that Global Marine operated it as an undersea mining re- search vessel for Summa - meaning Hughes. It was actually a CIA ship, de- signed to retrieve a sunken LOS ANGELES CAP> _Ken-Russian submarine from the neth Moss, who amassed a floor of the Pacific Ocean about fortune on Wall Street before he 750 miles north of Hawaii. Part of was 30, has pleaded guilty to in-the sub was recovered, including voluntary manslaughter in the Soviet nuclear weapans, docu- drug overdose death of a rock ments and nuclear-tipped UPI hlf9"'11o Tuesday December 9, 1975 DAILY PILOT .-1 .) Aft~r Reversal Reinecke Ponders Political Future SACRAMENTO CA P J Former Lt. Gov. Ed Heuwc·ke, free of hls perjury conv1ctton. faces a mountain of legal fee:-. and e,1 decision on whether to try a political comeback Reinecke said Monday mght that he was "not closing the door" to the idea of agam run ning for office. but he said he wanted to wait awhile h<'fore making a dec1s1on . "Before makin g a decision hk<.> this I would want to look around and talk to a lot of people." he said in a telephone intervww from his ranch in the Sierra foothills. "It won't be my de c1sion alone." REINECKE, WHO lost the Re publican gubernatorial primary last year after he was indicted, said he still has about $95,000 in legal fees to pay off. lie was CIVl'I\ an 18-month sus- pended sentence following lhf' verdict . fie resigned his pogt shortly before the sentence WU handed down But the U S. Court of Appeal~ in Washington overturned the conviction Monday on lbc grounds that the committee> which heard R e inec ke's testimony did not have enough members present. Reinecke said he cried when hl' learned of the ruling ii'\ J telephone call from his Wlfe. · I was sort of stunned,'' he said It was a very e motional momenl for me.·· THE DECISION did not d1~­ cuss the question of whether Reinecke lied lo the committct>. but Reinecke said he fell vm dlcated by the ruling. He said that the appeals court had simply agreed with one of the first points in his appeal and had not taken up other conten lions. musician last year. torpedos. Moss, 31, changed his plea The Glomar Explorer cover Monday as a jury was being story appeared in the company's selected for his trial on murder annual reports, which brought on charges. Superior Court Judge an investigation by the SEC when Vernon Foster scheduled sen-it was revealed the ship had a lencing for Jan. 6. secret identity. The company EBULLIENT ED REINECKE EMBRACES WIFE JEAN After U.S. Court Reversed 1974 Perjury Conviction Reinecke was convicted in July 1974 of lying to a U.S. Senate committee investigating the circumstances under which In ternational Telephone & Tele graph Co. promised to partially underwrite the 1972 Republican National Convention. "There was no point in going further.·· he said after di scussing the decision with one of hts lawyers. "lt was just simply a matter of not wasting time." ----- " 111 Hearst Case Moss was indlcted on charges agreed to amend its reports, the Pr t W4 t G SEC said, and further action r an ag of murder and unlawful provid-against it was dropped because it osecu 0 s ing of narcotics in the September was acting with the approval of 1974 death of Robbie Mcintosh, "another agency of the U.S. gov 28· a drummer with "The ernment." SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Prosecutors, accus past 19 months during her captivity lo eff ectively But asked if he would have Jtked lo have a decision that touched solidly on the issue of guilt or innocence. Reinecke said : "J suppose. Yes. I would have to s ay that. I know very well lwasnotguilty •· Reinecke says he plans n<J further legal action. "The casf' has been decided."' he said. Average White Band.'' ing Patricia Hearst 's lawyers of using the me<ha lo diminish the presumption of innocence in her favor AUTHORIT I ES SAID Me in· ALTHOUGH SU1'1MA Corp. create sympathy for the jailed heiress, have asked by branding her with such comments as being a IN ITS RULING, the appeab tosh died after sniffing heroin al did not actually own the ship, as a judge to issue a gag order barnng attorneys from notonous criminal.·· court said il found ''convincing·· a party at Moss' llollywood Hills Globa'l Marine reported, it "act further public comment on the case. He said he was refernng to a statement by Remecke's argument that the home. ed as agent for the United States The government's motion Monday charged that former U.S. Attv. Gen. WilLiam Sax be conviction should be overturned Entertainer Cher Bono, credit· for the purpose of secrecy and lo defense lawyers F. Lee Bailey and Al Johnson Johnson s ai·d the motion does not accuse the de· because only one senator was ed with saving the life of another provide cover to a classified pro waged a "publicit y campajgn devoted to evokin g a rense of any court v10lation anywhere. He did not present at the hearing. member of the group, testified at ject affecting the national secun sympathetic public image for the defendant by say whether be intended to oppose the government The prosecution tried to show the grand jury investigation into ty." the settlement said. stressing her mental condition." motion. that the cqmmittee had voted' Mcintosh's death last summer, The county tax assessor. Philip The result of the publicity, the government al -THE ATTORNEY said last Tuesday that Miss that one senator constituted a saying she s aw the musician and Watson, is still fighting a federal leged, "can only be to influence potential jurors." Hearst had been losing weight rapidly, looked pale quorum. felJow band member Allan Gorie court battle to collect a tax bill of JOHNSON SAID, "I consider the request and gaunt and had "emotional problems in con-But the court disagreed, say- sniffing a white powder. $7.5 million on the ship, arguing for a gag order to be entirely inappropriate since verting her thoughts to speech." However , the ing: "The competence of the Authorities said both believed that it was legally registered to government agents of as high status as the attorney sheriff's office said she weighed within half a pound tribunal must be proved as an m- _it_t_o_be_c_o_c_a_in_e_._n_o_t _he_r_o_in_.~~~-H_u_g_h_es_._w_h_o_o_w_es_ta_x_es_o_n_it_. ___ genffal ~e United&a~s have cho~en for the~_o_f_w_·_h_at_s_h_e~w_e~ig~h_e_d_w_~_e_n_s_h_e_w~a_s~ja_1_le_d_.~~~~~d~ependentelement~thecnme Getaway from the commonplace store. Bead Quarters, a unique Ski & Tennis Shop specializing in Head Sportswear. GiJ~ CLJ)GUARTERB SOUTH COAST VILLAGE/556-8278 South ·coast RUG CRIFTERS STARTER KIT SALE COMPLETE TOOLS & MATERIALS FOR PILLOWS ..Or WALL 16 .. x16.. HANGINGS 16"x26" REGULARLY $30. 90 LIMITED OFFER AVAILABLE ONLY AT SOUTH COAST VILLAGE 546-6340 r TIME BOOl(S SINGLE TITLES OR COMPLETE SERIES Available WITHOUT Subscription 557-3875 CuJinM)'. Etc. PHONE 557 -2223 H.U.D.D.L.E. IS FOR KIDS! ' (AND FOR GROWN·UPS. TOO!) ~ .. ~\:rl ~~--..,,.. 1(\V>,l'NOC.•rT" a· 10 ~PAA!( VQlU,,..9 ll,IAGINATIONS ~ l fRQl,I $1~~ I {~ ~ r'.HIW>l,I[ f<l<Q •I'S l\U.I<• rOA >IDS < R t;lllOwt.f·llP• t s~• n• 1 COLLECTOR'S 1976 400/o SILVER BICENTENNIAL COIN SET s 13'5 CSET OF 3J IM llEAUTIRIL STANO.UP CASE " 0 -z Ill SOUTH COAST VILLAGE 556-6850 - Christmas 191.i at 'Die@. Hdqtrs. 'J\.1971 We are very pleased to add the&e famous manufacturers to our existing list of nom. brands f:111~,lJ> ,JJ~,ll\'S • On't1~ 04' ,.:···~ -... ·~ v4' ,.:···~ ,. •• : :'t' ~ P,,,,, .. • '== 1t11rrie~ _. fo~Ar.c3 We Invite you to •top by and tole~ a foolc ••• ,1, Yov will be qvlte pleased ~ y<N flnd thot Ycry special gift fOf thot .,.,., ipeclol mon UH IANKAMIRICARD, MASUR CHARGE, 01 OPIN A CO. HDQTitS. CHARGI. Al.SOt lOO wtfl...W-~ 557 7215 UNfll. CMtllTMAS • -) .. .... ' .. A8 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE • Justice for Juveniles The juvenile justice program endorsed by the Orang~ County Cnnu.nal Jus tice Council last week h3S promise. For one thing. the program recognizes the need to keep Juveniles who commit serious crimes within the formal justice system. Simultaneously, it provides for more realistic anu less costly treatment of "status off enders," youths wbo h ave committed ofienses that wouldn't be of· femes if they were adults. The program calls for status offenders -truants and runaways, for example-to be treated and supervis ed at youth s ervice centers located in six re- gions within the county instead of being confined in Juvenile Hall. Introducing regions into the program means troubled juveniles wtll be treated in or near their own communities and that local authorities will help de- cide which programs are best suited to the commum· t y needs. Participation and cooper ation by local officials and citizens is needed to bring life to the Cnminal Justice Council's program. Given that local support, the program can't help but improve juvenile justice in Orange County. Empty Oil Assurances The court has spoken, or rather refused to speak, and apparently the sale of offshore oil drilling leases covering 1.25 million acres of submerged lands off the Orange Coast will proceed as scheduled this week. California officials for pursuing legal action when. as he condescendingly explained, their arguments for delay already had been presented to the federal go\'· ernment. Whether the government was listening is open to question. But we really should be of good cheer, a Mobil Oi l Corp. offkial assured us last week, becaus e "polls'' now show that the people are solidly behmd off shore drilling. Which polls, and which people, he did not specify. And, as usual, we are told that 11 adequate en· vironmental controls" will be taken. Just what the controls ma:; be seem s to be an of· ficiaJ secret, but for s ure they must be something pretty special. Even the U.S. judge who d enied the injunction, noting the unprecedented depths that would be in· volved in the Southern California drilling operation, desc ribed the ·scope of the project as "mind- bogg ling." Our minds are indeed boggled, both by the uncer- teinty of the hazards that may loom ahead and by the blind r efusal of the federal government to resist the pressure of the oil companies a nd r espond to pleas for caution. For those who have worked so diligently to obtain a delay in the lease saJes, at least until some down-to- earth assurances can be produced, the next move is wicertain. But the time lapse between lease sales and actual production could amount to three to four years. And in this period perhaps it will be possible to pers uade the federal authorities to impose suffi cient contnJls to guarantee reasonable protection of the coast. Refus al of a U.S. District Judge in Washington to grant an injunction delaying the Dec. 11 sale was of course applauded by Interior Secretary Thomas S . Kle ppe, who earlier had chastised Southern To this end, Southern Californians should be en· couraged to keep up the good fight ''YOU MAKE THE WORLD 1S SWEETEST MlLK.1 " ·rrruth Can Lawyers' Veto Power Questioned Wipe Out Rornance Dear Gloomy Gus A Bland Co11rt Appointment ART HOPPE ) Promise he r anything, but give iter ... 32.6 percent oxy. .drilycene, 16.8 perce nt 11'1hydrogeated coreopsis, 31.3 1'fercent polywansakraker. and . 7 percent inert ingredients. Or something. • Which is to s ay that the govern- m ent is waging another battle in jts relentless •campaign to • i p e nmance, ex· citement and adventure out of our lives. '2Cow it wants 'the manufac· turer s of perfumes and ~osmeti<.'s to list the ingredients on the labels. The government <.'laims truth in labeling is good for com- parison shoppers. Nonsense. What shopper is ever going to £ompare the ingredients in perfumes? What seUs perfumes is romance. SO~E PERFUME ads might pass a truth test . One that leaps to mmd is Madame Jovan·s· "What you do with 1t is your af. fair." And Chanel No. 19 t'ould <'On· ceivably get by with .. It's another feeling. It's another Chanel. .. Rut they'd have to pro- ve its sticki er or slipperier than old No. 5 And the government's eoing to want to know whatever .happened to Chanels 6 through l8. Obviou sly, s u c h lovely thoughts as .. And suddenly nothing is the same, .. "For all the woman you are," and "He can't get you out of his mind" We ·were flooded with Watergate revelations for almost two years. But where are all the crusaders and their relia· ble informants and leakers or everything we s hould know about the who, what, why, where, when and how of the incredible mess in New York City? E .M. will have to go. A.1'10 THINK OF that famous concerto for piano, violin and Tabu where the gentleman has seized the lady in his arms. "Was it the ambergris in my Tabu that made you a raving sex maniac, Poindexter?" she'll now have to inquire. And he'll have to honest- ly reply either (1} "No, I couldn't stand you lousing up 'Chopsticks' one more time," or (2) "Frankly, J"mjust plain horny.'' But the one I ' 11 miss most is Cri d'Amour·s ad depicting a naked lady and a naked gentleman scratching each other's necks or something in a garden. "Trust the French to have finally bottled Jove itself,'' the copy begins. "Never ever have you heard a perfume speak to you of love. Un- til this moment.'' Well, the gov· ernment's sure going to want to know what the perfume said. And if it knows what's good for it, the perfume had better say, "You go around wearing nothing but Cri d'Amour, lady, and you're going to catch your death of cold." Gone will he 'the happy dream that youth, beauty and desirabili· ty come in a bottle. And we'll all plod through life feeling just as old, ugly and undesirable a.s we are. If the government wants the truth, it's in trouble. WASHINGTON -Whil e almost surely 9voiding a Senate confirmation fight, the nomination or Judge John Paul Stevens contains subtle dangers for the Supreme Court and again exposes the limitations of Gerald R. Ford's bland presidency. There is no secret why Stevens. a member of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Chicago, was se lect ed. Pres ident Ford and his justice- hunters were seeking the best qualified nominee likely to win q u i c k confirmation. But in doing so, Mr. Ford furthered a trend toward capture of the nation's highest court by the orga nized legal profession which could convert it into a body of legal mechanics rather than lawgivers. MOREOVER, the Stevens 3ppointment reflects two characteristics at the Ford White House: a genuine desire to fill the Supreme Court with the best qualified justices, tempered by a timid inability to seize the challenge and opportunity of a coveted court vacancy. The end product comes over as the polit· ics of blandness. Whereas President Richard M. Nixon 's court nomination strategy was t"rassly political , Mr. Ford may have gone to the opposite extreme. The selection process was conducted by Atty. Gen. Edward Levi and White House Counsel Philip Buchen, asssisted by Richard Cheney, the new White House chief of staff. Cheney has little experience in party politics, Levi and Buchen none at all. Mr. Ford, shaken by four non- judicial nominations shot down Where Are the New .Leaders? This 1s a gelded generation. For urbanites, let me explain that a gelding 1s a horse whi<'h travels with the mare herd -in 811 advisory capacity only. Perhaps the men of our youth ftE'ver were so tall as we re- member them -yet we do re member ,them. In my own profes sion. we remem~r Walter Lip· _pmann and 'Walter WiMhell. Ed Murrow and F.lmer Davis. Henry Kaltenborn, Boake Cartt"r -the purpOISE'ful boat- ,J"O<'kers. In cntcrt-ainm.nt tht' macho- man as out ol Cashion. We have become a dress-alike MUtered 1endcr. an amalgamated t>nttation. MfERF. MIDST the military C'OUJd we rtnrl even ont' Dou1h1s .MacArthur or George Potton a B1Uy M1tcbell, an Omar Bradley, a Bull Hal~t'y? Vrrmont Roy•t«. scannJne lbe two ~.a of PtnnsylvanJ Ave., ua lhe nme qoC!'Stlon : Wh4!re toda7 are th~r• m n to matc'b the aUlure of the ll ti? I I I ( PAUL HARVEY J Franklin D. Roosevelt.. loved or hated. bestrode hi3 times like a colossus. Harry Truman. Dwight Eisenhower and John Kennedy were at least forceful men. When they spoke we listened. Even yesteryear's losers would tower over today's win· nera-for example, Tom Dewey, Adlai Stevenson. And where in Congress is there even one Bob Taft who com· mands respect on both sides of the aisle? Or an Arthur Vanden· burg of Michigan, Carl George of Georgia, Carter Glass or Virginia, William Borah of Idaho, George Norris of Nebruka and Everett Dirksen of JUinot.s! GRANTED, time puts n paUna on the past. but it is difficult to find their hke today. As Royster days, Houst-Spt-ak~r Albert and Senate Lellrler Mansfi('ld are ruce men. but one caMOt lead lhe Senat.t-nor th<' other the flou:se Whert> are the men who mode the bt-lls r1nJ1C" What belll rinr for the J acksons . .-_f\a nfordi., Ud1ll1, Schapps, Shrivers and Birch Bayhs? Sen. Hubert Humphrey, the Democrat-most-likely, is a rerun left over from the days when we had stature to.spare. Does the forthrightness for whi ch we remember Sam Rayburn and Alben Barkley and Harry Truman run for cover from the sl.ings and arrows or today·s exponents of mediocrity? Are we now so prone to distrust an)"one who does not stay in line, march in step? Then the axiom said: "Dare to win or lose it all! " The axiom now says, "Don't make waves." Today in business and industry Horatio Alger is straitjacketed by his own lawyers and red·taped to immobility by Lillipulian bureaucrats. · POLITICIANS have suggested that times of detente call ror modttators. compromisers, mil· quetoasts A historian i>ees these times nther as crying out for ex- ctll~nc.-, for un-commonness. for mou ntain-movers! Where are today's men deserv- ing to bt-tomorrow's statues? Perhpas cominl? up from un· der. filling lht> void, tht> next '11ianll will be women -or a re· asonablti.'f acsim ile. J ( EV ANS-NOV AK ) in the Senate recently, wanted no prolonged fight over William 0 . Douglas's successor. So Levi and Buchen quickly eliminated the fa vo rite of hard -lin e conservatives: Solicitor General Robert Bork, superbly qualified but stigmatized, unfairly, by the Saturday night massacre. IN FACT, the justice-hunters decided a silting federal judge would both ease confirmation and expedite the court's backlog. That killed chances for a woman justice. District Judge Cornelia Kennedy of Michigan, the only conservative Republican woman on the seriously federal bench consider ed, was deemed unqualified for the Supreme Court. Finalists for the seat were all male Republican cosnservative Federal judges - a res ult bringing much joy to the American Bar Assn. (ABA). "A lot of us feel. .. that you shouldn't start your judicial career on the Supreme Court," said ABA president Lawrence E. Walsh. Selecting Stevens not only means that live of the court's nine m embers now will be alumnni of federal appellate courts but strengthens the new role in shaping the court exercised by the ABA, the le~al profess ion's trade association. With Mr. Ford continuing the questionable Nixon precedent or submitting names in advance to the ABA, th'! high court could become the mere high point in a judicial escalator system. CERTAINLY Hugo Black, who as a Senator from Alabama lacked legal experience but proved a towering figure on the court, could never pass ABA muster today. No member of Congress would eve n b e submitted by the Ford Wh ile House. Considerable conservative sentiment built up in recent weeks for Rep. Charles Wiggins o! California. But Wiggins, while an indisputably brilliant lawyer, lacked long legal experience and was black- balled as "undistinguished." Respected conservative academicians, s uc h as the University of Chicago's Philip B. Kurland, were scarcely considered. That criterion would have dep· rived the court not only of Hugo Black and William Douglas but other famed justices l ackin~ judicial experience -including John Marshall, Roger Taney, Luis Brandeis, Feli x Frankfurter, Charles Evans Hughes and E~rl Warren (plus Nixon appointees Lewis Powell and William Rehnquist). Furthermore. some lawyers (i ncludin g loyal Ford Republicans) worry whether the veto power or faceless lawyers in the ABA is inappropriate for a Supreme Court which, uniquely m the world, is not merely world the highest appeals court but a separate branch or government that Alexander Hanulton called an "intermediat e body between the people and tbe legislature" Lo protect their rights . Alty. Gen Levi pushed vigor- ously for Stevens as the best qualified among the finalists . Levi is s upremely non.political. and, although Jewish, would never let that influence him. The result is the court's fifth Midwestern WASP (four named in the Ford·Nixon years) -irrel· evant if the court is viewed non-politically in European terms but perhaps inappropriate in the American tradition. Nevertheless, the mood at the White House is one of self- c on gr at u l at ion over an apparently fail·safe nominee. "Everybody's poring over Stevens's record," chortled one presidential aide, "but they can't lay a glove on him." Considering the pummeling Mr. Ford has taken lately, that may be good news enough for the President's men today, despite the subtle risks of encapsulating the Supreme Court in blandness never intended for it. · Reagan's Age Problem Anyone who was surprised by Ronald Reagan's announcement to seek the Republican nomina- tion for the Presidency can im· mediately claim honors for being a modern day Rip Van Winkle. The former California gov- ernor has been running for the of- fice ever since he s urprised many by unseating Governor Ed· mund G. "Pat'' Brown back in 1966. It was that year that his de· cision to make a bid for governor had the pro- fe ss ion a I politicians rolling in the aisle s . "What," they ·laughed, "a cowboy actor running fo r governor. Jla Ha!" Reagan then was 55 and a very young 55 at that. Athletic in build be was without a grey hair in his head. While he has managed to retain hi~ good looks and physical trim- ness the fact remains he is ten years older. Should he be elected he would take office at the age of 66. Only one other was older. Wtlllam Henry Harrison was 68 when be was inaugurated lo 1841. He died in omce one month later. So despite his outward extreme physical fitness Reagan is not on ly bucking the tide in attempting to wrest th~ party nomination from an incumbent Pre3ident. something wh1eb hasn't been done ever, at least In modern times, he is alsofiahtlnatlmc. HAD fff; been succes..,Cul when he f1n1t aot the bua to be Presi· dent back ln 1967 and openly m'1dol.:l bid in 1968 the age ques· . \ , ( EARL WATERS J tion would not have arisen. lie was only then 57. But he waited too long and by the time he made his last minute bid in Miami In 1968 it was too late. Nixon had the delegates locked up. On the logical assumption that Nixon would serve two terms Reag_an resigned himself to the waiting game. But Nixon's re- signation made it a new hall game and Reagan cannot afford to wail out another four or eight years while Ford serves out one or two terms. So his challenge or President Ford for the nomination Is perhaps not as bold as It Is desperate. Reagan must fl y in the face of time. Still thl· American public will tx· lookin$: at the age factor, his <'Xceptlooul physical condition notwittuitan<I in~. ( Reagan will be J f'-l yc-ur" oltfrr than the nV<'rtlRt' 11.i'' 11( ttw :111 President~ at the• timr th1·y ,,,..,k offi<'e. An<I h(' wlJI t.>f• within lhrN• Y<'ats of lhr nv.-r.rv.,. t(1' of dNlth of 36 Pre:i1dt•nt1 "''"" t''""· f;vcn ex<.'ludmg th four •ht> tll.-d at the hands or fllU1n1t._l n the avtrage :l#t' of 1l,.1tlh o( Pret1· den tis has bct-n 7 J • STJU. TUY, n r rptJon:a tathoH av~ra~P• ar• rnroura•ln1. Her~rt Hoover ond John Adam~ llved to be 80 whHo Jdfenoo, Madison, John Quincy Adam• and Truman lived well Into t.h~lr 80s and J 1 more were put the '10 mark. A.nothtr plu. for Reuaa cm ~ !ound ln the fact lhal ot th eight Presidents who took office o.ver the age or 60, only two, Har· n son and Taylor. failed to live out t heir terms. The others lived well beyond t ht> age considered normal. Adams was 90, J ackson 78, Buchanan, 77, Truman88 and Eisenhower 78. Al so the record establishes ~hat being young at inauguration 1s no guarantee or a long life. Of the seven men who took office while still in their 40s only one Grover Cl<'veland , hved to ~· oldrr than Reagan is today He took office the first lime at the aa:e of 47 and died at 71. The youngest ever to take of- flc(" wns Theodore Roosevelt at the age of 42. lie diE'd at the age of 60. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT llo"'°rt N. Wt'td, /luhluh" Thml'llJ t 1\ rflnl ,.:1111111 llarlnirll Krr1l11rh. 1'.'dltnrJnl l'a11r f:drtnr Thi' Nlltnnal pa~c· nf lhr n oily l'tlot IH•t•k 'I I 11 rn form n ncl 111t11111lnlr• rr.uh•r' hv rn..,rnllnM on t h11111111(1•111\ ,., ,,. romrrwntnry on '"\''"' ''' lnlt•ri·ril '" i.vndlcnl· ,.fl fu umnl11t1 unct 1·1u toonli.li., hv prov11lln1 "' forum tor rt•11drni' vl11w1 anti by prt1tntln11 th1~ n •r••ll r'a oplnlon11 and ldc-11' m turrrnt toplra The editorial OJ,tlnl•!ll "'tho llally Pilot uppur mlt In ll1t l'dllorl1I eolumn ut tho lftt> ul th• P••*' ()plnloo~ 1••c. Pffllifd b>' th c11lumnJ1ta and rart~l and l•U~f wrh are lhtf t' '*" Ind no tnCf~ment of lhefr ~'""' by the Dally Pilot •lloulct be 1.nr rr d. • 'l'\Jnctay, D c.,e, ms _ t , I Who's The~e? Monkey Raises a Rudau . . . . Gllbe~~] d~ ":-"*'key bocked at mldnllht at. Maaeda was so &tartled by the 2.root tall black animal that be slammed the door in its face. THAT MADE ftlE lldNkEY ANGRY. The ~expect. 911, t&:nJ!IUe \'laitGr sena...S. Jumped ap •d clph and ~==::S=·=e:.,:~ V•~tritoC* tt•ay.Tbeywereuau~. ~ ecrea-.•DlllooGDe nelabbor. Estela Ptu, and either bit or scr~tcbecl her on the leg. Mrs. Pena screamed and ran. Three times she tried to get into her car, and each Ume the monkey got between ber and safety. She cried and ran. The !Donkey kept chasiq her and the other neighbors kept chaaina the mootey. FINALLY, Mas. PENA DIVED inside her car and slammed the door. But a window was rolled down about ~ inches, and tJ)e monkey tried to wriggle through tbe open mg. . "He had treat big eyes," she said later. •'There were lots ol people there but be kept chasing me. I never saw him before." Police and dog catchers arrived as Mrs. Pena sped away and the monkey slid off her car. AFTER AN HOUR'S CRASE. patrolman J .K. Fitzgerald and a passer-by cornered the monkey under a car. At 2 a.m. the monkey was booked into solitary at the county Animal Control Center and was put under observa· tion for 10 days. If any symptoms of rabies s how up, Bums &aid. the monkey will be destroyed at once and a lab test performed to find iftbediseasereallywas present. The owner hasn't been found, and only the· monkey knows why it knocked at Gilbert Maseda 's door. JFK Killing Fo~eign Plot, Says Solon WASfUNGTON (UPI) -Rep. Thomas N. Downing (D-Va.), said he believes the assassina- tion or President Kennedy .. was a foreign conspiracy supported. by a domestic coverup." He called for a congrepional in· Yestigat.ion. , Downing and dozens of other congressmen have introduced a resolution calling for creation of a special House committee to in- 'testigate the Nov. 22, 1963 slay- ing in Dallas. Downing told a news conference Monday be ex· pects creation of such a commit· . tee by spring. f Downing said at one time he had been willing to accept the Warren Commission's con• clusions that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin ol Kenned,x -But Downing said, in light of recent revelations that the Unit· ed States had been planning as. sassinations against Fidel Castro and other leaders, "I don't think ~e commission was rig.ht." • Ul'I Tei.,lleto Britbh l'uft ·President Valery Giscard D'estaing of France and his wife will pay official visit to Great BritaiQ June 22-25 at invitation of Queen Elizabeth and her husband. Classics Replace X-rateds NEW ORLEANS <UPI) ._To the straina of ''Aa Times G~ By," Humphrey Bocart ran X~ ratec) mones ~ Ule Cvrolltoo Theatre. Boni to pabUc ~.the theate' brought back classic movies, starting with Bogart's ••casablanca" and "To Have and Have Not," after a two-month run of ••Deep Throat" and "Behind the Green Door." THE CROWD WAS sparse Monday when Bogie stepped into Rick's American cafe. In fact, m1y about five persons sat in the theater at 10 a .m. sbowtime on a brisk overcast day. But Cindy Bobbins, the assistant manager. predicted the crowds would pick up. "I really don't know· why they're not here, but if it was me I probably wouldn't be up this early in the morning, especially when it's this cold," Mrs. Ro~ bins said. .. It's a good time to stay home and cuddle,'' she shouted over the noise of the popcorn popper. "But they'll probably be here later." THE PHONE RANG steadily with callers inquiring about the feature times. · . "People probably didn't re. alize the old movies bad start- ed," said James J . McLain, an · economics professor who stopped by for the first show. "I've got finals scheduled this week, and I can see all my stu- dents decided to stay home and study instead or coming. But I'm ~ure they'll be here later this week." The theater, which ran classics (or four years, switched to x. rated movies two months ago BUT PHONE CAU.8 to owner Leroy Griffith, who runs a string or blue movie houses in the Miami area, convinced him to try an experimental return to the classics. The movies, playing on double bills, will cost $1 on weekdays and $1.50 weekends. McLain said the return of the classics was a popular cooversa· lion topic at University of New Orleans, where he teaches, but be was afraid the timing or the experilnentwasnotgood. •1The trouble is, they're <!oing an experiment just when the stu- dents are out of the universities. December and January are the worst months at the movies, I'm told," he said. • (Bet you thought our roolTls cost more.) •J Atfr11do'.s,_.?J Oa96ic. lt.allin ts$t8W'811t. -E-,Aaos/5#w.~~ $Cutt1 a-t Aail9.-d VJI• 5nof:Png. · Ora"'ge Gr-~Qre BreakfcilSt,lunch dinner; , l.ol:bf l.ai!'9e and Galleria ear. A:;oi, ~le. t.ennis, ng 9reeri,badrnintDn, ..L 4 tenr1is(D..lrts. SOUTJ.I COAST PLAZA J.IOTEL Bristol at San Diego Freeway 666 Anton Boulevard Cost.a Mesa, CA ~26 (714) !540.2500 WE91"ERN INTEtiNA1'10NAC. ltOTEC.S ·~ Partnera In travel with Unlttd Altlinff ~ •_/ I TU!ld!y. December 9 1975 DAIL V PILOT A 7 CHA':!::a~ ~~~=~h::~ ~i= ~::=~ J Horse and carnage owners wtll parently will do almost anything troduced a resolution to reqwre use a super scooper instead of to avoid putting diapers on lheu-horse owners to clean up after diapers to sol¥e the problem that beasts, use a two-way radio to their animals, and the COMD1'1J horses leave on the streets of this call a motorcycle clean-up man amended it to require the bor~~s tdstorie cit1. whenever a horse am;wers a call to wear diapers. lrhe elty., Chari~ IDcl lbe bone cnroen bave ~ °" qreeatent: the cit¥ \d'~ en. torce tts new dlapers~fbr·hohes law ii the carriage owners can keep the streets clean. THE PLAN INVOLVES the use or two-way radios and a car was h clean-up crew on motorcycles. ,olnature. .At. !'attfck McGinnis, president ot we local car wash company be· Ilg used, said r emoval time lbould not exceed 10 minutes. THE CONTROVERSY began last month when an influentJal resident telephoned the mayor to complain about the growing, nox- ious, pile or manure in front of • When the ordinance requirihg the diapers went into effect D~ . 1, most carriag~ drivers lef't th e streets. One driver, Charles Parker, diapered his horse, but another. David Fuller, was tJcketed for not doing so. FUiler must ai>pear in (Ourt Dec. 29 ii the law is still in el(ect to answer misdemeanor charges. ........ tt~---·o ..... \~ ... ~~~~~ ...... ~ ~-~ ~·<>·~~o •. ~o-. ~JIP'7 "•~ 11"7}'e~o. ~ FASHIOli :l ISLAND STORES \ .0 ' OPEN EVERY NIGHT I I UNTIL CHRISTMAS ~ ~o ~~· ~·!llt·· ... ~o ·~~·~~· ·~ ~·~· -•• " 0 • 0 .~ 0 ... 0 •• 0 •0 0 •• I .-• • • •·• •. t. e. l with the purchase of a General Electric Potscrubber 11 u • dishwasher GSD 950 Best Reason Yet To Replace Your Dishwasher s3799s A $7~ RFTATL VAl.UF-r:Pnuinl" pewter, 9 . "1n d1Jr'f•l'ler. A lim.te: "J1t on, ~uperbly • r• 1f1ed by fnt('rnat1onal SilvPr CompJny -lnd rf"}l~t•·rrd bysi.•nal numbe1. Jc i., you•s FTIP, wl!b 11.e rnwl purcluse of a GE Potscrubb-'r , JI"•dishwJshcr from now unul De-:. 31st. I )751 Cleans Your Pots, Pans and Crusty Casseroles Or We'll Take It Back u • 5 Pushbutton automatic cycles ranging from the High Temperature Power Scrub'ltcycte for heavily soiled pots and pans to the China end Crystal c;ycle for your fragile items •New PermaTu f""lnte11or will not chip, crack, peel or rust! It is impervious to foods and detergents I •Super Quiet Operation-thick blanket of sound insulation, plus PermaTuf™tub, and isolated mounted mechanism. •Spacious Interior-biggest GE has ever made! random loading rac~s ... no wasted space! 01al- A·Level rack adjusts for more efficient loading! • Power Saver-natural dry option lets you save power by shutting off forced air blower when fast drying 1s not needed! "::Cc;:zJLR::ii:::c:JC:::::m Low Prieed , .. Built-In Potscrubber · Dishwasher 3-Cycle Convertible Quality Performing )I I Dishwasher • 3·CVclt Wash Selection: Norm1I Soil. Ronse & Hold t 8u1IHn Soft Food DI~ • Tutl Tub~lnrtr10f • Ou11 Detetvent 01spenwr osc 4l2 s2399s •I • DAILY PILOT - • Over the past f e\\' \veeks we've laid to rest a lot of myths about foreign cars. Jn newspaper ads like this one, you've seen tha t GM small cars not only measure up lo the foreign competition, but in many Gt~<:~ lea\ c them holding the short end of th t· slick. Hard Lo bclie\l '! He, re's reassurance. All gas mileage ratings we've used are straight fr orn the EPA. All prices we' n used are Manufac turers' Srn~~t·~ted Retail Prices-the price-; each company suggests for its O\\ n cars. And all figu1 <'" on 1naintenance and warr,1nlics are taken directly from car owners' manuals and manuf acturcrs' lit( rature. So whether you 're shopping for a new small car today, nc:\t week or months from now, here's your chance to compare s1naJI cars. Just trar out this ad and take it with you wh<'n you shop. Because a t GM , we want you lo be armed with the facts, not just myths. And on tha t basis, we' re betting you'll rediscover Ame rica at your G\.I deaJers. ,()tHIAC l\SrAr :' 00014 r r. 'l . ' You've heard the news about GMS new mini, Chevrolet Chevette. Now take a look ' .. at some of our other small cars. CHEVROLET CHEVETTE Small Car Mvth No.I: 10Yeifn modefs Cost less. CMS smam~ are almost alw~ys priced lower than comparable foreign models. There was a time when small foreign ca rs had the edge on price. No more. The advantage they once enjoyed has been eroded by increased foreign labor costs, stiffer shipping charges, higher inflation, currency devaluation and other factors. So today, instead of showing us up in the price department, they usually come in second best. Take a look at the following charts-broken out by ''Small Economy Cars" and "Small Sporty Cars" -and you'll see what we mean. SMALL ECONOMY CARS MAKE I MODEL BASE PRICE" Chevrolet Vega Sport Coupe $3134 Pontiac Astre 2-Door Coupe 3214 Toyota Corona 2-Door Sedan 3797 Datsun 710 2-0oor Sedan 3709 ''"' ... , .. '"'· Fiat 131 2 -Door Sedan 4068 pf11s d11ler "''· Mazda RX-3 Coupe 4049 plu •ni. ""· VW Dasher 2·0oor Sedan 52'2 ....... ,,.,_ Vtfvo 242 2·DoM Sedan 8295 •All doll If fig urea •re menuf.ch1,.,.· qgetted rtt1i1 prices, including cosr of C•llfornia tm1$1lon equipment and t .. tlng, dHler new-vehicle Pf•P1r1tion ch1rges. ••cept where noted. St•t• •nd loc1I taJt"' •v•il•bf• equipment and dest1nat1on ch•ro• ,,. additional. I 1 ... ' • 100 . SMALL SPORTY CARS MAKE It MODEL BASE PRICE• Chevrolet Monza 2 + 2 $3833 Chevrolet Monza Towne Coupe 3471 Pontiac Sunbird 2 ·Door Coupe 3543 Oldsmobile Starf ire Sport Coupe 3830 Buick Skyhawk "S'' 2 ·Door Hatchback Coupe 3953 Datsun 280Z Sport Coupe 6689 plus dealer prep. -Toyota Celica ST Sport Coupe 4243 Toyota Celica GT Sport Coupe 4597 VW Scirocco Coupe 5012 pl11 haltf prep. Fiat Xl /9 Sport Coupe 4808 plu s dultf 111ep. Audi Fox 2-Door Sedan 4892 plus duler prrp. -BMW 2002 2-0oo r Sedan 6670 plus deal11 preJ. Mazda Cosmo Coupe 5800 pin dulu "''· Porsche 914 Coupe 7162 plus dealer prep. Triumph TR-7 Coupe 52 15 plus dultf Pfep. •All dollar l1gurC's are manulacturers' .-.u"JQC'>lcd wta1I p11ces. including cost of California em1:.s1on cqu1pm<'nl and 1r•.,t1ng, dealer new-veh1cl_e preparation charges r.~cC'pt whr1c notrd St..ttf' and local taxes. available eQuipment and destination charge!. cHC ddd1t1on.il. Small Car Mvth No. 2: Foreign mOdfiSdeliver signi/lCantly better gas mileage. ~act· GM Small cars are riglzt up tlzere, too. f"HEVROLH VCGA SPOk I COUPE Check the following charts. You'll see that many of our small ca rs were rated at a very competitive 35 mpg in the EPA highway te st, 22 mpg in the city test. Fact is. it isn't only Chevette that got an impressive gas mi leage rating. Our other small cars are ri ght up there . too. Of course, the actual mileage you get will vary according to the kind of driving you do, your driving ' habits, your car's condition and available equipment. SMALL ECONOMY CARS MAKE & MODEL ENGINE TRANSMISSION Chevrolet Vega 140·CU.·in. Manual Sport Coupe 4-cyl. 2-bbl. Pontiac Astrt 140·cu.-in. Manual 2-0oor Coupe 4-cyl. 2-bbl. Toyota Corona 133.6·CU.·in. Manual 2 -Door Sedan 4-cyl. 2·bbl. Datsun 710 119-cu.-in. Manual 2·Door Sedan 4·cyl. 2-bbl. Fiat 131 107·tU.·in. Manual 2-0oor Sedan 4. cyl. 2 ·bbl. Mazda RX·3 70·CU.•in. kP Manual Coupe Rotary 4·bbl. VW Dasher 97•tU .·in. Man~al 2-Door Sedan 4·cyl. F.I. Volvo 242 130-cu.-i n. Manual 2·Door Sedan 4-cyl. F.I. ~rce: 1976 EPA C1lilorni1 Gu M1t.~ Gu1d1. EPA ESTIMATES HIGHWAY 30 30 32 33 30 29 36 27 . ' CITY 19 19 19 22 19 19 24 18 • - - .. .. 1 ( I l - - romour" BUICK SKYHAWK ""S" 2-000R HATCHBACK COUP( SMALL SPORTY CARS EPA ESTIMATES MAKE & MODEL ENGINE TRANSMISSION HIGHWAY CITY Chevrolet Monza 140-cu.-in. Manual 30 19 2+2 4-cyl. 2 -bbl. Chevrolet Monza 140-cu.-in. Manual 30 19 Towne Coupe 4-cyl. 2-bbl. Pontiac Sunbird 140 -cu.·in. Manual 30 19 2-0oor Coupe l/4-cyl. 2-bbl. Oldsmobile Startin ' 140-cu.-in. Manual 30 19 Sport Coupe 4-cyl. 2 -bbl. Buick Skyhawk "S 231-cu.-in. I Manual 26 ' 17 Coupe J V-6 2-bbl. Datsun 280Z , l I ..-- 1 168-cu.-in. Manual 25 I 17 Sport Coupe 6-cyl. F. I. Toyota Celica ST & 133.6-cu.-in. l Manua l 32 I 19 GT Sport Coupes 4-cyl. 2 -bbl. VW Scirocco• 90-cu.-in. Manual /Auto 38 24 Sport Coupe 4-cyl. 2-bbl. Fiat Xl /9 Coupe 78.7 ·CU.-in. Manual 31 21 I 4-cyl. 2-bbl. Audi Fox 97-cu.-in. Manual 36 24 2-0oor Sedan 4-cyl. F.I. ~ BMW 2002 121 -cu.-in. Manual 2 ·Door Sedan 4-cyl. 2-bbl. Mazda Cosmo 80-cu.-in. Manual I 28 I 17 Coupe Rotary 4-bbl Porsche 914 120-cu.-in. Manual 31 I 20 Coupe 4-cyl. F.I. Triumph TR-7 122 ·CU.·in. Manual 27 19 Coupe 4-cyl. 1-bbl. •Source: 1975 EPA Gas M1tcago Gulde. Figures showrt are composites obtained w-ith m.nual and automatic transmissions. Small Car Mvth No. 3: Foreign mo'"deTs-require less scheduled maintena,nce tluzn US. cars. Fact: GM cars require less factory recommended maintenance. Thanks primarily to the GM-designed catalytic converter, the use of unleaded fuel and the High Energy Ignition System, your spark plugs can last up to 22,500 miles. And there are no p0ints and ignition condenser to replace. Ever. In addition, none of the foreign models charted here top GM's recommended first oil-change interval of 7,500 miles. And only three have longer recommended first-change intervals for oil filters. RECOMMENDED MAINTENANCE SCHEDULES SPARK PLUG Oil Oil FILTER CHANGE MAKE REPLACEMENT CHANGE Chevrol et Vega & Monza. Pontiac A· tie & Su11b1rd. Oldsmobile Starf 1re, Buick Skyhawk 22,500 7,500 7,500 ·-~--1-~~--0a tsun (All) 12.500 6.250 6.250 -~-----1------Toyota (All) 12.500 Fiat (All) _ ---'-= 12-.~-o~~---. VW (Rabbit. Dasher. Sc1rocco) f 15.000 Mazd a (Rotary) ] 1~.5~0-. Audi (All ) BMW (2002) 15.000 -·----__ L_12.soo Porsche (914) --±15 000 __ Triumph (All) 12.500 ---- Volvo (All) 15.000 OJIJ l•~r 1mruHt , tiJ ,.-,J on 19 75 mo(frls. 6.500 6.500 --6.000 6.000 5 000 15.000 6 250 12.500 7 500 '5.000 -- 6.500 6.500 5 000 5.000 6.000 6,000 7,500 7.500 Small Car Mvth No. 4: RJ11!1@1 snwTt Ca}'S lwve to11glz e11gi1ze wal'·Ju11ties. GM, Fact~ . s 5-yearJ6v,OOO-mzle guararztee on its 140-cu.-in. e11gi11e is tlze toz1gl1est irz tl1e ·bl1sirzess. How tough is tough? Well, the 140-cu.-in. eng ine you can get in the following GM small cars is so tough that it's backed by a 5-year /60,000-mile guarantee. No foreign car even comes close to it. And it's a very simple guarantee. It covers all 1976 Ch evrolet Vegas and Monzas, Pontiac Astres and Sunbirds nnd Oldsmobile Starfires equipped with 4-cylinder, 140-cubic-inch engines for 5 years or 60,000 miles, whichever comes first. It means that should something go wrong with the engine, your Chevrolet, Pontiac or Oldsmobile dea ler will f 1x 1t ... free. The guarantee covers repairs to the cylinder block, cylinder head, all internal engine parts, intake and exhaust manifolds, and water pump, made necessa ry because of defects in material or workmanship. TU!!day. Oeoemb« t . 1975 OAIL V PILOT ,, 9 ers. This guarantee, an added value feature on these GM cars. is in addition to the New Vehi cle Warranty but naturally does not apply to repairs required because of misuse, negligence, alteration, accident 1 or lack of reasonable or proper maintenance. ENGINE. GUARANTEES MAKE GUARANTEE Chevrolet Vega & Monza, Pontiac Astre & Sunbird. 5 Years or 60.000 Miles Oldsmobile Starf ire with 140·cu ·tn. 4·cyl. engi nes Datsun 12 Months or 12 500 Miles ._ - Toyota 12 Months or 12.500 Miles 1------- Fiat j 12 Months or 1 ~.000 Miles vw 24 Monlhs or 24.000 Miles ~ --- Mazda 36 Month s or 50 000 Miles - Audi 12 Months or 20.000 Miles ·'------- BMW 12 Months or 12.000 Miles - Porsche 12 Months or 20.000 Miles - Triumph 12 Months or 12.000 Miles Volvo 12 Months Dold for 1rnpo1t , b.l \l·d un 1 9 /'.J moc.ll'I , One Last Word. So there you have it. Head-to-head comparisons between GM's small cars and the popular foreign imports. We think the facts show that GM small cars have come into their own and even outdo most of their competition. But the best way to decide is to drive the cars that interest you ... ours and theirs. We think you'll prefer GM's. GM '· MARK OF EXCELLENCE at your f,alifomia GM Dealers CHEYIOLE.T VEGA, MONZA • PONTIAC ASTRE, SUNBIRD • OLDSMOBILE STARFIRE • BUICK SKYHAWK ,, l.1 I ' I ~ .. A I• DAILY PILOT Tuesday. December 9, 1975 FortheR~rd ....... MOA•Ma...c>•tA~ MDSl'ITA~· .. ·•s•n••lAN ...... , .. ,.,, , Mr. •lllf Mra Kevl11 Ker"•· , .. I Mr • .,u, Mn. ltoi>ert f'osler U JelrnlM en.11 Or., Cor-del Mttr, bo't • sallertt,ttU Ml •NI~ MlclWHll Ma~ 1't.S T111tl11 Aw .. ~ Mtse, 01r1 'Good' By DOUGIM FRJTZSCHE Of .. Dally ,. ... Staff Economic Y-ear Forecast- helping. And these factors might need to be com· pressed artilically. It may be that the only way to do it a.a wath wage and pri~ controls " be :s~d. aJtbou&b maintaining be as not a supporter of sucb controls. 1be two m-1or areu. he said, are consumer epmdin• ud 1overnmentspendiq. Baat whila the ecoaomy ln 1eoeral may be look· m, up, be aald, thinp took bleak for the nation's •l'M10fl. Hum~ hacf\, 91rl " Ml and ~'-i.otierl Gr.,nes ~I , S.11111'11 ~ , H1111t1nljton !leech, boy Ml Md M"-@otlert Wllllrnan, ISJ12 Sunbur\I Ln., H11nlln9101'r• Bu ch. Twin girls Next year should be a ''reasonabl)' goodJear" ~mically, according to tJie "bead of UCLA's craduate school of management. .,. Mr .,,d Mrt. Petrick llurtte, S1 ee.con e.y, 111-pon h•<ll, !l•r1 " • Ml end Mn Kenneth Nlclloles, ?Jin 'Ill• LAI Ce,1111•, Minion Viejo, boy Ml,lnd Mn. Jolln R•lcherl, ?JSI AYe, S.Usellto, frvlne, boy But it wlll be a marginal kind of economic im- provement that could fall through if consumers do not spend as anticipated, the dean, Harold M. • 1 Williams, told the Friends of UC Irvine at the cam· pus Monday. Deaths Elsewhere UCLA's predictions call for an 11 percent ln· crease in the gross national product-the measure of all goods and services produced in the country ·-flext year, which would be the first increase since 1973. DUU«cWes. ' THE FISCAL DILEMMA of the city or New York said Williams, will be mirrored in Los Ang. cles, Cbica10 and other m~orciUes .. Tbe problem, he Aki. ls tbat cltlel have a OOWinl need for services • lbf1 -.come cen~ lor the poor and mtftolitM!I while •t the nm• Ume, tax revenues stagnate.· Rather than lDake U\e DQl.iticallY unpopular choice ol curt.allial servic;es, he said, cittes co into debt. Ml. -Mrs, Roger Olell•rle, 26111 "'*>to Nvevo. Minion 'Ille lo. Olr1 Nevemller It, lt1S Mr. and M<l. Bruce R•sner, m1 <:MINI Ave., I nine, boy "" •NI Mr\ Jolln lebtrmen, I ""P. P11<9re-''• Irvine, 9lrt N..,e,,,._r lt, 1'7S Mr •nd M r\ Jemei D•Y. UtS\ NICl>oll St • Hvnll1>9ton Beech. 9irl Ml •nd Mrs J•m•son Crowner. 331 Elthe< St .• Coll• MHe, boy ... ,,."' ..... 11, 1'1S IN •nd Mn. Rodney G1flord. "I? Gllhlrend Cir .• HunlinQIOn Btecll, 9trl Mf •nd Mrs. Paul You119, 1m1 VIII~ W•y No 1, W•slm1Mler, boy Ml end Mts.. Brl•n NewllouS«, 'lOCl2 Orayst-L.n .. Hllfttt11gton 8Hc'1, 11lrl Death Notf~e• alt ADEN P ERRY MARSH'-LL BRADEN,~ ,,idtnl of WUtmlns1er, Ca. 0•1• o1 oe- •111 December 7, lt7S Survl11ee1 by two o.uQnte<-s. Marjorie Anne Warmer ancs Marcelle Roberti; one sister, Mary Tharpe, -brolllttr, f'r.end Br-n; l~H granekllildren e nd lllrff II'•••· 9r11neklllldren Memon~I \t'rv1ces """ be held Wllclnttday el 7 30 PM, ~ek SANTA BARBARA (UPI) -Retired Army Maj Gen. Wayne R. AJ. len, 76, who served in four wars and was Los Angeles County's first chief administrative of- ficer, died of a heart at- tack Saturday in St. Francis Hospital. ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP> -Dr. James C. Masson, the last surviv- ing surgeon trained un- der the Mayo brothers. died Sunday at his home here after a long illness. Masson, 94, was a Mayo CLinic surgeon from 1915 until retirement in 1949. • F•mlty Colonial Fune r•I Home •n Wu tm1n$ter, Ca. Tiie family Slill!l<tsls memorl•I contribution~~ madl! to~ ----------- PUBLIC NOTICE He•rt Fune! COFFMAN ALICE S. COFFMAN r~i6'nt of 1----------- Coit• Meu. C•. OatP of death C~·1'4l O. be a ~1 NOTICE TOCREOITOltS cem r ' h S Survlvl"d by ~r SU~EltlOltCOURTOFTHE dfUOlller. ~rQ<tret H•mmond ol Cost• Mtwt. two sons, Weller end Donald STATEOf'CALIFORNIAFOlt Hfmrnond Of Sen OleQO, ca, -s.sler, THE COUNTY OF OltANGE Mar 9.,t l P•r ker of lll1no1s. four No.A.f.Sllt tw'othe~. Jolln Seldon ol San Carlos, ES I • t e o I G R A C E 5 M I T H Ca .no Fred, Wiison & Artllur Seldon, WEBSTER, a lso known as GRACE 1 all ol Te••s. two 11r•ndcll1ldrf'n WEBSTER, ~cHS..d Services will be held on Thu~y at NOTICE IS HE REBY GIVEN lo ti.. 1 00 PM, F1rs1 Soutllern BapttSI Olurcll crea11ors of Ille above n•,,,.d dec-nt 1n Cosla AMsa Interment, H•rbor R••t U..t •II pers011s hev1n11 c la1ms dQa•nst ~moroal P•rk Tho-. whO wi\11 m.ty l1'le Yid 0.Cl!<lf'nl ar• requlrro 10 ltl• m.tk• memort•I contribultotK to n... them, •"th ttte ~c•s.•ry voucritr•. 1n Ahce Collm•n C•ncer Func1 v•• hH Ille oll1ce os tl>P clerk ot Ille aboff ~ cwuQflter. ~'ll•ret J H•mmonc1 11'6 lolled court, orto pres.nttl>Pm with thr C..p1101 Slrffl Cossa Mf'\a C• S.fl nec~sary vouchers. to Ille under"c;nood &oac!w•yMortuarydtrf'CIOr\ •I the law oflrc• 01 TULL y H ECCLES TONE SEYMOUR. llSI Dove Slrttt, Suile UO. LOLA M ECCLESTONE r e s· NewPOrt Beach Ca111orn1a9?660.""'1cll r<lenl of NewPOf'I B•ach. ca Oa!• of •s Ille pl-.;e ol 1>us1n•ss ol tlle 11n OHth December "· t97S SurviVf'O by ...-S1Qne<t •n all matl••s per1ain1ng to ner 1111-d. Olulu v Eccleslone. IN H lat• ol s.l1d ewocedenl, w1th•n four cw111111ters, Ol.,le~ W•rd 01 Arc.tel•• month$ .ttertl>P first publ1ca11on of tllls and ~rllyn H•U ot Puadena, ca sis-notice. ters, Dorothy Quinn os Los An!ll'les and Dalee! Dttember 2, 197S Verba CleYel•nd of Glendale, Ca . 1-MARGIEMA XINE grandelllldren Memortal services wtll ANOREWSancl belWld •l 11 OOAM Wf'dnesday, PaClltC TULLY H SEYMOUR View Chapel Enlombment, Mountain Co-':xecutors or lhe W11f of Vipw ~uM>leum In Altadena, Ca In Of tlie above na med decedent lleuol flowers memorial contribu1fons TUL.LYH.SEYMOUA may bt mad• to lhP charity ot your 1U10o ... St,..t,Sulte140 .choice Pactllc v iew Morlu.iry, NewP0<1aeu11,C•lil.t2660 NewPCY1 S.6<11, Ca Cltrf'C tor\ (7t4) m.0602 Att-y fOf' Co· E ate ulon BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 6 73-S.50 Costa Mesa 646-2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 6"2-9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Beach 494-9-41 5 San Juan Capistrano <195-1776 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac1f1c View Drive Newpart Beach. Callforn1a 644-2700 PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 SMITHS' MORTUARY 627 Main S t. Huntington Beach 536-6539 -a..,.... .. A..nc. ... ...,, ........ _, peepte er• efreicl ef. Cl .......... t. ,_ clrdft,' ,.....__..eflKCHltf•t c .... 9-4 -~ ......... ... teerffk...... . ........... It is probably more true today than it was in Rockne's llme. We see at all too frequently an our mu s i c, our entertainment, o ur educ ation ... th e. willin g ne ss t o compromi s e with mediocrity. Th.is is not the attitude that builds greatness an people or in societies. People must dare to be· more competitive ... to settle for nothing less than excellence in whatever they aUempt. . 1 By spec ifying the details or your own memoriaJ service well in 8dvance of need, you can spare your loved ones the burden of mak ing decisJoos under str~. Let us explain other 8dvantqes. ~HcFFcR: ~ m<>llTU.lllY · . -97. saITH CDAS r HIGHWAY VOJNA. 8EAOi *41S3S Pul>llShed Orange Co.isl Oa11y Piiot. Decflnber 9, t6, 2l. 30, 197S '67~7S Williams• talk, the third in a .. eries of Friends or UCl-sponsored economic views, presented a melange of conditions that contuse economic analysis. ADDITIONALLY, HE forecut: -Industrial production up 10 percent for the first year in three years, THE CONDITIONS ARE such that .they even made Williams, a former president of Norton Simon. Inc., <Hunt Foods) question whether the free enterprise system can continue. -Auto productioo up with ·9.5 million sales. That figure is below the 11 million cars sold in 1972. -Inflation at 6.5 percent. If that figure is wrong, he said, inflation likely will be higher. -Average wages up 8.3 percent, a real gain of two percent aCter inflation and the first gain since 1973. Efforts to tax business and raise . moneJ1 ).& said. may chase firms away and result m a drop m revenues. Conditions like inflation in the midst of re- cession "m ay mean that our economic system does not work any more," said Williams. WREN JNTEBESI' COSTS get too high, cities face New York's problems. "Traditionally. recessions have squeezed C>ut some of the high prices and wages," said Willia ms. BUT TODAY, HE SAID, "Ute recession is not ''BUT IT IS NOO' A broad-based impro.e- ment," he cautioned. "A couple of sectors are ex· pected to do well, and if they trip, the whole thin( will fall on its face." The only anawer, be said. woul~ be .ip so~e fonn ol regional eovemment covenng economic areas alnce current bnm>daries have no bearing on "economic reality ... Political Notes Hayden Due oli Coast By O.C. HUSTINGS 01 IM D•lly Piiot Staff Tom Ha y d e n , Jane Fonda's husband and a candidate for the Democratic nomination for the U.S.· Senate, is scheduled to speak Satur- day at a gathering in Huntington Beach of the Orange County chapters of the Student Democratic Coalition. A s1 donation will be sought at the ~!!!ir-... ~·;-:~, door. Free child c are will be provided. NOW is a feminist organization, but welcomes both men and women, ac- cording to Debra R e ed, a spokeswoman for the Orange County chapter. Hayden will be the guest of honor at a party at the hom e of Diane Schmidt, 6882 Rio Vista Drive. The event is being held to en- courage students to become involved in the pohllcal process, according to coa1illon spokeswoman Barbar a Ben- nett. who promises a Live band and refreshments. The ta b 1s S2 for s tudents and SS for non-students For ticket information and directions, call 963-1335. • • * THE ORANGE County Chapter of the National Organization for Women <NOW> will conduct its annual meet- ing Dec. 18, s tarting at 7:30 p.m. at the Anaheim Unita ria n Church, 1120 W. Santa Ana St ., Anaheim. New officers will be elected for 1976. The pubhc is welcome to the meeting. . . ••• VOTING BY Orang~ County con· gressmen on the tax revision bill passed 257·168 by the House last week and sent on to the Senate was along party lines. Democrats Mark Hannaford and- Jerry Patter son vot ed for the measure, while Republican Charles Wi ggins voted against it. Republican Andrew Hinshaw, who currently is defending himself against bribery charges in an Orange County Superior Court trial, missed the vote. U.,ltedw.ty -;; u gallery of unusual contemporary furnishinqs nnd d<X:•.s!>Qries Brihlr kJeas,Ltd® 3411 Newport Blvd. Newport Beach 673-6000 Johnsonidn shoes ... ·\3 classic styles ~~one terrific row price For holidays. For all days. fohn sonian shoes because they look so good •.. cost so little. Because the man· made Versaran® gleams like leather ••• but wears lon- ger. Cleans with just a damp cloth. Because the styles are classic ••• favorite monk·straps, slipans, moc-toes. And because soles and heels never need replacing- you're still more dollars ahead! In an extensive array of sizes-please refer to the chart befow. a. Monk-strap. Brown. black or white. Size 6 Yi-12 O and HE b. Slipon. Brown, blatk or white. Size 6 Y2·12 C,D,E and EEE ·~ c. Moc-toe tie in brown or black. Size 6'12·12 C,D,E and EEE · budget stores, men's shoes 823-(lncluding wllshire and aenshaw on the main floor)-except el cajon look at all the sizes we cany in stock 6Yi 7 c -D x x E x x HE x x 7Yl 8 6Y1 9 9y, 10 10Y2 11 12 x x x x x x x x narrow x x x x x x x x x medium x x x x x x x x x wide x x x x x x x x x extra wide from the Merry Christmas .. Stof e SN-I a.EMENTE IS3l NORTH e. OMt¥:) RfA.l 492.0100 South Coast Plaza-Costa Mesa, 3333 Bristol St.. 546-9321 Westminster Mall-Goldenwest at San Diego Fwy., asa-2521 Monday to Saturday-10 to 9:30 Sunday 11to7 • -. ...... ,. • I 1\ ) !. I ) .,~ 1 n s e c D Boy Dies After TIJ8SCJ!y. Oocembt:r 9, 19/5 Warnings No Good? Q,.. LY PILO I 11 J ~ 9 Years 3 U.S. Nobel Winners Cite Cancer Dangers SfOCKHOLM, Sweden <UPI> -America's three Nobel Prize winners in medicine say the public is tempting death by ig- noring available life-saving medical advice through which 50 percent of all outside influenced cancer could be prevented. Heading the list, they said Monday, was smok.i.Dg, certain chemicals and foods. They said warning the public is not working and pointed to the urgent need for a cancer cure in the form of vac- cination. BALTIMORE AGREED with Temin, but said it was hopeless to get people to heed medical ad- vice. Seiko hes lhe nght watch<'-' for men aod womcl'. tor dress. casutl~M s:>ortmg wea1. Chronograph• tor 1h0 masr active spe>ns Oko e.ir racing or sA1hng SeU...o Ouartz for men .1no wom$tl, ,. I l f f .. OAKLAND (AP) -A 14-year-old boy has died here .without regaining C005CJousness nine years after a car struck him on his way to kindergarten. The coroner's ofCice said Monday it has been unable to reach the p~rents of the boy, Timothy Turney. His legal guardian was listed as the Alameda County Welfare Department. Officials at Fairmont Hospital said Timothy's vital organs continued to ~unction while he stayed m . a coma, breathing without aid of a respirator. He barely grew and at death Sun- day was 55 inches tall and weighed 45 pounds. They said he suffered a severe injury to the bl'ain stem in the hit-run acci- dent on Jan. 27, 1967. Timothy's father, Theodore, reportedly had a nervous breakdown after the ac- cident and later moved with his wife to Alaska. TodagSpot Ul"I Ttlettfloto Candice Bergen, 29, will appear on NBC's Today Show once a week to display her photography and provide accompanying commentary on a variety of subjects. "ALL WE CAN DO is to give the population the opportunity to cut down on the incidence of cancer," said co-winner David Baltimore, a research professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Baltimore, along with Profs. Howard M. Te min of the University of Wisconsin and Renato Dulbecco, currently at the Imperial Cancer Research Laboratory in London, spoke at a new s conference at the Karolinska Medical Institute where they even criticized the presence of ash trays and m"tches provided by the or- ganizers. THE THRE E ARE in Stockholm to attend the Nobel Prize ceremonies Wednesday at which they will share the $143,000 medicine award. Temin said "well over hal! or up to 80 percent of cancer in ~uman bein~s is caused by things 10 the environment. The first thing is to recognize them and the second is to remove them. "IC they were removed, about .50 percent of these cancers could be prevented." the 11;1r1Lt:u.t11. a classic in en91ish design ava11ab1e 1n: c1ay. british tan. navy. al 1 with plaid lining 44 fashion island, newport center 644-5070 ANY LIVING ROOM DINING ROOM (or dining areal NOW ... Advanced techmquos and chemical developments make pou1ble 5uperior nrsults right m your home -and at a price you can afford. Now you can have your carpets cleaned professionally as often as you like. and HALL CLEAl'ltED IA••<1ar<Jlou of''"" WE'LL CLEAN ANY ADDITIONAL ROOM 1195 WITH EITHF.R THE ABOVE SPECIALS .................. . LIVING ROOM Deep Soil Extraction LIVING ROOM HALL 95 HA~l 2995 MOST CARPETS DRY 01t1NG 39 PE..,..SYL\'Al\l\ 197S "People still smokE' The number of youngsters smokmg 1s appalling," he said, adding that some cancers are also caused by high-fat foods. To warn people or the risks ~ey are running "ts just not go- ing to work to get them to avoid these things," Baltimore said. . T_EM~N SAID THAT present mdicauons are that "it 1s not possible to have a vaccane ag:Unst cancer." Dulbecco said the most impor- tant development m cancer re- search during the last three years was "the proof between cancer and smoking." S<JMEBODY CONFUSED DIGNE, France CAP) -A school to train shepherds has received 140 applications for next year -one from the son of a farmer and 139 from urban univer s ity graduates. WASHJNGTON (AP> - The U.S. Supreme Court has refused for the time being to block enforce- ment of a state court or- der restricting news cov- erage of some pretrial actions in a Nebraska murder case. Justices William J. Brennan, Potter Stewart. and Thurgood Marshall objected to the decision and said Mon· day they would have granted news organiza. uons' petition for a stay. The majority, however , simply postponed final action on that and other aspects of the case which has re- vived the long-standing debate over the constitu- tional guarantees of a free press and a fair trial. The dispute involves the murder trial of Erwin Charles Simants, charged with slaying six members of a Sutherland, Neb., family on Oct.18. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642-5678 tor a whole new s1andard ol ac.curaey to within &0COllds per month. Se'ko Wdtches w1lh tho~e d1s11ncllve colored dials. Seiko watches with $1)ecttt features like HAAOLEX mar·realsl crystals and ms1aot set day/date bilingual caleridats. If you want to ~ sur~ your g1tt 1s the r1gnt one, oe the Santa who says Seiko. No S04tM-•1ta.a 17J M w1N!11'Q. "" l 1: ••tar luled 01iln9utl 1•1~~dll 514mlU$ I •'.el dil l. ''"' "''" ' • •ed HARO~EK fl't-llf·lti•,. ["t.,S.ltf "°· m.....m.oo. HJ, •ell·"''""'~ "'~~•I <Salt Hllil!O ~~., II ~ .. 1 Ytl•o ... IOP/ $lt>i'len Jlttl bjtk •r<des<;eftt blll\llll d•<\I. ~•P A .H. W£/N£RT 32 FASHION ISLAND Newport Beach, c.Jlf. Fme jewels l714)644-204() .:r=·· • • ·. ' . ._, ~ --· ... .. ---·-. .. .. ~ .... SOftTU OO::OTA 191' • ~ ... ~· .. IN % TO 1% HOURS ROOM YES WE 00 DYE CARPETING RIGHT IN YOUR HOME al'd It is rwldy to use 1m~•at11ly. We will also TINT or COLORIZE your carpet while shampooing et sllpht addit•onal charge. COLORS SO BRIGHT AND VIVIQ you will be astound· ed es thousneds of 01h1" have beenl YOU'LL BREATH EASIER AND SO WILL MANY OTHERS WHEN YOU SEND YOUR CHECK FOR THESE SEALS CALL TODAY 675-9140 or 833-8070 NOT DELIGHTED? DON'T PAYI ~( GUaRanT@@f #i kfilhl ' ~~ . .\\IGUARANTEE CARPET CLEANING & DYE CO . ~~ SfRVING ALL OF ORANGE COUNTY ____ ,;, UJ.W.WU~.UAt!~Ut.Ul.U~U!..\UV!..~f.~.UJ.W.UUU~WJ UW! 11111111110 Ylll It Wll'lcl e e. Rll All If us Since 1909-almost 70 years ago-the Lung Association of Orange County has fought tuberculosis and other lung diseases. Originally known as the Society for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, it has raised funds for research annually with the familiar Christmas seals, like these representing all the states. These Christmas seals, plus volunteers from all seg- ments of the population, permit your Lung Association to continue its winning fight against tuberculosis and other lung infections-asthma, c hronic bronchitis, •emphysema-and to guard against the respiratory threats posed by smoking and air pollution. "It's A Matter of Life and Breath." You can help by sending your check for Christmas ' . seals TODAY. If you would like to know more about the Lung Association, if you can volunteer your time to help, if you can pledge future donations to the work and research of this organization, call ... :I: The Lung Association of Orange County J Harvry ,J 5hll'ld<., E xeculive Director Santa Ana, California 92706 • 1717 Nullh OroadwJy Tel<'phone. 83S LUNG One in a series of public service advertisements sponsored by Avco Financial Services, Newport Beach, Cal\fomia I A J 2 DAILY PILOT • Tuesday. December 9, 1975 P UBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICT1•1ou1 •US•HHS PIC'YITIOUS •USJNa u NU.SaTA•IMl .. T NAMISlAT&MINT 1'w ,......,."' Pt•lOll 1, 0011~ Ml· The loll0wlf119 -*'' ue dOiftO Ml ftnin· llHIM PA.JA ENTf.lt,.AIS£S. )DI) \o ON CONSIGNMENT, "'° GIWI ...... ~t•Arwi,Ce0torflla"1107 ,..Yf'e ~ .. 1.99""'9 a.~11. Gtllfllrll!a Ooll .. J " It•-~. ,,.,.Vl•5.M tbll • Crosby Ahead Silicone Racket Seen in Chicago -.nlN, UOIA\ HUI .. C:.lllOINa o ..... mel'l'ft Holan, to? .._.,.'St., Tiii• -illn~ I\ (OnQVClecl by Ml .... ......... 8ea<11. CelltOrrll• •lUI • ....,...I Raymon4 L.,MI Ha-•11'. IS42S.~ Oon J lll•V"'ll)~n U Crw:. L..a9une e.~11. C.lltorn.• t26)1 "h\1, ''•'•,.,,.nt wo ftleo .... 111 ,,,. Jacalyn Jo H•-•tll, 15-41 Sent• Qil\lnlY c1.,k ot Or•no• C.Ovnty an HO.,. Ctw. ~ a.~11. C.llfor111• '2.Sl ~,._"IS. Tiit\ b1111,...u is cono11c1ec1 oy • ,,.,u .,. ..... 1,,.,-1nerS11i11. L. M . Boyd CanuoBom 18th in Family I n Suit CHICAGO <U Pl> -The Cook County $tale's at tomey hais begun an in\:estigallc;>~ tnto ~ ~allonwlde racket which provides illegal silicone tnJecllons t~ increase the size of breasts and parts of the bod) Liquid slJicone injections were banned by tht• federal Food and Drug Administration in 1971. The injections were linked to a number of deaths. ""4>11~ Ofano• Coal! 0.1ly pjlot 1>1.ne J Nol•n Dtomb9r l, '· ''· n, 191$ •)17 I> n11, \l•l-fll was filed With tn. P U BLJC NOTICE "CTITIOUS •UllNESS HAMii STATE ME NT "Thi tollOWlnc) person IS doi119 .,.,.., ""'as GOLDEN WESl IHSULATIOH, It) Ee\l 4'11on !>en114'na C•lllorn.• Kttne Egan Inc • Calllorn.• cor l*r•l1on. ttoo w Ouanfr')flt, Hew'POf1 Beac:ll, ~ltforn•• Counly Oerll ot Orange County on Nov· emoer U. 1'7S, l"S0"7 Pl.tbll\llecl Oren~ Coast Delly PilOI, O.C.moer 2. t, 16, 13, ttlS •stt-75 PUBLIC NOTICE s.1m Exactly 41 percent of the girls who go to Stanford University indulge in that practice knoWn e uphem istically as physical romance. But only 27 percent of the men there do likewise. Such be the findings of a r ecent study. Our Love and War man is looking into the situation ther e to determine what prevents parity in thls m atter . LOS ANGELES (UPI) -An actor who sounds like "Old Groaner" Bing ' Crosby lost a round m a legal battle with the singer's attorney. A Superior Court judge Monday denied a motion by Jack Harris to enjoin Crosby's attorney, Richard C. Bergen. from threatening legal action against rad i o ad- verbsers who hired the actor for commercials. 'l'lae J udge Co m e d ian Ar te J o hnson cro wned Snowflake King and Queen at annual ball for menta l ly ret arded yo ung people in Los Angeles with help of wife, Gisele. State's Attorney Bernard Carey identified Hal J Ellison, 59, Chicago, as a m ajor target of the county grand jury. Car ey said E llison appa~ently has been injecting patients for eight years with .an i.ndustriaJ grade of liquid silicone used for car pohsh and waterproofing. An estimated 70 to 80 percent or Ellison's ·custom ers either were show business people, female impersonators or homosexuals, Carey said_. _ T111s bu\111ass Is conf ucled by • ot~potat•on l(ltne Egall IM, Jonn Egan Vice PrHtdenl • T111s s1a1eman1 was f1l.O ''"'" tne C.W.1y C•eo of Oran~ County on NO.,. ....ar2., u1s l'S01)6 Pl.tb11~ Or•n~ Co~st O.tly Piiot. Oe<errlber 2 ' ••• 13. 1915 09CHS MOTICIE TO CalEOITOftS .... A.ftltt SU"IEIUOR COUltT 01" THI! STATIE 01" CALI l"OltNl.t. l'Oll TN a COUNTY OF ORANGE 111 '""Mamer of,,,. Estate of WAR· REH R HAYES, ~<Hwd. Hollo I' he,...y given lo credtlon llev•ft9 <l•lm s ~1ns1 111e w10 de<e- mnt to Ille S..•d cl•lms in Ille of!ke of the <ferll ol the -1orew10 <°"'1 °' to .,,._,,, them to the 11noers1gne0 a1111e office of MORDOFF & KERCKHOFF ATTORNEYS AT LAW, 1.0 WEST P UBLIC NOTICE CCX.LEEGEST ,SUITE.00.lntlleOty -------------I 01 COVINA, 111 LOS ANGELES County, l"ICTITIOUS a USINESS NAME STATEM&HT Tiie to11ow1nv persons.,. 0011-v bllsl· nl'S§ •s CARNATION CLEANERS, 109~ W•rnH Ave., Fountt1n V•llty, C..ltlornla '1270I A9•1'1a ~rllno, 9179 Wonterqrttn Clrcle, Founla1n V•llty. C•ltlo1n1a 92109 Joup111ne G1rol~lo, 9119 Win· 1er9run Clfcle, Fountain va11ey, C:.1ttorn11 92708 -icll letter offlu Is •i.e place of bvsl- ntts of tl'le undenigned In e11 matters pertal11lhg to w~ -state. Suell claims ""111 tlw necessary vovc:nws must be filed or presented u aforesaid .... 1111n lour months afttr trie tlrsl P<>bllcalion ol t111s notice. 0.lf'd DEC.'· 191$. C.R McKENNETT Executor of tne Will ol salddec-nt THE VAMPIRE BAT stalks its prey not on wings but on foot, remember that. MAYBE YOU'VE heard that the great Ital.tan tenor Ennco Caruso was the 18th oC 21 ctuldren. But were you aware he was the first 'of them to survive infancy? NEANDERTHAL Am asked how the anthropologists know that the Neanderthal man believed in life after death. Easy. Digging around in cave graves in France. the scholars fou nd Neanderthal skeletons which had been buried with tools and grub Supplies for the journey beyond, clearly. HARRIS C LAIMS he uses his natural voice on the commercials. He has ----------- been an announcer and actor on radio and televis ion programs in Detroit and New York for 20 ye~n; Air Force . P ost Told LOW COST AUTO INSURANCE ~t· tr# . lh11 bu11neH Is conoucll!O by .i ~neral ~rlnersh1p 4'9•111• M•rltno ~ROOFF&KERCKHOFF 1•W1EST COLLEGE ST. SUITE Q COVI NA, CA. t17U Pl.tbl .. ned Orange Coast Dally Piiot, December 9, 16, 23, 30, 197S ..,, 1S Q. "QUICK, LOUIE, name the only American Ind ian t o become a brigadier general during the Civil War in the Con- federate Army." H arris f iled a $2 rrullion libel and slander suit against Crosby, al- leging threats by the al· torney have damaged his career WASHINGTON <UPI) -P resident Ford an- nounce d h e woul d nominate T homas C. Reed, a high-ranking civilian at the Pentagon. to be secr etary of t he Air Force. Married pers<)nS over twenty.five SJ 02* annually Jos~111ne G•rol•lo HHS st•lemenl W&I tiled Wllll Ille Goun1y Cler~ 01 Or•nve County an Nov ombtrn 1975 P UBLIC NOTICE A. You can refer to none other than Stand Watie. He ran that regi- ment of Cherokee volWlteers known as the Cherokee Mounted Rifles. Watie was slow to surrender, m ight mention. Very slow. He wound up on an Oklahoma farm. Twenty·one year old single males S J 44 *annually l'SOUJ Pu1>1ts11eo O••noe Cout Da11y P1101 FICTITIOUS 9USINESS NAME STATEMENT NO DATE HAS been set for tnal of the s uit. Reed , 41, of Ross. Nineteen year old single males SJ 67 * annually Oo<eml>er 2 9. U, 23, 19H O'I?