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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-01-06 - Orange Coast Pilot7 ~No Fair Trial' ( !• 1._·watergate, ·:·Lawyer Clai1Ds DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * *· TuesoAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 6, 1976 VOL ff, NO. 6, 2 SECTIONS, H f'AGES ByGARY GRANVILLE OI .. OllllY ...... SUff Two ,hospitals once controlled by Dr. Louis Cella actded.'personnel to their payrolls in 1974 who re- portedly did nothing more than work on Gov. Edmund G. Bro,wn Jr. 'selection campaign. Use of hospital-paid employes in the Brown cau.A who manned hospitals. campaign is under in· vestigation by both a Federal Grand Jury in Los Angeles and the Orange County Grand Jury, authorities said Monday. And a spokesman for the hospitals said Internal Revenue Service agents have already asked for and received.copies of payroll re- cords covering the workers campaign phones anchored in the THERE IS.NO.INDICATION that either Brown or his statewide campaign managers knew the workers were Of\ tqe }\ospital payrolls. Cella, California's top campaign contributor in 1974 with dedared donations of more than $500,000 to 54 candidates and causes; is under investigation by federal and county grand juries as well as the In· temal Revenue Setvice. .(\t the forefront of the investigation are allegations that Santa Ana physician inflated two hospitals' Medi-Cal and Medicaid reimbursements bases by ill~ally charging political costs to the hospitals. ,Blown campaign disclosure statements liled in Sacramento show that Cella anti his wife, Marian, take credit for contribUting $4,806 worth of in kind <See CELLA, Page A!) Thinl~ l'Yere bot for \be driver of a Juw:J mOtorbome that bunt into flames after an ear11· momlnc colllsion today wUb a wron1-way freeway driver in ~loft 't(ieJo. The ~m• drtvw fJed the seen. of the crash near the Crown Valley Parkway OYet· erosald• and tbe Caltfornia ~at~ Patrol la still looktnl having a difficult time determln- ~g wbo it is registered to. the QIP apokeaman said. Meauwbile, tbe wrona-way driver wbo started the whole tlaina Wb taten to Orange Coun· tJ Medical Center where he was · lilted in serious but stable con· dltion with burns and other in- juries. for him. ~ "We don't tftow If hilt rln out of. 1beer Mrror or beeaue the mltor hOme w •• 'bot' -stolen tlm 18,' ~a CHP 1pot•1UD takt lalllq. • .. .. lille fthlcle burMd dDwn to lta fr~• aad lavelUpton are .. •• He was identified by the CHP • Robert L. Nunno, 31, San Dleao. The CHP spokesman Hid Nwmc> WU driv1n1 north in the aouthbound Ja~es of the Saa Dl•IO Freeway whc tbe l :SO\ a.m. crash occurred • OU Police 1'ill Beatle Agent LOS ANGELES (UPI> - Malcolm F. Evans, the Beatles' longtime road manager and personal friend of members of the singing group, was shot and killed when he alleged· ly pointed a rifle at two policemen, the police de- partment said today. Evans, 40, was shot Sun- day night at the home of Frances Hughes where he had been living. Investigators said Miss Hughes, who is un· employed, told them she got into an argument with Evans who was having business problems and Evans went to an upstairs bedroom, taking a jar of pills and a rifle with him. She called police who responded to a "man with a gun-suicide attempt'' call. Police Probe 'Murder Try' On IRS Agent By AllTBUR R. VINSEL Of ....... ,, PUii .... Huntington Beach police today were investigating the alleged at- tempted murder of a U.S. In· ternal Revenue agent after · someone fired a shot into bis mobile home Monday night. Anthony Gubbiotti Bed the re- sidence in a park near Pacific Coaat ffi&hway and reported the incident to police invem.igators. He said following the 8:35 p.m. assault that he bas received threats in the past that be is a murder target due to his IRS in· vestlgative activities. No one ever tried to carry out threats of violence. however, GubblotU told lnveau.aton. Only one shot was fired, Detective Sgt. Moab' McKennon cmflrmed today bU\ it would be difficult to determine if the would·be slayer took deliberate aim or fired at random. A thorou1h search ~ tbe area f alled to tum up the alas or frag- ments of it, innstiJatGneaid. .. No projectile wu found," said Set. McKeonon, MdiDI that a bullet hole w H indeed found ln IRSAgentGubbiotU'1bome. Red C08moe Up MOSCOW (UPn -The Soviet Union today launched an earth aateJUte, Cosmos '181, to continue ~loratlon of outer apace, TIN aatd. I J ' . I . l ~· i' ontington -Polic Probe Murder Try On U.S. Tax Agent Watergate Hearings 'Unfair' WASHINGTON CAP> -A federal appeals court was told to- day that the Watergate cover-up trial was preceded by publicity which whipped the American people into a "white heat" and denied the defendants a fair trial. "We did not get a fair trial in this case,•• the lawyer for former White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman told the U.S. Court of Appeals. Atty. John J. Wilson said that publicity made the trial a cause c elebre and created the "greatest, largest, most virulent situation" in American judicial history. "The American people were whipped up to a white beat against the appellants in this case,•• Wilson told the six ap- peals court judges hearing the case. Haldeman, John D. Ehrlic hman and John N. Mitchell were convicted on New Year's Day 1975 of obstructing justice in the Watergate case. A fourth defendant. Robert C. Mar- dian, a sometime San Clemente resident, was convicted of con· spiring to obstruct justice. They are appealing those con· victions and the sentences they received but have not yet begun to serve. Peter M. Kreindler, a ~year­ old Harvard Law Scbool graduate who argued for the special Watergate prosecutor's office before the appeals court, said the trial "left no doubt whatever" as to the guilt of the defendants. "They were brouaht to account under the same system they sought to subvert," Kreindler said. . William Hundley, attorney for (See APPEALS, Page AZ) Bandits Hit BB Market A pair of awartby men menaced a Huntington Beach market clerk wlt.b a straight raz. or and robbed Mr early today. Tbe bandits ned the Stop N Go Market at 1T490 Beach Blvd,. witb an undisclosed sum of money. Jnvest11ators said t.be female clerk tOld them the pair, each about 35 years old, ·fied the conve- nienee 1tore at Beach Boulevard ..., • .._Avenue to an old car. 0 ce Diiiy ...... Slaff ...... RETAINS GAVEL County Supervisor Diedrich Second Time As Chainnan For Diedrich By WJLUAM SCHREIBER o .... 0.11., ...... 5Uff Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich will serve another year as chairman of the county board. Supervisor Laurence Schmit or Garden Grove was elected vice chairman, succeeding Anaheim SUpervlsor Ralph Clark. Both votes at today's board meeting were without opposition, though Diedrich abstained from voting for hiS own election. Diedrich·s selection came as no surprise despite his emphatiq statements last month he did nQ\ want another term as chairman. At the time, D1edrich said he would support either Schmit or Supervisor Thomas Riley for the job as nominal head of the five. member board. But reports that Diedrich In· deed would sffk a second term started mounting two weeks ago· and Diedrich himself chanced bis atance from a poeitlon firmly aiatnat re-election to one of a non-committal nature. • Jn accepting the nomination and electlon for a new term Diedrich said be considered It a ••great honor to serve even though it means a lot of extra work for myself and my staff ... Diedrich conceded that 1975 was "a tough year in many ways bu\ Oranae Counly is in better financial condition now than any othel' county ln the state." <See DIED&JCR. Pace Al) Sexual Murders Probed By TOM BARLEY OftM0.11, ...... ...., A sexually mutilated man : whose body was found Sunday in ~ Silverado Canyon may be the ; · victim of an unknown killer whose prime targets appear to be homosexuals between the ages of 17 and 25 years, Orange County Sheriff's officers theorized to- day. Investigators refused to spell out the mutilations inflicted on the body of the still unidentified victim but agreed that the killing had several factors in common with a number of other Southland slayings in the past two years. "Many of the victims are known to have homosexual back- grounds,'' Sgt. Robert Reid said. "They all fall within a specific age group-17 to 25-ilDd they were all mutilated in a way that stresses what we believe are the homosexual overtones of all these killings," he added. ·'But it's useless to say that we are looking for one particular killer," he stressed. "We could be looking for a man, a group of .. men, a woman or a group of women-the possibilities are <See BODY, PageA2) Coast Weather Sunny skies Wednesday. Warme r temperatures with highs of 65 at the beaches rising to 70 inland. Lows tonight 35 to 45. INSIDE TODA 'Y Can Angolo become .another Vi~m1 Prlt~M.oinnD9Q Te· porter-photographer Peter Arnttt. ont of the most familiar byline• Jrom tM SovtMa.11 Am war, ucur&bie1 IM pouibilitits. 8'. 2 DAJL Y PILOT s Tuesday. January 8. 1976 Reagan's C~y' Cold Campaign in New Hampshire By tM Auoclated Prfla With Preelde nt Ford in Washlngton and Sen. Henry M. J a c kson (D -W as h .), i n Massa chusetts. presidential candidate Ronald Reagan and Terry Sanford bad t.be voters of New Ral1Ul6hir.e to t.ber:melft1 today as they to~ the state with tho e a rlies t primary election. . Sanford, former governor ol North Carolina , began bis New Hampshire campaign with a .Diaper ~r~p Plane's Load Not Pot CHOWCHI LLA (AP) -Mader a County sheriff's . officers thought they might be o~ the tr ail o~ a marl· juana smuggler when a Chowch1lla -area resident re· ported a white package had been d ropped from a low· flying airplane. . . Loads of m arijuana flown to C~forma from M~x· ico often are dropped in open ftelds, so. deputl~s scoured the area but didn't find any pot, officers said Monday. . The mystery w as solved when a nearby r esident, Debbie McDonald, told inquiring deputies s.he asked her husband Tim to bring home a box of disposable diapers before flying his plane Sunday. Instead, she added, McDonald bought the diapers. took off in his plane and dropped the cardboard box out wh en he passed over the family's front yard. On Probation Anaheim Man Held On 'Meter Theft' Rap By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tll• O.lly ...... S4Mf An Anaheim man who gave bis na m e t o a land mark U. S. Supreme Court decis ion on search and seizure was arrested by Newport Beach police Mon· day night on charges of con· spiracy and grand theft. Ted Ste\'en Chime!, 53 of 823 S. Reach St.. An aheim, was picked up with two companions as they allegedly used a homemade key to open and e mpty parking meters near the Newport Pier. Police were called to the scene at about 10 p. m . by a passerby who became s us picious of the trio. Held today in Newport City . J ail alone with Chimel are ~•ft!ted Shirley Grindle of Orange won re-election Monday as chairman of the Ora nge Count y P l a nn in g Com - mission: giving her the com- mi ss ion gave l fo r the second consecutive year. M rs. Grindle was appointed to the commission in 1973 by County Supervisor Ralph Clark. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Tiw Ou~ toot 0.lly f>I"°' .,,,., ,..,,.~ 1\ to-nll•,...O I~• "'""'"'•U, I• "'4ti4•"""" by It.. G·-,.... "-'"'""' ,., .... , .... ,.,. ~•Ah· °"""'"~ Mt put>l1\ll•d "'"""•V lllfCI"'"' I •l(My for Co\td "'4w. Nt•Por t \\#..:,.. thd\t1~11~n hPit<IHf OU"t•tft V•ll••• •r•lrwt. C,..otth r_.,., '° ¥blf(lf And LAcmn.t 8~ ,., ,, l\nouih (t'M\t /1. ''""' .. •"'Q.-..t •OUtOn It pubO\P\f'O "''"' .... tf"JO \1,_, 11-•fl l!W' I>""< IPAI l"lhll\hll'Q 111•111 1\ ti jJCI ¥10 1 S.~ !>l•••I. (O\I• M••~. (•lilOtlM• th2' Robert N . Weed IO•nl'1•nl •net Pllb!IV-0• Jack R. Curlev '1/11 r t'f'I \llif'f'\f ~ntt (.t nH•I ~N¥' Thomas Keevil .. GllM Tl'IOn"llS A. M u'l)hlne , W MQI .... l OllOt 0\1rles H. Loos Richard P. Nall Thomas Hinkle, 35, and his wife Patricia, 31 who say they live at the same apartment bui lding as ChimeL Chime ! was a rrested o n ·identi cal charges by Newport Beach police in August 1974. He pleaded gui lty to the charges and served eight months in Orange Co unty J ail. He is still serving out a five-year probation sen· te.nce from that conviction. Ch i m el 's n am e became famous after a 1969 Supreme Court decision based on an ap· peal of an earliEtr case involving the Orange County man. In September 1965, Chime! was charged with burglary when police raided his Santa Ana home a nd found stamps and coins valued at $24,000 which allegedly had been stolen from an Orange coin shop. . The high court overturned his conviction on the grounds that police had no authority to enter his home. The decision was one of a ~ries of rulings during the 1960s which changed the process of search, seizure of evidence, arrest and questioning of s us· peels in the U. S. fi'rora Page Al APPEALS ••• former Atty. Gen. Mitchell, s aid U.S. District Judge J ohn J . Sirica , who presided at the trial, did not probe deeply enough into the possible prejudices harbored by jurors in the case. Hundley said there was "un· conscious thinking on the part of the judge in suggesting answers" to the prospective jurors. Atty. William Frates said his client. Ehrlichman, had been de· nied his constitutional rifhts because former President N xon was not mad e a vailable to testify. Nixon (ell critically ill after the start of the trial and Frates asked the court to delay the com· pletion of the trial until Nixon wa s w ell e n o u g h t o give testimony in some fol'm -either in person, b y d eposition or through a videotape question and answer session. "He was t he focal point or this entire trial," Frates said. "At no t ime d id anyone suggest bis testimony was not material or re· levant. "I submit that if anyone bad said that, they would have been laughed out of the cowtroom," Frates said. One of the appeals judges, J . Skelly Wright, asked il an effort had been made since the trial to obtain an affidavit from Nixon. Frates said he had been told that while two grand jurors and prosecution lawyers questioned the former president at b11 home in San Clemente, '"the govern· ment says we djdn't uk hiro about the cover·UP cue.'' Ehrlicbman's lawyer aaid that failioe to set Nixon's testimony was eltber a violation or EbrUchman'• Sixth Amendment rlabl or an abuse ol the judle'1 discretion. He uid Nlxoo could hHe bol1tered Ebrllcbmen'1 con· tentlon thet he coun.aeled lull dls· clos ure of the f acls in the Water1ate ca1e rather than partlcipaUna ln a cover.up, and that Nixon m llled Ehrllcbm1n In aaylna he would not dJ1cu11 clemency for the Watergate perpet.raton at lM 1ame Ume that he wa1 bavln• 1uch dla~ cuakma. pledge to mate it a contest "of is· sues, not Just shaking bands." The Democrat, on leave as pre- sident of Duke University, called himsell a "nonpollticlan" and his c ampa i gn s tatl i n N e w Hampshire "inadequate." But he said be wants to bring "f~h and innovative and bold approaches to ihe maigbtening out of gov- ernme nt." Reagan, former governor of California campa\gning for the Republic an preside ntial nomination, pushed his bu.5 tour through the White Mo~tain~. starting his round of morning ap- pear ances with temperatures between nine and 17 degrees below zero. He sipped coffee and ate doughnuts at a ski lodge at Mt. Cranmore and then watched a group of local ski instructors in .a brief demonst ration. .. I'm havin g a great time. If l could only adjust the air con· d1tionmg, everything would be all right," he quip~. The President, who faces Reagan in the Febt 24 New Hampshire primary, was back in Washington after s pending M.on· day in SL Louis, where he spoke to the American Farm Bureau Ft'deration. (Photo, A4) Ford's appearance was billed as nonpolitical, but he spent much of his time praising his own farm policies. The President also told a group of newspaper executives he still plans to enter every presidential primary. although he will not actively campa ign in each state. In Cleveland, former Treasury Secretary John B. Connally said in an interview that be will re- consider hi s own position if Ford drops out of the Republican pre- sidential nomination race. But Conn all y. in Ohio to speak to a private group of business and community leaders, said he is at present neither a GOP candidate nor willing to become a candidate as a favorite son or for a third party. Jackson lanched his candidacy today in Massachusetts. He is not campaigning in New Hampshire. In remarks prepared for de- livery in Boston, Jacksondecried ··a wave of cynicism engulfing this nation's politicians. These head-in·the-clouds politicians seem to feel it will be good !or the country's soul if we lower our horizons and it we reduce our standards of living. 'Burned Body Found Near Marine Base The body of an unidentified man was found Monday in a burned out car near tbe main entrance or the Marine Corps Helicopter Station in Tustin. An Orange County coroner's s p<>kesman said today the ~Y was badly burned and only a tentative identification had been made. That was being withheld until deputies are s ure of the· victim ·s identity, the spokesman said. Tus t in police sa id an in· vestlgation is under way to de- termine if the death was ac- cidental or a homicide. The car w as parked on Valencia A venue just west of the Marine base entrance. FrOttl Page A I " U,IT ........ DONALD DUCK SHOWSCARLHEART AROUNDDISNEYLAND Kansas Youngster Loses Battle With leukemia Youngster's Battle ·With Leukemia Enm SALINA, Kan. (UPI> -Carl Heart, who battled leukemia for 16 months, died Monday one day before his 11th birthday, sur· rounded by mementos o( his dream vacation to Disneyland. Train Kills Actor's Kin, Daughter, 4 DELAND, Fla . (UPI) -Mrs. David Holmes, s ister of actor Patrick O'Neal and C<>-Ownerof a New York City restaurant, and her 4.year-old daughter were killed when the woman tried to rescue the little girl from the path of a speeding train. Both mother and daughter were crus hed when the child wandered on the tracks to retrieve a thermos bottle she s aw fall from a baggage carrier. Mrs. Holmes , 33, was at the station with her mother, Mrs. C. Wisdom O'Neal, widow of a pro- minent Ocala citrus grower and civic leader, to see friends board a train for New York City. As the group walked down a walkway alongside the tracks about 1 p.m ., little J e nnie Holmes ran on the tracks to pick up the thermos bottle which belonged to their friends. About that time, a fully loaded auto-train roared into the station with its horn blarin& and bell clanging. Mrs. Holmes screamed and jumped between the tracks to try to snatch her daughter to safety. Engineer R. L . Gibson told authorities that by the time he. saw the little girl and her mother it was too late to stop the train It finally came to a stop 400 yards down the tracks. When news of Carl's terminal condition was first publicized, area businesses and residents contributed to a fund to give the boy bis bigges t wish, a trip to Disneyland and a chance to see some movie stars in person. Carl, along with his parents, made the trip in November. Ac- cording to the 10-year-old, the highli g ht w a s vis iting his favorite a ctor, John Wayne. Monday Carl woke up about 8• a.m .. sat up in bed and started breathing heavily. "Then he lay back down and that was t he end." said his mothe r , Sheila Heart. "We prayed to God to take him easy, and he did." A cardboard box at the Cecil Heart home bulges with greet· ings and get·well wishes from across the United States, Europe and the Far East. Donations con- tinue to come in to the Carl Heart F\tnd at a local Salina bank. Carl spent much of his last few months undergoing treatment at ·St. Francis Hospital in Wichita. He was able to go home (or both Thanksgiving and Christmas. Mrs. Heart said doctors thought the boy might not s u.r- vive until Christmas, butshesa1d he fought off one crisis after another and spe nt a beautiful holiday with the family. The family knew death was im· minent since last Wednesday. "They wanted to try some new medication on him. but there was only a 25 percent chance that it could have helped him," Mn. Heart said. "I was alraid it would kill him right there." Threat Arrest BRIGDGEPORT, Conn. (UPl) _:_ State police today charged a ·Bridgeport man with threatening the life of Gov. Ella Grasso and Bridge por t M a yor John, Mandanici. Fro• Page Al CELLA CAMPAIGNING. • • services to two Brown committees. A statement filed by Orange County Friends of Brown indicates that Mrs. Cella in 1974 donated $1,~ in unspecified ''polling costs.'' AN AMENDED STATEMENT of statewide Brown for Governor committee shows that Cella contributed $3,000 ln undetailed "phone costs. Managers for both committees said Monday they could not furnish details covering the Cella con- tributions. DIEDRICH.~ Though a minority owner in both Mission Communi- ty Hospital, Mission Viejo, and Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana, Cella by his own admission was in operational control of the hospital until last f all.1 It was in the spring of 1974 that extra phones were installed at the two hospitals to accommodate the need of at least 11 specially hired camapaign workers. Reading Crom a prepared text. indicating that the election had apparently been in the works for at least a few days, Diedrich said, "There are many majOT tasks in mid-stream and many new tasks that will start toward the middle of the year." Robert Zunich, controller at Mission, said he doesn't know who ordered six telephone extensions in· stalled in the hospital's personnel department in April, 1974. Diedrich ref erred to the fre-- quent clas hes between board members durtng 1975 but said, "Our difCerences were always honest." Nor does he know, Zunich said, who authorized the hiring of five persons in September of 1974, to man the phones. - "THEY CAME IN DURING the evening h0Ul'$ so most or us never saw them," be noted. Zunich emphasized that none 'of the hospital's medical employes was involved in the campaigning and that none of Mission's present operators was in- volved in the political activities. Diedrich , Riley, and Supervisor Robert Battin all face re-election efforts in June. No Good Samaritans MororUu Ignore Plea; Girl Dies in.Fire LAUREL, N.Y. CAP> -With bis 3·Ytl1'· old daqbm ttapped In a~ bedroom, a desper.te f1tber tried In •aln ton .. down J1 pa11ta1 cara in a.n eff«t to ull the fire~· ment. .: ,. .. The 12th C!fr stopped, but by' th« Ume fJremen arrived at dUa am.all communk1 oa the DOr1b fork of L«tg Jaland Moncla1 niabt, . the two-9tory frame home had burned to the IJ'C)Und, takln& the life of UM daui hter, Mae Jlelen Ge_rard. ~ Karry Guard, M. .ad hJt wife, Bertha. 41 both 1uffered burm wbiln they trted to ext· lnaul1b .tbe blaae them1elvea. Another dau1hter al10 wu lDJurcd. Three sons mcaped without serious injury. l>ollce said the lire broke out In a dowmtaln bedroom about 11:20 p.m., and Gerard fouaht it with a bucket of water. WbtA that failed, be ran outside to aet help beca~ t.be bouH had no telephoae. · Police ettJmated that be was tryln1 to 1et belp for eiaht to 10 minutes before a motonst ~top~~men actually received the alarm from police, who received a telephone call from a nelehbor who saw the names. · 1_ Geranl and dauabter Doana, 1, wen laat.- ed tn fl.Jr condlUon at a bolpltal ln RlvHbuct. N. Y. The mother ••lilted 1n poor caac11t•~ WASHINGTON (AP) - Rlchard S. Welch, a brilltan ~holar.apy the embattled Cl could lltUe aflord to lOM, w burled tod•Y at ArUnston Nattoa1l Cemetery; the first • agent to be honored by a p~i· • dent •s attendance at bis f\meral. Prealdent Ford, SecnUry of State Henry A. Jllutnler and CIA Director William £. Colby occupied f roat·row seats in the funeral chapel du.rtnl a IOlllber 20-minute service coodurtec:l for Welch by Col. Duncan C. Stewart, an Anny chaplain. The President offered con- dolences to Weleb•a widow and shook bands with other memben of the Welch family after the c haplain read from scripturt;S and led some 500 mourners m prayer. The agent's . ~Y was borne to the cemetery m a flag-- draped casket. 1 Welch, assassinated two weeks • ago outside his home in Athens, was buried in a militar.Y ceremony. The President ha~ waived restrictions limiting Arl· ington National cemetery to members of the armed forces. Meanwhile in Athens, police ' said they still have no clues that might lead them to Welch's three masked assailants. Officers said they have interrogated almost 500 persons including members of extremist organizations. The Greek government ·is of-1 f ering a $160,000 reward for in· 1 formation leading to the arrest o( 1 Welch's killers. The funeral service was held in a moderniltic brick and 1lass chapel at nearby Ft. Myer, Va .• from where the agent's casket was carried on a horse-drawn • caisson about flve blocks' to the cemetery. . Also attending the service was George Bush, nominated by Ford to replace Colby as director of the CIA. ~ Ford dld not at~m the burtat, but returned to th~te House after the fwieral le ce. Welch, 46, was 1 down aa be returned home from a Christmas party after being publicly identified as a CIA official. He had been listed officially as a special assistant at the U.S. Embassy in Athens but recenUy was identified by a Wahington quarterly called "Counterspy•• as the CIA representative lo Peru before beinl assigned to Athens· last May. AD Atbem newspaper named blm u one of a number of CIA officials operating in Greece. He had earlier been ide ntified by a Peruvian newspaper as a CIA 31ent. Ji',.... Page Al .t BODY ••• endless and we are looking at all of them.'' Among the mutilations spotted on the body of the latest victim, whose body was found near the top of Bedfq_rd Peak las t weekend, w&re cuts and ~cratches and bu.ms, Set. Reid said. "There wu one other aignifi· cant mutilation," he added. But he declined to specify the nature of that muWation. Several of the known 12 victims-tlx were found in Orange County communities- came from the Belmont Shores section of Long Beach, Sgt. Reid said. •'That's a homosexual-oriented area in the sense that there are a number of homosexual bars there,.. he said. ..It's possible that these crimes, If they are con- nected, bad their ortatn In that area." Among the killings being teoatively linked to tbe·SUverado Canyon 1layin1 -are tbe murder of a young man wboM bod)t was round in the South Lquna area in June 1914 and the ldllint of a 19- year-old man in the Irvine area ln November 1974. Other murders beJftl reviewed In the 1ame Ill• lnclude tbe till- lnl In April 1t11 of an un· ldenUfted man whole body was found lo the Huntington Beach area and a 20-year-old man who was found dead Oil the freeway near Seal Beach in July 1973. ~ Anlelu Count)' authorities bave related .the killinp of men whose dismembered bodies were scattered in the Long Beach are• to the Of an1e County kill.inp. "But 1\'1 much too earty to say thlt they we.re all the victims ot ooe killer or a group of killers," Reid aald. "Most ol them bav~ ac~, bomo1exu1Uty and muwatlons ln common, but~ doesn't add up to tbe ·~ lcllJer." .. I Mnrder-mieide .. ~ Los ANGELES <UPI) -~ man wbo stoned to pick \C> k frind for wotk found the man and hit wUe tyln• de.too the noo~ of tbelr ••artmmt.. ap· parently the ~letlma ol a m\ll'der- 1 ul clde. Poli~• ••Id Vtctw. Wm.fteN, •• probatli1 lbot ... !!!_•1_H__!lft, •u... with ........ .......... . .. .... .... .. ., .. .......,. ,, \ .. _....,._ SLOWLY IMP~VING Joseph Whitcomb &~ \1@(!!][[ ®@rrwo©® Tbe column appears dally except SatlU'days and Mondays. Customer Protection DEAR PAT : Since when has it become necessary to give your driver's license in ordertooblain a refund for an item purchased ror cash? This happened to me late one Saturday at the Sears· Service Center in Santa Ana. I'd purchased a part for cash that was not inter changeable, as I'd bttn told it would be. The sales person was very nice and located the correct part that cost more. I had ~Y sales slip. yet had to pro- vide my d rivers license for "identification" before I was -given my r efund on the original purchase. I asked why only to be told that this was "Sears policy."· Why? T .s .. Costa Mesa This policy protects you, ac- cording to Sears•. assistant manager Lou Gugliotta. When a customer loses a cash sales re- ceipt, another person could bring th1t receipt to the repair center and daim the merchandise for the repair price only -lf further identification we re not required. Sears also mails a report request form for every refund issued, ac- ~dJng to GugUotta. It appears to A YS that although this policy should have been explained t.o you at the time of the transac- tion, it is designed to protect rather than agitate a customer. • Food Additi.,e• DEAR PAT: I am a high school stude nt doing a report on food additives. Where can I Jind some good information? · M. W., Costa Mesa Many additives are listed in your dictionary . but these paperback books will give you more de tailed information: "A ('..onsumer 's Dictionary of Food· Additives ," by Ruth Winter ; .. Consumer Beware: Your Food and What's Been Done to It," by Beatrice Tnam Hunter; "The Chemical Beast," Ralph J'iader 's Study Group Report on the Food and Drug Ad- ministration, and .. The Poisons .10 Your Food," by Willi~m J.Gngwood. ' Planning ahead in the event they lose a court fight over dooT· to-destinatio n Dial·a·Ride service in Oran ge, county • Transit District directors took ~cti~ Monday to fill the void. They approved plans to impl~ Jnent community fixed route '(CFR> bus service ln Orange on the same day their last appeal ~nod runs out -Feb. u. The action was prompted by a lingering legal action against the Dlal·a -Ride program by Yellow Cab Company. · The taxi firm was successful in 'jta btd to outlaw tbe pioneer bus .f'ervice on grounds it presented )lllfalr competition from a gov· ~ment enterprise. But through a series of legal ,fD•neuvera and last-rnin\lte ap- ..peals the district bas managed 1~ delay th• cutoff date until a oJJn•l court. hearing toter this month. . lt's 20 days since Joseph Whitcomb, a toddler just turned three. got into the backyard at bis home ln Costa Mesa and fell into the swimming pool. • He has been in a coma slnce then after bis virtually lifeless body wu r evived by doctors at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Newport Beach. He waa transferred to Chtldrem Hospltal of Orange County in Ot'ange, where he has been making some gains. He ts still on the cri,tical list, but is no longe r in intensive care. He is breathing on his own, and doctors have told bis parents that h e is responding t o stimulation. But how have his parents held OCTDGets New Leases On 5 Buses By a vote of 3-2, Orang~ County Transit District directors agreed Monday to lease five "bicenten- nial buses" from the Long Beach Public Transportation Company for $47,000. The buses, dec l ared temporarily surplus by the Long Beach transit lin~. will be used by OCTD to improve service and fill in for regular vehicles taken out of service for reguJar main- tenance. Jim Reichert , assistant general manager of the district, dubbed the Jeased vehicles· ''bicent e nnial buses" because, OCTD will spend $1 ,000 apiece to paint them in appropriate tri- color themes. By so doing, Reichert ex- plained, the buses won't have to be repainted when they are given back to Long Beach at the end of the year. Directors· Robert. Battin and William Farris voted against the leasing deal, noting the district was getting seven-year-old buses for its money and that, in reality. the buses would only be needed about six months. Reichert conceded the latter point, s aying many of the shortage problems will be re- lieved with the delivery this spr- ing of 55 new buses. But he said the arrangement with Long Beach can be canceled after six months if th~ additional buses aren't needed. , In addition to filling in for buses being serviced, Reichert said the Long Beach buses would be used as "trippers" -that is, added to routes that get over- loaded at peak times of the day. Reichert noted that three or the 1969-model coaches have only re- cently been completely over· hauled and L ong Beach h~s agreed to maintain the other two. if they s uffer major breakdowns. OCTD pla1,1ners claim the five buses would run up about 40,000 miles each during the year. The le'!Se price has been fixed at 23.4 cents per mile for all five buses -a total or $42,000 plus the paint- ing c.osts. ' Irvine Gives Free Firewood .The City of Irvine will off er free firewood to a nyone who can cut it and haul it away Saturday and Sunday. More than SO orange trees have been grubbed from the site of Irvine's Heritage Park o n Walnut Avenue between Culver Drive and Yale A venue . According to Recreation Superintendent Froome Gayle, those wishing to take wood must s upply their own tools a nd muscles. City employes will be on hand from 8 a.m . to 4:30 p.m. both days to s upervise the cut- ting. While awaiting the bearing, the district was permitted t.o keep Dial-a-Ride in operation for 60 days after the original eutoff de- adline of Dec. J 1 . In that time, district plaMers have worked with Orange city of· ficia.15 to develop a method of fill" ing in the gap after Dial·a-Ride is gone. District Senior Planner Dave Schllllng said the urgency was prompted by the realization that "we could get blown out of the water in court at any time." The co91munity bus service in Orange would be similar to that b ei n g readied f or im - plementation io Buena Park and Westmlnater. Jt would make use of 14 small, l9•puaenger coaches that have, up to now, been used exclusively for Dlal·a·Rlde. n.ctey. Janu1ry 8. 1979 DAIL V PILOT A 3 . ., Tot -Beeovers J up? Clark and La"1te Whitcomb are a couple wlUl "1Ch a tense or · family that they adopted their first two children, Charles, 8, and Anne. s. after aeven years of fail- ine to achieve a pregnancy. How ,\lave. t~ev .r~oonded tot~ crisis mvolvmg Ulelr natural son"'? The Wbitcombs trust in God. They are .. born again'' Chris- tians and they believe the ex- .perience h's strengthened their faith. ln that sense, the crisis even bas been beneficial. "We were h appy before, but we became flabby ,•• .Clark Wbi,t comb . a m echanical engineer.~ said at the family borne at 2732 San Carlos' Lane, Qlsta Mesa. "We were so happy we did not grow deeper as a fami- ly. You know. we would only worry about small things, things that have no real importance." Mrs. Wh itcomb agreed . "Things are now in their proper perspective. You need something like this to impress you with b ow wonderful a family is. "I could have gone to pieces, but because we are Christians I rejoice. Our family has been cemented in love. I love my husband all the more and I love the children so much more.'' Mrs. Whitcomb, 37, who pulled her son from the pool and at- tempted to revive him until the paramedics arrived, admitted that s he had not been reading the Bible in the wa y she bas done since the accident. _ She also acknowledged that in the past she haCi tried to assist others 'who were suffering, but had not succeeded. "I was never able to understand those who suf · fered, but now I have suffered and I can understand," s he said. "People come in to com- fort us and we finish up comfort- ing them." The Whitcombs, who worship at the Newport-Mesa Christian Center at 148 22nd St.. Co.sta Mesa, are confident that Joseph's accident will have "a good ending ... They view his s urvival and his i mprove m e n t so far a s miraculous ... Wh en the paramedics took him to t he ho.spital they said that they were sorry. but they didn't think he -wu going to make it,·• Whitcomb recalled. "We sat for 45 minutes in the waltlng room at Hoag con- vinced that be bad gone when a doctor came in tb say that he was going to be all right." Tbe Whitc ombs believe Joseph will fully recover but they are aware of other possibilities. The doctor has told them that it appears that there may be brain d amage, but he cannot be certain if the brain is damaged, much less the extent. Further, while J~pb is apparently recovering, he is still vulnerable to infection. "What I want, of course, is a flash of lightning and for Joseph to ride off on his tricycle," Mrs. Whitcomb, a former elementary school teacher, confessed. "But you don't tell God what to do. We will accept him in any form and love him. But if there is a funeral we'll rejoice too because there is nothing wrong with going to the Lord." The couple regard Joseph's very birth as a miracle. They had virtually given up hope or having a natural c hild when Mrs . Whitcomb became pregnant. "1 found I was pregnant after mak· ing a special prayer to be a better wife and a better mother," she recalled. The foundation of th e Whitcombs' optimis m is their faith in the Christian doctrine that all things work together for the good. "A week ago l knew the Lord was going to do something. but we could not see the good." Whitcomb, 38, admitted. He then mentioned Joseph's signs of r<.' rovery and the closer family lies that have resulted. The Whitcombs also are able to see another benefit in the acc1 dent. "lt was a blessing that it was our c hil d a nd nt>l a neighbor 's." Mrs. Whitcomb said , explainin~ that another family might not have had the strength of faith to bear t.he trial. The couple explained that they have one of only two pools in the neighborhood and they have made their pool available to neighborhood children when a parent was at home. "We would put a little flag out. to let ever- yone know someone was home Y~r after year, . Fipt Federal Savings of Santa Monica has abSolutely no foreclosec{ property ("Real Estate Owned") on its an·nual reports. Zero foreclosed property. What does this mean for your savings? It means an extra margin of safety. That's: why we are running newspa~r and television advertising spotlighting this important fact. ' When it comes to the sa! ety of your savings,· look for the number zero. It means a lot. Fifft ~Savi~ ,\NO LOAN ASSOCIATION Of ANTA MONlCA &>stil Mesa 0ffice 0.11, ...... Staff P!tolo WITH THEIR SON IN A COMA. PARENTS RELY ON FAITH Laurie and Clark Whitcomb Find Good in Family Trial and the pool could be used." Whitcomb said. He admitted that at fi rst 1t was hard to look at the pool after the accident, which occurred Dec. 17 when J oseph got into the yard while his mother was busy in the kitchen. "J had to overcome an urge_ lo fill it in or board it over." he said. "But it was not the pool's fault. It is a blessing to have a pool and we like to share our blessings." The Whitcombs emphasized that they choose to believe in God and in miracles and let the question of their son's survival remain in God's hands ~.· "It's not what happens to you that's important. 1l's how you take it," Wh1tcomb~aid. His wife concluded. "If God chooses to put Joseph back in this family He will. He's such a beautiful little child. We are just crazy about him. But he is tht• creator's child. It helps to know that. Weeping will not bring him back. "God may take our son, but He \\;II never leave us comfortless. It would be a gaping ~ound. but. God would hea l us and fill the void with Himself. Giving up on \rod won't help our son, us, or anyone at any time." \ .. ·l -. • ' ' . ' # . A 4 DAIL v PILOT HAVE A SEAT: Our good Orange County Transit District directors got into a semi-nap only yesterday over the heady. question of where bus patrons put their other end. They debated bus benches. The transit district, as most folks are aware, operates those big orange and white buses that ply about our county. Many of our seasoned citizens ride these buses. Trouble is , out of some 7,000 bus stops, there are scant bus benches. One private advertising outfit has put in 1,500 benches free along Orange County bus routes. These gratis installations took four years. The transit directors apparently thought this progress in getting patrons seat· ed was too slow. THUS, DESPITE HEATED protests from the bench ad peo- ·ple, the directors went ahead and applied for a $360,000 federal grant to purchase 2,000 more benches. That figures to about Sl80 per bench. Apparently this action enraged the news pape r up in the County Seat resulting in a headline which screamed that the transit district. "Op.ts for Tax-Paid Bus &>nches." Well now, I have to ask you what's wrong with a tax.paid bus benc h , an yway? Would you rather s it on one that has a big s ign touting Preparation H? BESIDES THAT, a tax-paid bench m ight be a certain com- fort . You might be rep()Sing on one when a friend walks by and asks. "Hey, what are you doing here?" Then you could answer, "Oh, I'm just warming up my tax- nattened wa llet on this tax-paid bench while waiting for my tax· supported bus to come along." Additiona lly. who says that the fNier al benches have to be plain oltve-drab or such color? The federal governme nt could maybe put some advertising on their own benches. They could come up with some neat bench s logans like, "CIA All the Way." Or maybe, "Support Your Local IRS Office." Smaller lettering on the signs could even get across more meaningful messages, like, "Have a Seat -Let the Federal , Governm ent Hold You Up.'• Between times when the tax. paid bus benches aren't being used by transit district patrons, they would be a good place for bums to just stretch out a.Jld get a good night's rest under a couple :>f old newspapers. Then they could truthfully say they were being supported by the govern- ment. ALAS. EXPERIENCE shows that our government people don 't have much zip or flair when it comes to putting signs on things. Federal bus bench advertising would probably tum out to be a lot of warning signs like, "Sit to the Right" or. "Placing Chewing Gum Under This Bench is a • Federal Offense Punishable by a s.500 F ine or Like Increase in Your Income Taxes." You 'd also have to be careful about squirming around on the tax.paid bus bench. You might pick up a tax·paid splinter. But then, that wouldn't be the first tim e the government stuck you in that part of your anatomy. Tuesday. January 8. 1918 Ambush Figures Hunted ·BE.LF AST. Nort.hem Ireland (AP> -More than soo troops police and special agents hunt: ed through southern County Armagh today for terrorists who mas.sacred 10 Protestant texWe workers at a lonely crossroads. The slaughter early Monday ·night near Whitecross was the third in an escalating series of killings. in South Armagh that began Friday when three Protes- t ants were murdered. Five Roman Cat.holies were slain Sun- da..r, apparently by Protestants, and police believed the killing of the lO men Monday was a re- v e ng e s trike by the Iris h Republican Army's Provisional winr/ore retialatory killings were expected. The police also blamed the IRA for a nother a mbush Monday night in which a police officer was killed and two others were wounded near Castledawson, 40 miles west of Belfast. THE KILLINGS raised the confirmed death toll in Northern Ire land's Protestant·Catholic war to 1,413 since August 1969 and 18 since Jan. 1. Police said at least a dozen gunme n took part in the Whitecro ss ambu s h. Unconfirmed reports s aid there may have been as many as 20. Th.e police gave this account of the mass acre: The textile workers Crom a mill at Glenanne were in a bus bound for Bassbrook, a small Protes- tant enrlave in the Catholic- dominated area. One man with a red light fl agged the bus to a stop in a driving rain at the Kingsmill <'rossroads about a mile from Whitecross. When the bus stopped, the other gunmen eme~ged and or- dered the only Catholic in the vehicle ''t o make h i mself scarce." Then they lined the re· maining 11 Protestants up on the. roadside and mowed the m down with sub-machine guns and pistols. One man sur vived, 30-year-old Alan Black. He was gravely wounded and left for dead in the 111Ie of bodies. Auto Makers' Worst Sales In 13 Years DETROIT (UPI) -Mid· December new car sales shot up 30 percent over the disastrous period in 1974 but the U.S. auto industry stiH turned in its worst sales performance in 13 years. Neverthe l ess, Detroit's automotive executives said they were heartened by the strong showing which made the Dec. 11-20 period the best of the year on an annualized basis. American Motors was up 43 percent, Ford up 42 percent, Chrysler up 41 percent and General Motors up 21 percent. The same period in 1974 was the industry's wors t s ince 1960. Sales reports for the Dec. 11-20 period were issued Monday. Figures have been on the plus side in each of the eight reporting periods since the 1976-model cars were introduced in October. (Coastal, state .and national weather aummaries .appear today on~B9) 53 Billion Projeet SST Issue Ir.ks France, Britain WASHINGTON (UPI) -The public debate over U.S. landing rights for the ConcOTde ~c Transport bas ended with an Anglo-French threat , a policy reversal by the Environmental Protection Agency and a New York· Virginia split over whether to welcome the jet. Now the question rests in the hands of Tranaportatlon Secretary William Coleman Jr. He has promised a written rullnl within 30 days. The final, nine·hour Concorde hearina Monday drew more than 70 witnesses ranging from Bdtlah and French cabinet of. ficials to New York housewives. OPPONENTS INCLUDING the EPA, New York State, several conrressmen, the Nation.al Council of Jewish Women and the Lawrence, N. Y ., PTA argued the Concorde sbould be banned in America as a threat to public bultb and an unwarranted dia· tUTber of the peace. But the SST drew support from tbe State Department, tbe • state ol Vlrlinia; Sen. Berry Goldwater. <R·Arll.). a U.S. airline executl.e and officials of the Britlah and Frencb covernm1111t1. which have poured $3 billlon into the SST project over the put 1S .,...,... Tbe Immediate issue wu whether Coleman aboclld approYe a E m Britis h Airways and Air France for four SS!' fllahu ew York'• John F. Kenntdy Airport and two a day to '1 Dullea Airport startlng this year. • ··nm aaOADER ISSUF.S dealt with Ameriea11 lntematlollal e. f91POD1lbJUUn and treaty obligations, the development ot new teehlloJ011 and the growing awareness that tecbnolo1lcal .Svancet can brtn1 man harm as well as benefits. • JOffANNESBURGI _South A!rlca <U PU -Manust guer.· rillu backed b1 Russian arms and Cuban soldiers claim t.bey have driven pro-West~ rivals from their military strongboJd In northern Angola and cut their main arms supl)ly route. ~adlo Luaoda, k Marxlst- controlled station, reported &too· day the Popular Movement for ANGOLA COMPAA!O WITH VIETNA~ the Liberation of Angol a CPMLA), h ad captured Uige, formerly Carmona, 215 miles northeast of Luanda in fierce fighting over the past few days. "an1ulslied appeal to all freedom.-lovlna peoples'1 to SUP• port the npt qalnlt SoYld and C\Jban "w.armon1en". Radio Luanda said two Amer•can alrcr11ft were destroyed at Utge and "hundreda of tons" of wea~ueiled. WESTERN nJPLOMATS described the fall of lbe town and -airport ... a major' blow to the National Front and Its ally, the National Union tor the Total ln- dependence ot Angola (NUTIA). The Popular Movement's northern offensive follows a weeklong buildup of troops and arms and was timed to precede the Angolan peace summit called by the OrganizaUon ol African Unity <OAU > at Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on J an.10. On the southern front, milit~ sources with the pro-Western trooP1 reported clashes with ~he Popular Movement about 250 miles south of Luanda near Porto Amboi m, Quibala andGabela. African nation. lbelO&ln* Tbe pro.western forces baeked by S'outh Africa, Zaire l'effived aid from the U Stalet until Con1reu voted .lat month to end further aid.~ ·E1ypt and the Ul)i~ have called on South Alrlca, e Soviet Union and C\Jba to letf\'e .Angola and urged tbeOAUtoti•tp find a peacefAfl solution to the ncfci the OAU meetinC ~ l)OMnce Soviet and Cuban n· . terventlon, the issue ml hl tbe.n be referred to the-U • Stcurity Couneil if Russian apd Cuban advise.re and troops te- .maJ,n. !udgeRulea On Race Case Fa"" Addre•• UPIT ntE TOWN WAS the military s tronghold of the pro-Western National Front tar the Liberation of Angola (NFLA). The nearby Negage ~irbase was the National Front's most important staging depot for arms, men and equip· m ent supplied via neighboring Zaire. In Zaire, a spokes man for the National Front said the Soviet - backed Popular Movement had bombed M alanje, 264 miles east of Luanda. Since Jan. 1 about 300 Popular Movement soldiers and 25Cubans have been killed in battles in the area, the pro-Western sources s aid. SAN JOSE (UPI) -A federal judge has declined to order de· sef!.e&ation of the San Jose Unified School District because its racial imbalance is unin· tentiona1." President Ford speaks at Farm Bureau Convention in Keil Auditorium, St. Louis, Monday with mural of s ign. ing of Declaration of· In- dependence behind him. He said there were "thousands of dead among the civilian population '• a nd made an A.BOUT 7,500 CUBANS are fighting alongside the Popul~ ·Movement troops in the West U.S . District Judge Robert Peckham Monday handed down the decision in resp0nse to a class action suit filed in November 1971 in behalf of Spanis h• speaking students. ... Pacific Telephone's new rates: how you could be affected On December 30, 1975, the CalHornJa Public Utilities Commission approved several chmges in the way Pacific Telephone charges for some of its services.· The changes became effective Monday, January 5. Monthly rates for basic exchange service for both residence and business customers will not change. But the revised rates for other services will provide a portion of additional revenues necessary to help meet our higher costs resulting from inflation, increased wages of employees, higher purchasing costs of equipment, and continuing maintenance of the communications system. Primarily, rate changes will apply to service conntttions and installations, to long distance calls tNde within California, and on some b1,1Siness communiatlons equipment. As an example, we previously charged a flat $24 for a residence telephone installation. Under the new rates, charges will depend on the complexity of the work done by the installer and other company employees. Some customers may pay less, others more. Intrastate long distance rates have been revised, too. Jn the past, you paid a minimum fixed chuge for the first three minutes of any long distance call in California-even if you talked for only a minute or two. Now we are introdacing a one-minute rate for all directly dialed calls in the State. So you will no longer have to pay for time you don't use. To give you a better underst~ding of these and other charges, here is a more detailed explanation: Long Distance The most important change in long distance billing is that all directly dialed calls within the State o& California will now be timed in one minute incre- ments (instead of the old "first three minutes, and every minute thereafter" method of ti.ming). So, the shorter the duration of the call, the less the charge. This is the way interstate calls have been charged since March of 19~5. This change applies only to directly dialed calls. Operator-assisted call~ continue to have the three-minute initial pi!riod at a higher rate and person-to-person calls also will have an initial three-minute pi!riod at a higher rate. Pacific Telephone also has extended its special Night Rate (that's the lowest rate of all) so that it's now in effect all day Saturday. If you dial directly, you can take advantage of our Night Rate anytime between 11 p.m. Friday and S p.m. on Sunday, The new 1 calli~g period coincides with interstate calling periods. In Los Angeles and the San Francisco-East Bay metropolitan areas, we have cancelled all "six message unit" routes (check the front of your phone book to see which calls within your area are charged 6 message units). Calls which were previously billed as six message units will now be considered long distance calls. However, with the new one-minute rate in effect, it could mean a savings if you keep your calls to one or two minutes. The rates for Jong distance calls made from a pay telephone, and paid for at that phone (as opposed to calls charged to another phone number or to a credit card) will be increased. Charges will be slightly higher than for three minutes of conv8Ntion on directly dialed calls or calls over 16 miles, but lowtt than an OJ>i!rator-assisted call Actual charges will be given at the time a call is placed. Installation Telephone installation serviee charges will be broken down to include only those items ordered by a customer. As previously mentioned, we fonnerly charged a flat fee of $24 for installation of service to a residence, whether one or more phones were installed. Under the new rates, charaes will depend on the complexity of work don,. These l's>ay for what you order" charges will apply to both single residence and single business phones. Included are charges for the paperwork necessary to tteord and process an order for service, central office work, and jobs performed at the customer's home or business to provide telephone service. Because the installatioR needs of individual customers vary so greatly, a Service Representative will explain the charges at the time an order for service is placetL. \ PBX Equipment Thtte has been a restructJJring of rates which will different kinds of PBX equipment, an Account apply to many PBX services. Services affected are: RepttSentative will be visiting each PBX customer to l<ey Sta.lion Dial (755), Hotel Dial Pack {761A or B), assess and explain any financiAl impact~ clwtgts Modular Dial (756 only), and Dial Series {701, 711, might make before a change in billing bec:oD\ff 740, '157, and 800A). Since there are so many effective. OtherCharges Jnst&tion rates for intrastate WATS (Wide Area Telephone Service) lines, which have not bttn changed 1ince 1966, will inettue to $50 per line. There will be no change in the monthly M?Vice charge. The raidential monthly rate charge for Touch Tone servtc:e ~a to $1.45 per month for one phone and 25f for each additional TouchTone Mt. The old rate wu $1.60 a mon.th for one or more phona. A one- time charge for TouchTone service will be $7.SO for the firtt phone and $2.50 for each additional Touch Tone iNtrwnenL These 9fte-timt charges for TouchTone service will be the aam.e for businesses, but the monthly rat-e wU1 be .