· 7S Tiie toll-•n<J persons •rot doh>Q bll~I· neuu P UBLIC NOTICE LIFE PROTECTION SYSTEMS, -------------I t 140So. Coast Hwy., La<aune Buell,~ FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT ~ IOllOWtnc) oerson' are OO•nQ bu11 ,, .. ,., SOLAR WINO. St, lnotanaPOlls t1unl1nqton Beath C•l•too1oa 974>'11 Fran' Edward Viii, SU lncl1an aoo1t1, Hun11n91on Beacn. C.1tlorn1a 'l?MI V• n<ty Lou S• v•ql' S 12 In ""'""polis. Hun11n91on Be.ic n, (.4t.torn1• 9lf>4 Th•I bul•nt'Sl •I conoucteo by a 11m11 tdp.ir1ner~·P Fran~ E Vitt ""' "•lf~nl w,n ltl~ wflh Int! C.Ounrv Cler-of Or.in9e County an No., em1>er 1•. U1S. ~1 Alvin L. Hoff, OS Diamond St., ~BH<ll.C..926Sl • ~.,, L. Phllltps. 2348 Temple HtllS Dr • t..guna Beacll, Ca 92651 TMs bvsineu Is conovclro by a general pennersh1p. Alvin L. Holl ~an L. Pllilllps Tiits sl•l•ment wa\ ltll'<I w1lll lhe ...ounty Cler' of Orange Counlyon Nov 13, 1915 F.,,.,7 Put>hshed Or•n~ Coast Daily Pilot, November 11, 21, ano Orcem~r 1, 9, 1'75 4J'I0.7S Pl'BUC :'\OTICE FSOlll -----Put>hs.hed Oran<)I' C:O.sl Oa11y Piiot, NOTICE INVITING lllOS December l, '>, t6, ,l, 1975 4.S93-IS For tlla Constrvctlon ol S.riM C M{jRDERS One out of every 10 murders in this coun- .try is committed by somebody under age 16. THAT A WOMAN typically tends to be more sens1t1v~ about age than does a man has long been known. Now the science boys say they think it's an inherent trail. A woman's time for bearing children is limited. A man's time fo r fathering same is far less so. So many generations of women have been conscious of this fancy fact that they're believed to have taken it by genetic memory right into their basic nature. Intert!sting, if true. Address mail to L.M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626. In his suit, Harris as- serted a lire company dropped com merc1als he made after Bergen threatened legal action. HOTICIMAIACIALLf fOOMMSC.~TOlll'OIJCf AJTO........UAMOSTUMfln Irvine Jewish Community announces that our ad· missions pohcy for members and religious school stu- dents is racially non- discnminatory trv1n& Jew•\" Commun11y PO 8o~•1?0 ,,.,,,,., Calllorn11112684 Calif., has been director of the telecom m uni ca- tions a nd command and control systems at the Defe nse Depar tment since 1974. (full hme 'tud1111ts only) •with good driving record BOB PALEY and Associates Inc. Phone: South Ora nge County 642-6 SOO North Orange County S46-320S Jlisi t Sallla Daily 10 -9, Swulay 11-6 PUBLIC NOTICE 5outh Coast ?Iaza W •l•r 8 ond P r oje ct Wa1er .,_lflllllll._-"111111._-..__,,..__,, ..... .,... ..... _..._~~~~:~~~:~~~:~~~:~~~:~~~:~J:::==::=:=:==:=::=:::::=:=:::!~--~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~=----. TransmlsslOll FacllihM -Stage•. ,- NOTICE IS HE REBY GIVEN that FICTITIOUS aUSINESS -led bkts Wiii be recelveO t>y lhe5an- HAME STATEMENT la Margarita W•ter D•slrlct tor P UBLIC NOTICE r11e foll-1119 person I\ do<ng OU<>•· fumt5hlnc) llll Pl•nt. labor, se<vtces. 1-------------~su· nvtenels, toot\. eqvlpment. SuPPllM. S·IJ:ll NOTICE TOCREOITORS SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE No A·ISM7 In the Man er 01 111 .. E \latt 01 THOMASB TODD ~<ea\l'<I AGAPE TRANSPORTATION transciort•llOll, utilttle•. and •II othe< L.I NES. 21'> Cypru\ !io•nta Ana tlemsan<tl•c•lltlesneces~rvrhe<•lor O lllOM1a92701 •s prov•d•O 1n Ill• Contract universal L•I• Cllurcll, Int d Oocumentss, for the construction ot c.i.1t1orn1• corPQration, .01 Tlllr<t SI I -••r l••n,m1ss1on plpe1mes l'-1her Mi>Otsto. ~hlornoa dlSI With •II lll)l)l.lrlen•n<M I hereto. 1n !MICI Tiii\ bvsonen is conouclt'd by a I eccoroanc, wolh Ille SPK•focah~""" corPOratoon oraw1nqs on Ill• at the otft<e Of A.loo. .. 9i(>(' TraniPQrl•t•on L•ne' Bein. Frost & Associates. uot Quail Donna Smitn Slrttt NewPOrt IM'ach, Caltlorn•a TrHS\lrf'r DATE OF OPENING 01" 8105 Tl"s s1atemen1 w•s 111ec1 ..,11, '""' S.~ will be •K••veo at tlle ott•<" of County Clerl<ofOranqaCountyon...,_. S M.W.D. Chief Engineer, 15511 lrnoer 14 "7S M9,.,._ll• Pet'ltway, Mlsston Viejo, _ ' • FSOUl L•llforn••, until 9 00 a m , on PubllSl'I~ Oral\Q• CO<ll\I Daily PtlOI, Ol!ctmber 13, )97S, et wlltCh ...... - Cecember 2, 9, 1•. 73, "H •"41·15 piece Ille btOS will be pUOltcly ~ ano read alou<t. Bids sllall be sul>tnlttl!d PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS •USIHESS NAME STATEMENT 1n w•lecl envel<>1>es mar•~ on Ille OU!· !>~."Bid tor Series C Wat•r Bond Pf<>- je(I Weter Transmission Facihltn - Sl~4 " LOCATION OF THE WORK -The ""'r• lo be constructed l\ereu~r '' locatl!O In 1"-Community of M<noon Viejo, O.•nqe County, California NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN le creo11ors ha•1n9 <1.i1m1 .tqa•MI •~ Wt<I decedfont lo fol~ lol•d cta1m-. on Int office Of tht' clerk ot Ille •l0t'lf'!<l•d court or to P•H•nt tMm lo tM un / ~QIWd at Ille olltce of ALFREO C OAVEHPOPT 111 SoulP\ G•rlt•ld A.,. • 1n Ille C1t1 ol Monlel>ello, on L.O~ A119eles County wll1Cll lalttr office Is Ille place Of b\1~1ne\\ ol 111• unclers•~ In All matttr\ perl<11n1n9 lo ,.,d t5lal• Suen cl••ms w1tll Ille n.ces111ry vouc llH~ m1at lie ltteo or pre M'flt!d a1 etorewld ••thin fovr mon111~ alter Ille flrsl 11111>llcallonol tlll\ notice n~ lollowlr>,i persons are 0o1no b\111· ~IS~~SSION VIEJO EQUESTRIAN CENlER, 2s1•11 l.•Par Rd . Ml\\ton \11~10. C.llfornia 'l'h7S, P 0 Box 'I?. Et Toro, C:. llfornla 921>30 Wiiham J Fodor. 2•361 Pal0<n1to1 Cr • Mlulon V••Jo. Cal1forF11• '1?•75 Katnte+n I Fodor. '13~, P•lom•ta Ct • Mlu1on 111•)0, C•lilorn1o1 92'15 Tllh bl!SiMIS •I conouct"° Dy "" 1n a 1 .. 1°"'1 Wtlll•m J Foaor ICetttl"n I Foaor Ttus statement .,,., ltlO'd with tne county Cieri< ot Or4n9e Counlv on Nov ..,..,.r u . 1975 DESCRIPTION OF WORK Tiit ""''k comprl'>e\ Ill• c0Mtrucl1on 01 -lllr lr•~mi~slon plpe11nes ana ap. pur\enent work 81001NG ALlERNATIVES -Sub- IKI to 1"-ltm•t•tlons WI 10r1h '" Ille SPKlllcat1on1. b•dOers may t>.tw t~ir proposeh ue>0n Ille uw !JI •ny one of Ille Dilltd December 8, 1975 GRACE AUGUSTA TODD Eaeculrlxol lllt Wiii of said dett'~nl ALl'REOC.OAVENPORT t 11 Seuth Garfield Av• MDntlMllO, ~lllornla "4.•D Atlomeyfor Euculrlr Pvb11\"4td Or'"nO<' Coast Daolv P1101 Otceml>er 9, 1•. 23, JO. tOS Al>~H three ellernat1vr kin<ts ol plpr 1------------- ~tfled, pro.,10eo 111a1111e t>laoer shall ln<llU1lt 1n lltS ~al I"-llonds of 11'1>4! P UBLIC NOTICE and Ille PllW manut ac lurer uoon w?>•cll 1------44-94-4------ "41 bid is Oesed; provided further, lllal NOTICE TO CR E OITORS -.re more lllan one ktnd ol PIDe Ms O F llULIC TRAHSFE R FS01• been ~ected for Ille various olPllllC• (Seu . '10l,.l07 u.C.C J PubltloheO Or•nqe Co ... I Daily Ptlol. llorK, eacll such -.no ol pipe, tis Not ice 11 llereoy given lo the ~ 2, 'I,"· 1) UIS 4lo88-7S m•nuf•t lurtr, end Ille Quan Illy Crea 1 I 0 , s 0 f CL AU DE H ------------1 !her.of. shell be so ind•catl!O and no MONTGOMERY. Transfttor, ~ P UBLIC "OTIC'E ••»• NOTICE TOCllEOITOll$ No A·H4W SUP ERIOllCOURTOF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOii THE COUNTY OF ORANGE In I~ Mellu Of'"~ E\lalt Of ANN GEORGIA SCHUMACHER ~<•a...a Not1cl! '' nertby 91vt-n lo ""<"'or\ Nv1119 clalm1 aqa1n11 lh• l<l•<I Of<• Oent lo Ille W•O t l11im1 In "'" ot11c• ol Ille clerll oi Ille atore1e1d covr1 or to prMent tllem to Ille unoer\tQnf'<I .it '"" office of F. GORDON (HYTRAUS. INC., 6112 8eacll 81.,d tn llW' (•IV ol Buena Park, 1n Or•fllll' County, whirl\ taneroffltt 1s In'"" place 01 ou••r>n•ol ttw undef'Sloned •n all "''"''' IX~d•n ing to s..ld estetll Svch <l•1m1 with t~ "MftMfY vouctit" mu\I !It ftll!d or prewnt.O '' atort~•d w1th1n fovr m!Hlths efter the t1r11 publtc•t1onot lhl\ noH<e. 0.led Noy 20, 1975 WILLIAM l"AANI< SCHUMACHEA Executor ot 111~ w II of w•d ~Cf'<lf'nl I" GOllDON CHYlRAU~,IHC .,,, ..... 91 .... ...._hnr,CA PlltlllsMcl Oran(,lf' COt\I Daily Pllfll, Nov 2S....O Dec 1 •. 2•. 1•H ~I07 I~ 1ubslltvtt0fls wlll be alloweo alltr ~•ness adclrf'Ss Is llZ8 lrvlne A~nu.. -•rd NewPOrt Beacll, Co11nty ol OrM>Qe, Bids"" II be comoa~ uPOn Ille""''' Stet• or ~hfornla, Illa! a ovl\ tr~ler ol tlle -s1 rtt90f1Sfble b t<I for ..... IS •t>oul lo be m•de lo HARRY E <oml)lete ••ler lr•nsmissoon fa<:tlllY, (;!ORIO 11no ANHETlE M GIORIO, oawc1 -Ille btdOer's wlKtoon of the Transfuf!'el. wtiow b\IS1n@s1 aGdr<>ss '' Piiie material opltons SPe<ilil!O n:J31 s Avalon 81v<I , C.Jrion. eo..nty AWARD OF CONTRACT -TM Ofl.osAnQele•.Sl•leofC;tlllornoa o-.er •ewrves Ille ri911t, a lier •n•nq Sato property IS O~\trtbeo In 9flltr•I bt~. to re1ec1 any or all boas, or lo as All st0<1t in tradf'. h•turf'S, f<l\llP. mtlte •-ro to Ille lowest respomlbit menl and 9000 will 01 111111 laundrornal 11tooer •nd reject all other bids 8•05 and dry cleanir19 bvs1nen -nown as w.11 be comp•reci on Ille O<lsls ol Ille MOH'TGOMERY CLEANERS ano E1191ne<!r's estimate of the quant1llM Of loca~ •I 1178 1 rvint A"'"'*· N~ the wver•I •••ms of worll. n S110wn on Beacn, Counly ol Orange, Sl•I• ot Ille 81d She el (s). Only svcll plans. c.i.11tornia SPK•l•tellons, ano ilems ot worll ~are TM l>ulk tr•nsttrw1111>e consummal· "Pl>f'OP"latt shall a11t1IY to the wor'll l>!d eo on or •lier Ille ttlll day of ~cembt'r, on 1975, at 10·00 A.M •I Bank ol America CERTIFIED CHECK ANO BONDS NT & SA, 21615 Hawthorne Blvd, Tor -Eacll bid must be e<com~nll'<I oy • rltll(e, County of Los An9eles, Slate 01 nrtill.O or casllter's clltck, or oyacor California. porate \vrety bond on Ille form So tar as ,_,. to lhe Transferees, turnl\hed llJ tM Owner. as a guarM!fy •II bvSlnns names ano a<tdres-uwo 1"91 tllebldder will, ii an award 1, rNI~ by lran:1,.ror for t~ lllree YH~ I.st lo l'ltrn In accordance <#ilfl Ille lerrm Of ~sl are Montgomery Cle-r~ & his bid, promptly wcur·e wor1lmen's Laundtrtrs. IJ6S Avalon Blvd . Wtl..n. c_,.s..tlon 1nsuranc.e and llalltltly lllQ!on, Los Angeles County, Cilllf , insurance ••tcute a c.ontr•ct '"the re· Mofrt91>"'t•Y Cl•-rs & L•vn.-rers, Qv"ed form, •ncl lurn1Sh Wl!lactory 9" N Tustin, Oran~. 0••1199 County, Dondslorlllefaltllfulperfor,,..,..eottlle C.hf , Mont90mery Clean•n & Leun tonlrect and for Ille payment Of cl••rm o..trs.~Ster11s St . LOllQ Beecn, L.O\ ol malerielmen and laborer\, AnoPlesC.Ount.,,c.111 l,,_reunder' S••O cllec lt or bi-'s O.ted November 19, lt1S bond ~II~ 1n an amount not less then Slgnacl DY' ten percent 110'1.I ot tl'I• am0111t ol Ille H.,ry E G10l'IO, Tranilt'<tt bid AnnetteM. Gtol'lo, Tr•niteree PUBLIC NOTICE W.t.GE RATES -A\ required by TOttllAHCE MAtNOFFICE --.,..,..-----------I C<tltlO<nle l.al>or C-, not less lt\an tM aANK OI" AMEllllCA NT&SA NOTICl!Ol"lHERfFtr:'SSALE -ral P~.,.11t119 rate ot pPr OteM .... _.A_riu .... GEORGE R. WISE MAH, Pla1m1H ~""'not less than Ille general pre-Ott AIM ~-i.t C.llt•r v1 GEORGE FREEMAN, Defeno..nt v•lltnc) rate tor llOllO.y end ~I...-Tlln'-e,C.tl"'11laMSQ Ho 21432. -"· '"Ille IO<•ltly of wlllcll ttlf _,. EK IWW .... ..,_,..,. 8y vlrt,. of en e .. cut1on Is~ on 1\ to be performed. for eacll crait or Publl-Orange Coa\I Deily Piiot, Octooern, 1'7S Dy Ille Mun1c1pa1 CDV<i I~ of "'°'"men nettded to•recute Ille Otc•mtler9, 197S ..U-7~ Orenve C-ty H•rl>M JUO•C••• o,.,. won contemplated vnder Ille c;001tracl, trl<I, County of Ora11ge, Slaff' ol "published I" the Southern Celtternl• Cellfomle. ""°" • flldg,.,,.nt tnterf'O on M9ster Lebor Agrttmenh, wit be i-------------1 la"°' of C.Orcae R Wh emen as 1Ud<I peld to all workmen employed on said me11t creditor an4 against CieorQ4! worlt by Ille Contr•c1or or by eny sue> PUBLIC NOTICE Fr .. """' es 1u0ome111 debtor, lhowlnQ contractor iwrlorming any part Clf said 1-..,..------------1 •net bel••<t of SJ.011 71 actually°"' wor,. s.1m on r.ald JU09ment on IN! d•le ol the Is CONTRACT DOCUMENTS -A IUll NOTtC• TOClllEDITOllS wenc.e of said ••tcullOfl, I llaw le.,tea set ol drawl~ and \peclfltallOn\ Is SU .. I RIOtt COU RT Oft THI'. ""°" ell the right, lltle and lnterttt of evallable tor '"'!>eCllon wllllout c.Mr-Qe STATa Ol'CALll"OlllNIA, flotl s.alcl judgment debtor In I~ prCIP"rty In et Ille office of the Chlel En9IMer, S.... TH a OOUWTY Ofl Oii ANOE Ill• County of Oranoe. Stal~ ot lfM.,QarltaW•t .. rOlstrtct. '"A-IMU Ctllfon"•· Clncrlbed es tollo~· Comptete wh of wld Contract Oo<t>-1,, tllf Matter of the £1tet• of l°'. of Tr K t No •»A" .-.<ordf!d """''may be purcllued at 'lO por Wt D 0 R 0 1' H ... c H f: D D E H s lfl Boolt IS7, pagts 1·14 Oll1ual and ere Ol)lal111Dle lrom Rilub, lleln, aka D.C. HEOOE NS, OOAOTHY ~di,OrenoeC.011nty. l'rCKt .. Anocl•1H, 1'101 Quell SC,..,.t, CONSTANCI! SMITH HEOOEHS, TOQl'IMr wllll ell anll \lflOUlllr tn. ~ Buen, Callfor111~ '2663. Ho DOROTMV CONSTANCE Hl!OOENS, ttMmants. ~reollam..nh Mid •P ~und wlll be tn!lde of any cllar91S tor OKM.Md. _._H INreunto lle'°"91119or 111 ~lttuetlofContraclOO<~ HOTICI! t ~ H E R l!•Y GIVE N eftYWfseaoperlelnlnQ ADDRESS ANO M.t.RKING 0" lo tredllUI "evllll cltfm\ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVENIMIOll PROPOSAL -TN enveloc-9f'<~"9 99'1nst the s..ld dK .... I to In• ~Id 'WtOl•tdey, Oec-r JI, "75· •110 00 "" ~WI 11\all be IHlecl encl -Ciel"" In tM otflc• ...... cl.,-11 of I,,.. o ' t 1o<11 •. m • • M a In Lobby. 0.-HMCI to SMll• Mervoartta Water DI._ .,oreYld court ., to P"Mllt lllem to ~. 700 Cl,,1( Cet1t61' on... trld and c9tfl.,tred or n\lil~ lo~ I"• wide"IO"•d e t the olllce 01 ~ Cit., of S...t• Ana, '-"V of Meroarlte Weter Dhtr1ct, 7SS71 Mll.1.IR, 81t0HN, & altUMMEn, °'9fl9t, SIM• of C.llllOfflla, I will t.141 at ~ ..... It. "arilwo. MIU-v .. io. s-.lte ''°· l"lo.tlly ..... r.I ~.ta. S.Sl llM!fk .-tlon .. -1119'\HI ~.for Ctlltomla m 1.s TN '" ... , .. _.. be I!-* oc.... ''""" In '"' Cit¥ of ""°"" c..-Ill i.wtut rntftty of Ille UN• olalnly ml!Atd In llllf ~r ...-i.f\ilnd .. .,_, In 1.4" A~tas ~. -"Kii "*t, oH Ille r'9'1t, flt•• tlld ~of <-w1t11 ow Mmt ,,.. ..,,_, of IOIW flffke " ttw pl-ef '*",,..' er ~ J-.-t H IM« lfl ti. *"' h ~ aftd ~II IM•• '"' -It\ N ""*"~In all ,,,., .. ., 11tt1•n -.crl.,..~.orM muchthtrMf .. ~,lot," toll~ Ir( INlltleOI lr'lt"NN•''-'• S41<"<1•1rmwl1"11'1 • ,,.., • ~-' t• ••ll•l't ...... ..,. w.•ftc.•'-tor ttie woni -"" .......,.,, vwclien r!Wlt • fllM °' .cvt-. wilt\ •<er_,.. 11110'"1 -_.. -hour' for 999fll"I of"'°' n.. _,.....,.," " atoretald "''""" •-Clflll. <M'llfi.tt or <MllW'• cii.o, "-Y or. -.U.ottar IN flrtt ~lotlonof 1110 Ott• et,_,.. .. AM, GallterMa. ....._ ~ • .,, ~' ltOnct u..11 ... -~ Mltiet • ...... 1', 1'7J lnlflt-f"v ...... wtltllllelloNCIOVf °"'40.C.•, l'7S. llr.\0 0.-Tt:S. l 'I" Ottottlt of ttle ~ IM~rlt• CHARLES IC CHA,.MAH Slleflff-C.W-r WIMf' Dfstnct Dectl'llber S, 1'1) Euc:utOf Of the wlll Of Ul.wltyflOr"'f', ~ ay. HkfdKHent C:.A.lteMloll J~H SftollUI, .. u..tlt,altO .. N,&lltUMM.STT OttlUtY Oll9f f~l!'Hr ...... ,. ST~Ytl'IL.OtO'fT ~•Martarll4Wattr ........,~al Pleta ,.._,..,._,.., OOttic.1 ...... Octllflal'ff. ,.0__...~ ... -llC tU7!Mef'9119rlte PartMy '--f9Ndl,CA ~ ......,. ..... ~--1 Ml•leflVl4lo.CAtllor111emrs P\itlll.,_. Ou1104 Coul O.tlt "'"" ,,_1-.40t .. cwn Pllllr ~-. ,...,o""° ~ Cont 0.1111'1'•111. ~t.1u1 JO ms • .. ,. ti o.:1 ... , .,,,,, ,,,. .., 1J etulMll '· ••. "n ._,s · · •• II I To save money on your 197 5 income tax, there are things to do before the end of the year. At any Mutual Savings Office, H&R BLOCK: will tell you what you can do. Free. Come in to any Mutual Savings Office and talk to a representative from H & R Block, the nation's best known tax preparers. They will answer your questions about how to legitimately reduce your 1975 income tax. For instance, they will discuss with you the possible advantages of prepaying interest, property taxes, medical bills, even early registration of your au~mobil e. Or setting up a retiremeht accoun t. This year you have your choice of two tax shelter a ccounts -the Individual Retirement Account (ffiA) a nd the Self-Employed Ret irement Plan <known as the Keogh Plan). If you are eligible you can open one of these accounts-and save considerable tax money-this year. IRA Plan -permits you to put aside up to 15% of your earned income or $1500, whichever is the lesser amount, without paying Federal taxes if there is no qualified retirement plan where you work. You don't even pay truces on the interest until you draw th e mon ey ou t on retirement. At Mutual Savings your money can grow substantially -without taxes-as you save it. Self-Employed Retiremen t Plan (Keogh)-This is for people who work for themselves or who own -or are a partner -in an unincorporated business. You can put aside up to 15% of earned incom e or $7500, whichever is less, without paying Feder al 'Tuxes until you retire and get the same substantial growth. Call the nearest branch of Mutual Savings and we will give you an appointment to see the H & R Block represen tative. and IOan HtOClatlon . I Cas>tstrano-.San Cfemente 530 Camino de Estrella/ 493,..5651 Corona dcl Mar 2867 East Coast Highway/675·5010 T Fountain VaHey 17942 Magnolia Street/963-8396 Santa Ana 631 North Main/547·9741 r f" r Toniglit's TV Highlights KTTV 8' 8 ~00 -Julie Andrews ~stm':ls. Special. Peggy Lee and Peter Ustinov JOm Julie for a half hour of holi- day music. CBS 8 8: 30 -'Twas the Nil(ht Before Christmas. This animated version of the Christmas story features the voices of Tammy Grimes, John McGiver and George Gobel. Joel Gray is the narrator. NBC 8 10:00 .-Joe Forrester. Joe (Lloyd Bridges).attacks his latest assign- ~ent ;.vith a vengeance when he learns his fnend and fellow officer has been taken hostage by hoodlums. TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening DECEMBER 9 Burns' wife threatens a divorce and Colonel Potter is about to become a erandtather fOf the first time. Q ~(t)Qj n;)rola wu11n "lhe Hit'' H"m Yuhn euest.stars IS a hit man whose taiture to kill a p11zeh&hter who !las double· 6 00 6 8 a I O ED ~IHD News crossed the mob pl.ces his own I ~ 3) ~ (tj News hie in 1eop1rdy. (tJ 8oft1w (j) Tiie Untoudlablts lrollllde 0 ROOKIES HUNT '1ttldce funilJ ·*CRAZED BOMBER ID ~~~z m -0 (~ ({)) m CD Tiit Rootits (2~ Star Trek "lhe VO!Ct ol Thunde(' A h11h· EE! Cetl1n' Ovtr hsluon model, tormented by 1u11t (l9 ._a ) rruth 01 Coasequtncu and tur ol are. behevu slle has (f) lltlle RaSQls Hour been 1Mtrucled by the wa ol a 6:30 qgi MfrY linNin Show supreme belna to blow up porno Q) lewt1dlt4 bookshops and m&S$.lle parlors ~ r. I Hocan's Herou m The lold Ones l,;V " W Cesa JUlliU : S0Mndst11t lht Book ot Qj Movie: (Zl1r) "l iUtS for Mr Cllapm" I Presidtnr' (com) '64 -Arlene Dahl, (09 LIJ) love Ame11un Style Fred MacMurr1y. Poll)' Bereen. m A111t11un Ouldtorsman 1:1'1 •·-Callopins Gourmet w ....... nt of Man .. Generation Upon • Generation" 7:00 6 0 0 ii1 [6 m CD News 9:30 6 ~CV 00 All in the family ~Ironside (conclusion of two.part flnhbKk llow!ina for Oollm story) Aher many araumtnts it 61 Mod Squad (S 1 To Tell the Truth seems lhe problems have i>een I 1toned out to the point where the Conuntratlon weddina will take place. liowever, I l"t Lucy th f · The FBI e question o who will merry the 't7, (J Gunsmo•· couple is discussed a111n and the rt. u l •-•• rurmo1I starts anew. w o.,., f)News ~·Love ~mer1un Style W [I Choler E!J CIUSIC Theatre h tvlt'll . The 10:00 0 J2 ~) lJ.1 SWiUh! Pete 1on lo ~Y~Y ot the Wute1n \'oo1td" (R) picli. up hi$ new dale, only to dll· (~f' I i) loiun.u cov" that sht has been kid~pped tt'.) Palelnl and sold into 1 wh1!e-slaveiy rinc, {i)Ad1111s fuuly o ru w~m•oe htreshr MO 0 New T1u141re HuRI · I"-But laid S<11emt.s•• Jot for· 0 :l.l (!gi a;) H o 11 J It o o d resler sets ollt oo a lranhc surd\ Sqnru when he turns that his fntnd, ScL 0 lon A111tncu Style B"n" Vincen~ stumbled into a rob-0 Makh lihlt PM btry and hu bttn tJktn hosta1e 'I Phyllts by hoodlums who are trueaten1n1 fJ IOhon $ MOY1t. (C) (2hr) his life. ~mk '" tht Woil4" he lo) '6S 0 m EE Hnn -Dana Andrews, Peter Damon. l6J rcny Maso.11 m BrldJ Bundi 0 (~ (f.,) CI) CD Marm WtlbJ tl6 ltl's Mau A Deal M.O. "Tht Mede& facto<'' Or. Welby m I ''CCIAl l N1t10111t , .. 11raphic and a cllild psycholoaist try to $Olve Socttly "This Britain Heriu11e ot !he puule of a troubled boy who rhe Su " 1 hts t1ot.omenta1y looh refuses to speak after 1>ein1 aban- at Grot Britain and tis tr1d1hons Cloned by his mother In order to and p1aun1ry revolv1n1 about the prove her loyalty to a re~oluhon1ry i,ea aroup. CD Animal World m Ciel Smart al My Little M111it W Mor1ty Python's Arin1 Cimls !:00 0 '1Z. l1 l8J Good Times Unbt 10:30 0 CommunllJ fttdbl<k he~able IS II seems, J. I. -the m News Caunn.a ol the &hello" -can't W lnter11tlonat Animation festival eet I date with r htlma's 11011eous ED [I Slttw dt Watttr Mere.ado clmmate, Jo Ann. and '"ms de· 11:00 0 m 0 E!HtHD Nns stroye~ by the blow 10 hos eao sw~ ~ OO News lhe rut of the family trots 10 ltst tf liroudlo devise 'tl ays lo rebuild hlS shattered ~Sil BWkr f-1? · The Lucy SM 0 'A '6) (fo m M. v I ft. 0 II Mtvlc: "Wally Inc." (COin) .. Bru~out" While delivering car10 "42 -Edward G. Rob1'nson, Jane Wy· lo a pnson farm, Sonny is ~d· man, Broderick Cnwford. napl)td by an esu~d convlCI, who Q;) Mod Squad plans lo prevent lht state from QtJ l3) Battlelillt t1k1n1 away hlS son ~Ct•bat 0 Mo•ie: (2111) My llood Runs : Wo111n Nllt! ~" (hor) -lloy Oon1hur, Joe) ( ~ li)) le¥t Aaltrlcatt Styk Hutllerton. Barry Sulhon 11:15 €rJ Cl11t1111 34 ~Wild Wold Wut 11:30 fJ (IL C1J CBS l.tle Notie: (C) 0 (29 • ) 3 <D mmrn Sant. "fraultiR Oott•t" (adY) '69 -Suzy Clausl s C.m1na to T~n anl· l<tndall, Kenneth More. mated musial tale that delvts Into ! 01 (i) ~a;) Johllt!J CarSOll lht m~sttriu and myths of Kus Tiit Ht~Dtn K11n1te, ahas 5'ntl Claus Fred As· 6 Mtvle: "[lopt•t11t" (rom) '51 ta11e n1rr1tn -Chflon We~b. Anne Francis. Q) am.lW Julie Andrews Christ· 0 (~ (i)) (]) Wldt Wol1d MJi· mu $p«c11I A musical special with tery "Halfway to Danaer'" D11n Bak· 5pettal guuts, Peuy Lee, Peter Us-er slars. l1ncw, Oou11e Squires Stcond Gener· 00 Tht FBI ation, and the 1 reorchy Male YolCC O Movie: (C) •Mr. l111periu111" Choir. (mus) '52-lana Turner, uio Pinu. @ John Barbour Show lZ:OO 0 Twllirht Zotte ED a Sllow de Iris Chaton m MoYlt: (C) "Clnlry Cemm1nd" 06' Cunsmoke (wu) '63-John Acar, Richard Arlen. I £.Jltos 12:30 ,~rry RA> Koru11 Movit Movie: (C) •Nfpt of Utt CriL· 1:)0 fi]J (3) C1mim °Tns tht 1 (dra) '66-C~nt Walter. Nicht lkfore CiiNiiiiis (R) An1 Movie: "Tiit lit SQ" (•u) '52 mated version of the bttoved Cht1sl -Kuk Douet•\ Dewey Martin. mu SIOIY, w1lh ml Grey IS narra. l :00 Q Q1@QQ! m Tt!MITew IOI and !he VOICes ol Tammy G11mes 0 litM Auby ' ' IS Albtrt Mouse, John ~Iver IS 1:)0 (llJ (.1) M..w. (C) ~ Crtlt the Mayor, 1nd Geor11 Gobel as Misseltl bid,. (WU) '50-Wtndtll . father Mouse Cotey, Macdonald Carey. ( 8 The Bobby Ylnlttl Slltw 1:43 e Mtwie: (Cl .-w., tf I lallCM" CD MtrY liriff111 SlltW (dra) '52 -Roch11d Boont. Roty I W11dlift Adftnturu C.lhoun, Gene TiemtY. Or. Wiit: Ttrrtf of Ille Alitt11s 3:00 GI All·llic1ll Sit-. "TM kallM fl Sllow dt (~!lib MaWlt WH 1•1scntr ....,. ltwlb" 9;00 Im c.,) M•A•S•H Top pti· 3:30 6 Mtllt: (C) .. _...,ti tllt Cu. only IOI use ol the .017th t• w If TI111t" (sd·ft) '65 -Scott phont becomes an lssuo wlltn Fr1nk 81.oy, C1ti Perre111, AntlloAy EISiey. 1:00 0 "Tiie HtDf Men Dewit" (""') Wednesday '44 -rrardlot 1one. Veronica lake. Cf <C> "Tiit Dacft Soll(" (mui) DAYTIME MOVIES ·~3 -C«don MteR .. , Raymond 1 MmeJ, Kathryn Gfayaon, ' 9:00 C1) (C) "Emytlllnc lut tht Tnrtll" 1:30 0 "lllck K111t' (mys) 'SO - (com) 'S6 -Maurttn O'Hara, Jolin Gene Kelly. ' ,:30~f~~· "Clrr1111dr (dr•> ·&1 -3:oo~·~ t11t TIM """'" ' -11n1 L0111st, Ren10 R1ui. "Tiit (sci.fl) 60 -Robert Clarlle, Dar- t Sllortnt D1f' (com) '63 -Waller ltne Thompson. .. I P11t0n, Stewart Grenier J:JO m (C) •111tt SllltW .. relWOI~ ~ 10:00 (41 "Tht DIR Ctmtt" (myi) '45-(dr1) '54 -Tony CUrt1s. l11etllt 8'11, Mtn Slmns. 0 (C) "lrl,....... (Illus) '54 - lZ.-00 m "Ault 0.'141' (wn) '3!!-Bar Gtnt Ktl!y, Van .)ohnJon, Cyd •111 Slanwydl. Pr~ton fostlf, Cllerlue. KOCE Television (50) •, Fine 'Frog' at G WC Someon,, probably W.C. Fields, once railed vociferously on the ~ubject or acting with children and dogs. He might well have added frogs to the list. Not that the green performers in the Golden West College production or "The Celebrated Jump· ing Frog of Calaveras County" are any less human than t~e other cast members. It's just that Becky Galay s costuming and makeup for the croakers is so good that it increases their effectiveness by leaps and bounds. GOLDEN WEST DRAMA instructor Chades M'itcheU, who adapted the well-known Mark Twain short story !or the stage seven years ago then rewrote it to give the frogs more of the spotlight, has succeeded in doing just that. Mitchell, who also was pulled into the cast on short notice to play the cameo role of the sheriff, has fashioned a most en- tertaining playlet aimed particularly at younger audiences. Imaginatively directed by Bob Soares, "Jump- ing Frog" opened last weekend in the tiny Actor's Playbox, where the cramped conditions were evi- dent in the frog-racing sequences. This weekend, however, the show moves into the larger Communi- ty Theater to reverse the adage about big frogs in llttle ponds. AMONG THE CAST members, the most im- pressive, predictably, are Bob Myers in the title role and Bob Dennis, who plays both of his froggy opponents -filling in on short notice in the second role. Myers is hilariow without a word of dialogue, save for an occasional "ribbet," as be reluctanUy becomes a competitor in the Great Frog Race. Al McCafrerey plays the human hero in exag- gerated, melodramatic style, which fits the produc- Wayne'Out' Not on Box Office List NEW YORK (AP> -John Wayne is dropping out of favor with the movie.going public, if a list of the lop 10 box offi ce stars means anything. Intermission Tom Titus tiof? well. Ken Cope is fine as his opposite number, while Thom Carter smoothly enacts the city slicker who tosses a monkey wrench temporarily into the works. PARTICULARLY EYE·PLEASING is a frog b~et sequence, choreographed by Candi Copeland, which features Lynn Berkvits and a chorus of Dana La~en~e, Maureen Teerer, Ariel Dennis and Beth Erliesll in full croaker regalia. It adds litUe to the story, but much to the production. "Jumping Frog" will be on stage Friday and Saturday.at 7: 30 and Sunday at 5 in the Golden West Community Theater. Two encore performances bave been scheduled for March sand 6. • BACKSTAGE -Golden West College has an- oc~ced the musi~al drama "Man or La Mancha" ~ its seas~n-closmg show, opening May 13 .. .it Wl~ be .the eighth production of an am bilious season ~hirh mcludes. "W~o·s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" ~~t ~?ampaonship Season·• and .. The Devil's Disciple ... PITEi FOHDA WUHHOATH "92 IN THE SHADE" (R) .... "THE TAKING OF PELHAM 1-2-3" SUIFll'Ki ALM NSTIYAL TW1 W"4l'1 sa.ow .. SALT WATER WINE0 0.. Of T1M "°""' s.rt ,._her Mede! _____ ,... ___ .,. IU_..S UCH .... HT l'OI SUU90AHS. H4Tl10410S. CUSTOM T·IHllTS. """UAL P4SUS I OfHll •llAT l'WDS. "OUT Of SEASON" (R) 0.-., 7:9M:4 0.10-.JO iAT /SUM J->:40· l;J0.7:0M:40.IO-.JO Cl HEM ALAND 11 ll So HJ1bD1 A .. ncim '3~ 1601 1w1u .... "UTILE BIG MAN" (PG) Dollyl:O SAT /SUM 4: IS-1:41 "BLUE WATER, WHITE DEATH" 0.-., 7:ff i AT fSU" J:J0.7:t0 " ... ,,. ....... j ... _, .. ,, •..... t•l•1011•t ... , ... ,, •.... " .... ,, .. , , .. ,. ~·. , ... . , .... "''' "'' .. ........ .~ l ••U I' "'Ill' ......... ... , .. ..... .,.. .... ....... ,, ....... ......... lth t ... , .. , ...... ~. h tl h M• ,,.,.. ...... .. \M t ilt ........... ...... .. ... ..., ... ,,., .. ' ....... ...... l ht ... ,., ........ .. , '"' OAJL Y PILOT A I 3 ., .. __ llUI WAnl WHm DUTN ... SHAH'S TllASUU ,.. S _I,__. __ , 12/ IUC09ft_,..,. UT'S DO rt AGAIN"' •ar DOC SAYAOI• --··-1 .. _~­..... _ GONf IH tO HCONDS"" SIDICAI uc1u .... __ ,_, .. __ , ..... 1,.. --.--.o;.,.---.... 91 IN THI SM.ADI • WAY Of TMI WOILD • ..,,....,..__, ,.. --·-JAWS , .. , _. ..... DUTM WllM 1111 ....... --····· ... ··· 3 DAYS Of TMI CONDOl 111 --·--HYOMD ntl DOOt 111 ·-·-GONI IN tO SICOHOS .,.. SIDICAI IACllS I"! -.llD-rn•-- llU( WAnl WHm DlATH ... --·,--SHAIK'S TllASUll ,.. Ill _, tlllWI llUE WAnl WHm DlATH ... llllll• '"·-·-.. ,. OLD DUCULA (l'OI IO- PAIT II WALKING TAll For the first time in 25 years, Wayne is not on the list compiled by Quigley Publications. Robert Redford topped the stars, followed by Barbra Streisand. She was the only woman named. The rest of the top ten. in order, were : Al Pacino, Charles Bronson, Paul Newman, Clint Eastwood, Burt Reynolds, Woody Allen, Steve McQueen and Gene Hackman. 2c....,....sa.ow1 hell ...... 7:30 & •:lO . CINEMALAND UIHt lbM Ao.tllrdlliJS 16(!1 "ROOSTER COGBURN" =iiiF.~~~-,_,_ 1. D41TY MAIT CWY W IT P" --------- ' The H~wport i LIDO B~ach . 673-8350 HELDOVHI DAVID NIVEN "OLD DRACULA" Ill's Hew I -And- Mel llf'oolll Smash "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" MESA 1884 Newport Costa Mno sd-1 ssz HELD OVER! ''Seven Alone" GREAT F.AMIL Y SHOW •'NASHVILLE" (RI .. TOMMY .. lPGJ -olD oucuu.·1PG1 -YAU THE MOHET »I> IUM"' -YOUMG FRAHIEMSTBH" IPGI .. MONTY PYTHOH & THE HOLT GtW.L" "PEEPER .. IPG) U!Mi8M~~· "THE HAPPY HOOKER .. IRJ -ottTY MAIY & CRAZY LURY"" •y AHISHIHG POIMr IPGt ..GOHE IH 60 sECOM>S• •tvEL IHllYEl .. IPGI HOW FAR DOES A GIRL HAVE TOGO lOUMTAMGl.E HER TINGLE?? SEE THE UNCUT, UMCENSORED ORIGWl 35 MM PRINTS! © ADULTS ON..V COl.OR •--·PLUS THE SECOND MOST FAMOUS•lllli ..... ADULT FILM Of OUR TIM£ ... The Devll In Miss Jones ONLY ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING! PUllVCIT-873-4CMI 709 E. Balboa 81vd. Newport Beach OPOI DAILY AT 12 NOON Call 642-5678. Put a few words to work for ou. 41.. •SEYEM ALOHE'" CGt "W ..,.~o.c....-Mt.M COMTIMUOUS FROM I 2:l0 tHUlls.ffJ.SAT·SUM. THE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE '>RANGE •532 6721 ~ CITY CENTRE CINEMAS .... S.A. FAWY !MANCHESTER EX.I G G. FRWY (CITY OR. EX.I 11ROYAL FLASH .. • J.:JM: I W:OO 7:45-t:JO ~ .. • ·•.I • I .~,-... ~ .. i.,.. .... ,, .. ,,._., .......... .. ·--~~ Jm Lm'll "*"11 Seven Alone DAil 'i' AT ,,~,., S1U·7t20 & fi10 "'GO ..... 61SICOMDS" 2:1M:IO-t:20 Cret ..mr, .. 4:91-7:•• FOUNTAIN \IALLEV • 1 N t flrof J\ I ' tt t•f\f)•tl\Jll \'A' ti ....... t. .,. •>o.. "PllPH .. Cit 6:1 ..... H •11 HAllOW a.AMI .. 7tH 'ILUE WATEI, WHITE D!ATH" .,.., kte-7:45-~JI w .. l:JO.J:ll 1:11 6:.1"41 Dolly •:JO. I t:lO SAT~ J:)M·U·IO'.JO "LITT DO IT AGAIN" SAT/SUM 4:JM·U Oolly l :ll , OIANA AOSS Mal10.9.ar~ .. .,. HARBDa TWIN J ·· 1 •• ....,...1· ~. • llf•••N•'-\00 COU• ... \4 "'''I~···· ,,,.J'8Jln~ ...... ' ... u.. Oorf l'i Sol f.AI •• ~. The lt·rrifyrng n111tm11 p1C'iun fmm lh1 trrrifying /\o. /bl"'"' lln: 1 t1AWS ITS THE REAL THING MAN EATER "BLUE WATER WHITE DEATH " THE HUNT FOR "GREAT WHITE . ~ I -ClllMA 1£i0 I "EARTHQUAKE" ..,0.:,;:::;;;·•••·;~~ ,.,, 92 IN SHADE ll'Vl.11 FONDA TI4E Wlolllllt:N OAffS P\.US "ROYAL ( ..... fill}~~J~L .. ) FLASH'' Wl-''~~l'----!,•!.•••, 'THE OTHER SIDE Of THE MOUNTAIN' 2. V AN1St41NG .OCNT 1"' 3. WT &Ml1tcAN MllO IN\ P\.US 0119 Hl\.NllOUS CXM411' WOOOYALUN "TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN" INOIAWlST .... ,,~,... • '"°'-""""~' wun.u• ClW1'11 ttl t.ftl ... WALT DISDEY WU" eoeev 09'1SCOLL AOef.RT NEWTON 8A&ILS't'ONEY "BLUE WA.TEA WHITE DEATH'• TEENAGE HlTCHHIKER NtO "TEENAGE TRAMPS" .. .... t Tue.sday, Oecemw 9, 1975 PVBUCNO'l'ICE •• cnTaou.s ausu11au. MAMRITATRMINT ,IC1'ITIOUSau11•1ss n.te.i-i"l&lfftonl er•OOinQMI· MAMa ITATIMINT -•: The Jol!o-'119 lle•'°'1\ •r• diolfltMl- Mls.$10N ROOlllNO CO., 7")1 lleUH ....... Ml"* Vl•lo. CA '1•1$ LITTLe SHOI" AROUND flif; W114onC.JorMn, t..SJ Sl-CORNER, 'OJH Crown V•ll•y \A, """'lngton e.ac11. CA f?t41 ,.,.. •• Y. L•OllNI Nl9u.I, C'atll mn f>ofteld R °"""''· ttt)I eoi..oo. .ML•"'"""'" A Hoc let.es. Inc. (In illillsJ~ Vttlo, CA m1s Cotpor•IM In C.llf I ,., s... NIC04ti Tlllt bYSIMU IS <ond11<ttel by a °'. N•-' lltacll, Ca ttMO. ll""tr•I per1~nltlp, TillJ MIMSt l.s COndU(lff by • C~· W•telon c. Jordan -•llGn This ''•t-nl w•s llltd ""'fl me Jot Lel911ton & Anoclottt, Inc:. (Mwlty Clff" _. Of.noe 'o.;nly on Nov Jo. LtiQlllon, Prflldel\1 efl'IMflQ. lt1S. This sta-nt w .. flied w4ttl tt>e F•"20 C-ty Cltrll. of Oren9e COunty on flvOll"*I (lr.,09 CN•I O.lly 1'1101, 0.-c:.MOer 4, 1'1S. Newmoe< 15, and Otcember 2, •. "· ,sen7 1'1J .ws-1s 1'111111~ 0r"9e eo.n Dally F"llOI, PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS aUSINl5$ HAMIE STAT£MEHT 0. followl1>9 pe<sons are Oolng ti.di· ""'9'" TECHNICAL PRODUCTS ENGINEERING. Wt Blr<ll Str~I. S\111• 104, N-POrl Be~ll. C.lllornl• tMO TPE. • C.lilornla corPOratlon, '341 Blr<lt Slrftl, Suitt ICM, Newpor1 Bea<.11. CAllfOflllt 92660 lhl' llUSIMU ll conducted by" CM· pottllon. TPE T?us il•ternen1 ..,u lllecl '"1tll tl'oe County Clerk 01 O .. r'll" County on Oc· IOOef ll. 1'7S Ft"11 Pvbllslled Ot•nge Coast D•llY Piiot, Nov 1S, •nd Dec 1, 9, 1', 1'7S •SI 1·7S PUBLIC NOTICE FlCTITIOUSaUSINESS NAMIESTATEMENT The follow1119 persons ue do•ng bus!· nesses: S A.E. ADVANCED PACKAGING, ACS INDUSTRIES. J0e0 Airway Dri...e, Costa Meu, CA <n•?6 STANFORD APPLIED ENGINEERING, INC., a Calllorn1a co•'l•Otat1on, 340 Manin Avenue, s.~a Cl•r•. CalilOf"nl• HOSO This busowu Is conducted by a COf· "°'"''°"· Stanford "PPlled Enoltlffrl110. Inc B. H. Y a1n. Presl~nt This statenwnt was llltd with lllt' Cbunty Cler• ot Or<tnge County on Nov· ember 10, 1'7S. FffSTt Publlwd Oran<lf! Coast Dally 1>1101, 'fOWmbl'r 25, and Oetembclr 2, •. II>. 1'75 4S1H5 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Tr.t lollowln<J person Is OOlng bUS<· ness as WEST CO"ST CONCERTS. l.115 Cl•r St., N•wp0rt ~ach, C•llf 'nlr6D Rod 1.. Medler, 331S Clay SI., NewpOrt BrKll, C31lf, 9264) This business Is conducted by~ 1,,.. dlvldual. Rod L. Medler Oe~..,..ber t , 1•. U, lO, 1'1S 4'11·1S PUBLIC NOTICE flCTITIOUS •uSfNlSS NAME STATEMENT Tiie tollowlng i>erson " dol119 Ou\I· l'tH) 9'. COLORGRAl>HICS, 1IO ~ Cenler Or., NewPOr1 e.acfl, CA~ Generos• Rand, 110 Newport Center Or .• New119'1 Be.Kii, CA'?660 This b<Alntu ll c.onducted ov ~In. dlvlOIHI G-aRancl Tiiis tlatement was filed ""4111 the Covnty Clerk of Or•n!I<! County on Nov- em!Mr 20, 191S. F•"17 Pullll!.hed OfantJe C.,.st Dally PllOI, NoYember 15, •ncl December 2, 9, 1•. 1915 '504-75 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS aUSINIE~S NAME STATEMENT Followl119 persons •re dolno buSinus es: ESCAPE ENTERPRISES, 2033 5.inl1ago, Newp0rt Beacll, CA '1'26e0 Rlcllard M. Fox11, ?Oll Santi•, NfWPOrt Boacll, CA 92660 El•lne Foo, 2033 Santlaoo. NewOOf1 Bue h, c A 92660 Tiiis b11slnt'n Is conducltd by • C)fiwr al partnership RlcMrd M. Fou This stotement was tiled w1th lllt' County Clerk ot Or•noe County on Nov· ember 13, ltJS ,..., .. Publl\hed Ota"9e Coa\t Daily Piiot. No•. 18, ?S, •nd December 2. 9, 197S 43'11 IS PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAMIESTATEMENT The followlno persons are doir>11 bu$1· nenas: A•mon lnduslrin, HS SeilOUll UM, Bl02. Newport Beach, Ca'l766.J. AicMrd I.. Coberly, 88S ~il<,lull u ..... l'iewp0rt Buen. Ca 92643. Romon Jod•r. 1221 N. Russell St., u H•1><o11, ca 90631. This business Is conducted l>Y a general pjlrtnerslllp. Richard L. Coberly Tiiis sla\ement wa~ l1led willl lht County Cler• of Orange Counly on Nov embt'r13,1'17S. F4'701 Publl'>htO Oran!)!! Coan Dally Piiot, Fff10I NO~mbl'r 18. 2S,and DetemDer 2, 9, Published o .. ,. Coast Daily Piiot. 1975 •l'll-75 Tiiis slatenwnt was flled with t~ C~nty Clerk of Or•nge Co"'11y on Nov ember 13, 197 S. Novembet 18, 2s. and Oe<embl'r 2. ~. ---------"15 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSIH ESS NAME STATEMENT T~ following person~ are doing tiusi· toe$\~: WESTMARK & ASSOCIATES. 3'1758 B1rc11 Streel, NewPOrt Beach, C..lllorn1ll 92660 6•tes and Bauoll, Inc., a C.lilornia corPOratlon. J91SB B"cll Street, NewPOrt Beach, Cohlorn1a 97660 This business h conducted by a cor· poratoon. BATES ANO BAUGH, INC. John L. B•les Pre11dent Thl5 st•temenl was Hied witn ttw> County Clerk of Oran9e. County on t~ov· PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The lollowll'l!I person~ are 001ng bu:Si· l'IMSU. SUMMIT CONSTRUCTION CO, INC., 22311 Broo~llur~t S1reet. Su•te "'K'', Huntington Be<1ch, c.a111orma 9'2""6 ~nnls EdwMd Lyerla. '80S E Walnut, Orange. Calllornl• 91669 H.trwy Josee>l'I DIJ1:on. 19011 Heat•» point Ln, Huntfl'lg1on Beach, c.a1110..n1a .,,,,.., Th•s t>u~1ness •S conducted by a cor· PO•al.on Summit Const. C.O" In<. Oerv>ls E. LY~rl• P•e•l<Mnl This •latement wa• Iii~ Wll!I tlle Countv Ct~k of Oran9e Courity on Nov ~r1~, 191S emllet1',1'7S. F4tt41 FS01l4 PubllsM<I Orange coast Oaory Piiot. P\lblo•lled Orangt Coast Oallv P1101, Nov 25, ancl Dec. 2, 9, 1•, l915 .t.IOlP\ ~ml>er t. '·II>, U. 1'1S 4591 IS PUBLIC NOTICE NOYICE TO CREDITORS SUPIEllllOR COURT OF THE STATE O~ CALIFORNIA FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE Ne. A-ti1'1 Estate of JEROME B. LEVY. OK eased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to Ille creditors of the •bove n•med dtc~I tha1 •II porwns having claims 6gMnst tl>e Wld decadent are rt!Quored to Ille lllOm, wltfl the Mtesury vouchers, in Ille offlce of tne clerlt 01 Ille ""°"" tn- lllled court, or to prttent them, wi1n the ,_euery voucll(trs, to the un<let's.gned att11410fflct of BRENT, HERZOG ANO MINDELL. Attorneys at Law, 1•Qn· Nrv Park East, Sullt 1207, Los Al'lllf!les, QillfOfnl• t00i>7 whlch " the plact! ol b.ISlness of lhe undenlon•d on att mat· ters portalni119 lo Ille esl•te of salo ~ ~I. within tour m011tlls afle< U>e flr\I Pll!llicahon of this notice. Oaled November 1?, 1915. BARTONE. LEVY Executor of Ille Will of the above named dee:eOl'nt. 8RENT, HERZOG AND MfNOEU. 8y:JoMpl\T.Ma.,.1t ,. Cttltury .. orll E.,, Sulte1Jt7 PUBUC NOTICE FJCTITIOUS BUSINESS "NAME STATEMENT Tiit followi no person Is dol 119 business •s. MOMH"NS OF COS'tA MESA, l1>8• Brlslol Strut, Costa Mesa, C.llfornla Jame-5o A. McMallan, 2121 'N'its111re Boulevard, S.l'lla Monit.t, Calllorn1a This tiusoneu is l>eino conducltd by ., 1nc1;vldual. .;.,rroes A. Mc Mahan This stlllement liltd wllll Ille Countv Oen Of Or•~ County on No-.:rnber 11,ms. "4mo Published Oran~ Coast Oally PilOt, Nov. 25, ind Dec. 2, 9, 16, 1'7S 450'J.1S PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT TM lollowl119 perSOM are d0i1'19 busl· ness~: THE DECORATOR'S WHEREHOUSE, 16055 Bolsa 011ca. Huntlnoton Buell. Ca '2Mt. Wendy L. G~umet, 16254 Tl\l>l.lry Clrcle, Huntlnglon Buell, Ca~. Sunliglit 'Zoning' Probed SACRAMENTO (UPI> -A Ca lif ornia lawmakel" said be will in- vestigate "who owns the sun'' to help protect the solar rights of less af. fluent persons. "SUNLIGHT must be allocated in a manner that will balance skyscraper construc~oo against individual pro- perty rights," said As· semblyman John J. Miller <D·Oakland). Miller added, "Corporate construction plans must not be aJ . lowed to deprive less af. fluent property owners of sunlight.·· Benefits Weighed · ·Northwest Poirer Plants Probed RICHLAND, Wash. <UPI) -Major concerns are surfacing in the Northwest over the rapid construction of a trio of large nuclear power plants on the once super· secret Hanford Atomic Reservatioo. The Wa shington Public Power Supply System is building the plants to an ultimate generating capacity of 3.S million kilowatts of electricity. THE BENEFITS are obvious: Thousands of additional jobs for ,.. Richland and its sister ' cities of Kennewick and (ECOLOGY) ; dustry should be moving slowly in developrnent of large nuclear plants un- til such questions are answered. Echoing Sheppard's concern is Dr. Eric Cheney. a geological sciences professor at the University of Washington. "EVEN IF nuclear re- actors were absolutely failsafe there are still the insurmountable pro· blems of uranium re· serves and waste storage," Cheney said. He said would uranium * * * supplies will last 90to100 years, yet 11uclear reac-• tors are generating • waste problems that will last 700 to S00,000 years. "How could the gov· ernment guarantee storage that long? Thal t;0unds like they are talk~ ing about a nuclear priesthood that would make the CIA look like a bunch of school kids." THE CONCERNS of experts like Sheppard and Cheney are not new. They go back more than 30 years when the federal government carved Hanford out of 570 square miles 0£ sagebrush·covered de- sert along the Columbia River. * * * He announced his As· sembly Judiciary Com· ...,, Pasco, and a large quan· tity of power to help of- fset shortages expected in the Northwest in the coming years. But there are serious questions regarding all FEA Eyes Effect Of Nuclear Bans mittee will conduct a hearing Thursday to con· s i d e r w b e t h e r t h e St d2 T II legislature should pro-an •"fl a uPIT•l•pMto aspects of nuclear energy, particularly the million-plus kilowatt re· vide for solar easements or zoning regulations to protect individuals' solar rights. MILLER referred lo Ralph Nader's testimony An Atlantic Richfield drilling rig breaks up drab scenery on blizzard-swept tundra of northern Alaska. The 11 firms developing Purdhoe Bay field and 798·mile pipeline, will gross some $18 million a day when oil begins to flow. actors taking shape at Hanford and elsewhere in the country. "My feeling is that it's a system out of control," said Dr. John Sheppard, a Hanford scientist for SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The Federal Energy Administration has awarded a contract for a fact· finding report on the possible efCects of a moratorium on nuclear power plant construction in California. in a nuclear energy hear------------------------nine years and now head of Washington State University's radiation isotope Jab. William C. Arntz. FEA regional administrator. announced that a $103,000 contract was awarded to the Center for Energy Studies at the University of Texas at Austin to report on the "economic. social and environmental impacts" of the California Nuclear Safeguards Initiative, if passed by voters next June. ing last week in which the activist said: "Solar energy falls on the rich . and poor alike. FedMart's President Ousted ·SAN DIEGO CAP> - Sol Price has been oust- ed as president and chief executive officer of Fed· Mart Corp., a $300 million retail-store chairi in Californi a and the Southwest Price was fired in a special meeting of Fed- Mart"s board of direc- tors. Price said he was dumped because of ''serious differences" between himself and the majority of the board. He would not say what those differences were. FedMart officials an- nounced the firing and said that Hans Schoepflin of We s t Germany had been ap- pointed acting president and chief executive. Finance Firm In Newport Trans· Universal Finance Corp., a Los Angeles·based company, bas opened an affiliate office at 1100 Quail St. in Newport Beach. The new firm, Trans- Universal Finance of Orange County, is beaded by Hal Long. Gas Company Ups Customer Rates .. l'M NOT necessarily one to say stop, but there are still serious pro· blems that have to do with whether there is enough uranium to keep them (reactors> going, and then the longer-term problems of radioactive waste, which are not set· lied by any means.'' The initiative, backed by environmentalists, would ban unclear plant construction and cut back existing operations unless a two.thirds vote by the California Legislature in 1980 decided that plant safety systems were fail safe. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Southern California Gas Co. customers began paying higher gas rates this week because of fees charged for the right to negotiate for any gas discovered during Alaska oil explorations. The $27.1 million rate hike will average 13.5 cents a month for re· sidential customers, a gas company spokesman said. THE ATLANTIC Richfield Co. also an- nounced it has concluded a $420 million agreement lo explore the north slope of Prudhoe Bay for oil and gas reserves. The financing for exploration will come from various Chrysler Recall Amwunced DETROlT (U Pl) - Chrysler Corp. said it has notified the owners of nearly 2,900 motor homes built on the 1975-model Dodge chassis that an im- properly installed muf- fler could cause fires. lending institutions. Arco spokesmen said. The gas company will pay the interest on the loan and in return wins the right to negotiate for 60 percent of any oil found. Sheppard said the in- Consumer advocate Ralph Nader, testifying before a California Assembly Resources, Land Use and Energy Committee, warned that an FEA- sponsored study "will be clearly stacked against the initiative." He said the FEA is "a declared pro- moter of nuclear power.·· Ov(~r Th~ Count~r NASO Ustinqs These QUOl.ttions Brinks In 8V. ,..,, EINin A 18'h 19'1• Kt'O'e5o Fb tl'tt 1'~ Ol'llo Fer IS 15~ Trn Ocen l''• • 5-lled by !tie N•· ero.<lv F ' 4'h Encu In 1'h 7~ Ktrst rnt 21\.'J 12'h Opll Coat s 6 Twin D15o 7'1> 8 ~~.1f:J!iE::::~ =Ar :~ r !~f:ee~ :~ 1~: ~~= ·~ 1i:~ 1~~ ~Et:'Br ~i~ ~E ~ris~ ~~ :~ ~ed by over·lhe· Burnp SI tV. 4Yt Farm er 17 17'h KOQer Pr l'ti 9 Pac Gam 2S't> 26'1• Un•on Spl 1l 14 counter ck!alers 10 llrtler M 21 11> 22'A Farm Gr 54 S7 KrueQH" • 10 Pac Lum 24'1> 2sv, Un T enc 31 37"• ~~ other IE!~te~~ g:W\McSv' ~~ ~2 Ar19r111 3 J\\ L.Kled St 1:11> ~ ~a:'~ ~4;.~ 13't. u UnM Th m. 14'- tlme.l The quota· C&m Iron fS m:~ 1~~ 1~v. t:~:sl 11v. 22 Pay N Sv m: ff'• ~~ r:r~ 22°"' 23"" tlons clo not Include t20 115 Ill Unlnc 31:\4 32'11 I.Ann Ca ~ ?',~ ~n1Enlrp1 14 14'1> Uni\/ Fds Jtll 11\, ""•II mtrttup, martt c.m Tog 3511> 36\4 Food TW 17'"' 381Ao L.wsn Pr •v , ., .... 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Am Furn 2'h 2\4 Cml Shr9 17 18"2 H&cll Ch 8 'I Mtrcllnl 13'/• 13\lt Rtx Plas s•n ~·r. G . I L Am Gree 1 7:\\ CWt NtGs 15'4 16'J. Halln EW 4\ti 51~ M.rvyn 34'h 3S...., Ru P Pr 10 10'14 Q Ulf!rlS nllf O~Pr,'( Amini Gr CmwTI p 23'1J 24'J. H•mll Br • 9'11. Meyer Fr 16'/• ll>"M Rer11 &R 131/• u •r. GAINERS 1(50 51 Cptr AUto 9\4 1ov. H.•riier A 7 7112 MidTew c 16~ 11"' Rivel Ml 18•1· 19 , AlwoodOcn WI ""+ .... Up 1S 0 A Mc""T IO'lt 10'1\ trvls 3\lo •'I• Ha\11.am 71"a 8 Miii.-HS •'h S•I> Road Ea 41 Hlo4 1 C.ym11n Carp ~ • J.16 Up 20 o Am SIL I I 11'17 Conn Flt 12 ll"M Hawtll Fl 7'\\ 7'}o Mllllpor 46 ta Aobf1 Ols 1911, 2014 3 L T V Cp wt\ v. • 'lo Up 20 0 Am Telev 13\1') 1•'1• Conn <;.n l'llll <IOV. nred F 16'4 17'h flMSalt A l9 A2 Aolllns B 11 11 • H<1ml l11v 'rrst ''t • 1/o Up 11> 1 Am 'Miid '''• 9\lt Ct1s Papr 46 t7 Hucel c nv. 13 Minn Fal> 8V• a'll. Auckr Ptl 9'14 1C>l4 s Tele1.Clences l "'•. ,,., Up tS.• Alnos•Q 171/J 1''1> Cordis Q> IW> 7211> HIQbt Co UV. UY. MoQul Cp 16'4 171;, Rusi Stov U 14'4 6 "'°<WllBros •O •·? • ''• Uo 11 ~ MMUY 33 331"a Cousins ""' 111't Hints El. 24 26 Morn In 2•'1> 24''2 Scherer 7V> 8'4 1 R6Cogn EQU•O S\\. ... Up 12 s Allex<o 17 18 Cross Co 10"2 1w. Hoover 1014 1~ Moore Sa U'/J 1sv, Scho41 In x9'14 1ov. a Allpqlleny Bv t•,., ,,.. Up 11 1 Anln Myf H 't 2'1't Curt Noll 13 1l\'o I q, x1S~ 16V. Moren Br 2'1• 3 Scott Inn ¥o 1\li 9 Anderson 081> I''•• "• Up 11 1 Arvlda )"4 4'4 Deni lnll 1•11• IS Hublngr S2 53'1> Morrltn lt't. 19\4 ScottsL G IV, l"llt 10 Brend IMul.it 1•1,.. '"" Up 11 1 Auo Cola 16'4 17 Dirt Dt9 ic9"4 10'.4 Hunt Mtg 10'.4 11 MDsttc Cp ' 9~ Serl~ H 20 21Y, II Van Shao 78 1>4 + '-"' Up 10 O All Gs I.I I~ 13'4 Dela 100 l'i'o 9~ Hyatt C '"" •>.i. Motion 111 IS 1~ Sea Wrld 10,,._ 11llo 12 VlsualGra IOk 1'4 + •1, Ue> 10 o All Sleet 1011> 11 O.ytn Ml 2'Vt 31 Hysl« C 11~ 11"-Motor Cl 1'-3'1o Sv Much 10't. I~ 13 ~ls!Mch Cp 21'+ 11, Up 100 Atwd On 6V• 7 Otcls 0. l 3'17 IMS lnlnl '"' '"" Ms Smllll IJ'"' it Svmutr 2?'h 23'"' 14 Wstrn Mtg Inv I~+ Vo Up 10 o Baird Alo 3"' 3'1t Deklb AR 361/t 37V. Inda Wat 20 101'> MSI Oeta 1'1o ~ So~ Up 32'h 33'/• IS Am8ulldno .40 ' + 'h Up 9 1 Baird Wr Sitt S'"° Delhi Intl 2Y, 211'o Inds NIKI 2'111 3\lt Mufll"'8 13 U Shottw l'I• 3¥. 16 S<.otts LlqGold 111,.. 'lo Up 9 t Bal!H" Br 7\o't l 'h Delun C ~ :rl'h lnfOl'eX 21'> 2l'e Nt Bk GI 12'/.I 13'4 Sirnpsoft lS 16 17 Nobllily Home 311, t-V. Up 8.3 8akl!f" Fe ~'14 27'14 Diam Cn 12'4 13 Instr Loi> S 51'> Ntl CnvSt 6'111 7Vt Snap Tols 33 3' 18 Anal09Dtv Sl< f> V. t-1/J Up 8.0 BaldWn l. 11\o't 11~ 01.m Hd 2"' l 11'o lnt•rc En 9'h 10•.f) Nat 1.lbCy 3 3~ So Cal ~ 1111• 11'14 LOSE!!~ Bk•m Rlt 514 5'4 Dolt Cmp I V1 214 lnt.i Crp l>8 6'1'/t HtlflM Sv 2•Y.i 2S'I> So CnnGs •18'h IW• 1 CottonPetrt wt >II-•t.o Off «1.0 us"""""· CA. tto67 Tel: nu> u1-11a l.aurel Y. Hagoard, ~~03Sl-----------­ Chrysler said it bad four reports of fires re- sulting from the pro- blem, but only one was reported by an owner. 86rnet Fl 101/J 11 Docutel ' 6~ lnlmt Gs 12V• 12"4 NCNB co 8'/t l'h Sino Pap 1911; ttV. 2 OreylusCorp wt 11.-,,.. Off 33.3 0.n4tt F 17 11:V. Oollr Gen 8V• 8~ In BkW A 2"-3 Needflm ~ •V. 5cJKlra ll:V. Wh 3 AllNllRE .3Sb ~-''-Off 2S O O.yleu 8 8...., OoNlds 11>'1• 11 ln\ersll J'\\ 3~ Ntwll Co 8\lo 8:V. Sotldel N 1511> 16'1• • F-1 Tek Inc 'Ii-\lo Off 200 A.,_.,...,fw Exec- Pwbli!.l>e<I o ... n!lt' Coast Dally Pll~. Nov. 18, 1S, encl Dec 2. 9, 1'7S dlll-7S Wl,_,_rd Or., Laguna Nl9uelt'Z6n EllUbt!lll A. l.ivuay, HOH Wlnct10,.rd Or .• Laguna Nl9uel mn. This l>Yslnus Is condu(lad by a -------------1 general pertnerslllp. Wen<ty P. Grumet 'Olis statement wu flied wilfl Ille ---NO-T-IC_E_T_O_C_R_E_O-IT_O_R_S---1 County Cieri< of Orange Counly on sunRIOR COURT OF THE Otcembef"A, l9TS. PUBLIC NOTICE STATI! OP' CALIFORNIA F'Olt TIIE COUNTY OF" ORANGE Na.A.UJM Estate of ROSETTE JUDD EVELAND, ak11 ROSETTE J . EVELAND, aka POC:.ETTE EVEU.ND, Oecuw.f. Flllm P\lbllsNd Oranoe Coast Dally Pttot, Oec•mbtr9, 16, 21.lO, 1975 46112·7S PUBLIC NOTICE CP·11'3 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS HAME ST'ATEMEHT ThoP followlno person Is Cloi119 busl· ~su: CENTER FOR PLANNING AND RESEARCH, 740 Newport Ctnler MR. EXECUTIVE . ',The others occurred ~ur- a.cti ...._ pric" for lh ; mg assembly operations -.....Cu•nireip . '.by th e motor home $100,000 DUlM llNIRT'· · manufacturer~ who buy .... · the chassis from JI . $225 Chrysler. l7 • S21Z There were no in- ·U • $407 juries, Chrysler said. It 41 • $70t did not immediately U·StU "d t'f th f CALL llLL IL.ACK t en 1 y e names o the ,_ .,.... affected motor home 67wr.7' c:':u.ao 14 models. Notices to the l•I -.,.. Dr owners of the 2,884 motor ..._ _. .._; homes were mailed last "" week. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to !!It' <rtdllors of I~ Above nomed ~I f"9t all persons llav•"'-1 <•••m\ ~tl\I tM wld ~~t art required to f1~ thom, •Ith Ille ...ceu•ry vouchttl. In IN oftlca of IN ti.I'll of IM 4lboYe tn· titled court, or to proent tiwm, w\11111"' ~ VOU< ... n, to Ille U-\IQMd e4 tho oHICe of JOSE PH P. "AGENT A. •ttorMY at Law. 21S Santa Monie a 8fYd., &.mo Monlc11, Calllornl• ~' -lcfl 11 tllt place of bvs1ntts Of uw..,.. OriYe, Suite 215, Newport S.ACll, CA 1-------------------------m.o -119Nd In •It m•tters perta1111nq to Ille ~IMe 01 Wid Oe<:edenl, wo!Nn loVr """'1tlsoft11• "" flf\t puotocehon GI tn.~ ~tu. o.wdNowrnlMr 21. 1"75. ROM Id lllft Judd •ucut9'of Ult Wiii of CPA., Inc • 2•0 N~wport Olm~ Drive, Suite 21S, Newpor1 Beech, CA '™'O Thi~ business I\ btin<J (Ol\du(lfd by II ClO<llOf et Ion. Jofln L OlapmAn Prol~'lt, C.P R . Inc Thi' sl•tfl'nenl Ill"' w1111 Ille County Ottk of Ora1199 County on NOwm«>t!r 11, 1'7S. tflt toC10W n.tmed Ooctd!ftt "U\.01", ltOLITON, JOS.:~,., .lU,GENT A aUltNS & M<KITTRIOC AtWMy •UAW •1: Rlcfla111 E. ICM<M ns..-.M1111ua1..... "~' .. u. S-.~.Calff.tMt1 WMOMllS._ • .....,...... '"'""" .. edl. Cam. f'IAllllMd 0r.,. C:O.it Otlly Piiot, foubllshed Or•noe cont Dally Piiot. ,_.,,U,IMO.C.2,t, 16, 1'1S AS24"1S Ml>Y.2Sand0.C.?,•, 16, 1'75 •S0).1) PVllLIC N011CE PUBLIC NOTI~E s;uiJ Mlf>SlltfOtt COURT 0,. TH8 llATIO' CALlll'ORNIA FOR TH I COUNTY O' ORAHGI ... A ... ,. NOTltw Oft MUIUNO 0" .. l!TfTION ll'Oa f>aOaAT• 01" LOST 011 OUTttOY•D WILL & CODICIL. & lllOtt &An IRS ?llTAMENTARY lst•te of CHARCUl!S BRUCE l(tl.t..fAN , a tio known as C.8 . tUWAN ""41C. llRUCI! Kf LLIAHand OIAltLO&.ICILLIAN,DeeM19d. NC>TIC• IS Hl!RflY GfVIH 1N1t OEOAOa L Kll.L1Af4, en acMt. hB fll9d .. ,...,, • ""'lot! few ,..... f!I \Ml "' 0..1..,.-WI 11 & CMl<lf & lot Latt.rl Tetttftleittary rotertltClt to lllllldl Ism.-fof '""'-'-~ .. _. tl'9t CM 11Mt -,Cec.. .. '-tl"e .. _Mt....,MCfor o.c. n, ms, atti•...,..,, lflt'-<-'rMm .. °""""" fMflll Nio J tf Mid C-1, .. P00 CMc Qrlltf Oftft Welt. In tM City o* ~· ,,,,.., CallferN•. OMfd DK >. ,.Tt. WU.LIAM •• II JOMllif, c:-.ty °'" ............ c..t.--.-.,ir.I _,LOW...._, ...... ........ CA.ftttt ,....,,.W! F 1t••11 ,,........ °'*"' c-cf ,.., """- CIM.f#'li "'"'' ~ Mercedes Leasing Specialists SPECIAL LEASE RATES TAILORED TO FIT 'YOU Mlaalon Vl•IO Imports 714 831-1740 GOOD NEWS A.BOUT . RETIREMENT PLANS . Learn how a Tax·Sbeltered Retirement Plan can be quickly and easily established-Up to t7 500 a year of current earnings marked for it~irement are fully tax deductible for self employed. under the Keogh Plan, and up to $1 500 under th~ IRA for Individuals not cu'rrently participating in any prlvate or government retirement plan. Come to Los Angeles Federal Savings one hour seminars at 7:30pm. hi addition to a discussion of the Keogh and IRA. Plans. a licensed represent.aUve will dacuss a new tax def erred Annuity Plan. Call for ~•lions and information. December 9-i1-VaJley 1"1r.a Ofnee 1Zl60 Vlrtory Blvd., near Laurel Canyon, N~ HollJwood~ . Decmber 10-cemto1 omce 1135.S South St.red al 1Jridley Road-G·.5$118 Dectmber 1M8-Wlllhin District Office «iOO WilAJN Blvd., at San Vlceote--653-7380 o.eembef tt-Newport 8eAdi om~ DA Newport Blvd .• (ac:rc. from Clly Hall) •m.GIO 0.kln Co 6'11 41i't Clofch Gs 7,._ l'I• lntrsl Cp S~ S:V. NJ Nol G 12 12"4 54~ I 12"-1S'h S Acady lnsGro V.-'"' Off u 3 Bently Ls 10\4 11 Dow Jons 2S 2S:V. 1~ So Viii 22'MI 2?¥8 Nlcotet In 10 11 Sid ~ols 1"4 11 6 ArobSll1 O<!vel 111,-v, Otf 1A 3 Bell Lib J.CYt 35'11 Doyle OB 8~ 9r1e amHb 11 ll"N Nlelffft A 19'4 11'111 Slanl Hm x12 I• 1 Cmptrvlsn Co JV.-~ Otl 14 3 Bibb Co ·~ 7\1. Ducomn 7 7'4 JHn Em SI'> •'I• Nlelwn B 1811'o 18"11 Siii. N Ale •21\lo 2111> • Vlpont Chem 1 ... -.,. Off 13 3 81111' kid S'.4 S:V. Du!"l•ln 0 •"• .,._ JollnS E F U lh 15'1• Nol'd$1r 781/• 29 Steak N S 111'1 9"' 9 Procl>emco In P4-'1• Off 12 S Bln:I Sons 7t 1• E.erth S<.I •'"' S Jostyn M U•t.o 13 Nortfl 1<9 12'4 IJ Slrwb Clo 23•1> 7S 10 Wash Sci Inds 1¥.-\14 Off 17 S BlkHI Pw :M:V. 3S>u Eostmt IS 1S:V. K.91ser St 1Cl1"4 :nv. Nws NIG 7'"° a ~ Et •"-•>u 11 Ballek Corp 3"--'h Off 11,8 Block DQ 1~ IV. Econ Lob 27~ 21"' K•lnr c 2 ?~ Nox•ll Cp tl:V. 17'.4 Syrc Sup IS'h H'h 12 Alaska Gold 2 -•1, Off 11 t BtueOI S ' 6V. EDS Nuc: 9'11. 10¥. Kaman C 11\4 11 O<Nn Dr 27'4 ?l'h Tolly Crp 2\.'J 77/9 13 DllryQueen St 3 -~ Olf 11 I 8MA CO 8 811> El Paso 10 10'1't Kum Tit ''"' S O<ean Oil 11'/• 11-1olo Tempeic 3SV• 36V. 14 Summl EnrQY '1>-1·16 Off ll 1 Bob Evns 231/• 24'1. El Nuc:el I> 61'> Kelly $« 12V• 1J Ot:Mn EM 9"" IOV. Taylor W 12'1'1 13 IS Greco Inc .OS 61/, -:V. Off 10 7 8oMfM 10'h 11 Ernersn 7\11 8V. Kempet" IJ.lh W4 OffSh Los 11'.4 11:V. lennant 23 U 16 Gen Hllfl Serv 2'1>-'I• Off 9 1 Boolll Np W\4 23'h Ene<oy c 4>11 SI/II l(evfl Ess 11~ 12¥. OollV'f M """' 17 Tiffany 61/) , 17 W5oln Pac Finl 711>-'" Off 'I ' Brenco I 18 19 Equ S&L 71/e 7~ Key Data 3"" •V.. Oglllb Nr SI ~ T-le Mf 91;, ,,_., 18 Olamondlld C 2"\lo • 14 Off 8 7 MUTUAL FUNDS NEW YORK HY Ven 9 ... 10.:M Stell Fd 1.37 9.15 Herilge 1.01 . .. ll'Com 2.17 3.10 Pion Fd 10.88 11. Pm Incl 2.18 N.L. (UPI) -Foll-1119 CG Fund 1.62 t .32 EDIE Sp lS.74 N.L. Horact U .lt 1S.•7 LUTHERAN aRO: Plonr II 9.2' 10. t Asso Fd 95 N.L. Is a llst of bid and CG lnc;F 7.7' 1.42 E9ret FCI 9.49 10.3? lmprt Q> 7.09 *7~ 8r0h Fd 9,09 9.93 PlllMd 9.tO 10.22 Invest 1.00 N.L. med prlCfl on Cap Pnv ~.'3 N.1.. Eflun Trt 12.•2 ... Imp Gtll S.80 \6..3' Bro Inc 8.42 t.20 PLI GRO 9.32 10.19 ~an S.S2 N.L. Mutual Funds as t.111 Shs 8.71 9.60 Ener9y 11.23 N.L. Inc 8ost xS.37 ••• &ro US X9.90 10.71 PLI Trn S.71 6.24 TEIH ROE FOS; 2'UO!ed by tile NASO Olel Inv 1 ... t .77 Falrlld 7.Q 1.12 Incl FAtn 2.37 ... MASS CO: .. lltlCE ROWE: Balont 15.'8 N.L. Inc. OIANNING Fm 0..rt 7.30 N.L. lnf4190n 7 S6 8.17 Fr•m 6.•1 7.09 Gn¥th t .8S N.t.. Capltl 7.0l N.L. l"UNOS: FEDllRATl!D GR : IU ln"9St Ul 10 71 lndp F 6.27 6.87 lncom 9;•2 N.L. Stoel< 11.oe N.L. Moftday A GnBd 1.99 1.,2 A LHdr 7.12 7.~ ln,,.rn G 4 ... N.L. Mus F 9.lS 10.15 Hw Er• 9.S8 N.L. S~ GROUf>: C>Kemr:,.r 8I lt7S A GCap 3.1>8 4.02 Empre 16.ts ... Inv Gvld 4,0 N.l.. MAU l'NCl.: Hw Hor 6.50 N.L. Wiii S t'1 S.9? B d AP A Gllnc S.72 6.?S «fl Emp U.06 ... Inv lndlt 1.11 N.L. MIT 9,2' 10.02 Pl'o Fd S.06 N.L. lncom 1 50 1.10 Adm Gw 3.21 ... A oven 8.SQ 9.2' l"IOEUTY ll'IV 8os •.32 10.19 MIG 1.61 9.21 PrO'fel Gt 6.5' 7.20 K•ITl> c 10,20 10.85 Adm Inc l.?O ••• Eqty Gr S.7S 6.21 CHIOU .. : INVl!ST MID 12.09 13.02 Prud SIP 1.36 9.14 Sr!Yt'llt 7.SJ l .1l Adm Ins • 44 , . • Fftd A"' S.6S 6.17 Bnd deb 1.96 1.70 OOUNS•L 111\FO 10, H 10,9S l"UTNAM Technl S.U •.Ja AcMWf" 3.10 3.3' Pfov fn J.27 a.s7 Captal 7.'7 1.71 Ctclam 7.1J 7.11 MCD 10."9 11.31 FUNDS: s..rver F 7.91 1.n Aetna Fd 6.•7 7.2' = FCI 9.69 10 . .0 Contr• t.SS N.L. Ctolt Sii 4.0t 4.4 MF9 1.t.6' IS.78 Con"9r t.St 10.4 iemp G 8.1• 8.97 A4tna In 1LS2 12.St AIR Oly Inc 1.00 N.L. INVEST OROUf>: 11\Atlwr 9.01 N.l . Equity l .IJ 1.99 Temp Iv 1.00 N.L. "'"'"'"° 1.1• N.L. ON: O.st .... •.. IDS Bncl S.31 S.SI Mid Am Ill II) OltOr9 11.SI n.se ran Car> 6.IO 1.39 AGt Fd i.• 3.t6 Fnd Bos s ... •.ss Equity ' 10.71 ... IOS Gtll •.tO ... Mi>MY M 1.00 N.L. Gr"Wlf> 1.'10 9.n Travl Eq • 62 9.U AllState 1.11 9.41 Ff'Oft Co 3.'6 3.71 EsteX 6.15 • . . 1os ICD •.n •.st Mony Fd 1.54 •.33 lncom 7.0B 7.U Tuoor H 10.•2 N.L. Alpha Fd t .11 N.L. $11Tr lls •.33 6.92 FUl'll 13.SS 14.79 DSPr 2.T9 3.IM MS8 Fd 1?.7S N.L. tnllfft 6,'7 7.2' 20tll CG 1.45 N.L. ""1 Blrtfl 10.00 10 ... Specl .... S.07 Pllrltn l.'7 t .IO M\11\ltl 1,00 1.70 Mii lln F 1.90 l.'3 Vista F l .S2 9,31 Cl 4.31 N.L. "'" Ecrtv 4.17 •.S7 o.m l"d 7.,st 1.21 Solem fl ,, .. 3.7• Stol:ll 15.93 17.11 MIF Fd 7.30 1,19 Voyag •••• 10.SO Unified 6 ... 1.sa AM l"UNOS 01_,: 0tA MNO 1110$: Trwnd 1'.0f 19.n Setect l .tt 9. 13 MIF Gf'O 3,11 l .•7 Aalr!l>W J.31 N.L. Uni~ '61 7.22 Am ilal •. 76 7,,, l.lbl1y 3.10 4.IM 'IMANCUU. Ver Pliy S.7' 6.29 ,,_.,... OtMlll AtMN ft .00 N.L. UNI..,,.. SU,VICE Arne• •. n •.61 fojlenllt 2.SJ 1.IS f'ttOGRAMS: Inv flltsl\ • . .sa s.ot l'llllh: At"9r9 F .03 ··~ OU .. : """' Inc 7.7• a.•7 S<lluS " $.si 6.IM Rn Oyn S.'4 N.L I I I: Nne'f 11.27 N.&... Woe Eq 7.02 1.61 8n:I s Iv 10.90 11.91 Am Miit 7.7S l .•7 IAL Rn ll'CI 3.SO N.L Gnwth 4.26 4.6' Gnrtll 3.9S •.2' Saloco G s.n S.19 Nlltl lllv S.IO 6,34 A SC-I S.21 s. " : Fin Inc s.tt N.L. !!l<C!ftl BS 3.• lncme 7.9' U8 SCUODl!R ,OS: Un CoP' uo 9.40 8nd FA tu• IS.JJ Conwr 1.01 8.7S tstFd ..,. t.40 \0.27 1ht Ut J.01 ... Mui Sfln It.at N.L. Intl FIWf 12.12 N.L. ""uN'1°"T11 I" "·'· l~.28 Cao,. A s.si '·°" Fund 1.66 ..... ,lltlT 1'rd Sii 11.:M n .39 Niii llndu l .•S N.1.. Mal Res 10.03 N.L. D ,UNOS: o.h Am J ... t.01 Ofwth •.•t t .et NVUTOM: l•ltl Fnd 20.9' 2UI MAT SllC ~OS: &Mane: 12.tt N.L. Accum S.U 6.0C • 111C Am 12.75 ,,,,, tncom 1.09 1.13 Ol5' I'd •.CM •• ,, I..,., Fllfld 5.10 N.L. 8alenc ) ·'° 1.31 Stv Com 1.1• N.L. 8nd Fd 6.S. 7." nv Am 11 ... 11.72 ~.:.. 11.S3 N.L. Grtfl F4 U• t .14 J P Gwth 1.11 1.12 8ond Sc' 4.09 4."6 SPleal 19 26 N.L. ~11 OW 1.t! 1.1>7 ... Prt lt,17 l),AJ W&..TH 1ncom >.u 7.11 Jenyt Fd U,17 N.L Olvldn 3.10 ).)9 Sbcl Uv •.09 ......... fnc '91 1.67 "" ito• •.u ··~ UST: SICK• ,, •.n 1.12 .Jomsln 11.'0 N.&... Prot Stlt S,27 5.76 Sl!CURITY POS: lncom • . .:i 10 SS .,,, M n.:n IU7 A .. 8 .., ·" 1st Mulll us N.L. JOMN HANCOCK: 1ncom • 13 ... , Eciui•r 2.92 '·'° ~lone S.31 S.'IO Nn Oftfl 4.18 4,$7 C 1.1J t,».. Wall '·" N.L. 8nd I'd 17 ... It.SS Stoel! 5' • * 7.06 lnWJ S 16 •.St ,,:.•"9d 4 ll 4.IO A1n IMln lzl Ill J.1t •.. Fdn Or 3.57 3.tO Grwtll S ... S.97 ~ •. ,. S,411 Ullr• F '·04 t..62 "'d SvcF l .U N.L Am llWIC l.• N.L, (l! (I) fl'OUNDUll SlQMI 7.27 7.tO NIW •NO Lil: Stnllnel,. 1.81 l .4t U~,,?s 7 SS N L, °' 2.00 t.H II (I) OllOUf>: ICHITONI!: Equity IUS 14 84 ~~""•ML~o·"oi~· .. U$Llll'I! 111u•N3'os'·5.1 8.27 N.L. Crwltt •.45 4,16 CUCt Ill lt.67 11.A> GtWtfl 7.60 I 116 ...-Ill : : '"" e.u •.oo rncom 10.1t 11.it °"' e2 11." 1t.11 1ncom u.1• "JA O>mst •.JO uo Ar>e11 F > o ''' ~llY ft 1.00 N.L. In gw Ut N.L. F /Wltuaf 7 9$ •··· Qlst 84 7.12 7.IO Side 12.70 13.26 EnlrPf.11 :·~ s.: ~t;: UO 1 44 QtWlll ~ f.ft In 6.01 N.L. "$oecll 1.• a.it Ont 1(1 "-'' 110 HEA Mt 7.66 ... ~N fit 1·n VALUI Ltl.f1t'u 1110 = ..... . c 10.s. II.ti , .. ~ .. Kutt OISt Kt ..,,, S.o.J ~fl 7.31 N.L. ,.. I ... .:w V•I l..nt ,:os1 S'.:1!" '::~ '.:J .-ruu. ~c"1 s.S7 u1 &:: ~ 't:~ 1 ::: i£i:;tct ::t ~:b Si/l..'1o4&.'·°' ~! ·~ hi Ui w"t ~ t.M t'1 °'"'': •. 5 ,,.., ~f~~ f:U l:ft ~~ m U: ,..., fw :~·:t ::t ~ ;~-~ lhl v"."1,c'i~ i:., i:~ Aucll• ,. 6..41 1.111 Ortkfl ft 1. 1.67 U$ Ov S t.~ •O.Jl .. ·n 3.to n ~ 6.70 lllCM1 ,.. · SAN~r: ua 0ttw F 1. t·" ""11"~ 1.,, -1.1s · . ~·!• 11 • 'i N.L. .!."1:.., ,~·~ ,n5 _, ... : s ., .,_.~•!·'J <I·~ Ootta T 2ltt .. :r. =:'-i tjf t.n LO fie t .•11ti! ':m '=M .n: :·•J ~~ ~~rj·O; ~ sl:n t::: = D t1t ho Ql 1tfs N~~ ~I~,: u~ Jf. kil1.'::ou~:'° I.II ~om~ t~ di HIV 5" l '.M t:'6 ~ 0 .Q ::~ 8LC °"' 1:t1 ,,,. ..,,,, .:,, N.L. llVNOI lNCfl g 1u• IUO Mbrft • • ... 1'v•~ ... 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Tu sday' Afternoon Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE • Model Law Seen . On Malpractice By SYLVIA PORTEil /us ol Jan. 1, a new Jaw will go into effect in Michigan which may. bocom~ the model for national legislation to end the spiral 10 medical malpractice> insurance costs -and thereby, to help curb med.icaJ C06ls for all of us. Even before tbe law is tested, close student8 ol lts\>rovislons roreca:.'t that Jt will make med.teal history, alter th e image of the medical profession, do away with the spec· Money's Worth tacles _of emoUonal trials before inexpert junes and the ~wardins of huge sums to patients which end up primarily in the lawyers• pockets. AT THE VERY LEAST, the prospect is for ••stabilizing malpractice premiums." says John F. Dodge, Detroit la".V>:er and _general counsel for Michigan's Physician's Cn.sis Committee -and that means the patient will benefit. (In Michigan, of the malpractice dollar, SS cents goes to the legal system, 23 cents to the patient, the balance to the in· s urance company. It's even worse in some other states.) The medical malpractice insurance crisis may bave slid oU tbe front pages recently, but do not be lulled. The resp~te is only temporary. Physicians are rebelling against the insurance charges, backing away from risking what might be life-saving procedures for fear o( inviting malpractice suits. Insurance companies have made it clear they detest the whole area of malpractice insurance. Juries continue to make financial awards that threaten to un- dermine tbe practice of medicine in the U.S. AS FOR US, THE patients, the estimate is we now can be paying an extra $2 to $3 per office visit because of the cos· ts of malpractice insurance. U surgery is involved, even greater insurance risk costs may be passed on to us. And famed heart-transplant surgeon Dr. Cbristiaan Barnard of South Africa also voices concern that U.S. sur· geons will hesitate to use new remedial surgery techniques (because of the malpractice suit threat) and this could slow down U.S. surgical progress against heart disease, lop· killer of all killer diseases in this country. The core of the new legislation -the importance of which obviously goes far beyond Michigan to touch the lives and pockets of all of us -is "binding contractual arbitra· lion" -basically, an arrangement under which the patient signs an arbitration agreement. While many states have voluntary arbitration, this is not frequently used. Under the Michigan law, a voluntary arbitrator will be selected to ex- amine the validity of a complaint against a doctor or hospital. WHAT MIGHT BE SOME of the results of the law? Cl) Awards need not be financial. a condition o( settle- ment necessary to a court jury system. Rather, an arbitrator might award surgery to remedy the patient's condition; or signal for convalescent care; or order a trust fund to continue for the life of the patient and then revert to the insuror. (2) A closer check will be made on the competency of physicians, giving the public the bonus of higher medical ef. ficiency. Lists of doctors involved in 10 or more malpractice suits over a period time are to be compiled; the appearance on these lists of doctors often involved in malpractice suits will trigger investigation. Slate medical regulations are be· ing tightened too to weed out incompetents and to protect competent doctors. (3) A decided speedup will occur in the handling and settling of malpractice suits. Newport Co111pany's Pro~uct in England Newport Pharmaceuticals International Inc. has an- nounced the completion of an agreement with the Boots Co. Ud., Nottingham, England, whereby Boots will market Newport's new anti-viral agent, lsoprinosine, in the United Kingdom. lsoprinosine. Boots was the deveioper of a new antirheum a tic drug, Motrin, and it operates the. largest retail pharmacy network in .the United Kingdom. Boots will h ave the responsibility for obtaining governmental approval to market Isoprinosine in the agreed territory. PToVJsions have also been made for a program of mutual technical cooperation between Boots and Newport. The agreement represents the culmination of many months of negotiation and a comprehensive analysis and evaluation b y Boots of Newport's extensive clinkal a nd laboratory data on BofA Forecasting ·'Shortage in '70s' SAN FRANCISCO CUP[) -The •'Go·Go 60s" have turned into the ••shortage 70s" for small business men, ac· cording to a report by the Bank of America. The report said the cash shortage was showing few signs of easing. and that owners of small enterprises are hardest hit by periods of economic uncertainty. BUT "TOO OFTEN these firms look for outside finan· cial help when many possibilities exist within their own operations for sources of additional cash," a summary of the report said. NIW YOIUC flll"ll '°' IOwf "9 ere Pf le n on I he New Yllf'll ~toc:t ea<l\A1199 S.le• N9t ~Al'.r_!._L..<IU C"9 Abbott '-IO 16 12 » . ACl'llld 1 60 • 24 3'1'1 + ~ AC-Cl• SO s 2S I -"" A&.11'\0r 04 ' ' 2-. "' Ad ... .,, 77b • • 7 .-. .-.S.Ms Mllll , S ,._ "°" Addt'Qrpi, I I t2 1'" ._ Ad\ll11w .140 , 20 1'1• Mtllel,I I 01 U O S :u-.. ._ MtneLI pf l . I '11'1+ 11'1 ~ lO .s It ........ •\11"11 lnCD 8 1S 3 "" Alf Pfd 10ll 1S U 61\lt .. -AlfCOlll(pl S 41 11'" .. 11, A J lllCIUtlrs 4 S '2 -"°" AIUone I 10 • II~ ""' •.• Ale C.t I ti 6 6 12~-Va Al•P p1 1.a .. z200 n + y, A.l•P pf ' "' • . z>O tO •.. 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Ben C9 I 2S 4 M 17 -"- BtnC.l>PI 21h • • ISO "JS -'Al 8enCpl4lO •• J .. +"" e.nc.DCJf ..... • i100 ..,,.. .. I/) 8en Sid Ml9 • M IVt-Ye 9enot8 17b 4 II Wt ••• Ber~tY Pho . IOS 2 .... + Ye Best Plfod<t n to ll -~ 8el1'1Slttl 2• S 27'1 JO~-V.. BIO 311111 ... II n S71i't • V.. 81.Kll&0.40U .. 21V•+ 'Vo BlelrJhn .32 6 I 4~+ .... 811u&LO IQ 4 1' 11~-\le Bl«llHR .to 10 .-IS"° •. BtueBell .IO I 46 's -Ve ~Bri.s • a 2'41 ••. BoelnQ .,. • ., tt\li .. "" Bohe<:AI'.\ .t.S 9 Ue 21 + Ye Boc*Mo ' 60 1 •1 ,, + "" Bonllll I.JO '. '" ,..... • •• These possibilities include "maximizing cash flow. pin- pointing trouble spots and trimming overhead costs," ac· cording to the summary. • 8oro w l.lS 10 ,. ltl"o+ .... Bonnan• In 4 4 1 •.. Bolt Ed2 .... t l4 '1'-+ \111 8os:1Epf I .•.. 110 llVt ••. &oslEOI 1.11 • • '7 1014 •• Brenlff .10 ' 14' 7"° • er-c .so 6 .~ 14"-"' &rlOOSS 1,60 1S 20 o-. -,.,_ Brit Mv I to IS ~ 67Yo-V. 8r'I• My pf l • 4 '4'111 .. 'n 9rlt"-f .• tZ S1 11'16 t' Vt 8tck~ GI 1 7 1' 21111 •• 8rVnO. I 72 , u " ... Br-1 Com ' s ,,. . "A fleet of trucks or company cars, for example, ' represents a large investment. If these vehicles are sold to a lea!ing company and then leased back, cash from the sale is released for working capital and tbe lessor becomes responsible for the upkeep." ACCORDJNG TO the report, "Economic forecasters predict that the current capital-credit crunch may plague bUAiness for some Ume ahead." The summary said a small businessman hoping to stay afloat should scrutinize coatJS. "with particular attention paid to payroll nnd expense acc0W1ts. telephone calls, and eqtnpment and supply costs.'' ••The ~st managers dig deep for gold buried wit.bin their companies," the report said. It noted, for instance, that a business itseU is a source of capital. ••A naM CRE DIT-granting poUcy coupled with control procedures for collttUons can retrieve needed capilal from ac-counl! receivable,'' the summary said. '"On the othar band, accounts payable can be turned to ndvantaae by selUng up def'eTTed payment schedules with supplle-n and taking odvantagc ot the normal lag between the Ume 1oods are received and payment ls made." In short, tbe summary sa.ld, businessmen "mwit tum to 1ood manaaement techniqu lo pull them throuah.'' f j llrOf'up I 10 11 17 11r .. -'16 8rn 51:1"' 20 I 16 SV)-lo\ llrl"trrlt 20 17 ).ft S'" Ye 8r11MWk .40 10 211 10 .... -11' 9rllStl w .<IO 1 1 10'h • ~ ITMoe J0t> SO IY,-V. 91Kynn E I I> 11 I '1 • I;. ~'(!'Iii "'' • • • ,..,, -v. 8Wd Co • .0 • .., '""-.... ludoet I lldll • . • .. l/'r ••• llulf:!Q l.2Ge • •I) 201/'r+ I llilooHW . 20 . • '4 I • . 9uflllrt4 l.M • • l lt\41 + V. l!lunlt,,_ .2'11 . • Si 3" . ""'" "' 111'1 • • s, '°"-" ""1111d 1.20 ,. 12 ltl"o-.... "'" .... tlll 11 ,. 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SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The Standard Oil Co. of Qdlfomia report· ed a "s1gniflcant" 011 and gas dIS· covery in lbe Mackenzie Delta. of Northern Canada. Standard said t.he well, drilled by Sun Oil Co., Ltd • as operator for flve 'leaseholders, uncove?"ed two produc· i.ng zones which nowoo natural gas at a combined rate or 31 million cubic feet a day. ., A 1• DAIL y PtlOT .· / .. . . / •' ...... ~· ...... ........ --~ , ... Warning: The Surgeon Gen eral Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dang erous to Your Health. · . • ..... , . . .. .. • - ·--~" ' . . . ~~:'. ·Marlboro LIGHTS LOWERED TAR & NICOTINE • ' ' t I I 7 I A PtJrse That Screams? A display of alarm handbags at local store ·brings mixed reactions. The purse, with built-in alarm, screams a warning when opened by a would-be thief. Store employes say handbag has brought more smiles than sales, however. I .. ! t . BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tuesday, December 9, 1975 81 . , ~. •' Greenhouses I Flourishing ( . By DENNIS McLELLAN Ottlle O.llr ~llotS..tf Green plants, too numerous to count, cascade over shelves in the small Costa Mesa living room. H anging ferns, potted palms and assorted greenery engulf the area in front of the window. "People who walk in always say it's like a jungle in here," says 19-year-old Llbda Anzel who began developing her green thumb two years ago. "1 'd have more if I had better lighting." Some call it part of the back-to- nature trend, an escape from a drab world or concrete and plastic. Other s see it as satisfy. ing a need to watch something grow. Whatever it is, one thing is cer· tain: more and more people are bringing the outdoors into their homes. It is rare today to enter a house or apartment that does not have at least one rem, pblloden· dron or Creeping Charley. "It's a plant world,'' says Paul Brecht, owner of Paul Brecht Orchid Co. in Costa Mesa. "U you walk into a house and there'sno foliage plants, yqu sense there's somethine lacking. GIFT IDEA "Instead of buying a bottle ol booie or a box of candy, many people now buy a nice plant as a hostess or thank you gilt. You'll find plants in the bedroom, bathroom, kitchen -any place where they can put them. They're a part of Uvlngnow." Brecht attributes the phenomenon; ln port, to the hip· pies of the 60s, who turned to arta and cralts and learned to ."take what you have and do someUUna wttb 1t. . . ''That whole generation helped bring this about,'' be said. Shop owners agree plants are popular because more people now are Ii ving in apartments and condominiums, which have little or no room for gardens. Plants also serve as inex· pensive room decorations. For as little as 59 cents or an average of $7.50, a person can add a touch of color and warmth to a bare while wall. NATURAL SETl'ING .. It's big with interior decorat· ing in homes and olfices, giving them more of a natural setting," says Jory Adam, indoor plant buyer !or Roger's Gardens in Newport Beach. "U I didn't have them in here, what would I have?" asks one young woman. ''Plants create a nice atmosphere. I like the feel· ing of it being alm06t like out- doors.'' A lot of people buy a fem or vine for their apartment to "keep the walls from coming in on them," believes Bill Simon, co. owner or the Plant PUsber in Costa Mesa. "It's a sensitivity and aware- ness toward living things," adds his partner Mike Ian. ..Since most apartments don't allow pets, the only lJvq thing )'OU could have would be a plant. By caring for it you create a partnership between you and another living thing.'' Sometimes too much care can be disastrous. Killing plants with kindness, shop owners say, is the biggest sin committed. OVERWATEllJNG :·Most people see the plant dy-ina and the flrtt thing they think ls lt needs more water," aa.va Mrs. Bag One for Christmas l ' ByJOOLSON Of&. O.llr l"lleUt.aff "That's the purse that screams when you open it," the woman said, pointing to a display of the newest item in handbags. "Are you kidding me'!" her son asked, a note of disbelief in his voice. She wasn't t easing. The alarm handbag has finall y reached the shelves or a local department store, where it seems to be br- inging more smiles than sales. In an hour's observation, little interest was shown and only one woman actually picked up one of the purses and looked in-side. . ~be reactions were mixed from people who were asked their oplDlon. "Weird!" a teenager exclaimed. "A pretty good idea," com· mented a middle-aged woman. "Oh, beautiful," another laughed. "It probably has its merits," one woman said. "It's an in· teresting idea." She said she would buy one if the price was re· asooable in comparison with other band bags. An older woman said she probably wouldn't be interested in one because "I'm not out and around that much." A youth pointed at the display and laughed. . (' store spokesman said that two dozen handbags were in the onginal order. As of several days ago, six had been sold , two of those to store employes. She said children bad been having a Jot of fun playing with them. The handbags come in two basic styles, the shoulder bag and Adam. ~·They'll saturate the poor thing. tJ Shop and nursery workers are available and willing to answer any questions or help solve any problems tha t arise, from where is the best location for the plant to insects and diseases. "We're like a physician/' says Richard Otsubo, co-owner of Dana Point Nursery. "People always come in with their pro- blems. They really don't have the background. "A lot of people buy plants and don't ask bow to take care of them. They com e back and ask, 'what happened? ' '· A cartoon tacked to the wall of one shop shows a butler holding a telephone up to a potted palm. "Mrs. Vanderpost wishes lo talk to you long distance/' he says. l PLANT EMOTION Whether or not talking to your plants does any good, the subject ha s produced nume rous believers and countless jokes since laboratory experiments several years ago indicated plants h ave emotions and respond to affection. . Some dismiss this theory, but feel by simply talking to the plant, the person is taking an in· lttest in it which can't help but mate it do better than one stuck in a corner and for gotten. "I think it bas some validity," says Mrs. Adam. "I think they can pick up vibrations of the way you feel about them. "Some people buy a plant thlnklne they're going to kill It. IC they have a negative altitude they don't do well with them." .. . ' double·handle style,' and are sold for $17. There are four basic colors and the material is vinyl. Two small batteries power the alarm system. whieh can be shut off with a tiny switch before the handbag is opened. The purses were designed with the eight million Americans in mind who are victimized annually by street robbers, a Sears spokes man said. They also are supposed to appeal to women who carry medicine or pills in their purses and have small children who might be tempted to open the bags. Research done before the handbags were produced showed that one o·Jt of every two women were favorable to the idea, but the local response showed a somewhat different picture. Perhaps Orange County women are waiting for the breakaway purse being marketed by F red Staup, a former engineering student. He got the idea for a thievery-proof purse when a female friend of his was the victim of a purse snatcher in Fl. Lauderdale. Staup's purse is designed so it .will break apart at any point with a strong pull, allowingthecontentstospillout. The purse snatcher will be left with nothing but a worthless cbWlk of purse, he said. "It's going to be the purse snatcher's worst enemy-and I think it'll be about 75 percent effective.•• Staup also believes the breakaway purse will prevent injµrJ ...... to the victim. Many are left, be said, with dislocated shouldeqOJ other injuries when the purse is wrenched from them. ·'1 His bags sell Crom $10.95 to $18.95 and hold up lo 10 pounds. While Staup's are available only by mail order, the version at Sears is just a telephone call away. It's one of the featured item s in the 1975 Christmas catalogue . Simon tells or a customer who told him she kept a Creeping Charley and a h amster in her daughter's room. The hamster died, he said, and within two weeks the plant, for no apparent reason, was dead. "It 's just fascinating," muses Simon. Fred Lang, a landscape architect who has taught classes in container gardening, feels the talking does more good for the person doing the speaking. "l think the best vibration is a little wind," he said, adding, "maybe when they talk to them lt 's a tittle hot wind.·' COMMUNICATION Several companies are offer- ing a more practical way to com- municate with your gr~nery. at the s ame lime elnninatina the .. Linda Anze/ tends some of the 50 plants that fill her Costa Mesa home~ She's one of many bringing the outdoors indoors and using plants for decorative purposes as well as joy of watching something grow. problem of overwat~. One, called the Plant Com· municator , clicks rapidly like a Geiger counter iC the plant is too moist. A shop owner reports a woman bought 24 or the devices. saying that took care of her Christmas shopping. With the proliferation"' shops and boutiques and the selling of plants at supermarkets and swap meets, some sellers see an over· saturated market and predict an end to the trend toward indoor gi-eenery. But others, like Brecht, wti<> believe a happy home is a home with plants ln it, see no end in sight. ''I can't think of a.nyt.b1nc more depnssiq than sitting in a home without a plarit ln it," beaqs. "It would~•P~&Oll." r 82 DAILY PILOT Tunday Deoember 9, tlr75 No Match ,--. - I I . I I • r . '. i . ' By ERMA BOMBECk 1be great Minnesota Fats, toe more than SO years a legend at the pool table, was de- feated recently in two games by a fourtb- grader from Houston wbo had to stand on tiptoes to reach the table. As the child leaned over the table. expos- ing the price tag on a new pair of yellow jeans, the old pro was heard to plead. ''Hey, kid. play me one more so I can get even." Poor Mr. Fats. He was ripped off by one of the oldest coo games going in the country today . . . the old demoraJ.ue-the-over-30· group-with·tbe-inoocent-kid·routine. I figured out a long time ago that this country is being in!iltrated by beings from another planet . • . small children who are really 149 years old and have the body of a six million dollar man. They're ever-ywhere. for Kids They slt around swanky tennis courts in a pair ot $1.98 tennis shoes with the strings knotted, holding a tennis racket made in ·Noeales and sucking on an ice cube. When they are invited to play they squint and ask, "What do you call this thing again?" The pros are amused and explain, "A ten· nis ratket. And you take it out o! the press before you play.·· The kid's performance is stunning. He giggles as his pudgy little bands cannot hold two tennis balls at the same lime, so he places one on the base line. He bas to be told where to stand and his form is somewhere between Buchwald and a bullfighter with bad eyes . After the warm·up, the personality of the kid changes. He scoops up the ball with the back of bis Coot. aces his opponent on every serve, runs around the court like a wood nymph and jumps the net to offer bis con- Halo Bestowed T. Duncan Stewart was select- ed as the 1976 Guardian Angel because of bis outstanding service to the community, much of which has been with children. The award was presented by the Harbor Key of the Child Guidance Center of Orange County. Stewart is a director of the 'Harbor Area Girls Club, served 1 on the Orange Empire Council of Boy Scouts, was founder and fi rst president of the South Coast Gun Club where he taught saiety to young hunters. A nolmist, he s pends much of his time _play10g with the Retrogres«Ve Five Plus Three, who have donated more than $20,000 to children's funds and hospitals. He also is a member of a tno that has played al St. Joseph Hospital on the day before Chnstmas for the last 18 years. Stew art has worked for ecology, spearheading the drive to procure Inspiration Point in Corona del Mar as a public park, and through his e fforts with the ,Chamber of Commerce, he led the planting of 500 trees along Coast H1ghway. He is a member of Mended Hearts. a group of heart surgery patients who work to help others on the road to physical and emo- -t1onal recovery after surgery. • Stewart is active in the YMCA Y's Men 's Club and is a deacon at Plymouth Congregational Church where be teaches Sunday School. He serves on the Board of Ap- peals of Newport Beach, is a · builder by profession and has won the Los Angeles Times and Lhe Good Hous ekeepmg House- of-the-year awards. Silence Broken ADVISES In the DAILY PILOT Ann Landers with their bodies. Moreover, children should be told that if anyone tries to get in- timate to report 1t to a parent at once. I know now that I was severely damaged by· those early sexual ex· periences. I know. too, that every day some in- nocent child is being ex- ploited in every state in the union. Please, Ann, print this letter and help open the eyes or both parents and children. It's a wonderful op- portunity to e ducate millions. Thank you. -A VICTIM DEAR FRIEND: You are the one who sbould be thanked. I hope every parent and child who re- ads th.is column will pay close attention. You didn't ask for any personal advice but I feel compelled to offer it. U' you haven't considered therapy to help resolv~ the problems created by YOUR early traumatic experiences, I hope you will do so Im mediately. -• I AT WIT'S END dolences and asks for a towel. It is roughly estimated that there are 275,000 of these sports midgets running around the country today. Oo ski slopes they challenge, •'Bet you a dollar I can race you to the ambulance at the bottom o! the saloon.'' "That's slalom," grins the pigeon, shak- ing his head. "You'reon." There are no laws on the books to protect the unsuspecting over-30s. Those ot you who have ever been busUed by a kid two feet tall into playing them at anything are . asked to band together and keep them out o! bowling alleys, pool halls. tennis courts, and ski slopes. J! we need a reason, how about the profane language they bear ••• by the adults they beat? Horoscope: Cancer Be Versatile WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Low-key ap- proach is best for now. Communication tangle will be corrected. You will get green light to pro- ceed with new project. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Be ready to ask questions -and receive answers. Conversely, you can also expcect to be a target for inquiries. GEMINI (May 21 • June 20): One "in com- mand" wants you to assume more responsibility. Know it and respond accordingly. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): What seems ob- vious also is "slippery." Means take nothing !or granted. For best results, be versatile. LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22): Be willing to revise, review. to tear down for purposes of reconstruc-tion. Involvement is featured. VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22): Accent on ability to come to terms with one whose opinions clash with your own. Do so without abandoning prin- ciples. LIBRA (Sept. 23 -Oct. 22): Light touch is best procedure. Be flexible, willing to listen. If recep- tive, someone could drop a pearl in your lap. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 -Nov. 21): Hold off on speculative investments. Neptune position makes you prey to wishful thinking where money lS concerned. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 -Dec. 21): What ap· pears to be a setback could rebound in your favor. One in position of authority is intrigued, very willmg to grant you any benefit of doubt. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan. 19): Finish as- signment, project. Relative who is aggressvive tests your principles . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 -Feb. 18): New approach to money situation is indicated -and beneficial. Friend in need may actually be one who is lean· ing, even whining. PISCES (Feb. 19 -March 20): If you bow too deep, you could cause key person to despair of your sincerity. Be true to yourself -adhere to principles. 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ANCIEMTeocx~OllMESE ~ FIGMENTS AS USVAl.1 I SHALL t'IRECf M'f ~RKS 10 'tt>O S1RAl6HT FRQlA "rnE 50001..~R-MAN 10 MAN--=--AS I PON'T 9a.JEVE IN °"'LKIN6' W.VN 10ANVONE! 1ME MASTER 085ERVES I JO~ ~\lER'5 NAME ..• i NANCY l MY BROKEN WALL PLASTER I I \ ~ ( LOOKS AWFUL. TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE I ACROSS 47 In 1 ttarn Y11terd1y's Puule Solved 1 fllc:cld m1nner 5 Author Frtn· 50 Provine• ell Brtt -··· 51 Oo without 10 Outer 52 ''Just······· ~rmen1 ou111tves" 14 Scent 58 Of reya 15 Hilo "Hil'' EO Aw1y from HI Rullliln tllr tlle wind 17 Electric 111 Go 1.irKMf oenmtor water eg1ln 19 Sodt loun· 64 Str1tum teln crHtion 65 lrteguler1y 20 Judged nottMd 21 Tumultuous 86 -·· 1vl1: mob1 Unique 23 lntcthte perlOn 28 Ced1r R1pid1 67 Poor 1etors: univeralty Informal 27 "Tht -····-68 Adulterated tnd Hit Dog" 69 Photogr1ph 'I I I S 8 0 I S E [ v £ H t: ~ E C , .. 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OJHEN l{O\J FIRSi ASKED ME TO Pl.A'( I OION'T 1<N0141 AA'l'TMIN6 A60UT IT •tcaatlc e Neiof\bof of lnfonNI Mo"'9 VIP 41 Ending with Fla. 29 Rtgional 54 Fan huvllv dim tnd rwv 7 09CIY diallct 66 Roman MISS PEACH DALLY Pt.I.QT DOOLEJ!S WORLD c .... ---------------. 50\\E MYS IT PO£SN'r PAV TC TRY TO CAflRY ON AC~llON! YAKHoW W*1'1ME 1ROCl8LE Wmt~ IS,MAX? DR. SMOCK GORDO HI~ ReA/l /!}JO 15 00/NG nlE RUMBA! $PLIT! MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS by Gus Arriola by RodcJer Bollen IS IT CF COUR6& rr IS! :. SAFE? T~~T Rt:XX HAS •.• IMMEMO~IAL. by Charles M. Set.ft ,......,....--~~~~~....,...:., NOW, 11M REAP<' TO 6ET ovr TMERE. AND Krc.::: Al?.OOND TME OL' H06Sl(1N ! BEEN UKET\-00" Sl~ETIME. ... 0 I t 1 \ \7 --~-··""--.,., .. . ...,_~~ THE GIRLS I --- I I "Of course tM outlook is depressing, but before you give up oa the wor1d completely, Martha. promise me you'll try buying a new bat .. by Mel DENNIS THE Ma.ACE 42 Mil. Intl 8 Nonie Vod 31 Removed en\Plf{>' ~ t Ototogllb• moistur• 57 Ntlg~bor ot 43 Adjult9d an concem9 32 Anilt"1 at1nd TurktY t~A, PE~~ YOtA'O GET Ofl..I IJETT'E.C AT HOME IF YOl.4'0 COOPE~AT£ wrrM YOIAI' PA~ENT~. tftelM 10 Beainlfte 33 Likuftn 58 TejM1h1I '4 Ft~ ltN~ 38 0lt9usted: 2 litl plent ovule 11 Pllying fttld word• 59 Move quickly 45 "-···-the 12 Strong lWld 39 Butlnas e2 Soggy thln9 Pipit'• Son" 13 Soeltl lnMOtt •ttblithment 63 Emptov • 0 { i Jc !O f DICK TRACY • 0 Cl 4) () 6 0 '1•1)N.R£.V.~.~M~StPP1tt; Mm1N~ WI™ MIS ~NWR lS DUMB.~ , ,_ OAILYPILOJ TuaSd&y, Decomber 9, 1V15 l:NFL Refs I to Use Instant Replays? NEW YORK (AP) -With re- ( ere es under fire !or con- troversial, game-decidLng calls that dampened one . team's playoff hopes and helped kill the chances of another, National Football League commissioner Pete Rozelle 'is looking more 5eriously at the use of instant replays. Tw o we e ks a g o , th e Washington Redskms saw a sure victory over St. Lows tum into a tie -and eventually mto a sud - ~-Oeath overtime loss -when the Cardinals got a dis puted touchdown on a fourth-down play in ~~final seconds of the fourth pen . Tha play -in wh.1ch Mel Gray caught the ball but was stripped of it before his feet touched the end zone turf spurred renewed demands by Washington coach George Allen that each game have an additional official, one with instant replay facilities to review questionable calls. Greatesi Year On Sunday, Buffalo was knocked out of the playoff pic- ture, losing 31 -21 to Miami. The Bills· chances of beating the Dolphins were hurt not only by Don Strock ·s two touchdown passes and one scoring run but by a call by bead linesman Jerry Bergman on an apparent fumble by Miami's Mercury Morris. The play was ruled no fumble -and when Buffalo's Pat Toomay hit Bergman as be tried to r~over the ball, the official hit the Bills' defensive end with .a l:>-yard penalty. Rozelle, asked about the possi- ble use of cameras to settle the controversies over such calls as these, said: "If there is a prac- tical way, if the mechanics can be resolved, we are not opposed to it." He said he will ask the league's Competition Committee to study the feasibility of instant-replay use and report to the league at its Durable Tarkenton Close to Record . ,• = BLOOMINGTON, Minn. <AP} J --Professional football's version ('_f the Georgia Peach is packing "'up all of the game's passing re- • ~ords for shipment to his home ~late, where many of baseball's ecords alre~y are enshrined. Francis As bury Tarkenton eeds only two touchdown passes o surpass the record of 290 held )by John Unatas. That record j~uld fall 'by next Sunday during "'"\tinnesota's game at Detroit. t The 35-year-old minister's son :.from Athens, Ga., throws the .!Way the original Georgia Peach, "vY Cobb, used to hit. { "Francis 1s going to set some i rds that never will be en," says Unitas, who spent ars establishing his brilliant rkenton already has sur- ed Unitas' completions mark by 58 this season, while ~ablishing a Minnesota record of 230 completions in a season with two games remaining. He has passed for 2,622 yards and 23 : touchdowns, while be ing in- : tercepted 11 times in 355 at- : tempts. : With 32 more passing attempts · -a mark be seems certain to re· acb in the next two games - Tarkenton will have thrown ' more passes than anyone else. : He remains 1,771 yar<h shy of Unitas' lifetime standard or • 40,239 yards passing. • Minnesota coach Bud Grant aays Tarkenton's 15th pro season Ar his best. "Francis is setting ~eer records while he is at the :f*lery top of his profession," he ~aid. "He has all the qualities of ~realness and ~nt~usiasm,_ ~ut ,rmost important is his durability. ,..Francis is always ready." FRAN TARKENTON suburb during the season and spend the orrseason in AUanta, where h e has engineered a mushrooming business. Tarkent~n. rapped a s a scrambler in his early years, has given respectability to that frenetic activity. Grant likes to s ay Tarkenton's elusive maneuvers "buy time" for the quarterbacks and the rtteivers. Tarkenton also has rushed for more yards than any other quarterback in the game's his - tory, with 3,627 yar<h on 008 car- ries. That averages to just less than six yards per run. "He's impossible to defense," said Green Bay middle linebacker Jim Carter. annual meeting next March in Coronado. Rozelle also said the use of ins- tant replay bad never seriously been considered by the NFL, although it bas been discussed brierty. Among the problems with using it, he said, are the following: -"You would baveto seethe play from many a ngles. meaning you would need several camera posit.tons." -"We'd probably have to in- stall our own eqwpment and we would probably need 10 lo 12 cameras in each s tadium." -"We would have to decide bow many times the device could be used in a game, whether it would cost a team a time out and who would study the replays and where he would be located." -"We would have to consider the time element -how long it would take to look at a sufficient number of camera angles to be satisfied you had accurately seen play." And, Rozelle said, cost factors of installing such a system and a s tudy of whether all NFL stadiums would have enough ('amera positions available would have to be considered. He said he believed it would be ,.very difficult to operate such a system on the field during a game. The alternative, he said. would be to locate an official in the stadium and give him access to replays from a number of cameras. When a disputed play arose, the officials on the field coald consult with the man in the stadium, who would view the replays and then give the men on the field his opinion. "We're not saying it's impossi- ble," Rozelle said. "But there are a lot or things to be con· s idered. What we want to do is in- vestigate them and then we'll s~e what can be done." In Sunday's game, Buffalo had fought back from a 21-0 deficit and trailed 24-21 in the fourth quarter. On second down, Morris appeared to fumble at the Miami 28 and Buf f~lo recovered. But Bergman ruled that the whistle had blown before the fumble, then be assessed the penalty against Toomay on the grounds that he had el bowed him. Ralph Wilson, owner of the Bills, said Bergman ''should be fired from the job and never al- lowed to work another game ... ll was a rotten call that cost our team a chance for the Super Bowl. I will not again send my team out to play a game that he's working." Toomay said he "saw the ball squirt out of Morris' grasp and I ran to cover it. The official was right in my way so 1 pushed him to get at the ball. He took his flag out and threw it. "He said I elbowed him ... It happened during the flow of play and he was in my path. I never heard of s uch a penalty - roughing an official -in my life." ~ Tarkenton never has missed an bFL game because of an injury. : He s till plays with the ex- :f.uberance of a 21-year-old, which ~he was when he passed for 1,997 ;. yards and 18 touchdowns in his ~rookie season . Readers' Hot Corner S After six stormy years under ~coach Norm Van Brocklin at ~ Minnesota, Tarkenton asked to tbe traded and spent five seasons with the New York Giants before being reacquired by the Vikings ~1972. Dear Mr. White: 1 with the two words above have got to be members of the Foun- tain Valley Gridiron Booster Club or a fan. U~IT•,..._• OAKLAND'S ALONZO THOMAS STOPS FRAN l YNCH. Sports in Brief TV Blackout Ban Extended 3 Years WASHINGTON -The Senate has approved and sent to the house a three-year extension or legislation prohibiting local television blackouts or sold out professional football, baseball, basketball. and hockey games. The house is e xpected to enact similar legislation before ad- journment, scheduled Dec. 19. The current law, enacted three years ago, expires Jan. 31. The measure, which was ap- proved in the Senate Monday by voice vote, would change the pre- s ent law to provide that no blackout can be imposed on post- season series and championship basketball, baseball, and hockey games if all seats are sold 24 hours in advance instead o{ the present 72 hours. The 72-hour rule remains in ef- fect for regular season games in all sports and for the football playoffs. Manker Star• HONOLULU -Reserve forwards Bob Manker and Ed Torres combined for 18 fll'St·half points, helping Hawaii surge to a 10&-88 victory over Weber Slate Monday night. Manker, who played two years ago at Orange Coast, and Torres teamed with 6-f oot-9 center Mel Werts to carry Hawaii to a 50-37 half-time lead and the Rainbows continued to draw away in the second half for their fourth vic- tory without a loss. Werts scored 18 points to pace a balanced Hawaii attack: Manker had 16, including four straight 20-foot jump shots in the ru-sthall. whipped Kjell Johansson of· Sweden 6· 1, 6·3 and Birger An- dersson of Sweden struggled past Sherwood Stewart, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4. Snoob Wins PEBBLE BEACH-Tamara Snooks of San Clemente, won the SFB Morse flight of the California women's amateur golf championships here over the weekend. The 16-year-old San Clemente High School student defeated Betty Bennett of Redding in the final round, 4-and-3. Kurpiel Drafted HOLLYWOOD, Fla. -The California Angels selected first baseman-Outfielder Ed Kurpiel of the Detroit organization in Monday's major leaguedraft. Kurpiel, 21 , batted .287 with 11 homers and 15 doubles for Evansville in the American As· sociatioo last year. . Giants Sold? SAN FRANCISCO -A Beverly Hills mortgage banking firm said · today the San Francisco Giants had indicated acceptance of its $10 million offer to purchase the team, but a club official termed the statement .. a bunch of baloney.'' Sweeney Named FRESNO -Former Washington State University football coach Jim Sweeney was named bead coach at tl"esno State University today. ·Oakland Defense Wins It • OAKLAND (AP) -The OakJand Raiders' defense rose to the occasion by knocking down Denver quarterbacks John Huf- nagel and Steve Ramsey all rug ht. "Te n s acks! Tha t 's what. makes my job easy -when the line is putting pressure on the quarterba cks." s aid rookie safe- ty Charles Phillips, who in- te rcepted three passes in the Raiders' 17·10 victory over the Broncos in a nationally televised game. Otis Sistrunk, from his de- fensive tackle position, led the charge on the Denver passers. He took part in five or the sacks which look some heat off the Oakland offense and helped the playoff-bound Raiders win their seventh straight National Foot- ball League Jl!ame. ''Our defen se always rises to the occasion," Phillips added. "But our offense is so potent that it was just a matt.er of time until we scored.'' The time s eemed interminable to Oakland fans, who did some booing during the 28-minute wail. The normally explosive offense run by quarterback Ken Stabler seemed to be working with a silencer. Denver was ahead J .o on Jim Turner 's IS.yard field goal which followed an Oakland fumble in the first pe riod. "They took almost everything a way from u s ." admitted Stabler , who completed j ust two or his first nine passes and suf - f e red two inte rc e ptions. Oakland's offensive efforts bad accounted for only 30 yards by late in the second quarter. But Horace Jones then sacked Hufnagel. making his first NFL start, at the Denver 21-yard line and the Raiders drove 44 yards after taking a short punt. Fred Biletnikorr shook loose to catch passes which gained 15 and 16 yards and Harold Hart ran two yards for the touchdown which sent Oakland ahead. In the third quarter, after Phillips' third interception against Hufnagel, the Raiders drove 48 yaros for anothe r touchdown, scored by Pete Banaszak on a one-yard run. That was about it offensively. Denver outgained Oakland by: 76 yards, 254 to 178, despite the 74 yards subtracted from the Bron- cos' total by the 10 sacks. ''Still, Oakland keeps on win- ning, and you can't knock suc- cess," said Broncos' coach John Ralston, whose team is 5-7 and aiming only for the runnerup spot behind the Raiders, 10-2, in the American Conference West. Ramsey threw a 33-yard pass to Haven Mos es to set up Fran Lynch's five-yard touchdown run in the final period and Denver cut the Oakland lead to 14-10 . Two killing pass interference calls against cornerback Lows Wright then hit Denver's de- fense. setting up George Blan- da 's 18-yard field goal with 2:21 left in the game. SCQRE BY QIJARTUS f'lntdowns Ru\tles·v•rd' "9SSl"9 Y•rd~ Return yanJi PHS<!\ Punts Fumbles-lost 3 0 0 0 1 I 1-10 l -17 STATISTICS ~ o .... 18 I!> 42·U7 ~100 107 78 lS 81 t1·21·C 7-It. 2 6-lt. 7 Q 1-() , ' "9NltlH Y•rds 7.99 6·M INDIVIDUAL LEAO£f11$ RUSHING -Denver, Ke'l'""'Orth 22·7&, Lyncl\ l1·66. 01k1end, Hart 1S·42, J . Ph1lllps 4·28. e.nun kn-n . llECEIVING -Oenvu, Odoms ).J9, Kt..->rth ).3', MoMts 2·51. 0.kl•nd, Blfetnlkoff ~77 8r•ncl\ 1·14. • PASSING -Denver, Hllinao@l (>.ts-1, 87 yards; Re~ey $-IHI, '4. Oakla nd, Stab* 1· 16-1, ts. ·•Football is a lot more f \ll\ ~!en you're on a winning team,'' dTarkenton. ~ He i9 . confident, open and polite, but guards his personal ~ and family privacy tenaciously. The Tarkentons live in a rented !(-home in a western Minneapolis In response to your article Nov. 19, about ''Mater Dei Vic- timized Once Again," well , you clearly haven't taken into con- sideration th a t the Angelus League "super" powers have no attendance areas, and can draw from anywhere, while the teams in the "m ediocre" Sunset League, and all other leagues take what they have and make the best of it. It think its an honor for the Fountain Valley players and coa('hes to go, and I think you should give them credit where it's deserved. I, along with most players I hav e spoken to throughout the Sunset League, fe-el that the Angelus League should not participate in the C.I.F. playoffs because of their recruiting methods. The ('Onfidence that most of us in the Boosters have for the up- coming Edison game can best be told by our prediction of the way the sports pages should (but won't) read the day after the game. EDISON DEFEATS F .V. Once again the Fountain Valley Barons lost the big one. As in many of the previous defeats over the years they were beaten by a well·coached alert team who executed to near perfection. The Barons did not seem up to the task as they appeared to be un- prepared, unorganized, confused and over all, poorly coached. Reitz to Gfant• HOLLYWOOD, Fla.-TbeSan Francisco Giants acquired third baseman Ken R.eitz from the St. Louis Cardinals Monday night for pitcher Pete Falcone in a straight player trade. BB Coach Quits re ~~~~~=!!~ eH COi~ bHll:ettMllt poll: ndl-1.0 f,tr• ti.Al,.._ U 214 1.tNrytenct H l,Ote '1. US" U l10 3.Mel'qWtte 2-0 UI 13. H. c.re. $4, J.O 737 •.H. C.rollne 3-0 m M K•ntlldry 0.1 141 S. IJCl..A J.1 SM IS. WHhlftlltOft •-O 7S • .. LoulsvU .. , .. S7' 16 Nn.ILVI .0 .. 1 ~--3 0 ,.. 17. Aullivrft 2-0 u a1Notr• O.IM '° s" It. Mlctll'J'lft M n •;cinc1-.c1 • o us tt.M-st. J.O S6 ,Attron• ..0 '" •Ml-I .. o 41 Mr. White: RON V ALLERCAMP Huntington Beach V' FRUSTRATED! DISGUSTED! Any of the many readers of your column who can associate It's a shame, but that's the way we feel. We also feel that with more accurate and honest report- ing over the year~ that we wouldn't have reached this low point. Thank you F.V. Boosters (not all> Nmta.e Mn• UPPSALA, Sweden -Ilie Nastase of Romania. who cap- tu red the M asters title in Stockholm Sunday, downed Swedish Davis Cupper Rolf Norberg 6-3, 7 ·5 in the Uppsala Open tennis tournament Monday night. Jn other matches. Ove Bengtson edied Fred McNair, 6-4, 7-6, WoJtlcek Fibak of Poland ·Tantru1ns to ·Cost Pro Tennis Stars STOCKHOLM, S"edim CAP) - ul~• of dl1cipltne. can')'illg es of from $50 to $5.000, and nhinly deallnl •itb un· portsmanllte conduct oo the e:-ourt, were a nnounced Monday the lntemaUonaJ .Proleulonal l'7"1"'-"' CounciJ, whkh control• ft1Je world pro circuit. 11uvwinl a racket or hittiftl or Id~ a ball out ol bounds in ..,er or appearlo1 cm court la pra1 .. ioul dnu can ~ a l•1•r f5t;. a1lns ob1ee11e •ancu~• or DJUial a bell at ol· . ~ 'f fidall. baU boys <W spectators will bring a levy of SD> a.ad bet- tina on a match or accepting a bribe will cost ~.ooo. The rules were announced ln a Jtatement iuued by Dertk Hardwin, president of the In· ternat.iooal Lawn Tennis Federa- tion. And although no names were mentioned by the council, Ila .ntoa eame a day after U.e Maten tournament here wbich w• woa by temperamttttaJ Ille N..CU. who w aa disqualified from b11 ~rat round·robin match with Art.bW' A•bo far down.lni . and arguing. Ashe was dis· Tbe new code is effective, Jan. qualified for walkinl off the 1. /uJy player who la asseseed court but was later awarded the more than $3,000 in fines in any matc:b by officials. 12·month period automaUcally A player now m~ be ftned will be suspended for 21 days .. $1 ,000 for abu1ln1 offtclala or The council will decide when the sptttaton, wal~ing df the court suspension beilnR. during a match or dod,. ~final Fi.netJ of $250 will be Imposed ceremony. A similar fine wW b-. for faiJW'e to st.a.rt a match wtth.J.n assessed any player "1bo ln the five minutes oT the scheduled opinJDo ol the umpire or l"f!feree time. witb an •ddJUonal 10 ia not tryln1 hJ1 bat. and ii tho minute delay co•tinf $750. piayer delays play be will be de-Also, ii a player acceptt money f aultecl. or l1fta ln e~chanae for tuaran- Flnet wur be taken out ot the teeing. tournament eppearance, pl•vert' p ... -e monev. bewW be fined.., IUV\ ~ ,,.. ,, ,. I , ~.-. \ Brummett R~igns Grid Post By ROGER CARLSON Of ... O.lly~ ... 518ft Roy Brummett has resigned bis post as varsity football coach at Huntington Beach High, the Daily Pilot bas leQrned ex- clusively. Brummett, who took over the reins at Huntington Beach four years ago, leaves with an overall mark of 10 wins, 26 losses. His team's best marks were 3-6 ill 1973 and th.ls past campaign. No successor bas been named. "After a lot or thought and personal discussion with my family and frlendr," says Brum- mett., .. l 've decided to reaip my / post. • "I !eel when a coach does not believe In -1ld wish to follow tb& leadership of the program f <W the betterment of tho program It's time to step down." Brummett, who was Hunt- ington Beach's quarterback in 1957 and '58, wut remain at the school in the aoclaJ acJmcc dt· partment. "We were alway• very close in iu.r games," saya Brummett, but for aome reuon we Ju.st couldn't get. over the hump. 'that &ltuation has ~en here for Ute pai~ 40 years. ROY BRUMMETT Outta at te "I do feel that we've bettered the football pro1ram, but it's of utmost lmportance foT youna athletes to experience success. Too, J've roached a point ln my Uf e when it'I Ume to ~ore new 41.rtction.tt. 1' • I TU!lday, December 9. 1975 OAIL Y PILOT 8ti , Estancia ·Vik.es ';r~p Mt11phy, 7465 Area I IS)' GLENN Wlil'l'E Coot, -Mike Bublor _..the ..., ... 1&1119111 put .., Ibo -Goff B .. ,.R•L .. Y~~!"" · main1ta1a in turolD1 tbi np asure ad.made a bllatat nm. It Grid Stars • I Hosts Mat ~ Tourney • DY D ... ~ -It WU arwnd. eut the llP to 7CMS ad Md the Restil Ute tbe Marlna baaketball Cook wu crasbini the boards ball. But Ulland ~ a ls PGWerboUHI of old. Tbe Vlkinp and comla• up with the ball. He Ollated shot and paued to Bran· ;-:.:~•· ;'u,'s-bad 18 rebooncta, 11 defensive, to nln1 who drove in for the Four Orange Coast area schools are amoog the 16·team field in the fourth annual Century Empi r e w r est ling tournament at Estancia Higb, which begins J'h· day at 3 and wrap.{ ~ with an eigbt-b_<t~r session Saturday. sun-· . , , ' I . ~ I r I sco ln• u out ~o wttb bl• 14 poln\I. Brannln1 clln~~·la1·in. ot the flnt ~all doldrwm to abel1 and Subler 1ot the tut break Br&iiiin1, under IMavy de-~by Hd•lb °'n Loi ~eJ~! rolling and M artna ripped the ftaalve pr•H ure, wound up wtth • Moa ay a emoon Ai& -neta for 27 Points in the third 29 polota, U comtna from the Beverb Hilla tournuu.nt. : period, hlttln110 of Uabota from dwit)t line. And Marina bad on-Tbt Vikes of coach Steve tbenoor. lysevmtunaoversintbl1ame. Popovich return here Wednesday Other flrat round results in· niaht at a to batUe the boat ~.;t;re W~S keen Passini involv· eluded Torrance'• '11-88 wtn OYer school, wbJcb dllpoaed ot La ;:t Mr~g and Tom Ugland Buena and Thousand Om• 'JO.SO Salle. a..ca. anna took the lead for good l'01UP over Serra Murphy bad led by a many u when Buhler bit a shot from the ....,... nei · seven at varioua Junetu.Ns Of the free throw line with 3:58 to go In "" " .. ......,fUJ .. ...... J J s t ." • '' s first half and wound up with a the qu~ then six seccms later =" ! : : : g::;. 30-28 ed1e at tntermlaslon as Braruu.ne canned a 13-footer to c:.. 1 •• 1 •• ....,_.. Marina bad trouble &etting lta of. make it 44...0. :=,. ,• ,; ; ;: = fense tosether and was beine • 1ben Dan Boldt befan·to uaert WlrrM 1 • s • I.Alie . , .,, •••• ,,., shutoffof ltsdefemlveboards. himself and. got ive points ..._ 2 '' 1 =:. However, it wu another story before the fr ame ended with ,....., 2.iuu• T....., t t J I t 1 I 4 • ' 't 1111 zus in the third period u all.CJF re-Marina in command, SHG. ._..,,-;:'" 14 ,. """4J turnee· Rieb Branning. Matt The bulge extended to 15-SZ ::-;:: • " v ...,. Corona To Play TEMPLE CITY- ·Undefeated Corocla del Mar llilb moves into the tint round of the Temple City Invitational basket· ball tournament aeainst South Hilla Wednesday afternoon in a 4: 30 Wf. Tbe Sea Kings of coach Tandy Gillis swept through Compton, Villa Park, Long Beach Millikan and Lynwood for the Westminster· Marina tiUe last week. Pacing the Sea Kings is 6-6 junior Alex Black, who bas scored at a 19. 7 clip and was named most valuable player at the Westminster· Marina tourney. Wednesday's pairings: Temple City Tournament Wednesday (Dec. It) 3-Miraleste vs South Pasadena 4:30-South Hills vs Corona del Mar 6 -La Canada vs Pioneer 7:30-Temple City vs Walnut Gompf Honored Sophomore Bill Gompf wu named moat valua- ble player on Laguna Beach Hiab'a varsity football team Monday ni1bt at the school's sports awards banquet. At Dana Jnlls Hlgh's cross country banquet it was lluaU' Boman cop- ping the moat valuable award. Special award win- ners: L...-.IMclll v~ MMt v.-.: em~:-.. ,,.,...,.: ,,... Of''"••; ~ ¥"-McC\11._...; Defeftslwe ,..... Awar4 Wl1u1er: e111 O•"'ltf; ic.,,.... •...i: --Wllft;-.. t ....... le!Mlt; te.110eR; L...,_el 919 YHr: 911t .N*lftl; llect: II h Y-:Ke'fMP'ttle. ......... MMt.VeNMet: J-69 ~I Cejltel11: TeffY MwtM; MMt ,,.,.. ,.._.: IMl'tl °"'· '""""-• Malt v ....... : ......... : a. 1e111: Matt McCUlleutlt; Mell ,,.,.. .,...,..: All• IC.a-•'-'• DMeMHta~CMillrJ Mnt Veh111t1e V•nltr: ._ ..,_; MHt VellMllte 9"fM;aw: Garr .1111111811; Mut 'VelMltte flretMlefl: erlefl Hanlt; ~ •~: ,..... 9rut1efM11; Miil •~ llftWM: 0111tMewe1~ ••Ten IUtl llN ....... Mtlt V.._.: .lwM LIMres; Miil ,.....,.., TerNMe Sft'l"lt; Miil ......... : ftkll......,_, ................... Mlile~: JIMlwetlelld. ·~ John Ol1wan1 bas been named Oran1e Coat Colle1e'1 Pirate of the Year for cro111 roun- try. 1'be honor ume at a recent awards dinner. Oilers Stumble, 54-47; Tars Fall in Overtime By ROGER CARLSON had a shot at overtaking two-point lead, but Bill ~'i:DMHI;b-'s'Friars Servile, pulling to within WilkeJ1500 tied it again served up the first upset ~~ ~!b:!i~S:~1:t;: ~~th a pair of free in the 47th annual Hunt-ball and Scott Weir con-Warren acain took tbe i!1ctalo1t_~eabcb Invtta-nected. lead on Jim Klunder's tion u.oket all tou.rn. But Servite's Rieb 21.at and 22nd points, but ment Monday night and ---------the Sailors bad their as a result the host Oilers T__. ... ,....._ chance to send it into are relegated to consola-:~:_"!.K~:~r._ another overtime. tioo action. The Friars broke open Wiseman-and Matt Tbe Sailors bad the a tight contest after ooe Struckhoff hit buckets to ball with 41 seconds left, quarter with a slowing widen the gap and the but they were unable to tempo and the effect of Oilers, despite a full penetrate the tough War- the tactic was disastrous court press that was do-ren zone and finally it for coach Elmer Combs' ing the job, were unable was a telegraphed pass usually speedy and to cuttheglr.pt essthan thatwasinterceptedthat smooth Oilers to the tune six points to their turned the tide. of Sf..47. own turno rs and mil-Warren's Jerry. The Joss puts Hunt-sedshots. Mc Cart by raced in 1 ton B e a c b in Coach Ken Ammann's downcourt with the steal Thursday's consolation Newport Harbor Sailors a nd scored with 10 game ag•inst winless fought Warren nose-to-seconds to go to put the Newport Harbor, which nose through regulation, game on ice for the drdpped an 81-77 over· tied at 75. Warren took a Bears. time verdict to Warren in the first game Monday atthe0i1ersgym. For Area Servile slfapped a 16- all score at the end of the fU'St period with a brief flurry to take a 23-18 lead with 5:59 left in the half when the Friars went to Hoop Results their stall, takinl Hunt-c.r-..':::~....-C:.tmTwe ingt.on Beach out of its ""'"' 10 '" en--... tl&bt zone defense. sw-on " mG1ims And altbougb the =:!:~, ~ ~'= Friars were unable to re-1111c11en cat o '"•'-0<:4M scwl119 sultt: LerMnt J. ally do anything of-5'lel11111,McCM11e11•.M111er•.T~ fensively, due to their V-'ts. own turnovers, the ~C:~~~~:11~:~ze •. Oilers nullified their Hetttlme:CdM,>s.1s. gains with ice cold shoot-.._..11"•1"' 0 •> u•> 1Cett11.t l'tutlnd not F m MSOft ing from the field. eowe111t1 " cu°"""'"' In the second period Hfflle11 <1'> c m Srtwrs the Oilers were l ·for-11 ::!~;,<1• : ~~~ from the field and for the FV -•no sulK: Stoll •. Men-" ni .... t the hosts tanned ,...,.,..,, '· .,...,._.'"'*' 2• ~ 6AA 2, •SsplflOU 1. CJDly 19 of 53 for 35.8 per-Helftlme: Fo1111te111ve1 .. .,,n-t1. cent. And it wasn't a ...... v .. ,.c•tcutvetlllde case of taking poor =:on : .,,,.:!: percentagesbots. ~~~, ~ ~~= Tbe Oilers were blow-SdWtlNI tt> o n1c.111Mn ing layups and insi~e MVM*'lflt,.: MeMJ.SGmnss Shots. T~ t .. --.er S,C.....1.~t.Mrewtllert. ..... .......... ....a-:MDllM'Vlete.~14. factor w m for Ihm· ._....._... miC11t•.-c11 tington Beach as the· Pr-.c-01 F cm-. Oilers were pllty ~ 18 Dt~ftJ ~ nu-:,:: miscues -muy Jut :...:...,,;, o w.,,,.., when it seemed Hunt· S.:::..,~ .,.11tt~'-: in1ton B1'acb might flldMf ._ 1te.,.. 1 • ., .... a. overcome its adversity. -=:.: aawclnMt. With 4:23 Jeft it ap. -.cw.4onc.,, ... ..,.,.. peared the Empire o.w...,.m ,. ua1Wff Lea cue representatives ~·err•• ~ 0~1~ * * * =.:· : ':::= """'"1~mt MO.._ ... :,_..,......, .. fl ,, .. l.Mlf"'97 ........ ll. 9 O t 18 HllNMtt MIWOtf,•tt. • ' s ts • s ' 11 fl I a ··~= ........... s • • w ......,et., ,. cma.. a 4 :t to -...... CSI F ,.,....._. a ' ' 1 ··~- MtriuQttWINeff se,ter CAI F <2•1Mufllfle• HMaOllUt F CUI~ Hotl'flfl<21 c Ct>wrooeum Gr.._ en G CISI ~-...,_ 1101 G OISNwly ._.,.,... sc.lflt wit: ltou •. Tlelll •, Mt..-r2,AlllreyJ. ... if\llM: HefflS-20. ~Cttt <•I V~ lllt!Nfld Cit F f6l , ..... '°" Ollweft <II F (l l Jec:ObS HellleU 1261 C (II "-Jct< Ramirel (6) G CJI S'*- Fltlft COi o <o> Ot!iOll FY K"erlftt Sllbs: Stitt 2. H....., '· '8stluot, Pollllretls 2. Halftime: Founl•lfl Veti..,. •tt. ........ ~Cft)CJllMetlrDel ~(II) ,.. (S)~ HMd(S) F W~ ,..Cl!, ,,., c cu c.tteNn SdlMidt(t) G f11~ DtQs.ts (12) G UOl ~Ottto. Mii tcerlfll SUit: Adl"'S !. MO -"'9 SUllll: Steel t. ~ 2. ~l. *"111M: Mltlllll Vlefe ft.16. """'""' ,., (.M) ......... ,..,_ QOI F CUIWeftMt Deflll-<61 F Cll O.,.VU ~flt) c (6) ... ley .,_ 40) G Cit hrtllrm ._.. ., 0 "' 9-'00 Hefftllille: Ulllwnlty, .. ,,. Nt11Mwan1n ._..(N)(A)llaect:eA ...... ~ (1S) F Oll M1tte. ~411) ft ........... .... OSI C (IUO!rry ........ Ult G CWtllpe Hers OSI G Clt Yi<k EsUIK .. teert119 IWS: ...._ 1, OfM1,McDMletst ..... .. Hetftl!M: lstlnde .... . Diiiie .... CtU 0.) Y.,.,., ,.._ Mltdewtt.c UOt F CllOele .,_ Wt F m CIY'ft ...._.nu c CU""-' .._(II) G ., • ..,_, ..-.Qt G ntJIMs .,.. tcerltlt "*'It .,......... •• ......... Wt9-l. HelftlflW: DeMHlttt. .. 11. • 1J l2 11 -.....CMt C .. ,..._.. .....,,........ ,,.,._Cl) 0 .. ,...... Pre s ...,,. tt 14 '1 n ..... Mllrm ctt G C61.... p oceer .....,.....,_n ,1 _. n J-11 ·He1eorlweM9:l!1.._.s. Sw111ttCM) .. ft ,, 0 • 0 ' 0 ' • 0 ' • s ' t • 4 S I • , 1 • • •• f1 9Mdll (0) .. " ,, ~ J •• ~ '. 1 ~ '. t .,...,..._ • t ) S.-Wrt J • ' l"V-"'eM: Herl9w4. VA•s•n ~:Hllltt ........ ~M-tl. ...... I~ *f ....,.......,, .. ._.. .. , ..... c.r->t . • ec..cm ,. CUT .................... teerf ...... If 6 MNllldlUU F (5) ......... ~t.-~'91:a. tt ~keCll C (2)........ . ~CNl'VAltMn u .-.a> o (1Sl0na .. ,... nu• Ck .._. _. Wsatt•:•. J WleeleC7> G .,,,_,. •t. 1 ~ tarifle M : """"" I. .._. .... _. .. ec• ltM~t Q "9.,..,.t.Jee.,es11,Me4NMIL ••••1tlt.~ ................ ,. Helf\lme: •aw&..2~11. .,. .. ""'" ~YAMITT • wMMllllle Mr> Ottcw-l•Mtr ...... l'ITOU•..., ~mt ~ ,.,..,..._ - • .Jee:ells(S) F H I ..,_ ............ ~--~ 4 s.MIQ) c (61 ...... llcb. s.-~ l.IRNPf(W) 0 Ct)..,._ ................. ·-·-• • SrltlteWt 0 C16)W ,_s:=!it.s.:u--..1 .Bobbie Smltb defeated Vlralnia O'Brien to cap- ture the pretldent'1 cup championship at Irvine Coast Country Club re· cently. In the semifinalis t fliibt Maraery Stocker deleated Dorothy Wrilht in the finals. Other r esults found · Nancy Newland defeat· ' illC Betty Witali1 tor the , vice president 'a rucht crown; Barbara Wood wi nnin1 over Rose Sleight in the director's ruebt; Dorothy Bowen toppi ng Charlene Holloway in the gov· ., ernor's fiight. ~ Jane Lenk won the f Irvine night with a win : over Lois Riddle. Low 1 qualifier for the event was Lucille Knudsen with a net 73. Jn the ron- solation flight winners included Marilyn Jones t (A), Margaret Monger ' (B ) and Livia Gammill <C>. Dorie Amen was the wiMer of a criss-cross eve nt with a 30 1h. Virginia O'Brien placed '"'• ) CHRIS DOVE FV OffenM DAVE WHITE OCC Offense MARK BURKE FV Oetenae RON LAMERTON OCC Defense second in A flight with------------------- 31 , followed by Bev Evans (31~) and Rose • -s Al)Bml• tOS Sleight (32'h). ~ " June Rushfort h was the B flight winner with 32Vz, followed by Maria Desti (33), Dorothy Wright (331Az) a nd Thelma Carlson (35). In C flight, Marilou Hoge boom was the win- ner with 27 YI. Others in- cluded Jean Albarian, Shirley Pobe and Ernestine Valdes C33'h), Shirley Arnold and Venetia Dort (34 > and Helene Larkin (35 ). ·Ann Hairston captured D flight with (29'h), followed by PtJ arjorie Vachon (32 ), and a tie between Irene Almquist, Sonya Kelley , Lillian Musich a nd J eanne Hurst at 34. In a least putts event, Thelma Garford and June Rushforth tied for first in A fli ght with 31 , followed by B ette ~tbcart (32), Nellita h.ifur and Jo Sheward at 33. Marion Skinner was the B flight victor with 31 . Others included Betty Henderson a nd Gloria Mallory at 32 with Jenda Horne and Jeanne Stom- baugbat$3. In C flight, Bea Fteebalm was the win- ner with 30, followed by Ernestine Valdes (31) and Helen Risley (32). Sonya Kelley won D ruaht with 30, f oUowed by Ruth Payne (33) and a tie at 34 between Irene Almquist, Anne Hairston and Inez Johnson . College Buketball Race Entries WEONE'.SOAY-'lhOAY Cltw, Tr eek Filt. Finl Post tl :O p.m. St lucu Finl ••u. U ••.•ct•04'1. .......... , .. ._IUT AACa -<t00y1rft. >~oldl & uo. Cl•lmlnv. Purw i1100. Cl•lmlnQ ~keSt600. 122 OendV'S Slt r (Ctr OOH I Ari.I PHI INlc-m11u Mal is'9 IMllCIMll I l'l•v ~wll• CACltirl llotn lo Rule IWtrCll Jtn 1..111 .. l.JHIY CKnlQPlll IErlt'I Gold (CNWtl Olllck GrHfl (Ortyer) Nt"'9Mr ITreesurtl Joyeus Ve lefltlM (8eflhl IN. Adtq\let• (~dote) Seto Treut>i. (Ptttlo) Tuff Son IMllClltli I CllfMOmon <Myt.1) Pevt Scfftett IG•n•l ~llSMoofl (H•rtl Pltflly FH I CSellersl Conwi°"""lrilng IStrtuul .. ., Ulno ILlllNml 119 llOMTN ttACIE -~ yarcn 2 year 1n OI$. Cl•lml"9. PurH $2400 c1.a1mtnQ 1 t9 Ptlce $7SOO 119 Knl9fll Filte lLli)fltn't I 111 Boy l1M9t (8rooksl 119 Oupe'sA.\terlsk (Mytul 119 BoklOUlncy COreyerl I 19 Tuft Ro IMorrl\) 11' Hally Kip (Guiel TNSwl !Morrison I "' Ctplurecl Enric~s IC•rdota) W¥Goi>Y ICierlnel 1..lnd<lll>dy IC•lll 119 112 ,,. "' m 119 119 1n "' "'' Ht NINTH ttACIE -UO y•rds J .,-eM 1n ~ & \IP. Cialmin9. Puru \l'IOO 1n ci.1m1nv Price uooo 119 OlelQe<t1 CPaQt) 119 Sir Dl<ke 11..ipfotml 122 HoSed~ ICrH~r) 1n Hlf.iutln cerooh> 122 L""1nlntW•lch IMort1Sl 112 "°'Y~l~I T* llD ttAC1! -l10 'terdl. '"""tNs & -.. O..mlftl. Pwse U.IOO. Cltlmlflt Pnc• SSlllO. Klllgftt et Gl«l' COfflt I l'leeUer1I (CttU Judt'slMn (Btflllst Mtft*tt• C8rllffs> ~·sJel lMylesl On Ille House IWerdl NUttTM ••c11 -uo.,.,cn.a,...,. ._ -lftns. Cl•ln1l119. Pllrae Sl100. Oelm4nt PY Ice SSOOO. "-Forty PYIMe IW.lch) V... lw P•I*» (1(11l911t I Trina's tlun•••I' CCr•99t• I SewtfltMnFI..-(CtrdoUI) KlfltNeptune a." 18rOOlls> lMllWrltfol <Clerlswl 81eCt1Cy11 (Trftcel '-8Clel 111terest <Strauss> ~•Rule IH•rll s..lft llow IGenal "' 122 '" 122 119 11• 119 '" ltt sun• •AC9 -• ,.,,.,, , ,..,. el& o.lml~ PvrM UIOO. Oelnll119 "'1a ..... 0. t.el Klflo <c:erdllle) O.Uttle5's <CrNotrl ClllMllii-• (Hartt o.i .... c-t (8afllllJ Ml• '1ft Ply <TrNwr• 1 a.-O..Oectr <Dreyer) -..-...r (Adlllrl ac.eArtllt <W•rdl JetM9rtl ILl!IMml SeMtt\I Krlltl' IHIHlll119lot1I ltt '" "' 122 119 "' "' "' llt llt UftNTH AAC• -<tOO Yard!. 3 YHt aids. AllOW_.. PllrM SMOO, Tiii Veflture. ~,...,., llYIN ADYANTAOU ou• 'AGlll onas UftleJMllUl11 (Adair) Nl9 Trlll11 <c.eu I .... ,..,.,1 Oust o..111 ICerdoiel ing allO a.m. , The host Eagles ~ or Estancia, Costa M~a and Corona del Mat He among Century LeaQJe teams, which alsQ in eludes Sunset League representative Ne~ Harbor, against six EOl pi re League teamti. Rancho Alamitos and Loara are also listed, ~ the E m pi r e Lea,g ~e setup, which does nOt UJ· elude Huntington Beacb. Tbe tourney is a round robin affair involving dual matches, with eaeh team !acing the other loop's eight represeh · tatives. Over 400 wrestlers, ate billed to compete in 2P3 matches, which includes varsity and junior varsi- ty competition. The E stan cia Hilb boosters club will raffle off a quarter of beef, plus o the r d oo r p rizes . LEASE FOROS.CHRYSLERS &ENWL MOTORS-AMC -FOREIGN CARS & TRUCKS lllEDIA TE llELWERY IOSTllODELS OPEN& CLOSED LEASES • THEODORE II I ~ ROBINS LEASING cb, 2096 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 642-0010 540-82l CALIFORNIA'S LARGE$T LAW SCHOOL WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF . LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY Olawan1 was aJ10 named captain wbile tbe SoUct Gold Gub award weal to Joe Koi.r. ,11 ....... s • ' _., ' ' ' SllN !:tl ,.... tt • w W OllMIOf'lflt M : ~ 4. s.Me /1M I. o.Nel:t !--!MeM~~W.~:U.~A~laf'lll~~....,,.~~-~~:::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;=:=:::;::;:;;;;;::;1 FUU Y ACCREDITED BY THE Sf.ATE BAR OF CALJFORNIA •. Hantlnlton Beach Jllo•a water polo teams .m be laoaond with • aporta award banquet tont1bt at vma Parlt Padflc Qub Houe ID Huntla1ton Beacb. ~·at'. lite la located m Brook••rat. aoatla of Adam a. 0 ............... SiMel •• • •• ts-M .... ., .. ., ........ " ~ Monareha Vie . llater Del Hi•h'• llanattbl bolt Wellan tonJ.1bt In non-leaaue '-btball, bqinnh'I at 1. GWC Hosts Foe • I ohnson & son l:t====I 55~of_ frieOOY family service 1 th.t yours mey nott COMPUTI OIAN•I COUNTY COYIU .. ll:dullllt ....... IMd. s.. o..-. ........ Vlof9, ............. a... .....9' ..... u. ... 2 MONTH TO MOtn'M llNfAL IASIS l NO DIPOSIT llOUIUI ON AIPIOYD ClllfT 4 ONLY J17,1t Pll MOtCTtl TOTAL COST ....... ,...., 5 tllW COMPACT llftT • an nv... •. y,a 6 ftNCI .uA .. ~ Al.$0 -•YAILAIU 7 .. '1 flB MAINT8WtCI Olf.\"'Gf (OUN n 11 ·\IHO'T fl l PHO'ff Cil nVIC'f "' OFFERS A PROGRAM OF FULL-TIME LAW STUDY .. TO BEGIN IN JANUARY WIJ'll OI PMONI PQI CAULOGUI 1111 North St.tw Col""9 FvUtrton, CA 92631 (714) 993-7600 AMY NOW FOi DAY, IVlNINC, OI WHl8I) CWSES HGCNNING JANU~Y 19, 197' S1,.,1v.~ ,•OG•Al>fS ArAtt..uLf A.T COO.OIHA.T! CAMfUS IN SAN OIEGO STUDUtft Mll&.I ~ ROllAUY INSU9 maNf &.GMll • ~OWID fOI YltiwG • • • p • .. .. OAILYPILOT Tuaciay, Oooember 9. 11175 Chemistry Lab Peril? Cancer-causing Chemicah Detected WASHINGTON (UPl) -Many students lo col- te1e or advanced high 1Scbool chem istry Jaboratorie.s may needlessly be exposed to cancer- caU&i.ng chemicals. the National Observer reports. The Dow Jon~ publication cl led results of a Kentucky survey in which 17 high schools and 23 colleges each reported having one or more of 13 dif· Ce rent care rnogens on band in chemistry labs. · sutt~ l.Mt ances of finding ca.rcino&ens in hlgb gchool or college chemistry labs, with few Ol' no restrictions on access mid use. J . Bradford Block who heads a mcdical- con.suJtant group from k entucky's Labor Depart-. ment, said of the Survt!y results: "We have no reason to believe Kentucky is unique. The same type of chemistry courses areoUered everywhere.•• THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT HAS ertabtished strict controls in industry for use or the ~ompounds. But ins pectors at one state university found three s uch chemicals -vinyl chloride, beta· napbthylamine and benzidine -sUting in jars, •·not locked up or given any special care." the weekly newspaper said. He said no one can "prove with finality that anybody bas ever gotten cancer as a result of ex· posure in a chemistry lab, and we can't prove they havenoL "UNDER NORMAL (CLASSROOM ) circumstances, exposure to these chemicals would be minimal compared with the exposure in industry that causes cancer." Block said. "But the point we·re trying to make is that there is no need for any exposure." It said the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration is C'00.5idering issuing a special .. hazard alert•• oo lhe situation lo regional offices and to 22 jurisdictions that have chosen to enforre federal regulations themselves. The solution may be to educate teachers about the dangers, officials said. "The biggest problem is that probably the vast maJority of chemistry in- structors aren't aware of this." said William D. Kelley of the American Conference of Governmen- tal lndustnaJ Hygienists. iii THE OBSERVER SAID MOSI' STATE and federal officials which it contacted were unaware of the Kentucky findings. But Arizona, Oregon, Washington state and Utah authorities reported " j J Starring Role Julie Christie will head the cast of ''Demon Seed," a -futuristic approach to the Gothic tale of beauty and the beast. She'll play a widow ·selected as a mate by a com- puter. Laguna Bea~h -Offers Census ·Taker Posts The city of Laguna Beach is seeking 40 persons to circulate census papers door-to-door. The circulator positions pay $2.35 an hour and the city needs to fill its work force as soon as possible. The census will begin Jan. 13 and continue through the end of the month. Application may be made through the city personnel office. Individual jobs will last from five to 10 days. Those applying s hould be 18 years of age and physically capable of extensive walking and climbing stairs. Terry Brandt, personnel officers said. Circulalors will woc.k about six hours a day and will work even- ings and weekends. Boards Name New Officers ' New officers for t he South Coast County Water District and the South Laguna Sanitary Dis- trict were elected during a joint. meeting of the boards of direc· tors. Thomas H. Brooks was reelect· ed president of the water board; P . Norman Anderson was elected vice p resident: Raymond C. Miller was elected se<:retary and Robert Bonh am was elected. secretary pro-tern. Harold E. Edwarm was elect - ed president of the sanitary board; Frederick E. Leak was elected vice president: Raymond C. Miller was elected secretary and Robert Bonham was elected secretary pro-tem . 'Unofficial' Coed, 15, Fights For School Paper SAN DIEGO (AP) -A defiant 15-year-old girt says some people in her hometown of Holtville eas t of El Centro "haven't changed much" for the better over the years. Lisa Pliscou. whose family has battled for rights, is suing in federal court to be allowed to publish an unofficial school newspaper. ''WE WILL NOT BE driven out •• said Lisa, whose suit asks $2.S million from the Holtville school distriet. About 20 years ago, she said, a young attorney was dragged into the desert outside Holtville and threatened with death for trying to improve farm labor condi- tions. That lawyer was identified by Miss Pliscou as Al Wirin, today a widely known Los Angeles at- torney for the American Civil Liberties Union. IN A SPEECH TO the local ACLU chapter, the girl said that "exeept for having en~ded an enormous flagpole from which flies a gargantuan American flag, Holtville people haven't changed much." She said her older brother. Lee, s ued the school board and changed a policy that kept him from running or voting for school office, joining a school club or Witch's Pet Owl to Go . BEYERL Y HILI.S (AP) -A lthough Babetta Lanzilli makes her living as a witch, her magic wasn't enough to influence a judge from ordering her to get rid of King Solomon, her pet owl. Judge Andrew Weise placed the self-proclaimed witch on 12 months proba- tion on the condition she keeps no live owls. But the woman. who pleaded guilty to harboring the owl, maintains that Kmg Solomon is necessary for her Sorcerer's Shop. playing in sports unless he Palm Sprmg• S bought a $5 stude nt body card. The brother, now a Yale University freshman. was elect· ed student body president at the Holtville school, but was denied the right to make a traditional commencement s peech when he was graduated as valedictorian. THE DISTRICT CHANGED another rule, Lisa said, when her father threatened to sue because Spanish-speaking students were forced to attend continuation school instead of high school. When the high school changed journalism advisers this year, Lisa was removed as assistant editor and a friend as the editor and were assigned a specifi c page each. They st arted up another paper, "The First Amendment,•• with help of the Quill and Scroll journalistic society, but were told that they were forbidden to sell advertis- ing. A COURT RULING denying the right to publish would be "a fine disregard of the Constitution on the eve of the nation's bicen-. t ennial of freedom," said Lisa Pliscou. SIGHTED SCUI'Cll, S4NKSAME RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (UPI) -There's sunken treasure in Guanabara Bay - 2,000 cases of bootleg Scotch whiskey. Crewmen aboard the Brazilian freighter "ltanage" lo5sed the whiskey overboard when police caught them tryGtg to smuggle it into Rio Harbor. authorities said. There were 2,442 botUes the crew didn't have time to throw overboard. Rules Manure Agains~ Law PALM SPRINGS (AP) -As if the smell and the flies weren't bad enough, now you also can get a $.500 fine or six months in jail for spreading manure on your lawn. The City Council voted to make the use of manure fertilizers a misdemeanor after scores of re- sidents complained of the smell and swarms of flies. THE PROBLEM ~become acute as lawns are bein g fertilized for new cro~ of winter rye grass. "We have to plant l awn grass here twice a year because of the heat," said Dep. City Clerk Judy Sumi ch. Actually, she said, the city bad a s imilar ordinance on the books for 60 years but accodentally swept it out with a bunch of archaic ordinances during a re- cent recodi!ication of munidpal laws. SINCE THEN, THE manw-e business bas been on the in· crease, city officials said. • 0 1 bate to get into brand names, but in effect the onus would be put back on the manufacturers of basically animal manure to come up with something else," said City Manager Don Blubaugh. RESIDENTS WHO fail to com- ply with the new ordinance will receive a visit from the city's three-man e nforcement team of the Department of Community Development and will be warned to avoid manure a t the next pJanting, said Mrs" Su.mich. ~opulation Projertion San Juan Backs Low Growth San Juan Capistrano city COUD· Cllmen support an alternative of. fend iD the Southeam Oraqe County Circulation &tidy which project. the lowest populat1oo erowth in the IOUtbern port.ion ol t.be eounty. Futare roads suiaeated tn ti f nored aJttt'D•UYe would •~el tbe popu laUon at about 700,000. BOids outlined In the three other alternatl•e• au•aHt future PoPUJation filwet ranlinl up to UJ mlll.lon peoPI•. ·m A PPUVING tM lourtll dm'D.un, COUM'llmm lolJowed Ule edYice olu..ir plM' Nl CCD- mission which said-the deletion of tbe need for additional "bigb cost transportation corridors" makes it the least costly aJtema1ive. · Tbe commission also cited the facta that the road.I in this altttnatiYe will be the most con- ducive tor eo11nrSLoo lo a tr&Mlt Amtrak Hike SAN FRANCISCO (UP}) Amtrak wUJ increase it. rail co.ch fare betwHn the Bay Area and Balre:ral1eld from $16.50 to Sl1 AOatarti.Da Dec. 15. program and it is ••most effective ln keeping development pressure olf of the large agricultural COO· centration ia the county" as reasoosrortheirsupport. OOPIES OF 1'RE dty11 resolu- tion favoring tbls alternatl\le will be~ to other area cities, coun- ~ supervisors and tbe Environ· mf':rtal Mana1emmt Ateocy. Tbe co unty Planning CommiJSion ia due to study lbc oltttnativa outlined in the study early next year. Pl&lU't«'S ar.ez- p ected to recommend one aJtttnaUvo for adoption by the· ~nilon lnluno. I • Prison D•ttt• Diplonta Dylan Concert l\fillS A.ids Convict Blasted From Wlre Services Folk singer Bob Dylan, who wrote a song about Rub.ln ••Hurriune., Carter. visited wilh the former middle.weight boxer now serving life t erms for three murders. Dylan, who appeared with singers Joan Baer:. Joal Mitchell and Roberta Flack, serenaded Carter and other inmates o! the New Jersey state correc- tiooal institution. Among the songs was "Hurricane:• a ballad LOS ANGELES CAP) -Gov . .Edmund Brown Jr. attacked college and university '· c redenUal m achines" Monday night and said they were cheapening the value of higher education. "~ more pe~le get degrees, it"~ting money. It's of less that tells the story ol Carter's trial, conviction and ) appeab for freedom and reflects Dylan's belief in ( State the fighter's mnocence. * ~~--~~~~-Former U S. Ambassador t o South Vietnam Frederick E. Nolting was slightly wounded in a bunting accident, Albemarle County (Va.) authorities reported. . A s heriff's departmftlt-spokesman scud stray shot peppered Nolting, 64, ~nth~ head, Qeck, ch~st and arms while he was bunting birds on a farm with three companions. Noltaog's companions f ired almost simultaneously when a hunting dog flushed a covey of birds, the spokesman said. * President Ford announced he was nominating W"dliam E . Greener. his No. 2 press spo~esma~, to be assistant secretary of Defense for pubhc affairs. Greener, so. wilJ succeed J oseph Laitin, who re· value," the 37 -year-old governor said m an un- usual combination de- bate and folk music con· cert. The 90-minute dis· cussion on "~ducation and Wi sdom" - sandwic h e d between halves of a J ames Taylor folk concert -was a rambling, philosophical discussion with the Democratic governor asking most of the ques· tions. signed. . . Greener ser ved 20 years an.the Air Force befort: SI her p be retiring as a lieutenant colonel. .. as ro * American soprano Shirley Verrett scored a n.ew LOS ANGELES (AP) h g -The county grand jury triumph at Milan's La Scala opera ouse, singrn will hear evidence next Lady MacBe th in Verdi's opera MacBeth for the month on the grim firsttimeinher career. Slasher killings that "Sh e was great," J spread terror through Renata Tebaldi, herself ( Skid Row and then into an opera s tar. said after PEOPLE h L theopeningperformance. ---------Hollywood, t e os An Italian critic said. Angeles Times reported "She was a splend id Lady today· MacBeth.Sheisagreatsinger,asplend1dactress No one has been and a real artist.'' charged with the series * of nine slayings over 21':! Muhammad All bas gone chicken -either fried months between Nov. crisp or barbecued. ember of 1974 ~ind last The world heavyweight boxing champion plans January. to open a fast-food restaur3:nt call~ Ali '~ Trol.lcy on C'.hlcago's South s.ide. It WlU specialize m chicken, 'l'otf'rs' Warned fi sh and French fnes. * . . SAN FRANCISCO Sen. John Stennis CD-Mich.), chairman or the· (A p) _ ca 1if0 rn i a Senate Armed S~rvices Committee, announced he Secretary or State March will seek r e-election_ ne~ ye._ar. . . Fong Eu warns that a."ly Ste~nis ~an~s sixth m Senate seniority and will out-of-city people voting be seeking his sixth term. this week in San Fran- St enn is, who sur_vived s~ cisco's mayoral runoff serious gunshot wounds an 1973 election are eligible for and gall bladder surgery this ,.. .. the slammer. year, said in a statement he was physically fit to continue. M o n d a y s h e * threatened a purge of A suit by Princess Ira San Francisco's entire Furstenberg for $2,000 a month J00.000-name voting ust i n alimony f r om wealthy and warned persons who Brazilian industrialist Fran-don't live here to cancel cisco "Baby" Pigoatari has their registrations and been rejected by the Brazilian stay away from the polls STENNIS Supreme Court. Thursday. Jf they do Princess Ira 35 daughter of Prince TassUo vote, she said s he will Furstenberg, and ~i~.atari. form~r inter~ational press to the fullest extent playboy, wer~ m~rned an 1~59 and d1v~rced m 1964. their prosecution. Pignatan paid the Italian-born pnncess $25,000 when the divorce was finalized and pajd $2,000 a month in alimony until 1966. She began Brazilian Che<>k Ball Set court action in 1967 to get the payments restored, but the unanimous court ruling upheld a lower court ·s decision against continuation of the pay- ments. LOS ANGELES CAP> -Bail has been set at $1 million for Richard . . * Keats, who a llegedly A tooth infection postponed a s~heduled ap-masterminded the theft pearance in Shawnee, Okla. by musical comedy of 18 checks from the city star Carol Channing. . . . . treasury last year. Organize rs of the affair said Miss Channing ' was forced to remain in Los Angeles and postpone The bail was set Mon· her appearance until Jan.10. day by Municipal Court Miss Channing's son is a cartoonist for the. J u d g e D i c k r a m Shawnee News-Star. · Tevrizan, who was asked * by Chief Deputy Dist. At-J ol en e Reae Lange, a ty. Stephen Trott to raise fertility drug baby and sole s ur• Keats' bail from $250,000 vivor of 10 children born lo her to $800,000. But the judge San J ose mother within 14 decided the figure set by months. celebrated h er firs t Trott was insufficient to birthday. insure Keats would ap-"Just h aving her here with pearfortrial. u s i s j ust about the best Christmas present we could ~ have," Mrs. Charlotte Lange, • ..