$1.95 for the firtt lnttrUmtnt and z.s• fore.ch ~ouchTone extension.. Once a customer has p&1d the one--tlnw charge for Touch Tone Ml'Vic:e, It never hu to be paid again anywhere in the Bell System. •. There will be charges for other functions we perform, such as making a number change, placing a phone on "vaatton" rate, or for suspending M1'Vice at a customet's ttqUeSt. There also will be a cha.rge to the CUJtomer who takes' over service from &l\ existing subscriber without inlftr'Uption. Repla~ment of a eta.ndard telephone set with ~ o( our -0.ign J.Jne lnstrummts will carry a epedtJI charge of $25 per phone for mldence c:ustomen and $30 per phone for business customers. This fee is in addltJon to the lnatrument charge for~ Desiga Une phone. ll' addition to the cha"ga approved December ao, Pacific Telephone will begin wrsmg for reconnecttng servlee aftu it hu bMn temporarily ditcoru\tcted for n<Jftopayment of bills. ' I ' I 1 ·~'.Pink Elephant ,. Former California Governor Ronald Reagan donned ski clothes for his motorcade tour of snowy New Hampshire, where supporters presented him with a pink stuffed elephant at one stop. The New En.gland trip is Reagan's first leg in 1976 campaigining for the GOP presidential nomination. Liquor Tax Veto Upheld SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., promising to initiate his own reforms in alcoholism programs, has handily turned back a Senate attempt to override his veto of a $37 million liquor tax increase. The proposed liquor State cents on a six-pack of ( ) tax, amounting to two beer and seven cents on a quart of whiskey, was de-· I signed to increa se financing by abOut one-third for ; California alcoholism programs. And it would have made drinkers pay for all the treatment of alcoholics. · , . But the veto override effort by Senate health ~ committee chairman Arlen Gregorio (D-San r. Mateo>. fell flat after an hour debate during the ~ opening day or the 1976 legislative session. The vote ~ was 20·19. far short of the 27 votes needed. jl ·' .. . Slain Ollieer /ffoarned I ~ LONG BEACH (AP) -More than 1,200 ' i· policemen from throughout Southern California r formed a funeral procession four miles long in honor of ambushed officer Gary D. El~ins. ~ · Elkins, 34, was killed by a shotgun blast in the t head in a New Year's Day shootout. Police said the I officer had been ambushed. Two brothers died in j the shootout with officers. Floor Leader P1elced SACRAMENTO (AP) -Paul Priolo of Pacific t Palisades was elected Assembly Republican floor leader Monday, and Senate DemQCfats were ex- ~ pected to elect their new floor leader later in the 1; day. I· ~ I Sen. David Roberti of Los Angeles was given the inside track to succeed George Moscone as Senate majority floor leader. Moscone is resigning his Senate seat to become mayor of San Francisco. Skull Identified SAN DIEGO CAP> -A skull found at a barren Baja California campsite has been positively identified as that of Frank Seay, wbo disappeared ~ wi.th his family six months a~o. ~ Deputy Coroner Max Murphy said Monday that ~ dental charts confirmed that the skull, found last ~ week near the Mexican fishing village of San . Felipe, was that or the 39-year-old garage manager. ~ still missing are Seay's wife Sharon, 34, and 16-~, year-old stepdaughter Sherri Schoenrock. Stlldent• Not Oaarged SAN DIEGO CAP) -The University of ' California, San Diego will not file criminal charges against three non-students who took part in a de- monstration in which UC President David Saxon was jeered and spat on. Geor.ge Murphy, vice chancellor or student af- fairs on the San Diego campus, said Monday that there was no basis for bringing charges against the three. "There was a clear violation of campus re- gulations, but no violation or the law." said Murphy. Nudity Ends~ . Black's Beach Eyed . SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Black's Beach, the first of· shoul be closed, City Manager Hugh McKinley bas recommended. In a: report to the city council, which wUl consi~er the issue later this month, McKinley raid the city could not afford tbe estimated $1 mllllon cost to build bathrooms and other facilities needed to· meet the growing ctusb ol nudists who have nock4NL to the beach, ,' 'Ibe 900·foot beach below Torrey Pines Bluff north of the city drew about 500,000 sunbatbe'rs last sum- mer. McKinley said be was also worrted about eroeton of the cliff a overhanging the beach. Since the state has tentaUvely rejected a Hquest to JflOve the nudist r.one north to a state·controlled beacta, the financial and envirof\mental problems are too blg for the city to handle and the beach. I s.hould be closed, McKinley's report concluded. The beach, diflcult to reach, had attracted nudists for years on a clandestine, or tolerated, basis. . Under growing pressure from sun wonhipera. the U lty council appr"Oved a "swimsuit optional" or· dinance in 1974, making it the lint beach in the naUon where nudlty l! speclflcaUy le&al. J . .. -....... TU!ld!Y. January 8, 1976 DAILY PILOT A$ Full E ,ffeet Not Felt Yet Doctors' Protest Continues LOS ANGELES CAP) -"This ls like sitting on a volcano and not knowing when it will erupt," one official said as hospitals in the Los Angeles area felt the growing impact ol a doctors' slowdown. "I don't expect any patient to die fQr lack of care," said Dr. Gail V. Anderson, director of emergency ~ervices at the mammoth County-USC Medical Center, one of the nation's largest hospitals. But he said patients could ex- pect inconvenience as doctors and private hospjtab in a handful ot Southern Callfornla counties protest soaring malpractice in· surance rates. BY LATE MONDAY, County. USC was receiving a few patients transferre d from private Hospitals. But a special Emergen-cy Operations Center, activated by the hospital to coordinate area medical Harrises Charge Propaganda Drive LOS ANGELES CAP) -The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a $30-million lawsuit on behalf of Symbionese Liberation Army members William and Emily Harris, who claim law enforcement officials have conducted a "vicious propaganda campaign·· against them. "The district attorney's office in Los Angeles, the FBI and the Los Angeles Police Department have consistently tried our case in the media,'' the Harrises said in a statement. They accused the FBI of releasing "incorrect and misleading information" about evidence allegedly found in the two San Francisco houses where they and Miss Hearst were arrested last September. ~ . Miss Hearst currently is awaiting trial on federal bank robbery charges in San Francisco and will be tried in Los Angeles at a later date. . services, reported no life. threatening problems yet. Leon Hauck, a apokeslJ?an for the Hospital Council of SOuthern California, said a survey of the group's 2S4 hospitals in six counties showed 71 were affected in some way by the slowdown. The slowdown is concentrated in three of the six counties, includ- ing the largest, Los Angeles. room doctors on duty for each shift, has r es erves .waiting should the slowdown produce a crisis. "We can't close our doors to. anybody," he said. "'This is the one place they know they can come.·· Orange County and Riverside County hospitals were feeling on- ly minimal effecfs. Riverside County doctors have a different insurance plan than many pro· testing doctors. THE KEY COMPLAINT is against Travelers Insurance Co. which proposed rate hikes on malpractice insurance of as much as 486 percent OQ Jan. 1. Travelers insures most of the 10,000 private physicians. The rate hike was de layed until Jan. 15 while the company appeals a rate-hike ceiling of 327 percent imposed by1the state. ''It's more of a nuisance for people who are patients than it is an inability to find services," said Daniel Yatabe of the emergency center. "It just takes longer to find someone to put a cast on a broken arm." ANDERSON SAID County. USC, which has 22 e mergency Brando, Son Sued" LOS ANGELES <UPI) - Marlon Brando and his son were sued for $50,000 Mon- day by William Gerber, who said their truck crashed headon into his sports car "at a high rate ofspeed." Gerbe r s aid in his Superior Court suit he was driving his 1973 J ensen Healey March 29 when a j ee p truc k c arrying Brando and Chris tian Devi, 16 -Brando's son by actress Anna Kashfi -hit the car. Gerber s ought $50.000 for ''injuries to his nervous system" and $570 fordamage to his car. Fabulous wools at a terrific price 44.99 Originally $56 The beaurif ul basics to accessorize many ways. Cozy. Casual. Classics to count on this year and next year. In a blend of wool and nylon. At f I I the panccoat price ?f this season. I A. Double breasted, back belt. Camel L color, beige, vicuna color, red. 8-18. · B. Easy, casual wrap' and tie in camel c~lor or vicuna color. In sizes 6-16. Sherwyn Coats and Suits Leather and suede at annual savings 79.99 Originally $116-$126 Right out of regular stock. The luxe leathers, the soft suedes you love. Here, by New England Sportswear, from a group reduced V3 and more. C. Curved front blazer in ruse or beige suede. Sizes 8-18. Orig. $116. D. Safari jacket in beige or brown leather. Sizes 8-18. Orig. $126. Not all sizes, colors. Town and Travel Coacs and Suits Bristol, Costa Mesa. 5 5 6~06 J I ,.-- AS DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE f _ Con~n~!d~!~~~ti~~ru .!~~~~~~m. lawbreaker a fine of up to $500 and/or six months in municator, the Bell Telephone System, indicate the jail. The vast m ajority of offenders, especially in traf· move may not h ave been sufficiently drasUc. lie cases, are punished with a fine. American Telephone and jelegraph {AT&T) re· But a fine of a couple of hwidred dollars or even ports an annual profit of $3 billion after taxes. less can pose a terrible problem for many citizens. It could be that more and more Americans are de· And if the fine cannot be paid, t he usual alternative is ciding that a long distance phone cau-·-now relatively a jail sentence, with the dual drawback of depriving inexpensive with direct dialing--is a better bet than the lawbreaker of wages and the taxpayer of the cost the rrlail, which may or may not arrive on time. of his upkeep in jail. Perhap~ the most discouraging and baffling A solution that seems to be making s~nse is the voluntary action court referral program, which ac;pect of the whole thing is the fact that the recent 30 enables Orange County judges to "sentence" misde-percentincreaseinfirstclasspostalrates (anincrease meanor offenders to a specific period of voluntary private industry couldn't even consider) apparently service in lieu of a fine. Sentences range from at least won't do a thingtoimprovemailservice. 20 to as many as 200 hours of service, and cover such varied community fields as office work, beach clean- up, carpentry, tutorin g and Ii brary work. Beneficiaries of the program. coordinated by the Voluntary Action Center of South Orange County, in- clude youth organizations, community centers and municipal departments j n need of extra help. Since misdemeaporoffender._s rarely are criminal types, this approach to justice can erase the bitter- ness of an encounter with the law in a positive and· constructive manner--and at virtually no cost to the taxpayer. Mail vs. Phone The theory in switching the U.S. Post Office Department to the U.S. Postal Service was to make it more of a business than ~overnmental operation and thereby, m aybe, get it on a self supporting or break· even basis. -· It hasn •t worked. Despite rate increases the Postal Service still manages to lose about a billion dollars a year. One Winner With all the brickbats flying around the seat of Orange County government in the past year, it is refreshing to learn that one county department has been functioning with "a.high level of professional competence." Winner of the clean bill of health from an indepen- dent auditing firm hired by the county grand jury was the office of Auditor-Controller Vic Heim. After making its examination of Heim 's operation, about the only items the auditing firm could criticize were some delays in depositing cash receipts received from the municipal courts and the fact that the key to a check-writing machine was kept in an unlocked drawer. Since these errors and other minor r ecom- mendations doubtless cao be taken care of in short or· der, it appears .county taxpayers start the new year assured of getting solid performance from at least one section of1ocal government. And that ''s a hopeful note. - 'I'd .(ike t,o eichange something.' Why Not Back a Winner? Soviet Challenge Grows ( ·ART HOPPE ) ··If a great power never does anything anywhere," says Mr. Kissinger in justifying our in- tervention in Angola, "then it ceases to be a great power." Mr. Kissinger's certainly got a point there. Unfortunately, every time we get involved in a family fi gh t .some where. we lose. Do you realize we haven't won a war in 29 years? We're getting to be t he laughing stock of the great power set. Even so, Mr. Kissinger wants to rush in and give a lot of guns to a bunch of' Africans so they can ki ll another bunch of Africans who got a lot of guns from Russia. He thinks this will keep us a great power . Nonsense! Haven't we learned a thing from our humiliating de- feats in Vietnam, Cambodi a and Laos? For once, I say, let's show what a great power we are and back the winning side instead. SO FAR the Russians' guys are ahead. With our help they'd win in a walk. All Mr. Kissinger has to do is announce we are sending SSO million worth of guns to the M . P.I.A. instead of the F.N.L.A. Who'd know the difference? Even if someone found out we were supporting the same guys as the Russians were supporting. there wouldn 't be too much of a fuss. After all, the guys we are now supporting are also being sup- ported by The Union of South Africa, General Amin of Uganda Dear GI001ny Gus R eagan's campaign literature claims he has ··ctefinite solutions .. to the welfare mess. cnme, tax- es, inflation and the grow- ing bureaucracy. He sure. didn't have any during his those eight years he was governor. K.B. GIOOmy G\K comments ar~ iubmltffd by ....sen .. nc1 do not Mceu .. rlly retlkt tlw vi.-of tlle M~pa.,.r. Seftd yow pet PM,,. to Gloomy Gus, D•lly Piiot. and Communist China. So we can satisfy all concerned by explai n in g that we are switching sides to save Angola from white racism , black insani- ty and the red-ye I low peril. One tiny fly in the ointment is that Fidel Castro has sent 5000 troops to fight on the side of the Russians' guys in Angola. Many Americans are gravely alarmed by the presence of 5000 heavily- armed Cuban soldiers only 5000 miles from our shores. BUT SURELY once we came in on the same side, Mr. Castro would reconsider his position. "I'm not going to send Cuban boys 5000 miles to fi ght a war that African boys s hould fight themselves," he might say. Then he could bring those 5000 soldiers back to Cuba and we could all breathe more easily. There are also the Angolans themselves to consider, not that anyone yet has, as far as is known. To be sure, the State Department says it wants to sup- ply guns to the losing side in or- der to achieve peace. But supply- ing guns to the winning side in· stead would surely achieve peace a lot sooner. . Think what a great power we'd be in Asia today if only we'd backed the Viet Cong, the Khmer Rouge and the Pa th et Lao. The · Sorry State of 'the Fleet WASHINGTON -As a measure of the poor state of the U.S. Navy. its ships were in- volved last year in an incredible 17 collisions -most of them with other Navy ships. In the past month alone, three of the Navy's proud aircraft car· riers -the In- d ependence, Saratoga and John F. Ken- nedy -have banged into other ships at sea. The worst collision oc· curred the night of Nov. 22 in the murky waters of the Io- nian Sea. During routine flight maneuvers, the carrier JFK col: tided, with the cruiser Belknap. The accident s et off blazing fires aboard both ships. Eight persons were killea and 46 injured, 25 or them seriously. CLEARLY, s omething is wrong with the Navy, which sup- posedly is supreme on the seas but apparently can't steer its ships straight. We have written a number of reports, most of them taken from secret Navy docu- ments, about the deterioration o( the fleet. Here are our con· clusions: The admirals have let the fleet run down. We have seen classifi ed r eports about ships with rusting hulls, broken gear. inadequate equipment and foul living quarters. Navy inspectors have also reported waste, mis- management and inefficiency in the shipyards which are sup· posed to keep the Navy's 580 warships in repair. At best, the fleet is only in fair fighting con· di ti on. Yet the admirals always manage to s q aeeze en oug h money out of the budget for their own comforts. They also find (JACK ANDERSON) funds for their pet projects, whether it's a s tudy of "the drinking practi ces of Navy personnel'' or the roundup of stray goats and pigs from San Clemente island off the California coast. No less than President Ford has complained, accordipg ro confidential White House llinutes, that the military brass deliberately cuts muscle instead of !at when he orders a budget reduction. UKE ITS sister services, the Navy is top-heavy with military brass. Most admirals can be found m a nning swivel chairs in the Pentagon, rather than the bridges of our fighting ships. The best officers, invariably. are as· signed to the Pentagon where they occupy the mselves churn· ing out reams of paper. Our far· flung s hips, the r efore, are sometimes commanded by un· qualified officers. Since the Navy brass is con· centrated in the Pentagon, they become m or e absorbed with bureaucratic maneuvers than naval maneuvers. The fleet has been neglected, with infrequent practice runs and inadequate equipment. Routine refueling operation at sea, !or example, re. sulted in four collisions last year. With the close of the Vi.;?tnam war, the Navy's combat crews have no one to combat. They are at loose ends, whiling away their time at m akework projects. Liv· ing conditions aboard ship have also det eriorated. Therefore, morale is low, discipline lax and efficiency poor. Tms NAVAL neglect has been costly. The Belknap, for exam- ple, <!ost the taxpayers $700 million. Now it has been put out of action by a careless accident. Even the minor accidents have been costly. ·From confidential Navy documents, we have seen how much damage a: sideswipe can cause. The carrier Saratoga and oiler Mississinewa. for ex- ample, collided during refueling operations last month off the Florida coast. -The Saratoga's hull was ripped open and a refueling station was severely 'damaged. Aboard the oiler, mwe than 40 specific pieces of equipment were damaged. But the most serious conse- quence of our naval neglect ·is that the Soviets are steadily over· taking the United States on the high seas. Already, one Soviet fleet dominates the Baltic and Barents seas. Another is challenging the U.S. Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean. A third fleet patrols the strategic Indian Ocean, and a fourth guards the approaches to Siberia in the Pacific. Many experts fear the modem. expanding Soviet navy is more than a match for the U.S. navy. ·Footnote: A spokesman told us that the Navy is undertaking a thorough investigation of the re- cent ~ollisions. He pointed out that some commanders bad ex• ~ s uperb seamanship after the collisions. -".rbe destroyer Claude V. Ricketts, for example, conducted heroic rescue. operations which saved dO'U'D$ of· lives after the JFK·Belknap col• lision. And the S aratoga•s coolheaded commander, Capt. Robert Dunn, averted a possible catastrophe by takin& swUt emergency measures. The World in 1776 A panorama of .world history behind America's Revolution comes to life in a big, richly ii· lustrated volume that sums up the brilliant, contradictory, ex· plosive world of l ate 18th Century: The Horizon History of the World in 1776 by Marshall B. Davidson (McGraw· Hill, $27.50). A vivid text enhanced by over .350 illustrations re-creates the climate of the powerful monarchies, from Versailles to the Forbidden Palace in Peking, and shows the rulers, their wily ministers, the ir favored aristocrats, their powerless poor, their perpetual wars. Splendid r eproductions con· firm that the arts flourished on a scale not seen s ince the Renaissance. The Age of Enlightenment was at its heigh4 and literary salons buzzed with talk about new scientific advances and such daring con· cepts as justice, liberty, equality. ( THE BOOKMAN ) Literature, p hilosophy. music soared to new climaxes of genial inspiration. Lending Money to Governmen.t Risky AS TRIS masterful stud~ shows, J efferson, Franklin and the other men who cut America'J; political ties to England were well aware of Europe•s in· comparable strengths -but also of its weaknesses. Th~y realiz~ that they had the unique op. portunity of putting into practice what could only be discussed q. the monarch y-bound nation- The colonists' r eactions to Europe's problems is not.~ throughout The World in 1776. 6 final chapter explains how tbet Founding Fathers s elected fro• the European experience ~ practices and ideas which we~ the most suitable for a brand new government in an already eJdst. ing New World. .. VICTOR DE KEYSERUNG Quotes WASHINGTON -The owners of New York City I 0 Us are finding out what the Roth.5childs and others learned centuries ago: Peoplewh&lend m oney togovern- ments may not get it all back. Jn, the old days the kings used to welsh on thejr debts outright. Modem republics a re more prone to do it on the sneak by debasing the coinage. Sure. we'll r~pay you !or t hat $25 savings bond you bought 15 years ago, but you're going to get it back in 35-cent dollars. · The current New York City situation is closer to the days w hen the kangs would get abold or the p eople the y ow ed money to and t e ll them, . "Look , Mr. Banker, either yo u stamp paid on th1s IOU Or we're ..goin8 to cul your right-ear 0 ((." That's about what has .happened to the people who bou1bt New York City tax· uempt J.,ssue and ore DOW rinding out.that some or them are eetting ,tbrlr in tu est rate lowered and lbe repayment dates pushed off down the horizon into the future. It takes work to feel sorry for some of the people who are get- ting clipped this way. Too. ter- ribly bad for Miss Cecily Van Der Gem, whose accountant· put her last50 inherited million dollars in· to tax-exempt m unicipals so she could escape her fair share of the burden .. <Som ebody with a· big income would have to make a 25 percent return oo a "business" invest· ment to equal his actual t~ke­ bome income from many tax~ exempt municip al bonds.) And · too simply dreadful for 'Reginal~ Sharkfang, the b anker who c lean ed u p selling those securities to the smaller, gainful-. Jy employed suckers who bought lbetax exempts. TllESE PEOPLE believed the boilerplate fine print that pro- mllled in engraved, scrolly words that , no matter what, even before the mun icipa l ambulan ce drlvus, they would get paid their prlncipol and their inten?$l. The bond holders would have first lien on city balJ, the peoplcwtlobouJlht them were told, which is like foreclosing a mortgage on a church. Who in the hell are you go- ( VON HOFFMAN ) ing to sell it to in order to get your money out? Most of us don't have to worry about such problems. Municipal bonds are seldom sold in de- nominations of under $.5,000, and who's got that kind of money? Nevertheless, the present system costs us plenty. lt has been calculated that for every dollar local government saves in lower intere6t r ates on its bonds because of their tax-exempt feature the Federal Government loses at least $1.32 in taxes it can't collect from the bond purchasers. (For mor-c on this see Sanf oni Rose's arUcle in the current "Fortune" magazine.) That •s not the hall of it. The system u:nder which bonds are marketed gives any number of banks ond bond underwriters. who play the part of the mid- dlemen, huge aums for perform· ing a u rvice we could au profit by doing without. Why should some c-barac:ter like John MJt:cbeO, who came up by lawycrtn.g ln the bond busine,.s, aet a rake--ofr <!Very llme somebody buil~ o } J road, digs a sewer or puts up a classroom? Why are we sybsidiz· ing the rich, the near rich and the stinky ric h by selling them bonds which provide a tax -free income? . ' THE R EASON that's always advanced is that otherwise local communities would have to pay higher interest ,rates in order to sell bonds, the income from which is taxable. One solution is.to take the whole business out of the private money m arket and permit local communities to boT'· row directly from the Federal treasury. By every calculation the s avings would be enormous ... in U.e billions. · Tbe drawback is that OllC'e that borrowing window is <>pe.n. it will be somewhat easier for lbe polltl· clans to play funny money games. For people who are just tooemb.it· tend by Washington to trust it to do an)'thin? right, almost the same set o adu ntages can be gainl'd another way. That would be to setup a state~wned bank, an idea that New York has been valt\Jelytoyln1 with. As o( now there is only one in the country, The Ban k of North Dakota. Established in 1919 wilh $2 million of borrowed capital to provide banking services tor •, socially useful purposes, it is now worth almost $400 million. Among the many things the bank does is und erwrite local municipal bonds, thus pocketing for the tax· payers the profits that Reginald Sharkfang would otherwise clamp between his pearly whites and swim off with. BY LAW the State of North Dakota must keep its money in the bank it owns. This not only eliminates the endless and eD<i· les•1Y slea::iy bank competition to get public money deposits that Yo"J have in other states, but it a1so gives North Dakota the financial power to do /or itself without hav- ini to ask Wall Street. or pay it trfbute. That power bas been used in many ways ranging from student loan programs to gaining a pre>- fit a bl c control over three· quarters ef a milljon acres of mineral rights. Beyond tho Bank of North Dakota's specific ac• complis hme.nu, it shows that between local municipal de. generacy and Federal dic - tat.orsb.ip, tb.e states with the huge residual powers granted them un· del" the Cq,nsUlut.ion have the potentJal (or dolna S01ne rather wo.nderf ul tbioga, • •"fhe theory of a free pr~ t9 · that the truth will emerge fro• free reporting a nd free di• cussion,. not that it will be Ptlr sented perfecUy and instantly 1- any one account." Wolttr Uppmis:Blt Ammcan colum~andauJhot ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ROOerl N. Wetd, Publil"'1 Tltomo1 Kecui( Editor Barbera Kreibfch, EditQrlal Page Editor · The Nitorfat page or the Dally Pilot seeks lo inform and atlmulate readers by presenUni on this page diverse commentary on topics of interest by syndical· ed cohtmnist4S and cortoon~ts. by provtding a forum ror readen'- views ind by presenUn1 thlt ne~spapcr's opinions and ldcts on current t~s. The edllorial opinions of the'!Jaily Pilot appear 1 only in the edltortal column at Ute r top ot lhe page. Opiniona ex· pres eel by the columnists and cartoonlsl.'I and leUer wrilen •r. their own and no cndOJ'$t'mcnt of their views by the Dally Pilot sbou.Jd be inf erred. Tu.esday,Jan.6,11'16 • \ DAILY PILOT A 7 Son Already Dead Sex Ed Surve y Released Party Line Ammals Share Phone Grieving Dad Issues Plea TOM BEAN, Tex. CAP) -A thin white wire stretches across the prairies near here and at the other end is a telephone sitting in a pasture. Only Tom Gregg's seven cows, two sheep, a horse and some rabbits are there to answer. DECATUR, Ill. (AP)-A bereaved father made a nation-wide plea: "Please don't send any more gel· well letters. My son has been dead for seven months. NEW YORK (AP) -A 71.S percent majority of junior high school stu- dents questioned in a national p..