-Aide Resi9n11 ZT, said. CHA,.N11u; J olene weighed one pound 15 ounces when she SACRAMEN'!O (AP) was born prematurely along with four brothers and -Paul Halvomk has re- a sister. Five of the·sextuplets died of respiratory signed as pov •. Edmund problems within afewdays. :Br~wn ~r. s as~1stant for .legislative affair s. Carl "Pappy"~ celebrated his 79t.b birth· ·Halvonik: 35. ~ai d · · b · 'Monday h e is "delight-day m Dallas wit 17 strippers. , ed" with the job but is "Pappy" eyeballed the bevy of curvy cuties as leaving lo devote more they brought out a cake sprouting so many candles time to bis family and itlooked like a refinery blaze. personal hfe. He said be "I'm flabbergasted." he said. "I'd like to ap· point a committee to help me blow this out. I'll be lucky if 1 get one of them." Dolsen owns three nightclubs and bas acted as a strippers' agent for many years Telegrams arrived from retired and still active Btrippers all acr oss the nation -Candy Barr, Chris CGlt and others. * David Grob and &oey Mitchell. the nation's best-known demolition workers. have been named honorary m embers of the National Association o{ Demolition Contr actors. Grob, Rhoda's husband in the "Rhoda .. television aeries, plays the owner of a New York Ci- ty demolition company, with Mitchell as his chief helper. The actors were bouored at an association luncheon. PUBLIC NOnCE PUBLIC NOTICE PIC'TITIOUS aUSINIH NA.Ml STATIMINT n. fvl !Owl "'I per-I a Ool no bll.tl • .. ,.,. Sadld1.-o Velfty COMl'Mt ~ lflO, n!Sl 4'..nture lAllfl, Mlt)Jon Vie ... CA'141S. ,..u1 IPYtnlt umed, mn •-tUl't '--· Mlaltn Vle)o. CA t2•t~. l'tlh ll\l~MU It Con0wl4"1 fly !In I~ cllvldUel. fllllll l'renk l.anwd Tiii• ........ '" ••• filed ""'"' , .. Oil<l"'Y cie.-.. Of1n91 C*inff en ~4,lt7J,, ..... llllbll---°'""•Coe« Diiiy PllGl, would remain at bis post for a few more weeks before returning to his Berkeley home. PUBLIC NOTICE S.UN• IOlt COU•T 0, THI! STATlOf'CALlllOltMIA POil TMl!C:OUNTYOftORANGC ... .... ., NOTICE 0, MIA•INGOft "ITITIOM POil "llOIATl Oft WILL AND POlt LlTTIRS TISTAMBNTARY ANO flOR AUTMOIUZAT ION TO AD• MIHllTlll UNO l lt TH I IMOf"l"Ol!NT ADMINISTltATIO.. Oft bTATH ACT ,,., ... ,. C.. '" .... , Est.It• of OAVIO ALFRID VAUQHA N , all• DAVI D A VAUOHAN, 0.CH~. llfOTICE IS HFR~8Y GIVEN 11-t RODNEY H. 81Ll.INGSLEY, •-•, ROOHl!Y BILLINGSLEY, 114tt 11'41d ...in e llf\IUon fer ProfMtt 114 Wiii end lw 1~ of U tttn T"t"'"'"'....,' Ind for 1111110r1nt\oft I• IClrnlllfltiw -• ttlt h dlPU, ..,,, Mmllllttrltlctl el E.utft Act (,.,.of)ete C4IOt ftl ft MQ) ~·to wtlkll 11 l'Mdt ~ f\lr1Nr pertl(ul'"' end 11\at I IW t ltne Ind pt-.. .. "'"""' "" Mint l\al llMll -... OKemlltr U. t'7S, at 9· JO e m, In tflt _,,_Of 0.CNN-M Ho. t ol Mid CM.W1, et 100 CJ vie C.ni.r Ori,. \lllt1t. In llWOt'°' ...,,. Ane. CellfornlL O.IM O.c.mller 4, 1'1S. WILLIAM 1.14 J()tt ... Col#l(y C1er- HU1tw1n, 1t IM IR, MAC DOMAl.O &MaAOI Aniw.tt .. Uw a ... strwt l',0. ... IPU ........... ""C.tlf~ftMJ Ttlr C7l41 '1Mal ~-I ~ ltw Bl&pat Mlrbtpl1c. on the Or-.. CONt DAILY PILOT ~CLASSIFIED ADS- Y04.I Con Sall It, r1nJ II. Troct. h With a Wo"' Ad 642-78 One CAI Servi<• Foti Credit ~y" Real&tate ••••••••••••••••••••••• ERRORS: Adnrtbff't lhould check their ads doily and report er- rors i~diatrly. Th• DAILY PILOT ouumeJ liability for the f irst fn. cornet inseriion only. Publisher's Notice: All real estate :id.,crtiscd in this newspa~r is s ub- je<.1. to the Federal F:ur Hous ing Act of 1968 which makes 1t illegal to advertise .. ;iny pre- ference, hm1tat10n. or d1scnminatJon hJsell on ral'e, color, rt'ligion, sex. or national origin, or an intention to make any such preferem·e. ltmil.:1· tion, or discrimination.•• This newspaper will not knowrngly a ccept any advertising for rea l estate which is in viola· tion of the Jaw. ------G~ral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sales Be9inners · No real estate hcl'nsc- nen•ssary-Call LPHoy Opfe r or Jim Tom . PERFORMANCE HEAi. F:STATE, 847-3584 or 846-3377 Sl.500 Mo ves you 1n. Wheeler ctealer s eller ~•II make fabulous deal to unload n e wly rE'- modelcd house m area of fmer properties. One<' an a hfct1me opporlumly. Hurry, call V62· 7788 KEY REALTORS ENGLISH EST A TE 2 STORY-VIEW PRICE SLASHED $43,950 WindinJ? roodw:iy leads to secluded dnvPwa:- amidst tm .. enng pines & Eucalyptus trees. Spiral inJ? sta1n:allc leads to private 2nd s tory t•n· trance ! La\ 1sh II\ 1ng room o._,e rlooks :-.ur- roundi11g ar l':•' l·'.ur o· ~t':Jll gourmd k 1tl'ht'111 DIOIOJ! ('Oll•f t.1111 1111•nl Sweeping ma'.'>l<•r hdrm retreat' Separate mom in·l:.iw quarters or gu1•st or maid room with bath 1 Worbhop! This hillt<1p t•stalc \'<111 he your:. Cor $-1500 total down or I i1 kr over ex1strng loan al $21~ per mun I h. !"or qui <'k <tppL lO SC(' call 847-6010. { l"fN Ill \J• 1t f ltJN ,,,,,,... 'I .[® THE REAL ESTATE RS XIS FOR XTRAS Beautiful Bluffs. :l bedroom condo. Free- standing that offer:.. 1111 usual privacy ;rnd 11u11 t -lar~e wra p-around patio for outdoor d1111n g & sunning. Fmesl qua lit v carp t' ts & d r a I"'~ throughout. A real un- usual value at $76,000. C.F. Colesworthv Realton 640·00~0 BIKE TO BEACH $36,950!! Trt•c lined s trcPI . Perfectly manic ure d landscape. Secluded en- try. r'ree flowmg floor plan. Formal dine. Coun- try kitchen overlooks secluded rear grounds. Home is u1rnraded m every way.~MUST SF:E TO BELIEVE. Take ad· vantage. Call 546-23t3. Of1N flt 9 •II~ fl/N 1, 11or N• P • [•;• MESAMORTH 4 Bedroom, 2 baths. fplc, complete-carpet1n~ lhruout. Drapes. Bllns. Dble gar. Covered patio. All in very good condi· tion. Reduced to $46,000. Roy McCordle Realtor 181 0 Newport Costa Mesa 548-7729 OLDIE ON R·2 Single family home .on oversized lol: walk lo Lido shops. Great area for year around Ii vitut ! ~.000 associated RP01t EAC:.-Rf Ill TOAS l OH W t•>'b"'' 6 II 1,,,1 OPPOITUMITY knocks often when you use n!11Ull·getU01 Dally Pilot <;Jual{led Ada to reach tho Oranie Coast mark~l Phone 642-5678 r,_ ............ •"'1 , tauu.11• "' --~ .,. ..... ,,-.ia. .. ttn ~ '9\lbl1"*' 0r • .,.. °*' Olll'y ....... ~1,t.•s.ms .....,,. _______ _ '1 .. I l • •••••••• • ••••••••••••• •••••. ••• •• • • • o ou1•1 o r -e Ge-Mrol I 002 HCM&SH For Sde 1House1 For Sa&e Hou1 , f r Sde I H F c: ...... I •••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ .......... !~~~ !:~! ...... ~ ... ~?.~~ ~~~! .......... ~?~~ :~~!'! .......... ~~~~ CHARL.IE! THIS ONE OOZES Really ! It oozes with Little Island c h a rm. It a lso m akes cents!. 3 bedroom s plus a very livable guest room and 52 feet of prime waterfront including a pier and dock. Oh, there're t he shingled exterior , 3 fireplaces. absolutely darling li ving room antl 3 patios. It •s owned b y a leading architect and his wife, an interior de- signer. A listing of Barb Hutchings. U~l()Ut: t1()Mf:S : REAL TORS·: 675-6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar GHieral I 002 General 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FHA/VA ESLEY N ~YLOR CO. EALTOH.S since lH46 'LINDA ISLE-SUPEA ElEGAMT F.xquisite NEW 5 BR French Tradi· lion a I w I lH• a uti ful watt"r v icw. Pier /slip for lge boat. Fam rm, lge. play rm. formal OH., pool &5112 bas. 76LINDA ISLE OR. DAILYl-5 21 I I Smt Joacpn Hillt Rood NEWPORT CEHTER, N.I. 644-4910 . I GeMral I 002 Gftltral 1002 ······~················ ·····•···•·•·••·••··••• WATERFRONT WITH SLIP Private beach, slip & community are plus features of this large 2 bdrm. home with TWO large family rooms & dining room. $135,000. BAY & BEACH REALTY $39,950 P I u s h c a r p e t i n g • OUR 26tt. YEAR 675-3000. IOOKJNG for a GREAT BUY! Wtll, Charlie, NEW EU. ASSOCIATES has 'em. HOW ABOUT a Su per Laguna Art Call.-ry A real money mill. Owner will seU and leue back with terrific p rohtll to buyer . $175,000. HOW ABOUT a 7000 f\ butld1n~ tn downtown Laguna. ~ acre o( land. Lots of parking. Long term least:. H O W ABOU T a prestigious estate in Laguna's lovely Temple H i lls. Over size lot, beautirully landscaped li.> d egree breathtalong ocean view . 3 large bedrooms. M ammoth living and dining r ooms Den. S~per lntchen. 2 patios. 2 l a r ge view decks . All t his for $125,000. Great terms Owner MUST SELL. N EL\.. Associates • REAL ESTAT E •. INVESTMEr~T S CALL 494-6594 )/J mass1 ve stone fi rep I a cc !!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~-111!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ and corner location are HOW ABOUT a luxurious Gen~ral I 002 condominium. Unique in featured in this prime 3 General I 002 bt'<iroom. 2 ba th westsidc •••••. •••••• ••••••••• •• DOVER SHORES home. Lots of trt•es. beautifully upg raderi and no down to vets. Call 545-8424. Asso~iated South Coast Brokers 1' h r <' e e r a <' k I 1 n J! i-----------r1replac•es proclaim it's Christmas! Move in for the llolu.lays. Classic col· umns. formal entry. llv- i njl; & tl1nins: r oom s. Paneled family roo m, four big bedrooms. 31 ~ baths. Owner mo\. ing East. COLE OF NEWPORT **DUPLEX** Steps lo bay & park & shopping: nt>\\ ly decor duple:<; bar,l!am priced at $64 ,500. Seller may help fin.inc<'. Balboa Bay Prop. Realtors * 675-7060* REALTORS ,_ _____ _ 3BEOROOM GINO DOWN Sl,200 Total c·;ish movt.•s you in Lh1s 1·harmmc :J b d r m h o m t.• w 1 t h fireplace·. lots of panel. qwct stn•t•L ror 1·h1ldren near M·hool., hl.'al'h, & major :.ho11p1n.I! l'Cnter . \'els takt.• ad\ antagt' Call 96J-G767 [~ . , THE REAL ESTATERS ••• •• •••• • • ••••••• ••• •• Laguna. 2 bedroom s, 21~ Ow ..... ER'S bath s. 2 fi repl a ces. " Maginficent ocean view. PRIDE T HIS WO N 'T w A I T . 0 1.'IU X<' duplex, S. or $85,000. h1ghw:iy in Old Corona HOW ABOUT a Coastal d t' I M Jr· La r Jt l' 3 · Villa in South Laguna . bt.•droom units. Either Almost on water's edge. unit delq~htful for Remode l ed a n d owncrc; Call for an ap· redecorated to insure pomtment comfort, charm. Beam Call 675·7225 ceilings -M assive C.IU US '09' A. ,,llU e.st1•AU. '?E YALU£ \iALLEY REALTY fireplace. Professionally landscaped, huge patio. Walle to beach. GUEST UN I T. O wn e r wi l l finance. $106,000. A DEAG ENTERPRISES CO. 4 BDRM BEAUTY HOW A BOUT 10 units. 2.515 F.. Coast llwy 675-5511 h Prime Laguna corner. DOVER SHORES I.gt' fam omr on quiet ---------•I 0 ff Ices. apt s. X l n l Quiet e legance. F:nter strec·t with l ha, tomry fQURPLEX parking no v acan c y. MESAVERDE through t he ga t ed frplr, hug(' 1<1t & li.:l· POOL courtyard. view the pool yard. Offerl'd a l l;1st yrs $215,000. and lovely large Y~m.l pntt• of $42,500. Our <'X· $59 950 .,....,~ .. ,..~_. •• Well located 3·bedroom, 1 I t 1;•1; 771 t •J through 2-story windows <' usivr is mg. ., · · Th d 2·balh with sparkling of the livin" room and Open E ves ese brea and bull<'r 2 l'-'~1!!11-~~~~· heated & filtered pool. .. b<><lroom units reprt-scnt B1i:: lot w1Lh boa t or open gall<'ry. Large -::-~· ;1 great mvcstmt•nt op· t railer s toragt' P riced mas t c r s u 1 1 e w i L h ~1~* ~ I l'l(lflunity Lorated just for qwck sale at $57,000. 5 e Par ale s tud Y · 4 ' ~ Y0 north of South Coast with an assumabll' loan. bedr ooms-TV room · '· _,;,._!_ l'la1,a . Wa lk to all shop-c II kl 556 2660 pool-side dining room-so __ ~----••• ping, As:.ume existing a qwc Y. · ··-much more $225.000 ·!p SELECT call 642-5200 for appoint· ASSUME VA LOAN 71 2'' v A loan RTIES menllosee. $25,700 640-6161 PROPE PETE BARRETT Formal entr~ tn hu,i:c h v· ;. mg room with f1r(•pla('t!, ~REEMBROOK -REALTY-gourmet i..1trhrn o\'er . GIA.-.T :642·5200 675·4060 lookinJ? «OH'rt•d patio S BR + POOL ~~~~~~~~.,....I Total month Iv pa~ mt•nt + BEACH r-S260 per month lhkl-to SACRIFICE SHADOW RUH ~~6;~· Hurr y ' Cftlt ABANDO.-.ED .'Plan#41 / , , 1• PROBATE ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. hvinf! room with noor to 3 Bathrooms ~ Hard to find "f"' plan. In ceiling fireplace & 18' 3 Car garage 1 early bluffs on secluded I"\::>::> U \.. I Cl U: ::> • REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS CALL 494 ·6594 HOW ABOUT Fantasltc Laguna income corner. Great commercial building s ite, plus 2 choice r e ntal units $152.000. HOW ABOUT 9 choice shops on Coast Hwy. Laguna. OWNER MUST SAC R IF ICE. Great ter ms. Prepaid interest. ni.>,ooo. Formal entry. Sunken 4 Bedrooma I ~ REDUCED PRICE vaulted ceilings. Open 2Yearsnew _ . s lrc•el. L o('ated on gallery & library. Enter-With many u pgrades, in-beaut1rut private green HOW ABOUT 1.4 Acres · d 1· ht l b eluding a Microwave belt Pnc(•<1 at $68 500 t 1 OCEAN tamers e I ~ we ar. oven. seltin" by app01nl-0111..1 THE BLUFF . ,. spec acu ar ~ HuJ?e family part y room ,.. n and open to offers. Call FRONT PROPERTY. 5 adjoins terrace thru wall ment only. Call Now! View. View. View 673·8550. Re ntal units. Income F I 839-1710 . · ''"t" "1 ~·11 ' 1 ' '1 '·'''' now. Great appre"1·a u·on. or g I ass. or ma REX L. HODGES 2 bedrooms. 2 baths <.:on· ~ ... separate dininf! room. RKl\LTY dominiu m . F1n•pl:1< t'. [~ $375,000. Large ga r den view, __________ family room. tilt' entry kitchen with t'atmg area Custom carpl'ling and HOW ABOUT a gr eat Two separate mas t er drapes. DeriHa tor 's Laguna Charm home on suites 4 Baths Sweeping A Great wallpaper throughout. __________ Cliff Drive near town. stair:. to massi\'C bonus Separate laundrv room $55,900 beach. P lus l ot for 2 room & more bedroom Change of Place Two enrl"S,'l'd patios. one large additional u nits. · S f r 1 " Lovely J yr old Mesa $l 000 s wtes. 3700 q . t. o ux· custom bnc·kt•d. 2 car Verde horn<' 3 BR. 2 Bi' 06, · H 1 L'as te m s r See this 4 bedroom, I.,, ' ury. urry ·"' · Y r · h garage, t•lectri<' door w /cathedral ceilings, Call 963·7881. ~!~n P~~:~e~~~~geto a~ open<'r. s~1 mm1nJ? pool patio kit & corner lot. HOW ABOUT MONEY Ol'IN1110 .11uo.-v1ofu1<1' around th e l'Ornt?r. Low mamt yard w /lge MAKING M OTELS -[~ IM1'-il~~N ~~~~ .. 0~~U~ec~~:~ Jacu7.71 & Saun::i. patio & frwt trees. Call 0 n e 1 2 u n it San ,, BY OWllll...IER us for comp! details Clem ente. $165,000. One pool ' Great Easts1dt' f"'lll San Diego Area 34 units location. N ear all l8724 546-5880. pluslbrowoer apt. schools.ONLY $.52,900. STEPS TO BEACH 546-4141 Maplewood Ln HOW A BOUT terririr HUNTINGTON BEACfl 3000 sq. rt. ART CF.NT ER ~ 3·BR. 2-ba , bui l l tns +stone frplc. Newly painted big lot w /dbl gar. Real sharp and only COATS& WALLACE f,62,500. REAL ESTATE, INC. JACOBS REALTY ~~~~6~7_5·_66_7_0~~~W~a_nl_A_d_s~~C_a_ll_64_2·_56_7_81 GNeral I 002 G.-ral I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• mac nab I Irvine realty MUST SEE THIS SftADA Steps to beach & clubhouse. Gre~t home for entertaining. Lovely pat10 w /refl ect ion pool. 4 bedrooms +huge family room & 1~. kitchen. Bit-of-a-view. $159,500. Lynne Rothell 644-6200. (J67) 642-1235 644-&200 to1 DcMlf Dri\09 1'44 MllCN11141f Nwpof1 le.di, c.likwnil t2"3 GeMf'Cll . . I 0021G..wrol I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ~·~ ·'° TARRELUW!ll2!!§. rn .. . 1926-1976 4 BEDROOM-$.18.500: Fantastic · savings. Needs work. Ranch .styled home. Lots of trees ror pnvacy! can for complete details! $15,000-GI & ALL TERMS :. 4 bedroom bome. F1agstone patio, brick BBQ. Room f oc your boat & · trailer. Has just been reduced , owner must sell! 540.1720 Ztll I lu bur .,4 _. ~ ... r!iO....,. llw ""*~a.,.; 4 •• • . - - ,, Off Ellis, down Ch<ipc•l1.-. ...... ._ ______ + 1800 ft house'. Lots of Lane between Be;H·h ---parking. LEASE al $ra>G Blvd & Magnoh.1 GI .-.o oow.-. month. 968 ·42CJJ ~~ ~~-2STORY $28,500 WALK TO SURF Pricc•d at government W"'~il_!19i!!"~-----­appraisel Prime r e- l'V EL\.. Associates Adult Condo • REALEST A Tt INVESTMENTS - rAI I .&QA.CC.QA 3 &-droom, 11':> ba, extra Ige rooms, OW, pnvate patio. complet<'IY re· furbished. As little as $1425down. s i dent i a I beac h neighborhood. Elegance with a continenta l ac- cent. Tiled <'nlry. Stately Jiving room w i t h fir eplace. Pub typel•illlliiiilliim ... Maiijlli6 ... • J?Ourmet kitchen . CALL NOW R36·4206 or835-1532 VILLAGE Forma l d111e. Gracious HOW ABOUT LAGUNA fam1lv room with crack!-RENTALS by Laguna's m~ f1r<'plac:-e. Command· First rental office. . inJ? vie w of g rounds. REAL ESTATE SMALL MOTEL Choice location 1n San Clemente. J2 Units near freeway. $165.000. lfugc master retreat OCEANFRONT 2 br .• 2 Secluded children & ba. apa rt m ent w / 2 guest suites. Own<'r f1replac<'s fo r qu1 c l trans fe rred. Anxious! adults. Enclosed garage. Call 963-7881 . f . ~ f.J If C/ • f /'VEUJEL\.. Associates UG.UM.A HACH 4'4·H'4 Kl~,\l.TOllS 644-7270 VIEWVIEW! ~Immaculate Lusk 4 bedroom. rt1J family room, dining room home. N ew off-white c arpe t s , mirrored wall in dining room - enterta in around your beautiful pool & jacuu i. You must see to appreciate. $119,900. 1a2a E. toast Highway, Corono dcl Mor NT llll IOlll\ lol UY111$ '"""'" "' , ..... , ..... , .,. .. ot ""' H fl'l411 Ill 1• •4110- SPACIOUS 1 br . condom inium on Cli ff Drive , rum. C'lr unrurn. View of Main Beach. $350 mo. (Adults.) FURNISRf':D I br. cottage, North.side. SD> moathJy. (Mature couple .or person.) ' TU«.day Or•nmbl'r 9 1915 DAILY PILOT Bt~ !!~!!! .~~ .~~ ...... ·I ~'!'!!~!.':':..~~~....... ~~!!! !.~~ ~~ ........ ~c:'!;~! .~~ -~·'· ••••••• I 002 C osta M H CI I 024 HuntincJton lcodt I 040 G.....,.. I OOZ G~ol •• ••• •• •••• •••••• ••. ••• ••• •••• •••• •• ••• • • • • •• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISLE Like new! Lido Sood 4 BR, 4 ha. I-Own er. Custom bayfront Lawn, patio, jacuzzi; pier & nuat. $32.5,000 .• Waterfront, Lido Nord. 6 BR. or 4 IlR. &2 BR. aµt. On sandy beach. $285,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 34 1 Boy\1de Drive. N.B. 675·6t61 S4,29 S Dow.-. OR S1/J0 o LOAM 'l'h1fl Ct~ta M r'u fin"' t·t .:.1rd1·n hnmc· h,1-; ~I b<·tlr11orn,, .;! 1>.1llb Ouh $4 ~J;, down or ·" urn1· t h ,. V /\ I n .1 n I " r 5lt>:> 111w1th lutJl1 l'Jll now t, it, 7111 [~ I: f I ' , 11 • "I ~ GIANT Hu~~r ,!~~~.~~:2hlllh t11•11w l It,.,..~ tu .111 P.11nt 1t amJ r11.1kt• $:.4.>0IJ SU!llf f:urnlv room I !>u11p.11 lur 1 "11n11v k1td11•11 lt•.1tur illl! lo;11°h or I .l hllll'h i Corn1r11: wun• 1•ooktor> 1111n•, Marl\ 111a11y t'J< Ir:" 111 1111 , sl •·1•µ11i~ g i .1 II t \It :i I k t ,, ~Cl lOOl.S, IH S, S llOI' Pl '\l, &. 111" .\C'I I'' llt•l\t·r O\\tll'r ,\-.:.u1111 i• ·, hu1 ty on th1:-11n1 '' $19,:100 <1~1:1 11 II flllll 962°777 1 I O z N11·1· :l11r :!l>J cu~t.1 ;\ksJ ~-~---~~~ii.SH•··~~~ ~~g:wNeR···-~· .'.).t· 2 ·:·:·1<·R·o·T·o-F·1·H·o--1-- GREENBROOK LEAVING J UMBO H OME Rcauttfully upgrud1;tl. :l TOWlll..I l.OJfl!l':. t>nt 1110111 J 11 • .ih vrsold.3Lgebdrms,IJ?t' f"'lll ,11.,11 i.:.u.i).!•· ,1,,.1,.,1,..i FH, heavy shake ~roor. Galheor round th1• t,1m11\ ru11111:111111t1r11.o1 cov. patio. Loads o f fireplacr 1n t111-. warm 1t111111~, 1:,1·..i1111t 1,.1 ,, <.' h a r m · C •1 n b e and comrortablt· hnnw I I purchased subject to 7,., Wood shuttt·r"> .u11l 11.11id I 11111 onl quu I 'u ' ,. '•·" VA loan. 545 9491. 111";1r" 111111., ~ ... t11111p1n " -mg anti old t .. .,11111n1·tl Ju.,t 11 ... 11 ii 11111 r' ,, i.. hard\\{)()(l floor' ,odd to 1111 ~w .llMI (';ol( ", 111 11" Walker Blee Rarl lst1t1 the romfoit \\1th :1 l>drms and I '. bath .... there's :-.p.trl' fll1 .ill OwnPr·s ask m i:: ~13 ~100 SPANISH VILLA ON THE BAY and needs u t1ui1 k "alt-. 1---------· $39.900 ma .. ~ Cotl:IJ?t> walkw:iy to 0 , UGI clt'gant bays1de liv111 J! at Place ii fraction of c·ost ! Boat Prapaarties ·, dorks and m aritime hv· 7S'2·19'20 " in ~' Custom detor 14oo a uA1LST N1wPORTBIACH highlights formal dine! - Gourmet s un s hine EASTSIDE kitchen! Walls of glass! CUL-DE-SAC Sweeping master bdrm retrea t ! ~p1ral11n ~ sta1rras<• to sun t('rral'e' Hed tile roof anrt Spanish alrove -try $3990 total down payment! Or take O\ er ex.astmg loan at $249 per month It s unique and won't last! Hurry 847-6010 . I '' J •I J • / ~ II 't [-~ ESTATERS Location, Lo1·.1 twn. Location' A lit lit• dt• roralm~ ;o111I plantini: will make' tlus ;1 e'tra large bedrooms. 2 baths + den home a dream com e trut<. 0\\ Nt-:H ANXIOUS TO MOVl-:11 Call 546-4141 S · COATS1WALLACE REAL ESTATE, INC. SJt>.1100 Fu II J•ric·1· Mu~t st•ll lq• :H>r r.1nrh llllU.,l'. A!.Sllllli' t.'. I 11 \ I Cl a n , '"" w n i... "11 I y ~142/fllo Call '.>40 :1Gt.11: . EASTSID E lilix3011 I< 2 l;,t \\it h " I hlUSl'S ~ t~•dron111 .inti 2 h~:dro0m ;rnd .tr·n l'l:1t•1· frwt tn•1·-. Jlllt shr uh~ \\on t IJ .t l1111i:? !'all qwck '' 1\-.kin~. S:-,5 !1511 Call 540 11.11 Real Estate byMcVAY 36-24-36 1'111 n•.tll\ "di l>utlt l'm tall. firmh i'OllSll'Ut lt'•I ~ pro\ n c· ,;11 \ ". w <' 11 1ln!S'>l'd Ill dt·(·<•r .itor t·ul · 11r" ov1·r mv l.1.1-.H· tan trvm my bt':lf'h location. fo'patun•s 4 bt'drooms. l.1mily room & cl1r11n~ 1oom 2f\511 SrJ. rt. Cull a11vl 111w !lliH ·M~i IN(.'t.t 'DI'S ON 1-; Y 1-:Alt "•\J<H,\N'I Y PHO<; HAM ,- AHA:-.OO"l/E l> COT· TA<, fo' 111 i.c•durlt-d tre1· ~ha1lt·d ,\l moc;phe r C'. ~t·d hnr k frpk, warm \\Ond p:tnf'l1ni,:. ltookr:i :;es, f ami ly l't•n'<'r. kt>ttlc kitchen Jnil har. 3hr, small den. rwo.il Jnd clt•an as a pin! Assume $19.500 loan bal.ince, $2 17 month PITI. 6', rntercsL BKR. \1<'sa Vt•rdc. Spollt•">s 4 H H I ·Sly. Qu11•t St . STARTER HOME Balboa Island I 006 $13,500 A..,<t . fi10 5!".till 1--------962 5511 $38, 900 ~;;;N~.-~·a·;~=r·;;t ·;~,~ Huntington Be ach 10 40 ON THE BLUFF VA TERMS House & 2 BH Garai:(· ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • Lge4 bdrm, 2 ba home in Apt. $140,000. B!' owner View• View· View good «oncl. Lots of p::in<'l· By ~ppt. n73 5106 _ Arti•sts' 2 b1•droom.;, 2 baths Con· I h I & dom1111um. F1replacl', mg. Cose. Lo S<' 00 s ' Balboa Peninsula I 007 R t t t;ormlv room tile entry. s hopping Space for your ••••••••••••••••••••••• e rea Custi;m i·ai Jll'lini;: and trailer or boat. This nc\\ Bay Avenue Dupl<'' S28 500 drapl''" f)1·1 orator 's lis tin g won 't l ust. cu~tom built, i.tt.·ps to Cl T, B h \\altpaper throu0 hout. 5-15·9491. " ose o e ac .. Bay. S97.500 'oast Willsc•llont·on\'('ntional. St•parall' laundry room. "NEGLECTED" 3 +POOL Abandoned. Gated e ntry and totallv fcmcetl. Home needs some minor fixing & lender loving care. Yeaturei. J sp.1t1ous bedrooms. 2 baths, fami- ly dining room. Wall or glass gives full view or new pool and Jacun 1 Take over 7'/, loan of S270 mo. or new fmanc ini: available. Ne:ir beach. A money maker. As king $85,000. Check it out for yourself! Call 852 2535. ( ,, I /' '" '> • , , f • ~ I , Propcrlle!-67:! 5410. \I\ or Fil/\ tt•rms. t-:ntn T\\11 encll>sl'!I patio">, on~ Lot \'alut'. c:-ott;111t·, rir Ray Island S.15.0oo ~tarshall Rily ti75 1ft()(J Corona del Mar I 022 v.•1v to lug II\ 1n~ morn t·u..,tom hr • k1·1I. 2 car rartor :i ll<'drooms or caraJ!1•, t•ll'd r1 <' doo1 «<>nHrt1hl1• 1lt-11, tOfl'(•lf opem•r. sv.1mmmi? pool air h1•at1n)! ).!1111rm1·t a round th,. ~·orner. hu1 It 1n~ ll1s & her Jacu211 & ~a1111;1. • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ,. 1 o ' t• t ~ 1 n m ,. ~ t ~ r BY OWNER 18724 3 8R 2 Ba DUPLEX ONLY $89,SOO. in an exct>llenl ~outh or Highway lot'ation 1111 .1 gcnerou.; 4:-, fl . lot Call LI" q111tk &14 721 1 FREE·LISTINC SALE' Only $83,500 until 0(•<· I~• Jbr. 2ba, fam rm. Full ocean view. Sho\\ n b\i appt. Owner. 673 :1111._ lx>Oroom C'all 842 8115·1 TARBELi::: 1926-1976 Fall Special Think or th1.; 6 ~1 ':': mort~·J)!l', ,l\':11lahlc tu d.1~ on th1-. 3 BH pool horn•' Tl11s houst> has tlw ilPPollltnwnt~ for a famt ly sut ha.,:! ha. dlx. k1ld1 w 1chnmr. arl'a, trrrif11• floor pl.in s t.1rh with C'f'ntrr <'nlrant'l'. ~1:l.~1CHJ {',\LL PErwcrn \L\J\CE tH:AL ESTATt-:,8ti 3.'>IH Maplewood Ln lll \; 11'\CiTO" BF.1\C'H <)If r I . du" rt Cha p1 I Lane hl'tv.cen Hed<h Bl\ rt ~ ~L1_gnol1a 9'~· 129:l Real Estate byM&AY QUAINT DUPLEX CHOICE OF TWO South of Hwy. TOWNHOUSE Huth ha\t' s heauliful TUSTIN CONDO The krnd of prvrrrh 1 ,0 DOWN \ \ surwr h<lrms. l halh<;, pool & 2 Br. I'~ Bath. LJ!. patio. buyers search our to\\ 11 lluntini..'\on Bt•arh t•n.t .lan1111. 3 1:.ir J?:tra.i:<'. :.? custom decorated, many for. Quamt, cut('. 1·harm unit 1 O\\nhousl' .it nnlv \ t•a1 ~ m'w ! S67,500 and e xtras. $32,000. After mg. unique (O?ps!l. and S'~.soo 3 Bi~ bl'firooms, ::-68,!lUO! liarga1nJ 12:JOPM call 640-6161 or ad_o rable. With bt'am :? baths, drNim kilt hi·n. !Gi w>1;. 5 42 -38 86 ask for ceilings, knotty p_1n1 and riming art.•a and no 1:'\CLt:,DESONEYEAR Margaret. v.alls , wood burni~I.! tommonwa ll. Ooh ">lcp~ \\ARR,\NTY CHOICE r!'JllC and a s unny patio to pool and rt><'rt•ation. _l __ PR09RA~_r __ _ nght around ~he' cornrr Assumahlc 7,, In.in LAGUNA VIEW from Carnation Park. \\Ith payments only ~t:::' ---·S4-2•.0•0•0---· Sturdy 2 bedroom. den $86,000. Call 644-721 l per mo incltll? t.n•'" home, near everything . First time offrn·tl. <"all Old 2 lx>droom cotlag('. a ..,re a . 54fi·5RAA Agt'nl. th t 's a t Custom ~ 1't>ar Mam and Adami:;, d ecking & k1t t hen . St: ----------\\'1th all<'y entry on dee p °" II f ·nc t-l•>t 0\1.rll'r \\ill fmanct', •ncr wi carry ma · • ' f{C'ntud . Call for appoint· ing Call fi73·855o __ w-.i...-.11i:~llo:lil11&1~•1•---------~ u 1•.-11 , . t.. ', If~"'" -----JUST LISTED mt•nt. [® I 1: 1: ,; I:· I . ~ Ii. : : ~· MESA VERDE GOLF COURSE AREA ~ Beautiful 4 hdrm, 21~ bath plus den, formal d1nin1? room, ar c hed, beamed ~ntertainmcnt area s urrounding pool with s ide patio and balcony. Many extras Come see! Compare for $79,500. VIEW IRVIHE TERRACE lfunl1n j!lnn Heach Bi Pat'1fH' Sand!>. Tn-IL1V<'I ii pool ho m1'. by Dl'attt• _• '· , .' _' Very seldom a rc• we Brothers. This Jo,cly 3 ~-- fortunate enough to be b(>drm, 3 bath homt' 0£. ahle to offer a front row ft>rs comfort 1n l1vmg. I ~~~~~~~~~~ custom built view horn<' Formal dininJ.? room. I~ in exC'lus1vc Irvin<' Ter· Large Camil.v rm w /wet ---------- race, a nd now 1s one of bar overlooks pool and VETS NO DOWN those times. Wt' ha ve for tt'rracNI yard. Comp! vou a dramatic 4 RR. JancJscpd Cronl and n·:ir. Beautiful executive t~ home with exc1tm1? night Workshop an<1 s lr>rage 4 bedroom .... 21'.! baths light. bL1y, orNm & islanrt rabmets in OHrsizcd 2 Condo. \ pgraded carpel views,+ a s<'rludcd pool. c;ir gar:.ij?e. Block to anrl CU<itom drap<'s and All perfect forthcowm•r ot•ean.OHerrcl atSiJ.5-00. wallp.iper. Excellent \\ho IO\'('S to entertain. ~ lo cat 1 on. 0 w n er $199.SOO fo't-:~. UPEHB transferred and anx- Call644-7211 Q1\lES ious!!Only,$47,SOO. 3848 campus NB s•9·e&ss l'l1rnt4&m1i;mm ~ 962·4471(I::)546-8103 '~~·~·~~· ~l--=.~~:---1~~~~~ := BIG-VACA.-.T Irvin~ I 044 I I I Quail ~-· Costa M~sa I 024 2 Story •••••••••••• • •• •••••••• Prapp•r'atc,-!. ····T·o··w··N··H·O··u··s·E·S····· New paint an and out. ,.. Formal family .. m & din· BEAUTIFUL VIEW 752•1920 ing rm. RRQ & covered .. of Ulc atrium from the 1400 QuA•lST. NIW..ORTlfACH EASTSIDE patio a rea. Very low maste r suite with its MAG.-.IFtCEMT LAKESIDE SETTl.-.G NEWPORT BEACH Uobehev:ible heavily treed woods setlin ~. En· joy LAKE VIEW FROM F RONT PORCH! Warm country home wilh wood be11 m ceilings raised h earth + mammoth paneled recreation room with bath & f1 rf'placc. Exquisit.-terTaced patio overlooks mattn1f1cent pool with ~hde. THIS IS A RARf: ro-tNO' llurryto 111~. Call MG·2313 ' I~' f THE REAL ESTATE RS Col ( I L STYI F. 2 pnl'cd :1t only $58.500. walk-in clos<•t. doubh: 4 >N A ' ... 20bi1 Tillrr Cirl'le. Won 't pullman u nd large bedr m w i t h bri ck d I• lL ..... t s hower. z Addt'l. fireplace, formal dinmn, last!! Worl .ca ~t:i e .. """7777 bedrooms, ltvirag room la r ge bedrms. blln ~. ,..,.r 1----------1 firepl ace, spaciou s patio & J l4.1 yrs n ew. kJtchen and family room Prime location nt•ar HY Owner adorable 3 br with Solarian rtoor . An shopping a nd b\13 lm cs. w/sunken living rm & excitinf? home with a lit.- Only 10% Down. frplc, hte brick k Mhen, tie something extra to $39,500-$44.700 cozy yard w /covered use u you choose. Cov· Ed RiddleRlt64688ll pauo & waterfall. Will ered patio, s u pe r s<'ll FHA/VA, Assuma-I a n ds cap in g and 2STORY SPANISH Rustle Spanish l'Stato of. pool Sep. library. formal dinin~. Sacrifice• pnt'e' Save$$$. 645-0303 FOREST OLSON INC ble71'2. $45.950. 892 3788 sprinklers. $167,500 CLOS~TRACT TO Uf.:ACll 552-7500 red hill Uy Ownt'r. 3 Or, 2 na, ra m rm. wtt bar. cul de· ~.1r. atnum entry. Hom<' admin•d hy .-veryon<'. __ F_o_r _C-la-~-s-i(-ifd_A_d--1 s.v..soo. 963 3901 ~ ACTtON Cll 11 ll Druly Pilot. AD-VlSOR 642·56'78 ' IYOWMER 4 RR plus f'r<'o,ti ~r1~~~~~~~~~~ home Mu"t :-1•11 1 Open1. Dally, S391 El norado fo'tnd wbal you want II Dr. 846-2249 Daily Pi1ot Cl assilieda. , I •• ' I • . . • ~ , . ' I I I "' • -' , ft ~LYPILOT 1•00 o.t of Shih Hou:t•1 U•hnflhed Houfft UnfW'llhlMd Apw lnwrlh hntfsMd ~':'.~::':'~ •• Prafrrty 2600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... tiflttwleecll 3240 MlnlORYltfo 3267 Ol .. M..-J124 a.-h 776f TAX SH&TB SUM VALLEY -••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••·•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••~ °'T:.t:::. ~::!!.~.~~ ....... ~!!.~~!~ ....... 1~c::!!!.~~.~---·-~ ............ !~~~ Newportltoch 1069 H.wparta.ee.. 106t 2 STOIY·$36,500 POOL·IRVIME Prim~ I rvine IOc<f.liun St~p down Irvin~ room 10 cork & smoke glass walls! Guur1nt-I kitch('n Y.'ind1ng wrought iron ~I.airway to queen :-;1'LI;' bedroom:t. Sl.'p;.ir.111• l.11undry Ct'nlr11I air Secluded patio Sparkl in,;: comn1011 i.iool ' Bargain pri ced & shur111 CaJJ fast 752-1700 ( ' • '" 9. ' ' '' ., ... ' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISLAND YOUR OWH GHAT SOCIETY Why wait for Lhe future to come to you? Meet it halfway! This S bdrm. bayfront will Jet you live the way you've alWBYs wanted to. See it today, by app'l.· $325,000 FOUR·PLEXES ne1r fOAHQ..COHDO ll'i repl•ce. DW. bltaa, Ntw COnlova !I Br, re•dy $37.SO Wiik & UI' BEACH·µ;E-ADULTS i lhe OC'C!an. SUS:OllJ. l .h.d Studio+. 127 000. Cpl.I, df'PI, 3 tir, 2 h, for lmmed rtn.tal-$.770; -•Studio& 1 BR Apt$ -$1Z.1tudio 875-l865 •.tt!l up, S1_:2to4. $350 /mo. 983·4569 ...,.1214aft1PJ.t:, •TV&Mald Serv Avall 5:IO.'l03tdcFadd<in C1lll44 wkdysonly. ga.1188 · ZBt frplc bltns •~neServ,llldpool •-ci. ... ool•. 377, REALTY INC. 714/146·1371 • ' •Children Section -'!. ........ 3 BR c~p 2 balht, bllnl. !I Br, fncd yard, gar1ge •Low monthly rites. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••• sep. d.lllinl rm, no peta. z Br. AJcond, tar ace ·~OFF week •e: rent e Is clein, 1 BR. adj. • ,..._.. FrwnMslwtcl $300. 84&8291 3Br, frplt>. bltn.s w/ad to ocein. be•ut. view, ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMMAC 3 & t br, wtw F1nt111tlc vlew! 3 Br, Z376Newport01vd CM $191 lricld util. 492-618& CodaMne 3124 cpts, drps. bllns, newly fncd yd', frplc., bltns, S48-97SSor6.f.5-3"7 li&ft..5&wknds. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'a1nted. 842•1953 $350. 3710. --------1 •• _ z•-d r 1 ....., Nlcelocallon!4Br,frplt>, •Elm Gankttt* s-taAno ~..,,., u;s, en, rpc,patio, '-bl'--dbl&•rage •••• db&ar,Condorectactl,IMMAC 2 Br 1 na, ... ~. IBrFurn.S185mo.Move ••••••••••••••••••• r..co.. Prap1rty 200 no.pets Very Nice! '380. Twnbme. Adults only, HOM .. ~,!l'~ERS in ror $285. Adults, no ....... A.SSADOl IMMS LIDO REALTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 973-3597. Quiet area. $22S mo. ..,._.........., pets. 177 E. 22 nd St. ...,... 7,7300 HELP·HAVEll00,000 963·9771 M rtle • 3269 6423645 OFAMIRICA ll77YlaUclo.tiii.I. 6 r Need units In C.K . now! Hl!~a.aclt ll6t ~~ CICn 1--·------,-1 TWOLOCATIONS .... ,..... • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Partially rum. 2 br, 2 ba. WEEKLY RATES ~ No liaUn1 nee. Exchft ••••••••• • ••••••••••••• L -~i-....o 1052 ok. Steiner lnvestmen Deluxe 3 bedroom. SteP9 Village Real Estate $JBS. 3 Br, 2 ba, xx Jge yd, No children or pets. $185. f1JLLSERVICE ~---" ~ ,____.le h 1069 &&2·9666 from ocean. Now till No Agents Fee room for camper & boat. Mature adults. 642-5848 22"17llarbor,C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~,..-• oc June No peU ••50 pe •Yorktown /Bushard .._ Irvine. &68-8883 or·1----------1 2909Bristol,S.A. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8 UNITS Jpool So · · .-r 5'5-7628 SUS CA.SIT.AS MS-48406:~2300 [~ THE REAL Decorator•s • 4-8edroom. 2-baths , • coast Plar:a by owner WE TRY HARDER •Yorktown/Magnolia NEW .3 Br, 21h Bai , Lar11e nicely furn. l br. ~.900. WOW' w nr · month. Alf.. 2 BR , I BA ... $285 . l::'.::-:::--~----I ~~~~;;;~~~~ ste p-down li\'ing roorn 4 IEDROOM IM ..," .17.!, g ros s 120 M ATTRJ HARBOR 3 BR, 2 8A ... S300 Twnhme ! on 15 acre Adults only. no pets. 2110 _...._ 1 ""'' HOME -..eves Neumnrt.Blvd. ~-'.:~•-L.-~ !;11ni ly roon1 , l a r ge MEWPORTHEIGHTS · · . 400[.11"~ .. FORAU •Garfield/Brookhurst pa.rk ,view,pool,jacuzzi, ~...-~ Lovely t·nd unit Julliard, cnclOISed lol, sprinkh:r~. with family room plus il Multi tenant industnal C.M I\ uw 3BR,2BA ... $32S sauna,lse$375.646--2700 C d 0 3 bet.lrooms plus huge Ideal ramily homl'. can be set up with guest o~fice bldg. O_range ~o 4G""' •Warner/Beach asa e ro ~~s~~~~I i~7e"~~rb~c~ * IO~~.~~~TY • ~t!~l;h 1::P~~a~e :!~~ ~'r~9-~alion. Pnn. • •i~. -.~:~!1!~Ed~er N:n :e'!!~r2 ~ps~b~~~: C~LP~~~UJ:fo~:A:~u ••••••••••••••••••••••• C..-dolMar 312Z ••••••••••••••••••••••• :-;1gnt'r. Ready ror ''c"lur ----------1 street & in a prime loca-3 BR, 2 BA ... $310 $t25. 642-9666 renl. Cuslom designed (J1n1ly to move 1n & t•n-La N" J ~ t1on At only $64 5001 Call J BR, 1~~ Ba, home & 1 8 Houws Unfurnfslted •Bolsa/BrookhUCllt Walk to Beach, 3 Br 2 Ba, reaturing: -. Jov guna 19ue 646-7111. · · ALpl. 11ntco14m5e000S425P. mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR. 2 BA ... S32:li beams, C/D. ow, tennis 1°sdp.aciou~ hk~tchen with LE RAISOR the choice community • L..,."1 ni" • '' ~ 'u" ro~fN'(f ' ge 0 • • • nnc. lalboa PettinM1la 3207 •&Isa/Bushard & pool. $425 lse. 548·2200 n irect Il g ting ~., ~,l!!'!.~·: ••• s EA ,. ERR Ac.: E [ ® 1111.1 :1~i u1~ only. MS--4 774 . ······~················ 3 BR, 2 BA ... $345 BLUFFS condo11: selec-:i'i:~~~1~k~~~~~=~=a REALTY r..t A{; N 1 1'' 1 c £ N ·r JJti Aif 2 H<?USES ON I L'?T 1 Charming cottage, 2·br, •Carfield JBrookhurst tionfrornS42Sto$600 •Private patios ~IODEL 11 0 ~1 E in this . --·-··· '="'= choice Newport Heights comp. remodeled. 1>'i blk 3 BR . 2 BA ... $.135 Agent 644-1133 •Closed gar w /storage ol5l.3C:1mpus Dr , Irvine ~riv al£" are~ F'or mal $.'50,000. Xlnt investment to bay. $235. yrly. Re(. •McFadden/Broo khurst •Marble Pullman CORONA DEL MAR 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. Pool, tennis, •conUnental breakfast. Some ocean I: Campus Valley Shop Ctr. dinin.i:.. f:im ily ~oom, pro· San Juan Call evea. Agt . 968-2656 ~~~· 675-9523; 644-0997 4 BR , 2 SA ... $350 Immaculate 4 Br & t-~R •Kingsize Hdrms CALLSll-8600 ress111n alty landscaped Capistrano 1078 · •McFadden/Newland view, tennis, pool. $'i95 •Pool . earbequi'S· Catalina views. Cloee to shopping & fine beach. 644-26U w1th heat~·dpool Gard~n ••••••••••••••••••••••• BIG 3 bdrm., 2 bath +CoroftadetMar 3222 4BR.2BA ... $360 mo. 559-4646 /642-8235 surrounded with plush $43,950·2 SR I 1.i:. h I . au l o mat 1 c Ideal home for the grow· two l·bdrm. units. G ••••••••••••••••••••••• •McFadden/Springdale Joyce landscaping PERFECT ~pr1nkler s, 1n t ertom, ing family. 5 bedrooms, Eastside loc. $82.SOO Dec. lst-June llth, 2 Bd, 4 BR, 2 BA ... $345 5005 River Ave. 3 Br , 2 Ba , Adults. No pets STARTER! m,111yextras Callforap den . fam . & din ing l ba frpl c 1 blk to Big •llolsa,Spnngdale bltns. r efric . dshwshr. 2 BOHM$260 5 Br. $475 mo. bltrul, & ~·111e tr\in.:: IO{';•lH•n A pointment 598.75'1 rooms . f\-t any extras lrrJ -~: ;1·~~·11 Coro~a.Refs. 575.1917. 3 BR,2 BA ... $335 W/D. Avl 111176 $39S. 36.'iW.Wilson642-1971 dswshr. 2 s un porches, fl EAL U(>LI. I ll)USt-: • Laj.!unn Niguel Jlcalty $89,500 [l) I!!'"""':~~~,,_ ' 963-4567 or 963 ·1786 (213)445.0066 crpts. 673-3231/538-3836 flu~e portico cnt r v 810·5050 496·4040 J; · •t A real charmer; 5 BR 8 1-'or m;il "hilt.• t't.•11trlg -~ ---' ANCHOR.4.GE home in oJde CdM . 1 1 2Br.garage.(encedyd, 1 Rf'urn $18S4Br,2Bal850sqR,frplc, 1111.;h fircpJarc \';1ullt•d INVESTMENTS Mfla Yerdrt 4 Plex Formal din rm. + lg Bolsa/Springdale. ove Y walk to bch , yr\y $325, Lots of bltns, pool, walk bltns z blb to Beach. •'t•illll~'> Hij.! cht•er.\ Prinonly -AgtM2-3513 fam rm. $525 J\.1o. Agt 3 br, 2 ba, R&O, c pt.s, 675-4443 673-5502 to s hoppin g. •h mi . $.500.' Also; 3 Br 2 Ba. k 1 t ,. h ,. n T" 0 tar j;!e Ni!w-.-. Sl!ach I 069 17141 496·7711 675-5726 drps, $325 mo. 963-4569 ' beach. 931 W.19th St. ·. MOO. 675-8772 or &ff-.7211 l.ietlruurn ., Gi.i:.anlH'••••.'::'•~•••••••••••••• MEWllUHIT 96J..1786 VJEWcndunittwnhseon 548-0492 Jeff t I t h s~o A•o I 080 XI 1 c~ M 3 BR. Z ba, frplc. garage, hte grnbelt. 3 Br, 2'h ba ... ~~~~~~~~~1tc~;j;l.1;---]ijz;j' 1•;.i 10 eomp cc wit ? tw.1ch unit ~ S.'i2.500. Gd ... , ~ ....... a esa. area. 414 Fernleaf. $400. mo. 4 Bd. 2 ha . Super clean. $3SO. 644 _1480 1830.50501: CostaMna 1124 rt'lll'.ocotl IK'nl'ht•s & block ini·oml' 11 2 t•or Jot. Gin-••••••••••••••••••••••• Pride of ownership. W. 644 _0030 Near Adams & Bwhard. t 22 2035 Fullerton, CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'.,Jll pl.inters' I !<is dug 11 y 1" ,1rtu 11 1•. r It r . ESTATE ELEGANCE J\.1ors, Agent. 642-0758. S3'75. 646·8781. ex · 1 BR !-Urn, 2 lrg closets, La~ge, ~~rm 3 br, 2 ba apt run t ofl' Slum r ston•· ti157521) Classic&Charming. . ••COZY COTTAGE. 2· -queensi?.e bed, pr-iv. Wlt~d1n~ngarea,pantry. f1·nl'1• 1\11 1.:vntl1 t1(1nt•d ' ----4 8d home w/fa m.rm., S4 5,000, Small tra.ile bedroom fireplac,. ZBR.2 storycondo.Drps, Sm.Clerne-nte-1276 dressini;! rm. xtra lgc pat1o&f1replace. ~'ern o•nt t!r11 1• 11nd Oceanfront forma l d in .rm., Park ,Desertllot~pnng Walk to beach. Av ai"i: shag cpts, pool. Lease ••••••••••••••••••••••• rooms . e nC'I . g ar . Adull!lonly.$275. n1orc '1',1kl•;11l 1.1ntai.:L· breakrast room & base· lO spat>es+3 trailers, +Dec 27th $350/mo ~15.847-0448 ;536-2375 2 8 d · · 2,.b w/'to'•••· Adu!" 0,1,.. THEVEN_DOME tit I •50 ,-1 L•JrJ.~t·st& b\.'slduplt'xin 2 swimming poo l. . · · · rcon om1n1um, ,~ a. ...,, i·;i o<:J~' -iut lol'.n Spt>(·ta l·u lar ment.Surroundedbyex-+owner 's apartment. Lease.S925. Like new 3 Br + Fam. frpl~. ocean view, encl nopcts. 1845 Anahe1m,C.M. ~ 1 eva~ll1n(' \ ie"·s. 2 bd rm pansive lawns & lovely Sub m; t d n Own e HAL PIHCHIM Rm, frplc,2 car gsr. nr patio, self clean elec -. --645-3381 837-9517 [~ & 3 bdrm , with family old shade trees in the 642-2657 · REALTORS Adams & Beach Blvd. oven, j!olf courS£, pool. Clean I bd, carpets & Sl6S. lovely L Br, shai;. rm ' 5 baths, -l frplcs .. 5 Premier section of· old . 2727 E.CoastHwy. S375mo.Call968·9331 Av ail J an. 1. Owner OC'· ~rape:s s1.s.o. ~l ose tol refrig, bltns, oo pets. . t·nt'l ~a ra~<':s. all bit-ins Santa Ana. To view the QUAL ITY -BUILT Corona 675 4392 cupied. 496-9391 shopping. 642·7154 Adll.5. 540--6338 ~==='=='='='==' elegance of liv ing as it de! Mar orfice building. • 2 BR near Lake Park, ---~--+ l'arp. Finest •n c\·er-us ed to be call now. 675·6060CarriageRealty $225 . mo. 962-3533 or Santa.A."a 3280 I Br !um, $175. Mature2 Bd Skldlo, 11/:i ba, Laguna Beach 1 048 ything ' S:\50.000 542-4519. $135,000. Costa Mesa 3224 536.0321 ••••••••••••••••••••••• adlt.s only. no pets. 147 E Garage, brick frplc_, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1·A11 0 1oa1o ·~414 15 units W. C01Sta 01\l es ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bolsa/Ward 3 BR 2 ha ISth St,642-2628. privatepatlo,new.Ava1l , ~ Mobile Ho~s . Large 9·2Br, 28a, 6-IB $270. 2 Br. yard, cpts, Available now! 2 Br, OW t ' d s' $325. appro1t Jan 1. Adull.5, •Ol'EAN"FHf>;o.;T e d#ut#L For Sale 1100 $249M $32Gr. 644 -5389 dtps.160 "D" Monte Vis-condo. 963-~p~·l7:J1 ' · ~ayrk:~~h~~. 1 :r~· ~~~~: 2447 Elden. $275. 979·1658. Rare at S225 .1100 B\· lt~.ALT\' . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ta646-8883;545·7628 38r,2ba,dbl garage. BR Ba J 2 d Jts 1.11'.Tier 752 1111 l!:l!l <ll8·1· '•~• ''"'"Pat1,l'o•t ,,,,,..,. Mobile Home., Dbl J0x 42, Industrial 2 Br, yard. gar, $225. Nice! 3 Br w/yard $275. ything. $210 "incrng util. 2 • 1 • poo ' a u "EWPORT SHORES crpt, drps. water so(-Pr-oper+y 2100 MesaDelMar3BR,2BA. A bargain! 2 Br + den, 2 Br,2 ba,bltns l!i&40ra ngeAve. ~~~·.~JJsmo. 1632 8 2 ~eparall' hOll"•'' 11n l~C' . ....., , . lener. 2 s torage areas. ••••••••••••••••••••••• many xtras, near all bltns, fncd yd, $265 ~Br, _bltns, 8 rncd byar<l 1 1 LltG I Rr, pool, nr :;hops, !&2 B" 1 Sl~ & ~zo lot . bot11 ~ Bil~ ~t:ihll·' J lltlrm & den. fixer· H.B.960-2Z75or 536-6561 . GREAT Schools. $375. 540-1542or 4Br,2ba,frp lc,fncdyd. ,,,pac•OO.!i2 r,2 a, rp c, adlts /no pets. Util. pd. . nap s .,., ..,.. . rerm1tt1•1t 1n l.aj.!unJ l'<i UpPf'r Choi ce location' 54&-9460. 2 Br,bltns,yard,gar. fncdyard l8S4Monro\'ia 548_0336 Uti _I pd, pool, laundry nyon 2 rn1 n fron1 bl'h \l,Jlk 110 1bc .. ~~h90.01;i?ols, lOA"5dOI •P!ob,ilcCho11m1e . dSr. YEARENDIUY!! Huge ram .rm., lovely Niceloc.JBr,$300. Nice loc!4Br,bttns,fn cd · fac•~ .. cpts.drpsN ,d,thwhNr, .\~k1ni: Si9 .. "lt11J for l)()!h t1 •n11 1' Jn Y """'· ·· u I ar a or e· 1-IOMEFINDERS yd$325. Bach. p<-irl. furn. quiet clos.,-u gar. opes. o h1111h L'., 64 1 22 12 u r CAYWOOD REALTY tails, aft 6. 751-2466 . 2 New Multi tenant. In-pool 3 Bd l lf.i ba n~wly 642-9900 flOMEFINDERS person over 40. Nu crpt.s, children under 12. ·1~17 :!:..'!.12 • 548· 1290 * dust.rial Buildings, fully carP~ted: c~nv~n1en.t 642·9900 $145 util. pd 646-7342 Hacienda Harbor Apts -------< 24x52 1973 '•Buddy", By leased. Xlnt Mission Vie-east.side location. Avail Immaculate 3 er 1"11 ba · · 646-1264 BEA.CH Hewportleach 1069 Ol'.'Oer. Fores t Gardens, joLocation.10% Return immediately, 265 Rose Condo, HD. Cpi.s /drps. SouthLC14JUna 3286 STUD10 APT, DeC'orator . . MOBILE HOMES 1··••••••••••••••••••••• El Toro. 586-8637 to investor. 581-2340 or Ln. $375. mo. 642·2639 or bltns, pool, clbhse. $.1JO ••••••••••••••••••••••• furn . Pvt patio, wtr & s.,as I BR, I Ba $175. incl.1;1hl. 2 Bl)R;\I . 2 ba rnun1rv \\'&terfrontLot Commercial an.5•493·7687 5'6-7945. mo.M6-737laft6PM. Beautiful Spanish home pd .$175mo.646·5JJO Also lbr,lba.pytpatio_& by the bch, in exclusive garage. $204, incl ubl. '''1t 1n::: 12x6-0 \\'1th ,., R 2. 30 · x 90 '. 30· dock. Propttty 1600 INDUSTRIAL ILDG College Park, 3 Br 2 Ba, ••••S'12 500 customized a~a . 4 Br, 4 Ba . lge liv Garden Bach. Apart. 548-8005.::c-~~~-~ r~~~r~~.Sl~IJ loc:Jterl on a point with ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5,700sq.R,12rentals.Nr frpl~. xlnt cond. $350. t Br. 2 'ba,'2 frplc's. 2 rm library fam rm P\1..patio,$125, ~15.""New 2 Bd, patio, 4 , 1._ • v.i l'. I or 1•1111 bay \'tt'I'.' fronl _ & rear. 175 seal restaurant in freeway,gd rental area. Avail lmmed. 646-1757 or family rooms, pool table, cenlral Couriyard, 2 ca; 642-1334 garden, adull!I, no pets,. \Cr! 2 IJtlrm. l'.11h Ol'.n CrY.'1ll prov1deplans Costa J\tesa, 5 yrs old , 646-39?8eves·549-1531 549-9511 . bar, 3 car garage . 527 W.Wilson.642-1603. i.:orJ?cnus (lt't•a11 \It'"' i.lilproved by Coasta l Sl25K. OWC 1s t. Agt ' Largest lot.in tract. Fruit gar. Avail Jan l , $700mo. S:!J.5()!) l' om mi .s s i on . C a 11 642.9666 esa Verde, 3 Br Z Ba, trees. 21472 Lemontree 499-41Cl!lor833-6413 Dcma Point 3726 z BR, util. paid. Cpts, LA Rhc; E ~ bdr1m . (~Ox•l'i, lf.~I 0506 w 131 sh5r /Ndryr. d0~l frrp~c , Lane, H.B. 968-6726. Wntminiter 3298 ••••••••••••••••••••••• drps , patio. ChlldMren 1'.ll 1·'(fJ;1nc o 1ri'<1l PRICE SLASHED · ew crp'"". re ng. •••••••••••••••••••••••BIG 2 br, 2 ba, $250. Util welcome, no pets. gr. ;~(::;~~~~7.>1~~~~-~!. lh l· ~.;.~t ,Hso~~~C:~l.IC'~a:i $19,500!!! 646-1757or!N9-9511 lrTiM 3244Super3bedrm,2 ba,cptll, incl . N ea r beach . 1960 Wall a~e, Apt 6, 1 ~ Acres C-2, 190 FF on NICE lge 2 BR, newly ••••••••••••••••••••••• drps, R&O, $310. mo. 496-0l95or960,Il42 642·7364 .. • ., a n rt ·11 :. 0 u r fl' i· l '.°llJnJ!els. Sunset Real N Bl d Asking Lots for saf~ 2200 painted, gar, red yrd, BEAUT. San Joaquin 963-'569 963-1786 u.-.c..M0 " leach 3740 Sl70. 1 Br, cpt.s, drps, '>Pill'IO U' 12.'C6•J Y. ilh t:~1.1t£-,963-8991. ewport v • •••••• ~11 • ..,. 'O"W ! $2.67 pe:r sq. ft. Owner ···~··· ••••••••• '2029 Wal la ce (bac k Twnhme Large 2 Br, 21>'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• refrig, range. 724 • • 1 ~isru ~1,1~ !'.;c';t 00~',. ~111 I 03 U W Bay Ave . says sell now! 1 Promontory Bay F ront house) $210. first & last, Ba, 2 sty. View of golf F'irepla ~e. 4 BR , 2 BA , BEAUTIFUL 1 b ( JamesSt.673·77_87~-- 1 it'Y."s \.\'uuhl \ou n,,.111,,l, n.11 front 2 story Colonial Re11lonom1 cs, Corp. SOxlOO. Sale or lrad~ for SIOO. cleandep. 548-4017 course & lak e . $550. c pts. drps, R&O, DW, ts $1 70 & Sl80 Sr ~rh FOURSEAS0NSAPTS 3 !Wt +-& 21 1 ba. 10<:; ••675·6700 • • loc a l comme r cial . 547.7044 $345 . mo. 963 -4569 ap · panis I . b stud' ~l:!.75u 0 $1l6 500 642-3490 MESA VERDE Sharp 963-1786 style bid~. pvt encl gar. Spacious 2 . r 10, ~'h m :i) ha 0 d 1 h.t am~~~ Vacant lot, i:1ox290 , good ' · · clean 3 br, 2 ba:fam rm: *RENTALS* PoOI, sauna, lndry, adlls, br. pvt patio, pool. Child mtl'i':?j@[?fil ~;~'.!~rd n ~~t-rs . 673_4781 area, 1-lunt. Bch. Mobile-home fplc, bllns. quiet s t. nr TJIETERRACE Delux 3 Br 3 Ba Condo No 17301 Keelson l.n . 1 blk ok, no pets , $195. 73:; -..q .,......, . Il...._ r . 5 HESTER-BROWN TrfrPrks 2300 school/shoppg. $375 / mo 3BR,2Ba .......•... $42S child_ren U":der 14 . Will W.ofBeachoffSlater. JoannSt.645-0332 LN.@~ \)W o (2 13 J 4<19~~. Realtors 8..13-9781 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Mr Myhre 540-1151 RanchoSanJoaquin consider s in gles. $350 . 842-7848 VJLLAMESA·From$20S. ____ 499 2800 1 11:1rbor Vic"' Palermo 2 C d . . T 8x37 remodeled. loca I Heritage Realtors 2 BR , den. 2 ba .. $4751500 Own r '·Br k r • Ber 6 SMALL BEACH HOTEL 2 BR, patio, pnol, no pets. • <;tor.· 4 hd 3 ba over-on om1n1ums o wn· park $2250 or late mod. 2 BR 2.Jla $S50 893-1351 . An. 6, 893--4716 k 719 w Wilson. &f6.l.2Sl '1·-'(ceptional clup\t:'( !hr , ,11.f·il. r·~m r.m 2 °frplcs house-s for sale 1700 smali car. 646-9541 Charming 3Br house with TuRTi."E: ·ROCK ask for J errie Kukuk. Rooms S23.so wee · (9.5) • rplc nr't->lln 11ew w 'I . • d k ·M· · ••••••••••••••••••••••• OceanView.$32Smo. . . Apts$1IO.mo.536-7056 •'IJ\ e arl':J '(lnl ttrm:-; pal_io & ec · ;iny up-. Mauntaln, De-serf, . 673-9950. 3 BR, 2 Ba.·········· $450 3Br, large living rm, fam . . Trai!ers 1 & 2 BR, $140.• SIO.OOtJ(tn Bk r 49!1 -22i7 J7r.1 d_c s. 644 ·4779 or NORTH LAGUNA Resort 2400 CT!LVERDALE rm, cpts,drp.s, covered Furn. Studio I Blk fr $16S.Water6:Gaalncld. ---I 1>12 0322 CONDOS . ••••••••••••••••••••••• COLLEGE PARK 3 Br + 3 B:, 2 Ba ........... $375 patio. Xlnt area. $355 . ~~cb.h Water lpd .. Frpl~, 133 &.16th St.642-1285 COMMERCIAL Whitewaler Views-2 & J Own your own Mobile Din. Rm, 2 Ba, 2 car gar, ALNUTSQUARE Evesorwknds962-0678. ws r . poo , Jacuzzi. Shup bachelor u it l nu s u a l opp(lrl ~1n 1tv RO T swimming pool SJ50 See 2BR,2 Ba .••••...... S325 $185mo.846-7336 n · new "'{•ll bwlt m::inuf~u."J ' RA.REIAYF H bdrm.unitsfromSS<l,000. Home Lot in beautiful by appt 833_300o ~,13 3BR,2 Ba .•.•... $3l5/33S Condominiums 1 • 81~ •. good adrea. Near turin~ blrlJ! of approx OPPORTUNITY 420 Cypress. North Palm Desert Gre.e ns, Martin. Day s (i) THECOLONY Uttfumisfte.d 3425 rYIM 3744 Fa1rv1e w an Baker. ol .000 ~q rt . pt\1<; z hdrm , U>nder has foret>losed 3 Laguna close to new Eisenhower 734-0340e~es. • 3 BR, den, 2 ba furn $600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••··~·· $145 /mo, Adults only. 1fr·n h1im1-. wh1l'n 4·a11 h1· RR. 3 Ba . Ray fro nt Call 675·7225 Medit>al Center in Pa.Im DEERFIELD BLUFFS! Panora mic $70 wk or_ $300 !'10· tn-1"'541>~5880~=·-,.--~~~~ t·nnverted to l'omrn('rClill houo;;e Im mac C'Ond. San-Desert, l8 hole execul!ve 3 BR. 2 Ba, 2 patio~. c rpt.s, J BR, 2ba •••••••.•• $425 view or back h ay . eludes ~aid se~v1ce. TV, 2 Br, 2 Ba,.frplc, dsbwsb. U!'>l' on l.;1cunn l'an' orl d v hl' a c h . S2 05 .000 golr cour~e. rec~e.at.ion drps. frplc. nr Back Bay. 2 BR , 21h ba ..••.... $375 Beautiful 3Br 2'h bath. sauna, JBCU~ZI, pool & enc gar, cpts, drps, Hnad . acros!'> from loc:+-<.:ourt,,.~y to all brokers. center with adJOlning $370. 556-6295 COLLEGE PARK De I j g ht f u J pati o, ph~e 1717 F ... Dye r Rd. E . 18th st. $2 8 5. t1nn of new :+r~ ,<.('hoot C.:1)nla£'\ J 1m Krueger, cardroohm, billiard roob~· • _ 1 1 b h 1 vt 3 BR, 2 ba •••••••••• $400 firi!place, dbl. garage, Irvine. SW.1515 557--4347PM il7."l.ono 644 ltl60J\-1on .f'ri. pro s op, s auna . 1g ...... ve Y r ome w P et T \"ty . e e lounge with kitche n, garden patio, cpl.5, drps. c. op qua 1 in v ry Laquna Btooclt 3748 $190 Senior Citizens TURNER ASSOC. huge s wimming pool, ULil pd. $225·. mo. (1 ) 552-7500 res pect .$585 Owne r••••••••••••••••··~··•• welcome. 2 Br, pool, no 1105 N. Csl ll"'Y. Laguna BEAUTIFUL shuffleboard court, put· 73'--0222 544-4391 EFF1CIENCY APTS. children/pets.646-2738 494·1I77 DOVER SHORES TAX SHELTER ting greens, tennis court, d h' 11 3 Br, I'h Ba, newly painl-from $190. Pool, ~aid, $30orfSec. Dep. wJad2Br LOWEST PRIC.t::D OCEANA SOUT ll separate family area. All 2 BR home Eastslde. Lge re I ed & cptd, 2 story, phone, laundry. Village 2 Ba, child under 1 OK HOf..1 EON IN utilities up to lot line. 55 x fncd yd. Cpts, stove, children OK , nr pool & lnn.494·9436 $205& up. ?JOW.18thSt.' ..,,N/an 86 Foot si7.e, $8000, IO"/~ $255. mo. 548-6680 realty r N ,_ 1213,1-:----:-::----c:----::-::--:--:-l ,;c"'-""''-c,~O"==:::.. GALAXY DRIVE OCEANSlDE rec ac. o pe..... Ne-wport leach 3769 East.side; 2 BR, 2ba. $300 Ivan \.\'ells alrium, 4 BR. COMPLETELY fur· down. Will carry con· 3Br. famrm, frplc, bltn.'I , ~-434-3646afl.6. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mo. Call 557-6462 8 to 9 3 Ba . ~1arve lous day & n ished , professiqnally tract. Phone 12 ~3 ) fncdyd. ~ WK UP &2 Bd •-PM · d t-• od 1, 154000 9 44 -_69, 59 o r write zer,bl'-s,yard ,gor. Elega nt Bayfront sec. $40 1 r "'•~---·-------nitc v1ew Pool & jacuzzi. ecora ..,.... m e . . lass1fled ad no 505 ... , So J b 2 b OW bldg. Spac 2 Br. 2 ba, Bach. Color TV• maid1· Pnce reduced below ap-inventory) 28R, l 'hBa c . . · • Availnow.1Br,yd. per r, a, • adlts only. $595 mo. serv, pool. THE MESA. $315.3Br,Zba,yard,near REAL ESTATE 900 GIC'nru~y•<" St. 404 94 ,l ~40 0316 BUILD! praisal. 1824 Galaxy Dr. &ing le s tory con.do . Dally Pilot, P.O. Box "Abargain!4Br,fncd yd, bltns. cpt.s, drps, beaut 675_0003_ 415 N. Newport Bl, NB new, adults, nope~. Rid.I!-sites from $10.000 Open Daily & Wknds 1.5. Enclosed gurage. Patio : Costa Mesa, Ca. frplc, $350. lands c pg , $350 /mo. 648_9681 642·1601 to 541,000. w /excel1 cni $159,500 645-8498 with wroug hl fence & · 3 Br, yard, gar. $270. 963-4567 96.1·1786 Townhouse TRL vus Some have plans & gate. Adu~l lover 40) 80 Acres in Blythe Nea 38r,children/petOK. RENTALS UnfurnJsht-d 3525 OCEANFRONT APART adu!' 2 Br, shady park, permits Watch your LIDO SANDS ~Oml'!'un1t y, pool, Citrus,$5900.$100.down, 2Br,fncdgar,$215 3 Bd 2 Ba $37S/C70 ••••••••••••••••••••••• W\nterrental •. 11:\r. SlOO S48.fli?~opett.$130+util . • h·o~m~·~·~'~0~·~· ~~~~~I Well kept 3+ Den home Jacuzzi .. clubhouse. Nr. $50. per mo. or trade? 4 Br, rncdyard, frplc . 3 Bd .• d i b ·•· $450 3 BR, 2 Ba, 2 stv. Costa per m o. Ul1l incl'd.1 ____ . _____ _ w /beauti!ul covered El Camino Plaza shop-644-4579. ' llOMEFINDERS 3 Bd :2 ~ba.:.:::~:: S42S Mesa. Dbl gar. p"vtpatio, 548·1930or673-7844 1 Br a. bov_e carport L-a Hills I 050 Lanai ringed with col -ping center. Walk to bus 642-9900 S3l5 963-4058 / t D --._-· line. 30 m in . to San Brian I-lead. Utah, 3 Jots. 4Bd,2 Ba .•..•.• $325/400 · Real nice 2 br, frpl, new w pa io. rps & wtw ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~n1:e:;!!:rr::~ry~ Diego. Avail . now . over in, acreage, nea Near So. Coast Plaza; 4 L[ RAJSOR DupMxnUnfunti J600 cpts & drps. l bit to ~t. Bltn1, S160 mo. JustRe-duced sandy beach & short $32,SOOCOMPLETE. BY s lopes, S4000·$5000. BR. 2 ba., carp./drapeg, ••••••••••••••••••••••• beac h . Avail Dec to esaft6.8'2-i973. All Terms walk to pool & proposed OWNER.548-3036 714:493-3038Nites. Xlnt rond. $350. Vacant. REALTY· 2 BR, 1 Ba, CdM. no June, possible yearly.1.BrupperwJstcrre,retris. Th is 4 Br home in xlnt 000 r-11 Realtor548-5527 -L.11 .. ,.. ... ~-. ~smo. S:ZSOmo.548-4794 &Gar. Youpa7gu,~-. park. Onl~ 165. · "'9 Btll 3br, 2ba. shag crpt, Com.... "1IUU ..,._ ..,. .....,., <trea ha s l ~e wood 644-72llqwck. encl gar. Irvin!!." P8,250. .,..,..., •1 2500 POOL HOME: 4523CampuaDr., Irvine 644-6800 <Susie) 2 Bd, l ba, 1 blk to Bch. 2St & lut $100 dep. J117.9 :,hin~led fam ily room 1,,,,.,,.0 .,. .-Tl ... _ d . dbl CampusValleySbopctr. $27Syearly.Call97D·S.l57 Santo Tomas. 814·$2218 w/hreplace & wetbar. ................. •••••••••••••••••••••• 3ix,2ba, inmgrm, CAL&.lll ... 600 ~IDECM .2Br,encl eves days 494·4931 Sun. le nn ly SS4.950. Cal l Cen-*ONE A.CIE * frplc, bltn1, dbl gfir, paUo & gar. $250 mo. • Mon. tury21 ,831 ·264~0---I ·~~~~'C=~:d~;;·:: LEMON HEIGHTS ~~:~~-$190. •oc11 3241 9'19-2788or642-2598 $([;~~~-/)i::;trc.· L u1 I IOS21..::=====--'---j ci~t!w~el~l~.642~~-56~7!8·:_ ___ j CALIF.RANCll ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ J;.. ;:J o:pta"" ~ 1 ESTATE MESA VERDE 3 Br 1% PRAWLING 4 BR. & Apcals:o111l1hmldlecl T' I W , G " C' I/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport leech t 069 Newport leoch 106t All slumpstone construe-Ba, S3SO lncl'd 1rdnr 6 DEN' home, 11e. sundeck ••••••••••••••••••••••• not nl1i9uing ora ome witn o nuc e BF.ST PRICE Sl.fORE SIDE O F' JOGHWAVI Open be•m LR and lo,,;h lands~ape In thl.s 3 br corner Jocation. GAR· OEN HOME ... '74.500. &.joy t11o Good llfo 49J-25 IJ 499·4514 Dm"'t. drop lhe Niii Get• Job wkb • &owrHAt DallJ Piiot Claa,ifled Ad. --· I ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tion, 3·BR. 4-ba. den. wt!'. Nu crpts & dtpl. with ocean view: blt·in llllool'1•-• 3707 ....,,.., cu.t L f'O&t.Ull M•t'lter •uite has h is & 549-2066 range, oven. dishws hr .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 '-"'• r.tt... of N ColdweU Banker· PRIME VIEW-IE PLAN Bluffs , overlooking Back Bay, with city tights. 3 Bdrms. & family room plus private patio orr kitchen. Priced to sell Immediately at S89,500. A COUiWIU ....... CO. 644-1766 hers balba. All rm.a. off 0-poMf l226 w fw carp. 6: drapes; Sl85 OCEANFRONT a br, 2 ba, ._ ':;,.;,:0;!,~.:0::: •• rt fl I P . tile MON'fH winter rental. -... util. r-,,-,,.,....,,..,,.,;:---, · e ISO ••••••••••••••••••••••• -h•llway. St. CbarleaNt!WZflr"-do <kean• 1 I ncl. Avail . \2 /20.1 CUL MYS j pecan kltch., Chamben .....,., • OLDER SPANISI 673-C12if I I !' I I builtina Inc. lcemaker, Sunaet View, tennla, HOME : 2 bdrm. & dinin11----------1 frig r c ff pool. $120. 714·W·4681 rm .. frplc. Close to town Attractive 2 Br. avail. L:::=:;==:==~~ ~er:·ne~e!~~'tba~i.. days ; 714 ·498-8174 or &beach.$3.SOMONTII Jan. t , Winter or Yrly. rl G 0 R p" l'j' beer t•pper, all n•w m -ll033wkndt. MISSION RllJ.n Blk to Be•c.h. l73-023& t-'Tl'--ilT'~Jilt""i-1-t vinyl !loon, crph, tloMlh'91011leoc:~ 3240 -494-0731 c..t.MoM 3724 .... !'~p•per, •hu .. tter•, .. " ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 n. .... w cit....................... ' .... .,.. thruout. au •Y 1 BR '" •-bl 1 mll ..... qi.a area, en • I I F H A T J • Mohtrf •lone CM'l't....,.. Jdscpd w/waterf•U• & • um, I 1 7 Ten'att $305 mo. Nu kit. $115·S120. l Br trlr. J I' I J · buy hlppi""'-NII_~ K°'pooda.Roomforten· rm . Nr . Adam• • &Balh•·mO Matureadult.TbeAJoha .•.. _ who rm hid•~ nil court&:. awlmmlna JJrooltburat . tl85 . Trall•r P ark, cor. dolltrbllllnhlt-.RetMd:O. DOOi. so ••ocado • 15 ~C7;5f.5.4B 2 Br. se(J';tded area re Wilson( Newport I 0 Ac£ Io ·1 •for.,.phrineboolh.M Wt Ines. SUA.500. HOnc1 modeled kit.& bathroom ......,._ . I ' I I' I I' 0 """"" '".....,. ~ hardwood noon, no peta. bt" 1o111no .., ""' - CALL NOW bow Dalb' Pilot Cius· S3Umo..tat/lalt497·ll70 Slngleeottaae. 1dlt1:, no ._.,.....,,..... ... ~J= 1nea iilii diipl't tb6r pet. Sl15Jmo uu1 pd 752 •7315 mt!Sl•IH wlth le1lbUlty Hltpef 32.52 ~or541.fsol9. ' f9 ••\":i's~~~~ 1tnl~' IN 'and lmP11C!lT our •di. •e ••••••••••••••••••••••••l ---'--"-'------i ~c;;§!#;~~~;;=;;;:;r=? ate proud &o • .,.. re;:U, !Ilk 2ba 1•rd $32:5 $10oll'Sec. Oep.wtad1Bt • UNSC•ANUSl.C l(Tf~U fO 1et results. Pbon~ GOLo'R.EAi.TY • Oa.rdtn A,., pOOI, 1195 . .;:;...111u"""""''---"-.._ _..,., ........... 1131'1700 -710W.11tllSI-$CIA~mA .. wonlio ,..._. l I j I • ii. & ii. io, ts •• ts. en gr. 6, • le e f Tueectay. December 9. 1i75 DAILY PILOT 8~ . .. ~dd lt...Buitd it...Oaaper it ... Hammer it •.. Carpet !t ... Cement it...Wire iL..Hoe it...Clean 1t. .Move 1t. .• Pr&ss IL.Paint 1t ..• Nail it ... PJaster it . FtM it ... SERVICE DIRECTORY ··----·------........ -... - Plumb it. .. Pat ch 1t. .Pipe 1t. R emodrl 1t .. Roof it ... Land~ape 1t. .. T1le 1t .. Trtm 1t. Sew1t •.. Haul 1t... Add 1t .. Plant it... Alte r it. .. Le.Jrn it -~ ·Appl-.:• l.,_. Carpet Servlee Dedd119 6155 HauffltCJ Homeca..dftg MGSON"f r~ Poperin9 rtumblrKj TIJ. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• APPLIANCE RF.PAIR Shampoo & steam clean· lolcotd"/Walkwaya •HAl11LltJG• •HOUSECLEANING • F'\repluces l'lantt>r~ Prof. p:untcr,lnl &. Ext. MARV'S PLUM»JNG n·:HAMIC 111 E "'''\\ 6 $1.0-ServtceCall lni:. Color brighteners; ~akint:l,roblems' YA•H•Dr.cL .EANUP ReHableJapaneselody Brf<'k·C<>ncrele Patio f'rt>e Est. Slate Lie. • 646·9807 • rcmdl. f''rt·t' t•t<t SmJ Jubi. ('11C)S49-2422 wht carpl:s 10 min Decorative Waterproof __ 556·0347•_•__ 631·2o.18afl.7 BlockWalls BRQPtts 1:261479 ln<,url·d C<All NOJOHTOOSMALL WC'komc5362426 bleach Ctean Liv rm din c u L Refs F.Bt. 646-0464 John. !!6.17241 T • ..._1111-rm & hall SIS. Avff.' rm oa n3RYSRoSvG"'r. ivtna Fast Delivery, hauling, F.XPERJF.NCED Lady . -Plumber Rl'Plltr, install ree Sen1ce :::;~:·;;::! •••••••••••• $7.~. roudl $10, chair~. areas. uarantee. moving & ctn up!!. f7 up desires housecleaning tn WILLIAMS .& SONS CUbtom r1unt1WallpaJWr :owrvu·~ lint's. r<•r>tr>e c; "'°•••••••••••••••••••• Uy bome, very best care. credential tchr, will help w /homework. 642-3494. Guar clim pet odor. Crpt . Applied ~yst•ms Free est. 842·4~7. Newport. Cosl• Mesa Masonry, 8n('k /Block 1ng. l'utnl mlr $20rm, ex· Gtdll'Y 114:! ~Jl5 Ht>movab. limh1r11• 11111 repair 15 yn. expr Do lit-283642 (213)726·16S1 Hauli th' area. References. Phone &Slooe C311581·7829 lr$249avrg3Br968·7452. 111 n.: I' 1urt1 11 1• work. myself. Refs ;_._.-arical nR any ang, ~arage 642·047lbefore5PM. Mo . p h· . T _1. DRAINCLEANl-:0$6 50 FIRF.WOOU S75 Nir<I 531 0101 11;i1on.1 cleanup Rehuble fas Ylft9 uper anging. op qua 1 EH-s, wkmb sam t! pnl'e d t! 1 11 c 1 b 0 l1d 1111 .., -· ••••.••••••••••••••••••• service. 003·6452 KATHARINE'S WHITE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ty work. Free <'St. Call t:uar 5!18 7380 · C~ CARPETLAYlNG ELECTRICfAN·Small Hall -, -l GLOVECLEANING Moving/Hauling Student Dougeves.645 4727 G42·:!62.4. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AND REPAIR jobs, mainl/repairs. 22 u nf·f ehndp. r~e.re 64().8()80,5pmto7pm. w/large truck . Reas. rs-t .--. ---DRAINS CLEARED 01naml·ntal l'run1n~. 1t• Addl·ta·ons, Remod .. lln", __ c· _A. Pao", "'"2·"'Y70 yrs expr IZ331~ 548·5203 di~va s. lg ~~~mo lion, -Hat"" 548-9723/839·5779 as .,. , ... epair At Fixture SS muvals, rt"fs furn lnsrll '" ., "'.,.. ''" ggin~.645...,.,12 •HOUSECLEANING• ·J ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1"&2'1 $1250 "'·' d L I p ti p G-..1-I ---. ":' mes r v r a n 1 ~ c ,1 p 1 n ~ , a o s. an e I 1 n g, Cnnent ,Cone~ un-m ft9 Sunny & JeT·2 vets Tre Ry reliable couple. Good Paifttf1t9 _,¥aperin9 VERY NEAT PATCH 3 & 4 .. mwn hn(•s $1 ~ 9fi2 71117 (,ablneL<1,etc. 492-9739or••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••··~··••••••••• trim & removal, f~nces, References 536-T711 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOBS & RESTUCt:O. ANYTIME -ANYPLACE ..7S09460JuckorJohn_._ Bnck&blO<"k. ExprHawnhanGnrdener bldgs etc removed g HOLlDAYCLEANING PF.TERS PAINTING Freeesl.893·1439. Stntl'lt"11301U27 Upholsftty MJNOR HOME REPAIR Driveways. Sidewalks. Yd .Cleanups & .nauhng cleanup. Free p1~ku Furnish own equipment. !nt/Exl·Reas Rates Call 540-1687 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plumbin~·Carpentry Curb & gutter. Pool __!_nm&pruncG46-4676 fum/appliances.llolida Qual.work.Ph:548·l06l Cal1Gencut5S2·0458 PATCHPLASTf:RING -----Bill'sUpholde-ry Ceramic tile. 540-~ decks. Wayne. 642,8673 Com pl garden service. delivenes. 557-2005 -••ALL TYPES•• R~ & Repair S(•rving Oran~e C'o ov1•r ta'""entry, F1·n1'sh, Re. BRICK & BLOCK WORK Malnt-cleanups·all ty~s Hous:cleanlng --Landscaping *PAINTING* Free Ec;t 510-682.S ••••••••••••••••••••••• 20 yrs. Rcn1H'nn1?. ri· • ., prun11n 557 911W "' ••••••••••••••••.••••••• li<'/lll. s979·3335Try us --Quaht.v home imp lit'. 25 painng & r<'Sl}hllJ.: '" • model & Repair. Reas. patios, planters, walls, '... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Comp! Svs·Des1gns, -PtumbincJ yrs exp Free e•l. 1''a1r JOb loo small Gt·l iiur )'ates. Call 979·0379. etc. Quality al reas. Get1eral Ser~ices Wunt a RF.ALCl ... t-:,\N Sod, sprklrs. masonry, Prof. Painter. lnt. & Bxl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pnce <.:all Ken. J care. pnce before you tlecul• -REMODEL-BUIW° prices .6458512 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOUSl';?CallGtn~ham waterfalls. Ford Lnscp Qual work & reas. Free Plumbinn 6421770t.>vcs&14knds Wm Geo. ('ryko..,k •. SPEC.ONINSULATE LEONITE CONCRETF. IDOITALL! G1rl.1''recests645·5123 962-7817. esl75J.0684/548·2759. S lallt ---Ow n er . 6'11.i 5910 lt REFS,LIC.645·3439. STAMPING Cob Elt>ctrtcal, Plumbing, Xlnt housecleantn""' Maide-1 p f · 1 p pee SS RoofirKJ 645·6lo.5 _ bl R ... " ;rin-'J' ce r o es s 1 on a a Pe r w at c r h ca t t• rs . <1 1 s. • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • •• --estone, bri ck & tile etc_. cas rates. 642-4957 lady_ Wants c>r' reDula 1~ g R bl CU~OM CARPENTRY patios. etc. 640-4J49. -' ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• .an er. ea son a e. posuls, drains, faut·ets, REPAIHS-ALL TYPES NOTICE Patios, remodel & addi· -Carpentry. paintin g, bas is . Own transp Parties? We'll help with Guaranteed. 842-6553 copper repipcs . Day & Reas, freeest.s, ltc. how Daily Pilot Class \Ions. 549·4159 Controctor min or repairs. Fr ce 847'3637 serving, cleaning up. aner6 night !>ervicc. We take Walt 830-5020 a nytime ilted ads displuy lht.'tr -----!••••••••••••••••••••••• estimates. 545 1408. Housecleaning Weekly 640·0675 p INTER h' Mstr Charge. Li~ 30()948. ----messages with leg1 b11.tty 1 '00M add1t10 s G C -A ' ighly qua I JUST PLUMBl .... G Se11· th. 'th "' !' • ~n. onlraC'tor 11 yrs. & Own trans, Good refs. ified d k " mg any mg Wl a and impact? Our ads, we garages. patio cover & Exp.RemooelinJ?,repair llANDYMAN -llom-:s Gdwork.642·1440 Have somethingyouwant 1 nee~l~wor · •CA LL6424lll• Da1lyPilot<.:tassif1edAd are proud to say, really ~abinets. Mr. Kern work add1t1ons lt c Apts . Conscientious tosell?Classifiedadsdo 1s a simple matkr. get r esults. Phone 547-7334. 227773'. Mr. Ryan 54S·6299 crafts man. 645-6558_. __ Sell idle items it well. 642·5678. Want ad results 642·567 Classified Ads 642·5678 JUSl call 642-5678. 642·5678. -----1 ~hUnfww. Aporhllenhu.fwn. ApartmeahUnfurn. Room&Boord 40500ffieeRflttal 4400 MoneyWanted 50lOLost&Found 5300 HelpWont.ct 7IOOHelpWant.d 7100 ···•····•··•••········ ...................................................................................................................................................................................... .. Costa Mtta 3824 Laguna hach 3848 Newport S.ach 3869 Fr~ Room & lloard for NEW Will pay 10% interest on Lost: 12/l Tan Adult TE>r· .,••••••••••••·--··••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• older woman who will MEDICAL·DENTAL well secured $35,200 h.t rypoo. No ID. Lake Off haten Poth Drop a pebble into the L 1 BR . N t cook dinner for 2 adults. BUILDINGS T.D. Good Costa Mel.a Forest. atll 581 6892 l , 2 & 3 Br. Adults no Ocean from your Apt. J:~re~: rr~t ~;~~~. 646-4110 space available property. Prime buyer. LOSr: --- pets, ds hwhrs, shag cpts, Lease. Luxury• secunty · Yearly lse. $285 mo. VacaHon Rentals 4250 Soon to be constructed on Call 645"7221 ' ask for GERMAN SHEPHERD closed gar age' fr pie, Mature adults. 31755 Cst. Jones Realty 673~210 ••••••••••••• •••••••••• Warner, 'h block West of Realtor Dan Wallentine Near Talbert & Ward .BBQ. Gas & water pd . ..!:!_wy. 499·2835· --Choice Vail Location, 2 Br f'ounlain Valley Com· Morl~s. Trust Jn Fountain Valley PUool MANCHA APTS Whitewater view. nearly SPVAICEIWOUASPSAERCLT"~EDNETD + loft Condo. Sips 8. munity Hosp-Town & OffdS 5035 Black & Tan 2 b 2 b & 3 b 2 b '"' walk to 11·rt Avail Feb Country theme. Space ••••••••••••••••••••••• new r. a r, a. · · . N h · · Ans. to "Rider." 778S<·ott Place CM lease S280 $300 Block lo In dprest1g1ous . orl $75 a day. Write Dr. R. W. will go fast so call now to LOANS l 8QO/ SI 00 E 642-5073. be c h 494 :3383 r En . 3 Br. 2 Ba. din rm, Foster. 3270 s. MonrOC', obtain leasing informa· lstTDUrcoanOs--9oY.o/o R WARD 494~39· 0 frplc, lndry. Walk .to DenverColo.so210. lion. Recent surveys NoQuestions Asked HEW EAST SIDE town & beach. $425 mo tn· show a strong demand·SO Call 963-1t21 2 Br & Den, cpls, drps, Br dup .. North End, cl ulils. 531 Jo: Cypress Rentals to '11~ 4300 hurry-Call Phil Brown 2nd TD Loons BOYS AND GIRLS 12to15. Earn Christmas money working a few hours after school and S<.1turdays. If you are honest, ambitious, and not. ·arraid to talk to people, phone Mr. Wolfe at 6't5·2873. Equal Opportunity Employer l>ltns & dshwshr. $275 yard. ,·1ew. adults. no Dr. Laguna Bch. 494.3920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fairest Terms since 1949 Personals 5350 642-6243 ~9~L~z.s2$275 . 497-2575 Lido Isle lux apt. 3 br. 2 HOUSEMATES SattlerM~Co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• HelpWanted 7100 HelpWont~d · 7100 ba Patio sun dk frplc 642·2171 545-0611 Drinking problem? ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MES .a. VERDE · ' ' . · · T ME Call Alcohol Helplme "" L B · . $500 mo. 673·7358 As ~nllen 10 1. B S TTER W d NEW 2 Br, 2 Ba, adult uxury 1· r, view. Near Magazme,profess1onally 2ftdTDLoansWanted 24hrsaday835-3830 ABY 1 ante: apts. Lge beautiful in· beach. French doors, brings people together Buy T.D. 's for cash. PREGNANT? Mature Woman to sit w /2 Im med. opening. Ex per. teriors open to lush water beams. gar .. lndry; ut11. San Clement~ 3876 to share housing. Investment Division Loans on 2nd T.D. ·~ Ca ran g c onfidential :~~5~~t9~~3~ week. }~~h~r~~~ic~;et!te2 ~andscap1og. Every con· _pd. S300 Mo. Agt. 494·755l ••••••••••••••••••••••• SO WHY LlVE ALONE? New Loans·2nd T.D. s counseling & r eferral. ----------1 Morning meals & 2 eve. ceivable extra. Must see SPACIOUS SECLUDED Deluxe adult 2 br. 2 ba, Especially during the (714) 752-7300 E ~1. · $30,000 0 ._ Abortion adoption & Babysitter. mature, for 4 meals. Apply in person. to appreciate. $355·$465. VIEW APARTMENT good loc. $250 incl heat· Holidays. Call 832·4134 qwly nvsmt. i,v. keeping • yr old CdM. Prefer refs. 83112 Newman Ave , H . 8. Ml555ESAMVERVDErdVILDLAS. In pres ti,::ious No rth ing&hot water. 496·5167 Graph'1c Desgnr wants lminess Rental 4450 BARNETf MTG. CO. APCARE 547 2563 644-1680. 842·5551. esa e e nve Ed 3 B 2 B d' 20Yr smOrgCty. East. (714 )540-8871 Just n · r. a . m rm. San Juon rm mate w /furn. Have ••••••••••··~··•••••••.• 645-2134 anytime Babysitter for 3 mo. old. W of Mesa Verde Ctr. off fr~l c. Jndry. Walk .to Capistrano 3878 2BR 3 BA Npl Cr~st Gar DE.LUXF. office, comm I SPIRITUAL RF.ADER Start in J an. M-Th, my Harbor Blvd. adjacnl. to ~ n t bea<'h. ~2.~ mo I~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• wash /.dry full ktt Pool & ~n~ustnal spaces. Al~o A~~~~~ ~~~~ft~s. home. 646·2357, N R tn /\~~begul~! ~~~,\~u~l~~ds C MG lf&C Cl b c ult s. ?JI 1', CypressSJC c d 3 Br tenni s 645·7780 D m1n1 warehouses 10 Announ ts -----.. o . u Dr Apl.E.4943920. d . new l o;l~ i:;: 645·59251:: LagunaN1guel&Mission p cealmen 312N.E1Cam1~0 Real. BABYSITTER, mus t 12) Good Cooks Call rps , crp s. ns. x ve· e· Had t erson s SanClemenlc.Fo4r~ppll. drive. care of 2 school 581-1500.askforTom Mewporl Beach 3869 ~~~e961y4r6easonablc at G f R t 4350 S~nJODf:g;sFwy. n2J, l~ L~t & Found 492.9034 92·9 36 ch1ldren, 2-3 hrs daily. --- ••• •. •••. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • """""· 4 · 1 1 araqes or ett 2000 sq ft As low as .,"' •••• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • •• • ---------•DELUXE• e-.a. .a. --••••••••••••••••••••••• per sq ft. 83. l.'1400 .,,.,. Announcements 5100 HAMCYS OUTCALL Lite hswrk, Irvine area. Clerical .>UITTGAIKll 3880 XTRA LGE. $30. 408 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Massage.Call 894·0567 days,ask for Mr. Easlbluff 3 br, 2 ba, lse. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Al b H B 962 3533 (2131421-0574 Garcia or Mrs. Smiley. GENERAL lncl. spac master swle, 2 Br stove, dshwshr, garb. or~.,:m03a21· · · · 2 Stores nr Npt Post Ofc. -'.·~i.{'i"6"<._~·~•<~ __________ 1 din rm & dbl garage. disp. air cond. s hag ,>JV' 300 Sq. ft. ea. ,$100/Mo. ~·, . '...a Barber or Apprenli<'e. COOK COOKS .PIMECREEK Pool & re<:reation area. nice residential uea. Office Rftltal 4400 646-2414· ~· CHRISTMAS ? ,!, ,U'lUES ,·~ days. Eves. 496·2082. j Auto door opener avail. crpts, drps, encl patio, ea. Gd park g. Agt. , . !fU NEED ~ .;$•.:JAl;·.'j•-.)\~·l.)Aj~~:,. f /time. Call 496·9044 CLERK • LIVES UP Adults only, no pets. Cloee to shops, mature ••••••••••••••••••••••• lndustriat Rftttal 4500 'C MOHEY? :, ' [f IOOKS • Barmaid, evenings Sir .To ITS .... .a.ME •FR<?M $332• ad~ts only. No pets. Jn. 150 I Westcliff Dr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;,,-1..no1c around the ho115e. 'J ·;1 JEWELRY :' Harvey's, 177 E . 17th St. We have an openinj! for -"~ 865Am1gosWay NB qwre 415 S. Orange Apt N rtF' , l Ct 2000 Sq Ft offi<'e & .. d111 ou1 1ho61! unu:-cd ~· -.1 PU.HTS 1.• CM.548·9040 an individual with a ()\·er CllJ'I 1 • II trncr ·1nrl 644 • c ewpo manc1a r 1l,1 11-ms •. tum ·~em 1n•A ( j . . m l y a rncnnt .,.,.,, .1 " ... • -8064 or 536·1487 . L . off· s warehouse space direct· • chnst;as mO::~y. v;; r.,. ',)Got any of lhr~·· you ~ mm1mu e r .. ' 10 s t rctims "'1th Mana~edby .a. t t Fu • h d ~SUMJ ice pace ly across from OC ~ can putanadth1Ss1ze.JJ •• >;iren t usinll' \ou <'Jn• BEAUTICIAN office experience. Ideal w at nf a I h <'re a I c a William Walters Co. Af>Cl'lilen S mis e Ca ll on Site Mana~er Airport 549 1480 ,_ I.Oder the Daily Pilot ~l ·'.) 11$t I.hem all fonJll· in.. • Manager w /foll. for NB ('andtdate would hav1· r1•lax1n~ sl'lt tni.; for or Unfurnished 3900 (714 )642-311lcxt246 ~ ti ;) boxthtSs•~eundtrour .•, sulon.540·8582,644·0661 typmg skills ofS0.55wpm )'Our Sfl,l('IOllS lll'W l or Bayfront 2 Bd, 2 Ba, Pvt ....................... '(.~ CHRISTMAS TREE ·..t ' IJAll,Y PILOT ~ and would be capable of 2 lx.'1ho<>lll Jpartmenl. Bch & pier. $.550. yrly. THE EXCITING * .._.EW * ey •Ustallofyourgoodies•·:J .:-, CllRISTMAS TKEE. '·: BEAUTICIANS handling general off1c1· From $220. Fu rn1ture 979-1935 &644-4510 PALM MESA APTS. COS,...TA MESA .• .. ~1>--~~mcftt:r~lh~ ~ ; l\lrn 1.bo11e UJ>und ••~ " Space Rentals CdM duties such as filing. bill ava1a c .• ma P MJNUTESTONPT t11th.,Call642·~678for~ ;i OurChnstmasTreewill ,' mgan ('Cn ca supporl I hi S II els ~ ,.... .J• :,., into Chri st nu~ Cash• • 673.0404 · d 1 · l OK Adults only Orrtl'C OCEAMRtOHT BCH. (Near Harbor & Baker) moreinformallon. ;,) {J ~ Dec. 11th• llllh. 'i---------•I to accounting offt('(', open 9 oo lo ti 00. 2300 Bach, 1&2 BR. ~Alt c-•tloniftt 1360 to 3480 sq. ft. 18< per .. ~ ,....,IV:'ib>-~:'t '.1ri'.f'i~\~ , , Call '4Z·S678 for more •. & G• I Please apply tn person: . Fair view Hd . Costa 2BR.lba.winter$300 from$l!W. .,,c.,..,.....,...._1., sq rt. 110-208. J phase f 111rormatioo. • BOYS tr s Me:,a. l'hon~ 545·2300. STEPS TO BEACH Adults, No Pets ~::"-power, avail mid Dec., Lost & Fo.td 5300 'o1-{•,n .JnLJ-cl~o·•j•'l'* ·n· ' 10 lo 1(years of age. Dai· . 2 BR, 1 ba $230 winter 1561 Mesa Dr. / '"'' -'*'-'-• owner· (714) 540-4058 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly Pilot delivery routes Adult 2 huge bedrooms,. 2 BR, 1 ba, winter $225 (5 Blks East of Newport ~ x.-_.. your Broker t. 1211 115 T . Man companion 40·60. in· may be available in your S170 no pets. lnqw re apt, 4 BR. 2 ba. yearly $495 Blvd ) ./' s.cy --..,.., Chlh · · '"Y te 11 i gent, ch(' e rf u I, area. Earn profit for de· c. 568 W. Wilson. ~ Bachelor apt furn $165 546 9860. .....,.. pe<11.,. uahua F~male. San needed by pretty lady. 1· · & h ----------' Winter . Lease 1.000 sqft w /office Juan Ca Pl st ran o. Wnte Ad no. 620. Datly ~v~~~~ndi~:sr~r t~!'::u':~ 2 Bd. FAMILY Only. New SE.a. Wl .... D 110-220 V, heal, hot !1.!a1r506tbroken. Reward. Pilot P.O. Box 1560 CM A " b d' d ......,. new subscriptions. For Carpets, pool, $190. 3 Bdt Condo. 2 BR .. 2 ba., den. RES 0 RT water, new uil mg, g 92626 information please call $2l0.646-6ll5. Unf. Yrly.$475. $140 up store-offices cpts locale.545·2244· Lost: Blk Lab mix, 9 OUTCALL 642·4321. From San 6TUDJO apts, all util pd.I drps air bath. 17301 FREE RENJ mo' s. Fem a I e. & Clemente-San Juan t · $1 J Be ch Bl H B 842 2834 "Stymie''. llB. Call MA S SAGE Capistrano area, c::ill , ge. patio 65. mo. 859 a ' · · · 960-1852. ESCORTS 495·-0630 and Mission Vie· W. !9th St. 642'3452 SINGLE to 6 rm suites o M L y A F E w For the extra ·sin ltfe and jll-El Toro area, <'all $i~~~~;~~f:i~~~~:i~ , ... RK .... EwroRT LIVING ~~dxf~~~:~~:~~ ~AL~~EuFT. REMT ~~~~~f;~~e~~il~~:~ ~~~~%:ifs~~r::.3~~u ~~!~o(>ppor. Emptoyer ~ " tionist, conference rm, 581·2340or aft. 6, 493-7687 our family friend Please. l Bdrm. Garden apt. APARTMENTS ~erox, automated typ. S'--4550 Call 645-4351 nite or day MASSAGE BUSBOYS frplc, dishwasher, pvt Ba h I 2 mg. etc. CaU 833-3640 .... .....,.... HB area. FUii & p/tame work. Ex· N I · I d c e or lor Oakwood offers lhe ••••••••••••••••••••••• t-----------FIGURE MODELS Patio. ear rvme n Bed d per'd Apply 10· person rooms an flllesl in resort li ving at a f v und mini white poodle · • area. $11W. 557·2841. Townhouses i f d Storage lot or R 's etc. ESCORTS ask for Ruth, Sheraton pr ce you can a for . ro 50 pc .. mo Nr'll s·1gn blk /org bows pink nail M Fr. $239.50 There's Sl million in 60• PER SQ FT eo"''" F ·' f 53· 1 337 1 4 · polish. 998-5305 OUtcall· Appl. only. Newport, 4545 ac-LARGE 3 Br, upper, shag, freshly painted. Mesa del ()pen9.6 DQ;ly . orm o, · u Off Stud. Arthur Blvd NB .... recre ation facilities. 1617WESTCLIFF·NB 1---,--------.. ome· ice· 10 · · · STANDARD MEMORIES INC. A Subsidiury or APPLIED MAGN,ETICSCORP. 2221 So. Anne Street Santa Ana, Calif. 92704 Equal Opportunity Employer M /F COUMTER HELP P /time. Days. 18 & ovr. Apply betwn 2 & 5pm wkdys. Del Taco, 115~ Baker, Costa Mesa Spa-Pools-Tennis NIGHT LIGHTED TEN· AGT. 541-5032 Rentals W..ted 4600 631-381 I CAR WASH HELP Across from Fas hion NISCOURTS.' A full time . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• DAY BUSBOY Dana Poiflf 3126 Island at Jamboree on activities director who FUmished office, Bank of FURNISHED home ... ant· &=tion& FUii or p/lime. 5 Loca· COOKS • Mar. S'Zl5. 552-4576. ••••••••••••••••••••••• San Joaquin Hills Road. plans parties, BBQ's, Costa Mesa Plaza. $8S ed in Newport/Hunt. Bch lions. 2 Br 2 Ba, lge delux bltns, (714)644-1900 trips & more! Free Sun· mo. 556-3900 area. 3-4 br, l to 2 yr lse 1-----------••••••••••••••••••••••• ~';:~ :.~~ :!~~ro\a~~~!i:e~?i~ Oceanvlew $239.50 UTILITIESP.a.ID day brunch. FREEREMT beginning Jan 10th. Jobs Wanted. 7075 ---------t (Laguna Hills Mall> ..w&-1893 "" Plus beautiful singles, . 642-SS82or642·6725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• c-LJ-r----Shop Equal Opportunity BLOCKTOOCEAN 1&2 bedroom apts, Offices as low as 3se per ---------,__________ i:nn ... 1-~ H.t1.9on leach 3140 Deluxe Private 2Br. 2ba. furnished & unfurnished. sq ft. Mission Viejo & Exec. Relocating, needs 3 . Poodle Black Toy, EUROPEAN COUPLE of-Exper'd only. Apply in _E_m--'-pl_o.:..y_ers_._. ----- ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lac waJk-in c l osets, Models open 10 to 7. Laguna Niguel. 200 to Br furnished home. Mid Ans. ''Shadow·•. Male. fer cleaning serv. & person, ask for Rut,b, DELI P t Full ,,_ " f 83 ·400 'd J R t house ma1·nt Also party Shera•-Newport, A •• ermanen . a.: 1•10 BD Bch pool ap•-bl'A", garage, cable TV, So .. ry no pets or c .. 'ldren. 2000"" t. l·l Dec. to M1 an. es. · """ .. N ed °"' . ' ...,.. ....... • m "" Vic. Pau l arino/ catering Xlot refs MacArthurBlvdN.B. part·t.ime. e matun·. $175. up. Adults, no pets. Adults/no pets. $300 mo. Room mate service Sqn N M d' I Of upon request. Call Fa i r v i e w c M . · · • dependable, hard work ~7""1 till June 15. $375 mo. on ava1· t able. Month to ew e ica -201-871-3004 or P.O. Box 642·5299 . .....,.. "" fice for Jease ~ block N J REWARD. 751-6742/ ----------1·---------1 ing pe rson. Newport/ ---------•yearly Jease. Available monthoccupaoc". :rn Ft. Lee ew ersey, """·.,'""' UaJ..W_....._~ 7100 "A"' "'A"l WALK TO lliCH J r r om Ho a g II o s P . ....., .._, ....... ,. urmru CENSUS _'"""VIV ___ • _____ _ Dec. 10. CalJ for appt Cabinets, etc, free u _cn_024 ________ .._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 & 2 Br, cpts, dprs. SS1-«>42after6 PM. lease assumed. Call Bmiftess lnnst OST: Black neutered Are you management Dental Asst, part·tim<'. bllns. gar. 221 16th. 205 548 3451 t 'l 0 31 ~--male cat. W /collar & oriented! Earn up to . ENUMERATORS experienced. Call Dr. 1 St h St. 8C 7 -3957 ; eps to Sand, 2 Br 2 Ba. · 1 e<'. ' ~• bell, nam.ed Schaeffer. ..,SOOmop/t. 639.61..... Wetnerat847-8S01 532-2064; 536-3058 bllru!, patio, frplc, $295 Oakwood thereafter: 675·1189 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• 497-2601 Vac. Solana Wuy _.., _______ ~__ c rTY OF ---------1 mo. 642-9666 mail replies to Ad. No . ..._ss La B h. AUTO IODY SHOP NEWPORT BEACH Dental Floating Assist. EX lge 2 br, 2 ba, dlx Garden ~72, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box Opportunity 5005 g c S'Z.35 Per Hour for busy long estab'l ok. I poolside apt nr bch. Adil, Nr Hoag Hosp. Large 3 A ... ""' ..+ments 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca.••••••••••••••••••••••• : Orange & While 5 years experience. Temporary positions Noo smoker. Refs. Write' no pet..s. $195. 536-8362 BR, 2 B~, fplc, bllns. ~ • 92626 D 3 r Jing FA 5 HJ 0 N Male cat. 9 m06t oJd. Vic. re~kfo:ipiGodc~5r.coLuniv~ beginning Jan. AppJy by Classified ad no. 568 c/o DW, patio, encld gu. Hewporl lff<h UTIQUE De t N 8 MacArthur & San Joa· -v• Dec. 19th, 1975 at the Daily Pilot, PO Box 1560, ~pacious New Triplex 1 Adult..s,nopeta.$290.mo. trvineal16th Plcna !~a. · 11 • • quin HilJs Rd. CdM. try .' .. San Ju an Personne l Dtpt .. 3300 CostaMesa,Ca92626 miletoocean$345.3 Br,2 642-0596 645-0550 Ex.cutiYeSuit.s 67s.-0930 640-6823 Please caJl 640·18'7 Caplalrano! See Dennis NewportBlvd,N.B. DentalAsslst.p/time.Ex· Bii, bllnB. lg. frplc, sep Custom-decorated fulJ1---------REWARD! 0 l' P 4 u l · 8 PP1 Y gar w/lndry conn EW2BrCondo,nrHoag Ilise vlew offices.PLANT SHOP, Balboai-----------weekdays. panded duty dental as· 546-5633wkndsoreft6 Hosp. Wshr/Dryr lncl'd a~ 4000 Services of Certified Isl. owner operated. ; maJe grey min. IARWICKDATSUM CLEANING WOMEN st.st & plaque control in· 2 Br patio. crpts. drps, ~~n..,~0~99~95 + :-:=: ................. Professional Secretary, First time offered. Poodle. name "Sparky" 493-3375 831·1375 wanted. SJ+ hr. Own structor. Chairside ex- st.ove avail Dec. 15. $'lOO. ""'" LIVE at Newport Beach. ~plk>n & equipment. 1 1 _673-4 __ 7l_3 ______ Vic. 20t b St. N . B • 1---------1 transportation 644·2266. per. Xray he req'd. XlnL .s •• : ,. 0 3 1 , 1 5 0 3 c 2 Houses to Beach, 4 or 2 Weekly winter rates. ft«:. blk Airport.er Inn. ~ Reward. 675-1136 Auto Recreational Veb1· • oppor. Sal open. 842·6631 • 0 • ..-Ml b l D J · e &nallP IEMTAL cle Driver & Mechanicl•--------•I Nabama Ba, frplc, wetbar, den single room. 6302 W. Cst. ~ e son r , rvin · .,..... • o s T ; p u p p y • bel k 11 Cadrtoil Waitrns D £:NT AL REC E P • . gar. SSOO yrly. 642·3443 Hwy. Pine Knot Motel. CaJI Eve Moore. 752·0234 Nets $35,000 yr. Owner blk/wht/bm, Aust. Shep. per. Mo e app cation i p TIONlST min 2 yrs eJtper 3 Br $2$9 2 Br $190 Encl (714)673-0440 retiring after 17 sue·· 11 at Traveland USA, ad· Apply n erson lndentaJofficc6'2·5'24J ' Uo bltns Child On the Canal. Unique FREERENT.lmonthon ceASfulyean.Fromtools female w/rlea co ar. minlstrallon ofc, Sant.a 3lo5PMMonthruFrt _ ~·J:om • large l Br, unf\lm, nu PvtBalcBedrmforrent 300-llOOsqltdeJux,eorc. t.otracton.Pricedabout Vic. Beach Blvd. & AnaFrwy,SandCanyon 1lteAncientMarincr •0est Clerk, The Ion •l ---------• cpts,drpsboat slipavaU. w/ltlL priv'gs, $1~ mo. No.C.M.640-2200 the value or l'Quip. with Adams, H.B 536-8279 or ExitEaatlrvine. 2&07W.CoastHwy,NB Laguna. 211 N. CoasL •:!i~fe~~~~L~;:ty1~ $300 mo. ~3-~T . CM. 97MaJ9 •Mewpcwt leoth* ;:~% down. Aaeot J...9'794163.;.....:....;__ _______ ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;11~~~~~~~~~1 :~~~~~Te~ach. A.sic $175 982·0678 eves or WALK to beach Lee 2 br, Newport Bch. Sleeping F\JU service garden 0!·1---------AYON COOK TRAJNEE • Exper, ________ _ ~ 2ba,pool&tenniJ.$315. room near shops & fi~nearairport.From GIFTSHOP preferred,fulllimeC21.3) DllVHSWAHTED · 6'2·3048; 645-7708 boch. Pvt entr & bath. o . i.e.stni otncc open 9 nu."band t.ransferred le 592-lOtO ft1ustbe2Sorover JUST COMPLETB> TOWNHOUSE S120 mo. 673-0343 to$ Mon-Fri. 970-fl666 wife mu."t acU. Eitcep-1----------1 MHD EXTRA • ---------Apply In Person 3 Br 2~ Ba. dshwahr, Ba r I b b h d l l A/C Uonal opportunity for l: 1 pr. Gold rimmed SSTO MAK! Yetto c• 1 le 1 tar " pallo 2 Br + Den. 2 . rp c, &SIDE C.M. 1 r, at • CdM ex 2 rm "u te • wom 8 0 w It b aome Pres rtptl 1 0 w ~·~dren no peta' dbl 1•r. Wcstcliff area. pvt entr. refri~. lUO. utilJ!«·ll80.mo.28SSE oaullcaJ uper. Locat.td ln ~ute: tJ8:Ja~sl~ CHRISTMAS Toplaceyourmessacc ~lSl3leTAvenuc Alto; 1 Br, 'd1hwahr: ~· 548-8397 67H488orS4CHIGI Cat wye7s.aoc> ln busy marina. t8,000 Balboa Isle. Reward. MERRIE•? before tho Fountain Valley rr,,tc. t'ncl 1rar It paUo. Park Newport Sub·ltue, R 00 ms s2 s wk up . Private oflice-Westcllrr. FP. Ajl. &17-doO. 673-Ulllor5.22.a2IO. Earn them u on AVON rending public. s:no. AduJta no pet.. 1713 1 br · Save at S'lSO mo. w /kilchen. Apts S.1'7 .50 UnfurnlshMl. $'90. rno .. Eat ab 11 •bed Jr. t: U/6 lg red t.Alled REPRESENTATIVE D:i~~lot wan.No.l .Sl60llll4 AvaJI Jan lsl. 752·8141 wk up. 548 ·975S or 6424097. Sport.swcauto~rorsaJo bawlt wJlong leash. tr Se1l beaullful gifts, Classilied,"2·S678 OYEMAKER part tlme ror amall lour-slidl"/ punch press. 847 7515 •~va. &a...let1eh 3141 daya. Evoa64A-86'T9 &U-3967 •t MOFR1'~£ RENT• or I cue oo Balboa 5eenpJeuocall14S.76Se. Jewelry. coamotlcs. ·~;.,·••••••••• .... •••• Beautiful room in my 1·2·3 Rm. omcet from J 11 I and. Rep I Y to ------------1 more. I'll show you how I•--------· Earn $200 mo. p/tlmo. 06eanlront )'ear 'round l 1 Br Apt. Part. Fum. house for lady, kltch prtv SUS per mo. Near cluaified ad no. 803, c/o Loll malt wht puppy vie Call 540-70'1 or Zenith ---------i l'\iller Brash Sales, tout r 1215; 2 br 1395: bacb $125 mo. 6 gar Nr shops/bu!I. CM AIJ'l)Ort. No lcaae req. Dally Pilot, PO Bene ISSO, Ocean Ftoot • Proepect 7-1359. SELL Idle itema with a a:ru. BlU, aa..8378 .--UUI tn~I Uf.1CD21 845·2898 se..311a2. &:l).3223 9TU QOOI\ 00.t• Mt'!la, Ca 92821. N 8. 12-4. 644·:i&M Dally Pilot Clas.\lned Ad.•--------- • • .. I r • '8)0 DAILY P1LOT TU!!d!y. Otcember 9, 1975, Help Wam.d 7 I 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Schools and Instruction This variety of fine· schools · could introduce you to a new tomorrow For fortht>r information rC'~ardin~ placement c•( .1clHrl1Mn,I! in lhl' 1>:11h· Pilot ~c·hools and I ll'>lructllln l>trC"rtorv CALL 642-56 78, EXT. 325 REAL ESTATE??? HAVE YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO G IVE IT A TRY NOW "'TME THOMAS SYSTEM'" presents a pr&-hcens1ng program tor you to take to pass the state license examination. s599s TOTAL COST TO YOU a.lld9g ....... beab & ...... .. START YOUR CARHR TODAY!!! Cal MOL.fri. 8:l0 cun. to S:lO p.m. CALL FOR RESBtVA TIOMS UMITED SEA TING AV AIL.AILE 752-8341 VALLEY REAL TY A IB~ EMTaPllSI CO. PRE-S~HOOL EXPERIENCE IS THEIR BEST TEACHER Let yoor child experience pre-school at its highest level of quality during an exciting FREE DAY at AMERICAN PRE-SCHOOLS Offering your child the following benefits: • Opens 6:30 a.m.-ctoses 9:30 p,m • State Adopted Curriculum •Individual Attention (1-12 Ratio) • Pnvate Kindergarten • Competent Qualified Teachers • Ctedit for Absent Days • become confused easily •daydream in school • feel lost •• _ •feel like a failure • have poor grades • learn slowly . WE SPECIALIZE IN DISCOVERING- AND HANDLING THE BASIC BARRIERS TO LEARNING. q I r • we can help THE STUDENT IMPROVEMENT CENTER Gall 642-9088 901 Dover Drive N ewpart Beach Developing Your Personal Potential Workshop CDPPt WHO AM I REALLY? Can you r e member a day when everything went great? You were prob a b I y u s in g 5-8 'In of y :> u r potential that day. Most days you may be only using 2-47'-of your potential. The Process Of Becoming Dr. Herbert Otto began developing the OPP works hop in 1959 as a small group experience in "unfreezing" ones self concept & opening the mind to the real self. Over 100.000 people have experiehced this awakening experience all over the country. Weekend workshops are now being held in Orange CoWlty monthly. The Next one will be on Dec. 13th & 14th. The Cost is $35 and reservations are required. Lee Ha c hey, M.A. Uc. MFCC is yow l~ Call the Newport HCll"bor Counsefing Center at 833-16 10 for details Got' A Problem? Would A Good Job Help? . Career Train NOW For: SKrefary . Receptionist lo~Hpff Jr. Accountant . Typist-Steno · Special lru1h-Up COW"MS Day or Ennlftg CIOSSff .. . . . . . . Newport Air Associates Flight School & Flying Club LEARN TO FLY s595 lfiftOllCllKJ A•oitablel * FAA APPROVED * CCM1rse 9"chldff: 35 Hours fltght time 1n Cessna 150 s with 20 hours dual instroct1on. Club membership Free dues. lnd1v1dual 1nstruct1on. tailored to YOUR abiltty. 20 AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY Learn to fly now - -and have fun! * Special Rates for Commercial or Instrument Students. For Complete Details Call MOW 979-1155 1971 I Airport Way South Hed to Hte T~ ....,._ OrOftCJI! c_..ey Aif11ori .., LVM-TopWttcJH Bayvteweonv. HoepitaJ -: 20SS Thurin. CM QI II 6'2 .35M Management PEOPLE PERSON F:xec. looking for part Lune business assor!otc in wholesale supphes B u !\ I n e s s f u I_ I y capita lized. Interview 673-2223 OFFICE HELP J. HERBERT HALL J EWELLERS Neat, mature pers on wante d for £/tim e, permanent office work in fine jewelry store. Apply in person only, betwn 103m-12noon. So. Coast Plaza. Office AHendant P /lime eves. Bayview Manor. 350 W. Ba y Ave, C.M. 642-3505 . 1 ORDER CLERK Necess. skills · Typing, phone work, basic math. Exper. in international business ctesirable. Send resume to Classified ad no. 602, c/o Daily Pilot, P. O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca 92626. Part & F /time Time Life Libraries, Jnr. has positions for a m- bitious men & women. Use our phones to in- trod u ce v a t iona lly known Time Lif~ Books L CAREER TRAINING for MEN and WOMEN MICKEY'S PALETTE ART CLASSES JAPAN KARATE FED. 325 Mo. Newport Blvd. To Cali f. & ArizonJ. Earn up lo $150 & more. for 25 hrs work. Income based on salary, comm. & liberal bonus. Hrs arc· 9-2:30 & 3·30-9. 5 &6days a wk. No actual selhni? involved. All work is . done in our relaxed lrvine ofc. You must possess a pleasant clea r voice & a confident ma n- ne r . For more info. 833-8098. of all AGES! DayCllMl bewift9 Classes Mow FonftincJ • . . ' &wol Mow fM January Get Complete Details Today Phone 635-3450 •.-.CAL • DIMTAL ASSISTANT ASSIST AMT o Month Proqom 7 Monlh Proqom ~o-ed by AMA.MMA • &&CHMCY MH>ICAL • ..-.CAL OFACI IMTIMSIYE CARE NAMACPEMIMT TlCHHIClAM '4 Morllh Proqom b Month Evening P1oqom • DIMTAL LAI TKHMtCIAM o Months ~ or IS Mooths Eve\. • Acaocitod Member, Notod ~tOl'I of Trode & T ectncol Schooh • • M efqble ons11full()l'I uncle-the Federdly ln~ed S1udent Loon Proqom. No1ionol 0..e<T Student L~ P•OCJ'om, 8os.c Edicononol ()pporli.nty Gc:n Proqom. College WOfl Study Proqrom. SupplPmentol Educoi.onol ~ Gont Proqrom crd CETA • ~ for Ve1e1on' •Placement Au.~lonce le>< G~ ~no e•l!O co\t. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COLLEGE ..... MEDICAL AND DENTAL CAREERS 1117 S.. ............ St .. Auttrlm 9ZI04 Brenda's Nail Nook of Beverly Hills Is Open & is doing J uliette M anicuring at 28 5 5 E. Coast Hwy. . Corona del Mar ·Offering monthly special (S10 for first manicure & 2nd manicure is FREEi) Instructing Licensed Manicurists in Juliette Manicuring, which is the method of paper wrapping the nails to promote growth of your own. nails. Special on Sculpt1.1red Nalls. Also Pedicures. F0< Appointment & Oass Reservation ca11 e1s-osoo or c213> es1~21 Open 7 Days A Week Days & Evenings By Appointment ADULTS-CHILDREN COMPLETE LINE OF SUPPLIES CUSTOM FWING READY MADE FRAMES ART SUPPLIES & CU.SSES I 962-6900 l 18582 IEACH ILVD .......... °" lffeh TOWN & COUNTRY CENTER H.B. Suite #5, Downstain Days Tel. 637-5904 Nites 642-8387 IAuou,.,._"-1........, NOCOMRACTS MO GIMMICKS $24 PER MONTH Special rates to families. college students & groups. REE DIAL LESSON * IC•ale SWto Rp Shoto Kmt "* Alddo * t41cltatlon ..... . ...... *Yoga HetpWanted 7 100 HelpW..t.cl 7100 Help Wanted 7100 HelpWaatfli 7100HefpWanted 7100 .... pWantfli . 7100 - . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••'••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HelpWant•d 7100 H.tpWanted 7 100 • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Engineering Scheduler Food Service GENERAL •Secretcries Workers •Typists Hospital exper. Rotating •leypwtch Oprs schedule. E.O. E. Xlnt ••IX O~ benefits. Must apply in ..- person , Costa Mesa NEED D NOW' O r a n CJ e Co u,. t y Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Tempo Temporary Help aef'o t pace company Dunlap, 301 Victoria, 17802Sky Park Irvine C M Call 540-4455 lllm • immediate r.-1-:::·~=====j~~~~~~~~ cpir11Mnt for a col-I .. CJf'aduate with 4 SEEK & FIND·. yews experienu in FEUDALISM JUNIOR SALESMAN 10To15 Years Old Earn $20-$40 per week working after school & Saturdays. Huntington Beach & Fountain Valley areas only. Leave name, address & phone number · on tape recorder. Call 536-4298. · Inspectors PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD INSPECTORS IMfructiollCll Aide LADIES- Deaf /Hard of Hearing TRAVEL 4 Hours Per Day Nal'l Fashion Publisher OCEANVIEW has severa l immed. SCHOOL DISTRICT openin°s for ladies 18 & $3.21 Per Hour " Work in class rooms over who are free to w/students under direc· travel. Travel New York, lion of teacher. Ability to Fla., Calif. Transp. furn. · I 'd High earnings. See Mrs. Diceon Electronics. a use sign anguage req · Brideau at Holiday Inn, leader in the printed Some exper. working 3737 Chapman Ave, circuit board industry, w /bard of bearing Orange Suit e 107. has openings for quality children desirable. Ap· Parents welcome at in· control Inspectors ex· plication.s must be filed Personnel Commission terview. No house to perienced in receiv\ng Office. 7...,.. Warner Ave, house selling. inspection and final in· "''" s peclion of printed RB On or before Dec. Ladywhoneeds~mo& ----- PART-Time eves & Sal AM. Pref'd for students. inside work, guaranteed wage. Call Al. 542-9013 PART11t.E Sumtitute Shoppers Jnc. need5 women who enjoy s~r market shopping. Minimum $3 per customer assigned to )'OU. __ Must Ii ve n ear Brookhu.rst I Ada ms. c.au ~!'ll18 ti.w UAM-1 PM. PlZZA MAN wanted, full or part time. No exper. Apply 3024 2 Crown Valley Pkwy, L ag • Niguel PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD Diceon Electronics has openings in the following disciplines on 1st, 2nd & 3rd shifts. •MATERIAL CUTIER RECEIVING CLERK •PHOTO PRINTING TECHNICIAN •DRIWMG TRAINEE *EXPHIENCED DRILLR •COPPER PLATER •JANITOR •INSPECTORS •TOUCH UP SPECIAUST Good fringe benefits. working conditions and salary. Pleue apply. ewgia11rktq scheduliftcJ .ct tece.ical procJt"am ,._.CJ-wm iMple- ...t proc•durft for inspectlftg. recording a •d ••rl f yl t1 g ...... rf .. 9 ChGflCJH ad 1ce.•d11les. a11d nahlot• •11cp11HriftCJ S K U L S A M A H A 8 0 C A 8 A E b H A E T N A S A E P S l A S S A V L H E Y U K E C F H C 0 M H E R C E W B R R G D E 0 A R T G R E l ·1 E F J 0 A N W R A I 0 P E A C E N G Q M l 0 l T U O R L M 0 0 S F M l F U A A R S F S Y G A I R 0 8 I N 0 K R M R T 0 U 0 E C U E S A H H E M S M A G N A U T S l N NMMGYOALTANNFQHCPRA N 0 S L E N U S H V C I C U 0 U S P N F S T Y 0 A T H G T E k 0 E K E 0 S A 0 E S R 0 H E P I F X S T E W A R ~ ~ C H A R l E M A N G E R U N l I 0 H E R Y T l A E F I K l H K C A S T l E R E GO HMWAROMRA S NOJE RT twp Wa11ted 7 100 Help W•ted 71 00 circuit boards. Excellent lEqlth. 1 Op E 1 up. Sales oriented. Phone ••••••• ••. ••••••••••••• ••••• •• ••. ••••••••••••• benefits, including group l~~u~a ~~po~r~·~m~p~o~y~e~r~;;M;a;n;" lyn;;· ;968-837;;;;;8;;;;;;;; I General ornce. accounts Housekeeper • Mature life, health and dental in·i- receivable, invoicing. woman to do housekeep· surance. paid holidays, Lumber exper . man· ing&claundry2:30to6:30 vacation and sick leave, datory. Salary open, wkdys • Irvine. Mus t good working conditions. DICE ON llECTRONICS INC. • procya1W 1taht1 and cOllfrol cOll'f19lrat'°'9 ,....DCJllMllf ....... ,. ...... ~ htcWlflcJ....., lthtory to! Clolsfflecl ed "° 604 cJoDtllyrlot PO lox 1160 Cos ........ e•t. t 2•2' EQual <>pportunliY Employer M /P Want ads ~,:-:ni.11 ...... _ .......... .....,.,_...n1. ~ ......... • .__..,. •• o. ~. rw _., • ....... --....... It .......... , = Ai ds Fealty knfghts • fief Homage Scutage Lord Relief Stewards Minor Serfs V1ss1ls Tomorrow: Cap1t4h Of Western Europe 54<Ml940 have own trans & ref. Salary commensurate GJRLS-GIRLS-OIRLS 546-5243days, 551·0241 aft with experience. We are Easy fun ,. ob, day or 6 a stable. growing com· ---------• pany located near the ni&ht. No exp. ne<'., _we Housewives eam an extra Orange County Airport. train you. You must bke $5-$6 per hour teaching Only qualirted can· people & be nt lea.'lt 18. hobby classes w /Tri. didat~ need apply. Apply any ,.n,, or eve. Che m Liq u I d F. m 219 Harbor. Costa Mesa. broldery. 979·34RR or Help wanted p/Ume days 963-2300. night & eraveyard ahiJU iiiii;;;;ii;;j;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;i Jack In The Box, 1205 Baktt, C.M. J.E. Mfg/bydrau $18K __ ...;.._ ______ • Tool Cutter tamdr $7hr HOSTlSSI S QCSee1/mlf exp $'100 & Hodfts Tula 111 Reeeot/Gen. Of c to '650 A...... 1 p Ge:n'f Acd.aa/mrs '800+ .,.,.y n 6800 Ce»tAcdCll(fmf1 $800 Colony Kltchen Pit Ptloaf' Worlt -.10 hr 21142 Ortell Hwy .., San Juan Ca piatrano 1""'ne Penonnel A«tncy See Manager 411 fl!. 17lh, Colla Maa DICEON RECTRONICS INC. 18S22 Von Kannan lrvlne, C• 92864 &13.or70 AnEquaJ Opportunity Emp&o)'tr ISUMDH YACHTS Has the following im· mediate opentngs : Electricl• Make & lnstall electrical aystems ln boat.a. Mio. 1 yrexper. As...-.vc.,......,. Capable o(installinll pre· made woodwork on tnter & e~ur or boata. l Vr ex· per. req'd. RMID.....,. Reef• min Z.3 yn e:xper. ln Ona1 preparatJ.oo ol boats. Mlllt be ablo to use mecbanJcal tools. Apply In Penon 1922 Barranca Rd Jrvln Equal Oppor. Employer ---Sult.e2:M 642-14'70 Howidc.eper wanted live·"!!!~~~~~~~ The futUt draw lo th jn, Ugh\ w9rk ~ F'lnd what you want in Wttt.. . a Dally Pllo S5f.!MTO Cfus1fkid Ads ~ Da11J PilotClutJfleds. ClfllU'i~ A~78. l • I LOAN PIOCIESSOIS Downey Savings & Loan hu lmmt!dlate openings in Orange County for conventional loan pro- cessors. Must bavo ex· per. in proce."slng from documents t.hroUQh rund· ing. • Contact Personnel Dept 541M)902 Equa ()ppor. Employer llmVon Karman Irvine. Ca 92664 833..()870 An Equal Opportunity Employer Real btote Sales Newport/Irvine areft. The "national but neishborly" winning tam wtth hl&h ~mm/ , IJ)lit. lraiolnt proJram • natlosl wide rererralt and HOWISTHl nMI more. Century u. for Job udt01'1 to check MacArthur at Ford Rd hi ute Dally Piiot Help the old ranch houao. Wanted clualfication. If _MCM9$0 ___ • ----- the Job you want ls not TM rutest draw (n UM there you mt•bt conl1der Weal. . .a Dally Pilot offerlo« your aervlua CIH•lflad ~d Phon w1lh an ad ln the Job &G-lf78 • • Wantf'd cate1ory. Phone11----· -----&42·~8. ~!!~ ..... !!~ ~4!!.~~·.·.~ ..... ?!~~ ~~r.~::~·.-.~ ..... !!~~ l~!.~~::! ..... !L~~j~~-~~'::! ..... !!.~~ ~=-......... ~~.s.~ Tuesd111.0ocomber 9, 1!J75 DAILY PILOT •I I t BEAL ESTATE SALES . Soro & Lovt• Seat, Lae cof· Mis.c.a-tou• 8080 MlicftlCIMOlt.S 1080 look, Sail 9060, ATTENTION RN TAILORESS YACHT Salt>sman fee table, t"nd table •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• LICt:NSEO, needed • s c 1 to c K w /ttoragc. 819-8690 or 0<>..-~o .. J\. WA MTED Sabot Sail boot, brand n~ UNLICENS•;o, CCUnCU ROATS, 2900 Lafayetlt", fM 8892. .ft V • .,. &compleLt" $400 OETTHE R "'D F\JU & p/Ume. 3·11:30 & We have a nnsition o~n 'or an ex "1,,.,......,. Beach. l oo YOUMAHi Tot CA~H DOLL.\>~ ~l-OO'Zl CARPET"' 11·7:30 shifts. Contact pc.nenced talloress lo ';ork part·llm~. ·~ .... -• Nr new couch & lctathcr ~) .Pt-cHaJSTMA' PA Io I' OR ':' o u R TRE1 ATM ENT I 11 ~rs. /en~n , 842·27 1 34 • alongside the greatest master tailor to Mtt-chancff•e ~,1,t·':!~t <:}a~~~ .... ~~:, f ~ Gnrrn-i~;~:.,vi~:::& 1oats. Slips I We tran you to so H~s'u!1 . e~or al befoundanywherein theGREATEST ••••••••••••••••••••••• d1n('tte set. 1>46·17S'1/ o Q SILVt-:n SERVICE Oocb 9070 homcswltbanaccele~at· C MPEO'E301 lctorla, srORE to be found anywhere. Our Anffque-s 8005 642·2lSS .ftWhyfl()lach..UWUiem{} FINE l"U RN & AN-••••••••••••••••••••••• ed coune thut start& ., . . . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• -* ID • boll uu. )lH "~' ()-·nQUES. 615 2200 BOAT SLIPS ::~:t'dl1~ I~i~:;4t ~lg store is located in Newport Beach & Anuque mirror 2'" 3'. 137 Wed UYd four&. -0 tJw OAn.vPnnr It Firewood Org Euc $78 Somelive·aboards money from tho start, thetailorshopisonlhc2ndflooroflhe year~ old. flOO. Antique Thisweeksspec1al ; {t ClllUSTMASTRt:t:r ~t cord, del. o'utc. Cout 645-8616 Ext41~ get Individualized free RN st.ore in a large wr conditioned room painting "Rcl>t:cca Jtttbe 4 Club Ch.aari, $65. ea. -o Our airuuou trN wW i\. F 1rew0 0 d s u PP 1 Y • training on the Job In one with aJl new equipment. We also have ~e.u·~~~:;.~aL!J>111;. 4 ~t~~:~~~;.~·:a· .Jj llf>OUr 0ec. rnb • tllh v 581-1122. Boats. Spet'd & o( many t.op ofrfces local Emercae1tcy the best Sales staff, Selling to the 846 1677 1 Cocktail Thi. $45. ea. * Vw cao place your .d f. Ski 9080 ed lhruout Orange Coun· &/time, ll~M-7 :30AM. nicest customers & if you would like to 1635Superlor UnlU, CM <I~.~ c!tt1 ~>':.;: ~:. Rrewood /Stock Up ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~~·il~~ll I~i'e~~be{71d4e) ~1.~. ;.or~~nn~accot"dJ : have the opportunity to join our ~~~ S~r~rl:~!!~t s:!~ck 54tl-7951 {) .=0::;~0 ~ _!!Scord del,642·26.24 1965 HORIZON lS', 75 8'18-8142 Roache, R.N. Cost a team ... Plcasesendabricfresumeto: chairs oak tables com· Simmons twtn mull/box · Cancelled Contract. 2000 Johnson 0 /8, 40 br.1°11 Mes a M e m o · 1 n. o..u.. PUot p o lo 1560 Costa d ' d ' f b . hdbrd yds carpeting below en~. Hvy tlty tra1 er REALESTAT,ESALES ran -·,. • • • x • mo e.s.. re ssers, sprg, rme, r~ss Refrigerator, 5 tires, 4 cost.lmstall547:8729 w /new tires. $1100. . • Hospital, 642·2734. Meta. CL 92626. C1auffiecl od ftO. 60 I. rockers, m Orange Coun· like nu $65847·5264 Crager Rims, 1 radio. __ 646-2677 Join *1 Wewtlc..toctyoufw91.....,..lew. ty. Al~ wnolesale to the oodR L $75 Call837-1140. LionelTrainSet. ---------TT" p u b 11 c. ST F. W A RT lentw OC•et' Co I >t ted Tarbell. Rultors ROTH ANTIQUES, 1760 afler6 PM . 642·2539 Cute Playhouses-new·S'x mp ;S:.5'.?~un ' Trcmsportotion ·Free JS da.y training RN'S HelpWant•d 7IOOH.J-Waated 7100 Monrovia,C.M.645-9446 8'x6'hi.Wecanmake 20 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.... ---------18oysdesk·chest-bookcase Ch · t · .a.: ....a. 9110 coun;e ( . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• more before n s mas Lounge exerc1sor, new, ""rcr"'" •Cadillac car program F'UU· Time) . Service Station Allen· TOW TRUCK OH IVER. YESTERYEARS olive green antiqued $50 al S240. Also Army forts cost $35 but will seU for ••••••••••••••••••••••• •HawaH,Acapulcotrips Med Surg, 11-7:30 shift. dant, exper'd . Day & exper'tl G & w Towing. COLLECTAILES 968-3lS2eves for the boys 645-8148 or S'l0.846·1671 CITABRIA-Almost new, •1st p lace-sal es an Exper. acute care Eves.Thll&p/lime.Ap-lOOOlrvme.N.B.642 1252 &ANTIQUES Console walnut stereo, 549-8039. • 65 hrs total lime. Top OraneeCounty hospital only. Excellent ply Shell Stallon 17th & ---1673 lr•ine Ave. Suite chairs , corner group, * Chnshnas Gifts eqwpmeot. 552-9646. •lSt place-listings taken benefits. Contact Mrs . Irvine, NB. ' TRAINEE "L" (in back of llt·time long walnut chest & Mechanic's Roll away tool Mfg. Warehouse Sale, , in Orange County Jensen, 642·2734, Costa For lite maouf. plant Uquor) Costa Mesa. storage chest. 645·3'111 box. Misc tool boxes & open to the public. Gin Ccwnpers, Sme / •lsl place-listings sold In M e s a M e m or i a 1 Shoe Sa I es . rt time r /time. Start $2 hr. Cali after 2pm. tools. 10 Spd Mans Bike. Items 90% off. Every Refit 9 I 20 OrangeCounty Hospital, 301 Victoria ~mployee wanted for 979-8600 Pvt. Collection-Hoosie 2190College,Apt20.CM Sat. llll Christmas 10 5. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •tst place-advertising in C.M. EOE. Lanz Shoe Dept. No ex-Cupboard, Pie Safe, ch Dinette Set, 6 chr. 2 CRISIS CALL 178.51 Sky park Circle, Factory Direct campers California per. nee. Will train. App· TRAINEE table, washstand, clock, leaves, gd cond $50. Pb: Irvine. $895.up, Shells $179 SO. •lSt place-advertising in RM ly in person, lS Fas hion Audio field install good balltree, mirror, china, &&S-5178 betw 8 to lOAM. A single touch of the but· -Sl~pers. 858 W 18th CM the U.S.A. p d h Island, NB dnvani;t & work habits sml items. 7871 loth Sl. L ood d. . tbl 16 ton on a 1 ounce pendant •Swap Mttt Sellen 642·8471 •Lst place winner RELO erm. weeken c arge . $2.'l5slart Westminster. g, ~ inmg w transmitter automatical· Mrg. needs wrhse space, ---------- Home Buyer's Contest position. Day shirt. Sub Station. Attendant. Full or 642.5267 chaus $100, 6' couch $15, I y phones po 1 ice , will sell great gift items Mot c:I s / H unlicensed, let us as· acute, psych. hospital. parl·t1me. Ex~r. pref. Appliances 80 I 0 4~7482 paramedics. fire dept., by Truckload at 90% off Scorcycie 91 SO sist you in obtaining your Fringe benefits. Garfield Chevron St at1on, 3000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• your doctor, relatives, retail. 540-4811 oofers Real Estate license. can c 0 n v. H 0 s p.' 7 7 81 Fairview. CM * UTOTEM * Kenmore Gas Dryer $45, G~ Sale 8055 neighbors etc. Lease or . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• BillAory Garfield Ave, HB Teacher-Pre-schoo l . Kenmore Washe r $50, ••••••••••••••••••••••• purchas e life saving F.~clus1ve N. B._ Tenms MOTORCYCLES 847-9671. 1.4PM. $2.40 hr. Ex· EMPLOYMENT Wasteking Dishwasher BUILDERS SALE! system NOW. Wherever C.::lub Membership $1200 FOR SALE 842-6691 perienced. Call 640-8820. OPPORTUNITIES $50, Guar. 546·8672. Trave rtine Marbl e you are on your proper· 96.'.l·~l. 962·6115 SALES-ADVERTISING F\Jll orPart-Time G.E. washer/dryer com-Toilets, Sinks, Pullmans, ty, in you r house, GU1TAA (Martin) ooo 18 1974HONDA Outstanding sales OP· No Exper. Necess1Jry Dishwas her , Gravel, ~arage, bath, yard or Xlnt cond. New $650, Sa<' CR~ portunily. Sell advertis· TECHNJCIAN Age21·65 Eligible bination $75. Call after Mirrors & much, much po~I, CRISIS. CALL for $425. Contact. Mike TARBELL:= Xlnt Condition ing space for Orange GoToTheNearest 6PMorSat556·8236 more. Call anytime. brings help in any 642·3761 -------;.;..;,.,.=-i County's fastest growing TICTOC MARKET Will buy some refrg & ap. 631·2660 or drive by 1226 emergency. 871-231. --· ------• publication. Im med. MULTI-LAYER For Applications & Info pliances running or not, ~olaris Dr. N.B. IRVINE Coast Golf Club Pool .Table, Brunswi<'k 1926-1976 $625 ,41est offer *** REAL ESTATE SALES. Limited openings for qualified salespeople. Check with all the others but be sure to discuss the Cooper &. Cox program with Hal Cox before you decide. 540·9922. RECEPTIONIST For law ofc. Fash Isl 644,8055 or 644-8056 opening. This position OR CALLl714)642·7702 also scrap metal . . M b h. f 1 Anniversary Mode l. req's har d work, in· Tic'focSystems.Inc. 675-5258 Movang Sale-Thurs & Fri em ers ip or sa e. 4'h'x9' w/l" Slate Bed. telUgence & most impor· TECHNICIAN · a,rt 3, all day Sat & Sun. 3 675-2252 Xlnt cond. $1200. Must tant professional selling Auction 80 IS Chest of drawers, 2 sofas, Christmas Bazaar Dec. sell, moving to s m all er exper. Compensatlo WAITRESSES ••••••••••••••••••••••• queeoszwalerbed,com-13th&l4th,12-lip.m.1632l home. 640-5515 aft. 5:30 commensurate w /abili-With good solid ex· Exper'd.Thllorp/t. U plete, '66Toronado, xlnt H B Fr pm ty. Male or female. Call perience and processes Goodhrs.Neatappear. **' B Y** cond.Slove,refri~.desk. Eagle Lane ... ee --------• Mr. Skolnik, (714.) requiredtolakeamulti· Over21 Good Used f\Jmiture & M1sc.175E.22ndSt,CM giftwrapping. New Rheem Furnace. 894·4781 ror interview. layered circuit board Surf &.Sirloin Appliances-OR I will CHRISTMAS 100.000 BTU, forced air from scratch and pro· 5930 W. Coast Hwy, NB Sell for You. Mf9 Clos~t T R E E S furnace used in new SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS aumsy-Prong- Fruth -Caddie - N Ph C lls ....... STERS .a.UCTIO..... Macrame, plant stands, * home 3 weeks. $150. duce a first class pro-o one a -"' "" brand new art. & craft Wholesale. to public. 551.ol24. totype. Will pay top WAITRESS d 4 5 646-8686 & 833-9625 kits, Polaroid camera, Freshly delivered from --------1 dollars for a lop talent , ays. . Aft6-Call842-1542 bicy c le, macrame Oregon -Corner or TIR ES· 5 Firestone who really can produce. Days p/wk. Call for appt. hangers $1 up, hundreds Laguna Canyon Rd. & 7 .50·16·8 plys on rims. Good fringe benefits, 9625541 Bicycles 8020 to choose from . 1715 Canyon Acre Dr., Like new $100. 645-7424 s1_1lary a nd working con· Waitress, exper. f/time. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plaza del Sur, Balboa Laguna Beach. OPEN 10 beforc6pm. ditaons. l\pply: Sid's Blue Beet, 107 21st Used Bikes & Parts. Buy, Penrn. Dec. 10th thru to8. ZAGRODZKY _.::...;:..._...:.....;_:_-------1 Pl, NBarter4pm sell & trade . 24 88 12th·l0til6PM. 497-1579 494-8611 SCUBA DIVING Equip. 1973HOMDA XR75 Xlnt Condition JBRace $500 ~· offft> * * 1t l970HONDA TRAIL70 Good Condition $150 NO DIME Money alone can 't always buy happiness. Ask anyone who ever had RECEPTIONIST a hundred-dollar bill in The Jolly Roger General his wallet and NO DIME DIC EON . Newport Bl., CM. . . k ment, large. $225. Dark Wanted Reliable. mature, 642-7910. Honn 8060 Chtna, Non ta e, l2 pc. Room Equip. like new, Spanish, English spe~· . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• $~00 /besl orr: Console complete $350. 631·2176 ELECTRONICS ing female for res{.>Onsl· Ross 3 spd. bikes. has/ AThoroughbredStallion Singer sewing $70. · Phone 8 30-6129 Afttt6pm Office is looking for a full ._r_or_· _the--'phon'--_e_booth. ____ , time, permanent recep· tionist. Must be very personable. attractive & experienced. Includes typing & some Ii le clerical duties. Must be able to operate 10 Key adder by touch. $475 to start. Apply al 17042 Gillelle, Irvine. ble '(X)iition. Laundry her, orig. pacing $115 or $300. 640-5823 Musi 1 maid for motel on beach. mk. offer /846-0051. 837·0820. . co '74 Bultaco Pursang 2SO, For details all&l2 :lW 45 g~l. Aquanum. Thlly Instruments 8083 S7SO. Also •65 Trium h SALESCOUNSELORS IN"' c . Boys Schw.i~n Stingray Christmas Horse for equ1p'd w /stand. Xlot ••••••••••••••••••••••• "basket case"hasalot~f For Newspaper Promo· "· \.'hleelAl.Jgnment&Brak Good cond1t1on. $45. Call young lady. Englis h· cond. $65.545·0068 JARMAN AMPLIFIER custom parts, $200. tion.Mustenjoyworking 18522VonKarman Technician. Newpor after6,675-0110 PleasureMare.673·1933. 14 "profess1onal Top (no s pkr box ) 675-0970,askforBill with young people 10 to • lrvine. Ca 92664 ~Center. 5 Day wor w /Heverb & fuzz Tone ---------- 14 years or age. Reliable 833·0870 wk. SaJ +comm. Appl 27" Mens lO spd bike Bay Geld. 7 /8 Thor-floor polisher $75• 100 watts rms $150/best Must sell '72 Suzukl GT transportation required :nx>E.CoastHwy,CdM nearnew$30. oughbre d , 3 1h yrs . 536·7389. oHerCa11548·171ldays. 550. $525, 675·7572 or Excellent part-time pos1· /\ 1 ~9-8183 16hands. Green broke Lo · ht 'lb N 552-8481 lion. High pay for 2·3 rt netqu3 1 Don't "ave up the ship• 3 644 0665 ' se weig wi ew $475, Rogers Drums.---·------oppo uni y emp oyer .": . . . . · Cats 80 5 ·· Sh ape Ta bl et~ a nd Dynasonic Snare, 3 Zild· •71 S..mki ~~U:S ~~c~u ~vde~~-g, ~~lf j ~~,1~l to itsh~r:l~~~'~t~~i ••••••••••••••••••••••• J•welry 8070 Hydrex Water Pills. At Ji an cymbals. Top Hat. R.E. MANAGER 642·8102 for interview 642·5678 642-5678 HIMALAYAN KlTIENS ••••••••••••••••••••••• College Pharmacy &. 536-3520 TS-125 Duttet" Salary + Override before S:OO ----------· Seal & Flame Points wall Costa Mesa Pharmacy. Converted for dirt, but s y R 'pr----· ----=:. --_,.;;,,_-.......,, ... hold for Chris lmas WANTED Offic~ Fumitu~ & all s treet equipment Pt· • apt.r!tc~x_rctl·v:~~~ w~~i Sales 119Rilh£ll£WWV£SP 675-0168 TOP CASH DOLLAR LARGE MENS SSUITS, Equipment 8085 eluded. Extra tires.Good located ofc., inqwnes in Public: Relations PA ID F 0 R Y 0 UR xlnt clean cond. z 46.48• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Condition. Must sell. I "onfidence, call 638-7529. If you want work, call Doqs 9o4o JEWELRY, WATCHES, Reasonable. 645"3126 Sey chrs $8/up, e:icc svl S27S. 644-0577 • ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ART OBJECTS GOLD d k RE.SALES Mr. Wood. 645·0320 NOW • • ch rs $15 /35, scy . 5 s. '74 Kawasaki, F ·ll, 250 •PET WORLD• SILVER SERVICE. EST ATE SALE Elec typewnters. Pierce. cc. Lo miles. Must see to ' ' t ~ IMARUT7 lf you are tired of small commission splits a nd big company politics. contact us for an appoint· ment to see a fresh, new approach to real estate sates. Call Cliff Landry for an interview. 673-7601 .Anytime SECRETARY Ad Agency Located near O.C. Airport. lf you can take Gregg shorthand at 100-120 wpm, t ype between 55.75 wpm & are looking for a challenge, then send us your re· sume. Classified Ad no. 5()7 c /O Daily Pilot PO Box 1560, C06la Mesa. Ca 92626 SECRETARY GENERAL OFFICE PARTTIME 494 -9444 Respl·ratory s E c R ET A Ry • ED . tre p r eneur ne e d s Th • t mature, experienced, de· erap1s tail secretary to help Min 2 yrs exper. Must control new upanding have e:icper. in blood business. F1exible hours, gases, ICU & general tremendous opportunity. respiratory care. Salary 675-1001 commensurate w /train· ---------- ing & exper. Contact MT. "Sett1ationol" $600 Hamilton, Costa Mesa Are you a .. Super Star" Memorial H ospital , on the typewriter? 642-2734. EOE. Beautiful surroundings. Mag Card II exper. Will ----------1 train! Call Control RESTAURANT-PIZZA Career Employment Now interviewing for full Agency; SS6-8505. & p/time gen'l help for•-.:.:..--=:..;,_ ______ , location near O.C. Service Sta. Attendant, A.iJl>ort. Neat appear.&. p /Ume. E:icper'd only. willinC to work fast on Avail eves & wknds. feetreq'd.21or ovr.App-Neat appear. & ly in person Mon thru handwriting. Apply AM, Fri. toam-3pm, Sgt. Pep· 2S90Newport Blvd. CM perooi 'a Piua Store, 2300 s. E. Bristol, Santa Ana IF YOU Hghts. <next door t o have a ser vice to offer or McDonaJds) ~...:_-~------1 goods to sell, place an ad Classifted ads sell big In t he Daily Pi I ot items. s mall Items or Cluslfied Section item. J ust call 642·5678. Phone 6'2·5678. MANAGERS & ASSISTA~T MANAGERS · Hamburger Hamlets : • Due to our present ra~id extension program, we ar e seeking energetic people who wish to progress quickly. U you prove lo be stable & dedicated & possess the ability to lead & motivate people, your future ls with us. Managem ent experience is. d esira ble, b ut not necessar~. Excellent salary. Company paid benefits. ,, Apply Mon thru Fri 9AM-Noon GENERAL omcES 322 Mo. Foothill Rd, leT...ty Miis lqual Opportunity Elnpoyer A COHvtNIENT SHOPPING ANOgA~lil::: SEWINC CUl0£ FOR THE CAl ON THE CO. Long and Short! I . I Fashionable Cape! The w1i1t shapln1 Is 10 splendld, we thoualit you'd like this dress both 1hort and Iona for dey and dancul Choo•• pique, chambray, knit. Printed Pattern 9217: Missea' Sim 8, 10, 12. 14, 16. 18, 20. Sitt 12 (bust 341 takes 2h yards 45·1nch. Send Sl.00 for 11ch pattern. Add 2Sf for uch pattem for first.clan !NII and handlln&. Sn• tl1 .......... ,_.,. o.,e. 441 ......... UJ W... II.. St,. ....., ,_.. MY 11111. Prt•t ....,,. AOMISS. DP, 1111 •snu"'*• Dt YH llNW lllW ti ltt I pttem fruT San• NW ftr t ur 111• Fall•Wlttttr Patte111 Cltllt1-cll111 Ctllptll IHldt ftr ,,.. patt1n1 tf r111r tlltlct. Stnd 11-tttwl St• + Knit 1 .. 11 lt.2$ 1111blt Mtatr Cnfts _ 1.DO lnltl•t faafllH l ooll 1.00 lnlllflt Sewtna IMll $1.00 702 4 ""Aea13~ Greet •II seasons in fashion In this new cape. Cozy, cuddly· w~nn is Ille w1y you feel 1n this e.sy-cr~ chet cape with mock cables. contrast color. Use knit11n~ worsted. Pattern 7024: Misses Sl1es 10.20 Included. · $ t.00 for each pattcm. Add 25¢ 11ch pattern for first.class mall end handlina. Stnd to, Ala ..... t'n 11 ... O.,.. IOI .,.., .... .. 1u.owc ......... ..... .,.,., "' 10011. Milt ............... J.lp., ..... ........,, MORE than ever before' 200 deslsn• plus 3 frH printed in· sidt NEW 1976 NEEDLECRAFT CATALOG! Has everythin11. 75(. Crochet wltll Sq11aru _ $1.00 Crochet 1 Wtrdrtbe -11.00 Nifty fifty Qull11 .... ~ -1.00 alpple Crtclllt _ -UICI St• + ~t look -11.25 Net4l11110lttt l eoll -1.00 flewtr Crochet Bcok .• 1.00 H1lr,J11 Crecllet leolt 1 00 h11t111t Crodltt look $1.00 Inst.ant Macn 11t leoll _$1.00 h1sta11t Mom look __ $1.00 co111pl•t• 1m hok f 1.00 C1111plttt Af P,111 114 1.00 12 Pritt Ara11ana 112 so, IH~ of 11 Q1flh II so, Mus.um GDIR l tok t2 _so, u a1111u for Today IS _so, look ef II Jiffy hp so, Cockers, Chi~uahua, FINE FURN & AN· Sofa, chairs, tables. 867 W.19th, CM 645-7411. appreciate. 400 miles on Poodl es, Sh1h ·tzu. TIQUES.645-2200 lamps, antiques, etc L·Shape walnut desk new motor. Many xtras. Maltese, G . Shepherd, Mi _11 8080 Als o '72 Ford .a,-, T 90 x30 chair s125, 5 $550 or bes t offer. Samoyed, Jap. Spaniels, IC'l:"I oneous Pickup.SaleatAtlSpace waln~l/ fab'ric con· 546--0073. mini-Schnauzer, Poms. •••••••••••••••••••!••• 1----------100 mixed puppies. Stud Tablesaw-"'.Datsunand Storage #AlG. 8564 feren<'e chairs $45 ea. '74HOMDA .,.,., Hamilton Ave. HB. Wed· 642-4097 or 833·2616. SVS most breeds. 2525 w. Toyota engines & parts, /Thurs Only. For in· _;_ _ _;_..:..,__:..._ _____ , aSINORE 17th at Fairview. SA. cheap I or 1h price. formation968·4818. APECO Photocopy Mach. "ROCKET'' Open eves. 531·5027. 673-1784. Completely recond1· Super trick. FMF port• t.ioned. $495. 642·4097 mg & head, TM pipe, 30 Darling Little Stocking Stliffers. AKC Yorkies. male &. female. $175. 962-1713 St Bernards, 13 wks , 1 male, 3 fem, pet & show qual, reas, 842·6927 German Shepherd Pure Bred Pups. 8 wks old. $35. 847-8052. Silkie Pups-AkC 2 Mo's, except. beaut. E·Z groom, no shed, no. odor. 557·2821 Lhasa Apso puppies. champ. sired, show & pel. Shots & wormed. Will hold til Christmas. (l )734-0222 -------Christmas BOX ER Puppies, petorshow. 962-8031or830-1391 AKC reg. Toy poodle pup· pies Will hold til Xmas. 551·4000 •St. Pups, AKC, put a hl tie sparkle under your tree. 213-430-5107 • YORKSHl RE * Beaut. 10 wk. fe male. Champ lines. 962-8717 Temporary Loving home needed for our German Shep. for 2 mos. 833-8090 Beautiful female Af1than, loves k1cb. 1 Year old . $25 to good home. 631·1837. f.r'ff to You 8045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adorable Puppies. Mixed breed. Free. Call eve & weekend. 645-5376 2 Year Old Afghan rree to good home. Female. Call 536-5098. Free to Gd. Hom<'. St Bernard. (Short hair ) 1 yr old. All shots. 548·1245. 8050 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Maple Dinette 5('t, rnd, mar-prf top. 1 ext. com· fortable chra, Ma pie br1df(e lamp, Office n desk . Make ofCer . S4&-2074. Bdrm fum, Antique whl w tgold trim. xlnt cond. 2 blk wrought Iron shelveii, couch, gm/aold, dbl bed & coffee tbl. 613-GM> Claa11irted AdJI a~ll bllC ltema. sm•ll Item• or any atem. 642·58'78. l Tum them into CHRISTMAS CASH by placinCJ an od under ow DAILY PILOT CHRISTMAS TREE •.... ,,: .. ~ > •• ,,, ~~-............. ~ ',01~•~ •'"~4 -'""' '/-@ CHRISTM AS o . .' ". PRESF,NT ~~·. FIXER UPPERS '" :/ Wagons. tricyclcc;, bikes, ~ ~ scooters, peddle cars, /: ·~,skate bo~rds, dol~. bug· ~ • .... g1es. trams. appliances, / .o· musical instrumenls, ..// "''.sportinggoods.etc.ctc. ~ \' I......... ..,1 I 0/ !_•,fnt'J-;..;. rf/ ~ o ~ .•. ~.~·!t'M'1' ·.4··~~·:t?~ .. •''dl~•t.•vO -tfl .,. • ~.. ...~ ~ MA .. ~ ':.. CHRIST "'S •• , .-.• ~ GOODIES "• ••.ct ~: ~ GALORE ~ _.._._ • .">. f.,$6.IO '' v ~: Good used toys for kids of\ ~a ll ages-crossword .. ~ \• pu11.l ell-gamell-golf ~· ;.,\ clubs-bicy<'les-baby ~\ \' dolls & Barbie dolls-, \'books for young & 7-: ~' adult-clothes-record ~ Y .. d •' ;:.~ play c r s -recor s -• ~ radios-TV's-stereos-\f -. train sets-Macrame-:_, \ home-made gin Items-.-. ~t kitchen apphances etc ~ . -~ • lf , .. •' . d : ; ....... ' '~·\'6-1•' :(;<•'. , •• ,.,·~···. ~ Our Dally Piiot Christmas TrM wll run on Dec. I I th • 18th. Jnt c .. 642·5671 Oftd place yovr ad todllfl Pic:w.o1 & Or"C)ans 8090 Mikun.i, new GP piston, ••••••••••••••••••••••• fork kit, layed down Boge s hocks, chain Hammond Spinet Organ tensioner, new lowe r & bench. Model L·l22. 2 end. Lotsofextras&new manual, foot keyboard, paint. All original equip. draw bars w /percussion included. $900. Must see & reverb. Owned & used to appreciate. by a professional musi· 536_4758 aft 6: 30 PM. c1an. Will fit m any de· ---------- ('or . X;LNT condition. • 7 1 Hus It y, n e w $950 f1rm. Shown by transmission & engine. appt. only. Please call $400 or best offer. before noon. 67S-4899. 496-8421. Piano Tuner Has Piano for sale •• 960-1155 ... Honda 350, needs work. Want $12Sor best offer. 496-8421 OQUlST PIANO REPAIR SL 70 Honda very clean, Oak Upright. others. many extra;, $300. From $495. 536-8775 673-1933 Ebony grand piano in 1900 Honda 175. Good C'on- good condition $950 dition, needs battery $150 646· l219 as is. 640-5958 TV. Radio, 8098 ''11 Yamaha 17S Endurn HiA. Sfetta w/'74 eng. Runs & looks ••••••••••••••••••••••• great $290. 548·3900 2.5'' ZENITH COLOR TV, xlnL cond. $150. '74 Honda 35-0F. Clean, 646-6006 ittras. Lo mi's. Owned by Boah & Marine a girl. 548-9445 aft 3:30 Equipment ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale /Rent 9160 G~ 9010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• •••••••• Rent 25' 1975 Open Road, BOY .SCOUTS NEED fully self-cont. sips 6-8. BOATS. Tax Advan· Winterrates.644-8385 tages. caUS4M990 For Sale. '7' Motor Home-. loah, Marine Road Cruiser. 2'2'. 360 EquipMnt 9030 Motor. Dix model. Xlnt • •••• • ••• • •. ••••• • •• ••• cond. 962-2929. BLACK BEAUTY '30 Blue Bird Bus 1968 50 horsepower M ot orh om e, Onan Mercu ry out.board Gerncrator, Air Cond, engine. C.D. Ignition $2500. 646-7050. w /MercontroJ, n ew roilen.Uti&ty 9180 waterpump. Engine IN ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXCELLENT COND. lEAVY 'DUTY 4lll'.8 Bo~ S u Per C 1 ~ • n • Ca 11 Trailer, gd tires. $300. of· 646-4965 evenmgs. rer. S48-6356 I '73 Johnson 9.9 Electric s.rtlce & Oil\ engine. Just rcblt. Parh 9400 $300. 640-0459 "5 loah. SoU 9060 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ronado 23, top shape, r .... _ _. radio, alJ options at Dano Pt. 714 ·R33·4669 days. 714·49'-1174 or 5S2·9033 tSIO wnknds. Wantoo Exper'd Sailing Crew for 2 mo's Mexico c.-rulse. DeparUns Dec•---------- 16th. 640-1609. '"71Coronado2'7. Barienta. 4 tails, n~ Johnson e. knot meter. •uoo. l40-0'58 9510 . ..........•......... " '71 VW Dun• BUll1 '1J5. SACRIFICE. Call &U-71JO I 8J2 DAILY PILOT Autos, lrnporl.d Autos, lmporW 'Mltot, l•potied Autos. u ... d Autos, UHd A..to1, Uud 4 \ftheet Drhes 9550 Autos Wanted 9590 Auto1, Imported •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mercedes ten 974 Toyota 9765 Voho 9772 Dodgt 993S Mtistong 99S2 P0tttlac 9965 •..••.......•••••.••••.............•.•••........... , ••.............•. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '7•FOaD . IROMCO 4a4 Automallc. pow~r stH-r ang, radtu, $4988 <9681.AG >. Theodore ltobhts FORD 2000 Hubor Blvd Costa Mesa 642 0010 Landcnisers '72 Thru '75's 7 To Choos• from EXAMPLE: '72 Hardtop 372 FDC I $3877 :OeM lemiA m .~VOLVO 19M fl111h111 ( M Ml-YJ01 Trvcks 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •74 DODGE 100 PICkUP Auto trans .. po\\ er steer ing & braklo<;, lo\\ miles. SH88 < 6000!1 X ) Th•odore Robins FORD 2()6(1 llarlJor Bh d. <'nsta Mt•sa 64:! 001() '76 .. "WAMT TO SELL 9720 YOUR CAR?" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Le-t us sell 1t for •ou. Wlt.I. nuv YOtrn CASH! Wit takt-10 tradt' DJ\'T'SlfN, TOYOTA, a n y m a k e o r OH VOl.KSWJ\r:t:N model. .car~. trul'ks. PJ\ll> FOil vans. re<·rt.>at1onal ORNOT veh1des 1 m ports & TOP 001.LAR domestics. Must he 1n <: l I. runrunte cond1t1on & meet SAL BEHNAOENE l'allfornta snfrty c:odt-540·04'42 ~tandards. ---------- 1-:1caminoAutoSalPS '72 240Z 4911 1400 Dealer Rebuilt e1HJlne. trans. 4 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR new rodlals. . FOR TOP USED CARS 675-1483 l"OllEIGN. DOMESTIC or CLASSICS If your car is extra dean Fiat 9725 :.eeus rarst. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BAUER BUICK F1· . t 29'.!S Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa 979·2500 TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS CALL OR COME IH TO SEE US NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy. N.8. 642-9405 Before you buy .. see• Mission Vlelo v Imports Avery Exit, S D Fwy, 831-1740 '71&1 D.300!-it;L, 6 3~ 4-dr, 76 OR.AMGE COUMTY •72 DODGE DEMON '73 MUSTANG '72 PONTIAC l)Unrl, 65,000 ML Stiver Auto. tr•n$., powl.'r Auto tran", uir, powt'r VENTURA mt-tall.Jc. no a ir. $7,500 TOYOTAS VOLVO s teerittf, 1ur, 1'adto, steerin~. & brakes ~988 cu~turn 4 door sedan. firm Xlnt rond 581 7R62 IT~1103217 EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO $2188. <695FZY). («f.<i VT). tiowcr :1teenn~ & brakl·" $2997 Larce1t Volvo Dealer Theodore Robina Theodore Robins i:.>olltl l825MM \) Resaleables in Orange County! FORD FORD Theodore Robins M BZ '7S 450 SEL Extc Plus tax & be wlll deliver BU~fn~&ASE 2060 Harbor Blvd. 2060 Harbor 81vd. FORD Lux Sed Met finish ,. 11 d Costa Mesa 642 0010 Costa Mei;a 642 0010 2000 Jl:irlior Blvd ~:~~~. ~~~90\~earunce ;o~~w iori~ ~i2n o~~;o ~t -~~f~-,!l!~i~ •69 Monaco WGCJOn •7 4 MUSTANG U Costa Mcsa __ 6t2 0010 MBZ '75 450 SL. 5,000 mi a~~~ablfe 0 36n °.P.?rov~~ ' • T • Clean, runi< very well. Mudi I, v G. power slt>er· ·74 Grand Safari. 9 pas!., Leaseorbuy. (024737). Cn:utt, or •~or..., $975.9'79·8600days int: & brukes. 13,785 1-:very xtra, per!. shape MBZ '75 280 Sed. Exec. months. · 2025 S Manchester · 9940 Miles. $3588. (631KXZ). Must sell-under whl:.lc Uemo. Clearance pnred. cdW\ l"•~ a Anaheim 750-2011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Theodor• Robins ulue_b~SO. M4·02~ ( tt 96.'\S). uu w . M BZ '72 350SL Cpe. · '75 i''ord Ltd Landa u, 4 FORD '68 Ponlta(' Lemans, Rdstr. Fully equip. TOYOTA ·~ Volvo Sta Wgn, auto dr., lif'hl btue, vinyl top, 2060 Harbor Blvd. $250or best offer . Lease or hu v <>n ext. trans, R/H, gd running lo mi., AM /F~. Pwr Costa Mesa 642·0010 631-1097. terms. (039MYF). · eond. $750. 833-6413 or seats, locks & windows, -MBZ •72 280SB 6 C 1 1960Horbor,C.M.6469303 4994108 cruise ~ontrol .. luxu~y '66 Mus ta ng 289, Y:8· ·73G.PrixA/C,P/S,P/B, I • 1 •1 d Y · group, tilt steenn2, air, Clean, xlnt cond. Ong. L-Ow uu .• gd cond., 1-\Je mJeCt on. lar to 'TI Corolla Sta Wag. Xlnt Autos Us-..1 tinte d g lass $5 2SO $900 64 .. ·0757 493.9577 C1nd modC'I Avail for d N d' • C'U • • • owner. . " . 1 · h (09 98· J) con . 4;W steel ra 1als. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 833-733J. ___ _ eai.e ~r purt · . 1 · $139.5. 675 8038. · · Oldsmobll• 9955 •67 Pontiac Fire-bird MAZ 71 2SO Pn<.'ed for Gettet'al 990 I '65 Ford St. Wgn, clean/· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Or. hardtop, V-8, auto. QW('k salc. (002172). Toyota Corona '70 .4·dr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• dependable. Ta pe derk, S 1 d S" trans .• factory air condi-P 0 RSC 11 E '7 4 9 14. Nu carpet. nu tires. Runs hrtr. Xlnt. $500. 493·7766. a es an • crvice Silver Exccllcnt cond. like nu. 556-2990 SALE OLDSMOBILE lloning, power steennR. '73St t. w 8 GMC TRUCKS radio, heater, wtutewall Pnced ril{hl. <902512). CHEVY MONZA •75 2+2 a 100 agon. pass., h 1 & MHZ '72 220. 4 dr. 4 cyl. '68 .Corona. Auto, 2dr, low Cpe. Under 12.000 m i. 4 1 owner, full power, xlnt HONDA CARS tires, mag w ee s . t•rono m v. Ex<· e I I en I rruleage, gd cond. Must Spd. Week·end special. cond. 494.2077 U • ity Olds i;harp. VHH913. C'Ond Lse or pur(·h sell.$950.Ph:556·1542. Priced for quick sale. '74FORDLTD ftlV~rs $1299 (100101) -. --2850 Harbor Blvd. MBZ '67 200 4 D N 74 Toyo~a Cehca GT 5 (216919) 2 Dr. hardtop, Y·8. auto. Costa Mesa 5409640 Duna..--Ford ' • · r. e\\ spd. wh1te/blk vinyl top PORSCHE '73 9UT. Mint nm m~me. Excellent cond. Am/Fm stereo air low condition. (100583). trans., factory air cond1· LEFTOVER 2240S. Main at Warner Least' Must be early! mi. $3700/968·17Ss ' '75 FORD LTD. 2 Dr. tioning, power steering, Santa Ana 546-70.70 Must see' ( 159024 ). Brougham. Very lo mi. radio. heater, whitewall BRAND NEW '75 ·75 MRZ 450SLC. Hard to Triumph 9767 Excellent lease availa· tires. Tinted glass, wheel OLDS STARFIRE '74 Pontiac Station Wagon Al't EuroP<'an del. ran·••••••••••••••••••••••• ble.(037NK0). cover s , l ike n e w . V-6"GasMiser'' Grand Safari, loadert, (:l·llataon ~>nly 350 mi TR 3B, new cng, trans, '69 PORSCHE 911E . 056K.XY. · Clos•ouf Price immac. $4000. or bestof- Sunroof. lassette, alloy clutch. tires. paint. brks. Sport O Matic. Excellent $3666 fer. Priced below under wht•cls. l.::.e or purch. Fast. $1850.968·9566 cond. Priced to sell! $3995 lowbook.673·2700 1101988). t629HWG >. Dunton Ford 5 To choose Th·-.... -rbird 9970 n'75 MRZ ~t50 tSEf .. E'.xehc. VolkSWOCJftt 9770 '73 PORSCHE 911T. 5 2240S.MainatWarner Ser #l20211, 120213 •••• -::~.••••••••••••••• t.•mo . "c 1n1s . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Speed . 20,000 actual SantaAna 546-7070 120296.124875,122810. • a· d s c Full Sunroof. Stereo, under VW '74 Bus new tires miles. Factory aircondi· Exte nded Wa rranty 74 T· tr ' unroo 2.000 m1. Priced right for mags, Z·bed, am /fm tioning , truly immac. ,68 Ford w-Available pwr .. stereo. Excel cond .. TOYOTA Oranqe County's TRUCKS High•st S Buyer on Imports saleorlse. (043141). radio.551-5728. Lease or purchase. --:r-.. Jomi.,644·5389. V-8, auto trans., factory 16 To Choos~ f.rom Bill Many T oyoto HOUSE OF '72VWBUG 4 Speed, radio, healer. $1788. (178FPD). (462JFN). air conditioning, power CHO DS ••DA Ve-go '9974 HOUSE s teering. radio, heater, · L /II,.., ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Speeds, 5 spN\ds. Call Roger or Bill automatics, Jons bl•d::.,1 ____ 84_7_-_85_5_s __ _ IMPORTS 714 /523-7250 OF whitewall tires, tinted 17311 IUClt ILYD. ·74 Estate Wag., low mi, glass. WIC432. Mt*T. IEACI • aa.-.. super clean, many ex· ~horl lwds. AJso 6 Used Compact TOP s Paid Th~odore Robins FORD Costa Meaa 642-00 I 0 IMPORTS $1199 tras. Sold new for $4900. '69 Olds 98, l oaded, Will sell $3100 ftrm. Trucks to choose from FACTO HY AUTHORIZED Sal~s • S~nice Parts • Leasing MG C1742 714 /523-7250 Dwtton Ford am/fm, factory lape.1_4_9_2_·3_198 ______ _ 22408. Main at Warner $795.~-5638 i2 Vega GT, A/C, AM ~ecutlemiA '69 MG Midqet ••••••••••••••••••••••• '63 VW Van Camper, nu Cadillac 9915 eng, clutch , brks. nu ••••••••••••••••••••••• pamtjob $1500, 556·3926 Santa Ano 546-7070 '72 Olds, 16 MPG , very rad104 spd, lo mi, $1250, ,73 Ford Torino clean , •·emergen cy 646·1432aft6 pnced" lo sell qwckly 120 W. Warner at t.lain \;JTOYOTA FOR Used VW's Santa Ana 557 2132 ConY•rfible '68 BUS Camper, reblt 4 Speed, s t ick shift , eng, xlnt cond, $1SSO. radio, heater. vinyl in-Must sell. 541·9134. WGCJon 642·2187, 16SOTustin Ave. •73 Chny V~a V-8, auto. trans., factory C.M. Woody Wagon ''CADILLAC" Quality & Price 19b6 Horbor ( f.\ 1-.11-Q)(l1 1 l 9i5 Ford F250 Ran~er XL T. 460 cnS!. aulo trans. <.1 c. p s. p disc hrakcs. + mo~l other 1>pl1ons. \\'1th c-ab h1~h c-ampt'r sh<-11. $5900 962·1763 Paid for or Mot XI9. xlra clean, mags, FM, two tops, lo m1, red w / racing st ri pes. 962-0656 tenor. wire \\heel COY·----------ers, nice car. ZCG922. $1699 On~ 70 '69 BUS Camper, rbll eng, xlnt cond, $1650. Must sell. 541-9134 to Choos• From For the best prices. the lowest lease rates, & de· brake pcndablescrvice, -see air conditioning, power -. ---------1 Auto. tra ns., power steering, radio, heater, Pinto 9957 steerinJ?, radio, heater. whitewall tires, tinted ••••••••••••••••••••••• whitewall t ires, tinlctl glass. whee l covers. •74 PINTO glass .. wheel covers . C@.@IQ}I 74 Fi at l 28 wa gon. Dunton Ford 1964 vw 252HGB. STATIOHWAGOH 1711\LE. · 18711 ach v Hunt &h. 842·4435 AM/FM other xtras. lm-22405. Main al Warner Needs minor mac. $2800. 837·6527/ SantaAna 546-7070 work.$350firm. NABERS CADILLAC $2699 Dunton Ford 642-7610 751·5143 1964 FORD FREE APPRAISAL 850 Sport Convert. •68 Opel 9746 • VW 0 _ 1 N t· 2600 Harbor Blvd 22405. Main at Warner Eeonoltnc p1ckup SSOOor We buy used cars & Spyder. xlnt running ••••••••••••••••••••••• 69 D'l:~~e. ew ires, COSTA MESA 540·9100 Santa Ana 546-7070 w1lltradcforfurmturcor t rucks. Call GROTH C'ond. Nu cng. $lOOO . '73 Opel Manla·37,500M ~Int ~5n~1fn. Mak~.of· __ O_P_E_N_S_U_N_D_A_Y __ 1---------- umodcl work or ? ? ? . CHEVROLET for a free 640.5635 J\ M / Jo'M Tape Stereo. er... · eves. ays .68 Eldorado. Xlnt condi· •70 Ford Ltd 4 Dr. 2 Door, 4 speed, roof rack, low miles. $3188. (21JLAC). Th~odore Robins FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa 642·0010 $1999 Dunton Ford 2240S. Ma in at Warner Santa Ana 546-7070 CLASSIFIED will sell it. Call 751·5143. appraisal. J\ C, 6 4 0. 6 0 2 0 / Day 557-2520, Ken. V-8, auto. trans., factory '72 El Camino 350, 4 spd. GROTH CHEVROLET JOCJUar 9730 673·1890 /N '73Super Beetle AM /FM tion546-5392evenings air conditioning, full 'l~r~ .. d~k~s~u 2$24~5o7o~; Cadillac 18211 Beach Blvd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• --t 20 000 • · $2350 ----------1 power, power steering, 96S·0290 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• nu tire~ xlnt runninJ? Huntington Beach MARK·X Ja~ ~cdan '63. '68 Opel Kadett ~~~~d~vs mi, ' '71 El Dorado, white on radjo, heater, whitewall ----------i 9915 cond. sl agh~ body 847·6087 549·3331 Auto trans. Very i::d 2 Dr hardtop. it s peed,__ ·' white,sunroof,fullpwr. tires. vinyl roof. tinted dam a J! <' • q u 1 c k s a I e cond Best offer f~2 1272 stick shaft. radio. heater, '69 VW Bu~ good cond 752·8353 Days/673·0613 glass, wheel covers. Like SIR{MI IX'"t offer 556·4011 , Autos, lmport~d · .... heel covcrs. Lake new. s8so · Eves. new.120CAX. _'l799497_±1m ••••••••••••••••••9••7•0•1• 1973 Jaguar XKt-: V12 YXS607. 497·3246 9917 $1499 Genttal 12,000 m1. lmmac Tllt:.: ----------1Camaro "74CHEVY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ChnstmasG1ft f.454251 $1099 ·75 VW Bus, illness in ••••••••••••••••••••••• Custom Pickup 64·65 Lotus Etan. stereo. family. musl sell! Im· '73 Like "NEW". Loaded. D .. .ton Ford Auto. t r ans • power Xtras, comp. reblt , parts Matda 9738 Dunton Ford mac. cond. 7000 mi. LT model. '76 license. 22AOS. Main at Wa rner steering & brakes. radio, car. Andy 546·0096 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2240S. Mam at Warner 640-5258 $3750. 642·3301. Santa AM 546-7070 •excellent! $3488. • '73 Mazda RX2 4 dr .. SantaAna 546-7070 ----------1--------- (011945). Audi 9707 \\ air. auto trans, lo mi . --'74 VW LOVE BUG CheYr'Olet 9920 '70 Ford Torino Th~odore Robins ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1795. 492·0447. Porsch~ 97SO 4 Speed, s tick s hift. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Dr. Harcltop '70 Audi lUOLS. 4 dr.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r adio, heater, tinted FORD M-· ... -s D-n1 9740 V-8, auto. trans .• factory SlSOO. Anne 673.2950 or "" ..... \R' DC' ·73. 914 Silver . air. Konis glass. only 19.000 miles. CONNELL 2060 Harbor Blvd. ~-3156 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• cover. bra, xlnt $6000/ofr A·l cond. 362LWG. air conditioning, power Costa Mesa 642·0010 Lease 833 9264 steering, radio. heater, • '72 Audi l OOLS. 2 dr, -------(?888 CHEVROLET whitewall tires, v iny l 76FordF-IOOPU am /fm ster eo, auto New-Used '6fi PORSCHE912Cpe.XI. ~ roof, tinted glass, wheel 6 Cyl . st1rk shift, heater, trans 833-1361or 640·1217 OVER I 00 shape 3.000 ma on 1120 Dunton Ford covers. This car is like only 1200 miles, almost ' MERCEDES eng New '74 Sepia Brn. 2240S. Main at Warner SALES &SERVICE new. 710BJ.i..T. new.1Afi6649. BMW 9712 paint. ATS mags. SantaAna 546-7070 2828Harborll•d. $1699 $3888 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ONDISPLAY P irellis, s poilers . COSTAMESA House of Imports blaupunkt. xtra set of '66 vw Bu~. Red. Xlnt 546-1200 Dunton Ford SADDLEBACK '71 PINTO 2 Door. 4 speed. AM radio. $1488. (206C PT). Th~odore Robins FORD 2060 II arbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 642 0010 '71 FORD PINTO RUNABOUT 4 Speed, s tick s hirt. radio, healer, whitewall tires. wheel covers. 959DVL. $1299. Dunton Ford 2240 S. Main at Warner Santa Ana 546-7070 '74 WAGON, 24,000 mi, auto, great cond. $2500. 962·6461 o ... ton Ford AUTllORIZ}:n wheels, tires. new tinted cond. $875. 497·1895, ·1 2240S. Main at Warner 2240S. Main at Warner 1-fERCEDES UEALER windshiclcl. lst $5.000. evenings. 74 El Camino. a /c, p/b, Santa Ana 546-7070 Santa Ano 546-7070 6862Manrht·stcr, ~akes Jl. C714> 673"6562 a ft --.67-V-W-. -re_b_l_t _e-ng-. -p /s, au lo trans. adj.---.-------71 Pinto, radio, air, vm. Buena Park sunroof. $650. or offer. steer ing whl, r emoteiMCl"fenclr 9947 top. Sharp exterior, good BMW '72 Ford F2S 0 PU v.s. auto. trans, power ~teenng . tinted s:lass, whct'I covers, nice truck. 8133066. 176 BMW's NOWHERE 2M02 Mergueftte Pkwy. S23-72SO ·72 914. Loaded. Must sell 640-6782 control outside ourror. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. auto. 552·0217, lhis week . $4,000. ----------Radio, lo mi. Blue. $3350 1970Maverick.$900 $1200orBes toffer. 96.11593: 531-RSJO. '69 Sqback. Auto. or offer. Hank Mon-Sat. Must Sell ! Dtvmoufh ----1 S925 640-4797 833-9004 646-5484 • '1 '71 P 0 RS C H E 9 14 . ----------1----------••••••••••••••••••••••• On the Santa Ana Fwy. 73 MERCEDES 9960 450 SLC n<'d Rik ant. Mint. p,1 '68 VW Bug. must sell Beautiful '72 Chevy Monte Mastan«J 9952 Carlo. Asking $600 below ••••••••••••••••••••••• llabers Cadillac Qgality& Price lt73 CADIU.AC 7SUMOUSIMI Tuaedo bl•ck wil" Dunston tnlenor. 1\111 PCIW«. dual loelory etr, t1't ...... 