>11 believe that they should have classes in sex education. The re· . mainlng 28.5 percent dis· agree. "It's the m ost ridiculous thing I've ever heard of.'' Gr'egg said Monday. "J mean - isn't this incredible?" ''My wife and I just can't take it any longer. We are being torn up. I've got to let all of my son's letter friends know that be died last June," said Charles games, reading material Ryan. and religious m atter. GREGG'S HERD OF A.~IMALS got its phone last September when the Greggs• m9ved their mobile home a quarter of a mile away to a new home site near this North Texas community. - Egesight Saved U~ITtletJ ..... A. two-month old boy, .Jason Mulerig of Boston, is recovering his sight alter a lemon-sized tumor behind his right eye was suc- cessfully removed. The tumor is so rare medical experts said there are no more than 50 cases in recorded history. Here his eye is protected by a make-shift covering before the operation. 'Cheers ' Booed 1 LUSAKA , Zambia (AP) -Zambia's de· partment of cultural services wants to end the foreign habit or beer drinkers clinking their g lasses and saying .. cheers." A just published pro- gram aimed at reviving indigenous customs in- stru cts provincial cultural officers to "take measures to stop Zam· bians from using foreign ways of showing happi- ness when drinking in bars." Toxic Kepone Flowed Freely HOPEWELL, Va. <U PI> -Virginia health inspectors allowed the toxic pesticide kepone to flow through this city's sewage plant into the James River for eight months before determin- ing that the discharge may h ave violated federal r egul ations, of- ficials have told UPI. A portion of the river was ordered closed to all fishing by Gov. Mills E. Godwin Jr. last month because of co n - tamination by the ant and roach killer which has also hospitalized 28 employes at the now· defunct Hopewell plant where it was produced. (EC OLOGY ) the discharge should be reduced. MEASWHll.E, CITY officials maintain they did not know of kepone's dangers and said they had assurances it was harmless despite trouble with its sewage digesters in both April a nd October of 1974. The firm, Life Science Products Co., which pro- THE SON, 13-year·old Mark, fought cancer for five years. A story of his c r ippling plight ap- peared in a national weekly publication last May. The article said Mark would ·like to re- cei ve letters and the family's address was given. "A week later Mark passed awa y ," said Ryan. "In that time we received 6,400 letters, in- cluding a personal one from Sen. Edward Ken- nedy whose son's can- cerous leg was amputat- ed. Since Mark died, we have received 6,000 more pieces of mail. We are getting about 40 letters a week now.'' R YAN SA I D H E screens the mail and tries to answer as many letters as possible. "Mark h as letter friends all over the country and many in Canada," said Ryan who has three older children living at home. "I try to answer as many letters as I can to let people k now that Mark is dead." RYAN SAID about 200 packages also have been received containing ESPERANTO IN VATICAN Oceanside Gets Lost Rare Bird duced keponP under CO!'· tract to Allied Chemical Corp., was closed last July after employes became sickened by the chemical. THE STATE Water Officials say kepone VATICAN CITY (AP ) · · d h -The Vatican radio has Control Board, charged po1sonmg pro uces SU<' started a news bulletin in with enforcing federal symptoms as sterility, Esperanto , the in· permit s, did n 0 t tremors, l~ss or m e~ory OCEANSIDE (AP> -drac:.~ally reduce the and brain and hver ternational language in· ..,.... d T 1 h vented by Russian·physi-"People will be comit)g_ lu>pope . d ischarge. and · amag~ w1: ve . av.e cian L.L. Zamenhof in • ' We re c e i v e d 24 Bibles, $.100 in cash and even a coin collection," said Ryan who works for the Decatur Public Library. "We got a dozen boxes of gifts that I am going to take to St. Jude's Children's Hospital in Memphis." MARK WAS . stricken with bone cancer when his father was stationed at Ft. Hood, Tex., and was treated at the Scott and White Clinic in Tem- ple, Tex. "It started to spread to his lungs," said the father. "I retired from the Army and we went to Tucson where he began cobalt treatments at the University of Arizona Medical Center. Mark never knew how bad his condition really was." Fifty-two percent of the 1,000 students polled said that sex education already was taught in their junior high schools, according to the survey conducted by the Encyclopaedia Britan· nica Education Corp. In answering the question, one male ninth grader said be thought that such a course should be taught even earlier because by the ninth grade "you can be in big trouble without it." Ninety percent said their parents were an important influence on their liyes and 59 percent said they believed in marriage. · Eighty-four percent said in getting a job they thought that a col- lege education was im· portant. I ' ..i .,..;, "";' ''The telephone company said they would move our phone to our new location in about a week ... Gregg said. "They never bave." The Greggs left the telephone -which is shared by four-party line users -sitting on the ground. "THE COWS KEPT KNOCKING the re· ceiver off the cradle and interrupting service," Gregg said. "I'd have to go out there and put it back on. We now have it in a little ice chest but the cows still trip over the wire and pull the phone orr the hook ..• Gregg said a Continental Telephone Co. lineman kept checking the system for pro- blems until Mrs. Gregg directed him to the telephone in the pasture. "THEY'VE NEVER GIVEN ME a real ex-· planation as to why they can't come out and • disconnect the telephone and put it in Qur new house. "It's costing me $12.50 a month," Gregg said. "We were told it might be next spring." down from Los Angeles 'am'e n d Hopew el l·~ rued ~~t ~ekmg nearly to tike a peek at this federal permit until June~~.·::.:· ..:m..:..:..:.:1l=i1~on~·;Jrt~d;a;m;a;g;_;es~. ===t::h::e::las=t::c::en::t::u::r::y::. =:==:_ bird • • • s a y s G u y 1975, eight months after - )tcCas kie, r eviewing it learned the bug killer Judge for California's was going into the James .. )'ear-end Audubon Sode-in apparent violation of ty bird counts. federal regulatibns, or- T he rare Coue's . .ficialssaid. Flycatcher which ar· Raymond E . Bowles, rived in Buddy Todd the head of the board's Park is the second ever e n f o r c e rn e n t seen in San Diego County administration, said the a n d t h e 1 o t h i n delay was caused by dif- California, McCaskie !icultjes over how much, and other experts said. Its "internal compass" w e nt aw r y, sai d Stanford Law McCaskie. . "The bird obviously is· Head Selected lost. and meant to go . south from the Arizona mountains into Mexico," be said. The other Coue's Ftycatcher in San Diego County has been a long- time visitor in Presidio Park near downtown San Di eg o . Coue's Flycatchers settle for the winter and, natural- ly, catch flies. ATIENTION! STANFORD CAP> - Professor Charles J . .Meyers, 50, was named dean of the Stanford Law ~bool, effective Sept. 1. Meyers, also president of the Association of American Law Schools, will s ucceed Thomas Ehrlich: who recently was named president of the Leg'al Services Corp. ALL PEOPLE WHO TAKE PRIDE IH THEIR HOMES! NOW ONE COMPLETE PACXAGE • IMTHIOR DICORATIMG •TOPll.AHDSfUIMTURi- •ALL AT 3MOo/oOFF UT AIL PllCIS CALL FOR EXCmMG DETAILS ' "DESIGNING WOMEN" LTD. IDMWM °'IASTBM~ 21 3-360-2556 ........ a•c...trclllr • FROM F ash1on Island · · N ewpo rt Beac h \ Does . Lindora think Losing Weight is easy? It is not a simple task for a patient to reach and maintain "lean weight" for life. First the patient must have an honest desire to c ure his problem ... then accept professional guidance from trained Medical Doctors. Undora's unique 10-week treatment and training program will teach patients how to reach and maintain their "lean weight" for life. A safe and practical pla~. with proper nutritional diet. and continual emotional support. New audio and sub-liminal visual aids ore used to motivate the patient. The entire program is under the strict supervision of Medical Doctors, special- ists in Bariatric Medicine. llndoro O inics ore owned and odm1nistered by Medico! Doctors that restrtct thetr procllce to Boriotrics. All O ln1c Personnel ore licensed bv the Slate ol Cohlom1a. Call for information Monday thru Friday 8 A. M. to 6 P. M. Lindora~ MEDICAL CLINIC NEWPORT BEACH 645-3740 COSTA MESA 557-1893 Pace Professional Mesa Verde Bldg. Professional Bldg. Son Bemordlno • E. long Beach • Mission Hiiis Hawthorne • Orange • Newport Beach Gorden Grove • long Beac h ~ Posadeno lo Habra • Woodland Hills • Sherman Oaks West Covino • Fullerton • Riverside • Santo Monica COsta Mesa • Pomona • Cerritos • Hollywood I \ Dcin"t~ aeposit until you see the percent of our interest Extra percentage points ai·e valuable nm munition in your revolt against inflation. Don't lose them by depos- iting your savings at the first ta1·get of opportunity. Hold out for the hight'St intC'rest the law allows. on a wide variety of insu rC'cl accounts. Interest will be paid day-i n to day-out, compounded daily. What's more, you'll 1-eceivC' interest from the first of the month on savings deposited by the tenth, whC'n held to quarter's end. . 73/% halize *Noweorn ./• o 8 06% an OMUOI yiekf of • o by compounding dalfy. S 1000 m1n1mum ~llGll.6 yHr mlllimum f~1al 'MlufdhfW"IS pcitfm1l wrthdtaw~I• from t'"'"' ~:..-accOU"lt-s MtotO maturny. but 11\f'ro "'" •ut.iant.al rc~ucuon tn ln..,nt Ool"""!I" ****** Don't squander more than 20 free services, either : including social security direct deposit, travelers checks, safe deposit boxes,• note cot. lection, • and checking accounts.•• Before you do something hasty, remember what that poor fellow wrote in his almanac a while back: "A penny sa\·ed at Republic 'Fr<leral can be much more than a prnny earned." • $1 .000 minimum bn1:inra ••$:!,:.-01) minimum bGl•ncc REPlJBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS and loan association Four loc:atlon1 Jn Or•oe County SANTA ANA 17th St. West of Newport Freeway (714) 541-5286 ANAHEIM 202 Anaheim Plaza, 500 N. Euclid St (714) 956-8290 LAGUNA NIGUEL 30232 Crown Varley Parkway (714) 495-0850 WESTMINSTER 134 Westminster Mall/Boise & San Diego Fwy. (714) 894·5347 He11d Office: AL TADENA 22•6 N. Lake Ave. (213) 791-12811681·6611 T-lff Loc:.ttlons: AL TADENA •ANAHEIM • ARCADIA • BURBANK CLAREMONT• HACIENDA HEIGHTS • LAGUNA NIGUEL• LOS ANGELES PASADENA • PICO RIVERA • SANTA ANA • WESTMINSTER ...... .., --..,-11 ..... _ ... ., .... v,. .. rlSIJln-I ESOCJ SAVINGS ACCOU~TS INSURED TO $40,000 -- STEREO SOUNDS OF .THE HARBOR· f /'· A8 DAILY PILOT Tu.day, January 8, 197& . QUEENIE By Phil lnterlondi . "! .""\ / •' .. .. I've been trying to avoid men all day and 1 run into YOU'" Deaths. Elsewhere CHARLOTTE, N.C. CAP ) -Paul S. Jones, 62, vice president and secretary of the J .A. Jones Construction Co., one of the largest in the world, and a well known tennis umpire, died Mon- NELSON HETTY NELSON resutent of Hunt· •ngton Be.xh, C• Sorn l'eoru.try 23, 18" •n M1ssourt D•lt of dedtll January • 1974 1n Hun1tn91on Be•cll, ~ltt Surv1~d DY Mr sons. Fr~ Nehon of Ana11e1m. C• • Jac k Nelson o t ~·••n<I. M•~souri. e1au9111er. Dons M. Btek\ ot Hun1tr191on Be.ch, ~.; OrOIMr. Evertl1 Murray ol l"e"'f"lli.. • Mluour.. sister, Mae Conrad ol North Hollywood, Ca • two QranC!chlldrM Serv1ctt wt II be held at 1 00 PM Tuts· d•Y. J•nu•ry 4, 1974 •I Smith\' Mo'1uary Cll•~I Rtv Edward Erny oflic1ant lnttrmtnl, Cte!ar Fork Cemetery •n Perryville, Missouri. Sm•IM ' Morluary 1oca1 directo"- NE IEFE LOIS MARIE NEEl'E, rttlC!tnt of Weslm1n\1er, Ca. Date ol dutll, January 7. 1~74 Sur vi vtCI by hc!r ~s. R~r ano Boo Neete; sister. Gllldys S1anC11lorC1 and Ltl•a PMker. \even Q•andch lldren and live qreol Qrandchlldren Services will be hl!ld Wedl'M'sdav, January 1 1961 c11 n JO PM, ~o l'am1ly Coton1c11 Funeral Home 1nwe,lm1n\ltr. C.t GIBSON day after a lingeting ill· ness. KINGMAN , Ariz. (UPI> -Loujs S. Smith, 46, of Los Angeles, civil rights leader and black businessman, died Mon- day of injuries s uffered in a car crash. Death N offC!es Barb<lr•, C• matnnal QrandmolMr, Hortense Welle' s1earns ol Garoen Grove. Ca . Miss Londeltus was • Qrt>Cluate of Newp0rt Harbor Higll - anenoed Orar19t ~st Colle91! M>d Oc· ctdental Coll99f. She wu a rnembff of TM NewPort CNpter of The Nat~I O..nty Le...iue, anCl Wlls tmplC)\'eCI .s • bool<l<Hper •I The Newport a..c:h Attlletlc Club. Memorl•I serv1Ces wlll be Mid lit 7: lO PM on Wednesday lit TM Community Olurch Con9regatt0n.ll In Cor-C!tl Mar. C.. In lttu ol llOMr-$, the family sUQgests memor1al c,on. tr1butlons be made to Tt>e Arner1can Canc•r Society or The Cancer Research Institute. Pacific View Monuarydlrectors. SMITH Polltleal Notes TV Transportation Forum Planned 'By O.C. HUS11NGS Of .. Oellyl'flettlaft A one·hour telephone "Forum by Television" on bow to solve Southland public transportation problems in the future will be presented on KOCE·'IV, Channel 50, at 7:30 p.m . Jan.13. Local residents viewing the program will be invited to call in their ideas to 897-0302 in this first public television forum of its kind. It will be presented by the League of Women Voters of Orange County, in cooperation with the Southern califomia As· sociatit>n of Governments <SCAG >, and Channel 50. FERN PIRKLE, coordinator of the project for the Orange · County League of Women Voters, said "We are presenting this op- portunity for residents of Orange County to be heard on their ideas on mass transportation in the future in the Southern California Region. We urge Orange County viewers of Channel 50 to take part by calling in their solutions about the problem. Comments received will be used in pre- paration of the final plan by the SCAG organization in April." Simultaneous ly with the televised "Phohe Forum" pro- duction on the issue with Channel 50, the League will sponsor two other open forums, which wilt have television receivers for the· audience to share in the pro- gram, and where there will also be SCAG and Orange County Transit Dis trict Officials to answer questions. The two other lorums, begin- nln1 at 7:15 p.m . Jan.' 13, will be at Francis Scott Key Elementary School, 2000 West Ball Road, Anaheim, and at Vista Verde Elementary School, 5144 Michelson Ave., Irvine. The public is invited to attend these forums. MODERATOR FOR the Chan- nel 50 Phone Forum broadcast , will be Jeanette Turk, president of the Orange County League of Women Voters. Televisjon panelists will be Gorden Fie 1 ding, former Director of the Orange County Transit District; Frankee Baner- jee, SCAG transportation expert, and Shirley Irwin, memberofthe Los Angeles League of Women Voters Metro Transit Commit- tee. Orange County League of Women Voters volWlteers will handle a battery of telephones to receive the incoming questions or ideas from television viewers. ••• ASSEMBLYMAN Robert Burke <R-Huntington Beach) is one of two state legislators to get 100 percent ratings on their 1975 ·voting records from the California Conservative Union. The conservative group rated legislators on 20 bills. The group opposed most of them, including postcard voter registration, re- peal of the oil depletion al- lowance, the state budget. col· lective bargaining for teachers, the farm labor law. and a bill legalizing sex acts between con- senting adults. ORANGE COUNTY The ratings included votes on two bills the group supported, one requiring prison terms for certain crimes committed with firearms, and another mandat- ing the death penalty for bomb- ing a building in which someone is killed. • •• JERRY PATTERSOI'I, the Democrat who represents central Orange County's 38th Congressional District, plans a ~eries of public forums Jan. 31. He will meet with constituents at 10:30 a.m. in the Buena Park Community Center, 8150 Knott Ave .; at 12 :30 p .m . in .Westminster City Council cham- bers, 8200 Westminster Ave., and al2 p.m. in Lecture Hall D-101 on the ground floor -of Dunlap Hall at Santa Ana College. Transit Audit Set in County Oranie County Tnneit Dtatrict directors called Monday tor the flrst manaaement audit of diatrict operations. The audit, which could cost more than $10,000, wu su11ested in a letter to di.strict officials f rotlll. lut year's county Graod Jury. • · · In the letter. the jury noted that the district h8d J never been audited since 'its formation more thdf four years ago. ••. • 1MARY ·EV ELYN BB YDEN, OCTD spokeswoman, said the jury's proposal was accepSI ed in good f alth, but the implementation of an audJli was delayed ''becauseoftbebudgetcycle." 1vl "Until we got the jury's recommendation, we- were never really big enough for such an audit," she said. "Now we <are and we are going to conduct it." 1<JI The jury's letter didn't infer that the distriSI was being run inefficiently, only that it would l»t best if an audit was conducted. .r•, Since the 1974-75 Jury's letter was sent, thel OCTD annual budget bas doubled to more than Pt, million, its fleet of buses bas nearly doubled and ltg top management position bas changed hands. .1, THE AUDIT WllL BE conducted by a prival'~ firm. ' The proposal sets forth 17 specific tasks that should be accomplished. •'l Poles to Install 'Ir SANTA ANA -Kathryne Siler will be installed as 1976 president when the Orange County PoUsn Club ushers in the new year with a dance at tb~ Plumbers and Steamfitters Hall here. "' The event s tarts al 8:30 p.m. Saturday at th'\ hall, 3904 W. Bolsa Ave. The public is invited. Call 534-4469, or 543-8011 for details. Bus Drivers Eyed operation next month or s hortly thereafter. Just give us a call. Or, better yet, stop in today. We'll explain our easy leasing plan. And show you all the beautiful Cadillacs you can choose from. ·· The Orange County·Transit District is soliciting proposals from any private entre preneurs interested in contracting with the district t o operate the new bus lines in Buena Park and Westminster. Dave Schilling, senior planner for the district, said details are available at district offices In Santa Ana. The deadline for fil ing a proposal is 3 p.m. J an. 26. Nabers Cadillac The two lines are due to begin 2600 Hdrbor Blvd .. Cos ta Mesd 540·9100 GORMA N l(E GIBSON rt\· 1denl ol Hun11n91on &•ac t> Ca O.tt of deatll January I 1q7~ Surv1~ by h1\ wit,, Lorr.t•n• G1 0 \on. daUQhters, Zell• Rust and C<ltnenne B•rrv. Ro~tyn, Lorraine ano Jant'lle Atwood. sons. J amn . Kennetll ano Gorm•n Lee Gibson, Orolher, Ken Gibson 1nree QranC1<h1ldren SERVli:ES will bt helCI WEDNESDAY 4,0~n1r19 <JI 7 )() PM, J 11nuary 7, 1916 ill ~ell Family Colon••• Funtr•I ~ 1n DORIS M. SMITH. passed •way JenUllry 4, 1976 In Newp0rt 84."ach, ca. SuNiwd by her huso.nd, Plllllp O. Smith ol Costa Mt~. Ca.; two sons. Sidney R Smllh ol Indiana and Howard M Smith of Arizona; one brotrter. Robert M.C. Yamer ot Ocunsle!t, ca.; two Sisters, Mrs Rowen Yamer ol Oceanside and Mr s Roselyn ZlH ot Oct.tns1d e tour Qrand<t>tldren. Memor1a1 servt<ts -re held Tuesday, January 6 al 9 00 AM, Bell Bro.M!Way Chapel Rabb1S11vermdnolf1<1ant.8ell -------------------'--------------------------------------------------------- L~s1m1nster. Ca LONOELIUS THERESE EVELYN LONOELIUS, aqe 19, re\IC!enl of ~•WPorl Be.ell, ~ Date of death January 4, 1•7• Surv1Vl"d DY titr parents. Mr & M rs JoM C Londehus, brotntr, John I' Loncll!lli;s '"ter, Chro•t1ne A Londel•us, all ol Newport Beach, C• • maternal granOfalM•. Fran"s Sleurn' ol Santa BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 673-9450 Costa Mesa 646-2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Beach <$94-941 5 San Juan Capistrano <$95-1776 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac 1f1c View Dnve Newpart Beach. Cal1forn1a 644-2700 PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave Westmmster 893-3525 SMITHS' MORTUARY 627 Main St Huntington Beach 536-6539 PUBLIC NOTICE S-IUS STATEMENT OF ABANOONMUfT or: USE OF PtCT ITIOUS eUSIN IUS NAME Tiie lottowlng person llH ~ '"" ~ of the fictitious ovslness "8fN M EDIC A L INSURA N CE PROCESSING COMPANY at 1"40 SC Stat• College Blvd , An•h•lm, c.tlfornle. The fictitious ovslMSs n.ame ref~red to...,.,...was filed In County on 7·9-11 ERNEST A. l'ENNER, 1"40 SC State ColleQt 81...0., Anehe1m, Ctlltorn1e This buSlneu wH conoucted by.,. ln- dlvl~t. E RNEST A FENNER Tiiis stattnwnt WH llled wltll tht Goumy Clerk of Oranoe County on Otumbef' 3t, lt7S. "1,..1 PWllW!ed Of9ftQ9 Coer.t 0..lly Piiot, .,_"' '· u . "'· 21, 1'1' 11•1' PUBLIC N011C£ fllCTITIOUS IUSllllH "AME STATIMUfT Tiie ..,lewl"t Pt'-we delnt...,. -·: 01!111'1'-AT i.ON lll'li'O~ESSIONAL aJfT I It$, t1t a... l.lftcol"9 An9flelm, CA J9fwl L. .......,, Jte YW Trvc,.._ ~a..cfl.CAft..O J-I . Lyn<h, 10100\'Of'ljl1Jn. ... lllfd. Apt D, Yortwt l..lflde. CA .. Sttpfleit W•Y"' ltt•n, 1ttt 0..-.0r .• lll'lecMUe,CA fM1't Tll .. bvsl!MtS It C"'4N<t .. by e ~ .. ..,.,.,.""'". .wtflfl 1.. M iker Tiii• IQtilmeftt WH flltd '1111111 tfl9 Courily Cltrtt Of Or.n99 CovMY on OK. "·ms ..... l'l.ellllled Ot'Mtt (Nit Delly ,. ... Broadway Mortuary Clo rectors. FLORA HAZEL C. FLORA, resident of Costa Mew. Ca Oale 01 death January s, 1'11>. Surv1vt>d by ont son. Jack C. Flor• of LA Habra,~ ; two e1au911ters. J-t Blomquist of Costa Mesa ano S:..a Millt>r of lll1no1s. nine Qranckhlldt'ill and three 9rtat-9ra11C1children ~vices will bt twtd on Wednesday J·OO PM, Bell Broaoway OlaPtl With Pastor R0911r Ber9 ofl1c1ant. lntermt>nl, Sw•n Lal<e Memoru11 Gardens, Peor1•. II· hno1s Bell Broadway Mortuary local Clore< tors. McCLEMOHT ALICE M McCLEMDNT, passed away on Janu•ry 2. 1971> at ,,... B9' of ICl2, resident ot Hun11n9ton Btach. C. Survived by one ClauQllltr, H Louise Gretn ol Huntln9ton Beach. two brotllers, Glenn OsbOrn of Ml<lltQan and Witham Osborn ol Michi<Jitf'; two 9randeh1ldrtn, Mtlvln GrHn Of Hunt· l"91on Beach and Byron Green of LA Crescent•. C a .; live Qrt:•t· Qrlllldchlldrtn •nd seven 9reat-arut- 9ren<ICll1ldrtn. Graveside \ervlces will bt Wednesaav. Janual'y 1. at 11 ;00 AM. Grandview Memori•I Park, Glenc:talt, ca. SmlthS' Mortuary directors. RYAN ANNA ELIZABETH RYAN, ~ltt.nt of Los Angeles. Ce. Date of Clffttl January 3. 1974 Survived by two ntpllews. Richard E . w ,,,e1e11 ol LAQUN Hills. c a., and Albert c. Gruss of AnaMlm; nlec•. Lois A. Wenlell of South Gate. Services will bt l'teld 'Ntd- ntsday, Pacific View Olilpel. Inter· mt>nt. Hollywood Memorial Par• Pac1l1c Vle't' Mortuary, NewPOrl Steen, ca • Cl Ire< tors. FISCHER ANNA ROSE l'ISCHER. ruidl!nt of JOOI Country Club Drove, Costa Mt~. ea. Date of dtalh January s. 1'76. Sun1iV4."d by sons. Donate! and LAYO! Fls.cller andO.UQllter, E1l•lnt FIKl'ler, nine 11randch1ldren anCI tour Qrtdl· grandchlldren lnltrmt>nt will be In New Ulm ca1no1tc C'mttery In Mln- nnota, Baill·Ber<Jeron, Cost.a Mesa, Ca. Mortuary, e11recton. aEFLECTIONS by Heyn Sheffer· ., ..... HI 51 • W.., ....... ...................... ..ell .•. • H we could write the formula for our own hap- piness, few or us would be successful. Most of us think w e co uld b e supremely happy if only we had more . . . more friends, more time, more money! While it is probably true that happiness is bard-pressed to thrive where there is too little, PoUoct reminds us that loo much can be equally detrimental. We're more apt to be happy when we learn to be satisfied with wbal w e h ave •.. somewhere between too little aod loo mucb. Our service is cba.rac. terized by the utmost con sideration and sympathy foT those we aerve. as set forth lo the Golden Rule. You're in- vited to drop in for a "get·aeq\lalnted .. visit. oS!~!f.~R f1~ SOJTH COAST liGi'WflY LAGUNA BF.AOt 49·4-1535 SAN CLEMENTE ISll ~TH a CAMINO REAL 49'2-0100 Help I F\'ee Tax servtce by H&R BLOClt at all IWutualSaviogsoffices The nabon's best known tax preparation service will prepare your mc:hv1dua1 Federal and California tax returns free. or for a small fee. Free. 1f you have a cerbficate account at any Mutual Savings Office with a balance of $7,500 or more. For $15 1f your balance 1s a minimum of $3,CXX). if you are not now a Mutual Savings customer, open an account and become eligible for this exclusive offer. We will arrange to transfer your funds from your bank or other savings association. Not only will our tax service save you money, but your return will be covered by the famous H & R Block guarantee:' "J[ we make any error in the preparation of your tax return that costs you any interest or penalty on add1bonal taxes due. while we do not assume liab1lity for the additional taxes, we w1/I pay that interest and penalty Furthermore, 1f your return is audited, we will accompany yow at no extra cost to the Internal Revenue Service and explain how your return was prepared. even though we will not act as your legal representabve'.' Save money. Have your returns prepared by the best known tax people in the business. Be protected by a guarantee. Just call or come in to any Mutual Savmgs Office to make an appointment But do it soon because of the popularity of this offer. SerVJce not available in San Diego County. MUTUAL SAVINGS · llfililllillll.... ~ loM MeOClltioft C-.• K>-San Clemente '°"'1elk'I Vlley 530 Camino de Estrella/ 493-5651 17942 Magnolia Street/963-8396 Corona ct.a Mar hnta Ana 2867 East Coast Hlghway/67&-5010 ~1 North Main/547·9741 ' . .. 1 .J i .. . r 1, l 1-.• f ••• t {' l'J Ill %'1 °"'"''·ta,•. ttu...-J-"· '· tt16 ..., _________ .. • ,,..,s '-------------------------------------------,r----------------------------------------------------------------------------------...:.