1tef90. r.cl'M hrn. low miles. (OIDNOKI. Only $6995 1975 llAMCHBO GT VB. evto ,...,... . ooww a1eenno 1no brokes. l1c1ory 111. P e . r11C110. rlld1•! WSW tires. •le. E•lro clean 102002AI Only $3195 1974 fMTaMATIOMAL HAltYHTa ¥• rtCIUP O"IV 12.200 mtle•' V8. Iulo lrw>s. -st_.1'19 and 1><6kH =~ler. H 0 ltres, Sh1rpt Only $3395 I t72 POISCHE 91 IT TAIGA .. $2799 MlalOft Vlefo 131.2040 • '95-4e49 UM AY9f"/ Partrway Exit Open Sunday& f\f ct a 111 c ht' 1 g e w 1th matching anterior . autom:itn: transm1ss1on, power steering, factory air cond1t1oninJ!. AM !l''M sler('() radio, heater, etc. <23511SY I Ply S4500 or best offer. S800 or best offer 540..0421 &642·2502 6405581 blue bk. $1995. 833·9211. •7 4 MustGnCJ Ghia ATLAS Orly 44 ooo m.1"1 5 509fd. elf cond. st•roo AM/FM alloy -.!•. •le. Su119r1> c;onchlton ' (031.JJCl Dunton Ford 2240S. Mam at Warner Santa Ana 546-7070 ·74 CARRERA, sun r oof V°'•o 9772 coupe with evcryth1ni.:. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '70 Monte Carlo. Xlnt 2 Door hardtop. 6 cyl., cond. Air, PS/PB. $1750. factory ai r conditioning. 644 ·1700 ext 548 or power steering, AM/FM 839 1968. s te reo radio. heater, Chrysl•r ft»lymouth Open Daily & Sun. 'ti! 10 PM Only $8995 ·~ FORD f.. I 00 With Camper Shell V-8, auto. trans . power ~teering, tinterl glass. See to appreciate A-J cond. 577211'~. $2199 Dunton Ford 22405. Main at Warn<'r Santa A.na 546-7070 '74 Chevy Luv. top c·ond. Low m1, bi$( shell, must s ell. S2700 /bst offer. f,46-8459 or 645-4809 aflC'r- noons. Vans 9570 __________ ORANGE COU~TY 'S OLDEST ~ Sales·Ser vice·Leasing Roy Car•er, Inc. $15,800 SLEMONS MERCEDES 1~1;11 11art>or. CM. 631-1276 Avail approx. Jan 1, 1976. Sl5.000 firm. 645·f.101 between 9.30 & 11.30 AM wkdays. ------- Rolls Royce 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• #l DEALER IN U.S.A. ROY Roll s Royce BMW 234E.17lhSt. ------ CO!\ta Mesa 546-4444 '74 Merc~des 450SL fRR CARVER ROLLS·ROYCE 1976 BMWs ARE HERE CREVIER V R, aulu trnns • factory a i r <·nnd1t1on1n g, full powc.>r. power ~lt'cr1ng~ pow<'r d i sc brakt•s, 23A E. 17th St COSTA MESA \...._ ___ S.&C.-4444 ClOSlO SUNDAYS power window~. AM /FM ---------·- stereo radio. heater, tml SMt 9761 ed ~lass. whc<'I <.'Overs, •••••• • •••• •• ••• • •••• • • cruise control, two tops, EXCLUSIVE . 23.000. m1. l.1kc nl'w. <PBUNO>. FOi :;;·;:~~~:·~~·e·r·~;~ &' sr & ••oAowAv $13,500 Orange County vs. XJnt cond. Finished SANTA ANA Dunton Ford <64 best oCr. 646·4043 or niEuu11t1ATEDA1V1NcMA<:ti1NE Santa Ana 546-7070 intenor. Ai r. $2950 or 835·3171 2240S Mam at Worn<'r ~ 6734062 V R Capri 9715 Must sell '69 Mt'rC'C'dcs MOTOI '73Club Wagon an. um; ••••••••••••••••••·-··· 280SE $3750 Call ""cs or CAI x lnt, looks grcat, has . •· · AUTHOltll:D bllin closet xlnt for ski 197~ Capn V·6, Y~.llow. afternoons. 963 3139__ S.S & Senlce · & c 'I $3500 Air Cond1l1on1ng, -------~·2926 amp ng. ' · AM/FM radio. Dual ex-'67 Mercedes 200. ilDr DAVE ROSS · haust, Mag wheels. Koni Sedan: Ga$, 4<')'.I, new POMTIAC·STUTZ '69FOROVAN S hocks. & Michelin valve 1ob,auto.lllr f'Ond, l4IOHarborllYd. $1,000. runs good Radial ti re!;~ Approx. $2650/of968r. 644-1700 ext 548 962.0184 12,000 miles. J. nis car is or 839·1 · ---------- in pc rf e ct condition. -;::;:..JJ...:=7;t§=:::;:;;:::====:.!.--------:-.-~~==:'1 Ford Van, gd cond. $118.'i. $4,!XX>. 675·1636 or eves. ~-STAR GA'ZERilt~7 Broadway & Csl Hwy, 644 16.'lO ).~·~ 11, tU.Y ll l'OLLANr----.----1 L.B. UniooOllCo. ....,u .L H uuA ----------10..A.·-~ "•' " M Ytwr Oo•lr A<l•••'7 c;.,..,. V itrr. 11 1"t\ 1 v•-. 9720 ~.~ . V /occord1"11 lo I~• S•ort. oci n'i>lw 73 Chevy t!t Ton V-8 J(Y7. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 91~';, ! To ~vtk.p """.,,.,.. '"' Wednnrlov, '"17.11-30 xlnt cond. Cust. int. ·73 240Z, 2R,OO" m1·1e"., 57J.~90 rf'OdWQrrl''""'"'l(>Ond'nci'onumber\ ;.1 .......,. 67"' ...,_ v ·~ ----of 'fOoJ" Zodt0e borth •'9'\ -'-"'---""" ..,....,.... .,...,."°° ong. owner. super clean. A uuwui , ,. .. ., J1 Suto-•• "' r , K04lf'IO tAOOft. 644 ~.n., i"'·-"" 10 '""""' )1 ... ,... ,,, ¥""""' A.tos W..t.d 9590 ~"" """"" '~ .... H 311..-... J), ..... ,,. t>l 1 ,.., -.J6.-"'" • '"'-''"°''°"' UT,. ~A A.-t v,t ,., ••••••••••••••••••••••• s&UMG YOUR CAR? TOP NICES PAID For Imports Paid loror Not 0.-..... h~• 191116Harbor •. M. MS-9303 '73 Datsun 240 z ":.'1!>-1~ H~ ~~ ~~:;;:..1 Aut.o trans .. factory :iir o".:~:~ 11 ~~ l~!:.,.. ~~~= .... conditioning, pow('r lL~ •r...-,. ~'-'"'"'° c.911 t r1 #' r N Nt H IOlo .0\JNIO• 70A..,... .. 'ee ng. r11dio, hea ter. !J..ll u.J2 11 s,,0 •• ..,.. .. '"'''Y 11 v....., Unt.fd nJass. 29,000 miles. ~· ).ti ~ 12 Te .,........ ,, ....... .. 1 l "-'"'-•l Spll 1 J -.,.d "9 """'=~-t 461MCI. 1'Mt~ H C..H 7•Co'"'""" IS W~t •5 St......__ 7) ()I 16 ........ ~ .. n. ..... "'9 76Al1Ht- 11 ,.__.,. 41 "1eh 11 L1lt•'Y t• A •• W••I 71 -.. ~ ....... 19\NNl4 •9N,.. .,..__, $4999 0..ton Ford Wanted -Roll•-Silvcr 22AOS. Main at W:tm~r Cloud 4 dr, orl11nal owner, fall details re· 5-ta AftCI 54&-7070 10 .Af'td •ri ,,,..,,., II() '""" ua ,, .... ,. )tY... • ........ n I .,.., '1 •---" e1 A-7l ~""' ~1w.,,, 11Nt."1b,. ...U.tJc c.ub price. Als Studebak~ Hawlr. Write Kave s"mMhlna you want Ad •~1. P.O. Box 1516, Lo R ll? Chuslried ads do • Dail)r PUot, C.La Meu. It well -Call NOW. • ca. 121828 84.2-5678. ,,,.., ,. 0. •• p ... 1-.. ,., If !i. .. l\ilf"ltt~ f\ f •"'"'""'.,.. J6 Vw If ~ ~ .. Act.Of"lll f'\ ,, w ... ,... '' -., ~ ....... ·•-·"11* ~'" ~~v~•uo 1' rn..,. ~Q ,..,.,_.,... t9 llt..-"."twHT JOT• '° W1tft to It'°'''' ,,.,~Coocl (M)M ...... ()N!W.~ 2929 llarbor Blvd., Costa Mesa lt75 Ml% 45058.SEDAM '76'S · VOLVo·s HERE NOW whitewa ll t ires, vinyl Chryst..-9925 roof, tinted glass, wheel 546-1934 El.clrtc sunroof Only 1 O 000 mtlH on this toalllv •Qu10!)9d 1uto ln<:ludu crutSI con1rol slllreO Wll-ere. (9?0MXOI. ••••••••••••••••••••••• covers, only 16,000 miles ----------.. 'W Chrys ler 300. Htr, all pwr, radial tires. 2190 College, Apt 20, CM Continental 9930 876J PS. . 'W Fury Ill. Xlnt rond. $3888 mechanically & exterior. Make off<'r. 979·3819. Dunton ford Only s 16,300 2600 Harbor llvd.1 Costa Mesa •New Engine ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2240S. Main at Warner '63 Plymouth, xlnt mech cond. needs brks, $250. 496·7482 540-5630 •New Transmission •Ne w Colors '73 LINCOLN CONT'L 4 Santa Ana 546-7070 dr. org owner,.perf cond. ---------- fully equip, sac 557-21oa Autos. M•w 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 All 75'S --................•...........................................•........ Corntte '932 AND DEMO'S MUST GO THISMOHTH BUY OR LEASE USED SPECIALS •74 Volvo 164 Automatic, sunroof, AM /FM stereo. leather. Luxury at its best. #5005. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •TOP CASH! For Cor vettes and other used cars & truc ks! HOWARD Chev rolet, Dove & Quail Sts. Near J amboree, Bristol, & MacArthur, Newport Beach.833--0555 '74 Corvette 454, P /B, P /W, P /S, am/fm stereo, new radials. 493-0631 art. 6 $6395 '61 Corvette Fl Classic, all original solid, best offer '74 Volvo 142 overS2SOO,S46·6647 4 Speed, overdrive, Cougar 9933 leather, AM /FM stereo •••••••••••••••••• ••••• cassette, sunroof. A '00 Cougar Model XR7 sports sedan. 752LEQ. full pwr·w /stereo ' ~399 '1295 49tJ.7482 . ft l . · o~ 9915 .11etlll fJl)iA ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71DodcJtP~cro 2 Door H•dtop VOLVO V-8, auto. lrana., f actory 1966 Hofh1>r c M 6A6 9301 air condltlonlni, power ------------1 ateering, radio, heate, HOW IS THE TIME for Job sffkers to check the Daily Piiot Help Wanted classification. If the job you w.ant ls not t.Mre you miaht consider oflering your 1ervJce1 with an ad in the Job Wanted c1~1ory. Phone 642·~8 whitewall tires, vinyl root, tinted glass, wheel covers. Like new. 4f7DFD .. $1399 Dt.tOllForct 2340S. Main at Warner Seta AM 546-7070 '68 DART . Good You don't need a •un to transportation. $450/ or "draw fast " when you best. Call 751·1770. place an ad In Ult Dally Pilot Want Ada I Call now Have M>methlng to sell? -642-5178. Cl&S310cd •d• do it well. l "Thanks to you" ~ru~~~~TJ IS NOW ••• Number 1 Oldsmobile Dealer in ORANGE COUNTY! COME IN AND HELP US CELEBRATE MEET PLAYERS FROM Number 1 Los Angeles RAMS - FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12th • See our fantastic selection of ;~~=sc~~s~'~enco 197 6 CUTLASS C:/y~e; 65c~EEO 197 6 STARFIRE Over 100 New '76's IN STOCK UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE . 2850 Harbor Blv d., Costa Mesa 540-9640 t • l 7 I j I I \ --· H untington Beacli Fot•ntain Valley EDIT I ON .. Afternoon N.V. Stoeks ,\ I VO L. 68, NO. 343, 2SECTIONS, 28 PAGES I I 7 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1975 TEN CENTS Huntington Teachers Balk at Talks Teacher negotiations in the Huntington Beach City (elemen- tuy >School District were back at a standstill today after teachers boycotted a "fact finding" meet· ingMonday. Teacher spokesman Tanner Peterson said teachers have re- jected the appointment of Dr. E . Earle Brewer, a professor ai tPep- perdine University, as chairman oftbe fact findin g committee. And he said they won 't participate until s~meooe else is appointed or until the school board vofes on Brewer's selec- tion. Brewer, a former school ad- ministrator, was a ppointed to the post by Deputy Supenntendent Charles P.almer. . Palmer was to represent the school board in fact finding and Totn Brown ot the California Teachers Association was to represent teachers. But after Brown fa.I.led to arrive at Monday's 2 p.m . fact finding session , Palmer said, the meeting was halt~. and no new one has been arranged. Trustees are expected to dis· cuss the matter at tonight's 7 o'clock.meeting at Dwyer School, 1502PalmAve. Trusteee Brian Garland today said Monda y 's session was another in a series of ''game play- ing" sessions "orchestrated by Palmer." And both teachers and Palmer today accused each other of stall· inginthe matter. "We have documentation to show who is s talling," Palmer said, saying the delay has been caused by teachers. · "They told us to go ahead and select and every time we select they find something wrong with that person," Palmersaid. But Peterson, who has asked that the fact finding chairman C'Ome from a professional con - ciliation or arbitration service, said Palmer has been using "'stalling maneuvers.'' And Garland said he has documentation to show Palmer is stalling. Carland said and Palmer agreed that the district had no firm commitment that Brown wou ld arrive for Monday's session. Palmer said he did receive a letter Mond ay from Brown after Brewer already had arrived ror- the meeting, in which he voiced opposition to Brewer. Pl"terson said that Jetter-also (See TEACHERS, Page AZ) · Rowlands Rapped for Police Plan .Canyon Blazes Quelled., By WILLIAM SCHREIBER ._ oru. o.ur ~""' 51.-t Hundreds of firefi ghters worked until almost midnight Monday before fully containing a major br-ush fire that burned across 1,700 acres of Orange County's rugged canyon areas. The blaze, which broke out ear- ly Monday in Silverado Canyon. was finally ha lted by an army of 1,000 firemen just as it topped the ridge of foothills overlooking east Jrvine and El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. (Additional story, pbotosPageAJ.) Today, county fire officials said the fire could easily have been much worse if winds were stronger -perhade rivaling' the 196'1 Pueo Gran e inferno that burned 50,000 acres in the same general area, destroying 66 .homes. Two dwellings a nd a guest house were destroyed in Mon- day's blaze and ther-e were only two reported injuries -a Mod· jeska man who broke his leg and a volunteer fireman sent to the hospital with an eye cut. The fir e was triggered when a botUed gas heater exploded in the bedroom of the Fred Meylin g home in Si.lverado Canyon. No one was at home at the time. The flames spread rapidly but quick response by the Silverado Volunteer Fire Department and the nearby U.S. Forest Service station had Jin es established along the top of the canyon within an hour. A county fire spokesman said at that point, the blaze appeared to be contained wi thin less than 100 acres but then the wind picked up . Hot ashes jumped the fire line and the bla ze r aced down Williams Canyon, just off San- t iago Canyon Road, aod the whole hillside burst into flames as sparks ignited explosive manzanita bus hes and dry grass. Firemen tried vainly to save Rancho Soldona, a cluster of houses and barns owned by Phil and Sue Charlton on the slopes of Santiago Canyon. The main r anch house, the guest house and all the out build- ings burned to the ground in less than 15 minutes, according to coun ty fire Capt . Bruce Turbeville. Then the s moke and flames ap- peared ominously on the hills above Sjlverado School and the children were evacuated by bus. They returned later Monday af- ternoon when the fire was stopped and extinguished only a few hundred yards away from the bui lidin . Fjre of!ic~als said only a last- minute back fire and strong sup- port from crews saved the school. Boom Rocks Neighborhood A thunderous boom rocked a north Huntington Beach net1hborhood Monday evening, twice, and polJce officers nar- rowed the caune down to probable malieioun mischief. · lnvestJ1ators said the explosion heard tn the are• of Edwards Strffl and Ellis A venue at first wa considered. 1 P<!JSible u · plOdlonon aricril ri;. l Patroltnan Jim Lail said , \ hoWever, that he rouna evidence 10mec>ne had attached a fuaeto an OX)'ac~lene 1aa-tank -an ex-. tttinel1 dan1erou1 prank -and 1' 1¢tedltUkeabomb. I I ' O.llr ...... ,,_.. ~r !ti~ K-ll>r CANYON BLAZE BOMBED WITH FIRE RETARDANT FROM FOUR-ENGINE PLAN E This Payload from Aeri al Tanke r Dropped Near Santl•go Canyon Roa d Cella Subpoena Nixed By GARY GRANVILLE Of-D>IUrl"I""'..,. A moVe-to s ubpoena bank re: cords tracing Dr. Louis Celia's . complex financial political deal- ings was quashed Monday by a federal judge ln Los Angeles. If the goverom,nt wants Crocker N atiorta1 Bank to pro- vide copies oC Celia's r~ for use in its inve.stigationcltbe San· ta Ana phys ician, it should reim· burse the bank for its eosts, Judge Jesse W. Curtis ruled. Subject of a subpoena quashed by Judge Curtis were bank re- cords covering roughly 30 personal and business accounts controlled by Cella in retent years as be emerged as California's top poUtical cam- paign donor. · The bank records were sought in connection with a federal a:rand jury investigation of Celia's t1x status as well as Medicare pafments to two Orange County hospitals under his control until recently. Seekin& th'e same records and already in poSsession of some as a rttult. or executed seartb war· rents ls the Orange Oounty Grand Jury. The county jury Ls investl1at-- tn1 possible rraud, embezzle· mmt llnd arand theft alle~,,. ion• •• t.be result or the of camouflaaed bosplta_l fd.~. purportedly u sed to bankroll Cella in his politic al and business ventures. In seeking to have the tederal subpoena quashed, Crocker at· tomeys argued that it would cost the bank an estimated 1,000 man hours and $12,500 to meet the sub- poena's demands. And while government at· tom.eys argued there is no prece· dent for demanding reimburse- ment or cosu, Judge Curt&• said the subpoena placed "an onerous burden on people who are not s uspect ed of committing a crime." "If you want that inCormation, you can make a deal with the bank," the judge said after up· holding the bank's motion to quash. Government attorneys said in a brief opposing the motion to quash that the bank's reluctance to comply with the subpoena is frustrating the iovemment's in- vestigation and made reference· to 17 auditors waiting ror the re· cords. Taxes Due Fint DeaJJ.ine Wedneaday 'Wtdnesday js the deadline for mailing the tint lnstall- mentof this )"ear's proper\)' t11.xes wltbou,t penalty, acCOl"diftt: to Orme• Co\lnty Tax CoU«toc· TTeUllr<!r Robe:t Citron. IF PAYMENTS ARENT rec:e!Ved qr P05tmarked by Wednesday, a six perCflDt delinquency {f1 will be char1ed, Citron said. Tbetu collectOT ,.lduol Dec. 2, about $44 ..,lruon of the first installment total of 1296 mlllior'I had been received by his orncc. A TOTAL OF 411,000 property tax billa were malled out by Citron's office in October as tbe !int step toward 1alher· ins more than $$112 11\/1lion in county property taxes thl> ~ear. \ No City Approval For Bid? By ROBERT BARKER OftMD>IUrl"l""'SC•" Cit y Administrator Dave Rowlands gave the lluntington Be ach Police Officers Associa· tion retirement benefits without City Council authorization, ac- cording to a llegations or an ad hoc committee released Monday. The measure, known as the CHP plan, a llows officers to retire al the age of 50 instead of 55 at half their salary. Cost of the plan, pr-eviously awarded to the firemen's associa· tion, is expected to be $250,000 an- nually, but it is not due to go into effect UDtil 1978. Rowlands said today he still believes that City Council mem- bers were aware of discussions on the proposal in executive sessions and that "be would give 50 bucks to find the tape recording or the meeting." He said furthe r that he regards the CHP plan as a negotiable item . ''The association still hasn't re- ceived it ,'' he said, ''and if in the future they do, they 'll have to give up something in incentive educa· tion benefits or some other fringe benefit.'' Jn his written r eport on the sub- ject. Flint Mor-rison of the Hunt- ington Beach HOME Coun cil, said that Rowlands committed the city to the retirement plan prior to the time that negotiators actually began discussions with policemen. · "It is important to note that at no lime did Rowlands inquire of <See ROWLANDS, Page A2) City D elays Bol,sa Chica Bluffs Annex Huntington Beach City Council members Monpay put off for 60 days action on a r eq uest to annex about 280 acres or the westerly bluffs in the Bolsa Chica area. George D. Stringer, vice presi- dent of the Signal Bolsa Corp. told council members that he believes the bluffs are ready for development. He expressed anxiety over what he considers an impasse with the city over plans to annex the area. But the city <;ouncil delayed ac· tion, indicating it wishes to annex the entire 1,450 acres o( Bolsa Chica in a single s woop at a later date. Ruth Baily, president of lhe· Huntington Beach League of Women Voters, opposed the an- nexation. She said the league supports preservation of Bo\saChica as an ecological preserve surrounded by open s pa ce "to prevent furthe r degradation of the coastal resource." She urged the city not to allow premature and piecemeal annex- ation. "Annex.atlon 6t the bluff would precipitate decisions that would bypass the total area," she told council members. Herb Chatterton ot the Amigos de Bolt a Chica aatd he favors the area as a wetland preserve and that annezi.ng ll now would raise the price the 1tate would even- tually bavi to pay If it aequl.res the properti'. . Councilwoman Harriett Wieder moved that the matter be sent to committee fot study. The commlUee i• to report back In 80 da)'>-• ( • O.Uy l"llet,.,... COMM ITTEE TARGET City Aide Rowlands Schmit, 3 Kids Hurt In Crash Orange County Supervisor Laurence Schmit and three of his children were undergoing treat· ment in WestminstcrComm\lnity Hospital today after being in- volved in a two-c ar-collision in Ga rden Grove. The extent of injuries to Schmit and hi s l'h il dren \\'C're not im· mediately known. However, a spokesman at the hospital a nd Schmit's chief aide Loren Norton said the injuries are not believed to be critical. The 35-year -old county supervisor-repoitedly was driv- in g the three chi ldren. Joseph, Cheryl and Jean, all teenagers, to school shortly before 8 a.m. when his station wagon was struck broadside at Springdale Street and Garden Grove Boulevard. Early reports indicate the im- pact rolled the station wagon over- on its top trapping the supervisor and his three children inside. After being freed by police and . fire personnel called to the scene the Schm its were taken to Wes tmin s ter Community Hospital where the supervisor-. complained of a severe hip pain. A hospital s pokesm an said Schmit and hi s son were undergo. ing X-rays late this morning. The· accident report had not been filed al the Garden Grove Police Department by mid- morning. Coast \\leath er Fair skies through Wed - nesday but patchy fog near the coast in the morning hours. Highs Wednesday, 68 at the beaches rising to · 7S inland. Lows tonia;ht 47 to SJ_ I NSIDE TODAY Cltart!'d of J>ttiUF'JI eonuidion, for-nsn California LI . Gov. Ed Rdneckt f.t pondering IOOere' togo/rom#Nrf. AJ. l a d ex . .. ... ... •• . .. • •• ... ~I ... .. .42 OAILYPILOT H/F Holdout f Tests I l Nerves LONDON (U Pl) -Trap- ped Irish Republican Army JUDmen rejected an offer of food in exchange Cor ont.> of their hostages today. spumed a supply ot water and disrupted their hot- hne with police in an intensifying war of nerves on lht>1r tturd day under s iege. The police retaliah.'d by cutting off electnc1ty to the apartment liVlllg room where the gunmen "'ere holding Mr. and Mrs. John Matthews. lt left the three or four IRA gunmen without bghts or television news of their ordeal. 'The apartment heating was working. There were fears that Britain's most wanted man, Michael Wilson, had escaped during the chase mto the Matthews apart ment last Saturday and was not inside as ongma11y thought. ··we have not made much pro· gress,'' a police <'ommander s aid. "But I think they are gradually being "orn down and will come out £'ventuallv " The gunmen. "1thou 0 t food for three days, refused an offer for a meal in exchange for the release of Mrs. Ma tthews , 53. whose nervous cond1llon is a cause for police concern. The IRA m en also rejected an offer of more water -the first delivery was made Monday - and disconnected the hot-line when they did not want to speak. The gunmen renewed their de- mand for a plane to fly them to· Ireland. Their rejection of the new food· for-hostage proposal came via the hot-line telephone linking the li ving room refuge with policemen outside. It provided another negotiation deadlock in the three-day-old police trap which at first was thought to have caught Britain's most wanted man. Mi chael Wllson, among tbe gunmen. l)wyer Sclwol Fate Gets Panel Study 1 J •• • t J :t . .. ~ "\ The Huntington Beach City 'elementary> school board will meet at 7 tonight in Dwyer ln· termediatc School -a facility 1t agreed two years ago to sell or tear down by now. And Trus tee Brian Garland said today he will propose that the board appoint a citizen com· mltlee to study the Dwyer mat- ter. Deput y Superintendent Charles Palme r explained the school boa rd agreed two years ago to sell Dwyer by November 1975 and use pa rt of the proceeds. to pay back a $2 mtllion state loan. used to bulld Sowers ln· termed1ate School. But a t the ttme. he said, trustee s did not reahze they would still nee d Dwyer to house ~1xth . sev e nth and eighth graders Now. he s aid, the district still needs Dwyer and doesn't have $2 milhon to pay back the state loan. Palmer said the state could force the 1mmed1ate closing or the 40-year-old building and 1t could demand immediate pay- ment of the $2 million loan. But he seid he doesn't believe the state would do either. Howeve r . he s aid. he and state officials have not been able to <.·ome up with a solut.Jon for the <hlemma. Garland s aid today he will pro- pose a ''broad-based committee of parents, bus inessmen, stu- dents , teac hers Cand> ad- ministrators" to. study all op- t.Jons. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT TM O.•t1CI" (OA\I 0411Y PHol wolll wh1lh I\ <..,,,,,t>1n.f1'S tt'W' N•#'\ Prt'\\, u 0Ubl1~ f'Y IM a. .... ~ COA\t J'\;l>tololllnQ '"""""'' ~•At• f'<SH1on' •r• pubh,..,.,,f'd Mt>nd-'V 11'\t'OUQt'I t llMf tcw (.0\11 Mfl'\.. N"\llJOOrt ~-"· HUf'lh001M 8f•t h/FOu.f\t.t1n Vttllry, lr•lnit~ \.ttktl•Wt• v,,11•v ,,.., L.eoun• ft.t'~t"'~" (M\I A '\t"O'•· t.qtQtWI f"01h0f"I IS: publ!\'1fl'1 ~tUff°MY'\ •n4t \1;n 0-'1\ fhf' p,1nc.1p•I p-\;bli\l"ttf\Q p••n• t\ .-if UO _,, 8•1 ~H .. t. C.0.1• Mh• C...hto•n••'l2ol~. Ro~rt N. Weed PrnlCHnl •ncl Pul>ll.,,,..r Jack R. Curley "" t Prn 1donl •I'd c..-•• MoNvtf Thomas Keevil £••• .... ThOmas A. MUfli'llne MIMQll•• IE.dttof CNrtes H. Loos • Rlch&rd P. Nall AM'tl<llll WNt•"ll E.<hl«• RobArt Barker WtU ()f_ Ce.,,,ty E.W HumlMton ~Office tttl'fkKll~ Meltif'IQ AClllrfft P 0. -.l'llQ, ..... • OtherOfflcts ~ .. Kii, llttO.._,.ilf'Mt ~uMeM ~-, .. 1,.,... ,.__, .. Kii QlJ..._,...,..._d ~ ....... ., JS2tl Lot,.., -•• Mii oa..o ,,_ T•M'9e.M (7t4) '42~1 Cl..Uffltd Actvertlltlng ... M671 ,,...,. ...,,_Or~ Co\IMY c.i.-~tNA • S4o-1220 c.mnaM . ..,. Ott<\ .. CH<• Pullll<fMlll ~ ~· '* ... -........ ""''""'-· .... ..,, .. -lltr Of •dY•rllH"'•nh ~ttln -· ff rt,.ffll< .. •Ill"'"' t,.c1•I 11-rmlOltlft of <#'+'tlOM _,' • .., .... clotl ~ ..... patll .. ~ta *'•• c.flt.....ie ~ftoll.,. •• cMl'WP N H -.. ., .,.,...u ... u .... n1111•. "'""_,,~._ pd,..ifl•ty. ' - Fro..P~AJ ROWLANDS. Miranda Frot11 Page Al TEACHERS • Ruling the City CouQcU ~ to the ac- curacy of hia understanding of the procedures concerrung the ~x­ tenslonofthecoverageofU1eCHP plan to the pobco memben," Morrison added. Morrison said that the retire- ment benefit probably would have been mandated by 5lale legislation in the future. f Weakens aaid Palmer should tt!l him know lt th~ school board had voted on the matter before any m~tmgs be arranged. But Palmer said he had no commitment either way from Brown. "We were ready to proceed," Palmer said. Confusion seems to mark a second allegation that RowlaDds instructed Public InformatiooOf- ficer Bill Reed to itpend a con- siderable amount or city time in providing inCormation in support of the retention of the con- troversial Real Property Tran.seer Tax. The findmgs asserted the city administrator assumed greater prerogatives than were expressly and implicitly authorized by the Clty Council. •·And in so doing,'· the report al leged, "he directed certain key employes so as to cause them to act in a manner which may be contrary to law." The findings were listed over the signature of City Councilman Ted Bartlett who said he didn't write them or agree with them. · · 1 personally felt that Rowlands and the city were doing the right thing," he said. ''I'm go- ing to find out more about this when the ad hoc committee meets again Wednesday.'· The ad hoc committee was formed by Mayor Norma Gibb!> and the City Council on Oct. 6 to look into charges aired by Coun- cilman Jerry Matney. Matney ac- cused Rowlands of a conspiracy to prevent the counctl and public from learning of city operations and expenditures. Committee members are Coun- cilman Al Coen. the chairman, council members Harriett Wieder and Ted Ruth Baily, presi· dent of the League of Women Voters; F1int Morrison, president of the HOME council; John Stillman, citiz~n at large, and Mario Antoci who replaced Phil Oster, chairman of the Economic Advisory Commission. The ad hoc committee also con- cerned itself with two additional allegations: Dolly ...... SQff ....... CITIZEN OF THE YEAR Fountain Valley's Bry•nt Unification Leader Honored Frank Bryant, co-chairman of Fountain Valley's recent school unification campaign, has been selected as the chamber of com- merce's "Citizen of the Year." Bryant, who has lived in Foun- tain Valley 11 years, was nominated for the award by Teen Help, a family counseling service. He has served on the Teen Help board of directors for three years and as president for two years. "I felt honored," Bryant said or the award, which was present· ed at a chamber banquet Friday night. "But in a community like Fountain Valley it is a total com- munity effort when someone gets recognized.•' WASHINGTON (UPI) -With two juetich predicting the landmark Miranda decision will soon be overturned, the SUpreme Court ruled 6 to 2 today that in some cases police may continue questioning suspects after they have exercised their right to re- main silent. Justices William J . Brennan and Thurgood Marshall dis- sented. Brennan,· in an opinion en- dorsed by Marshall, said "Today's distortion of Miranda's constitutional principles can be viewed only as yet another step toward the erosion, and, I sup- pose, ultimate overruling of Miranda's enforcement of the privilege against self- incrimination." The Michigan Supreme Court reversed the t'onviction of Richard Bert Mosley, convicted ·for tbe January, 1971, slaying or Leroy Williams in Detroit. Mosely was first picked up for questioning about a series of rob- beries. He exercised his right to remain silent and interrogation stopped. Two hours later, other detectives warned Mosley or his rights and, when he did not object, asked him about the murder. After be was told about an ac- complice's confession, Mosley made self-incriminating state- ments. The Michigan Court ruled the statements were inadmissible as ~vidence because all police ques- tioning on any criminal matter must cease after a suspect first says be wants to remain silent. Justice Potter Stewart, writing for the majority overruling the Michigan Court, called this a "literal interpretation" of Miran- da which could "lead to absurd and unintended results.•· Stewart said Mosely was But Garland <trgued, ''How could Palmer in his wildest im· agination feel there was going to be a meeting yesterday? I ques- tion whether Dr. Brewer should have been invited down. How much time did he spend at dis- trict offices? Who did he talk to?" · Garland then questioned how Brewer could be neutral after spendine time with district ad- ministrators Monday. . "I am quite frankly just sick of this, and I am hoping somebody else is too," Garland continued. Palmer said he ,did not present any briefs he prepared for fact finding to Brewer, and he will consider the material confiden- tial until the boycott is resolved. He also said that when he ap- pointed Brewer to fact finding he was acting a s the board's representttive, with trustee knowledge. Palmer said teachers will (ind some reason not to attend fact finding no matter what happens. But Garland charged Mon· day's meeting was "orchestrated mainly for public relations," s o the administration could accuse th~teachers of "bad faith" by not. attending. "Usually when you have a meeting," he said, "the people agree to meet. I could call a meetirig this afternoon at Don Jose's with President Ford, then I eould accuse him of not showing ·up." Gays Quizzed In Knight Case O.lly ...... IYff ........ HUNTINGTON TITUST Junior Miss Spin•k Ronda Spinak, a senior <(t Edison High School, has been chos en Huntington Beach's Junior Miss. Miss Spinak is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Spinak, 10172 Meredith Drive, Hunt- ington Beach. She will represent the city an the state Junior Miss pageant in February in Santa Rosa. Sixteen high school seniors compe~d in the pageant held Sat\U;<fily night at Sowers Middle School in Huntington Beach. Julie Bradley was selected first runner-up, according to pageant officials. and Jean Kim- mel was selected second runner- up. Both are seniors at Hunt- ington Beach High School. Pageant officials said M1ss Spinak hopes to attend Stanford University, USC or UCLA and major in law. business ad ministration or economics. -That Rowlands solicited a donation of a s culpture worth ap- proximately $40,000 from the Huntington Beach Company in exchange for a monetary obliga- uon of approximately $160,000 due the city. Other nominees for the award inc luded John Beddow. sponsored by the Kiwanis Club; Charles Posner, sponsored by the American Association of Retired Persons; and Clara Peck Schultz, sponsored by the American Association of University Women. - Bryant, 35, is a division manager for JeCCerson -Standard Life Insurance Company. • warned of l\is rights a second time and could cut off questioning by demanding to remain silent. PHILADELPHIA <UPI) - Philadelphia police said today they have called ip many persons from the city's homosexual com- munity for questioning in connec- tion with the death of millionaire newspaper heir John S. Knight. Gays Making Big Passes In the NFL? -That Rowlands presented the Military Retirement Amendment to the City Council with the knowledge that he would benefit personally. Attorney John Stillman said that there was no known money owed to the city and that there is no evidence that Rowlands solicited (he artwork in exchange for any consideration. Stillman did add that Rowlands used poor judgment in discussin~ the matter of the artwork at a meeting and that he failed to re· port findings to the city. On the retirement matter, the findings said that Rowlands had no prior knowledge that benefits would accrue to him personally. A second allegation said the plan was presented to the city as a savingsof$156,000 a year, when in fact it will not save money. Committee members con - cluded there will be an immediate $156,000 savings but there will be future costs to the city that aren't determined yet. Mayor Norma Gibbs said today that if there were any errors , ···they were very human ones." "Dave has always thought of the city first and he's very good in keeping council members in formed," she said. She added that she was not aware of the retire- ment benefits awar ded to policemen, however. Rowlands said today the ques· lions could a 11 have been answered if Councilman Jerry Matney, his accuser, had come to him personally with them. A member of the chamber, be has served on the board of direc- tors for the Fountain Valley Boys' Club. is a past president and member of the Founain Valley Jaycees and is a member of the Kiwanis Club. He also belongs to the National Association of Life Underwriters and is a member of the Million Dollar President's Round Table,. an honor bestowed for insurance sales. In addition to serving as co- chairman of the unification ef- fort, Bryant was cbairman'of last spring's tax override election in. the Fountain Valley School Dis· trict. Safe Marriage Panel Meets The Orange County Chapter of the Committee for Safe Mar- riages will hold an organizational meeting at 7: 30 tonight at 18262 Busha rd St., Fountain Valley. A proposed · "family bill of rights" and approaches toward better marriage and family rela- tionships will be discussed; or- garuzation officials said. Those interested in additional information may call 968-2973 or 962-8046. Band Booster Adults Needed ~~n~~~iah . School Band Boosters will hold a To Help HB's dance a~ 8 p.m. Saturday at ~he Fountain Valley Commumty Center, 10200 Slater Ave. Carol P t The high school's 22-member agean Jazz Ensemble and Stage Band Adults with musical talent are needed now by the city-operated Oak View Recreation Center. 17241 Oak Lane, Huntington Beach. Center Director Susan All~n said youngsters who frequent the after-school center are planning a Dec. 22 and 23 live manger scene and Christmas caroling pagunt. Anyone able to help them prac· tice carols, both ln Engllsh and Spanish, and anyone able t.o sup· ply a guitar or other musical in· strument may call her at M8..()U4. She u.id lbe manger for the productii>n is bein~ built by tho .Huntioctoo Beach J ayceee. Scott Released LAS VEGAS, Nev. CAP) - Walt« Scott, brotherohport.1 ac· tivi!t Jack Scott and a key ngure in the Patty Hurst case, hu bffn released from a h oapltal PIJChlatric wal"d wbero b was admitted Collowlnr an apparent suicide attempt, a hospital 1pokesm.,saJd Monday. will play. The event is being held for · adults only. Admission is $5 per couple. 'Tuxu Past His Bedlime A wayf areT in search of a bed for tha niaht checked ln at the front desk.of a Hunt- ington Beach lod8lng plac~ Monday and got it, but the room tervlce was notblne towrttebomeabout. OfCicer Blaine Davis said the unexpected 1uest staa· ftted through the door of the Huntington Beach Police Department about 8 p .m ., proclaiming 1t wu bedtime and askiDi wtwre cooldhecleep. Hewu allowed toatayup a little later than usual while omcers booked him · on a drunk·ln ·publJc clw'ge. Then they wcted hJ m ln fort.be nllht.. "The requirement that law en· forcement authorities must respect a person's exercise of that option counteracts the coercive pressures of the custodial set- ting,'' Stewarts aid. "Wethererore conclude that the admissibility of statements ob- tained after the person in custody has decided to remain silent de· pends under Miranda on whether his riJlht to cut off questioning was scrupulously honored" P.,Uce, believing the 30-year· old heir knew his killers, said the homosexuals were questioned because of various items found in Knight's apartment. Officers said the items in· eluded nude photographs of young men, tape recordings that included accounts of sexual ac- tivities in the apartment. and diaries that included accounts of various sexual activities. Seige Goes On 2 Sick Hostages Freed AMSTERDAM, The Netherlands (UPI) -South Moluc- can gunmen released two sick hostages today and another man died of injuries suffered when he leaped from a window of the Indonesian consulate to avoid capture. ~he developments came as new negotiations got under way m Holland's twin hostage drama that saw two terrorist bands still holding more than 50 persons in the consulate and in a train hijacked a week ago75milesnorthof Amsterdam. · A _Dutch official announced the death in a hospital of ln- ~ones1an consulate clerk E . Abedy, 52, of injuries when he Jumped from a third floor window as seven gunmen stormed into the building last Thursday. Hew as thefourthperson to die as a result of the seizure of the consulate and the capture of a train a week ago. Three other persons were killed in tbetrain. But the consulate gunmen, apparently satisfied with the progress of negotiations on their demands for South Moluc- can independence, unexpectedly released two of their estimated 26remaininghostages today. Both were sick. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Some big name pro football players, in - eluding at least three starting quarterbacks, are either homosexual or bisexual, tne Washington Star said today. In the first of a four-part series, star sports writer Lynn Roselllni wrote that s he based her state· ment on interviews with more than 60 athletes, coaches, sports ofCicials, psychologists and members of the gay community during the past three months. . The newspaper listed no names of athletes of either sex but the story said: ''Some of the biggest names in football, including al least three starting quarterbacks in the National Football League, are homosexual or bisexual." Miss Rosellini made these other assertions: -Antigay press ure is so in- tense that many male athletes who prefer homosexual rela· tionships maintain fronts as mar ried men with children. -The percentage or male homosexuals in sports is pro· bably close to the 5 percent which prevails in society as a whole. -Up to 20 percent of women athletes, including tennis and golf stars. are lesbians. an impressive and unique commemoration of our blcentennlal, beautifully boxed for gifts to friends and formal presentations l I ; 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • •(or your hom<', office, storP • for c;chnnl~. fr.He-rnal or <.ocial cluh~. younl{ r coples organization~, businc~' .:ind trade a't<.o<iJtions • fo r bu"nc<.c; Rifts, :.wards and congratulatory present.i hon<> A M!SA, CAlll'. 92627 • f'HONE 6"46·~838 -6.C6·l355 7 r e e s d y s r- e h n d " I 7 ~·. Lag11na/South Coast Today' Closlag N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 68, NO.)(), 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1975 TEN CENTS Fire1nen Win Battle of Silverado O.lly Pilot ...... '1 ltlc:Mrd KMltlff CANYON BLAZE BOMBED WITH FIRE RETARDANT FROM FOUR-ENGINE PLANE This Payload from Aerial Tanker Dropped Near Santiago Canyon Road Second Campus Studied Satellite Sclwol's 'Deatllines' Debated By LAURIE KASPER Of tM Oally ...... SCalf Saddleback Community College District trustees, ad- ministrators and residents Mon- day differed on the timing for a satellite or second campus in the Tustin-Irvine area. Trustees have been investigat- ing the possibility of opening a satellite campus in the northern area in September. The plan talked of most often is to locate the satellite on land which can be purchased and developed as a permanent second campus in the future. Although there seemed to be no doubt that a second campus will be needed someday, those who spoke during the meeting seemed uncertain when that day will be. District administrators bad presented the trustees with a packet of population and enroll- ment projections which indicated the district enrollment would at least double in the next five years. Dr. Robert Lombardi, district superintendent, admitted he doesn't know how accurate the fieures are. He said they were being presented in the belief that · the district bes to prepare for the day when its population does in- crease. · But this day, said Trustee Larry Taylor of Laguna Beach, is fifteen rather than the ad- ministration's suggested five years away. He urged that they develop the existing college before moving onto a second campus. He also nuestioned the conten- tion that · distance from the Irvine-Tustin area is what causes residents to attend a college out- side of the district. Rather, he said, they are attracted to other colleges by better courses, at- mosphere and facilities. Even residents of Mission Vie- jo, where Saddleback College is located, travel to other colleges, be said. However, Trustees Norrisa ·Brandt ol Irvine and Frank Greinke of TusUn. continued to contend that distance apd the costs of commuting are a major I act.or in a student's choice of col- leges. Residents of the area both agreed and disagreed with them. "Anything worked out for our people would be very much ap- preci ated." said Gabrielle Pryor, a member of the Irvf,ne City Council who was speakning Taxes Dae Fint D~atlline Wedneaday Wednesday is the deadline for malling tbe lint install- ment ol tb.11 yea r~s propert,y taxes without penally r&CCOf'dinC to Oranee County Tax Collector· Treasurer Robert Citron. l P PAYMENTS UEN'T received or postmarked by Wednesday, a six percent delinquency fee wlll be cbareed, Cit.ron1aJd . Tbe tax collector said as of Dtc:. 2, about $46 million otlbe Ant lutalJ ment total of '296 million bad been rece1 vcd by h1I office. ,\TOTAL OF 411,• propert,y tax billl were malled out by Citron 'I office in October u lb• first atep toward 1ather-- lq more than ~92 mUUoa in county property tu ta lh1s yeer. as a private citizen. Allbough the campus may not be built for 10 to 15 years, she suggested that the land be re- served "as soon as possible." This, she said, is needed because the costs are rising. "It's not something that should be put ofl for 10 years," agreed Greinke. If trustees go along with the plan to open a satellite campus in September on land which can be developed into a second campus, a decision on the site will have to be made by Feb. 9. Trustees are expected to con- tinue discussing the issue at their meetings until a decision is made .. Eight Take Out Papers In Clemente Nomination papers for the March 2 San Clemente City Council election were collected Monday by a businessm an and a college student. Papers were taken out by David C. Max, 805 Calle Puente, Apt. B. and Christopher P. Alexude!1 142 Avenida Pelayo, Apt. 8 . max listed bis occupa· t.ion as a businessman. Alex· ander is a college student. Six other persons have col· lected nomination papers. They are Wade Lower, former city councilman; Donna WUJtlnson. p~annlng commissioner; William Walker, San Clemente Chamber of Commerce presi·. dent; Rieb ard Lentl, retired police officer; Carlo Bocci, businessman. and E.J. Cludy. tetlred police ofttcer. Terms of Councilmen Cbarla Fos and Arthur Holmes uplre next 1ear. No nomination ~n have been returned to tho city clerk's office. l'U1.ng d• ldline la Dec. 2'. By WILLIAM SCHREIBER oe•o.111..ii.c-.n Hundreds of firefighters worked until almost midnight Monday before Cully cootaining a brush fire that burned across 1,700 acres of Orange County's rugged canyon areas. The bJaze, which broke out ear- ly Monday in Silverado Canyon, was finally halted by an army of 1,000 firemen just as it topped the ridge off oothills overlooking east Irvine and El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. (Additional story, photos PageA3.) Today, county fire officials said the fire could easily have been much worse if winds were stronger -perhaps nvaling the 1967 Paseo Grande inferno that burned 50,000 acres in the same general area, destroying 66 homes. Two dwellings and a guest house were destroyed in Mon· day's blaze and there were only two reported injuries -a Mod- jeska man who broke bis leg and a volunteer fireman sent to the hospital with an eye cul The fire was triggered when a bottled gas beater exploded in · the bedroom of the Fred Meyling home in Silverado Canyon. No (Sff CANYON, Pa~e AZ) Judge uashes . Cella Bank Bid By GARV GRANVILLE Of ... .,.,., ~ ... Stitt A move to subpoena bank re- cords tracing Dr. Louis Cella's complex financial political deal- ings was quashed Monday by a federal judge in Los Angeles. If the government wants Crocker National Banlc to pro- vide copi~s of Celia's records for use in its investigation of the San- ta Ana physician, it should reim- burse the bank for its costs, Judge Jesse W. Curtis ru.led. Subject of a subpoena quashed by Judge Curtis were bank re- cords coverin g roughly 30 personal and business accounts controlled by Cella in recent Cleinente TeaDISters ·Try Again A Teamsters Union attorney said today he will return to court within a week in a new effort to al- low the union the right to represent San Clemente police of- ficers in salary negotiations with the city. An Orange County Superior Court judge Thursday denied without prejudice a writ of man- date sought by the union to force the city to recognize the union as the officers' bi!rgaining agent. The writ was denied on pro- cedural grounds only. The merits of the Teamsters case against the city were not considered. "We expect to file for a new writ of mandamus within a week," said Richard Goldman, a partner in a Los Angeles law firm retained by the union to handle the case. Union officials contend that the city is restricting labor rights guaranteed police officers by re- fusing to acknowledge a represen- tation contract ratified by police and the union in April. The city contends that state law allows cities to deny police affilia- tion with labor unions that might interlere with law enforcement functions. Under the terms of the representation contract, police are not actual union members. Their contract only allows Teamsters representatives to handle salary negotiations. Police are seeking a 13 percent wage increas e. Negotiations bavestaUed as a resultofthelegal battle over tbe representation contract. years as h e e m erged as California's top political cam- paign donor. The bank records were sought in connection with a federal grand jury investigation of Cella's tax status as well a s Medicare pay men t s to two Orange County hospitals under his control until recently. Seeking the same records and already in possession of some as a result of executed search war- rants is the Orange County Grand Jury. The County jury is investigat- ing possible fraud, embezzle- ment and grand theft allegations as the result of the use of Ford Signs NY Loan WASHINGTON (AP) President Ford today signed congressional authorization for $2 .3 '*illion in loans to New York City and asked Congress to appropriate the money. In a m essage, Ford said it would cost $1 million to administer the loans dur- ing fiscal 1976 and $315,000 to administer them during a budgetary transitional period from next July 1 through Sept. 30. . The President signed the authorization as the ele- ments of a federal package to teep New York City out of default were coming together. The House was ready to approve a change in federal bankruptcy laws and the Senate prepared lo approve the $2 .3 billion ap- propriation. Gays Quizzed In Knight Case PHILADELPllIA (UPI) - Philadelphia poli ce said today they have called in many persons from the city's homosexual com- munity for questioning in connec- tion with the death of millionaire newspaper heir John S. Knight. Police, believing the 30-year- old heir knew his killers, said the homosexuals were questioned because of various items found in Knight's apartment. Officers s aid the items in- cluded nude photographs of young men, tape recordings that included accounts of sexual ac- tivities in the apartment, and diaries that included accounts of various sexual activities. San Juan Planning Director Rebuffed San Juan Capistrano's director ol plannin1. David Smith, bas re- ceived a written reprimand for makine political statements and directions on bow he must act in bis pc»lUon as a city employe. The reprimand and directions, written in the form ol a confiden- tial perlOll.Del memo by City Manaaer Jamn Mocalis, result- ed from 1tat!JD:ents made about the clt.J council by Smith last week when be took out council DOdW'tatiOn papers tor the ~ cominr mwllclpaJ elections. He atld be had drawn the papen uil may nm tor one of the COUl'cll M8U rnnclpajly because ot the ·'lack o leadenblp and do- cillveneH' 1 expressed by the ') COW1Ctl on the agricultural pre- servation program. Although the councilmen knew of bis plans to take out the nomination papers, they were not warned of his statements. The council held closed executive sessions to discuss his state- ments Saturday and Monday. After Monday's meeting, the councilmen refused to talk of what they bad discussed. saying Ollly that they were taking no ac- tion on the personnel matter. Mocalls sald they had decided it wu an admlnialr tlve mat\er which ht should handle. He said tM memo wu Written because Sm1tb•1 stat ments <See SMITH, PageAJ) camouflaged hospital funds purportedly used to bankroU Cella in his political and business ventures. ln seeking to have the federal subpoena quashed, Crocker at- torneys argued that it would cost the bank an estimated 1,000 man hours and $12,500 to meet the sub- poena 's demands. And while government at- torneys argued there is no prece- dent for demanding reimburse- ment of costs, Judge Curtis said the subpoena placed "an onerous burden on people who are not s uspected of committing a crime." <See CELLA, Page A2) Pair Deny Murder Of Girl, 5 A preliminary hearing will be held Jan. 9 for a San Clemente couple charged with the torture murder of their 5-year-old daughter., Jose Molina, 21, and his wife, Yolanda, 23, emtered innocent pleas to charges of murder dur- ing arraignment at South Orange County Municipal Court. The Molinas are accused of beating and burning young Laura Cruz to death over a tbree- week period in November. They were arrested by San Clemente Police after they brought the un- conscious child to San Clemente General Hospital. The girl died a short time later. The child's body was covered with burn marks caused by scalding water, cigarettes and hot metal objects, police said. A second autopsy on the re- mains -conducted at the re- quest of defense attorneys -has been cQmpleted. The results, however, will remain confiden- tial. Molina, the girl's stepfather, is a Camp Pendleton marine. The Molinas are in Orange County Jail in lieu of $100,000 bail each. MIA Promise WASHINGTON (UPI} -A House subcommittee has re- turned from Paris with a North Vietnamese promise to account for Americans missing in In- dochina along with a request that the United States lift its trade e m bar go and provide re- construction aid. Coast Weather Fair skies through Wed· nesday but patchy fog near the coast in the morning hours. Highs Wednesday, 68 at the beaches risin1 to 75 inland. Lows tonilht 47 to53. INSIDE TODAY Cleat"ed Of J>n'ivrJI conviction, /Clr'TM'r CalifomJa Lt. Goo. Ed Rftntt~ ii poncimng ~ to QO from hne. AS. •••ex • ,., _ _.,le• AJ ..,..... ... A1a 1.--.....c.11 •• ..u. ...... •tt ~ .. .r: AU ....... AfJ Al ........ ... M =-~ti =Olllty "" IU .... o-w• IU ""* .... .,. o... ..... . .. =--.... ........... M Atl ,.. .......... At> ~ Aq ,._ .,..,. ..... M ""'tu•• .. • • rl I I . , l t • l ,ti DAil. V PILOT L /SC Tuwsax. ~mber 9, 1975 'Ma n i11 Middle, Gumb in er Enters Race D•llY Pll .. StMt ""'°'° DECLARES CANDIDACY Builder Gumbiner f'rom Page A J CELLA ..• "If you want thal information. )OU can mak~ .i deal with the bank." the Judge s:ud after up- holding the bank ·s motion to quash. G<>vernm ent attorneys said in a bnef opposing tht' motion to quash that the bank s reluctance to comply with the subpoena is frustrating the government's in - vestigation and m ade reference to 17 auditors waiting for the re- cords. Bank officials made 1t clear Monday they were nol opposed lo furnis hin g the records but only lo doing so without being reim- bursed. The absence of bank records notwithstanding. the federal grand jury continued its in-· vestigation into Celia's affairs during the day Sign Ordina nce Fate P o n d ered The fate of a proposed or- dinance that would place strict new r estrictions on business s igns wiU be decided when the San Clemente City Council meets at 1· JO o'clock tonight at City Hall. The adjourned meeting was called for completion of business started at a meeting Wednesday. The council will receive recom- mendations from the city's sign committee and planning com- mission askmg that further con- sideration of the proposed or- dinance be dropped and that the city's existing sign ordinance be more strictly enforced. The two panels made their re- commendations after local busi· nessmen promised they would police their own ranks for abuses of the existing law. The proposed law, patterned after an ordinance r ecentl y adopted in Costa Mesa, would al- low each business one square foot of signage per foot of street rron· tage. The current ordinance al- lows twice that amount. A controversial provision in the proposed law is that signs that would become tllegal would have to be removed within a specified period of time. In other business, the council will consider a request that more restrictive wording be restored to the n ew hill11de grading or- dinance. Calling himself a "man-ln·the middle" candidate, Mark Cum- biner, a builder and realtor, has entered the Laguna Beach Ci ty Council election. Gumbjner, 48, is the third can. didate to release a position paper in the campaign. The others are Sally Bellerue. planning commissioner; and Arnold Hano, writer. Buck Sims, a restaurateur, bas taken out election papers. but bas been un- availabl e for comment. The theme of Gumbiner's cam- paign is as announced Monday, ·'It is time to bring Laguna together.'' "It is true that I make a living as a builder and realtor, yet I was also chairman of the committee that first defined the concept of village Laguna," Gumbiner said m his statement. "We are paralyzed by in· decision at a critical moment in our history. Irvine, Niguel and Mission Viejo are pressing on our borders, threatening both the spirit and the physical form of Laguna. Yet a feeling of helpless- ness pervades city hall. We are reacting instead of acting and by then, it is too late," Gumbiner SaJd . He w as critical of the leadership of the present council. .. The city staff is doing its best, but the individual departments need direction. "Without this direction , policies can backfire, producmg the opposite of the intended ef- fect. To slow down development, for example, the city staff has created a bureaucratic maze. Yet this does n't slow down the professional out-of-town tluilder. with his pl a y -it-saf e un - imaginative building plans . Instead, it stops the amateur home owner, the person who lov- es Laguna and wants lo create something special," he said. Gumbiner is chairman of the city Parking, Transportation and Circulation Committee. He is a member of the city Economics Committee. He is past president of the Citizen's Town Planning Association and was chairman of the Citizens Advisory Commit· tee appointed to develop goals for the city general plan. Gumbiner is married, has three children and has been a re- sident of Laguna Beach since 1966. Rocky Warns West on Oil LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Vice President Rockefeller, facing Western governors and local of- ficials hostile to federal plans to increase offshore oil drilling. said today Americans arc "fed up" with mountains of re- gulatory paperwork weighing down the economy. "They want sensible, balanced environmental protection that does not obstruct economic growth and job opportunities," Rockefeller said in remarks pre- pared for the final White House public forum. -~ Rockefeller appeared to be warning leaders in the West - which has most of the nation's coal and oil reserves -that con- tinued obstruction of federal plans for greater self-reliance in energy would annoy the rest of the nation. Uses Rev ietee d M aki11g lJp a F ours ome • Former President Richard Nixon chats with his golfing foursome in San Diego - from left, auto dealer Pascal Dilday; former White House communications direc- tor and San Diego Union editor Herb Klein and military aide Jack Brennen. F rom P age Al CANYON BLAZE ••• one was at home at the time. The flames spr ead rapidly but quick response by the Silverado Volunteer Fire Department and the nearby U.S. Forest Service station had lines established· along the top of the canyon within an hour. A county fire spokesman said at that point, the blaze appeared to be contained within less than 100 acres but then the wind picked up. Hot ashes jumped the fire line and the blaze raced down Williams Canyon, just off San- ti ago Canyon Road, and the whole hillside burst into flames as sparks ign ited explosive manzanita bushes and dry grass. Firemen tried vainly to save Rancho Soldona, a cluster of houses and barns owned by Phil and Sue Charlton on the slopes of Santiago Canyon. The main ranch house, the guest house and all the out build- ings burned to the ground in less than 15 minutes, according to county fire Capt. Bru ce Turbeville. Then the s moke and flames ap- peared ominously on the hills above Silverado School and the children were evacuated by bus. They returned later Monday af- ternoon when the fire was stopped and extinguished only a few hundred yards away from the builiding. Fire officials said only a last- minute back fire and strong sup- port from crews saved the school. For the remainder of the day, the school grounds were used as a landing area for · four : water- dropping helicopters used to knock down bot spots on the fire's perimeter. As they landed, water was pumped into their empty tanks and within minutes, the choppers were back in the air. ln the early hours, Williams Canyon was the hottest spot on the fire line. A fireman on the scene said the names shot down the narrow ca- nyon like a funnel and jumped across Santiago Canyon Road. By 1 p . m ., only charred skelet003 of trees were left in what was once a shady glen called Williams Canyon. · Firemen had saved the scat- tered houses and barns in the ca- nyon, including a suburban style .house sitting by itself on a hilltop above the canyon floor. The flames destroyed a colony of domestic bees in a canyon clearing and s warms or the bee.c; hovered around the s moldering . remains of their hives. The prevailing wind carried the flames out of Silverado and Williams canyons, across the face of Santiago Canyon's eastern slope and into the dry bed of Santiago Creek. Tinder dry grass, brush and old live oaks in the creek bed .spread the flames up the other slopes of Santiago Canyon, where it centered in the Limestone Ca- nyon region -unpopulated and almost inaccessible. Fire officials said the flames were stopeped by ground crews and dozens of aerial water and fire retardant drops by a fleet of aircraft that included helicop· ters, twin-engine borate bombers and a silvery DC-7 called "The Great White Hope.'' At the peak of the fire fight, nearly 100 pieces of equipment from the county, U.S. Forest Service and a dozen city fire de- partments were on the lines. There was no panic. All the crews seemed to know exactly what bad to be done and where to doit. Shortly after noon, packaged lunches and cartons of milk were delivered to the forestry station in Silverado Canyon so the men could eat when they got breaks. Mingled with the fire engines were Pacific Teleph.one and Southern California Edison trucks whose crews were trying to assess damage to utility poles and other equipment. It was learned today that the main t e lephone line from Silverado to Modjeska Canyon was burned out in the flames along with dozens of other phone connections and electric lines. By about 3 p.m., firemen had the blaze cornered in Limestone Canyon, on a ridgetop overlook- ing East Irvine. Turbeville said back fires were set to "cut off the head of the fire" and the tactic worked, pre- venting the fire from racing down the western-most slopes of the foothills into populated areas. Ocean Search Canceled for Mesa Couple The search for a Costa Mes a couple, missing at sea after their 20-foot sailboat was found partially submerged with the body of their son aboard, has been suspended. Orange County Harbor Depart- ment spokesmen in Newport Beach said the sea search was canceled Monday. The victims are presumed drowned , spokesmen said. Missing are Steven Miller, 27, and his wife, Sherre, 21. The body of their 3-year-old son, Shawn. was found aboard the semi· submerged sailboat Sunday about one mile off Abalone Point, near Laguna Beach. Harbor Department Sgt. Harry Wright said if the young couple did drown, their bodies might be recovered "in a weekortwo." Harbor Department and U.S. Coast Guard officials examined the craft Monday after it was towed to shore but could not give an exact cause for the sinking. Wright said several experi- ment.I were conducted on the boat and tbat ft appeared possi- ble the craft becam& swamped with water t hr ough the outboard engine well. He said that a board was found ln the water that could have pre- vented a swamping, but that ap- parently the board had been taken off for maintenance. For a three and one-half hour p e riod Mond ay, sea rchers scoured a 150-mile area, from Dana Point to the Santa Ana R.iver Mouth up to eight miles seaward. Wrieht said the search turned up only a hatch cover and some mattress foam about three miles off Dana Point. Wright said the search party included two harbor patrol boats, a Newport Beach rescue boat, a Coast Guard helicopter and a Newport Beach Police helicopter. Tht Millers, who were first re- ported missing by Miller's mother on Sunday, moved to Costa Mesa from Colorado only three weeks ago. Miranda Ruling I ·weakens WASHINGTON (UPI) -With two jus tices predic~i~g t~c landmark Miranda decision will soon be overturned, the Supreme Court ruled 6 to 2 today that in soane cases police may continue questioning suspects after they have exercised their right to re - main silent. Justices William J . Brennan and Thur good M arsball dis - sented. . Brennan, in an opinion en· dorsed by Marshall, s aid "Today's distortion of Miranda's constitutional principles can be viewed only as yet another step toward the erosion, and, I s up- pose. ultimate overruling of Miranda's enforcement of the privilege against self- incrimination. • • The Michigan Supreme Court reversed the conviction of Richard Bert Mosley, convicted 'for the January, 1971, slaying of Leroy Williams in Detroit. Mosely was first picked up for questioning about a series of rob- beries. He exercised his right to ·remain silent and interrogation stopped. Two hours later, other detectives warned Mosley of his rights and, when he did not object, asked him about the murder. After he was .told about an ac- complice's confession, Mosley made self-incriminating state- ments. The Michigan Court ruled the statements were inadmissible as evidence because all pOtice ques- tioning on any criminal matter must cease after a suspect first says be wants to remain silent. Justice Potter Stewart, writing for the majority overruling the Michigan Court, called this a "literal interpretation" of Miran- da which could "lead to absurd and unintended results.•• Stewart said Mosely was warned of his rights a second time and could cut off questioning by demanding to remain silent. From Page A J SMITH ... "tended to denigrate the prestige of the council. .. In my opinion, his statement reflected an unprofessional at- titude," he said. Mocalis said the issue is that Smith released a political state- ment. lf he had stated his opi- nions outside of the political areana, be said, the situation would have been d ifferent. Smith, who was in his office during the council's executive session, said he had no comment to make. If no one else comes forward lo carry agricultural preservation as an issue during the election, he said, he still intends to quit his · job and run for a City Council seat. Stereos Worth $2,450 Taken Theft of $2,450 in stereo equip- ment from the home of Gary A. Schaetzal, 2487 S. Ola Vista, San Clemente, is under investigation today by San Clemente police. Among items removed by an intruder who entered through a window were tape recorders, turntable and other stereo com- ponents. The burglary occurred Monday evening._ The council also will consider petitions signed by 652 persons asking that changes be made in the fee structure at the municipal goUcourae. ORANGE COAST f,,. Ot-to.•t 0••11 Pilot,"'"~ -·c~ "com- bt1'111"d tt\f' Ntw\ Prf'\\ '' o~bt1·.hfo t'ir '""o,..,. C~U Pubh\htnQ (omo•n., ~fA'''" ..O•llOnl •r• pubUt.hed Mo"d•'r trHO\l•lt\ r'KI•• I r ro\t• MPW~ Ntwport Bf'•<,. Hu"'·niotor ~tttrt ro~ t•1n V•lley_ tn,.nt> \.•f1dltb.C:L '-'•Htf aftd ~ .. i1<.rv~outl\ (o.nt A \U''llQ ... rf'Q•f"lol'lill• •di t.on tt OUbh'.\~ S.turd•Y' -"' \Ufle:M) ff ,. poft<•~I pul>H\'°'ll"IO Ol'1"t t\ ~' U0 Wf\t b•Y 'Slrttt. Co\lA Mti. .. C.•ll•ornl• ct?u• Crescent Bay Bid Gets Planning Eye an impreaaive and unique ·commemoration of our bicentennial, beautifully boxed for gifts to friends and formal preaentations Robert N. Weed Prl\l«knl •no Pu1141W• Jack R. Cur~y V1ff'r P1n1cM"I •nd c,,,,....,.1 M.<t~t Thomas Keevil fdllOt Thomas A. Murpnine AMn•Qll\Q Edi tor Charles H. LOO$ Richard P. Nall AHhl•lll Mtn•G'llO Edllort LaauH Beach Office f116 C.l•nn•vte !>lt .. I MtlllnQ AO<ltH\ P 0 Ooa ... , '11.Ul Othef'Otfkts C"'t1Mn1 JlOWnlS.ySl....t Ne~ llH<h .l1» No...,.,,~..­Hvftllf19 .... euc:ll 171H .. K .. ...,.._~ ~t>«> ll•llty IUlllA--al S.110 .... l'r~ Te..,..OM (714) '42~ ClusHltld AdY9f11stnt 642-5611 u9una Beach All Deplrtments: Te .. pftofte 4'4-9466 ,,-~11ci. ........ 4tS-OUO C..v•l9"1 lt1\ Or•-'"'' l'IAll1~"' C-0 """' .,.. . ,._ ,,.,,., '""'''··-.-..na1 ,..,11., •' MVOtllHl'l"tllU "''"'" _., M np•odw••d .. ,111aw1 ,,.till "'"''"-•I , .......... -. ,. ond clau Hiit .. ,..,d al Ce\lt MtW, '"'"'"'"'" ""'"' ... ~" ~, ,_ u " -"''' ti• ........ u _ .. , ... ,. "'"''"" _,_._ Pl\-tfllY ..... The Laguna Beach Planning Commission will continue review of uses suitable for property on Crescent Bay Point when it meets at 7:30 o'clock tonight at city hall. The commission is acting un· der pressure to conclude its de- liberations and to make recom- SC Apartment Unit To Install Officers New officers will be installed at a meetlnl of the San Clemente Apartment~Hotel·Motel Assocla· lion. 7 : 30 tont1bt at the Villa Granada recreation room, 405 Avenida Granada. Offi~en to be ln.ltalled are Lew Einael, prHident; Geor1e Gearn, vice prealdent; Ken Nosier, tuaaurer; Vtr1lnla Laidlaw, record ln1 1ec:retary, and Ethel Colbum, con"•pond· • 1nc aecretary. .I ane Sliva will conduct the l.Dltallatioo. .. mendations for action by the council before a four-month building freeze on the Crescent Bay lots expires. The interim open space zone enacted by the council last month prevents buildinl in order to al· low time to study the bell uses for the oceanfront lands. Other action before the com· mission ineludes: -Creation of special r.ones for submeraed and tidal lands and for parks. Currently, the pro-perties an zoned R· 1, smale f ami· ly residential. -A move by Commission Chairman William Leak lo rescind previous approval of a Uf eguard pro Posed f aclUty at tbe north end of Main Beach Park. -Conslderatlon of parking probltms tn the downtown bull- ntn district. -A review of the Joint Laiuna Beach, Irvine and Oranae Coun· ty 1tudy for lmplem«ttatlon of *• ..... carpe • for your home, office, ~lore •for schools, fraternal or social dubs, young pC'oplcs <>rgJnizat1ons, business and trade a~'iOCiat1ons • for business gifts, awards and rnnf(ratulatory presentations We pmuclly 1lrl'<.enl The Attwriqn lAtlt'f'(f W.Jlf ru11. hett• loom tw-Au1v fat ll•dlllol\tl 0t coni...npowy tetlln~s.. lhe ''-'"· I 11>!1rty .. II and ,.,~ "" dotrtc1.d in 24 tru•10 Ille culol\ 11tr,.1ndrr \mllh tho-e •uyhc ftl>N for h111t'r .1ntl 1•mll'•t•• we•ve for prec•t1011. eod• INthef It ~IMd, •he en111•m1 I• IC"&lblt, 1he '141'• 11.'d. ""hlle .t1'CI blllt' are vi· bmtl In IM prem ... lon bel~ IJ • kttJNke foldfl ~'q>l1in• DEN s~· ~ .... ,. ·-~ .. ~ "";;:·hM·i 1.uu: iiisi~ilitioii: ·custom drapsriss UC. NO. 2J0422 the La,wta Greenbelt coneept 1663 PlACENTIA AVENUE • costA M!SA, CALIP. 92611 • ,HONE 646·4'838 -6"46·235.5 aroundLa•u.naBeach. "----------------------------------------------------------------------..1 1 .. " I I l i i I \ • t ' , I . . . . ~ Michigan Test Mqdel Law Seen t ()Ii Malpractice By SYLVIA PORTER M of Jan. 1, a new Jaw wlll so into effect tn Michl.gen wb1cb may become the model for national le&lalation to end · the spiral In medical malpractice insuranc~ coats -and thereby, to help curb medical costs for all of us. Even bet ore the law . · \ Money's Worth ii tested, close studants ol lts proviaions f orecest tbat It will mako medical history, alter tbe image of the medical prolession, do away with the spec· t.cles of emoUonal trials before inexpert juries and the awarding of huge sums to patients which end up primarily 10 the lawyen' pockets. AT THE VERY LEAST, the prospect is for .. stabilizing malpractice premiums," says John F. Dodge, Detroit la~er and .general counsel for M!cbJian's Physician's Criais Com m1ltee -and that means the patient will benefit. (In Michigan, of the malpractice dollar, 55 cents goes to the legal system, 23 cents to the patient, the balance to the in- surance company. It's even worse in some other states.) The medicdl malpractice insurance crisis may have slid off the front pages recently. but do not be lulled. The respite is only temporary. Physicians are rebelling aga.inat the insurance charges, backing away from risking what might be life-saving procedures for fear of inviting malpractice suits. Insurance companies have made it clear they detest the whole area of malpractice insurance. Juries continue to make financial awards that threaten to un- dermine the practiceof medicine in the U.S. AS FOR US, THE patients, the estimate is we now can be paying an extra $2 to $3 per office visit because or the cos· ts of malpractice insurance. If surgery is involved, even greater insurance risk costs may be passed on to us. And famed beart·transplant surgeon Dr. Cbristiaan Barnard of South Africa also voices concern that U.S. sur· geons will hesitate to use new remedial surgery techniques (because of the malpractice suit threat) and this could slow down U.S. surgical progress against heart disease, top killer of all killer diseases in this country. The core of the new legislation -the importance of which obviously goes far beyond Michigan to touch the lives and pockets of all of us -is "binding contractual arbitra- tion" -basically, an arrangement under which the patient signs an arbitration agreement. While many states have voluntary arbitration, this is not frequently used. Under the Michigan law. a voluntary arbitrator will be selected to ex- amine the validity or a complaint against a doctor or hospital. WHAT MIGHT BE SOME of the results of the law? (1) Awards need not be financial, a condition of settle· ment necessary to a court jury system. Rather, an arbitrator might award surgery to remedy the patient's condition ; or signal for convalescent care; or order a trust fund to continue for the life of the patient and then revert to theinsuror. (2) A closer check will be made on the competency of physicians, giving the public the bonus of higher medical el· ficiency. Lists of doctol"S involved in 10 or more malpractice suits over a period time are to be compiled; the appearance on these lists of d9(tors often involved in malpractice suits will triner investigation. State medical regulations are be- ing tightened too to weed out incompetents and to protect competent doctors. · · (3) A decided speedup will occur in the handling and settling of malpractice suits. . - Tuead 0.Cemti.t II. 1175 L/SC OAIL Y f'ILOT .4 Tue day'8 Clo ing Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Yev'a High-Lowa Appear Evt>ry atardoy .:=:t'rOIU( CUlltl) ~ Nrt ~ ,,_. W.. .... ..... y, 1':cr!'~U: .. t\Mal a. °" ,~ Cl'dll a. ~ , ... ..., a. ot d-. ~ UA 1t !7 n-+ ._ ~\. t.7' 1 UI 1...,_"' Mll9fllN4 I 11 1~ •L ,..,.. .... ..... ' 17 ii~-" OUli\.M llfl •• 020 fl'A • ~ .,Jt. • l'• ... ~I <Ml> ci.w Qe. ties( IJ 111 ..Olio+ 11t ~ 1.20 •• d10 ,,.,_+ ''°' Hlli 11111 .-f ..-""• ,_ .......... ,.--..A-Id.Mil t4 21'-•• , ~27S .. z:M »16o+ 14 .......... S 11 .._.-. 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Tr1(:.oftt..J •• 1CCS 17V.-~ Tr101 Cir 2lh • • I 29 • · • T~ ... 4 14 I~ •.. T · .JOit •. I 1 -~ TM llld 1 S 21 2AV. , •• Trllli<Ma .20 11 IS tt~ \• TltW lft 1.20 • 14 1~ lit T•W pt 41h .• 1 Ml4+ h T..W Pf'4.AO •• 25 .fflio-~4 TMCMllG ·" I 1Jt 11 + 'lo T..C:.Fn .AO • n 1'°" T~.20 7 J3 11 -lo. tyter "' .AO.: u-!.-'... . . UAUM AOa • .. 25'4 + lit UGI c-ua • u UY>+ \• U G I oft.7':J •• J:al ,._ + \. UNtC flidU 1 I 11 ftlt-\\ UMET Tnt • • ,. 1 • Uowrc.o • so ' 11 7 'h . UnCNV2.ftl> t J .... ....._ .... Unanc. ... •• t.-\\ UnC-21' 12' ~+ .,. ~, .•• di S1\6+ -. UnComm 11\ s " ~ . . Unkln C.or1» • ,. .fYr-'lo Un EIK 1.211 e 211 1J •. UnEI pn.n .• 2 ~+ \4 Un El oflV. .• dO ,. + .. Un El pf ..... . • -411/t-..., UnEJ<Pcptl •• 2 7Sll't •• Un AcaiHy t t'2 • ._ , Ull()(.el I... 7 ., ~ • UnOICpf 21/'J • • 8 SS -..... Un ~ 2.eo " vo n-..-1v, UPacpfAI •• 2 n~-. UlllOllltn •• J ,,,. .. Unlroyal .SO I 21f 71/t-\lo l::'°.t.~: :: ll:f 71t.= ~ Utd Brlld pl • • 23 • tllo+ v. UllCorp .7211.. 22 ,.... • .• UGasPL .n 6 11 1314-Ya ~11~~ I~ J! 2~r.:= ~ UnllldC .400 s l f'l4 .. UICI IMS .10 • 20 A°"+ V. UnJsyB 1.0ol 1 2' 9'4-'lo Utd MM .IO .. II U-.+ Yo Un NllCl .. r 2A 12 UMo + °"' Utd PkC Mn .. 20 I..,_ ••• UnRefllQ .... l • •v.-.,,, USFldefJ.4 11 15' 3S\\ + ~ USFoS 1 t7b . t 14\4-\It US Gyp I 60 ll 41 1614-.. USGypt 1.IO •• • 10\4 + V. U~Cp •• 165 A -'loo USlllOu .20b •• 301 3 -\It USLHW .21 S 11 1 U S Rtalty • . 22 Wt us ~ .9S • 67 17'11. ..... USStftl LIO S "6 61YJ+ ~ US Toti .tO t1 SS 19 •• Vld'TKl\lll 2 6 113 &4¥. • UtefTKI\ pt8 • • 3 l09'11-"• UnlTtl I 12 t 2Af ""' •.• UnlTel wts •• 2 t~+ \\ VlllTPI" IYt •• tA '1~ •. : Unlfr'ode Qt • 4 .. + ~ Ulllver t.AO 4 6 tN ... Univ Lf Tot> 6 17 llYJ + ~ UOP In .'7h 10 66 10 •.• UOlotlro • t6 t9 tSO ~-\It USLI FE .» S 66 I~-\It . USllf+Fd .'6 to a1' '"° + Yt Newport Conipany's Product in Engl~d """"' · • • -ConsNG 2.11 6 2' 2• -14 Gn EIK 1.60 U 706 A6V. + 'I• Kl~ C .9010 Al 11Yt-:\\ , ~'19t.11·~ 9 Wit 1129Yt-~ CNG pll0.96 GnFood I.AO l2 214 11'11 + :\\ I( L M Alrl .. J 24"" + ~ "'""' "'" T> • • "' • JU3l tO 107 + 1., GtnGr 1.2211 u 11 lSV. + 14 .,. AIOryO 1.AO 1' 1.U 3''1'7 + Vo Con Pw .,.. Gt>l\Hosl . .SO I 13 11 -V• l<lliQllt R ,54" u 21>"" • • · HW'Jl lrlCI "'1 • • 1 U ' · · ScovtlrMto I 29 SI tOV. V. ::-_:11114c2L =~ ~"'> ! 2~ Scovtl pf fl'>.. A 291'\: \\ -M\l'ro1b 10 21 f + Yt ScuddwO V • • 11 • .,., ••• USMC.II 1.20 A 1 t~ •.• USM pt 2. to • . 3 2• -v. Vtall Intl 1• 12 1fS 441'1+1 VtallPL 2.AO t t9 26~-v. ut Pt.pf 2.IO • • 52 21YI + 'It UV Indus..!.!_: y~ll Newport Pharmaceuticals International Inc. has an· nounced the completion of an agreement with th~ Boots Co. Ud., Nottinaham .. England, whereby Boots will market Newport's new anti-viral agent, lsoprinosine, in the United Kingdom. · The agreement represents the culmination of many months of negotiation and a comprehensive analysis and evaluation by Boots or Newport's extensive clinical and laboratory data on Isoprinosine. Boots was the deveioperof a new antirheumatic drug, Motrin, and it operates the· largest retail pharmacy network in .the United Kingdom. Boots will have the responsibility tor obtaining governmental approval to market lsoprinosine in the agreed territory. Provisions have also been made for a program of mutual technical cooperation between ..Boots and Ne'YJ>Ort. BofA Forecasting 'Shortage in '70s' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The ••Go-Go 60s" have turned into the "Shortage 70s" for small businessmen, ac· cording to a report by the Bank of America. The report said the ca.sh shortage was showing few sJgns of easing. and that owners of small enterprises are hardest hit by periods or economio uncertainty. BUT "TOO OFTEN these firms look tor outside finan- cial help when many ~sibilities exist within their own operations for sources or additional cash." a summary of the report said. These possibilities include "maximizing cash flow. pin- pointing trouble spots and trimming overhead costs." ac· cording to the summary. ''A fleet or trucks or company cars, for example, represents a large investment. U these vehicles are sold lo a lea.sing company and then leased back, cash from lbe sale Is released for work.int capital and the lessor becomes responsible for the upkeep." ACCORDING TO the report, "Economic forecasters predict that the current cap!tal·credit crunch may plaaue business for some time ahead." The summary said a small businessman hoping to stay afloat should scrutinize costa, "wtth particular attenUon paid to payroll and expense accounts, telephone calls, and equipment andauppJ..ycosts.'' "The bat m anaaers d.18 deep for gold burled wlth1n their companies," the report said. . It noted, for instance, that a busl.aess itself ls a source o! cepltal. "A f11lM CREDn'·P'aDtlnJpollcy coupled wtlh C'Ontrol procedures for collecttona can retrieve needed capital Crom · account.a re.eel v • bJe,'' the summary said. "Ori the ot.hel' band, accounts payable can be tumed to 9dva.ntaae by •et.lint up d rer...s paym.ut.«hedW.. with ,uppUen and taklna ldvantaee of the normal l•I between the Ume 1ooct1 are rffelved and payment II made.'' lD abort~ the 1um.mary laid, businessmen "mUJt tum to &ood man•1•ment techniques to pull them thro\llh." , Al ._,,111.AO • 4 22'h • • . sm 2 1 202 17"' • · · G+n 111str 21110 1>7 7"'-v. 1Coehrl"9 Co • 18 11/J • ·• Altll-,40 J 77 I V.-'Al ConP pf V6 •• 120 l4 -2V. Gell M+d .10 I 1S I)...._ 'I• Kowri 1,40 7 41 321/• + " Atlco M .15b .. Al IV.-v. Con P of •V. · • l2l0 39'h · · · Gt11Mllls .6116 22s 26"'4-Vt l<oracorp l112J 6 3 + V. At1CvE11.S. t 11> 11:v. • .. g::~:: Ms .. z~ M -Y> GllMol 2.AOb 1• lOll s..,._ + 14 Kraltco l.t'l 10 to At YI •.. ~:~~~/:is,..} ~1.4+·~ ConPofS~::'lss ;:._,,_·~ G+nMot~ .. 6 6' •·· ~~= dt~ 1n n~: ~ AtRc Of 2.IO •• 16 5'.V. . . . ConllAL IOk .. 91 ...... ••• 8"~u·1.61 ·; 1~ 1;~ ~ l<ysor In ·'°~· l -s-·~\lo All Reh prU .. 1141 -v. 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"'°"°"l 1 •• ~ -_, DAnT Plu:JT ~~~ 1.,.. H 1118 1~-;-~ 1~0 II\ .. • a.AUfAIO ADS ""4 EIPl.1' t >SO 10--14 + '4' __ ..;Ml:;.;.;:,...·..::.M.;u.;i __ ;:r.f1t::: ~ H~·~ .,.,_IA . + t ~.:.al~io "J Ii. ;\. .,..,.,o.n ., 6 .. " ., ' Tu.d!xi December 9, 1975 Warning: T.he Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health . • • • ... ... -······· I I . . .. . . • • Ma rib om LIG.HTS LOWERED TAR fi NICOTINE • I • # .. 4 I I 'I J I . , ' ' Today' N.Y. VOL. 68, NO. ~,2SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA'LI FORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1975 TEN CENTS. •. ~~~~~~--~--~----~--~--._.....:.....,._;~------~~--~--~...:........;.,.:.;..;.,;;_:;....;::..;:;...::...;__;_.:....:,.~.;.::.;:...-_;:_;_;,,, __ ~~~--~------------------------------------------------- MAC Panel Against SChoQI Tax Hikes By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OflMDallyl"llet .... The first opposition to tax in- crease plans by the Saddleback Valley Unified School District surfaced Monday night at a meeting of the Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Council (MAC). Royall Geis, spokesman for the MAC budget and finance com- mittee, told the council that his _, panel bad concluded that the 70-cent tax override proposed by the schoOI district "should not be carriCd through." Altllougb the committee did loot take a vote on the tax hike proposal when it met Thursday night, Geis reported that none of the eight to 10 members present was in favor of the March 2' ballot measure. "Our feeling is that the school dustrtct should make general cuta," Hid Geis, noting that the panel was of the opinion that edu.cational benefits will not be lost by trimming the school dis· trict bud&et. Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees, meeting a week ago, called for an in- crease in the tax rate from the present $6.41 to $7.11 per $100 of assessed valuation to cover a ;,J/:;&. o.lly ,.._. PIMtl lty ltlcu,.. Kettl~ CANYON BLAZE BOMBED WITH FIRE RETARDANT FROM FOUR-ENGINE PLANE This Payload from Aerial Tanker Dropped Near Santiago Canyon Road Silverado Blazes 'Out' By WILLIAM SCHREm E R Ol IM Dally l"llOC 91.Mf Hundce d s of fire fi ghters •::~rked until almost mJdnigbt Monday before fully containing a brush fire that burned across 1,700 acret of Orange County's rugged canyon areas. Tbe blaze, which broke out ear· Jy Monday in Silverado Canyon, was finally baited by an army of 1,000 firemen just as it topped the ridge ot foothills overlooking ea.st Irvine and El Toro Marine Corps All" Station. (Additional story, photos PageA3.) Hot ashes jum ped the fire line and the blaze raced down Williams Canyon, just off San- tiago Canyon Road, and the whole hillside burst into flames as sparks ignited explosive manzanita bushes and dry grass. Firemen tried vainly to save Rancho Soldona, a cluster of houses and barns owned by Phil and Sue Charlton on the slopes or Santiaeo Canyon. . Valley Traffir The main ranch house, the guest house and all the out build· ings burned to the ground in less than 15 minutes, according to county f i r e Capt. Bru ce Turbeville. Then the smoke and fl ames ap- peared ominously on the hills above Silverado School and the children were evacuated by bus. They returned later Mond ay af. <See CANYON, PaJteA2) projected $1.4 million budget de- ficit in the 1976-77 Ci.seal year. Geis said his committee would be willing to conduct a 5urvey of Mission Viejo homeowners on the proposed revenue limit increase, then m ake its findings known to the Municipal Advisory Council. Although MAC members Mon- day night took no direrj. act.ion on Geis' offer to conduct the survey, Councilwoman Jeanne Gagnebin said she thoueht the tax override study ought to include a review of salaries paid to school ad· ministrators. Councilman Cal Neve added that he wants an explanation from school district officials why they are requesting a 70-cent tax hike when that rate increase wall actually raise $2.3 million, nearly $1 million over the amount needed lo cover the projected de· fie it. School district officials main· lain the additional $.9 milhon is needed to shore up the district's dangerously low reserve account and to cover continually n sing school costs. Geis pointed out after the· meeting that the MAC budget and finance committee was not only opposed to the proposed tax increase but also spendint: $15,000 in taxpayer money to cov- er the cost of the election. Judge uashes Cella B.ank Bid By GARY GRANVIUE Of"'• Delly ...... Staff A move to subpoena bank re- cords tracing Dr. Louis Cella's complex financial political deal- ings was quashed Monday by a federal judge in Los Angeles. If the government wants Crocker National Bank to pro- vide copies of Cella's records for use in \ts investigation oflhe San- ta Ana physician, it should reim· burse the bank for its costs, Judge J esse W. Curtis raed. Subject of a subpoena quashed by Judge Curtis were bank re· cords covering rough ly 30 personal and business accounts controlled by Cella in recent Saddleback 2nd Campus Questioned By LAURIE KMPER Of tM Delly ...... St.Mt 'Saddleback Community College District trustees, ad· mini.strators and residents Mon- day differed on the timing for a satellite or second campus in the Tustin-Jrvine area. Trus tees have been investigal· ing the possibility of opening a satellite campus in the northern area in September. The plan talked of most often is to locate the satellite on land which can be purchased and developed as a permanent second campus in the future. Although there seemed to be no doubt that a second campus will be needed som eday, those who spoke during the meeting seemed uncertain when that day wiU be. District administrators had · presented the trustees with a packet of population and enroll· ment projections which indicated the district enrollment would at least double in the next five years. Dr. Robert Lombardi, district superintendent, admitted he doesn't know how accurate the figures are. He said they were being presented in the belief that the district has to prepare for the day when its population does in· crease. But this day, said Trustee Larry Taylor of Laguna Beach, is fifteen r ather than the ad· <See DEBATE, Page A2) yea r s as be emerged as California's top political cam· paign donor. The bank records were sought in connection with a federal grand jury investigation of Celia's tax status as well as Medi£are payments to two Orange County hospitals under his control until recently. Seeking the same records and already in possession of some as a result of executed search war· r a nts is the Orange County Grand Jury . The county jury is investigat- ing possible fraud, embezzle· ment and grCind theft allegations as the result of the use or cam ouflaged hos pital funds purportedly used to bankroll Cella in his political and business ventures. In seeking to have the federal subpoena quashed, Crocker at· torneys argued that it would cost the bank an estimated 1,000 man hours and $12,500 to meet the sub· poena's demands . And while government al· tomeys argued there is no prece· dent for demanding reimburse- ment of costs, Judge Curtis said the subpoena placed "an onerous burden on people who are not suspected of committing a crime." <See CELLA, Page A2 ) Taxes Due Fint Deadline Wednesday Wednesday 'is the deadline for mailing the first install- ment of this year's property tax es without penalty. according to Orange County Tax Collector· Treasurer Robert Citron. IF PAYMENTS AREN'T received or postmarked by Wednesday, a six percent delinquency fee will be charged, Citron said. The tax collector said as of Dec. 2, about $46 million of the first installment total of $296 million had been received by his office. A TOTAL OF 466,000 property tax bills were maHed out by Citron's office in October as the fi rst step toward.gather· ing more than $592 million in county property taxes this year. Are l;ays Calli-ng Plays in the NFL? WASHINGTON CUPI> -Some big name pro football players, in· eluding at least three starting quarterbacks, are eith er Sara Moore's Defense- 'lnsanity' SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) -Al· tomeys for Sara Jane Moore, ac- cused of• trying to assassinate President· Ford, told a federal court formally today she will use "a defense of insanity and men· tal disease." Miss Moore, who has been in and out of seven mental institu- tions in her lifetime, goes on trial Monday in U.S. District Court in San Francisco. homosexual or bisexual, the Washington Star said today. In the first of a four-part series, star sports writer Lynn Rosellini WTote that she based her state- ment on in-.erviews with more than 60 athletes, coaches, sports oCCicials, r sychologists and members o the gay community during the past three months. The newspaper listed no names of athletes of either sex but the story said : "Some of the biggest names in football , including at least three starting quarterbacks in the National Football League, arehomosexual or bisexual." Miss Rosellini made these other assertions : -Antigay pressure is so in- tense that many male athletes who prefer homosexual rela- tionships maintain fronts as mar- ried rhen with children. -Up to 20 percent of women athletes. including tennis and golf stars, are lesbians. Today, county fire officials said the fire Cl>Uld easily have been much worse if winds were stronger -perhaps rivaling the 1987 Paseo Grande inferno that burned 50,000 acres In the same general area, destroying 66 homes. Woes Blamed on Coast Her public defender, James Hewitt, said he will employ "a defense of insanity and mental condition without any reserva· lions-in toto." Coast · Two dwellines and a guest house were destroyed in Mon· day's blaze and there were only two reported injuries -a Mod· jeska man who tftookohis leg and a volunteer, fireman sent to the hospital with a n eye cut. The fire was triggered when a bottled gas beater aplodfld in the bedroom of the Fred Meylinf home in Silverado Canyon. No one was at home at the time. Tbe names spread rapidly but quick response by the Silverado Volunteer Fire Department and the nearby U.S. Fore:;t Service 1tallon bed lines established atons the top oUhe canyon wilbln an hour. d. A county fire epolesman sai •t that point, the blue appeared to be contained wllhin less than 100 acr~s but then tho wind JkW•· By RUDI NIE DZID.SKI OftlleOtlly ,.i.t,._ A report on southeast Ormge County's fut ure highway needs Monday nl1ht s parked com - ments from members of the Mis- sion Viejo Municlpal Advisory Council (MAC) that the beach cities bad turned their backs on t he county '.s trans portatlon needs. "The beaeb cltJes are very selfish in their attituda. lf we had bad t b e P acilic Coast Freeway we wouldn't have all thls problt-m," sumineid ~P Coun- cilman John Noble. Noble was ref errini to t.bo de- letion ot t.b• coastal frftWay in um throu&h pressure applied by Newport ~e•ch. Thls wH a forerunner to planning for alttrn•t• tran1portatlon cor- ridors in the IO\ltheastcm part o1 t.becounb. These were outlined for council members by Hal Krizan of the county Environmental Manage- ment Agency and consist of a series of four alternative roadway systems, known as the Southeast Orange County Cireulation Study <SEOCCS>. The alternatives are keyed to Mure land uses in the study area and the populatJon figures that are likely to accompany them. One sbows an inland route paralleling the beach cities and two other major arterials along the Saddleback Valley's foothills includln1 the O'Neill Ranch pro- pert.ies. Major lntercban1es are shown on t.be maps wlth San Diefo Freeway at Avery Parkway in th• vicinity of Saddlebaclt Colle1e. "ln each cue there's an ht terehtln•• at A very," f om~ ' Councilman Cal Neve. "The peo- ple bought there because of the college and they . thought they were going to enjoy nice, quiet homes." , Neve described the SEOCCS plans as "nothing but a pacifica- tion program'' because the study ignores highway planning along the beaches where the greatest density is. MAC Chairman Ri c hard Lowcock jolned tbe attack on the coulal cities by saying, "The county most make up its mind re- 1ardJess of the f eelin1s oC the people. We've got to put in cor- ridon where the population ls." Memben of tho Mi.s..'lion Viejo M\m.ldpal Advlsory CouncU wUJ be uktd to ro~mmmd one of tbe four aJtemaUvee l.o county of- ficial.I before tbe end ot lbe year. County 1opervhora are ~uled to talc• final action oa the circuJation plaits nm.Jwe. In bis notice filed today with the court and (iven to govern· ment prosecutors, Miss Moore's lawyers said they will US(\ the in· sanity argument in regard to any ''mental disease or derect in· consistent with the mental ele· ment required tor the offense charged." Hewitt said this refers to im- pairment of her condition "to form a specific intent where specific intent is required." The public def ender said he was making lbe disclosure in ac· cordance with a new federal re- quirement that defense attomeys notify tbe prosecution when they intend to raise a mental condition argument in a trial. Miss Moore. 4S, • onetime ln- form ant for the FBI and .l'reasury Department, wu ac· ~ ot Hrins a pistol at Ford ~.as e was emerefng from tho St. Puncis Hotel in San Fran- cisco. Tbe pr ldent wu not hit. W e a t h e r Fair skies through Wed· nesday but patchy fog near the coast in the morning hours. Highs Wednesda,)t. · 68 at the beaches rising to 75 inland. Lows tonight 47 toS3. INSIDE TODA V Cltortd of J>ttiu'll cmw6cffan, formerCali/omfo Lt. Goo. Ed ~ i.f po?tdmng tdwre to '10 from Mr~. AS. la•e x AlY-...... k • AJ ........... All ,,_...,.. .. 91 ......... " ... ~ AU ...... All •• .............. •• ~ ..... =c-ty .,. CllMlct ., .,.. o--.... 91 $fl$,,.. AU o...~ ... =--..... ............. M A1f ...... _ .. AU ,,....... ., ~ ., .. " ...... •• ... c..-•• f 42 DAILY PILOT 58 Tuaday Oecemb«t, 1975 Marrh Date ... ----------- MAC· Names Parks, Open Space Panel An ad hoc committee Monday nlaht was charged by the Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Coun- cil (MAC> with reviewing the community's ruture parks and O)Jel1 space needs. The committee, to be com- poted of two members from each MAC standing committee. will Schmit, 3 Kids Hurt In Crash Orange County Supervisor Laurence Schmit and three or his children were undergolllg treat- ment in Westminster Community Hospital today after being in- volved in a two-car collision in Garden Grove. The extent of injuries to Schmit and his children were not im- mediately known. However, a spokesman at the hospital and Schmit's chief aide Loren Norton said the injuries are not believed to be cri ticaJ. The 35-year-old county supervisor reportedly was driv- ' · ing the three children, Joseph. Cheryl and Jean, all teenagers, to school shortly before 8 a.m . when his station wagon was struck broadside at Springdale Street andGacden Grove Boulevard. Early reports indicate the im- pact rolled the station wagon over Dfl its top trapping the supervisor and his three children inside. After being freed by police and . fire personnel called to the scene the Schmits were taken to Westminster Community Hospital where the supervisor complained of a severe hip pain. A hospital spokesman said Schmit and his son were Wldergo- Ulg X-rays la le this morning. The accident report had not been filed at the Garden Grove Police Departmenl by mid- morning. ·pie in Eye CostHim$50 GREAT VALLEY. N.Y. <UPI> -William W. Beckhorn's sense of humor cost him $50. Officials said Beckhom. 31, of Dundalk, Md., was sitting in a restaurant Sunday night when he picked up a marshmallow cream pie "on impulse" and hit a waitress in the fa ce with it. ''That's not funny ," the waitress said as she walked l<> the telephone to caJI the Cat- taraugus County sheriff's depart- ment. Town Justice Donald Hall agreed with the waitress and fined Beckhorn $50 for harass- ment. Thieves Take Coin Cache Burglars who broke into a mobile home in El Toro Monday night by removing a window screen carried off a coin collec- tion, a television set and a leather coat with a total value of more than $1,000, Orange County Sherirf's officers said. Deputies said intruders en- tered the mobile home of clothing salesman Max Spritzer, 67, of El Toro while be was away at work. ORANGE COAST SB DAILY PILOT TM Or-CNSI Delly Pl lot,"""" w1>k'I h <Oft" ......, '"' N•Wft•l"reU, II pvOll-try 1 .... Or-Conl Pullll9"1"9 Company ~-91•..,lllOM ••• ""°""'" Mond•Y """"II" Frklo '°' Co•I• -... ..... ...,.., 8•e<ll. Hunll"°'°" lllH<h/f .,..,,. •• , .. V•ll•Y. tr•I"•· Saddl.-..C-Vallo ..... ~ hkll/So"1h Co .. 1. A llflO .. •P<>k>NI •d•· tictft '' poAtllsheO '-turoan -~""""" 1 h• prln<tCMI put>ll-"l"I 1)1..,t h at lJO W..~I &•Y ~Cos""Ma ... Catllornla~ Robert N . Wefd PrH"'-"' end .....,.,.,,.,. Jeck R. Curley V•o Pruloent •rid 0.Mut MaNOdf' Thomas Keevll l!dllOf Thomas A. Murphlno MAMtl"9 lelllor Chartes H. LOOS Rlct\llrd P. Nall AHIMallt MeM91"0 fdtton S.ddlebKll V•l-.Y OffQ "'1011.A P'H llNO et 54111 Dit90 ',...,., OtMrOffka c.u~·uo-.. .. ,u,... ~ .. -ll;m>........,-....- ............. ec..11: t111J'""' .... """ .....,..-..c:.111 1ta60~.- T• ......... C714) MJ.021 On5HMd Adwrtl1Mg'42>WI s..ltNc11 V•IMt1 ..._<>m<. "1-611t ,,,_ Ufl c,...,..,. .,,..... ~ "" Or9fttll CN't "'*' ...... C-ltM'f --.... ~. llllnf\'M-~I M•llM ~ MIYtfllH-lllt Mftlfl "'ey M ,.,,~< .. •ll .. tlt ~Ill ,,.,,,,h•*' ef ~ ..... -. Se<•ltf <••t4 .... ..,. ,e ... -"' ~ M. ... (.ool•,.,.,.• ._.,,.._ .., ~ u.n - Ill'(, ..,,,,.,1 ... tt _.lll!r; fl'KltWY_.i...l_ P.tl-'"'' t focus primarily on a study com- missioned by the Mission VieJo Company that polnts out the community will have a "cash flow" problem in the order or $100,000 over the next Clve years in maintaining landscaped areas. Committee members were asked to present their findings to the council by March. The study by environmental planners Raub, Bein and Frost points out that the existing tax rate is sufficient to ultimately maintain green areas but not in the immediate future. This will be brought about by the timing of the addition of large landscaped areas, primarily along Oso Creek and English Ca- nyon, which are being set aside in ancicipation of future resi- dents who are expected to settle in Mission Viejo. As a means out of the cash dilemma, the consultants havl• proposed a numbe r of alternatives. inc 1 uding: -A direct, short-term cas h subsidy by the Mission Viejo Company to County Service Area 9 l Mission Viejo>. -Redesigning parks for higher use and lower maintenance. -Annexing additional lands to County Service Area 9 to give Mission Viejo a greater tax base. -Raising taxes or calling for a bond issue. The study was comrruss1oned by the land development farm last April when it became ap- parent that the county did ~ have enough funds to landsca and maintain the vast open spa areas the Mission Viejo Com- pany was ready to dedicate. Ocean Search Canceled for Mesa Couple The search for a Costa Mesa couple, missing at sea after their 20·foot sailboat was round partially submerged with the body of their son aboard, has been suspended. Orange County Harbor Depart- ment s pokes men in Newport Beach said the sea search was canceled Monday . The victims are presum ed. drowned, spokesmen said. Missing are Steveo Miller. 27, and his wife, Sherre, 21. The body of their 3-year-old son, Shawn, was found aboard the semi- submerged sailboat Sunday about one mile off Abalone Poml, near Laj?una Beach. Harbo-r Department Sgt. llarry Wright said if the young couple did drown, their bodies might be recovered "in a week or two." Harbor Department and U.S. Coast Guard officials examined the craft Monday after it was towed lo shore but could not give an exact cause for the sinking. Wright said several experi- ments were conducted on the boat and that it appeared possi- ble the craft became swamped with water through the outboard engine well. F r om Page Al DEBATE •.. ministration's s uggested fi ve years away. He urged that they d evelop the existing college be!ore moving onto a second campus. He also Cluestioned the conten- tion that Jistance from the Irvine-Tustin area is what causes residents to attend a college out- side of the district. Rather. he said , they are attracted lo other colleges by better courses, at- mosphere and f acillties. Even residents of Mission Vie- jo, where Saddleback College is located, travel to other colleges, he said. However, Trustees Norrisa Brandt of Irvine and Frl)nk Greinke of Tustin, continued to contend that distance and the costs of commuting are a major factor in a student's choice of col- leges. Residents of t he area both agreed and disagreed with them. "Anything worked out for our people would be very much ap- p reci a ted," said G abrlelle Pryor, a member of the Jrvlne City Council who was speakning as a private citizen. Although the campus may not be built for 10 to lS yean, she naeested that tbe land be r~ served "u soon as possible." 'l'blJ, she said, is needed because the costa are rlslnc. "It's not somethinJ that aboul<S be put Off for 10 )'Carl," a&re<'.'Ci Gttinke. U trusted go alonf w\th the plan to open a satel~~! .. campu.1 ln September on land wnich can be developed into a Htond campu!, a dtci.lton on the site will have to be made by Feb. t. Dally Pilot Staff Plllete Mir41nda Ruling WASHINGTON (UPO -With two Justices predicting the landmark Miranda decision will soon be overturned, the supreme Court ruled 6 to 2 today that in some cases police may continut· questioning suspects after they have ex4!rcised their right to re main silent. · Justices William J . Brennan and Thurgood Marshall dis- sented. Brennan, in an opinion en dorsed by Marshall, said "Today's distortion of Miranda's constitutional principles can ~e viewed only as yet another step toward the erosion, and, I sup pose, ultimate overruling or Miranda's enforcement of the privilege against self incrimination.'' DEFENDANT TALKS WITH HIS LAWYERS DURING RECESS IN MURDER TRIAL From Left, Attorney Patrtck Magers, Daniel G. Bedellan, Attorney Roger AgaJanlan Tbe Michigan Supreme Court rever sed the conviction of Richard Bert Mosley, convicted for the J anuary, 1971, slaying of Leroy Williams in Detroit. R e b1tttal Witness Atwater Lawyer Talks Mosely was first picked up for questioning about a series of rob- beries. He exercised his right to ·remain silent and interrogation slopped. Two hours later, other detectives warned Mosley of his rights and, when he did not object. asked him about t~ murder. By TOM BARLEY Of IM Delly Piklt5Uff Nancy Fuller At water's lawyer testified today that defendant Daniel Garbis Bedelian never told him during a series of con- versations that Mrs. Atwater tned to kill her husband during the fracas that led to her death last Feb. 6. Called as a rebuttal witness by the prosecution, estate attorney Bertram Flagel told an Orange County Superior Court jury that Bedelian. 40, told him during several office interviews that he Front Page Al CANYON BLAZE ••• ternoon when the fire .was stopped and extinguished only a few hundred yards away from the builiding. Fire officials said only a last- minute back fire and strong sup- port from crews saved the school. - For the remainder of the day, the school grounds were used as a landing area for · four : water- dropping helicopters used to knock down hot spots on the fire's perimeter. As they landed, water was pumped into their empty tanks and within minutes, the choppers were back in the air. In the early hours, Williams Canyon was tbe hottest spot on· the fire line. A fireman on the scene said the names shot down the narrow ca- nyon like a funnel and jumped a~ross Santiago Canyon Road. By 1 p .m., only charred skeletor..s of trees were left in what was once a shady glen called Williams Canyon. · Firemen had saved the scat- tered houses and barns in the ca- nyon, including a suburban style house sitting by itself on a hilltop above the canyon floor. The flames destroyed a colony of domestic bees in a canyon clearing and swarms of the bees hovered around the smoldering remains of their hives. · The prevailing wind carried the flames out of Silverado and Williams canyons, across the face of Santiago Canyon's eastern slope and into the dry bed of Santiago Creek. Tinder dry grass, brush and old Jive oaks in the creek bed spread the flames up the other slopes of Santiago Canyon, where it centered in the Limestone Ca- nyon region -unpopulated and al mostinaccessi ble. Fire officials said the flames were stopeped by ground crews and dozens of aerial water and fire retardant drops by a fleet of aircraft that included helicop- ters, twin-engine borate bombers and a silvery DC-7 called "The Great While Hope." At the peak of the fire fight, nearly 100 pieces of equipment from the county, U.S. Forest Service and a dozen city fire de- partments were on the lines. There was no panic. AJl the crews seemed to know exactly what bad to be done and where to doit. Shortly after noon, packaged lunches and cartons of milk were delivered to the forestry station in Silverado Canyon so the men could eat wben they got breaks. Mingl~ with the fire engines were P a cific Telephone and Southern Califor nia Edison Yule Co11£ert Set for Mall Three Saddleback Valley elementary schools will present a Christmas music concert WeJ· nesday from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at the LaJruna Hills Mall. trucks whose crews were trying to assess damage to utility poles and other equipment. It was learned today that the main tel ephone line from Silverado t o Modjeska Canyon was burned out in the flames along with dozens of other phone connections and electric lines. By about 3 p.m ., firemen had the blaze cornered in Limestone Canyon, on a ridgetop overlook- ing East Irvine. Turbeville said back fU'es were set to "cut off the bead of the fire" and the tactic worked, pre- venting tbe fire from racing down the western-most slopes of the foothills into populated areas. Turbeville said today no. ac- c u rate estim ate has been made of the total cost of the fire. · Five fire engines and ball-dozen hand crews were due to stay on duty during the day lo be sure the blaze is extinguished. Front Page A J CELLA ••• .. ,If you want that information, you can make a deal with the bank," the judge said after up· holding the bank's motion to quash. Government attorneys said in a brief opposing the motion to quash that the bank's reluctance to comply with the subpoena is frustrating the government's in· vestigation and made reference to 17 auditors waiting for the re- cords. Bank officials made it clear Monday they were not opposed to furnishing the r ecords but only to doing so without being reim- bursed. acted in self defense when he killed Mrs. Atwater in her Newport Beach home. ··sut he never said anything to me about her going into her hus band 's bedroom," Flagel said. "And he never told me anything at any tame about his preventing Mrs. Atwater from· killing her husband." Bedelian told the jury that Mrs. Atwater was on her way to her invalid husband's bedroom with a carving knife when he in- tervened and grabbed her in a bear hug . The male nurse testified that he was compelled to club Mrs. Atwater, 50, to the floor with a bronze figurine wben she turned the knife on him. Bedelian testified that he panicked when he realized that Mrs. Atwater was dead and that he wrapped her body in a rug and shoved it into the trunk of his car. The Lebanese immigrant then drove to an auto wrecking yard in Pacoima, stuffed Mrs. Atwater's _body into a 55-gallon 011 drum and filled it to the rim with liquid cement. . F1agel also testified today that the Atwaters were openly affec- tionate in his presence and that A.G. Cox Atwater called his wife "Momsy" and she called him "Popsy". A defense witftess earlier testified that Mrs. Atwater called · her husband "a slob", openly wished for his death and threatened her ailing spouse with divorce until he met whatever demand she h ad in mind at the moment. Male nurse Frank Corley also testified that when he worked for the Atwaters at the Perham Drive home in 1973 he could only count on Mrs. Atwater being sober for a bout 30 minutes in the early morning. The special duty nurse said his employer drank at least a quart of hquor a day and that she fed her invalid hus band amoWlts of alcohol far in excess of the amount allowed by his physician. It is expected that final argu· ments in the trial will be de- livered later today. The prosecu- tion is demanding a verdict of first degree murder against Bedelian. · After be was.told about an ac- complice's confession, Mosley made self-incriminating state· men ts. The Michigan Court ruled the statements were inadmissible as evidence because all police ques- tioning on any criminal matter must cease after a suspect first says he wants to remain silent. Justice Potter Stewart, writing for the majority overruling the Michigan Court, called this a "literal interpretation" of Miran- da which could "lead to absurd and unintended results." "The requirement that law en· .forcement authorities must respect a person's exerciseofthat option counteracts the coercive pressures of the custodial set ting," Stewart said. "We therefore conclude that the admissibility of statements ob tained after the person in custody has decided to remain silent de pends under Miranda on whether his riJr?ht to cut off questioning was scrupulously honored.'' Ford Signs NY Loan WASHINGTON CAP) - President Ford today signed congressional authorization for $2.3 · billion in loans to New Yor k City and asked Congress to appropriate the money. In a message, Ford said it would cost $1 million to administer the loans dur· ing fiscal 1976 and $.115,000 to administer them during a budgetary transitional period from next July 1 through Sept. 30. The President signed the authorization as the ele- ments of a federal package to keep New York City out ·of def a ult were coming together. The House was ready to approve a change in federal bankruptcy laws and the Senate prepared to approve the $2.3 billion ap- propriation. an Impressive and unique commemoration of our bicentennial. beautifully boxed for gifts to friends and formal presentations ,, • for your home, offirc, store- • for ~chools. fratNnal or social clubs, young propfM org,mizallons, business .rnd tr,1dc.-J~~oc1alions • • (or bu~ines<: Rifts, awards and conRratulatory pre$en tations WI' prnocilv J1rl'\IW Th<' AmHlc.tn ll'pnd Wllf•Njl • .,,.,,.. "'"m t~•111y fnr 1r1d1tl<>NI Ot c:onlt'lllpotuy ~lllnits. lhcl (•Ilic-, lob<•ny 114'0 •nd fl•g Jtt MplClC'd 1n 24 11\M 10 111., , "'"" "''"~nikr Smolh ct.o.t 1uyllc h~r IOf lutler ind ••mln"N y.,.,.,. f(lr 11red<o011:c-1cft fultler Is dctlnrd, tll.. "'~'""''n~" ••·c1ble 1he ''-'' ,..d, whit• and blue ire"'• hw11 In lhl' prr<rnt•ltl>ft boll~ I l<tti>Ult~ (ofdfl rq>llln• DEN S'' '" ~.,,. ·-·· .,. .. , . .,:;;·-1 At 6:30 the San Joaquin 8Jld O'Neill school bands and or- chestru combined will play for 30 minute1. At 7 the San Joaquin cborua, with tbe addition of atu· dent.I from Trabuco Elementary School, will 1in1 holiday too&•· The O'Neill cborus wW perform at 7:30. *• ..... carpe ____ : iiisiailatioii: ·custom draperies u:. NO. "°422 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92621 • PHONE 6A6··U38 -6'46·,355 l ' , .... n· id rt of ed of or b· to on ivc et- the Ob· • Irvine VOL. 68, NO. 3'3, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNT¥, CALIFORNIA .Today's Closillg N.Y. Stoeks TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1975 . TEN CENTS Sehoo Smo.king c.r,.ekdomn l'omed Despite renewed pleas from students and parents for smoking areas at Irvine ·high "chools, trustees Monday unanimously backed a no-smoking policy call- ing for a tougher crackdown on student smokers. The hearing was marked by a pitch for s moking areas by one tnlstee's son and a comment by an Irvine police officer that a loophole in the law allows minors to buy cigarettes under certain COCld!Uons. Trustees, when the matter came up two weeks ago, said they could not approve the smok- ing areas because state law pro-hibited · sale of cigarettes to minors. However, police Lt. J erry Boyd told the trustees there is no law against minors buying cigarettes. If a minor bought dgarettes from a machine when a storeowner was not present, Boyd said, no crime would be committed. ''A cigarette machine cannot be a suspect in a crime," Boyd said. Additionally, Bob Foley, a stu- dent at University High School and son of Trustee June Foley, pleaded that "the majority of kids suffer" from smokers who clog bathrooms between classes to smoke. He added that high school stu- dents are not likely to pay atten- Uon to a plan of educational punishment for s mokers outlined by trustees in their policy. But bis words did not sway even bis mother. The trustees ordered Superin- tendent A. Stanley Corey to re- port in J anuary on how smoking can be stopped on the campus. The policy calls for measures that would educate students to the dangers of cigarette smok- ing. Trustee f'rank Hurd, who bas conceded that he bas had a call from the schools regarding one of his children smokmg, said that suspending students as punishment is not worthwhile. Meanwhile, s moking has been reduced by tougher enforcement measures at University High since the board first approved the new 'policy two weeks ago, Principal Vic Sherreitt told the board. But other stud ents added, drawing pained reactioos from trustees, that high school stu- dents felt the board bad com- mitted a breach of confidence in asking for opinions about the . (See SMOKE, Page AZ> Judge NiXes Bid for Cella ReCords Gay Football? Writer Labels NFL WASmNGTON (UPI) -Some big name pro football players, in- cluding at least three starting quarterbacks , a r e either homosexual or bisexual, the Washington Star said today. In the first of a four-part series, star sports writer Lynn Rosellini wrote that she based her state· ment on interviews with more than 60 athletes, coaches, sports officials, psychologists and mem bers of the gay community during the past three months. The newspaper listed no names of athletes of either sex but the story said: "Some of the biggest names in football, including at least three starting quarterbacks in the National Football League, are homosexual or bisexual.'' Miss Rosellini made these other assertions : ~Antigay pressure is so in- tense that m any male athletes who prefer homosexual rela- tionships maintain fronts as matt ried men with children. -Up to 20 percent of women athletes, including tennis and golf stars, are lesbians. -The percentage of male homos exuals in sports is pro- bably close to the 5 percent which prevails in society as a whole. Irvine A r e a Studied Second Saddleback Campus Questioned By LAURIE KASPER. Of IM Dally l"t ... IUff Saddleback Community College District trustees, ad- ministrators and residents Mon- day differed on the timing for a satellite or second campus in the Tustin-Irvine area. Trustees have been investigat- ing the possibility o{ opening a satellite campus in the northern area in September. The plan talked of most often is to locate the satellite on land which can be purchased and developed as a permanent second campus in the future. Although there seemed to be no doubt that a second campus will be needed someday, those who spoke during the meeting seemed uncertain when that day will be. District administrators had presented the trustees with a packet of population and enroll- ment projections which indicated the district enrollment would at least double in the next five years. Dr. Robert Lombardi, district superintendent, admitted he doesn't know how accurate the figures are. He s aid they were being presented in the belief that the district bas to prepare for the day when its population does in- crease. But this day, said Trustee Larry Taylor of Laguna Beach, is fifteen rather than the ad- ministratlon 's suggested five yean away. He urged that they develop the existing college Ford Si.gm NYLoan WASHINGTON (AP) - President Ford today signed congressional authorlzatlan for $2.3 · billion in loans to New· York City and a sked· C9agress to appropriate the money. In 1 message, Ford said it would cost $1 million to · administer the loans dur· mi r11cal 197e and s:us.ooo to administer them during a budseta.ry transitional · period from next July t tJu-ouab Sept. 30. 'lbe Pretldent signed the authorization H the ele- ment.I of a federal package to keep New York City out of default were comlnC totethtl'. Tbe House was ttady to appt'Qvo a change ln f edenl bankruptcy laws . and the Stn te prepared to approve the .3 blU1oo ap- proprlaUon. before moving onto a second campus. He also ouestioned the conten· tion that · Jistance from the Irvine-Tustin area is what causes residents to attend a college out· side of the district. Rather, he said, tbey are attracted to other colleges by better courses, at· mosphere and faciliti~. . . Even residents of Mlss1on Vie- jo where Saddleback College .is l~ated, travel to other colleges, be said. . However, Trustees Norr1sa Brandt of Irvine and Frank (See DEBATE, PageA2) Mi randa Law Weakened in Wurt R uling WASHINGTON <UPI} -With two justices predicting the landmark Miranda decision will soon be overturned, the Supreme Court ruled 6 to 2 today that in some cases police may continue questioning suspects after they have exercised their right to re- main silent. Justices William J . BreMan and Thurgood Mars hall dis· sented. Brennan in an opinion en- dorsed by M a r s hall , said "Today's distortion of Miranda's constitutional principles can be viewed only as yet another step toward the erosion, and, I sup· pose, ultimate overruling of Miranda's enforcement of the privilege against self· incrimination." 'The Miclilgan SUpM!ne Court reversed the conviction of · Richard Bert Mosley, convicted ~or the January, 1971, slaying of Leroy Williama ill Detroit. Mosely was first picked ilp for questioninl about a series of rob- beries. He exercised bis right to remain silent and interrogation stopped. Two boun later, other detectives warned Mosley of bis rights and, whenbedldnotobjec::t, asked bjm a bout the murder. After he w a1 told about an ac- complice's conr .. mon, Mosley made aell-tncnminatlng state· ments. The Michi1an Court ruled the statements were inadmissible as evidenc• because all police ques· tiooing on any criminal matt.tr must ce~e after a suspect first 1ay1 he wants to remain silent. Juat.ice Potter Stewart, WrltinS for the maJority overrullna the MlcbStan Court, called lhls a "literal inta'pretatlon" ol Mltan- da wblch could "lead to absurd and unintended res\llta." ~ffl ·~~ f._,j. -· oauw Pilot Pllet• by lllclMnl l<Mlllet' CANYON BLAZE BOMBED W1TH FIRE RETARDANT FROM FOUR-ENGINE PLANE This Paytoad from Aeri al Tanker Dropped Near Santiago Canyon Road 1 ,100 Acres Scorc hed Silverado Blazes 'Out' By WILUAM SCHREIBER Of ... O.lly ...... 5'afl Hundreds of firefighters worked until almost midnight Monday before fully containing a brush fire that burned across 1,700 acres of Orange County's rugged canyon areas. The blaze, which broke out ear- ly Monday in. Sil verado Canyon. was finally baited by an army of 1,000 firemen just as it topped the ridge off oothills overloolD.ng east Irvine and El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. <Additional story, photos Page A3. > Today, county fire officials said the fire could easily have been much worse ii winds were stronger -perhaps rivaling the 1967 Paseo Grande inferno that burned 50,000 acres in the same general ar.ea, destroying 66 boJnes, Two dwellings and a guest house were destroyed in Mon- day's blaze and there were only two reported injuries -a Mod- Ta~es Due First Deadline Wednaday· . Wednetday is the deactline for maijlnt the finl ins~J­ ment of this year's property tax.q Witho\lt penalty. acconbng toOrangeCountyTaxCollector-TreuunrRobertCttron. IF PAYMENTS AREN'T received or postmarked by Wednesday, a six perttnt dellnquency fee wlll be cbar1ed, Citron said. The tax collectors aid u of Dec. 21 about $46 mllllon of the fint installment total of $298 million bad been ttceived by hls office. A TOTAL OF •Mproperty tax bills were malled out by Citton'• Office ih Oetotm-as tbe flnt step toward 1ather· tn1marethaa$5itiamlWooincount)'pi'OpertJtUesthl1yur. jeska man who broke tus leg and a volunteer fireman sent to the hospital with an eye cut. The fire was triggered when a bottled gas heater exploded in the bedroom of the Fred Meyling home in Silverado Canyon. No one was at home at the time. The flames spread rapidly but quick response by the Silverado Volunteer Fire Department and the nearby U.S. Forest Service station had lines established along the top of the canyon within an hour. A county fire spokesman said at that point, the blaze appeared to be contained within less than 100 acres but then· the wind picked up. Hot ashes jumped the fir~ line and tbe blaze raced down Williams Canyon, just oft San- tiago Can1on Road, and the whole hillside bunt Into flames as sparks ignited explosive manzanita bushes and dry grass. Firemen tried vainly to save Rancho Soldona, a cluster of houses and barnl'I owned by Phil and Sue Charlton on the alo~ of Santiago Canyon. The main ranch house, the auest boust-and all t.he ~t build· ings burned to the ground in less than u minutes, ac<:Otdin1 to county fire Capt. Bruce (See CAN YON. Pa.., Al) D e cision Se tback For Jury By GARY GRANVILLE OI t1M Delly Piiot Staff A move to subpoena bank re- cords tracing Dr. Louis Cella's complex financial political deal· ings was quas hed Monday by a federal judge in Los Angeles. If the government wants Crocker National Bank to pro- vide copies of Celia's records for use in its investigation of the San- ta Ana physician, it should reim· burse the bank for its costs, Judge Jesse W. Curtis ruled. Subject of a subpoena quashed by Judge Curtis were bank re- cords covering roughly 30 personal and business accounl.s controlled by Cella in recent years as he e m erged as California's top political cam- paign donor. The bank records were sought in connection with a federal _grand jury lnvest]aatjon of Celia's tax status as well as Medic are payments to two Orange County hospitals under bis control until recently. Seeking the same records and already in possession of some as a result of executed search war- r ants is the Orange County Grand Jury. The county jury is investigat· ing possible fraud. embezzle- ment and grand theft allegations as the result of the use of camouflaged hos pital funds purportedly u sed to bankroll Cella in his political and business ventur~. In seeking to have the federal. subpoena quashed, Crocker at- torneys argued that it would cost the bank an estimated 1,000 man hours and $12,500 to meet the sub- poena's demands. And while government at- torneys argued there is no prece- dent for demanding reimburse- ment of costs, Judge Curtis said the subpoena placed "an onerous burden on people who are not suspected of committing a crime." "If you want that information, you can make a deal •with the bank," the judge said after up- holding the bank's motion to quash. Government attorneys said in a brief opposing the motion to quash that the bank's reluctance to comply with the subpoena is frustrating the government's in- vestigation and made r eference to 17 auditors waiting for the re- cords. Bank officials made it clear Monday they were not opposed to (See CELLA, Page A%) Coast Weath er Fair skies through Wed· nesday but patchy fog near the coast in the morning hours. Highs Wednesday, 68 at the beaches rising to 75 inland. Lows tonight 47 toss. I NSIDE TOD1' Y euar~ of ~jury conviction, farmer California Lt. Gov. Ed ~~ u pondf"ring ~ to flO from Ml'c. AS l••ex "'.,__ W.lee .u ........... AU .,_...,.... &J AiMU ... n an ~-= . ,. ...... AU •• .... .......... M ~ ... ,. ....... c:i-ey ... °"'*' ., :::.· ...... &M 0--" u AU ......... !( .. . ,. =: .... .... ~ ..... M AU ... -·-· .,, ,.....,. AU ........ .... u ....... .. ........ ., , H DAIL y PILOT Eeho s lr"in e Newport Balks At ATSC Aid Errors J In Tandy Tax· Told Tandy Corporation tax manager William Hughe~ ad mitted late Monday in Orange County Superior Court that his company's property tax state- ment for 1972 revealed "some omissions." Officials of an independent <.:enter offering diver::.ion and treatment to Juvenile offenders won isplntual support but no cash Monday from New port Beach city councilmen. Instead. the Assessment and Treatment Services Center of Coastal Orange County, wh.ictt Front Page Al CELLA ... funushing the records but only to doing so without bemg reim- bursed. The absence or bank record-. notw1lhs tand111 g. tht' fl'dl•r..il grand jury continued 1tli an vest1gat1on mto Cl'lta ·~ affairs dunng the day. Key witness as the jury's in- qwry entered its second week was Jerry Zanetti. stat t' Democratic Senate caucus purty leader Zanelli was reportedly paid by ~lercy General Hospital, Santa Ana. while it was under Celia's control, for actually working out of county on polit1cal matters. lt 1s alleged that the payments to Zanelh were disguised on the hospital records as payments for professional services never ren- dered. The jury 1s also investigating payments to fictitious firms for supplies never received. Bank records obtained by the county grand jury show that payments to the phony firms were deposit· ed in multiple accounts on wh1ch Cella had power of signature. Also called before the jury Monday was Pat Wood, a worker in the personnel department at Mission Community Hoopital, Mission Viejo. and Stephen Evans, former assistant ad· mimstrator at Mercy General. Sara Moore's De fense- 'lnsanity' -SAN FRANCISCO <UPI> -Al torneys for Sara Jane Moore. ac- cused of trying to assass111ate President Ford. told a federal court formally today she will use .. a defense of insanity and men· tal disease.·· Miss Moore, who has been in and out of seven mental inslitu· tions in her lifetime. goes on trial Monday in U.S. District Court in San Francisco. Her public defender, James Hewitt. said he will employ "a defense of insanity and mental condition without any reserva- tions -in toto. · · In his notice filed today with the court and given to govern· ment prosecutors, Miss Moore's lawyers said they will use the in- sanity argument in r egard to any .. mental disease or defect in- consistent with the mental ele· ment reqwred for the offense charged.·· Hewitt said this r efers to 1m· pa1rment of her condltion "to form a specific intent where specific intent is required." The public defender said he was making the disclosure in ac· cordance with a new federal re· quiremenl that defense attorneys notify the prosecution when they intend to raise a mental condition argument in a trial. Miss Moore, 45, a onetime in- Cor man t for the FBI a nd Treasury Department. was ac- cused of firing a pistol at Ford Sept. as e was emerjting from the St. Francis Hotel m San Fran- cisco. The president was not tut ORANGE COAST TiwOf•~ (tM\t O•lly P11a1 w1tftWf'1(h".com bUWd t,_. ,., • ..,, Pt•'U, t\ OWbll\l'lir(ICy t-""0t4tAC)t" (.o.MI Puoh\1'11nq ComP•"'Y \foo.t; ittf f'd•hMr\ AHt put>U~...a "'''"d•v ttoirouon f riO•'f t04' (Oo\t• ~' Hif•Port e.Hn. Hunttnoton IW«n r.,.,, t•l" V•tlt'f. I r•lnt. 5•ddlt~-V•lfty •ncl L~uNlllo<ll \ovlllCcw•t A\llWll"•Qo()l\.tl•d• t.ort '' e>vt>ll\Md S41utd•1\ «Id \V"'I')"''' hu. prlf"l(•pal pvb'''"'"'O p•a"t I\ ,., llO W.O\l Ut1'f Slfttl, 'o\14 N'tW, C•l•fnr111" .-i•lil Robert N. WH:fj Prt>Klt~t •1'14 PubttW• • ~ ' Jack R. Curley VtCf' PT•\10tnt and Geo,,.r•• M..n.-.o-r Thomas Keevll lclllo• Tllomas A. Murphlne Ma,...,,..1c1aor Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall A\\l\1•111 ~MQl"O f dtlAln omu• <Ml•-UOWt\li11417~,._. ,.._. euc11 UU N~ -"'••rel ~ k<Kll 11 .. 0 .. _....._, Jivnll"91 ... h•<ll lit IS ........ llaoM•MCI ~1.cwKll V•t .. , U10I U ,.., 11- •l S.ft Oi.ot "'-Tet....,_ (714) '4.2-4321 oautfi-.:t Advertislna '42-5'71 ~._-k V•llty N..-'bttoe• st1-4i10 , , .... ~ft ( ,.,,_" 4ts-l630 c...,..-.1. 1'7S Of'.,.._ Coetl "WI'"'"" C-...,., N9 IWM tWf "'-ltl<l\lf•I-_ .. I m•ll .. er MVtrflulfleftl\ i-.rtlfl ,...., M ,.prNv<" wllM\11 tClet••' ~~ ...... •I . ....,,..,.._, ""'""cl (IHt J•~fl .. D•lf .. c;.MtCI Mou, C..lllMNCI ~r1!>4t0f' by ( ... r~ s;IJS -· ''";. by ........ " ...... ""' ..... ~ ....... ,--... ,,,_,, ... ,, t . has dealt with about tiO Newport youngsters so Car this year, will have to wait until early next year to find out if Newport will chip in to help defray next year's estimated expenses. Jnitial estimates of Newport's share in the costs were set al ~o.ooo for the coming year, but cowicilmen echoed a similar posi- tion taken recently by the CitY" of Irvine and balked at lending anything but moral support. Officials in both cities have said the county should pay for the service. !:. O.lly l"llot St.Ill ~-· But Hughes, called as the third witness in the bribery trial of Congressman Andrew Hinshaw. insisted that he believed the document to be accurate when be signed it and sent it to the Orange County Assessor's Office. Cross-examined by Marshall Morgan. Hughes con- firmed the defense attorney's suggestion that be reimbursed Tandy Vice President James Buxton for $1,000 given to Hinshaw by Buxton as a cam· paign contribution. At Monday's session, center \'tee President George Jones of Newport Beach said that recent fund-raising activities from the private sector were successful. He gave no indication that the '.'Jew port contribution would make or break the program. DEFENDANT TALKS WITH HIS LAWYERS DURING RECESS IN MURDER TRIAL From Left, Attorney Patrick Magers, Daniel G. BedeUan, Attorney Roger Agejanlah And Hughes, granted immuni· ty from prosec\,ltion in return for his testimony, admitted be was aware at the time that it is iilegal for corporations to make contributions to candidates for federal office. He stressed that the entity has won strong praise for its low rate of repeat offenders. Instead of go- ing directly into the juvenile justice system, youngsters re- ferred to the center by police can be ser ved through counseling. Their parents also are brought in fol' consultation. Atwater Attorney Schmit, 3 Hinshaw, 54, is accused of ac- cepting and soliciting bribes while be served as COWlty as· sessor prior to his election to Congress in 1972. Quizzed on Bedelian Kids Hurt It is alleged that the Newport Beach Republican accepted gifts of stereo equipment and a $1,000 campaign contribution from the Tandy Corporation and that he solicited a bribe from a lawyer representing Beckman Instru- ments in an assessment appeals hearing. The only strong support for the donation from Newport came from Councilman Howard Rogers, who termed the sum a re- latively nominal amount. He said that delays in the city's answer would only complicate the cen- ter's budget for the coming calen- dar year. But he finally went with the council majority which promises that after further study of the diversion concept in general, and of the center specifically, final ans wer would come from Newport. Late next month officials of all . the cities involved in the service -Newport, Irvine and Costa Mesa -are expected to compare notesonjuvenilediversion. Newport's council will have the matter back before them on Jan. 26. By TOM BARLEY OUM Delly ~leUuft Nancy Fuller At water's lawyer testified today that defendant Daniel Garbis Bedelian never' told him during a series of con- versations that Mrs. Atwater tried to kill her husband during the fracas that led to her death last Feb. 5. Called as a rebuttal witness by the prosecution, estate attorney Bertram F1agel told an Orange County Superior Court jury that Bedelian. 40, told him during several office interviews that he acted in self defense when he killed Mrs. Atwater in her Newport Beach home. "But he never said anything to me about her going into her husband 's bedroom," Flagel said. "And he never told me Fro•PageAJ CANYON BLAZE ••• Turbeville. Then the smoke and names ap- peared ominously on the hills above Silverado School and the children were evacuated by bus. They returned later Monday af. ternoon when the fire was stopped and extinguished only a few hundred yards away from the builiding. Fire officials said only a last. minute back fire and strong sup- port from crews saved the school. · For the remainder of the day, the school grounds were used as a landing are~ for · four : water- Fro•PageAI DEBATE ... Greinke of Tustin, continued to . contend that distance and the costs of commuting are a major factor in a student's choice of col-· leg es. Residents of the area both agreed and disagreed with them. "Anything worked out for our people would be very much ap- preciated," said Gabrielle Pryor, a member of the Jrvine City Council who was speakning as a private citizen. Although the campus may not be built for 10 to 15 years, she suggested that the land be re· served "as soon as possible." This. she said. is needed because the costs are rising. "It's not something that should be put off for 10 years," agreed Greinke. If trustees go along with the plan to open a satellite campus in September on land wh.ich can be developed into a second campus. a decision on the site will have to be made by Feb. 9. dropping helicopters used to knock down hot spots on the fire's perimeter. As they landed, water was pumped into their empty tanks and within minutes, the choppers were back in the air. In the early hours, Williams Canyon was tbe hottest spot on the fire line. A fireman on the scene said the flames shot down the narrow ca- nyon like a funnel and jumped across Santiago Canyon Road. By 1 p.m., only charred skeleton.3 of trees were left in what was once a shady glen called Williams Canyon. • Firemen had saved the scat- tered houses and barns in the ca- nyon, including a suburban style house sitting by itself on a hilltop above the canyon floor. The flames destroyed a colony of domestic bees in a canyon clearing and swarms of the bees hovered around the ·smoldering remains of their hives. The prevailing wind carried · the names out of Silverado and Williams canyons, across the face of Santiago Canyon's eastern slope and into the dry !>ed of Santiago Creek. Tinder dry grass, brush and old live oaks in the creek bed spread tbe flames up the other slopes of Santiago Canyon, where it centered in the Limestone Ca- nyon region -unpopulated and almost inaccessible. Fire officials said the names were stopeped by ground crews and dozens of aerial water and fire retardant drops by a fleet of a1rcraft that included helicop- ters, twin-engine borate bombers and a silvery DC-7 called "The Great White Hope." Boy Jogger Tumbles Off Cliff; Rescued A 17-year old Newport Beach youth took a wrong tum wb.lle jogging this morning and wound up hanging onto a small ledge of a cliff overlooking the Upper Newport Bay ror more than two .boun. Don Hanson, 1826 Commodore Road. was rescued by Newport Beach Firemen after he was spotted by three Oranae County Health Department officials who happened to be examinlnl the bay on the other aide. The officials told fire~ they heard Hanson's falnt abouts for help and then spotted him when they looked throu1b t heir blnoculan. Hanson told firemen be l)eCan his jogglns ellcunioa at 8:30 I a.m. and became stuck on the cliff shortly after. He was not rescued untll close to 9 a.m., firemen said. Hanson said he ventured down t he cliff near Galaxy Park above._ the bay, but when he got about 40 feel down, be realized be could not so back up or continue back down because of the steep- ness of the cliff. Ht said he hung on and yelled for about two boun before the health officials -Jerry Daugherty, Doug Jones and Monica Muur -heard his cri . Firemen at the scene lower@d a rope down to Hanson and then Fareman Randy Shelton pulled the youth to 1alety. Hanson wu not hurt ln the incident. anything at any time about his preventing Mrs. Atwater from killing her husband." Bedelian told the jury that Mrs. Atwater was on her way to her invalid husband's bedroom with a carving knife when he in- tervened and grabbed her in a bear hug. The male nurse testified that be was compelled to club Mrs. Atwater, 50, to the floor with a bronze figurine when she turned the knife on him. Bedelian testified that he panicked when he realized that Mrs. Atwater was dead and that be wrapped her body in a rug and shoved it into tbe trunk of his car. The Lebanese immigrant then drove to an auto wrecking yard in Pacoima, stuffed Mrs. Atwater's body into a 55-gallon oil drum and filled it to the rim with liquid cement. F1agel also testified today that the Atwaters were openly affec· tionate in his presence and that A.G. Cox Atwater called his wife "Momsy" and she called him .,Popsy". A def eose witness earlier testified that Mrs. Atwater called h~r husband "a slob", openly wished for his death and ~eatened ~er ailing spouse with divorce until be met whatever demand she had in mind at the· moment. Male nurse Frank Corley also testified th at when he worked for the Atwaters at the Perham Drive home in 1973 he could only count on Mrs. Atwater being · sober for about 30 minutes in the early morning. The special duty nurse said his employer drank at least a quart or liquor a day and that she fed her invalid husband amounts of alcohol far in excess of the amount allowed by his physician. Frorn Page A I ·SMOKE ... In Crash Orange County Supervisor Laurence Schmit and three of his children were undergoing treat- ment in Westminster Community Hospital today alter being in- volved in a two-car collision in Garden Grove. The extent of injuries to Schmit and his children were not im· mediately known. However, a spokesman at the hospital and Schmit's chief aide Loren Norton said the injuries are not believed to be critical. The 35-ye ar-old county supervisor reportedly was driv- ing the three children, Joseph, Cheryl and Jean, all teenagers, to school shortly before 8 a.m. when his station wagon was struck broadside at Springdale Street and Garden Grove Boulevard. Early reports indicate the im· pact rolled the station wagon over on its top trapping the supervisor and his three children inside. After being freed by police and fire personnel called to the scene the Schmits were taken to Westminster Comm unity Hospital where the supervisor complained or a severe hip pain . A hosp1ta{ spokes man sa1d Schmit and his son were undergo- ing X-rays late th.is morning. The accident report had not been filed at the Garden Grove Poli~e Department by mid· morrung. NY Bankrupt Bill Pmhed WASHJNGTON (UPI) -Con - gress is working on legislation to make it possible for big cities to go bankrupt -just in case the fortbcoming $2 .3 billion in federal loans fail to save New York from financial collapse. The last obstacle to the loan program -the will power of Sen. Accountant Paul Tabor, Hughes' predecessor as Tandy's tax expert, admitted in eqrlier testimony that the company saved between $25,000 and $30,000 a y~ar by undervaluing its inven- tory statements before submit· ting them to the assessor's office. Tabor admitted that he told Radio Shack employes to grant discounts to assessor's employes "as an investment in lower taxes." He also testified that a tax ex- emption sought by the company on its imported electronic equip· ment was denied by the county assessor's office and later grant- ed when Tandy contributed to Hinshaw's campajgnfund. Tabor also testified that the contribution to the Hinshaw fund was made via Buxton's personal check because "we could gel more mileage'' out of a contribu- tion made in that manner. Bomb Suspect Blown to Bits WARREN, Ohio (UPI) - A bombing suspect who kept an arsenal of guns and dynamite in his trailer home apparently blew himself to pieces as authorities approached to arrest him for the beating death of his former mother-in-law. Pete lsipis, special in· vestigator for the federal Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms department, said Monday he believed pieces of a body scat· tered over a 100-square-yard area were those of Edwin Miller. 