~:..J .. ' - ( i: fJ \ .. ' . . • 'f . ~ ) . n-d!y. January 6 , 1178 DAILY "LOT .1f --~-Cla_a_rg~e The r e's Gunme n Still Loose In F lorida Sprees SD Sets Airport Curfew Aide Def enils . Mon ey I -...MacA.rtlwr · Ill Nail S . ORLANDO, Fla. (AP> -Central Fl~rida authorities say they are faced w1tb only one certainty in their manhunt for masked terrorists responsible for a nine.month binge of murder, rape, torture and robbery - the gunmen will strike again. not even poslti ve they are dealing with one gang. I WELLESLEY. Mass. (UPI> -The personal Nde of Oen. Douglas MacArthur aays there ls .. ablolutely no truth" to tt\e story that Presldent Jbrry S Truman had to order MacArthur to'land at \fake Island for their historic meeting and then the general kept the President waltlne. 1 .. I wu at Wake bland with the general. *tArthuT arrived at Wake the 111gbt before. We Md dinner there, we slept there and he was waiting for Truman at the airport.'' Col. Laurence Bunker nid Monday in an interview with UPI. ' BUNKER, MACAJl111UJl•S AIDE-DE-CAMP for slx years froro April 19t6· through November 1152, said •'there's absolutely no truth" to the much publicized ~ory that MacArthur kept his plane cirding Wake trying to make Truman's plane land ftnt and that the President finally ordered the atneral's plane to land. He also dellied that alter Truman's plane landed, MacATtbur kept the Presi· dent waiti!'g 45 minutes before joining the welcom· •committee. The Wake Island scenario was used by writer Merle Miller 'in bis book "Plain Speaking" and in the ABC·TV s how •'Collision Course," aired Sunday nigt)t. Concerning the first formal meeting of Truman and MacArthur. Truman has been quoted as say- ing. "when he walked in, I took one look at him, and l said, 'Now you look h~re. I've come halfway lreross the world to meet you, but don't worry about that. I just want you to know I don't give a good god· damn what you do or think about Harry Truman, but don't you ever aaain keep your commander-in· chief waiting."' ' WEARING A GRAY. PIN-STRIPED SUIT, white shirt with French cuffs and a bow tie, Bunker sat in the living room of his 2'h story, green clapboard home in this Boston suburb. An auto. graphed colored photo of MacArthur was on the bookcase. Bunker slowly shook his bead. "There was no such confrontation," he said. ¥Jn his memoirs. Truman said the meeting was cor- . al. And at the end, he ~inned the Distinguished rvice Medal on MacArthur and gave him a box of andy for Mrs. MacArthur. "Gen. George Marshall once told a friend of min e t h at Truman was reluctant to relieve MacArthur or duty. Even after he bad done it, Marshall said Ma c Arthur was Trum3n ·s military hero. • It dated back to t he First World War. When I~~ i t ( r e c a 1 1 i n g j MacArthur) first· was p s uggested to him, ? Truman said be was not ~ going to do it -not go- lt.r. 1 ing to end the career of a MacARTHUR · · distin~uisht:d mili~ary man in this f asb1on. When it was suggested the second time, be re· 1 luctantly agreed," Bunker said. I ASKE D WHY HE THOUGlfl' MACARTHUR 1 was relieved of duty during the Korean war , Bunker said. "The people immediately around Truman were afraid he (MacArthur> was going to win the war. They had persuaded Truman to wage-a limited war -a no·win war. "There were hostile elements in Washington J giving Truman bad advice .... Everything MacArthur did was to strengthen Truman 's hand - I not weaken it. He wasn't being insubordinate. He I was putting facts before the public which those I others were s uppressing. "There was a great deal of politics involved. MacArthur had not been back to the United States since 1937. He already had been credited by the { American peoj>le with winning the war against t Japan. He had conducted an incredibly successful ) occupation of J apan. Politically, no one knew what I MacArthur would do when he returned to the United I states if be bad added victory in the Korean war to J this list. I '"THEY WE RE AFllAJD THE AMERICAN I people would put MacArthur into the White House J whether he wanted it or not, .. Bunker said, adding, 1 "I know he didn't want the White House. He had no ambition in that direction. U the American people ' I insisted. he would have sone along -but be would have been unhappy. "Politicians. particularly the (Thomas) Dewey wing of the Republican party plus the Democrats, were determined to do something to tarnish the general's image before he returned to tbe United Stjttet.'' . 1 Bunker sajd that even after he was relieved of l duty. MacArthur bore no ill feelings towards l Truman. .. He had no bitterness for Truman. He was I aware of the pressures being brought to bear on t Truman." I HE RECALLED THAT F OLLOWI NG AN an· r nual dinner in honor of MacArthar, tbe general was t talking with Gen. Leif J . ~ Sverdrup, who organized the get·togetber. Bunker quoted MacArthur as sayiag. ••Mark my words. Harry Truman ~ go. ing to go down in history as afar treater president than (Dwipf) Eisenbower. Harry Truman made more imp0rtant decisions from a sound point of view than Jke ever d reamed of making.:' • 'l'INMAM Asked why be tb'ought stolWs about •a confllct between MacArthur and 'fruman were beinl publiclaed, Bunker said, HThe ' ad thins about Truman was that ln later years he became senile. Much of the pre.SI ge,nerally a1r6ed not to interview him. But Merle Miller declined to go alon1 with that. Heg.,Harry Truman into New YOC'k !or a televl1lon • Truman was drinkid1 hAI favorite bourbon and Miller wu makine taPQ ~ t.belr converHUODI. But Miller tat on the tapes Lmtif alter Ttuman died. If Truman bad read some OftboHthln11. be wouldhavecorreeted t.bem." Bunker said MacArthur would bave been "bor- rlfted" by what took ~In Vietnam. "IWACARTRVlt' WAS TaAINBD IN TR E prtndple that when 1001otowar, you should end tt • eoon as Polllble. 1be IODaer it goes on, the more ~•uallle1. And U one th1na bothered blm, it wa1 •uilllea. Durtn1ldlJIor39 ampbibiOWJ landlnfl, tblre were only sorn«blnc Uh S9 persons killed in •tablltblDI a beachhead. That ·a absolutely fabulou.s. · "I know the 1eneral was very unhappy •bout U. battle tadtn of the Amtrallana and at times the JllltMI. Both of them liked to be 1pecta'cular -to • .,, frontal attacks. MacArthur cUsUked that auae 1t caused too many usualUet.'' 1 DALLAS (AP> - Don't btte those fin1emall1 ! You may be chewing off $00. "We're not even certain the same individuals are involved in all the cases," Monge said. "Sometimes it's been a lone male and sometimes it's been three or four involved." That's the price a woman can get !or a set Of leod flogexnalls, kC· cording to the owners of a bfauty salon In North Dallas. "We have about 25 or 30 wome n g rowing •fingernails now," said Norm Heinz, who along with his wife. Lee, owns the Creative Airs salon. "We still have people waiting for nails." Uf'IT ........ Beat• 3 OfHll•• Former a s tronaut Frank Borman, now president of Eastern Airlines, joined 700 baggage handlers in Miami in piloting luggage carts through crowds in one of airline's busiest holidays. "It sure beats jogging," he said. "They undou btedlY know that every policeman in this part of the state is looking for them and they haven't stopped yet ," said Jeff Monge, a Florida Department of Criminal Law Enforcement detective in charge of coordinating the investigation. MONGE SPECULATED, however, that all the gun men may be ex- convicts "be~ause they know what evidence can be used against them." In many break-ins, the gunmen have ignored expensive items like jewelry and color television sets in favor of such loot as small appliances, kitchen utensils and even food. SAN DIEGO <UPI> - One of the tdlgbest airport landing and takeoff curfews in the nation is in e!f ect at San Diego International Airport, grounding noisy jet airliners until 6 a.m. Port dis trict com- missioners last month unanimously imposed a six·hour mandatory ban on all flights out of Lindbergh Field a nd restri cted landing privileges to quieter models such as tbe I..1011 andDClO. "I'M AFRAID WE'LL have to operate on the assumption they will continue these attacks until they are caught.•• In one case last month, where a Deland man was killed and his wife raped and then thrown off a bridge in· to the St. J ohns River, the gunmen were s urprised while cooking in the victim ·s kitchen . The salon pays as much as $2 per nail cllp- ping to resell as transplants for $35 !or a complete set. Since April, the terrorists have in- vaded 14 rural homes in five Central Florida counties in a spree or robbery and torture that has left two men and a woman dead. MONGE SAID POUCE will be "ex· tremely lucky" to catch the gunmen in the act, but held out hope that a $.5,000 reward offered by the sheriffs of five counties last week would cause someone who knows the gunmen to squeal on them. An airport spokesman said only two violations were r eported Monday, when a Pacific Southwest Airlines 27 landed on a flight from Sacramento and a small . private plane took off. The t echnique,· in simplified terms, is to glue a longer nail onto the edge of the existing nail. It's a temporary step to allow the nails or the wearer to grow out to the desired length. Along the way, they've also r aped three women, tossed two housewives off bridges and poured drain cleaner in the eyes of ~mother female victim. Heinz said nails must be at least one-third inch out from the fingertip before the salon will con· sider them. SF Killings SAN FRANcisco <AP) -Homicides re· ached a re cord 135 in the city in 1975, police say. THEY STRUCK TWICE over the New Year's weekend, killing one man and raping his wife in Polk City and ransacking another hom e near Orlando on Saturday. "TM only thing we have been able to determine about their pattern is the fact that the motive for these attacks ls not monetary," Monge said. "The stuff they take isn't worth that much money. R ight now, . we have no theories. They just get their kicks ou.t or terrorizing people .•• A PSA spokesman said the San Diego-based airline did not consider the landing a violation because the !light had been delayed and suf· f ered mechanical dif· ficulties. The tot al includes 12 people who died in an apartment fire set by an arsonist on Dec. 12. Although all the attacks have been perpetrated by men wearing ski or stocking masks and all have been committed against rural residents at night, Monge said investigators are MARTIN FURNITURE Daily 9-5:30 Fri. 9.9 Closed Sunday s.n ... the H.-. Area OYtr 21 . , ....... tWs locatloa. Ow 1-.st llwe.tofy *astic_., reduced. Hen Is a lsfhMJ of -, a few of ..,, -"tmcllng lliily1 -JM,. find ...... 111ore. Don, cWay! .... ,1 . LIVING ROOM ... SOFA· LOVE$EAt SPECIAL FREE DELIVERY • 100 .. Sofa • w·• l ove Sect to m:i tch Custom qtiltod Nyfon fobic • Maflex springs. One set ody. Bolh Pcs. clos&out •••••••••• $619.00 I only 100" l oose Pillow-Bode Sofa IGeen-Yeliow). , TERMS OF COURSE Fortrel -7 pillows .............................. CloM CMlt $450.0CJ • 100" Tuxedo Sofa, loose Pillow-Bock. Fortrel - 7 pillows !Blue} .•••...•.....•.......••.......•. Cao..-t $625.00 Thomasville Country French Sofo, 84". Carved Oak frame. Reg. $850.00 • • • • • • • . . . • • • • • • • • . • • . • • • • • • • • • . Close CMlf $69 5.00 %" Cciif. Furn. Shops. Birch trim luxlliously soft Reg. $595 •• Sale $545.00 %" T lifted bock, crescent shape Sofa. Reg. $650.00 !Geen Motalosse) • . . . • • . • • • . • • • • . . • • • • • • • • • • • Clo11 .t $495.00 96" Coootry English Sofa · Fortrel • 7 ?111ows. Oak trim Sale Price $645.00 %" Tuitedo Sofa (down f!Med~ Pillo# bod: w/1>olstetS. G~ .•••...•.•...•.•••.•...•.•••.•.••• S. Price $575.00 SPECIAL SOFA S~EEPER SALE hwy Sll•per c• be or•ecl IR _, sbe SIMplf' Oii' Sofa -CWr- "°99 SHI. fwll • q..... ~ 5-6-7 or I ft. GI Ide prices J09 c.'t ........ CHAIRS· CHAIRS • CHAIRS CWrs Of ••lt"Y clncriptta. • sale. Q6 Cliialn • OccmhRll CWn • Woocl Ch*s • C.. CWrs • W9g Chairs · Swt..e CWn • Swlftl lockers • -..11 s • losfoll locbn. Al ,._., "-.... H .. • dl1co•nts °" all wall decor. Pal•tlltgs, Acceuorfe1, Odds & .... Sale Prices °" al l•mbr•dt la.,., the f...,.s Slgllt UgM mcl .... lc ...... s. • HURRY FOR BEST BUYS • SOME ITEMS LIMITED • OPEN DAILY . 9:00 SIMMOMS BEAUTYREST SALE Close CMlf Prices • leautyl est in stock only • Discontiwd Roor Scauapks • Sold In Hts Olf'ly • full size Svpreme I Set (I orly} Reg. $279.90, Sole •••••••••••••• $245.00 full size Bock Core I Set, 2 orly, Reg. $279.90, Sole •••••••••••• $245.00 0Jeen size Supreme I Set, I only, Rec; $339.95, Sole •••••••••••• $2H.OO Q.oeen size Bock Core I, 2 ony, Reg. $339.95; Sole •••••••••••••• $29t.OO King size ~eme I, 2 ody, Reg. $499.95, Sole •••••••••••••••• $439.tS King size Bod Core I, I ony, Reg. $499.95. Sole • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $43'.95 Twin size Limited &:fition (2 oriyi Set •••• •••• •••• t• •••••••••• ·$lat.SO QJe00 size Llmited Edition (I orly), Set •••••••••••••••••••••• $27t.t5 Rinc:J size fantasia (I O!YyJ, Set •••• : ••••••••••• •• •• •• •• •• szn.95 Thom:lsville Mediterranean Goup DINING ROOM Trestle table 2 20" leaves -4 side choirs, 2 orm choirs. Ocl & Pecan • Cone bock • 7 Pc. Reg. $1 150 ............................. Sale SI ,035.00 Matching Chino • Reg. $695.00, •••••••••••••••••••••• We $ 635..00 Thotrosville Pine Mona • (The Country Loe*~ Ovol table w/2 f~ls • '4 side choWs & 2 arm choirs. Reg. $830.00, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Sale$ 699.50 Thotrosville Antique P'rne • 48" pedestal table • 2 20·• fllls & '4 hicji bod: Windsor choirs. Reg. $895.00, •••••••••••••••••••••••• We S 765.00 Thomasville ltotion Provincial. Cd table. pedesta, wf2 20" fills· So&d Oierry • 2 arm • 4 side choirs. Reg. SI, I 50.00, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • As Is $ 150..00 Cdifanio furn. Shops 48" tc::t,le w/fVrrica top, pedestal base. 2 fills. Reg. $329.95 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• We S 279.SO Cd. Shops 48" octe>C}Old. '4 fills. Reg. $379.95 ••••••••••• We$ 32t.50 f:oriy American Birch choirs to rrotch ot sole prices • Chino, 62", gloss. Reg. $739.95 •••••••••••••••••• CIOM Dlul S 595.00 Cd Shops 54" Hutch Gino. Reg. $599.95, •••••••••••••• We $ 4H.SO ThomJSV111e Choteau PrO'o"eOCe • Ccutry French 45'' x 60" ovd table w/3 18" fills. 4 upholstered side choirs. 2 t.pholstered arm choirs. 70'' 01ina to rmtch Reg. $3,280.00, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Close Diii $2,475.00 5 pc. Dining Set. 42" pedestal toblo & 4 choirs. WolrPJt ard Ari. White. Reg. $229.so •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• c·1qse• s 111.so BEDROOM SPECIALS Thorrosville Mediterranean Col 5 pa. include n " Dress«, K"n; H3. Miror, 2 stands. Reg. $895.00; 2 sets ony to go for •••••••••••••••• °"f $795.00 lage door chest to match. Reg. $3fil00, •• , • , ••••••••••• W. $299.SO Thotrosville ltofion Provincial Cherry. 76" triple Dresser, ~. ()Jeen he<d>oord. 2 stonds. Reg. $975.00, dscontirued • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $795.00 l.aqe door chest to match Reg. $399.50, •••••••••••••••• mow $2H.50 Thorrosville Leqocy Oossic. Pecon & Bui Bm 78" triple t.Kesser. King HS. char bock. 2 stands. twin NVrrors. Reg. $1 ,545. Sole Price, 6 pcs. SI .2'5.00 Cdif. furn. Shops Woodstock Ant. rine l().Qower ofesser, 1-Ltcn Mirror with ~s. King Cannonball Bed with footboad, 2 stands. Reg. $1,769.80 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale Price $1,591.00 • SIMMONS & SEALY I MAnRESS SAtE .. AJ1&11ca'1Two~MlllhftNI TO 5:30 FRIDAY 9:00 TO &:00 s.Pc. Country American (!v'iique Pine~ Q-esser, ti.itch Mirror, King ConnOnbdl Headboard. 2 stands. Reg. $899.00, •••••••••••••••••••• 5* $795.00 • Some set os above, with ~ t-ti •• , • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $750.00 Lage 5 drawer Chest to mJtch above • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $199.50 ~ ... r ,,..c • s. Prices CLOU.OUT 1'Cll OM STOCK ... CNAMDISI ONLY ~ ~ .. s ~, twin. ea. pc. ••••••••••••••••••••• ' $51.00 Seay firm.Res <);It U size set ...................... $149.IO Sealy firm-A•• LUICll)' Q.1t ~ -set •••••••••••••••••• sz lt.00 Sealy ~u (Lui111)' 0,.lt King lize set .................... SZ9t.OO s.aty R.lt Guard ( f1tm) ~ set .. • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • SI lt,IO Seely.._., Guard (firm) U siae set •••••••••••••••••••••••••• SI "·'° Sedy R#God (firm) O""ua set •••••••••••••••••••••• IZ It.DO Sealy W Guard (firm tGng sa set •••••••••••••••••••••••• $279.IO f9MMONS OOLOEN VM.l..E SALE} • • T v.ir\ Sid • Firm • ea.. pc. •••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••.• $ It .II T wir1 sim • Eatra F1rm • ec:a. p:.. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . • ••• S M .II Fi.A si:r9 • m · eo. pc. ••••••••••...••••••••••..••••••••• S 7'.n hA ... Extra Firm • ea., J>C. •••••••••••••••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • s """ o.-sa. . Rrm • Mt • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • . • . • • .. • . • . • • • • • . • a n.oo ~ --~ Firm • set •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $249.00 ~ size -Firm • let-•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• "".00 Ki'9 -• &tro Firm .................................... $329.C!O M..y other ledroom Pieces at Sale Prices.. • SAVE IN MRY DEPARTMENT 1161 HAllOll llv.D.• DOWMr~OWN COSTA MES• • PHONE 548-S 131 ~OVER 20 YEARS OF SERVICI • ·1 • • • I . . • ,4 J 8 DAILY PILOT Tuesd9. January 8, 1979 Today's TV Highlights ABC (7) 8 :00 -Happy Days. Fonzie's p a rtne r in the Har vest Moon dance contest is Richie's mom, who gives him more tha n he bargained for. KHJ (9) 8:00 -"Saratoga Trunk." Gary Cooper and Ingrid Bergman are paired in this 1946 movie from the Edna Ferber novel. KTTV 01) 11:00 -Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman . The premie re episode of this new ni ghtly soap opera spoof from Norman Lear introduces the "Fernwood Flasher ." TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening JANUARY 6 'Ye Ind 8 J. IO for gel thtir d1shkt of the man and show him a hltle friendship. 6 oo 0 0 I a 'lOI ED ED CD "twi l3 0 11 3 23 6 flews 0 BOl\Jl\U O '.l:t 16) 112' ED l'olict Wom1n "lht Metting Point of Ice" Ami· lew 1h1eves stu l a m1ll1on dollars worth of uncut d1am0Ad~ from pro lession1I robbers. when one of the p1os panics. l6l Wild Wiid West ( 6 J h m1l1 Alf1if m lr•nside P'11t11d1e Family Ad1m·l2 Soltdld 16 StJr lrtk ED Ou1story (~ 8 ) StJtlrtk W l.Jltle R1sals Ho111 § (l'l9 8 ) Ll CD lhe Rotlits The Bold OnH V111tty Sllow "26 Mom; (C) (2111) "Thf Oark at the Top ol the Stlirs" (dra) 60 - Rot>ert Pm•011. Dorothy MtGu11e I •e Ardtn, Anetta l1nstlury. 6 JO 6 Q) Andy Griffith Show to Mtf'I G11th1 Show WI mc•Al I la Smell of 1 MHS- llo Documentary on tht 81lumore S~mphOny Orclles111's first Young Conductors Com~lllJon tollow1n1 the hn1I coottstants !h1oueh a ur.es qt dem1ndin1 "'"tten tuts and vigorous conducltr.g tlt•C•St,. 11 3 Hotu 's Htrou rn Electric Co111p1ny EV Amt nun 011tdoeumu CD C1ttop1nc Gourmet 7:00 0 0 0 ~ l6J ED CD "rws 1 l tronsldt O Bowhnt for Don1rs 6 Bonanll 'J:JO 0 ~7 W ~ Oat Day at a Time ! !here's a man •n Ann·s hie -he I wants 10methine Ann hu. and she wants 10methin1 ht hn. In Ann's ca~. she w1nts a 1ob. In his cue, he wants Ann. 1 a' To h it tht Tiuth 0 Conctnllation m I Lovt Luer @ Tht fBI 17 ~ Gunsmoke fl) LI lob• '26 l ove Ame11u n Style EI;) Woman (29 18 ) 8tlllllll ED P'alo1111 Ei) t ht Addun h mil) ' I m El Choler 10:00 O ,rt, .JJ .__s) Switch! JacQuts Au- buchon euests 1s (u 1 Harper, a bank pm1dent who's been lurntd into a human bomb by a pa11 of extor llon1sts. while Pett 1nd MK try lo stall 101 time H they try to f1eu1e out a :.olut1on. 0 ll 6)(10 ED lot forrutu 7.30 O Nt'1I Tru1u1t Hunt foepawer" Forrester 1s 111Strumen· UI 1n helping 1 fnend and fellow olf1Ctr 1ecept a 5 year old step d1ut11ter liom his wife's pre .. ous mamaee. O ll' 10 ED 110 11 , ... d Sqam 0 Lon A111tnu n Style 0 Hip RoUm ~ ~~!ottctors l btJ Bundi I W's Mite I OtaJ Or. Wiit: lllt Mind t i h~ Alllr111I Wof1111 M) l..rtllc Mit&IC I OOID"tws tJ l'tt ry MHon 0 (2' l!J ~-CD M1rus Welby, M.D. An tl·bueball ~ar 10ho hu tocked a ~nna.nc P'obltm linds th1t ht IS I ht(llllill\ Ullltr. @Gt! S1111rt .ti)IMI~ C-f.D MontJ P'Jtlloll's flrittl C11as (R') • 1:00 B (ff (31 ra GoM Tl!MS MJ J ., 10.30 rn An11111tioft Festivll ftinCH" Pan I of I two part story • al E Shew dt W11ter Mert1do No 1nform111011 1v11f1blt from the 11:00 0 ~ 0 mm CD lltws nttwort. at our prtss ttme 1 O l I 1 'lO '23 (!) "ews O 23 6J 10 ED Mnlft' On .. Tht ' 0 ltst of Gro11d10 04d Soulh Will Rist Ac•in" SoAny fA) Tiit HOMJ!IKMIMrS 1w11thes from p1to11n1 1 rog on th• fJ Dart Shldon r~d lo p1lot1n1 a balloon 1n lht I ll. m Mass Murder in Fern· O Mov141: (C) (2hr) "ludldo" (adv) '56 -Ro!>trt Mitchum Ursuli * wood · · ·Who Is The Thim, Cilb"1 Roland. ZKhary j Fernwood flasher? Scoll I m MMJ Hlrt1111n, Miry H1rtm1n r 6~ Mod Sctu1d @ Mod Sql!H o <:>9 ta h 31 CD H • e e' o.,, r1t. cv Blttlt1J1t · Ou1u Conl•sl f onz141 eets more I tu~ Co•blt thin he bar111ntd for when Mrs: 1 EtJ RMert lhdfd lttport Cunnmifl.;m Ilk) htm to be her (~ ())) Trvtll or ~uencu • p11tntr 11 t~e H1rvest Moon d1ncer U·lS n!> C' •• con,,.sf i · ~ ••ma 1e 0 M1lhon ~ Mmt. (C) (21tr) 11:30 0 !i7J (1) C1S LI~ Mtvit: (C) "S111toea Trunk" ldll) '46 -C1ry1 "Cry"fuic" (d!I) •74 -John FOf· Cooo•1. lnp11d Berem1n 1 sythi , 'Aline fri nCis, £1r1 Hol~milll. Cl)C1oss Wrb • ~2}@ (!;).ltltlllJ C.rso1 @ 1$ 811bour S11ow fllf H~ Ul """ 6J lil..le: ·"Ceeractt0s Dr. Cllris- l6 ~¥Mmtkt tlH" (du) '40 -Jun Hersholt. ED Tonight Emmy-winner * "Upstafrs Downstairs'' 13 all.new episodes Mobil '?ii Corporation llofothy lovrtt. o·,,. ({I 3 UC'~ "Kiu Me & Ote" (R) Ceor1e Ch1k111s i nd Jtnny Acllfter star. • (tj flit fll 0 Mom: "l>"J" (corn) 'S7 W M~ece fht1ltt: Upst.lin Harry Secombt, l!Otl Randell. Oowiut11rs \R) m Tiit GMst I Mn. M1ir ED Esitos t]) fti• I Yoa al ..,,.1141,. un111111 Procram lZ:OO 0 Twllifllt Zone . 1:30 0 (T7 (3 Joe ' So.ls Gus IS '" I m Mt-M: "Tiit Blad look" (dra) pantt 1fttr rdnn1nr out on a gam '49 -Robert Cumminrs. Arltne blin1 debt and nttther he no1 Jot 01hl, Rtdltrd 811elt1rt. can sc11pt up tnou211 money lo p1yl Q) Mowit: "llictdlet Rora111et" rlf his IO.SY\ (com) '55 -Marjorie Main, Rudy O tl9 t8 )3 CDWt ltomt ValJet Bae-. l t11ei lh1 lnngest Week 1 tnd" Kotter hi\ seton~ th1111ghls '1IZ:JO 0 Mayberry Rfll about h1\ · frtt •nd •quat re•ahon , 11 MO'fie; ""'kcd luntlt" (dra) '!'l4 ship' with Jul1t .. hen \ht lak•s ofl Charlton Heston, Eleanor Parker Mt s••'"~ .. ttkenrt with a ~1n1te1 l:OO Q ei)(i1~0)mT011orro• a·rltr•tnd I 0 litllt Autry e Tltt lobby Vllllo11 Slit• j . . 1:30 (17, Q.J Mf•ie: "The Atota!C Citf' ID GAMBLING THEME: (dra) '52 -Ct1>t Sany, Lyd11 * Jack Klugman, Benny CJane. Binion among gUHts 1:4S 8 w..: "ll.,n111 '" Ml~tf"' Q) Mm '11ff111 Slltw @WiWlfft ~ ED El S1*r de uw tw ., .. (11\JS) 'SJ -Jose9b Colttn, Jun Ptltn. Gii)' Memll. Z:OO 8J M·lllPt SNw: "My Gitt f!Slc," .,,..,..,.. 9:00 D OJI (3J a M'A'S'H Hoptnc to pert up lllOI~ f11nk Bums w!ltle J:lO f) ltleiM: (C) "TN Frndl Ute" Hol Lips rs II 1 nurws' Kmtnll 1n (corn) ~ -hnt Runetl, G1lbttt Tolyo, Coond Potter uu Hn \ RoQncl, Maiy McCM1y. Wednesday linda Olfntll, C«fltJ Wiidt, llid\lrd Greene. DAYTIME MOVIES 1:009 •1rs A SINN WtM' Crom) '35 -S~ow Trl(y. Wendy ilarne 9:30 0 "1!tbf4 Ci4'(' !im) '!13 -Wrid B•lt cniott. M•rror1t Ln1d ·1~ Our Tr111t" (d11) '4' Ida I up1110. P1ut H~nmd ~t "About Fm" {mul) '!>2 C01don Macll~. Phyllis Kuk. Eddie Briden. l:OO 0 (C) "Iliff the M111 Otw!I" (dta) '53 -Brian Dontevy, rtta h rllft. 10.00 6 (C) '1ht TitfitW Thtlldtlboll" (com) 'S 1 St'~lty Holloway lZ 00 m •fortftr Mbtt" (011) ., llOJ ~ IMt °"""" (MP) '63 -lamtt f1111eiscus. lcslte Niel Ull, Slnrley llnip l. .KOCE Television (50) .. •1111-SCMOO\. l'•OO•AMMINO twmlft) n 1•8L8CT•tCCOMl'ANY tL•suAM•snan *"""' t·• tN-SCMOOL l'•O.•AMMING '601'111111 l :•WDT••M Cl YI LI I.A TIO. •• ........,.lclMI· 1"" _,,_., ... 5-lrlt" Jl•WAMUMOTO.. waal( .... S'lt ... , l :•YOT8H' 1'11'1 U•I "Oly~lt11U ,.,,_,. •:••IT•. •oo• •s NtllCMUIO.MOOe •:•s&SAMI n •t•T ltO""lll t 1•aa.CCT•ICCOMl'AM Y l1•e.t.••A.SCOL&MOAI •:•t1••&.U8MA•aL.W •i•COMSUM8• l•ita•1•Mca"..._.Hlt9Nllefl.fl ' 1:•1W1AefCO,OU.l'AINTINO 7:•Al4CATtMOfPllCTACUL.Aa ti•CONfUMI • fU •Vt"ALl(IT''SfNll 0.1"9c-1 .. t :•MYllC P•OM.t.U'aN 1 .. INlll ----· "~~ .............. C.1'11111) ' t Clemente, Mesa tfeliear:sing Two Orange Coast community theaters are tartlng orr tbe new year oo a light note and have announced the cas ting or their next productions. For the San Clemente Community Theater . it will be Robert Anderson's quartet of one·acts, "You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Run- ning." openine J~n. JS. The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse will follow on Jan. 23 with "The Happiest Millionaire," DIRECTOR TONY ltrandt is doubling as one or rive ~rformers playing a .dozen roles in the San Clemente production. He and George Ali~ are the producer and writer in "The Shock or Recognition" with Monica Hutchens as a secretary and Charles Anthony as an actor who'll do anything for a part. In ''Th'e Footsteps of Doves," Alig and OlQria Brandt are a bed-s hopping couple with Anthony· a s a saleSJnan and Miss Hutchens as a diverting customer. Alig, Mi ss Brandt and Miss Hutchens comprise the family trio in "I 'll Be Home for Christmas.'' The Brandts team up as an elderly couple in the curtain clos er. 'T m Herbert." Performances of .. Wa ter 's Running" will be given Thurs days through Saturdays at 8:30 for three wekkends at the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Clemente. Reservations are being taken at 492-0465. AT COSTA ~1ESA, director Pati Tambellini is prepa ring for her 42nd production since becommg resident director of the Civic Playhouse. Heading the cast of "Ha ppiest Millionaire" are Joe Bell and Kris Hagen as the father and mother with Linda Putna m, Brad E strin and Stan Wlasick as tne1r children. TOMIGHT! ONE HITE ONLY SMOKEY STOVER.:,S pvetffi!y p11ese nts RAIN c.A TRIBUTE to U .OOCOYH l2t5 .... ,... .. cl ......, ....... .. c~~; 673-137 4 ... Intermission Tom Titus Other members of tbe Costa Mesa cast are Mike Wilson, Susie Scott, Geof:fry Constant, Donna Adam, Ron Cloff ey, Earlene Holladay and Lub Mello. "The Happiest Millionaire," an early-century costume comedy for the fami•y. opens Jan. 23 for three weeke nds , playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 ln the Community Center auditorium bn the Orange County Fairgrounds. Call 556·5391 for re- servations. Movie Reslated LOS ANGELES (AP) -"'Nickelodeon," which :ilmost str uck out because or budgetary problems, has now begun filming. The story of early-day Hollywood hit a snag when Columbia Pictures figured it would prove too expensive. Additional financing was arranged, and Peter Bogdanovich began di recting the film Dec. 30. It stars Ryan O'Neal, Burt Reynolds and Tatum O'Neal. The Ufe and Tunes of "GRIZZLY ADAMS llllASt O IY SUN ClASStC PICTU~lSfO 1'74 SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT STARTS TOMORROW! ONE WEEK ONLY ONLY SUN COMPLIMENTARY PASSES ACCEP'(EO CO.FEATURE AT ALL ORIVE·IHS "MR. SUPER INVISIBLE" DEAN JOHU 8ArSTOl Coote "'"' MESA eo.lt M-CYPRESS TWIN Cvo<Hs WEST8flOOI< CINEMA I t a.