32, a "loner who was divorced on- ly a week ago." smoking areas and disregarding James B. Allen <D-Ala.) -gave al way Monday. He said he would Miller, also wanted for ques- tioning about four bombings, bad been charged with the murder of his former mother-in-law Mildred Smith, 66, whose bat: tered body was found in her home in Enon Valley, PA. most unanimous support from no longer try to block a bill ap- students and a parents advisory propriating the money for the group. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-loan. *•••••• carpe ~ an impressive and unique ·commemoration of our b icentennial, beautifully boxed for gifts to friends and formal presentations • (or your home, ofOce, store • for schools, fraternal or social club~. young peoples organizations, business and tr.Hie associations • for business gifts, awards and congrJtulatory prc~enlations We .,ro.:i11v flfl"«'nf T~ A~nnn lf'>&rnd wtll·nsf!, ""'"" llX'm IH••utv 101 tr.idllloNI or ,on1cmporary selHnl(S.. The hat ... I 1lwrtv Btll ~nd 1111 .ttt dtopocttd in 24 trv~o-11111 colorJ Alr-undl'I ~mrth ~ Krylic lober for lusR>< ind ••mlntlf• wf' tW' Im prKISk>l\, l'•dl INl~r '' dtflMd, lhe ""11""'"11 " ll'jl1blf', the 11.ta't rtd, wh1I• and blM •re..,._ h1~nt In th" t!''"''""'"il!ll 00. 111 lt~pwke lo~r ~tn-D EN S' ........... ~h· .. ~ "'":;;:-1 ••••••••••••••••• ·installation. custom draperies UC. NO 230422 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CAllP. 92627 • P~ONE 6 .. 6:.4838 -6A6·23.S5 I \ ,.. Orange Coast EDITION !re4ay'8 ~losing N.Y. Stoeks °VOL. 68, NO. 3'3, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY CALI FORNI A ·TUESDAY, DECEMBER9, 1975 N TENCEN S ' Probe of Cella Bank Records Nixed By GARY GRANVllLE CMlll•Dellyl"l!ot~ A move to subpoena bank re- cords tracing Dr. Louis Cella's ~mplex financial political deal- 1015 was quashed Monday by a federal judge in Los Angeles. If the government wants Crocker National Bank to pro- vide copies of Cella's records for use in its investigation of the San- ta Ana physician, it should reim- burse the b•nk !or its costs, Judge Jesse W. Curtis ruled. Subject of a subpoena quashed by Judge Curtis were bank re- cords covering roughly 30 personal and business accounts controlled by Cella in recent years as be emerged as California's top political cam- paign donor. The bank records were sought in connection with a federal o.fty ............... •cM"' It ........ CANYON BLAZE BOMBEO WITH F1RE RETARDANT Plane Drops Payload Near Santiago Canyon Road Firefighters DOuse Silverado Blazes By WILLIAM SCHREIBER otu.tO.lly l"IMCSUft Hundreds of firefighters worked until almost midnight Monday before fully containing a bruab fire that burned across 1,700 acres of Orange County's rugged canyon areas. · The blaze, which broke out ear- ly Monday in Silverado Canyon. was finally halted by an army of 1,000 firemen just as it topped the ridge of foothills overlooking east Irvine and El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. (Additional story, photos Page AJ. > Today, county fire officials said the fire could easily have been much worse if winds were stronger -perhaR§. rivaling the 1967 Paseo Gran~ inferno that burned 50,000 acres in the same general area, destroying 66 homes. Two dwellings and a guest house were destroyed in Mon- day's blaze a nd there were only two reported injuries -a Mod- jeska man who broke his leg and a ·volunteer fireman sent to the boepita1 with an eye cut. The fire was triggered when a botUed gas beater exploded in Ford Signs NYLoan WASHINGTON (AP> President Ford today signed congressional authorl~ation tor $2 .3 billion in loans to New York City and asked Con1ru1 to appropria\e the money. 1n a message, Ford said It would coet $1 million to · 8dmtnisttt lbe loans dur· lnl fiscal 1976 •nd $315,000 . to administer them during a bud1etary transltlonal period from next July 1 ~hSept.30. The Praldent sl,ned the . aut.hOritatlon as the ele- mentl of a federal packqe to keep New York City out of d~f a ult. were c::omln1 tocetber· Tbe Kouae was re1dy to approve a chance m federal bankrul)tcy laws md the Senate prepared to apptOV• tbo $2.8 blllloo ap- • p:op_riation. 1...-• the bedroom of the Fred Meyling home in Silverado Canyon. No me was at home at the time. The flames spread rapidly but quick response by the Silverado Volunteer Fire Department and the nearby U.S. Forest Service (See CANYON, PaieA2> Ocean Search Canceled for Mesa Couple The search for a Costa Mesa couple, missing at sea alter their 20-foot sailboat was found partially submerged with the body of their son aboard, has been suspended. Orange County Harbor Depart~ ment spokesmen in Newport Beach said the sea search was canceled Monday. The victims are presumed drowned, spokesmen said. Missing are Steven Miller, Z'T, and bis wife, Sberre, 21. 'lbe body of their 3-year-old son, Shawn, was fowtd aboard the semi- submereed sailboat Sunday about one mile off Abalone Point, near La«Una Beach. HarbOr Department Sgt. Harry Wright said if the young couple did drown, their bodi~ might be recovered "in a weekort.wo." Harbor Department and U.S. Coast Guard officials examined the craft Monday after it was towed to shore but could not pve an exact cause for the sinking. Writbt said several experi-~nts were conducted oo tbo boat and that It appeared posai- ble the craft became swamped with water tbroua'1 the outboard engine well . He said that a board was found in the water tbat Could have pre· vented a awampinf, but that ap. parently the board bad been taken off !or m • intcnance. For a three and one-half hour period Monday. search era scoured a 150·mUe area, from Dana Potnt to the Santa Ana River Mo11tb up to eilht miles seaward. Wriaht said the aearch turned up only a hatcl1 cover and .some mattrea1 foam about Ulree mlleaoft Dana Potnt.. J .. grand jury investigation of Cel:a•s tax status as well as Medicare payments to two Orange County hospitals under his control until rec en Uy. Seeking the same records and already io possession of some as a result of executed search war- rants is the Orange County Grand Jury. Tbe county jury is investigat- ing possible fraud, embezzle· ment and grand theft allegations as the result of the use of camoutlaged hospital funds purportedly used to bankroll Cella in his political and business ventures. In seeking to have the federal subpoena quashed, Crocker at- torneys argued lhal it would cost the bank an estimated 1,000 man hours and $12,500 to meet the sub- poena's demands. And while government at· tomeys argued there is no prece- dent for demanding reimburse- ment of costs, Judge CUrtis said the subpoena placed ''an onerous burden on people who are not s uspected of committing a crime." ··u you want that inCormation. you can make a deal with the bank," the judge said after up- holding the bank's motion to quash. Government attorneys said in a brief opposing the motion to quash that the bank's reluctance to comply with the subpoena is frustrating the government's in- vestigation and made reference to 17 auditors waiting for the re- cords. Bank officials made it clear Monday they were not opposed lo . <See CELLA, Page A%) Health Firm Assailed County Testing Termed 'Below Standard' In a special report to the Board of Supervisors, Orange County Health Officer John Philp today branded the performance or a health testing firm linked lo Dr. Louis Cella as below standard and unacceptable. Subject of Philp's criticism was the four-month performance of Orange County Health Testing Institute, an operation in which Cella said be divested Newport Overconies Flood Fear Newport Beach City Manager Robert Wynn Monday announced what amounts to a complete vic- tory for the city in its dispute with a federal agency over the ef · fects of a 100-year flood on Newport Bay and its beaches. And the end of tbe battle means that earlier federal declarations that most of Newport's lowlands should be on stilts hay~ been scrapped. ?. Wynn said that a special arbitration panel of scientists from the National Academy of Sciences has sided with a private engineering firm hired by Newport. Now, the new flood- level maps show that Newport property owners would qualify for federal flood insurance; and federally.guaranteed loans. Late last year it was a different prediction. The U.S. Geodetic Survey said all of Newport's lowlands were s ubject to severe flooding. Had those initial federal maps been deemed official, Newport would have had to be rebuilt on stilts as high as eight feet in places to qualify for construction loans and fede ral flood in- surance. Newport officials hired their own engineers to find the flood level and the Long Beach firm of Moffatt and Nichol drew much more compatible conclusions. Wynn Monday said that the greatest point of contention focused on early federal predic- tions tbat the Balboa peninsula would have been awash during a tyPboon-like storm and that sea water would spill into the bay. He asserted ·that federal engineers predicted that the bay would fill like a basin and flood homes. But city engineers insist- ed that the water would simply flow out to sea again. > "The panel of scientists agreed with our position and the. next step is for the recommendation to go to the Federal Insurance Ad- ministration for final approval," \be city ,manager said. himself or any financial interest six months before it was awarded a $275,000 county con- tract. • Philp's report said that in 683 physical examinations provided prospective county employes, 142 ended with erroneous laboratory reports. Another 24 exams involved physician errors, 24 were found to have typing or computer er· rors and 22 bore false informa- tion, according to the county health officer. The county health officer also cited 73 instances of minor medical errors, 43 physiological test errors and 43 other errors in performance. As a result of the errors, ac- cording to Philp, there were de- lays in hiring or rejection of otherwise qualified applicants. Taxes Doe First Deadline Wednesday· Wednesday is the deadline for mailing the first install- ment of this year's property truces without penalty. according toOrangeCountyTaxCollector-Treasurer Robert Citron. IF PAYMENTS AREN'T received or postmarked by Wednesday, a six percent delinquency fee will be charged, Citron said. The tax collector said as of Dec. 2, about $46 million of the first installment total of $296 million had been received by bis office. A TOTAL OF'"·· property tax bills were mailed out by Citron's office in October as the first step toward gather- ing more than $592 million in county property taxes this year. Boy Jogger Tumbles Off Cliff; Rescued A 17-year old Newport Beach youth took a wrong tum while jogging this morning and wound . up hanging onto a small ledge of a cliff overlooking the Upper Newport Bay for more than two hours. Don Hanson, 1826 Commodore Road, was rescued by Newport Beach Firemen after he was spotted by three Orange County Health Department officials who happened to be examining the bay on the other side. The officials told firemen they heard Hanson's faint shouts for help and then spotted him when they looked through their binoculars. Hanson told firemen he began his jogging excursion at 6:30 STOCKS DRIFT OJ'ER TAX CUT NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market, stalled by doubts about tax cut prospects, drifted uncer- tainly in a narrow range today. Trading was moderate. Analysts said investors seemed to be in a cautious mood over the chances for an extension of the 1975 tax cuts to next year. The Dow Jones industrial average of 30/stocks gained 2.52 pointsto824.1S. <Tables, AlS) a .m. and became stuck on the cliff shortly after. He was not rescued until close to 9 a.m ., firemen said. Hanson said he ventured down the cliff near Galaxy Park above the bay. but when he got about 40 feet down, he realized he could not go back up or continue back down because of the steep- ness or the cliff. He said he hung on and yelled for about two hours before the health o ffi c ial s -Jerry Daugherty, Doug Jones and Monica Mazur -heard his cries. Firemen at the scene lowered a rope down to Hanson and then Fireman Randy Shelton pulled the youth lo safety. Hanson was not hurt in the incident. Scroll Goes To Ford On Energy A 10-foot petition signed by hundreds who either live or work in Newport Beach or Irvine, will be presented to President Ford Wednesday in Washington. The petition is part of Project Independence, a grassroots cam- paign to encourage individual contributions toward saving energy in the U .S. Are GaYs Calling Pltiys in the NFL? Participants in the project walk, bicycle, ride in carpools, or. take the bus to work. Most work at Newport Center or in the lrvine Industrial Complex. The petition is being presented to the President by Al Auer, an Irvine Company vice pn!Sidenl. The petition to the President and Congress, asks that the COUD· try develop an energy p<>llcy that allows Independence from foreign oll sources and en- coura1es more energy.saving methods domestically. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Some bit name pl'O'f ootball players, in- cluding at leut three startirtg quarterbacks, are either homosexual or bisexual, the Wasbinetoo Star saJd today. ln the tint of a folJr-pert series, ala.I' aports wriur Lynn RolelUni wrote that she based btt state- ment on lntcrv!eW'!i with more than 60 athletes. coaches, 1po1U officials, r•ycholo1l1ts and members o the gay communltY durtnj tbe past three months . 'Ibe new a paper Usted no namet ct athletes of either sex but the •tGl'Y aald; "•Some ot the blaest I names in football, including at leut thr" 1tartln1 Qllarterbacks in the Netional Football League, ·are bomoeexual or bisexual." Miaa Roaelllni made these «tier useriiona: -Anlipy pressure ls so in- tenH that many male athletes wbo PT fer homosexual reJa- Uooahl119 maintain trontS"as mar· rled meo With children. ~P to JO percent ot women athletH, Including tennis and ~ atan, ar lee bl ms. -The ~roeataa• of male tiolDOHXllalt lft lportl ls pro- ,babl,y cloee tot.be~ percent whlcb preva!la ln society u a whole. MIA Promise WASHINGTON (UPI> -A Hou.e subcommittee bu re. tunMd Ctom P arls witb a North Vietnamese promise to account Cor AJDericans mlssln~ ln In· ~bin a aJonc with a request that the United State Uft Its trade embar,o and provlde re- ~ aJd. "Many more applicants were required at their own expense lo document the absence of disease that in truth never existed but was erroneously reported,'' Philp said. "Other applicants were caused undue worry regarding theit health and voluntarily expended their own funds to ascertain lheit true health status." (See PIULP, Page.A%) ATSC Gets Backing, No Money Officials of an independent center offering diversion and treatment to juvenile offenden won spiritual support but no casb Monday from Newport Beach cit3 councilmen. Instead, the Assessment and Treatment Services Center o• Coastal Orange County, whict has dealt with about 00 Newpor1 voungsters so (ar this year, will have to wait until early next yea1 to find out if Newport will chip it lo help defray next year 't estimated expenses. Initial estimates of Newport·a share in the costs were set al $20,000 for the coming year, but councilmen echoed a simil~r posi· lion taken recently by the City oi Irvine and balked at lendin& anything but moraJ support. Officials in both cities have said the county should pay for th' service. At Monday's session, center Vice President George Jones of Newport Beach said that recent fund·raising activities from the private sector were successful He gave no indication that the Newport contri bu lion would make or break the program. He stressed that the entity h~ won strong praise for its low rate of repeat offenders. Instead of g<> ing directly into the juvenile justice system, youngsters re- ferred to the center by police can be served through counseling. Their parents also are brought in for cons ultation. The only strong support for the dona lion from Newport came from Councilman Howard Rogers, who termed the sum a re- latively nominal amount. He said that delays in the city's answer would only complicate the cen- ter's budget for the coming cal en· daryear. But be finally went with the council majority which promises that after further study of tho diversion concept in general. and of the center specifically, final answer would come from Newport. Coas• Weather Fair skies through Wcd- ·nesday but patchy fog near the coast in the morning hours. Highs Wednesday, 68 at t.he beaches rising to 75 inland. Lows tonight 47 toS3. INSIDE TODA '1 ~of~jvrv~. fClrY'Mr Colifqmja Lf. Cw. Ed Rrincdce .. ~ ..,.. &ogo/romhn~. A5. •••ex AU •tt AQ ~ .,. •••• ••• aw ' AIJ Alt ·~ ,. ' . " ·--~ 4•.4.2 DAILY PILOT N _finors -1 ·.Atwater . l Holiday 011 Jan1boree? This is what Irvine Company plans for 16 acres bet ween Coast Highway. Jamboree Road and Back Bay Dn\'e. De\'elopment plans center on proposed 200-room Holi- day Inn. Project is scheduled to go before Newport Beach Planning Commission Dec. 18 for initial action. $8 Million Given by Foundation The Irvine Foundation gave more than S8 m11Jion. three times its 1974 gifts, lo California or- ganizations in 1975, according to the foundation annual report. Orange County groups rc- cen·ed twice as much as dunng the previous year, but the percentage of the total given Orange County groups dropped from 19.6 percent to 14 percent. San Francis co Ba y area groups received Sl.5 million, compared to the $1.15 million re- ceived by Orange County groups. Although the foundation ·s as- sets consist primarily of Irvine Company s tock, only one member of the board oC direc- tors, Mrs. Charles Wheeler of -NeWJ>Ort Beach. is an Orange County resident. Five members of the eight· member board are San Fran-cisco residents, two are from Los Angeles and one is from Ven- tura. Gifts to Orange County groups during the fiscal year that ended March 31. 1975 included: Hoag Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach. $525.000 ; Martin Luther Hospital. Anaheim, $50,000; St. Jude Hos pital. Fullerton, Sl 00. 000. Also. South Coast Community Hospital. Sou th Laguna, $100,000 ; Central Orange County , YWCA . Orange, $11 ,500; Girl Scouts Council of Orange County, S25,000; YMCA of Orange Coun- ty, Santa Ana, $100,000; YWCA of Santa Ana, $49, 750. Also. Goodwill Industries of Orange County, Santa Ana. S25.000; The Salvation Army, Santa Ana. $25,000: United Way or Orange County. Orange, $66,800; Laguna Beach School of Art. Lag una Beach, $50,000 ; Lyric Opera A ssocialion of Orange County. Laguna Beach, $14 ,000 ; Orange County Philharmonic Society, Newport Beach, $15,000 · Basque Killed : MAD RI 0 , Spain (U PI) • Police in Spam's restive Basque region shot and killed a man lo· day, fought a gun battle with left- : wing agitators and foiled an al- : tempt to bomb a police station. c : ORANGE COAST . <d . .. ' A . ... , ., . ~ . . . .. • :J ·: • II N DAILY PILOT ftw °'~ '°''' D•ily P1toe, wdh #hoth I\ c.,,.,,bh•~ thr t'~f'W1-f'r~'~· " pyt:h~ OY It\.• o.....,. Co••I Pul>li""•m,i ton'*'' .,.""""' ..ail-\ •re l>Ut>lll~•d N'<><wM• '"'°""" Fro ... , 1or eo.w McY, Ntwoon &o«h, Hunll"<ll"" B*•<l'lt FOU"'t•ln \111llt-y , lrw•n•. !tMktl•b.t<l. VAllt1 •"" L.Agune Bu< h '>ou!h C.0..'1 A ""Git ·~-• od•llOI> I• publl\h.-d .,,.,..,.,." -s .... dAY\ 1~ prlftCIPAI pUl>h\llu'Q pl~nl " •I lJO W..\1 Be1 Str"I, c .. 1. M•M, (•11101"'• '11•1o. Robert N. Weed Pr .. 10.nt •nd Pvbtt...,.• Jack R. Curley VI« ll'T"i0e11I .... c;._ .. Men19" ThomH Keevll E~ Thomas A. Mul'J)tllne _"" ... lelilOt Charles H Loo~ RIC'Nrd P. Nall '"'~"•"' ~"91"11 Edl'Or\ From Page AJ CANYON BLAZE ••• station had lines established along the top of the canyon within an hour. A county fire spokesman said at that point, the blaze appeared to be contained within less than 100 acres but then the wind picked up. Hot ashes jumped the fire line and the blaze · raced down Williams Canyon. just off San-. tiago Canyo.n Road, and the. whole hillside burst into names as sparks ignited explosive manzanita bushes and dry grass. Firemen tried vainly to save Rancho Soldona, a cluster of houses and barns owned by Phil and Sue Charlton on the slopes of Santiago Canyon. The main ranch house, the· guest house and all the out_ build- ings burned to the ground m less than 15 minutes, according to count y fire Capt. Bruce TurbeviHe. Then the smoke and names ap- peared ominously on the hills above Silverado School and the children were evacuated by bus. They returned later Monday af. ternoon when the fire was stopped and extinguished only a few hundred yards away from the builiding. Fire officials said only a last - minute back fire and strong sup- From Page A I CELLA ••• furnishing the records but only to doing so without being reim- bursed. The absence of bank records notwithstanding. the federal grand jury continued its in- vestigation into Celia's affairs during the day. Key witness as the jury's in- quiry entered its second week was Jerry Zane lli , s t ate Democratic Senate caucus party leader. Zanelli was reportedly paid by Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana. while it was under Celia's control. for actually working out of county on political matters. It is alleged that the payments to Zanelli were disguised on the hospital records as payments for professional services never ren· dered. The jury is also investigating payments to fictitious firms for s upplies never received. Bank records obtained by the county grand jury show that payments to the phony firms were deposit- ed in multiple accounts on which Cella had power of signature. Also called before the jury Monday was Pat Wood, a worker in the personnel department at Mission Community Hoopital, Mission Viejo, and Stephen Evans, former assistant ad- ministrator at Mercy General. port from crews saved the school. dropping helicopters used to knock down hot spots on the fire· s · perimeter. As they landed, water was pumped into their empty tanks and within minutes, the choppers were back in the air. In the early hours, Williams Canyon was the hottest spot on the fire line. A fireman on the scene said the flames shot down the narrow ca- nyon like a funnel and jumped across Santiago Canyon Road. · By 1 p.m .• only charred skeletor.s of trees were left in what was once a shady glen called Williams Canyon. · • Firemen had saved the scat- tered bo\.ises and barns in the ca- nyon, including a s uburban style house sitting by itself on a hilltop above the canyon floor. The flames destroyed a colony of domestic bees in a canyon clearing and swarms of the bees hovered around the smoldering remains of their hives. · The prevailing wind carried the flames out of Silverado and Williams canyons, across the face of Santiago Canyon's eastern slope and into the dry bed of Santiago Creek. Tinder dry grass, brush and old live oaks in the creek bed s pread the flames up the other slopes of Santiago Canyon, where it centered in the Limestone Ca- nyon region -unpopulated and almost inaccessible. Fire officials said the flames were stopeped by ground crews and dozens of aerial water and ·· fire retardant drops by a fleet of aircraft that included helicop- ters, twin-engine borate bombers and a silvery DC-7 called "The Great White Hope." NY Bankrupt Bill Pmhed WASHINGTON (UPI> -Con- gress is working on legislation tq make it possible for big cities to go bankrupt -just in case the forthcoming $2.3 billion in federal loans fail to save New York from financial collapse. The last obstacle to the loan program -the will power of Sen. James B. Allen (0-Ala.) -gave way Monday. He said he would no longer try to block a bill ap- propriating the money tor the loan. Fog up North By Tbe Associated Press Dense fog clutched parts of Northern California this morn- ing, with zero visibility in areas of Alameda, Contra Costa and Sacramento Counties. Balboa's Lighting . Debate Hits Panel Balboa's battle of the street lilbt3 nared briefly before city councilmen Monday as residents ~ West Bay A venue debated the ment1 of night u~ before agreeing to a delay ln a city de- cision. The council agreed to wait several more week.a to allow resl- denu of the street f rortting the bay to fully explore the C'Olt.s to each homeowner of a comblna· tion project calling f« under- IJ'OWld utilities and mission bell street U&bU. Baldenll on th bay 11deotth rQad favor the ~b. But ac.ros~ I • . ln~andy Tax Told Tandy Corporation tax manaeer William Hughes ad· milted late Monday in Orange County Superior Court that his company's property tax state- ment for 1972 revealed "some omissions.'' But Hughes, called as the third witness in the bribery trial of Congressman Andrew Hinshaw. insisted tbat he believed the document to be accurate when be signed it and sent il to the Orange County Assessor's Office. Cross-examined by Marshall Morgan, Hughes con- firmed the defense attorney's suggestion that be reimbursed Tandy Vice President James Buxton for $1 ,000 given to Hinshaw by Buxton as a cam- paign contribution. And Hughes, granted immuni- ty from prosecution in return for his testimony, admitted be was aware at the time that it is illegal for corporations to make contributions to candidates I or federal office. Hinshaw, 54, is accused of ac- cepting and soliciting bribes while he served as county as- sessor prior to his election to Congress in 1972. It is alleged that the Newport .Beach Republican accepted gifts of stereo equipment and a $1,000 campaign contribution from the Tandy Corporation and that he solicited a bribe from a lawyer representing Beckman Instru- ments in an· assessment appeals bearing. Accountant Paul Tabor, Hughes' predecessor as Tandy's tax expert, admitted in earlier testimony that the company saved between $25,000 and $30,000 a year by undervaluing its inven- tory statements before submit- ting them to the assessor's office. Tabor admitted that he told Radio Shack employes to grant discounts to assessor's employes "as an investment in lower taxes." He also tesUfied that a tax ex- emption sought by the company on its imported electronic equip- ment was denied by the county assessor's office and later grant- ed when Tandy contributed. to Hinsbaw's campaign fund. Tabor also testified that the contribution to the Hinshaw fund was made via Buxton's personal check because "we could get more mileage" out of a contribu- tion made in that manner. Bomb Suspect ;Blown to !lits WARREN, Ohio (UPI) -A bombing suspect who kept an arsenal of guns and dynamite in his traijer home apparently blew himself to pieces as authorities approached to arrest him for the beating death of bis former mother-in-law. Pete l sipis, special in- vestigator for the federal Alcohol, Tobacco and f'irearms department, said Monday he believed pieces of a body scat- tered over a 100-square-yard area were those of Edwin MiUer. 32, a "loner who was divorced on- ly a week ago." Miller, also wanted for ques- tioning about four bombings, had been charged with the murder of bis former mother-in-law, Mildred Smith, 66. whose bat- tered body was found in her home in Enon Valley, PA. .,.,.., ,. ... S4lllf ..... HITS TESTING ARM County He•lth'a Phllp Front Page Al .PHILP ••• Philp went on to say that there were some instances where a potential "life threatening er- rors" were performed that might have .. major liability implica- tions for the county of Orange." The health officer concluded his report by saying in bis opi-. Dion the errors and the possibili· ty of continuing errors negate any potential value in the con- troversial contracts. Philp's report contradicts a ·finding by administrative and personnel department workers who have claimed the Orange County Health Testing Institute is working to the county's advan- tage. · The contract, which became effective July 1, became the sub- ject of controversy between the health department and personnel department officials. Philp and Dr. Thomas Hamilton complained that their recommendations against awarding the contract to an out· side firm were ignored when personnel director Bert Scott re· commended the contract be awarded to OCHTI rather than be maintained in the health de- partment. Tax Cut Bill Pact Studied WASHINGTON (AP) -As Senate bearings on extension o{ this year's tax cuts began, Senate leaders expressed hope today of a compromise with President Ford that would permit Congress ·. to recess for Christmas as planned. Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield and Republican Leader Hugh Scott said they hope that Ford could be prompt with any veto so that an override vote could be scheduled immediately. The President is planning to tell Congress again that he will stand by his vow to veto any ex- tension of the 1975 tax cuts if they are unaccompanied by spending reductions. ·Soliah to Appeal SACRAMENTO CAP) -An at- torney for Steven Soliah, one of Patricia Hearst's companions before her arrest, said Monday the defense will appeal a court ruling against a bail reduction re- quest. La Wyer On Stand By TOM BARLEY OtU-. O.lly .......... Nancy Fuller Atwater's lawyer testified today that defendant Daniel Garbis Bedelian never told him during a series d con- versations that Mrs. Atwater tried to kill her husband during the fracas that led to her death last Feb. s. Called as a rebuttal witness by the prosecution, estate attorney Bertl'am Flagel told an Orang<> County Superior Court jury that · Bedellan. 40, told hlm during several office interviews that h.e acted in self defense when he killed Mrs. Atwater in her Newport Beach bottle. "But be never said anything to me about her going into her husband's bedroom,'• F1agel said. "And be never told me anything at any time about his preventing Mrs. Atwater from killing her husband." Bedelian told the jury that Mrs. Atwater was on her way to her invalid husband's bedroom with a carving knife when he in- . t.ervened and grabbed her in a bear bug. Tbe male nurse testified that he was compelled to club Mrs. Atwater, 50, to the floor with a bronze figurine when she turned the knife on him. Bedeliao testified that he panicked when be realized that Mrs. Atwater w..s dead and that be wrapped her body in a rug and shoved it into the trunk of his car. The Lebanese immigrant then drove to an auto wrecking yard in Pacoima, stuffed Mrs. Atwater's body into a SS-gallon oil drum and filled it to the rim with liquid cement. Flagel also testified today that the Atwaters were openly affec- tionate in his presence ilJld that A.G. Cox Atwater called his wife "Momsy" and she called him "Popsy". A defense witness earlier testified that Mrs. Atwater called her husband "a slob", openly ·wished for his death and threatened her ailing spouse with divorce until he met whatever demand she had in mind at the moment. Male nurse Frank Corley also testified that when be worked for the Atwaters at the Perham Drive home in 1973 he could only· count on Mrs. Atwater being sober for about 30 minutes in the early morning. The special duty nurse said his . employer drank at least a quart of liquor a day and that she fed her invalid husband amounts or alcohol far in excess of the amount allowed by his physician. Thieves Li/t Film Projector A $2,000 movie projector has been stolen from a building at the Aeronutronic Ford complex in Newport Beach. according to a police report. Emoloyes reoorting the theft told police the projector was in a room where numerous persons have access. They said the Bell and Howell projector appears to be the conventional type to show borne movies, but actually shows only one frame at a time and is of no use to the average home movie viewer. an Impressive and unique ·commemoration of our bicentennial, beautifully boxed for gifts to friends and formal presentations • for your home, office, store • for schools, fraternal or social clubs, young peoples ors.inizatlons, business and trade a!.soc.iations • for busines~ gifts, awards and congratulatory presentat1onc; Wtt pmudly Pfl'Wfll .,,,,. Amenu11 lr1t"nd wall-rus:. hf.1r- loom ~.1111y for tr•dllloNI nr torif,,mpor•rw M'ltt11r The l.lalt'. l•l-l"rty 8f.ll arid I 1'11 •~ "'1>•ctNI to 24 tttlt'-1o-11ll' colon 1111 ~.,,,....,~Ith~ '''l''•c f•bc'r '"''""'"ind •'m'" .trr \¥"·"<' lor pr.ci.>(>11, ttKtt fr1tlwr k dtfllltd, the •"'''~""'ti '' 1, ~·blr tllc lla1ft rNI. "'hll« and blur •rt,..,. b11nl 111 tlw-f'llr•l'llW>M h11• it I kttpMl.ft lolderC"\f)llm-DEN s··" .... ,. .. -"."''"'~;- 1a;:p;;IJJ--· .• -.... .., .. : iiisia11it~oii: ·custom .d ra psries \ I I I \ I I I I I ( 'j I !: . ' I I r I ~ I l Michigan Test" Model Law Seen Ori Malpractice B7SYLVL\ PORTER bl ~b of Jan. 1, n new Jaw will go into effect in Michigan w c may become the model for national lelisJation to end lhe spiral in medical malpractice lnsuranee coats -and thereby, to help curb mod.le al C06t.s ror au of us. - even before the law ··,.---------..... i& teated, close atudents· \ Money's Worth of ill pr-ovisiont forecast. that it wilt make medical history, alter the' im~ae of the medical prOfession. do away witb the spec- tacles .of emotional trials Wore lnexpert Juries and the ~warding or huge s~ to patients which end up primarily m the lawyers' pockets. • AT THE VEBY l.EAST, the prospect is tor "stabilizing malpractice prem1ums,'' says John F . Dodge, Detroit la~er and general rounsel for Michigan's Physician's cruts.Co,mmittee -and that means the paUeqt will benefit. <In Michigan, of the malpractice dollar, 55 cents goes to the legal system, 23 cents to the patient, the balance to the in· surance company. It's even worse in some other states.) The medical malpractice insurance crlsis may have slid oft the front pages recently, but do not be lulled. The resp~te is only temporary. Physicians are re~lllng against th~ lll5Urance charges ... t)ack.ing away from risking what might be life-saving procedures for fear of inviting malpractice suits. Insurance companies have made it clear they detest the whole area of malpractice insurance. Juries conUnue to make financial awards that threaten to un· derminethe practice of medicine in the U.S. AS FOR US, TllE patients, the estimate is we now can be paying an extra $2 to $3 per office visit because of the cos· .ts of malpractice insurance. If surgery is involved, even greater irisurance risk costs may be passed on to us. And famed heart-transplant surgeon Dr. Christiaan Barnard of South Africa also voices concern that U.S. sur- geons Will hesitate to use new remedial surgery techniques (because of the malpractice suit threat) and this could slow down U.S. surgical progress against heart disease, top killer of all killer diseases in this country. The core of the new legislation -the importance of whicb obviously goes far beyond Michigan to touch the lives and pockets of all or us -is "binding contractual arbitra· lion" -basically, an arrangement under which the patient signs an arbitration agreement. While many states have -Voluntary arbitration, this is not frequently used. Under the Michigan law, a voluntary arbitrator will be selected to ex- amine the validity of a complaint against a doctor or hl»pital. WHAT MIGHT BE SOME of the results of the law? (1) Awards need not be financial, a condition of settle- ment necessary to a court jury system. Rather, an arbitrator might award surgery to remedy the patient's condition~ or signal for convalescent care; or order a trust fund to continue for the life of the patient and then revert to theinsuror. (2) A closer check will be made on the competency of 'Physicians, giving the public the bonus of higher medical ef· ficiency. Lists of doctors involved in 10 or more malpractice suita over a period time are to be compiled; the appearance on these lists of doctors often involved in malpractice suits will trigger investigation. State medical rerulations are be· ing tightened too to weed out incompetents and to protect competentdocton, (3) A decided speedup will occur in the handling and settling of maJpracticesuits. Newport Company's Product in England Newport Pharmaceuticals International Inc. has an· nounced the completion of an agreement with the Boots Co. Ud., Nottingham, England, whereby Boots will market Newport 's new anti-viral agent, Iaoprinosine, in the United Kingdom . lsoprinosine. Boots was thedeveioperor a new antirheumatic dTug , Molrib. and it operates the· largest retail pha rmacy network in .the United Kingdom. Boots will have the responsibility for obtaining governmental approval to market Jsoprinosine in the agreed territory. Provisions have also been made for a program of mutual technical cooperation between Boots andNe~rt. The agreement represents the culmination of many months of negotiation and a comprehensive analysis and evitluation by Boots of Newport's extensive clinical and laboratory data on Market lnde.re• ., ~ '""'• '•""' ... leM, ff'nl! i.,o.1 •J..• up ASE IMe• 11.1• oft ~' llMI 11t.1S XI •$ & I' JllO SIO(k' II.JO up . " ... rn 0.2J Nftl:! 1' ork 15 ltlo•t Aeflee Tuesday's Closing Prices . . -. N DIJLY ~LOT A Jt,\ NEW · YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ·• l 'e •r•• Uigh-Low• Appear Every Salurday • I • Warning: The Surgeon Gene ral Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking fs Dangerous to Your Health . ., ., . ' I I , ' • Marlboro LIGHTS LOWERED TAR & NICOTINE ·~ r 1 I I I I l l I Today' Clos~g N.Y. Stoeks • ._v_o_L_._6a_,_N_o_. _343_,_2_s_e_cr_1 o_N_;s,_2_8_P_A_G_E"""."s ___ --=--------o~R!:::::A~N~G:!E~c.=o.=u!!N:.!.TY:.!.L., !:::CA~L~J!.!F..!:O::.:.R.!.!N.!.!l:.!:A~ __ __:_T.:u.:e:.:.:soA v , oeceMB e R 9, 191s c TEN CENtS .Probe ·of Cella Bank Records Nixed· By GARY GRANVILLE ot-.DllUyl"lletMA" A move to subpoena bank re-~m tracing Dr. Louis Cella's ~mplex financial political deal-in&s was quashed Monday by a federal judge in Los Angeles. If the government wants Crock~ National Bank to pro- vide copies of Celia's recor~ for use in ita investigation of the San- U; ~a physician, it should reim- burse the bank for ita costs, Judge Jesse W. Curtis ruled. Subject of a subpoena quashed by Judge Curtis were bank re- cords covering roughly 30 personal and business accounts controlled by Cella in recent years a s he emerged a s California's top political cam- paigJl donor. . Tbe bank records were sought in connection with a federal 1rand jury investigation of Cella's tax status as well as Medicare payments to two Orange County hospitals under his control until recently. Seeking the same records and already in possession of some as a result of executed search war- rants is the Orange County Grand Jury. The county jury is investigat· ing possible fraud, embezzle- ment and grand theft allegations as the res ult of the use of camourtaged hospital funds purportedly used to bankroll Cella in bis political and business ventures. • In seeking to have the feder al subpoena quashed, Crocker at- torneys argued that it would cost the banlc an estimated 1,000 man hours and $12,500 to meet the sub- poena's demands. And while government at- torneys argued there is no prece· dent for demanding reimburse- ment of costs, Judge Curtis said the subpoena placed "an onerous burden on people who are not suspec t e d o f committing a crime." "If you want tha t informatton, you can make a deal with the bank," the judge said after up· holding the bank's motion to quash. l I Government attorneys said .i.n a brief opposing the motion to quash that the bank's reluctance to comply with the subpoena ~ frustrating the government's in- vestigation and made reference· to 17 auditors waiting for the re- cords. Bank officials made it clear Monday they were not oPposed lo . <See CELLA, Page AZ) ~ealth Testing Firm Under Fire DldlY "'"" ~ .,. .. ~ ....... .CANYON BLAZE BOMBED WITH FIRE RETARDANT Plane Drops Payload Near Santiago Canyon Road Firefighters Douse Silverado Blazes By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of .. Delly l"l let Slaff Hundrecjs of firefighters worked until almost midnight Monday before fully containing a brush fire that burned across 1,700 acres of Orange County's rugged canyon areas. · The blaze, which broke out ear- ly Monday in Silverado Canyon, was finally halted by an army of 1,000 firemen just as it topped the ridge of foothills overlooking east Irvine and El Toro Marine Corps ·Air Station. (Additional story, ·photos Paee A3. > Today, county fire officials said the fire could easily have been much worse if winds were stronger -perhaps rivaling the 1987 Paseo Grande inferno that burned 50,000 acres in the ~ame ceneral area, destroying 66 bomes. Two dwellings and a guest house were deatroyed in Mon- Coast Weather · Fair skies through Wed- • nesday but patchy fog near the coast in the morning ·hours. Higbl Wednesday, 68 at the beaches rising lo 75 inland. Lows tonight 47 to53. . . INSIDE TODAY · a.ortd of pa/1''1/ eonuidk>n, fomwr C411/ondo l..t. Gou. Ed Rdnlcu u pond~ng whert to go from Mrl. AS. ladex day's blaze and there were only two reported injuries -a Mod- jeska man who broke his leg and a volunteer fireman sent to the hospital with an eye cut. The fire was triggered when a bottled gas beater exploded in the bedroom of the Fred Meyling home in Silverado Canyon. No one was at home at the time. The flames spread rapidly but quick response by the Silverado Volunteer Fire Department and (See CANYON, Pa.ce AZ) Ocean Search Canceled for Mesa Couple The search for a .oosta Mesa couple, missinl at sea aftertbeir 20-foot sail boat was found partially submerced with the body of their son aboard, haf been suspended. ·0ranee County Harbor Depan- ment spokesmen in Newport Beach said the sea search was canceled Moaday. The victims are presumed drowned, spokesmen Hid. . Missing are Steven Miller, rr, and bis wife, Sberre, 21. The l>odi of their s1ear-old son, Sbawn, was f oun aboard the aemf.i. submerged aallboat Suaiclay about one mUe off Abalaoe Pa&nt, near Lapna Beach. Harbor D•partmeot ~. HUT7 Wrilbt said tf the ~ couple did drown, their tJo4Ma ml&bt be recovered "in a weekortwo." Harbor Departmtnt and U.S. CoaM Gu~ officials ex.amlned the ttatl Monday after lt wu towed to shore but could not Cive an exact caue for the slnkina. Wricbt 1a1d several experl· ments were conducted. on the boat and that it appeared posal· ble the craft became swamped with "Water tbrooab tho outboard enitnowell. ') ,~ Branded As Below Standard Jn a special report tothe Board of Supervisors, Orange County Health Officer John Philp today branded the performance of a health testing firm linked lo Dr. Louis Cella as below standard and unacceptable. Subject of Pbilp's criticism was the four-month performance of Orange County Health Testin~ Institute, an· operation in which Cella said be divested himself of any financial interest six months before it was awarded a $275,000 county con- tract. Philp's report said that in 683 physical examinatims provided prospective county~ployes, 1"2- ended with erroneous laboratory repol"ta •. Another 24 exams invalved pbysicia.ll ~. u .wwe found io ltan tntn. or cOmpUter er- rors and 22 bore false informa- tion, accordiag to the county health officer. ~I The county health-officer also cited 73 instances of minor medical errors, 43 physiological test errors and 43 other errors in performance. As a result of the errors, ac- cording to Philp, there were de- lays in hiring or rejection of otherwise qualified applicants. "Many more applicants were required at their own expense to document the absence bf disease that in truth never existed but was erroneously reported," Philp said. "Other applicants were caused undue worry r egarding their health and voluntarily expended their own funds to ascertain their true health status." Philp went on to say that there were some instances where a potential '"life threatening er- rors" were performed that might have "major liability implica- tions for the counliy of Orange.'' The health officer concluded his report by saying .in rus opi- nion the errors and the possibili- ty of continuing errors negate any potential value in the con- troversial contracts. Philp's report contradicts a finding by administrative and ..,sonnel department workers who have claimed the Orange County Health Testing Institute is working to the county's advan- tage. The contract, whk,b became effective July l, became the sub- ject of controversy between the health department and personnel department officials. Philp and Dr. Thom as <See PmLP, Page A%) ....., ............ HITS TESTING FIRM County Health'• Phip D#tY "9111 s..ft ~ EULA 11EN9CH (LEFT), NEIGH80R ELEANOR BllOUWEA EXAMINE DAMAGE Mrs. Rensda Among Apartment Dwellers Who Lost Cars In Monday Night Fire Police Probe Arson 2MenRob Mesa Store; $483 Lost Mter Carport Fire Costa Mesa police and firemen are investigating the possibility of arson in a carport fire Monday that destroyed four cars. It was the second suspicious fire at a carport in the vicinity in four months. ' A fire in August burned eight cars in a carpo rt directly across the alley from the scene of Mon· day night's fire behind 'l77 E . 16th Place. The 7 p.m. fire destroyed cars belonging to Reg Webb, EuJ a Rensch, Lena M. Bussel and C.E. Kirkwood. Webb lost a car in the earlier fire. F ire m e n estim a t ed the 'damage in Monday's fire a t $4,000 to the carport and $9,000 to the cars. The earlier fi re was investigat- ed for signs of a rson. but no firm evidence was found, according to fire department Battalion Chier Bob McClelland . An armed r obbery, led by a puffy-eyed, pistol brandishing bandit, netted two men $483 from a Costa Mesa supermarket Mon-cf ay night. The men robbed the Stater Brothers market at 707 W. 19th SL, Costa Mesa, at about 8:4$ p.lfn . A clerk at the store told police the men wandered around the store, picking up two lemons, twq cartons or cigar ettes and a candy bar. Are Gays Calling ·Plays in the NFL? She said they got in line at the check stand, but when she began to give the men their change, one pulle d ou t a s m all c aliber chrome-plated automatic pistol and demanded the money in the cash drawer. When the clerk said she couldn't give them the money, one of the men reached over the counter and scooped out the cash. WASHINGTON (UPI > -Some 'big name pro football players, in- cluding at least three starting quarterbac ks, are e ithe r .Mesa Census Scheduled For January They're goinJ? to start counting beads in Costa Mesa next month: And every head that is round, beyond the 78,000 which the state estimates there are in Costa Mesa, is worth $13.50 a year in re- venu~to the city from the state. Plan.nine aide Douglas Clark said that the city staff estimates that there are about 82,000 people intbeclty. Clark said that the census will belin Jan. 14, and urged the sup· port of residents in letting the ·cemu.t takers make their check. . Tt.e city ts seeking applications for tbe 170 temporary census- t.akin• positions. The pay is $2.35 an bour. Applications may be made to tbe city's personnel of-ft«. 'lbe last time a c.nsus was 'taken Lo eo.ta Mesa. was in 1970 1'heo a federal survey placed the populaUon at 72,660. For tax- atltribuUoo P\llpos , the state bu made annual population tilitlm.._ neey 1,ear ai.oce then. Clift:::.-W.. u;tt all but four ~7cihMI iD ~ wW be ecmductin• CenlUIUinJuuary. homosexual or b isexual, the Washlngton Star said today. The newspaper listed no names of athletes of either sex but the story said : "Some of the biggest names in football , including at least three starting quarterbacks in the National Football League, are homosexual or bisexual.'' Miss R osellini made these other assertions . -Antigay pressure is so in- tense that many male athletes who prefer homosexual rela - tionships maintain fronts as mar- ried men with children. . -Up to 20 percent or women athletes, including tennis and golf stars, are les bians. -The percentage of m ale homosexuals in s ports is pro· ,bably close to the 5 percent which prevails in society as a whole. The two men fled on foot, leav· ing a trail of s pilled money on their way to the door. The robbers w ere described as male Mexicans, both with black hair and brown eyes. One man was described as five feet. five inches tall, about 150 pounds. The second man was described as fi ve feet, two inches tall, 135 pounds and with swelling around his left eye and up~r lip. Botll were in.their mid-20's. Teenager Kill~ 1 r VISALIA CAP) -A Pixley teenager was killed when the car in which he was riding plowed into a school bus in near-zero visibility tog Monday. Taxes Due First DeaJl,Uw Wednesday· Wednesday Is the deadline for mailing the !irat install· metttofth.is year's property taxes without penalty, accordinJ to Orange County Tu Collector· Tl'(!asurer Robert Clt.ron. IF PAYMENTS AREN'T received or postmarked by Wednesday, a six percent delinquency fee will be charged, Citron Said. The tax collector said as of Dec . 2, about $46 million of the first ln.stallment total ott296 mJllioo bad been received by bis office. A TOl'AL OF•• property tax bills were mailed out by Citron'• office in October as the first step toward a•~ inc more th on $592 mllllon tn county property taxes this ~ar. I I I I DMLYP1LOT c Tu.day, o.c.mber 9. 1975 Puppet Port royal Angela Claxton, 6. and her dog, "Spot," entertain friends through a make believe . television set. Children were taking part in after school playground activity at Lindbergh School in Costa Mesa. Angela entertained with her version of a Cat Worthington television commercial during program sponsored by city Department of Leisure Services. From Pag e Al CELLA ... furnishing the record5 but only to doing so without bemg reim- bursed. The absence of bank records notwiths tanding. the federal grand jury continued its in- vestigation into Cclla's affairs during the day. Key witness as the jury's in- quiry entered its second week was Jerry Zanelli. stale Democratic Senate caucus party leader. Zanelli was reportedly paid by Mercy General Hospital, Santa ~a. while it was under Celia's control, for actually working out of county on political matters. It is alleged that the payments to Zanelli were disguised on the hospital records as payments for professional services never ren- dered. The jury is ilso iuvest.lgating payments to fi ctitious firms for s upplies nev er received. Bank records obtained by the county grand jury show that payments to the phony firms \\ere deposit- ed in multiple account~ on which Cella had power of s1gnalure. . Also called before the jury Monday was Pat Wood, a worker in the personnel dl'partmenl at Mi ssion Community Hoopital. Mission Vi ejo, and Stephen Evans. former assistant ad- ministrator at Mercy General. Tax Cut Bill - Pact Studie d WASHI NGTON (AP) -As Senate hearings on extension of this year's tax cuts began. &mate !eaders expressed hope today of a compromise with President Ford that would permit Congress to recess for Christmas as planned. Democrati c Leader Mike Mansfi e ld and Republican Leader Hugh Scott said they h~pe that Ford could be prompt with any veto so that an override vote could be scheduled immediately. The President is planning to tell Congress again that he will stand by his vow to veto ~Y ex- tension of the 1975 tax cuts if they are unaccompanied by spending reductions. ORANGE COAST fhf-0rM'9• (o.t,t 0it1¥ P 1l1Jt ._.,fh wl"i•CP\ t\ c~+N"d IM Nf'W'\ Prt .,, ., O\lhh)I t f'.I bv IN> O<~ Cw\I Pi;bh\hol\Q ,.,.,,._, ""°"'•'• ..,.,,.,..~ .,. pi;bh\IMd M-·· '"'"'41 F n<Uv for Gott. ~w. NtwpOrl 11 ... c11, H""'•"9IOO'I 8••<1•1fO"n'••n V•ll•y, '"'"".1 !>•Odl•D•O V•ll•y .,,., l•oun• & .. tll/So<illl UM\I A >lnQI• reoioN1 tOIUon " publl\Md ..,.,.,,"""...., ~"" dn• TM l>'ln<•o•I publl\lllnQ P4•nl •• •I llO Wnl 8•y '.!iltte1. COii• Mt\4, Celllntno• '1616 Robert N. Weed PrnlO•"' •'ld Pubh\Nf Jack R. Curley Vtc.a Prtl10tnt •nd Gtntt'•I Mill"MIQl't' Thomas Keevil (dllo• Thomas A. Murphlne ~~•o•nt Ee111°' Q\arles H Loos Richard P. Nall ., ... , ... , -.... q .... ( ...... , Cost-. Mtsoa Offke ,.., "'"' n., ~,, ... , -·" .. ,...,, ... , 0 -11 ... ftl>t Oth~Offlces .... ~t .. A(I\ ~,.........,'°"" .... '--.... n t I~ Gff,,,,.Y'• 'nr•~I >t...,, ''"'"'°" fit .. ., r HUt .. ..,fl l\euWv.trd ,,...., •IM< ....... , H)tl IA .... It-··~n O• ... , ,_., ~~ It/I Or-( .. ,, ~Ill•"" C,.... ~y Jr.o ,.., t•t1fo\ tfl"Ur.tilCW'I"-, f'f'f•V..t.tt '"'4"•' or •Uh•''' -"""""" Pt•t•t" m i1y b4J 'tl'Nt1l•O w '"'Cul ''''' ••• Hfn'Ht\IOt\ of C.WYt~O~fl'WtloH \l'trtftd ti•\\ ci1Hla,,~ P•i4' •f ""''• Mfli'•• C,.,ti...m• !Jtlb\lr•pl1C'~ by C..WrtH "' 11 "'°"'" lfll~ n'f"'*'"' l\mnn11111. ,,.,..,..,,.,..11..,11- .,,S.....,1111. ~ I F rom Page A l CANYON BLAZE. ~ • the nearby U.S. Forest Service station had lines established along the top of the canyon within an hour. A county fire spokesman said at that point. the blaze appeared to be contained within less than 100 acres but then the wind picked up . Hot ashes jumped the fire line and the blaze raced down Williams Canyon, just off San- tiago Canyon Road. and the whole hillside burst into flames as sparks ignited explosive manzanita bushes and dry grass. Firemen tried vainly to save Rancho Soldona, a cluster of houses and barns owned by Phil and Sue Charlton on the slopes of Santiago Canyon. The main ranch house, the MUftJt IM>ute ud al.J tbe opt ,bWld- fng• burned tb fbe ~ fn IMs than 15 minutes. according to county fire Capt. Bruce Turbeville. Then the smoke and flames ap- peared ominously on the hills above Silverado School and the children were evacuated by bus. They returned later Monday af- ternoon when the fire was . stopped and extinguished only a few hundred yards away from the builiding. Fire officials said only a last- minute back fire and strong sup- port from c r ews saved the school. IRA Gunmen, Police Test Their Ne r ves LONDON (UPI) Trap ped Iris h Republican Army gunmen rejected an offer of food m exchange for one of th eir hostages today. spurned a supply of water and disrupted their hot lme with police in an intensifying war of nerves on their third day under siege. The police retaliated by cutting off electricity to the apartment living room where the gunmen were holding Mr. and Mrs. John Matthews. It left the three odour IRA gunmen without lights or televis10n news of their ordeal. The apartment heatmg was working. There~ ere fears that Britain's most wanted man, Mi chael Wilson. had escaped during the chase into the Matthews apart- ment last Saturday and was not inside as ongmally thought. "We have not made much pro- gress," a police comman~er said. "But I think they are gradually being worn down and will come out eventually." The gunmen. without food for three days, refused an offer for a meal in exchange for the release of Mrs. Matthews, 53 .. whose nervous condition is a cause for police concern' The I RA men also rejected an offer of more water -the ftrst delivery was made Monday - and disconnected the hot-line when they did not want to speak. The gunmen renewed their de· mand for a plane to Oy Urem to Ireland. 11:wir rejection of the new Cood· !or·bostage proposal came via the bot-line telephone llnkin11 the ltvine room refuge with Policemen ouuide. tt provided another neaouatlon deadlock in the three·day-old Police trap wbtcb at rlrlt was t.bouOt to have cauibt Brit1ln'1 moat wanted man, Michael Wlllon, among the ~\.lllDeO. dropping helicopters used to knock down hot spots on the fire's perimeter. As they landed, water was pumped intb their empty tanks and within minutes, the choppers were back in the air. In the early hours, Williams Canyon was the hottest spot on the fire line. A firem an on the scene said the flames shot down the narrow ca- nyon like a funnel and jumped across Santiago Canyon Road. By l p .m .• only charred skeletor • .s of trees were left in what was once a shady glen called Williams Canyon. · Firemen had saved the scat· tered houses and barns in the ca· nyon, including a suburban style house sitting by itself on a hilltop above I.he C8Dl0D noor. The flames destroyed a colony of domestic bees in a canyon clearing and swarms of the bees hovered around the smoldering remains of their hives. The prevailing wind carried the flames out of Silverado and Williams canyons, across the face of Santiago Canyon's eastern slope and into the dry bed of Santiago Creek. Tinder dry grass, brush and old live oaks in the creek bed spread the flames up the other slopes of Santiago Canyon, where it centered in the Limestone Ca- nyon region -unpopulated and almost inacceisible. Fire officials said the flames were stopeped by ground crews and dozens of aerial water and fire retardant drops by a fleet of aircraft that included helicop- ters, twin-engine borate bombers and a silvery DC ·7 called "The Great White Hope." At the peak of the fire fight. nearly 100 pieces of equipment from the county. U.S. Forest Service and a dozen city fire de· partments were on the lines. There was no panic. All the crews seemed to know exactly what had to be done and where to doit. Shortly after noon, packaged lunches and cartons of milk were delivered to the forestry station in Silverado Canyon so the men could eat when they got breaks. Mingled with the fire engines were Pacific Telephone and Southern California Edison trucks whose crews were trying to assess damage to utility poles and other equipment. Ford Signs NY Loan WASHINGTON CAP) P r eside n t Ford today signed con gressional authorization for $2.3 · billion in loans to New York Clty and asked Congress to appropriate the money. Jn a message, Ford said it would cost $1 million to · administer the loans dur- in8 fiscal 1976 and $315,000 . to e.dminister them during a bud1etary transitional period from next July l through Sept. 30 . 11le President signed the authorization as the ele- mftlts of a federal package l<I keep New York City out ol derault were comlng toaethel'. The House was rudy to approve a change in rederal bankruptcy laws and the Se:nate prepared to 8PPJ'O'Vt the $2.3 billion ap-propria~oa • Err:.ors -In Tandy Tax .TOid Tandy Corporation tax manager William Hugbes ad- mitted late Monday in Oranae Cowtty Superior Court that his company's property tax state- ment for 1972 revealed ''some omissions.'' But Hughes, called as the third witness in the bribery trial of Congressman Andrew Hinshaw, insisted that he believed the document to be accurate when he signed it and sent it to the Orange County Assessor's Office. Cross-examined by MarshalJ Morgan, Hughes con- firmed the defense attorney's suggestion that he reimbursed Tandy Vice President James Buxton for $1,000 given to Hinshaw by Buxton as a cam- paign contribution. And Hughes, granted immuni- ty from prosecution in return for his testimony, admitted be was aware at the lime that it is illegal for corporations to make contributions to candidates for federal office. Hinshaw, 54, is accused of ac- cepting a nd soliciting bribes while be served as county as- sessor prior to his election to Congress in 1972. It is alleged that the Newport Beach Republican accepted gifts of stereo equipment and a $1,000 campaign contribution from the Tandy Corporation and that be solicited a bribe from a lawyer representing Beckman Instru- ments in an assessment appeals hearing. Accountant Paul Tabor, Hughes' predecessor as Tandy's tax expert, admitted in earlier testimony that the company saved between $25,000 and $30,000 a year by undervaluing its inven- tory statements before submit· ting them to the assessor's office. Tabor admitted that ne told Radio Shack employes to grant discounts to assessor's employes "as an investment in lower taxes.'' He also testified that a tax ex- -emption sought by the company on its imported electronic equip- ment was denied by the county assessor's office and later grant- ed when Tandy contributed to Hinshaw's campaign fund. Tabor also testified that the contribution to the Hinshaw fund was made via Buxton's personal check because "we could get more mileage" out o( a contribu- tion made In that manner. Sl'OCKS· DRIFT OVER TAX CUT NEW YORK (AP)-Tbestock market, stalled by doubts about tax cut prospects, drifted uncer- tainly in a narrow range today. Trading was moderate. Ana lysts said investors seemed to be in a cautious mood over the chances for an extension of the 1975 tax cuts to next yeaJI. The Dow Jones industrial average of 30 stocks gained 2.52 points to824.15. (Tables, AlS> Soliah to Appe al SACRAMENTO <AP) -An at- torney for Steven Soliah. one of Patricia Hearst's companions before her arrest, said Monday the defense will appeal a court ruling against a bail reduction re- quest. Atwater ' TONIGlfl' • ' B E H J N D T H E By TOM BARLEY HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T. ot .. 0.11, P11t4SUff Brown lecturer, OCC Forum, Nancy Fuller Atwater's lawyer 7:30 p.m . . testified today tbat defendant. "SCENES FROM AMERICAN ·Daniel Garbis Bedelian never IJFE" -South Coast Repertory toJd him during a series of con· Theater, througbSun.8p.m. versaUona that Mrs. Atwater UCl LECTURES -"Wines of' , tried to kill her husband during the World," UniveraityClub17:30 the fracas that led to her death p .. m: '' U~~ocktn g Real~ties last Feb. 5. Within Us, Room 100 Science Called as a rebuttal witness by Lecture Hall, 7 p.m. the prosecution, estate attorney WE DNESDAY, DEC.10 COLLEGE PARK HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION -Regular meeting, College Park School, 7 :30 p.m. $8 Million 'Given by. Foundation The Irvine Foundation gave more than $8 million, three times its 1974 gifts, to California or- ganizations in 1975, according to the foundation annual report. Orange Cou nty groups re- ceived twice as much as during the previous year, but the percentage o( the total given Orange Count~ groups dropped from 19.6 percent to 14 percent; San Fran cisco Bay area groups received $1 .5 million, compared to the $1.15 million re- ceived by Orange County groups. Although the foundation's as- sets consist primarily of Irvine Company stock, only one member of the board of direc- tors, Mrs. Charles Wheeler of Newport Beach. is an Orange Cowtty resident. Five members of the eight- member board are San Fran- cisco residents, two are from ·Los Angeles and one is from·Ven- tura. Gifts to Or arige County groups during the fiscal year that ended March 31, 1975 included: Hoag Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach, $525,000; Martin Luther Hospital, Anaheim, $50,000; St. Jude Hospital, Fullerton. $100,000. Also, South Coast Community Hosp it al, Sou th Laguna, $100,000; Central Orange County YWCA, Orange, $11,500; Girl Scouts Council of Oranc-e County, $25,000; YMCA of Orange Coun- ty, Santa Ana, $100,000; YWCAor Santa Ana, $49,750. Also, Goodwill Industries of Orange County, Santa Ana, $25,000; The Salvation Army, Santa Ana, $25,000; United Way of Orange County, Orange • $66,800; Laguna Beach School of Art, Laguna Beach , $50,000; Lyric Opera Association of Orange County, Laguna Beach, $14,000; Orange County Philharmonic Society, Newport .Beach, $15,000. Front Page A1 PHILP ... - Hamilton complained that their recommendations against awarding the contract to an out- side firm were ignored when personnel director Bert Scott re- com rn ended the contract be awarded to OCHTI rather "than be maintained in the health de- partment. Bertram F1agel told an Orange County Superior Court jury that .Bedelian, 40, told him during several offtce interviews that be acted in self defense when he killed Mrs. Atwater in ber Newport Beach home. .. But he never said anytt.ing to me about. her going into ber husband's bedroom," F1agel said. "And be never told me anything at any time about rus· preventing Mrs. Atwater from. killing her husband.,. Bedelian told the jury that Mrs. Atwater w as on her way to her invalid husband's bedroom with a carving knife when be in- tervened and grabbed her in a bear bug. The male nurse testified that he was compelled to club Mrs. Atwater, 50, to the floor with a bronze figurine when she turned thek:nifeon him. Bedelian t estified that he panicked when he realized that Mrs. Atwater was dead ~d that • he wrapped her body in a rug and shoved it into the trunk of his car. The Lebanese immigrant then drove to an auto wrecking yard in Pacoima, stuffed Mrs. Atwater's body into a 55-galloo oil drum and filled it to the rim with liquid cement. F1agel also testified today that the Atwaters were openly affec- tionate in his presence and that A.G. Cox Atwater called bis wife ''Momsy" and 'she called him "Popsy". A defense witness earlier testified that Mrs. Atwater called her husband "a slob", openly wished for his death and threatened her ailing spouse with divorce until he met whatever demand she had in mind at the moment. Male nurse Frank Corley also · testified that when he worked for the Atwaters at the Perham Drive home in 1973 he could only count on Mrs. Atwater being sober for about 30 minutes in the _ .early morning. Tbe special duty nurse said his - employer drank at least a quart of liquor a day and that she fed her invalid husband amounts of alcohol far in excess of the amount alJowed by bis physician. It is expected that final argu- ments in the trial will be de- livered later today. The prosecu- tion is demanding a verdict of first degree murder against Bedelian. · NYBankmpt BillPmhed WASHINGTON CUPI) -Con- gress is working on legislation to make it possible for big cities to go bankrupt -just in case the forthcoming $2.3 billion in federal loans fail to save New York from financial collapse. The last obstacle to the loan program -the will power of Sen. James B. Allen (D-Ala.) -gave way Monday. He said be would no longer try to block a bill ap- propriating the money for the loan. an impressive and unique ·commemoration of our bicentennial, beautifully boxed for g ifts to friends and formal presentations • for your home, 0H1ce, store • (or schools, fraternal or soda I club~, young peoples organizations, busine\S and trade associations • for busine~s gifts, awards and congratula tory presentations • OC NO. 230422 1663 PLACENTIA AVE~UE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 6'46·.4838 -6_.6·2355 ' - \