-a-. TVSllN SOUAAE T utM LOS Al. TOS t3 lOllQ IMKI> LO'Q .. llClt ~,­~·~ 113-1900 UM«>I ~l­ u1.m1 s,.cw .. iil ...... ,.....: 5" THEA Dlitderitt,.... I 1}J, masurpia of b.. /{)f)t that stumwl /;ana. Apomail<f looeand submission to disonkr lht. smJra.tlltll . A1tAIU«/ArlJSIJtalMM CID © llO ONI Ullllft ~-A SOUTit COAST PLAZA THEATRES SAN DIEGO Fwt. AT &AISTOl SO.COAST PLAZA ~C.SC:OTT.AMMI~ "HINDENBURG" (PG) DAii. T 7:Jt & t:Jt 1A T /SIM-I tl0.1°*S:4 .. 1:~9'H S46-2711 FREE PARl(INC. SO.COAST PLAZA JAC: 5Ctf "ONE FLEW om THE CUCKOO'S NEST" lil DAii. Y 7:ff t t:4\ 1AT fSUM-1 :tO.J:t .. S:»1:4S.lt:15 GlORC.l SlGAL '~HE 11.Aa<llRO" OIJLT 1!41 SAT~l:l5-k00-t:4S "ROOSTER COGIURM"' OAIU 6:0 •tt:JO UTJ\UM-1-6:4S. lt:Jf "DOG DAY AFTERNOON" O~LY a 00.10.1$,SAT • .SUH..1:~10.IS "DROWNING POOL" DAILY I 20 SAT JIUN, l<li0-t:20 FREE PAAl<ING "STORY OF 0 11 CXI 6:45-1:30.10-.25 ·SAT/SUM-1;30.3:1~5:00 • 6:45-1:30.10-.25 ' •I J I> 8'>{ Jt. '>l.' h<''s Sum S~.Jr .... and his falcon's worth a fortune" a film by TANbEY l\!JBRICK RYAN O 'NEAL • MARISA BERENSON "ONE OF THE MOST VISUALLY DAZZLING WORKS IN THE HISTORT OF F1LM •• IT RAVISHES THE EYE ANO EN THRALLS THE E AR •.• A BREATHTAKING AND MYSTERIOUS ACHIEVEMENT.'' EDWARDS CINEMA HAal 04IATAOAMS COST A Mt!SA 546-J I 02 HUNTINGTON CINEMA 11.C:HATLLIS.IU . 841·'601 .. , ... 11 C NEMA CENTER MAllOIAf,_.,....,,CotTA .. SA SA Y'llOIC.llHTD f7'-4 I 41 JACK l(ROL.L NEWSWEEK NEWPORT CINEMAS NIAi COASTHW'f i ,.ACAITNUI •ICWl'OltT~crwtta '44·07•0 DAILY TH•U SUH. 114 i·l-S-7;15-11:>0 "THE PICTURE TO BEAT FOR THE NEXT KT OF OSCARS" WNI\. Pott CINEMA CENTER HAHOaATAOAali.C:OSfA ... HA ¥UDfCINTB fJf.4141 "AWlm ~:Told .· ..... """"' . •-MIMfll...- W~J don't we make more films like this? Plu• We did. • WALTER MATTHAU GEOAGE BURNS RICHARD BENJAMIN FOR THE PRICE OF A MOVIE YOU'LL FEEL LIKE A MIWON .. edwards BRISTOL CINEMA ~ .... ...,~"f .. +.t• Ch'H-"\1 1~~1 ~'""' '"' mot.k .. tr\th.t~ll'td dt\f'ilt""'ttil"ft tnt..,'11f"li'wt f)oi~ f'l"hrw nc v.hrtt.JM•"'-""''hl 1tw~ """"'',...,., •1ot• ..... ,ft., .. ~ 11• ~·'MM"'~"" PLUS "Let's Do It Again" 2nd At Both ThHlre• HARBOR TWIN HU•Oa A f Wll\OM, COST A MfSol 646·0S7J '46·l1'6 CINEMA VIEJO SD faKWAYTOlA,At MISSIOM \llfJO I J0.6H O 3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR ROBE"T REDFORD FAYE DUNAWAY i....1 .,,a= SBan coon1rq.mtcbam Caln '-A VIGOROUS. FLAMBOYANTLY EHTERTAININO AOVEHTUM." "ONE OF THE YEAR'S TOI et;ST," s man Mo would 81 KJag ARBORiWIN HAHO•ATWll.SOM,COSTA..UA 60·0S7l 6U·l1U CIN£MAWEST t ~~ ·~---' ~.rrrhl!t ....... ~-.;(,iU£ :IA.RAIS ~ ~EE1'1 HECKART ARTHU~ O'C0 1'tNEU. 'A ll'\lfo1rn11ttt1" 1! •• • 1,•,1f 'f•lrtl n( Cllrl\U,1111ty .. 1l ... Kht1n 1H•111110"111 • -VAltl LrY t I ,, -· I t ·-' Ml,UCKY LADY-CPGJ "SUMSHIMI IOYS .. IPGI "MAMO.AMY• Nt "OMCI .IS MOT IMOU4iH" lat •J DAYS OF THI COHDOr IRI "DAY OF THE JACKAi. .. IRI ~ MAIY, cun LM1Y- "YAM1SH1MG POtMT" -.OHi IM 60 SECONDS• INJ "HUSTLl" I "THE &AMILEr llJ U ... AOA WAl• • HllCO&• Nltf St M •· lloeton """ SAfUllOHtflf ... ......_.,, •1 • \ • MMClllO DOI DAY Aml'l'lllHC91~0~ot ... • .,.._ DIOWl•tl flOOl "' Of911M! t ----.!......!!? ... lrnlOUI llUIN• -MaMll THI CONYIUA110N "' .. .._ ... ., '4 F! , .. ............. _ . .., i DAYI Of THI COlllOI • ......... ........ MMClllO DAY AmlNOOM ......... llOWNINI POOl "' ,.....CAAM KIUll 111TI (1) ...... ~ IVllmtlNI ~ Ill • ..,_,. ..... ~ --· """ . . ......... ......... ._._... lUCIY UIT "' , ...... ,.,, .. . ...., .. ,_. 'l&l COllf. _., ...... LIT'I DO IT AGAIN ,. -fUll. TAKI net MONIY & •N "' t IOllll'f, MO ,,um t ;ONE IN 60 SKONDS !I'll CIGlll UICmllll CUIYMIMA• $(( Tll •• , I ISOSlllD IBM.SS• PllTS! /© ADULTS ONLY COlOR •-•PlUS TIE SECOM> MOST FAMOUS-• AOUl T flM Of OUR T9£.. ONE TWNKS OF PETER Ustinov as sitting in a drawing room uttering bons mots between sips of wine. So how did he happen to be performing stunt work in a man-made hurricane? "I wonder myself," he mused. 0 lt's too late in lite for me to start making this kind of picture." The accident occurred when Ustinov was work· ing in the tank at the 20th Century-Fox location ranch in Malibu Canyon. He was not only damp but :deucedly cold -"When my car was picked up after ·I went to the hospital, they had to spray it with hot water to thaw it out.'' Ustinov and fellow performers Robert Fox· worth, Joan Hackett, etc. were doing a hurricane sequence in the post-Civil War ad-venture about a. search for buried gold. Ustinov was told to tum away from the camera~ so his stunt-man double could take over in subsequent scenes. "I TIDNK THAT IF I hadn't turned, I would have escaped injury," he theorized. "The trouble was that my feet were planted in the sand; while I turned, my feet didn't. I was hit by a few hundred gallons of water, did an elegant curtsy and sat down." His injury kept the actor sidelined for three "ON ANY SUNDAY" Pia HILDOVH FOi i WEEIC ''GONE IN 60 SECONDS" A '"THI llUM ILITI .. Nt V 'WIAIOUT'° ........,..,..._ .. • ..,.. ........ c...... .... ..- C0MnNU0US MOM I 2:JO . SAT. TMIU JAM. 4 "HUSilE" ·2:10 4:50 • 7:10 t:JO Tu.c!!y. ~anum 1, 1978 rru~.~·.~.~ ... , ~"-I ..==.=;===-=~ ~ --· "LISZTOMANIA" -=S':'• co•OMA OIL. MA• "AIRPORT '75" + "EARTHQUAKE" (R) + "LAST DAYS OF MAN ON EARTH" (PG) Eve. Program Only Call Theatre For Showtlmes "ROYAL FLASH " -Plus- "UNDERCOVERS HERO" With Peter Sellers UA $OU1H COAST •••••• , •••.••••••••••• 54M5t4 PLITT CITY CIMTll •••••••••••••••••••••• 634-tZIZ tlGHWAY lt DllYE 14 •.•••••..•...•..•• 534-62'2 ... BUI .. CGJ J:tO.l:ll-t: I 0 "'CAnAIM MEMO" J:4t-7:11 WHY IS A SWEET GIRL UKE MICHELLE WORKING TO CURE "AN OLD FOLKS DISEASE? ""MAHOGANY" CPGJ · 1:0 .... ,,JO .. OMC;l IS HOT IMOU9H .. l.'4..,:1- FOUNHUN VALLEY , ... , ... , '\ .. 1t ·• . . . . .. .... . "HIAl11 OF THI WllrlNI .... 1t41 .. ~T~1:4t ._..._AM'' .... , ... Michelle Tandy of Huntington Beach is five years old. but she shares the misery of many seni or ci tizens - more than 20 m~llion-who suffer fr om Arthritis. But through treatment from the Arthritis Founda~ tion's Juvenile Arthritis Clinic, Michelle can now walk without her braces, and hopes to live a full, produc·. tive life. Part of this productive life will be helping others-through the Arthritis Foundation. She is the 1976 poster girl for Orange County, and will assist Actress Claire Trevor, 1976 campaign chair· man for Orange County, and others in the Arthritis Te let~on ·January 31 ·Februa ry 1. Through the Foundation, ·research continues seeking the cause, the treatment and the cure of this crippling disease. If you would like to foll ow the lead <?f S·year·old Michelle, if you would like to know more about Arthritis, its symptoms and its treatment, if you can help the Foundation with your time or your contribution, call Tiie Artlarlde Fo.adadoa Orange County Branch e in a series of blic service advertisements s ., Betty L Elias, Chairman 900 North Broadway Santa Ana. California 92701 Telephone 547-5591 Avco Anancia1 Service A8 DAILY PILOT Tuesday, JanUlllY e: 1971 QUEENIE By Phil lnterlondi . , ..... "I've been lrymg lo avoid men all day and I run inlo ''OU!" Deaths. Elsewhere CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP> -Paul S. Jones, 62. vice pres ident and secretary of the J .A. Jones Construction Co., one of the larges t in the · world, a nd a well known tennis umpire, died Mon· Deatla Notl~e• NELSON HETTY NELSON, rHldent ol Hunt· 1nq1on Bf'ach. C• Born Ftbr.,..ry 73, 1• 1n M•~SO\lro D<ttt of dea1h JW1..ary • 1916 on Huntonc;iton Be•cll, C.l1f. Surv1~d by ht!r wns, FrM Helson Of Ana11t1m Ca , J•ck Nolson of <>wri•r>d. Mououro. ""u9111..-. Dofls M. Bocks ot Hunllnc;iton Bt..:.11, C..; l><Oelltr, Evtrtll Murr•y of Pltrryvlli., • M.ssouro s1\ter, M•t Conr.o of North HollyWOOd, C• , two c;ir•ndctllldren. Serv1te\ will be htld •t I 00 PM Tues- day, January 6, 191#, •t Smiths' Morlu<try Chapel Rev EdwMCI Erny oll1coant lnttrment, Ced•r Fork Ctmetuy on Perryvllle, Missouri. Sm•tl'ls' Mortuary local dorettor'- NEE FE LOI'> MARIE NEEFE, rttldtnt of West monster, Ca. Datt of de•th, January 2, 1976 Survh;ed by her som, Roc;itr and Bob Neeft, sister, Gl.On St,,ndtlord and Lelt" Park•r. -.even 9 randc lloldrtn and five c;ire"t gr•ndchlldren Serv1ets will be held wedot\day, January 7, t%7 al 12 JO PM. ~tk Family Co1on1dl Funeral Ho""" 1nwestm1nsttr, Ca GI BSON " day after a lingering ill· ness. KINGMAN , Ariz. (UPI) -Louis S. Smith, 46, of Los Angeles, civil rights leader and black businessman, died Mon· day of injuries suffered in a car crash. DeatlaNodre• Barbar•, Ca • mattrnal 9r•ndmother, Horten" Wtlles Stearns of Garatn Grove, C• Miss Londtlous was " 9r.Ouate of Newport Harbor H1911 ...o •lltndecl Orange Coast COlltilt! ....0 Oc· cldtfltal College. She was a ~of The Newport CNpler of The HatloMI Q\arlty league, ...ci _, ernpl~ as• boollkooper at The Newport Be.ch Attllttk Chit). Memorl•I strvten wUI belleldat 7:JO PM on Wtdnesd.lyat n. CMnmonlly Olurth Con9rt<J"hONI in COt-del M.ar, C.. In htu of llo.wrs. tllO family s1199esls memorial con- lrlbuUOftS bo made to The AmertCWI C•ncer Society or The Cant er Reseuch I nstltute. Pacific Vltw MDrtu•rydlrwclors. SMITH Polltleal Notes TV Transportation Forum Planned 'By O.C. HUSTINGS OUMl>tlllr,.i.tt&Mt A one·hour telephone "Forum by Televlston" on how to solve Southland public transportation problems in the future will be presented on KOCE·'IV, Channel 50, at 7:30 p.m. Jan.13. Local residents viewing the program will be invited to call in their ideas to 897·0302 in this first public tele vision forum of its kind. It will be presented by the League of Women Voters of Orange County, in cooperation with the Southern California As· sociatio n of Govern ments <SCAG >, and Channel 50. FERN PIRKLE, coordinator. of the project for the Orange County League of Women Voters, said "We are presenting this op· portunity for residents or Orange County to be heard on their ideas on mass transportation in the future in the Southern California Region. We urge Orange County viewers of Channel 50 to take part by calling in their solutions about the problem. Comments received will be used in pre- paration of the final plan by the SCAG organization in April." Si m ultaneously wit h the televised •·Pho he Forum'• pro- duction on the issue with Channel 50, the League will sponsor two other open forums, which will have television receivers for the· audience to share in the pro- gram, and where there will also be SCAG and Orange County Transit District Officials to answer questions. The two other forums, befin-ning at 7:15 p.m . Jm 13, wil be at Francis Scott Key Elementary School, 2000 West Ball Road, Anaheim, and at Vista Vetde Elementary School, 5144 Michelson Ave ., Irvine. The public is invited to attend these forums. MODERATOR FOR the Chan· net 50 Phone Forum broadcast, will be Jeanette Turk, president of the Orange County League of Women Voter s. Televisjon panelists will be Gorden Field ing, former Director of the Orange County Transit District; Frankee Baner- jee. SCAG transportation expert, and Shirley Irwin, member of the Los Angeles League of Women Voters Metro Transit Commit- tee. Orange County League of Women Voters volunteers will handle a battery of telephones to receive the incoming questions or ideas from television viewers. ...... ASSEMBLYMAN Robert Burke <R-Huntington Beach > is one of two state legislators to get 100 percent ratings on their 1975 voting records from th e California Conservative Union. The conservative group rated legislators on 20 bills. The group opposed most of them, including postcard voter registration, re- peal of t he oil depletion al- lowance, the state budget, col- lective bargaining for teachers. the "farm labor law, and a bill legalizing sex acts between con- senting adults. ORANGE COUNTY The ratings included votes on two bills the group supported, one requiring prison t erms for certain crimes committed with firearms, and another mandat- ing the death penalty for bomb- ing a building in which someone is killed. • •• JERRY PATTERSON, the De mocrat who r ep resents central Orange County's 38th Congressional District, plans a ~eries of public forums Jan. 31. He will meet with constituents at 10:30 a.m. in the Buena Park Community Center, 8150 Knott Ave.; at 12 :30 p .m. in .Westminster City Council cham· hers, 8200 Westminster Ave .. and at2 p.m . in Lecture Hall D·lOl on the ground floor of Dunlap Hall at Santa Ana College. Transit Audit - Set in County . Orange County Transit Dtatrlct directors called Monday for the first management audit of district operations. The audit, which could cost more than $10,000, was suggested In a letter to dlstrlct officials from.. last year's county Grand Jury. · • · · In the letter. the jury noted that the district had f never been audited since ·its formation more thartf four years ago. '4 • IM ARY · EVELYN B ft YD EN, 0 CT D spokeswoman, satd thejury•s proposal was accepG.' ed in &ood f alth, but the implementation of an audi&1 was delayed "because of the budget cycle." · f•J) "Until we got the jury's recommendation, we- were never really big enough for such an audit," she said. "Now we are and we are going to conduct it." 101 The jury's letter didn't infer that the distriatJ was being run inefficiently, only that it would bei best 1f an audit was conducted. ·1·, Since the 1974-75 jury's letter was sent, the' OCTD annual budget has doubled to more than $38• million, its fleet of buses bas nearly doubled and its top management position bas changed bands. ·', THE AUDIT WILL BE conducted by a privai'& firm. 1 The proposal sets forth 17 specific tasks that should be accomplished. i: II ·Poles to Install r. SANTA ANA -Kathryne Siler will be installed as 1976 president when the Orange County Polist. Club ushers in the new year with a dance at th~ Plumbers and Steamfitters Hall here. "' The event s tarts at 8:30 p.m. Saturday at th~ hall, 3904 W. Bolsa Ave. The public is invited. Call 534·4469, or 543·8011 for details. Bus Drivers Eyed operation next month or shortly thereafter. Just give us a call. Or, better yet, stop in today. We'll explain our easy leasing plan. And show you all the beautiful CadiIJacs you can choose from. · The Orange County Transit District is s oliciting proposals from any private entrepreneurs interested in contr actin g with the district to operate the new bus lines in Buena Park and Westm inster. Dave Schilling, senior planner for the district, said details are available at district offices in Santa Ana. The deadline for filin g a proposal is 3 p.m . J an. 26. Nabers Cadillac The two lines are due lo begin 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesd 540·9100 GORMAN LEE GI DSON, rt\· 1<1t n1 of Hunlln91on Beac n c,, D.lle ol death January l 1'116 Surv1~ by hos w ile, Lorraine G•bson. "'1uc;if\ten, Ztlta Rust and C..tlltr•ne B.,ry. Rowlyn, Lorraine and J-llt Atwood, wns. Jamn, Ktnneth "nd Gorman lee Gob\On. brother. Ken Gibson, tnret 9randcholdren SERVICES will be held WEDNESDAY even109 al 1 JO PM. January I. 1'176 at ~Family Colon••• Funeral~ on DORIS M . SMITH, passed away Januery 4, 1'76 In Newport ~acll, ca Survived by her husband, Philip D Smith of Costa MeS<I, Ca.; t-SO!'S, Sidney R. Smith or Indiana and How"'" M Smith of Arhona; one brother, Robert M.C Yamer of Ocean\lde, ca.; two sisters. Mrs Rowen Yamer ol Ocean\lde and Mrs. Roselyn Zill ot Oce.,nsodt , lour grandcholdrtn. Memo""' services -re htld Tuesday, J anu,,ry 6, "t 'I 00 AM, Bell BrOddway Chapel Rabb1S1lverm.,nolf1c1ant Btll ------------------------------------------------------------------ LON DELIUS L 'Wll!stm1nster, Ca THERESE EVELYN LONOEllUS, ~ 78, res10tn1 Of ~wport ~..:11, C. ' O.tt ot Otath Janu•ry •, 1'76 Surv1~ t>y htr parents, Mr & Mrs JolV\ C Lonclehus, brother, John F Londthus sister Cllr"ltne A Londelous, •II ol Nt wporl Bt,,Ch, C• • m.Jtern"I 9ratldfatht!r. Fr.,ncos Ste.irns ol 5dnta BAL TZ·BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 6 73.9450 Costa Mesa 646·2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Beach 494-941 5 San Juan Capistrano 495--1776 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific Vrew Drive NewPOrt Beach. California 644-2700 PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 SMITHS' MORTUARY 627 Mam St. Huntington Beach 536-{)539 PUBLIC NOTICE S.I•" STATEMl!NTOF A•ANOONMl!NT Of' USE OF FICTITIOUS •USINESS NAM€ Tl>O fot-•nc;i person llH 8bendontcl ti. uw of tllO llcllllous t>uslneu ,,_ M EDIC.AL IN SU RANCE PROCESSING COMPANY at 14«> SC St•I• Coll•o• Blvd .. An•holm, c..tlfomla. TM fictitious t>uslnou n.,ne ref•red lo~ WH lllM lnCounty8"7· ... 11. ERNEST A. FENNER. 14«> SC. St•te (oli.ot Blvd., An•helm, C•llfomle Tiiis buSlnou _, condUctl<I t>y Ml ln- CllYlW.1 E .. NEST A FENNER Tiiis sl•tement wH filed llllth lht °"'"'' Clerk of Oranoo Counly on Dtc;ombOf 31. 1t7S. .... ,., ~l'Jflod Oratt0e Coast Delly ,..i.t. ~·.u.20 ,,,,.1• »·1' PUBLIC N011CE .. ICTITIOUI 8U$1NIH NAM• STAT•M .. fT .,,. ..,.._.l'IO l!K-er•_......_ -·= DI! "IL.AT"°" ... 0, ISSIOfilAl Cl'HTl!IU, 91t ._. Uftcot11, ANtltlm, CA ,,,,.,,. l. Wltw, "9 V.... TnicM. ........, IHdl,C.AftMO J-E. lrn<11, 101t0 YOl'tle i.;.,. di, llWll.. Apt. U, Yorbe l ..... CA ... ne,11011 wor11• a..-, "" 0.-SOr., li'l~CAtMJll Tlllt ""tlflOtt If COllllllCIM ~ • ............. ,,,.1. JOM l . Welker Tlllt tl•lomoftt W•O fllH .itn tfll (.Mlfttr o.r11 of Or an90 Covmr ... OK. n, 1'7S ,_. ,....,,_. ~ C...11 O.lly ... ~ Broadway Mortu.,ry dorec tors. FlORA HAZEL C. FLORA. rts1dtnt of Costa Mew . C.a D•lt ol dtalh J anuary S. 1'76 SurvlWdbyoneson,JackC Flora of u H•I><•. Ca ; two dauc;ih~s. Jantt BlomqulS"t of Cosl" Mes" and S.ra Miller of llhno1s, nine 9raOC1Ch1ldr..- and tllrtt 9reat-9randcll1ldren Serv1cnw1llbeht!l<lonWtdn~yJ 00 PM, Bell Broadway Chapel with Pastor R09er Btrg officiant. Interment. Swan I.Ake ~n•t G•rclens. Peoria, 11- lonoos Btll Broadway Mortuary local d•rK~ M<CLEMONT ALICE M McCLEMONT. passed away on January 2, 1916 .it tht age of 102, reside-it of Hunlln.gton Btach, C... Survived by one dau9httr, H Louo-.e Grten of Huntin9ton Beach; two brothers. Glenn Osborn ol Michlc;ien Mid Wiflo•m Osborn ol Mlchil)illl; 1WO 9randchlldnn, Melvin Grten of Hunt- l09ton B .. ch "nd Byron Greet1 of La Crestl'nt•. Ca.; f lvt c;ire•t· ll"andtlllldren •net s.ven ~fft-<Jte~· 9rendch1ldren. Gr,,vesloe services will beWedne\dey. January 7,at n ·OOAM, G<•ndview Memori•I Park. Glendale, ea. SomltllS' Mortuary directors. RYAN ANNA ELIZABETH RYAN, resident of lOs Anvetes, C•. Date of <lfflh J anuuy 3, 1976. Survived by two nephtws. Richard E . w ,,rdell 01 '-"llUN Hills, C• 'and Albert c. Gl'llSS ol M•helm ; nlKe, Lois A. Wardtll ol South Gett. Services wi II t>e held WtcJ. nesday, Pacific View 0..pel. lnttr- ment, HollyoWood Memorial Pfrk P•collt Voey Mortuary, Ntwport BtKh, C. .• direclo~. FISC.HER ANNA ROSE FISCHER, ruident Of l001 Country Club Drive. Costa Mesa, C:.. O.te ot death J.111.,.ry S, "76. SUfvlved by sons, Donald end L.avoi AKllOr and dauc;ihter, Ell•iM Ascher; nine 9randthildrtn •nd 10\lr oreat- gr...OChlldrtn Interment wlll tie In New Ulm C.lllolic Ctmtttry In Mln-MSO(•· B•llz-Berveron, Costa Masa, c:.. Mortu,,ry, directors. 1AEFLECTIONS by Heyn Sheffer , ............. ., ...... ....................... ..ca. •.. - tr we could write the formula for our own hap. pi.Dess, few of us would be successful . Most of us think we co uld be supremely happy if only we bad more . . . more friends, more time, more money! While it is probably true that happiness is bard·pressed to thrive where there is too litUe, Pollock reminds us that too much can be equally detrimental. We 're more apt to be happy when we learn to be satisfied with what we have ••. aomewbere between too llttle and too mucb, Our service is charer· terized by the utmost conside ration and sympatby for those we serve, as set forth in~ Golden Rule. You're ln· viled to drop in for a "ld·acqu.ainted" YlslL ~!!,~fu.f.~R '76 SOUTH COAST HCJ1'WAY l.MiUNA 8EAOi 49+1535 SAN CLEMENTE ISll NORTH El~NOREN.. .m-0100 Help! Ji\'ee Tax Sel'vice by H&R BLOCK! at all Mutual Savings offices The nabon's best known tax preparabon service w ill prepare your md1v1dual Federal and Cahforrna tax reh.lrns free. or for a small fee. Free. if you have a cerllhcate account at any Mutual Savings Office with a balance o f $7.500 or more. For 515 1f your balance is a minimum of $3,000. li you are not now a Mutual Savings customer, open an account and become eh91ble for th1s exclusive offer. We will arrang.e lo transfer your funds from your bank or other savings association. Not only will our tax service save you money, but your return will be covered by the famous H & R Block guarantee: ' "II we make any error in the preparation of your tax return that costs you any interest or penalty on addibonal taxes due. while we do not assume habihty for the additional taxes, we w1JJ pay that mterest and penalty Furthermore. if your return is audited, we will accompany yow at no extra cost to the Internal Revenue Service and explam how your return was prepared, even though we will not act as your legal representative'.' \. Sa~e money. Have your returns prepared by the best known tax I ·~ people m the business. Be protected by a guarantee. Just call or ~ come m to any Mutual Savings Olhce to make an appointment. But do it soon because of the popularity of this offer. Servtce not available in San Diego County. MUTUAL SAVINGS · .......... end loen U90Cletlon C&plltra io-San C1emente . f«l1l*I v.ley 530 Camino de Estrella/ 493-5651 17942 Magnolia Street/963·8396 Corona del Mar S.nta AN 2867 East Coast Highway/675-5010 631 North Main/547-9741 :, r .... -i .. ,, ~J '.., I f t l'l Dk.•l,U,J0,19t$4t1141.Htt .• ,"76 ..., _________ _.1..---------------------..,----------------~-------------------------.;;.ti:~ ~75 . ' • ' I DAIL v PlL..OT A. Rebats ~ha!IJe There's Gunmen Still Loose In Florida Sprees SD Sets Airport Curfew Aide Dtileiids . Money ~.MacA.rtlwr · Iii Nails , 1 WELLESLEY, Mass. (UPI> -The penonal aide of Gen. Do"1las MacArtbur says there is "absolutely no truth" to~ story that President ltarry S Truman had to ot'der MacArthur to land at wake Island for their historic meeting and then the general kept the President waiting. I "I was at Wake Island with the g~neral. ~Arthur •rrived at Wake the night before. We had dinner there. we slept there and he wu waiting tor Truman at the airport, .. Col. Laurence Bunker said Monday in an interview with UPI. t BUNKER, MACARTHUR'S AIDE·DE·CAMP tor slx years from April 1946· through November ~.said 0 tbere•s absolutely no truth" to the much publicized ~ory that MacArthur kept his plane cireling Wake trying to make Truman's plane land .ftnt and that the President fmally ordered the ,gtneral's plane to land. He also denied that after Tnaman.'~ plane l~nded, MacArthur kept the Presi· dent wa1tmg 45 minutes before joining the welcom· iQj( committee. The Wake Island scenario was used.by writer Merle Miller in his book "Plain Speaking•• and in the ABC · TV show ''Collision Course · · aired Sunday ....... . nl51-.. Concerning the first formal meeting of Truman and MacArthur, Truman has been quoted as say- ing, "when he walked in, I took one look at him and. I said, 'Now you look h~re. I've come hallway ~cross the world to meet you. but don't worry about tbat. I just want you to know I don't give a good god- damn what you do or think abourHarry Truman but don't you ever again keep your commander-in: chief waiting .... . WE~Rl~G A GRAY, PIN·STRIPED SUIT. white shirt with French cuf(s and a bow tie, Bunker sat in the living room of his 21h story, green clapboard home in this Boston suburb. An auto- graphed colored photo of MacArthur was on the bookcase. Bunker slowly shook his head. "There was Qo such confrontation," he said. "In his memoirs, Truman said the meeting was cor· llial. And at the end, he pinned the Distinguished Service Medal on MacArthur and gave him a box of ~andy for Mrs. MacArthur. "Gen. George Marshall once told a friend of min~ that Truman was reluctant to relieve MacArthur of duty. Even after he had done it, Marshall said Ma cArt hur w as Truman's military hero. It dated ~ack to the · First World War. When .1 it (reca llin g ~ MacArthur) first· was l i ~ suggested to him, ~ ~ . Truman said be was not ~ i go.ing to do· it -not go-1 ;> < L' r %' t1 ing to end the career of a MacARTHUR .... ,.,.' distin~uish~d milit.ary man m this fashion. When it was suggested the second Ume. be re· • luctantly agreed, .. Bunker said. l ASKED WRY HE THOUGRr MACAJlTHUR I was relieved of duty during the Korean war~ Bunker l said, "The people immediately around Truman were afraid he (MacArthur) was going to win the 1 war. They ha~ persuaded Truman to wage.a limited I war -ano-wmwar. DALLAS CAP) - Don•t bite those fingernails! Yo\l may k chewing oU $20. That's the price a woman can get for a set of good fingernatls, &c· cordinc to. the owners of a beauty salon in North Dallas. "We have about 25 or •30 women growing fingernails now," said Norm Heinz. who along with his wile, Lee. owns the Creative Airs salon. .. We still have people waiting for nails.•• The salon pays as much as $2 per nail clip- ping t o resell as transplants for $35 for a complete set. The t echnique, in simplified terms, is to glue a longer nail onto the edge of the existing nail. It's a temporary step to allow the nails of the wearer to grow out to the desired length. · Heinz said nails must be at least one·third inch out from the fingertip before the salon will con- sider them. u"1r.......- Beat• J ogglng Former astronaut Frank Borman, now president of Eastern Airlines, joined 700 baggage handlers in Miami in piloting luggage carts through crowds in one of airline's busiest holidays. "It sure beats jogging," he said. SF Killings SAN FRANC.SCO <AP > -Homicides re· ached a record 135 in the city in 1975, police say. The total includes 12 people who died in an apartment fire set by an arsonist on Dec. 12. ORLANDO, Fla. CAP) -Central Florida authorities say they are faced with only one certainty in their manhunt for masked terrorists responsible for a nine-month bingeof murder, rape-, torture and robbery - the gunmen will strike again. "They undoubtedly know that every policeman tn this part of the state is looking for them and they haven't stopped yet," said Jeff Monge. a Florida Department Qf Criminal Law Enforcement detective in charge of coordinating the investigation. "I'M AFRAID WE'LL have to operate on the assumption they will continue these attacks until they are caught." Since April, the terrorists have in- vaded 14 rural homes in five Central Florida counties in a spree of robbery and torture that has left two men and a woman dead. Along the way, they've also raped three women, tossed two housewives off bridges and poured drain cleaner in the eyes of another female victim. THEY STRUCK TWICE over the New Year's weekend, killing one man and raping his wife in Polk City and ransacking another home near Orlando on Saturday. Although all the attacks have been perpetrated by men wearing ski or stocking masks and all have been committed against rural residents at night, Monge said investigators are ' not even positive they are dealing with one gang. "We're not even certain the same individuals are involved in all the cases," Monge said. "Sometimes it 's been a lone male and sometimes it's been three or four involved.·· MONGE SPECULATED, however, that all the gunmen may be ex· convicts ''because they know what evidence can be used against them." In many break-ins, the gunmen have ignored expensive items like jewelry and color television sets in favor otsuch loot as small appliances, kitchen utensils and even food. In one case last month, where a Deland man was killed and his wife raped and then thrown off a bridge in· to the St. Johns River, the gunmen were surprised while cooking in the victim's kitchen. · MONGE SAID POUCE will be "ex- tremely lucky" to catch the gunmen in the act, but held out hope that a $.5,000 reward offered by the sheriffs of five counties last week would cause someone who knows the gunmen to squeal on them. "The only thing we have been able to determine a bout their pattern is the fact that the motive for these attacks is not monetary," Monge said. "The stuff they take isn't worth that much money. Right now, .we have no ·theories. They just get their kicks ou.t. or terrorizing people:" SAN DIEGO CVPO - One of the tdlghest airport landing and takeoff curfews in the nation is in effect at San Diego International Airport, grounding noisy jet airliners until 6 a.m. Port district com· missioners last month unanimously imPOSed a six-hour mandatory ban on all flights out of Lindbergh Field and restricted landing privileges to quieter models such as the LlOll andDCJO. An airport spokesman said only two violations were reported Monday, when a Pacifi c Southwest Airlines 21 landed on a flight from Sacramento and a small . private plane took off. A PSA spokesman said the San Diego-based airline did not consider the landing a violation because the flight bad been delayed and suf • fered mechanical dif • ficulties. MARTIN FURNITURE Daily 9-5:30 Fri. 9-9 Closed Sunday Slnlnt the H• bar Area oYer 21 · years in this loeatlon. O• largest kweatory drastically reduced. Hen Is a l1tlng of ody a few of our Ollhtanding 1 bllys -yH11 find •"-*eels we. Don't delay! Hu11 y! LIVING ROOM . , .. . "" ' SOFA ·LOVE $EAT SPECIAL ' 100" Sofa -l:J)'' ~ove Seat to rrotch. Custom quilted Nyfon fabric - Morflex springs. One set orly. Both Pcs. dose-out •••••• , ••• U 19.00 FREE DELIVERY • ' I only 100" Loose Pillow-Bode Sofo (Geen-Yeliow). ·TERMS OF COURSE SIMMONS BEAUTYREST SALE C...-Prices • leautynst in stock only • DiscontiMecl Roar Swwwplls • Sold In sets Olly. . . Full size Supreme I Set (I orly) Reg. $279.90, Sole •••••••••••••• $245.00 Full ~e Bock Core I Set, 2 ooly, Reg. $279.90, Sole • • • • • • • • • • • • $245.00 QJeerl size Supreme I Set, I ooly, Reg. $339.95, Sole •••••••••••• $299.00 0Jeen size Bock Core I, 2 ooy, Reg. $339.95: Sole •••••••••••••• $299.00 King size Supreme I, 2 only, Reg. $499.95, Sole •••••••••••••••• $4Jt.tl King size Bock Core I, I ony, Reg. $499.95. Sole • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $439.95 Twin size Llmited Edition (2 Oliy), Set •••••••••••• 1• • • • • • • • • • • SI It .SO ~ size Llmited Edition (1 only), Set •••••••••••••••••••••• $279.tS King size fantasia (I only}, Set •••• : ••••••••••••• •••••• •• $299.95 DINING ROOM "There were hostile elements in Washington ~giving Tru~an bad advice .... EverY!.hing_ t MacArthur did was to strengthen Truman's hand -1 I not weaken it. He wasn't being insubordinate, He I was putting facts before tbe public which those ~others were suppressing. · futrel • 7 pillow& ............................... Close CMlt $450.00 • 100" T Ultedo Sofa, loose Pillow-Bock. Fortrel • 7 pillows (Blue) .•••.........••.......•....•.... C~ $625.00 Thorrosville Country French Sofo, 8·f'. Carved Oak frame. • Tlxim:asvjlle Mediterranean Goup Trestle table 2 20" leaves -4 side chairs. 2 orm choirs. Oo~ & Pecan • Cane bock· 7 Pc. Reg. $1150, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale Sl,035.00 MQtching Chino • Reg. $695.00, •••••••••••••••••••••• Sale S 635.00 Thorrosville Pine Mona • (The Country Loe*~ Oval table w (J. fills • 4 side choirs & 2 arm chors. Reg. $830.00, •••••••••••••••••• Sale S 699.50 Thomasville Antique P'rne • '48" pedestof table • 2 20" fills & 4 hicjl bod: 1 "There was a great deal of politics involved. t MacArthur had not been back to the United States j since 1937. He already had been credited by the 1 American peo,Ple with winning the .war against 1 Japan. He had conducted an incredibly successful 1 occupation of Japan. Politically, no one knew what I MacArthur would do when he returned to the United I States if he had added victory in the Korean war to I this list. I "TREY WERE AFRAID THE AMERICAN ! people would put MacArthur into the White House [ whether be wanted it or not," Bunker said, adding, "I know he didn't want the White House. He had no 1 ambition in that direction. If the American people ! insisted, he would have ione al~ng -but be would ' have been unhappy. · . t "Politicians, particularly the <Thomas) Dewey wing of the Republican party plus ·the J;)emocrats, were determiJled to do something to tarnish the 1 general's image before he returned to the· United i StJltes." Bunker said that even after he was relieved of ' duty, MacArthur bore no ill feelings towards ''Truman. ~ "He had no bitterness for Truman. He was l1 aware of the •pressures being t>rought to bear on , Truman.·· · f HE RECALLED THAT FOLLOWING AN an- nual d inner in honor of MacArtho.t, U,e general was t talking with den. Leif J . Reg. $850.00 • • .. • • . . . .. .. • • • • • .. .. • • • • • • • • • . CIOM-Otlt $69 5.00 96" Calif. Furn. Shops, Birch trim lux1.1iously soft Reg. $595 •• Sale $545.00 96" Tufted bock, aescent shape Sofo. ltecj. $650.00 (Geen Motolosse) • , . • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • .. .. .. • • • • Close ..t $495.00 96" Country English Sofo • Fortrel • 7 Pillows. Oak trim Sale Price $645.00 96" Tuxedo Sofa (down fdled). Pillow back w /bolsters. Geen-gold ..••••••••.•.••.••.••••••.••.••••• Sale Price $575.00 SPECIAL SOFA SLEEPER SALE hwy Sle•per cm1 be owdlred in _., sbe Sleeper or Sofa • Chair - Lo¥e SHI. Fwl • QtlMll • Gig: 5-6-7 or I ft. Gt sale prices ya. c.'t ........ Ct:IAIRS • CHAIRS • CHAIRS CW... Of every ....,.._ °" sale. C.. Cltalrs • Occcnlo•" Qairs • Wood Chairs· c..e Chain • W1ltg Chairs • SwlYel CWrs • Swtnlt llodcers • RKIMrs • lolfoft lodcen. All FmncMts MCllR . .. Hut• discounts on all wall decor. Pal•llllCJS. Accntorles, Oclcls & Ends. Sale Prices Oii • l .... r•clt la..,., the fCllllOUs Sight Light mid N..tlcal'-ps. . . ~ ... r 'J .. HURRY FOR BEST BUYS • SOME ITEMS LIMITED • OPEN DAILY . 9:00 Windsor chbirs. Reg. $8%.00 ••••••••••••••• , ......... Sale S 765.00 Thomasville ltott0n Provincid. Ovol tOOle, pedestal, w /2 20" fms • Sorid Cheny • 2 am • 4 side choirs. Reg. $I, I SClOO, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • As Is $ 150.00 California Furn. Shops '48" table w~o top, pedestal base, 2 fills. Reg. $329.95 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale $ 279.50 Cal. Shops 48" octagonal -4 fills. Reg. $379.95, •••••••••• Sale $ 329.50 Ealy American fWch chairs to rrotch ot sole prices. qwno. 62", gloss. Reg. $?)9.95 ................ ,. Close Olll S 595.00 Col Shops 54•• Hutch Giro. Reg. $599.95, •••••••••••••• Sale$ 499.SO ThomoSV111e Choteau PrOllOOCe-Country French. 45" x 66" ovol table wfl 18" fills. 4 upholstered side choirs. 2 ~stered arm chairs. 70'' OVno to match. Reg.. $.J.280.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• C-...-$2,475.00 5 pc. Dining Set. 42" pedestal table & 4 choirs. Wolrm ord lvt. Whita. Reg.. $229.so •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• c~ s 11t.so BEDROOM SPECIALS ThorroSV11fe Mediterranean Oak.Spa. include 72" Dresser, King HS, Mirror, 2 stands. Reg. $895.00; 2 sets orly to go fot •••••••••••••••• OlllJ $7tS.OO Lage door chest to match, Reg. $350.00, •••••••••••••••• We $299.50 Thorrosvme Italian Provincial Oierry. 76" tripfe Dresser, Mflot, Queen hecd>oad, 2 stands. Reg. $975.00. discontirwJed • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $7.95.00 Lage door chest to lflOfch. Reg. $399.50, •••••••••••••••• MW $2'9.50 Thomasville Leqocy Cassie. Pecon & &xi 'Bm 78" triple U-esser! King HS. choir bock, 2 stands. twin Mirrots. Reg. $1,545, Sale Price. 6 pcs. $1,295..00 Cdif. Furn. Shops Woodstock Ant. Pine I O<lrower Ofesser, tiJtCh Mirror with crawers, King Connonbdl Bed with footbocrd, 2 stands. Reg.. Sl,769.80 .............................. Sale Prfc• $1,595.00 .. Sverdrup, who organized the get-together. Bunker quoted MacArthur as sayiag, .. Mark my words, Harry Truman • go- ing to go down in history as a tar ereater president than <Dwtibt> Eisenbower. Harry Tru.man made more important decisions from a sound point of view than Ike ever dreamed of making.:• 1 ........ Asked why be tb'ought stories about •a conlllc:t between MacArthur and Truman were being publiciied, Bunker said. "The sad thinl about Trldman was that in later years be SIMMONS & SEALY MAmESSSALE ' ......... Two~ Melli ..... ~ =• epe•ctlf W.Pricn TO 5:30 FRIDAY 9:00· TO &:00 5-Pc. Country American (.A.ntique Pine). Dresser, tiJtch Mirrot, King Ca~l Heocl:>oord, Z stands. Reg. $899.00, •••••••••••••••••••• Sale $791.00 • Some set as obove, with ~ t-e • • • • . • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $750.00 Lage 5 drawer 'he st to 1TOtdl above • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $1 tt.IO bec•m• senlle. Mus:h of the preu 1e,i.erally ae~ ' not to interview hif!l. But Merle Miller declined to go alona with that. He got Harry Truman into New York for • television 1bow. Truman w11 drinkil\I his f&avorlte bour~ and Miller wu makln1 tapes Of t.b.elr conversation. . .But Miller sat on the tapes wstil after Ttuman died. Jf Truman bad read some olthoMthing1. he..ouklbave~ tbem." Bunker sald KacAtthur would have been .. hor· rifted" by wbat,tookplacein Vl•am.. . ~·MACAaTRVll. WAS TRAINED IN THE principle that when you fO to war, you should end It • MOn as poulbte. Tbe JoDger it goes on, the more t•ual\lea. And If one thl.nJ bothe~ him, it wu .,ualtia. Durtac Im 17 or 39 ampblblOu1 lancHa11. tbere weNi onb' soinetblnf Uke 59 penon1 knted tn •tablJtbiDI a beachheacl. That's absolutely fabuloua. • "I kno" ttie fenenl wu very unhappy about tlll battle t•etk• ot the Australians and at times the JI.._. Both of tbem liked to be 1pectacular -to .. .,. frontal attacb. MacArthur daUked that auae lt ca\ISed too many cu&lalties. l • Cl.OU.OUT OM STOC:X MllCNAMDtSI ONLY Sealy Frim-Aex (Lu.ury Q.lt! twW\ ea. pc. •••••••••••••••••••••. $55.00 Seofy ~es (Luxury <;M1t U size ser •••••••••• ~ ••••••••••• SI 4t.IO Sealy firm.Rex (Luxury <)ilt QJeen size set •••••••••••••••••• S2 tt.00 Sedy ~-(Luxury ();It King tiie set •••••••• I • • • • • • • • • • • SZH.00 Sedy. Rest Guard (firml twin 1et •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $1 1 t~IO Sealy "-"Guord (fwm f\M ne Mt ••••••• w •••••••••••••••••• Sift.lo Seofy Rttt Guord (rrm ()Jeen size set .................... , • 121 t .00 Seatv Rs Glord (firm t<lrq size set .•. • •••••••••••.••••••••• $279.50 !SIMMONS GOLDEN VALUE SALE) • T "'1lit\ s;. · Firm • ea.. pea • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • S 5 t. II Twin si• · ExffO Arm • oo. pc:. • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••• S ff .II fiJI $ize • FinTl • eo. pc. . • • • • • • • • • . . . . • • • • • • . . • . . . . . . . . . . . S 79 .II ~ sita ·Edra Firm • ~ p:-. .................... · •••••••••••• S It.II 1 C)....n ~ -F:irm • iet ••••••••••.•••••.••. , • • • • • • • • • • • • • $229.00 ~ 8Z8 • &t~ Firm· set ••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••• $249.00 KiWi1 size · Fwm • aet ..................................... Utt.00 Kinq siM • Eictro firm ·set ..........•........•...•.....•.. $329.00 . . Mmy othtr leclroom Pieces at Sale Prfces. • • aoSEo· SUNDAY SAVE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT I 1161 H~RIOR IL:VD.• DOWNTOWN COST A MESA • PHONE 548-5131 •OVER 20 YEARS OF SERVICE • 'l • • • ,,. . . • l • DAILY PILOT Tuesday. January 9, HJ78 Today's TV Highlights Clemente, Mesa lJfeli.ear:sing ABC (7) 8 .00 -Happy Days. Fonzie's partner in the Harvest Moon dance contest is Richie's mom, who gives him more than he bargained for. KHJ (9) 8:00 -"Saratoga Trunk." Gary Cooper and Ingrid Bergman are paired in this 1946 movie from the Edna Ferber novel. KTTV (11 > 11:00 -Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. The premiere episode of this new nightly soap opera s poof from Norman Lear introduces the "Fern wood Flasher." TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening JANUARY 6 6 oo f) 0 ll ll0< ED EI;) CD News (3 D 11 3 11 6 Htw\ O llonuu 16 l Famd1 Alf111 m lrornde '"trldce h m1ly Ad1m 12 Soltdld l6 Stu Trek ED Ourstory ( 19 8 l Stu frt~ ffi llttlt Rnull HOVI 6 30 6 m Andy '"lfith Show 10 Mtrv Crill11 Siio• 17 3 Ko&1n's Heroo ED Uednc Comp111J W A"'triun OutdotnmH CD '1llop1nc Gourmtt 1:00 0 0 0 'U l6J EI;) CD News 1 3 lronsldr O 8ow11nc f11r Dollars 6 Bon1nz1 • 8 lo Ttll the Truth 0 Conunt11hon 0) l lAlve luCJ ID The FBI 17 3 Gunsmoke ti) LI lob1 '26 love Ameiiun Style ff)Wom1n ( 29 (I ) Btn1nu ED ra1om1 {i) T~e Adil1m1 family eye ind 8.J. to forget their d1sl1~e or the man and show him a little friendship. 0 ')j 1 6' •10~ ED Police Womu "I he Melhni Point ol Ice" Ama leur 1h1eYes steal a million dollais woflh of uncul diamonds horn p10 fH\1onal robbers. when one of lht PIOS pan1<1 l61 W~d Wild Wrst m ('29 e l l3 CD The llootiu Tilt Bold Onts VmdJ Show 'l4 Mmt: (C) (2111) ~rht Dul II thr Top of the Sii.in" (dr•) '60 Robert Prulon. Dorothy McGuire he Ardrn. Anael• L•nsbury. ED I SflC1Al l ln St1rdl ef 1 Mlts· tro Oocllment11) on !tit Ball1mort Srmphooy Orchestr1's lusl Young Conduc1ors Colllpthlion lotlow1nc lhe f1n1I coo1es11nts :hroueh • u11es QI dem•nd1nc w.11llrn tests •nd vigorous ronductmg emc•St •. I 9:30 f) (17 W (e Dot Day 11 • Tir11t · !here's • 1Mn '" Ann·s Ille -he I wants somelh1nr Ann hu, 1nd shr wan11 somrlh1ng ~e hu. In Ann's cue. she wanls a rob. In his cue. he wanls Ann. ED D Cllolrr 10:00 a .11 L3 La switch! Jacques Au· buchOn guests as [1rt Harper. • bank pres1den1 who's bun turned tnlo • human bomb by a pair ol rxlorl1on1sls, while Pere and Mac try lo slall tor time as l~1ey lly lo l•eure out a solutron. 0 l3 61QOE!}Ju romstrr F1re(>O'Wer" Forrester is 1nslrumen l•I 1n ~pine a lnend and f•lln w 7 30 E) 1tew Trusurt H1111t o!fl(tr accept a 5 year old s:ep 0 .ll 6 ' 10 m N t 11 ' •• 0 d daudlter horn his .. ,,,., PleYIOUS Sq.am m~nage. 0 levt Amenun Style 0 0 m Nrws O Hip R.U.n 1, l'tflJ Muon 2 l'llyllis 0 (lf l!J L3 ED M11tus Welby, The 'r•IKlors M.D. An u ·bueball sw who h•s trady Buldl hcltfd 1 411nk.ng probltm l1nds that I Ld's M3t a °'11 l\e rs 1 he11'hl11 umtr. Or. Who: Tiit Mind tf h~ @Get Smart Allim1f WllM • U) ..... Cafe 1ifJ lJttk M11c1t , Eil) Monty 1')111o11's Ryinc C1m1s (II) • 1:00 a fit Cf ,., liot4 T-s "J J's 10:30 ED A1u111ation FHtival Filo««" Put I of 1 two part slory aJ El SllN de W1lter Mtrudo No 10f0fmll10I\ 1v11lable from the 11:00 a ) 0 Ell m CD HfWS networ~ at our prus ttmt ' 0 I 10 .23 6 News 0 ;l3 '6 10 Er) Mov111• 011 "l he 1 0 llnt ol 'roucho Old South Wtll Rtu Ac11n" Satiny 1.! The Ho11ey111oeners swilches from p1lo11n1 a 1111 on lh• U Dirt SMdOt!t road to p1to11n1 a balloon 1n the 11r. m Mass Murder in Fern. g Movie: (Cl (2hr) "l111dldo" (adv) ·~t. -Robtfl M1lchum, Ursula * wood · · ·Who Is The Th1ess, C11ben Roland, Zachar1 Fernwood Flasher? Scoll I m M.,, Hartm1n, lilary H1rtman (61 Mod Squid ID Mod Squad O <~t• 1tl:1CDH•eo D11s J.1,(V kttlltillt Oanc:e Contest" I on11e am more' '26 Co111blt than ht b111ained tor '°""" Mrs· ED Rllllert MMNd llfl>Ort Cunn1ngli.un ul~ hiln 10 be her' ( 29 'IJ) Trvtll or Constt1uencu • Two Ornnge Coast community theaters are starting off the new year on a 11,;ht note and have rumouneed the casting of their next productions. For the San Clemt-nlc Community Theater, it will be Robert Anderson's quartet of one·acts, "You Know I Can't Hear You When the Water's Run· ning," opening Jan. IS. The Costa Mesa Ci vie Playhouse will follow on Jan. 23 with "The Happiest Millionaire." DIRECTOR TONY Brandt is doubling as one of Cive performers playing a dozen roles in the San Clemente production. He and George Alig are the producer and writer in "The Shock of Recognition" with Moniea Hutchens as a secretary and Charles Anthony as an actor who'll do anything for a part. In "The Footsteps of Doves." Alig and GIQria Brandt are a bed·shoppin~ couple with Anthony' as a salesm an and Miss Hutchens as a diverting customer. Alig. M 1ss Brandt and Miss Hutchens 1 romprise the family trio in "I'll Be Home for Christmas." The Brandts tt'am up as an elderly couple in the C'urtain closer, "I'm llerbt>rt." Performances of "Water's R unning .. will be given Thurs days through Saturdays at 8.30 for three wekkends at the Cabr illo Playhouse. 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Clem ente. Reser vations are being taken at 492-0465. AT COSTA ~IE A, director Pa li Tambellini 1s preparing for he r ·12nd production s ince becoming resident director of the Civic Playhouse . Heading the C'ast of "llappit'st Millionaire" are Joe Bell and Kris Hagen as the father and mother with Linda Putnam. Rrad Estrin and Stan Wlasick as tne1r C'hildren. TONIGHT! OME MITE OML Y SMOKEY STOVER,S p11eHE°Hy pvescn~s RAIN .. tft·: ,· ...... ~.:_~ _. c:.A TR I BUTE to u .oocova l2'5 ........,,... lhtcl ... .., ........ ~"'"'by ,.......,,,.,...~ TAt\hEY K1JBRICK RYAN O'N E AL • MARIS A BERENSON "ONE Of THE MOST VISUALLY OAZZLINO WORKS IN THE HISTORY Of ALM . fT RAVISHES THE EYE AND EN1HRAlLS THE EAR . • A BREATHTAKING AND MYSTERIOUS ACHIEVEMENT " ~ Intermission Tom Titus Other members of the Costa Mesa cast are Mike Wilson, Susie Scott, Geoffry Constant, Donna Adam, Ron Cloffey, Earlene Holladay and Lub Mello. "The Happiest Millionaire." an early.century eostume comedy for the family, opens Jan. 23 for tbree weekends, playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 in the Community Center auditorium t>n the Orange County Fairgrounds. Call 556·5391 for re- servations. Movie Reslated LOS ANGELES (AP> -"Nickelodeon." whtch <t'tlmost struck out because of budgetary problems. has now begun filming. The story of early·day Hollywood hit a snag when Columbia Pictures figured it would prove too expt>nsive. Additional financing was arranged, and Peter Bogdanovi<'h began directing the film Dec. 30. It stars Ryan O'Neal, Burt Reynolds and Tatum O'Neal. The Ule and nmes of GRIZZLY ADAMS ·~.,~:·:-·:·· a!UASIO IY SUN CLA~SIC PICTUalS© 1974 ,.. ,...f SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT STARTS TOMORROW! ONE WEEK ONLY ONLY SUN COMPLIMENTARY PASSES ACCEPl,'ED CO-FEATURE At ALL DAIVE·INS "MR. SUPER INVISIBLE" OEAN JONU SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES S.AH DIEGO FWY. AT BRISTOl SO.COAST PLAZA MOii•• c. scon. A»M ~ "HINOENBlJHi' (PG) OAK.Y 7:Jf & t:Jt SAT /SUN-l:JO.J:4~S:4'-7:1&-t:H SM-27ll SO.COAST PLAZA ~ "ONE FLEW OYEI THE CUCKOO'S NESr (RJ OAI&. Y 7:Jt & t:4S 549..JJS! SAT /SUM-I :00.J:t .. S<H-1:4'-lf:I 5 GlOIGl SEGAL ''THE ILACl<llRD" OAllY 1:4' SAT~r:IS.S:oo.t:4S "ROOSTER COGIURM"' OAIU 6:4S.lt:JO SAT~-"4S. l•Jt "DOG DAY .AFTERMOOM'• O~lY I 00.10 IS SAT./SUN.. 1.l5-l..10:U .. DROWNING POOL" DAllY t ·20 SAT.ISVH. :t-.-·20 FRE P.Af•l<1NG "STORY OF 0 11 IXJ 6:45-·l :l O. t l>'.l.S SAT /SUM-I ;JO.l: I S.S:OO ' 6:4S.l:l 0.IO-.lS ~, I> Bf'1 Jl. 'N h<''S ~ SJm 51).)J(·. Jr.. and his fakon·~ wonh a ronurw.'1 JACK KROLL NEWSWEEK WALTER MATTHAU GEORGE BURNS RICHARD BENJAMIN FOR THE PRICE OF A MOVIE YOU'LL FEEL LIKE A MfLLION Pt.US "Let's Do It Again" 2nd At Both Theatres lllNI I "'U'll Ssan connsrq .. mtcftBBI Caln ·-A VIOOAOUS. FLAMaOYANTLY .ENTEATAININO AOVENT\lllf.." ·oHE Of THE YEAR'S T£H IEST." lbs man Mo would BB King ARBOR1WIN partner at !ht Harwsl Moon danc.r1 U·IS ~ r ., conl!sl 1 · .:w .... ,1111 ,,. HAU O• .ATWM.SOfl. COSTA .. SA 646·0S 7 l 646,JZU NEWPORT CINEMAS HARBOR TWIN EDWARDS CINEMA 0 Mllho11 S Movie. (C) (2fu) 11~30 0 @ (3' CIS Lite Mtvit: (Cl "Sa11toe1 Trun•" (du) '46 -C.ary "Cry l'anic" (dra) ·74 -John fOf· Cooo.r. lng11d Ber1m1n i he. Anne rmiciS, Earl Hol~m;in I Cms Wlb · )} (i:l 'lOl m lolt1111J Can .. Jolla llrbovr Sllow The HiM,-11ers l'frws 6J M..ie: ·eov11ceeas Of. Clint· l~ '""Sllltlt t111~ (dra) '40 -.ltan Hersllolt, E1!l Ton'g"' Emmy w· Oorolhy LO'tell ., 1 '". • iru:ie~, U ( 'l+ fl l '3" AK ""'1tl't "Ms * Upstairs Oo~starrs Mt & Oit" (R) Gtorft Ch1k111s and 13 all·new ep1~s Jtnny Acufler s1u. • Mobil Oil Corporation (!J Tiie Fii · . O llo¥ie: .,,..,.. (com) ·~7 @> ~ Tht1tre: UpUlin tfmy Seeombt, ROii Randetl. Donsta11s (R) G) Tfle 'll01t & Mn. Muif ED urtos m '°'' ' Yoa G) llJl11tst uncuqe l'roer11111 12:00 0 Twilitht loM 1:30 0 (!ti [3) Joe ' Solis Gus IS Ill I m Mtvit: "Tht llact Boo ... (dra) pan1t atler rdnninr oul on a gam '49 -Robert Cummincs. Arltne bltn1 dtbl and nttlher he nor Jot -Othf, Riellenl &astl!m. can Strape up enough money lo P•Y j ID Me111if: "Rictclttt Rontlfttt" oll his lnssts (com) '55 -M11jone Main Rudy 0 (~l8l (3)CE)Welcomtl Vallee. · Blct, Kttter "1-11e l nnRtsl Wer~ ' end" Koller has St(.Ond lhnoghh• 12:30 0 Mtybtny RFl> about his "tree and equal rt'ahnn •a Movie: "Ntkcd Junflt" (dra) 'S4 ship" with Julie when she ia~es nfl Charllon Heslon, £Ju001 Park•r <'n ~ s~11n1 weekend with a ~1ngle, J:OO H CUlj) fo!E!}Tomorro• girlfriend 1 ~Ill! AulJJ a "" aobby v1111111 S11ow I . . 1:30 r11 W lilovie: "Tlte Alo1111< City'' m GAMBLING THEME: I (11111 ·52 -Gm Barry, Lydia * Jack Klugman, Benny C111k Binion among g~ts 1:45 B """"': "lllllfPMt '" M1rdtt" 0) ltltn '"lfHI Sii• l!) Wildlife u-t.rt ED u SMw 4t ldw '''"' .. 9:00 8 (Il) (3) rai M•a•s•M Hoptn1 to perli up lllOIOSC f 111\t Sums wlule Hot lips •s at a nunn' stmrnll 1n f~yo. Colonel l'ottn ull:s H1wk Wednesday DAYTIME MOVIES ~JO 0 "Tltlle4 City" (wn) '!>.) -W~d 8111 C"iotl, M11f011t lord ·1~ Our Time" (dra) '44 ld1 I up11m, Paul Htnmd. 10.00 6 (C) '1llt Tltfltld fllvndefflelr (COlll) ·~ -St.nlty Holloway 12.00 m "ftfMf M4ltt" (dra) .• , (J!l¥S) 'SJ -Joseph Cotten, Jean Peters, Gary MemH. 2:t0 m Alf.Not si-: "My '411 risa." "Wlllrtpotl" J:lO I) IMwlt: (C) "T1lt fl~ li11t'" (com) ·~ -bne Russdl, Cilber1 R(Qnd, Mary Mee.my. Linda Darnell, Corl1tl Wilde, Rdlard Gree11e. 1:00 0 wrrs A S.an Wolld" (tom) 'l~ -SptDCtr Tmy, Wendy cl11ne. 126 "About Fact" (mus) '51 G01don MacRae, Phyllis Kuk, ldd1e Braden 3:00 O (C) "Rldt tflt MH Dtwn" (dla) '!>J -811an Oonlev1. I Ila Ra111ts 1101 ~ Owt,El¥tt1tt1" (susp) '68 -lames franc1KUl, lUht N1tl sc~. Sl11rley Knrrht. .KOCE Television (50) I ' HUNTINGTON CINEMA l lACHATIUl\,H t 147·'601 147-6017 CINEMA CENTER HAH OIATAOAW\ COSTA HUA SA YHDI CIHTU '79·414 I v.41. ... ~.iJ.!O\\iJt'I" .... n ........ ......, i.nrw • ts orcd"""'•\N '"""I""" ~ .tW! .. .am~~ ... ~ n..1,,i,.,.. rtl(,.t~l)f"IN'Tv.h') cw.11~1h.. mo-..., b.i••• •• 1 ... ..i.~ .. m. ... <kt ttrld 1lwr. trwii "'"""""""' n,,,•irhrw1tt ... tiotM'f•"t''"""" llV-t •tit'-1,..MI '""·""" ''"! fO ...... M.ti • ....,..., HAllOI AT Wll~ COST A MfSA 646·0S7l 646·l2U CINEMA VIEJO S 0 f«ffWATTOlA,Al MISSION VlfJO IJ0.6't0 3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR ROBERT REDFORD FAYE DUNAWAY CINEMA WEST WlSTMIHSTD A TIOOUlliHWfST WESTMIM.CEHlff H 2·44'l PLUS "fEM IS ..,.. THE Ur' AT WI.ST ~.1trillil .. uUE :r~RRIS t. ...EEi": t1ECt<ART ARllUJ~ O'CCi•'il'fEU. 'A ,,.\ll111t111i.111 .. •! ... 11.,11 'fttt11 nf Chl1!>lklr•1ly •. 11 ···1\lll'>ll l'l \'l .. )rO'"' -vArm:n I . l . ~I .: I I -t r-' ~KY LADY'" CPGJ . .. SUHSHIMI IOYS .. IPGI "MAHOSAMY'" fNt "OHCI .IS MOT IMOUIW Ill •3 DA TS OF THI COMDOtl" llJ "'DAY OF THI JACKAL" llJ ~ MAIY, CUIY LMIY" "'Y AMISHIMG POINr '"SOME IM 60 SECOMDS• CNt "HUSTU• "THE GAMILH" llJ U ••aoa WA~I • IAltG&• ._. It M • . llOlitOU """ SA t V'IOU th < ... .......,., II M \ M ·=-I IOlllf --eAYI W WAY a DATI Of 11tl CONDOI " ......... fUMID191 .... ,.., •t1a1 Cll.U.. -II •t• ............. , ...... o......~tt •·--· ... ---DOI llY AftRNOON" ---.. MOM-POOL,. ••mm-:;;:;;;-1 _, ............ .... .. 5:1~=:--.. ---·-·-~-· _____ ..._ MC1l NIOMMIOM e -9T, MO,..... .,... .... a... c..dl ......... Ill ,.,, ...... • NClllO DAT AmlNOON ......... llOWNI• '°°' "' ---------- -C&Mt IULLll UITI 11> ........... MITTNINI AIOUI .~ " ..,_.... ..... 11M ~i· I ~ ..T.:. . ........ ..._...._.. lUCIY LADT,. ... , ' . _., ...,,.. UT'I DO IT AGAIN I"' ""'. TAKI TMI MONIY l IUM "' e IOlln'. MO,_... e ;ot11 IN 60 SICONDS "' am.- Sll T1I M UT. UICEISllO OllCIAl JS•PllTS! CWTMAMA " PLUS THE stCOIO MOST FAMOUS --ADULT FUI OF OUR TIE... -• Tu.day, Jenuary 8, 1978 Disney WOrk Hazardous No De lay Over Fire ByBOBTHOMM LOS ANGELES (AP) -"I think 1 liked it bet- ter wh~.n the Disn~y people diew tbelr stunt!. I pre· ferred it when Mickey Mouse was floating over a precipice a.nd walking on air back to safety. Much better than submitting human actor.s to such things." The wryly pointed comment came from Peter U~tlnov, one of Disney's human actors. He was hob· blina on crutches ., the result of 1 stunt wor~ In the studio's new adventure ftlm, "Truaure of matecumbe." • weeks. Being Peter Ustinov, be wasn't idle. Among his works in progress: a two-hour special he is writ- ing for the Children's Television Workshop; his autobiography, which he is calling "Dear Me"; a new play, ''Beethoven's Tenth," which he terms "very funny, perhaps too funny." "Treasure of Matecum~" la Ustinov's fourth venture with Walt Disney Productions. The double Oscar winner supporting actor C"Spartacµ~." 1'Topltapi") .Played the tlUe role ln '1Blackbeard's Ghost" and tbe voice of Prince John in "Robin Hood.'' Last year h' played a Chinese spy in "One of.Our Dinos~urs ia Missing," one of Disney's near-nussee. · LOS ANGELES (AP> -A Quinn M artin Productions s pokesman says no shooting time on "Cannon" a nd "Barnaby Jones" was lost because of a Christmas Day fire at Goldwyn Studios that destroyed the sets for the two television series. The cause of the fire. whi c h cause d an estim ated $3 million "ROYAL FLASH " -PiuJ- () ''UNOERCOVERS HERO" With Peter Sellen ''I get out of the pluter cut in a week," said the Portly actor. "The doctors dla1nosed the in· jury as torn ligaments. I heard one or them tell another, 'Too bad it was n't a fracture; then we wouJd know where we stand.• "P E RHAPS IT WAS TOO British for the total damage, is under Amerjcan market," he observed. "But I think it i'nivieisitligiatiijoni.iliiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii will do excellently in England, where it is jus t'open- ing now." Hmmmm." USTIMOV / ONE TWNKS OF PETER Ustinov as sitting in a drawing room uttering bons mots between sips of wine. So bow did he happen to be performing stunt work in a man-made hurricane? "I wonder myself," he mused. "It's too late in life for me to .start making this kind of picture.'' The accident QCCurred when Ustinov was work- ing in the tank at the 20th Century-Fox location ranch in Malibu Canyon. He was not only damp but :deucedly cold -"When my car was picked up after I went to the hospital, they had to spr ay it with hot water to thaw it out." Ustinov and fellow performers Robert Fox· worth, Joan Hackett, etc. were doing a hurricane sequence in· the post-Civil War adventure about a. search for buried gold. Ustinov was told to turn away from the camera so bis stunt-man d ouble could take over in subsequent scenes. "I TIUNK THAT IF I hadn't turned, I would have escaped injury," he theorized. "The trouble was that my feet were planted in the sand; while I turned, my feet didn't. I was hit by a few hundred gallons of water, did an elegant curtsy and sat down." His injury kept the actor s idelined for three "ON ANY SUNDAY" Pia HILD OVER FOi i WEEK ''GONE IN 60 SECONDS" IA '"HIAITS OP THI WISr' "" "WISTWOILD" •AMllJCAM 61AFFl1T' "OLD DlACULA" "HUSTLE" ·2:l0 4:50 • 7:109:20 Ustinov was surprised to receive a protest let- ter from a Chinese actor who complained that the role should have been played by an authentic Chinese. Ustinov, of Russian parentage, wrote back that under such reasoning he should have protested to Woody Allen and Mel Brooks about not being cast in their Russian films ("Love and Death'' "12 Chairs"). "Fu.rther, I should have played the Henry Fon- da role m 'War and Peace' and I m~gbt even have supplanted Vivien Leigh in ·Anna Karenina,• " he added. "So far I have received no reply to my let- ter." · "AIRPORT 7 5" + "EARTHQUAKE" Eve. Program Only Call Theatre For Showtlmea UA SOUTH COAST •••••••••••••••••••••• 540-05'4 PUTT crn CEMTll ................... '· .614-tzlZ tlGHWAY l t DllVE lt4 •••••••••••••••••• 534-4ZtZ /. "IENJI" CGI 1.'*l:JS-t: I 0 '"CAPT AIM MEMO" 3:40.7:11 WHY IS A SWEET GIRL UKE MICHELLE WORKING TO CURE ''AN OLD FOLKS DISEASE? "MAHOGANY" CPG) 1:00.f:JO "ONCllSHOT IMOU•H•• 2:41-J:IO ""HIAITS OF THE WIS'rfNI ..... 7:41 ... /SAT-4:H-7:40 ... UH16 AH'' ):H.7:40 Michelle Tandy of Huntington Beach is five years old. but she shares the misery of many senior citizens - more than 20 m'.llion -who suffer from Arthritis. But through treatment from the Arthritis Founda~ lion's Juvenile Arthritis Clinic, Michelle can now walk without her braces, and hopes to live a full, produc·. tive life. Part of this productive life will be helping others-through the Arthritis Foundation. She is the 1976 poster girl for Orange County, and will assist Actress Claire Trevor, 1976 campaign chair- man for Orange County, and others in the Arthritis Telethon ·January 31 ·February 1. Through th e Foundation, research continues seeking the cause, the treatment and the cure of this crippling disease. If you would like to foil ow the lead of 5-yeaN1ld Michelle, if you would like to know more about Arthritis, its symptoms and its treatment, if you can help the Foundation with your time or your contribution, call The Arthrid • f o•ndatJon Orange County Branch ne in a series of ublic service advertisements s Bett y L Elias, Chairman 900 North Broadway Santa Ana. California 92701 Telephone 547·5591 Avco Financial Service · rt Beach Califoml ) A)2DAll.VPILOT ., I . I • • Why are more people than ever coming to Home Savings? Because Home is America's Larg- est? A good reason. But consider this also-families save, and borrow, where they are confident that they get the most for their money. Thus, long before Home was largest, so many generations of savers and homeowners made Home Savings their choice that "Old Depend- able" did indeed become number 1 in the nation in both savings and loans. Today there are added reasons for •• I saving at Home. Today the differences between the risks of investments and the safety of savings are more impor- tant than ever. So why take chances when, safe at Six-Billion-Dollar-Strong Home Savings, you are paid such high interest ... on time, every time ... and · you get so many extras in seryices! A reminder-there are other sav- ings institutions with names similar to Home Savings. To Be Sure at America's Largest, look for the familiar shield pictured here. Open Saturday, January 10, 9 AM to 1 PM ' NOW OPEN 'Tl._ 8 PM FRIDAY S f or your: convenience NEWPORT BEACH 190 Newport Center Drive Near Fashion Island ' 640-6100 I , EL TORO I LAGUNA HILLS 23861 El Toro ·Road 837-5111 • Home Savings-Numberl in the Nation in both Savings and Loans I ' ~ember: FEDERAL Savillp and Loan IJieuraru:e Corporation. A<counta lllllllOd lo '4(),000 (or an individual, up lo fll60,000 r.;, 1f11Dily~4. Mombor: FSOl!iRAL Homa Loan S:W.e,.i.m 1, I t .. \~ \ ' I -er --. I . .. ' • ' • . .. ,, . ' . . \ ........ " l I j • I ll I. - ' j, I '' ' " ' (' • n ~ ; '' I' I • I' I" r ,.. . ~--' I I; ,. I I I ' I ' j 'I I I ~ ' ' \ I j I I ! I • I I I l I: .. -· I . : Good • . • ,. ,. ( I' M ~· 1 ~; I f TYned Out? I ... .Course , \ Covers tots of 'Ground BylOOLSON °'*Oe&tJ" ...... Friday, Jan. 16, will be a •ery special day for Jan Rublnt, Newport Beach violinist. •It will, literally, be his Orange County artistic debut. Rublni, an experienced must. cian who bas performed around the world, has lived in the Harbor Area nearly five years but has not yet had a chance to perform tor a large audience in a format setting. So, the upcoming benefit con· ce.rt for PLEAD is a wtofcome op- portunity for him. Rubini will present a light pro. gram. because be thinks ~'the condition); of the country are too bad ior serious music. People want something light.•• It will be a concert of melodies, since Ru bini believes that con- temporary music is short on pleasant tunes and long on mis- ptted cnords. ''Modern music is a nothing, a terri,ble noise. How people can digest that kind or rubbish is By ALLISON DEERR OftM D•lly Piiot St.ff Barrios, bagels, Big Bear and Bel Air. Richard Outwater's urban af· fairs course on the Southern California urban environment literally covers a lot of ground. The course. sponsored by Cal State Long Beach's Continuing Education Department. begins Thursday, Jan. 15, with an on- campus orientation. The remaining five all· day weekend sessions are on- si te, on foot explorations of SouMJer}l California's diverse population. To study shopping for goods and services, the class will visit Long Beact,t, Lakewood Center and Los Cerritos Center. Corona, Mira Loma, Olive and Irvine are included in the rural-urban fr. inge. GheUos, barrios and bagels will mean a trip to South Central Los Angeles, East L.A. and the Fairfax District. · UFESTYLES Lifestyles of the rich and super-rich will be viewed in Beverly Hills,. Bel Ai:r and Marina del Rey. Big Bear and be)"ond me. I 'm waiting for the day when there will be melody In music. Today we havt ar- rangers, not composers." He is ch905ing music which will "incite a reeling within a person because of its technique,'· but wblcb ls "not so complicated you can't understand It.'' Rablnt never forgets that he is playing for .. the avera~e person·~ and welcomes this kind of audience, since it is wbat helped him build his career. TOY vtOLIN A' child prodigy, Rubini was disappointed as -a ·youngster when his f atb~r bought him a toy violin which didn't work. A real Instrument was qwckly sub· stituted and from then on. it was "music all the way" for Rubini. LONDON DEBUT He presented bis first concert· at the age of 9 in London's Royal Albert Hall, then went on to perform in Carnegie Hall and Arrowhead will be sites for study of the recreational services of the metropoliton area. Dr. Outwater stresses that the rourse is not a ·'look out the bus window" offering. And, although it is geared as an introductory fOurse. it will deal with problems such as housing, unemployment and racial issues. . "In most introductory courses," be said, "you can go back two years later and re-test and find very little retention of material "This is the kind of course that people do not forget There are more than textbook examples. ll "s something that's happened to you, no matter bow briefly, something you've heard and smelled and felt and tasted.·' Material is not all look-see variety. With the course comes a 100-page syllabus of data on the areas visited and the topics dis- russed to be read and digested by the class before setting foot on the sidewalk. . · For 90 percent of those taking the course, mostly middle-class. mostly white, the e:q>erience is an eye opener. Dr. Outwater said. \ theaters in many American cities. Rublnl also has conducted tbe•ter orchestras, performed for American troops, worked in radio and television and ap- peared with Ken Murray 's Blackouts. Tb.rough it au. be learned the art of ahowm ansbip, which he ftill deems an important part ot every concert. "Music is like a picture. It should be beautlfuijy framed," he said. "Concerts must be feasts for the eyes and feasts tor the ears." Rubini's by·invitatioo concert will b" given in the main ballroom of the Balboa Bay Club which has only a small stage, but Rubini plans to draw bis au- dience in and make them feel tbe warmth and beauty of the music through hi s abilities in showmanship. It is this kind of musical excite- ment Rublni believes is missing in Orange County. He laments the fact that many local residents don't vatue a musical group or "They find it bard to relate to when we go to East L.A. neighborhoods where English is , rarely spoken. The same applies to South Central L.A. where whites are seldom seen." SPANISH SPOKEN Although perhaps 10 to 20 per- cent of the students in the class may be minorities, most also come from middle-class back- grounds, Outwater said, so pov- erty level lifestyles are as foreign to them as to the white students. What also makes the class in- teresting, Outwater believes, is the diversity of student back- grounds and age levels. "Each has a different perspec- tive. from the average younger student to the teacher picking up extra units to the older person re- turning to school.'· "We can't study any topic in great depth, but if nothing else students develop a consciousness and awareness of what problems do exist. "Most come into the class with a superficial awareness of where certain ·ethnic groups live, of housing problems, of employ- ment problems.•• I • I D ~ • ~ Curses! legend Foiled •. I I I l t •• WASHINGTON (UPI) -After years of sleuthing by Feminist Gloria Steinem's older sister, the Smithsonian Institution is publishing a definitive history of the Hope diamond which will dis- count its legendary "curse" as Uttle more than a fairy tale. Tbe priceless steel-blue gem was acquired by the Smithsonian in 1958, along with the claim that an owner wut meet with mis· fortune, tragedy or violent death. Some believe tbe "curse" helps explaJn the Watergate scandal which befell the fabled diamond's current owner, the U.S.governm~nt. · 1be Soiithsonian•s new book. due for publication lr\.AprU, wu written largely by Susanne Steinem Patch or suburban Chevy Chase, law student, mother of 1lx chUdr~ and a diamond enthusiast since her Smith Colle1e days as a aeotoay minor. Sbe bat rnearched the Hope diamond'• bl1tol")' ape>rad.lc:alty ovet' the years. Someone at the Sm.ltblonian, w-.ere she worka as a volunteer, heard about her work and mentioned t h e possibility of a book to the editor of the Smithsonian Press. He liked the idea a nd Mrs. Patch began writing. The legend began more than 300 years ago when a French diamond trader, Jean Baptiste Tavernier, supposedly stole the original, larger diamond from the eye ot a Hindu idol~ smug- gled it from India in 1942. Later. the story goes, Tavern.I• wu torn apart by a packolwtlddo11. Not so, says Paul E. DeSa~1'. the Smithsonian's curator of gems. ''When the recorcll were investigated," he said, "it was found out that Tavernier died at the ripe old age of 83." When Tavernier sold tbe diamond to King Louis ..xiv, it took on the npme "French Blue." It was among the crown Jpwtols stol"' from a temporary treuury during the French re- voJutlon, when owner Marte Antoinette Wu beheaded. What is assumed to be a smaller versJoo of tbeataner~ap- peared in 1830 when English banker Lord Henry Philip Hope purchased it from a London jeweler. It maintained the Hope name throug h a variety of owners, who according to legend, included a Frenchman who collb milted suicide, a Russian prince who wa s killed b y re· volutionarles, a Persian jewel merchant who drowoed, a Greek merchant who drove off a cliff and a Turkish sultan who was detbi'OOed. In 1911, it was acquired by French Jeweler Pierre Cartier, who sold it to its last private owner, eccentric millionairess Evalyn Walsh McLean of Wublnston, D.C., for$180,000. New York jeweler Harry Winston acquired it trom the MclAan estate and donated it to the Smithsonian as a gift to the American people. DeSat1teJ1 believes t.M. cune h11 been ••embrolderedu by Jewelers over the years to ltlmtllate intere1t amonc P10L •Ptdlve buyers. Lut apdn.a, the Sml•IMonJ• received thousands of letters after its CBS special, "The Curse of the Hope Diamond," was broadcast. Some writers blamed the diamond for Watergate and other assorted U.S. misfortunes and demanded the gem's im- mediate return to India. Desautels believes the s how's producers sensationalized the legend. "There was lll feeling on both sides,'' be says, and the Smithsonian decided against future specials. - Was Watergate Just another misfortune in the Hope Diamond's 'embroidered' history? performer unless they are from out of town, and is disappointed by the lack or naJr be sees on the part of local musicians. But Rubini is adamant that the county is ready for excellent, JocaJaroups. "Let's D\&ke our own Philharmonic ~ere," he suggest· ed. It's time to wake up. ll could be a little paradise here, but it's up to local radio and television stations and businessmen to go after it.'' Rubirii isn't afraid to say what he thinks where music is con- cerned. because he knows that strong statements can bring action. He tells the story of a concert he was scheduled to give in New Zealand, at a Town Hall. The piano was so bad the ac- companist could not play, so Rubini announced this fad to the· capacity audience. He urged any member of the press who might be present to tell the story in their newspapers and on their radio stations, and chided the Town Hall manage- ment. from tbe stage, for having such a terrible piano. A doctor in tbe audience of- fered to loan his Steinway, if someone would pick it up, so the audience waited for an hour for the concert while the piano was borrowed. MUSIC BEAUTIFUL This was a small town in New Zealand, and Rubini persisted bec·ause he believes that "smaller towns should have the benefit of music.'· He believes. as well, that music can be an enriching ex- perience for everyone because it· offers "insight and an entrance to every beautiful thing in life. ··The sense of beauty within one·s heart, to the extent of godli- ness. helps you see the better things in life and helps you see .how rotten some things are.·• Rubini said be tb.inb there would.n 't be•• muchrobb&ni.and killing If more people were musically educated, because ol the void music fills in a ptt10D'1 life. Music a1so has introduced blm to European royalty as well u "wonderful people from every country,•' and bas pl'ovlded serendipitous experiences durtna his travels. When he and b.is wile, Helen, go to Hawaii, for example, be always tucks his violin amidst their luggage, and when someone aboard ship finds out he's a mu.si· ciao, the violin comes out for an impromptu eoneert . Rubini said he bas never tbouaht o! what else be would have done, if he hadn't become enchanted with tbe violin. And, ·he does't begrudge all the hours he bad to spend practicing as a youth. NO PLAY "l didn't have a child's pla)' life, like the others. But I don't regret it one bit. I'm thankful that my people were as strict as they were." , F\tnds raised from the concert will go to PLEAD's current pro-- ject of purchasing cardiac re- suscitation equipment for the student health center at UCI, which will be available to stu- dents. f acuity, employees and visitors to the campus. PLEAD was formed in 1969 by a group of women in Orange County, who were concerned about drug abuse. The initials stand for promotion, learning, eduration to end abuse of drugs. Alcoholism is included in the drug category. PLEAD so far has donated funds to youth problem centers, Laguna YMCA, youth employ- ment center s, Laguna Free Clinic, the Listening Ear 24-bour hot line and purchased films and books for PLEAD 's library. BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tuesday, January 6, 1976 81 Object lessons in the field hit home when· they might not in the classroom, he said. For example, listening to a family talking about "ripping off the local market·· to s upple me nt a $3,000-a-year income is hard to forget. COMMUNITY CONTACT Getting the most out of each trip is guaranteed by using com- munity people as resources in the ethnic areas, Dr. Outwater s aid. "Our contact is always a respected member of the com- munity we visit, who can in-. troduce us to families still living there, the people who know best what the environment is like." There is no contact person for Beverly Hills or Bel Air, and Outwater noted that they often encounter more trouble in the high income neighborhoods than the low ones. "If we stop on a residential street in Beverly Hills to talk, in no time the police show up to ask us what we're doing there," he said. During each field trip_ students collect data either by observa- tion or interviews with residents. Each location is chosen because it illustrates a part ofthe larger picture. The South Central L.A. area visited is a classic ex· ample of the lower income level. A high pe rcentage are on public assistance: there is a hi gh unemployment rate and some 70 percent live below the poverty level. Students also discuss transi· tional areas with some high and low income areas such as Venice. The recreation component is in- cluded as both a lighter topic and because recreational needs are a part of the urban problem. ·'The course is not designed for those with a lot of sophistication or knowledge of the subject. It is real and very bas ic." Outwater holds a PhD in geo- graphy and was director of the Center for Urban Studies for four years. His emphasis has been in urban geography and he has taught several interdisciplinary courses on the subject. Futher information on the rourse is available through the Office of Continuing Education, CSULB, (213) 498-5561. ,... I Ill OAJL 't PlLOT Tu..dar,Jannry8, 1976 " Group's Goal Sf.rictly SOcial ! • Negative images can be changed. -John Zigler · By ALLISON DEERR Oft ... Dlll' ..... ,.... Stereotypes are easy to create, ha.rd to change. Members of Orange County In· dependent Bllnd would like to shatter a few myths about the visually impaired. Director John Zigler would like to erase the image of ''just sitting and rockine." Secretary-treasurer Linda Rener noted that "really the only thing we can't do is drive a car.'' The fledgling group has one key .goal tor organization- strictly social. Ruth Ralston, now confined to a wheelchair in addition to her failing eyesight, listed transportation and finances as major problems. .. Most of us have to depend on Social Security or SSI. And, you don't live on that, you survive." Often the social needs of the 21 and over group are ignored by established programs, .one meJDber asserted. .. There is a lot tn th4' aNa or education, but most of the social· ~~•tional programs ~ for the children, teenasers and aenlor citiHns. •• UMJTED RESOUltCF.S 8ecaU1e of limited funds and little public transportation, the visually impaired young adult often is trapped at home. "It's unbelievably frustrat· ing." Many of the members have spouse, teenager or roommate who can provide transportation. Others don't. OCIB hopes to re- medy the situation. "We want to pool our resources on transportation. And, we plan several fund-raisers so that, as a group, we can go places we couldn't as individuals, such as Las Vegas," Zigler said. Limited finances can be al- leviated somewhat if members help out with moving a nd fUrnlshinft wben needed. .. Your sighted frieDcls, and even your f amlly, aet a little tired ot you a$klng !or help, and )OU become a little reluctant to ask," Ms. Ralston said. .. But within the ll"OUPt.we have a common underatanaing. We KNOW what it'·s like and are tbe best ones to help each other." CHANGING IMAGES Getting out more socially also will mean getting to meet more people and eventually cbangi.Dg the negative images about the blind and the visually impaired, Zigler said. They also hope to work with teenagers encouraging indepen- dence. "Many blind youngsters lead very sheltered lives. And, many of us were slow to admit that our eyesight was not going to im· prove and we needed help to lead new lives," he added. . "Most of us got out of that chair and out or the house through Braille Institute. But too often at niaht it was easier to sit home and watch TV or Usteo to talking books than to get out among peo- ple aaaln. •' Thus far the croup has sought discount rates for focal amuse- ment parks and Uckets to the Civic Light Opera. • Horseback riding, a barbecue and a f iahing trip also are in the works. A Christmas project included decorating a tree for a needy family. Friends have offered the use of;: c· b · sat Big Bear Lake for otberout gs. Helpin each other as in· dividu ill soon mean working with the newly blind ln grocery shopping, cooking and cleaning house and helping out other members when such problems arise. The OCIB welcome sighted m embers as boosters and to help overcome trnns~rtatlon pro· blems, but essentially die visual- ly impaired want to make in· dependent decisions. Members hope to shatter some stereotypes through. their own lives. Zigler, who bu held a variety of jobs ln the past, wlll start next month as a oooking in· structor at Braille. Ralston does volunteer work for the Community Referral In!ormation Service, Tustin, and attends school. Janell Steburg, who is totally blind, is a "pheonomenal" crib· bage player and has' accepted a challenge match from a sighted player from an area social club, with the proceeds from the event going to the winning group. OCIB is open to any visually impaired person 21 or over. Those interested can contact Zigler at 635-9388 or write OCIB, 1541 East La Palma Ave., Apt. JJ, Anaheim, 92805. Virgo Take Stand Ann Landers Su p.port Triggered WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21·April 19): You're able to analyze, arrive at conclusions. get information previously obscured or deliberately kept from you. TAURUS (April 20 ·May 20): You're on road t~ better family relationships, more satisfying surroundings, a chance to gain more financial security. Key is to evaluate. GEMINI (May 21 • June 20): You learn lessons and apply them. Accent is on standing in community, ability to stand tall for beliefs, principles. What seemed· out-of-reach could become available. CANCE R (June 21 • July 22): Look beyond the immediate. Check sources. Project into future. You have something of value to offer. LEO (July 23 • Aug. 22): Involvement· is 1 highlighted. You are able to dig beneath surface indications. If persistent. you could strike pay dirt. Get to heart of matters. VIRGO Ll\ug. 23 ·Sept. 22): Take stand -be independent. Insist on getting commitments in writing. Have legal technicalities explained. Be patient enough to listen and take notes. LIBRA (Sept. 23 ·Oct. 22>: Pace may appear slow but there are undercurrents which promise exciting conclusions. Emphasis on health, service. employment. special tasks. SCORPIO <Oct. 23 ·Nov. 21): If flexible, will- ing to make intelligent concessions, there could be more songs and flowers to enjoy. Message will become crystal-clear. SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 22 • Dec. 21): What might seem restrictive actually w..Q.rks to your benefit. Be specific, thorough. You will be con- cerned with abode, family affairs. • CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 ·Jan. 19): Movement, journeys. messages, ideas, a flurry of social activity is indicated. Close neighbors, relatives are in picture. more so than usual. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 ·Feb. 18): Accent on what to collect, preserve or sell. Budget review may be necessary prior to major luxury-item- purchase. PISCES <Feb. 19 ·March 20): Lunar cycle promotes independence, new starts in new direction&. Refine methods - streamline pro· cedures. · If today is your birthday you are in· trospective, a perfectionist, ideals sky-high - you have been disillusioned by "idols," but you bounce back and you will be on solid ground this year. Calendar Conferences· CONFERENCE: Dr. Carlotta Mellon, appoint· ments assistant to Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr .. will keynote the first con- ference of the Orange County Chapter, DEAR ANN: Tonight at 9:55 p .m .. our phone rang. Dad answered. We could tell from his responses that it was bad news. It was the mother of a dear friend who bad just died. The week before, HER phone had rung. It was -the sheriff asking her to come to the hospital. Her son had been shot in the head while driving down one of the main streets in Omaha. He was only 33 -a wonderful person, no enemies, no reason why anyone would wish him de· ad. But someone took a shot at h im -a nd now he is gone forever. T he agony of this man's parents is unbearable. He was their only child. There are no clues as to who committed this sen seless m urder. They will probably never find the kilJer. It makes me sick to know that whoever did this awful thing is out there somewhere -walking around with that gun. God knows who will b e next. -AMERICA, WHAT'S HAPPENING TO YOU? DEAR AMERICA: 'lbat's a good question. One of the answers ls this: There are at least 90 million guns out there and many are in the hands of crazy, irresponsible people. Again I am ask(ng all conce~ed citizens to urge their con· gressmen and senators to pass a strong federal gun law. Every poll taken sbo.¥s that the vast m~rity or Americans WANT it. Are the gun ma.nuf acturers and lobbies in Washiagtoa stronger than the voice of the people? Let us make ourselves beard. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am going to pieces. My husband bas accepted a new job -a sub- stantial promotion. It means he will be out of town six nights at a. time, once a month. I know a man cannot go that many days in a row without sex. The thought of my husband sleeping with another woman is driving me crazy. I have small children and cannot travel with him. Am I being childish and possessive? Do I need to see a psychiatrist? I'm frightened of my feelings, Please help me. - MRS.X DEAR MRS. X.: 'Jbe notion that a man can't go without sex for sill days ls cuckoo. You need to talk to a therapist and learn why you are so Insecure and why yoa feel so threatened. Get mov• ._ing,Lady. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 16, a high school junior, and preg. nant by a boy I don't love. I can't figure out bow I got into this fix. It must have been too much booze. I'm about nine weeks along and the doctor says I am P .G. for sure. The boy responsible says he will pay h alf the cost of an abortion. My mother and dad will pay the other half. The problem is I don't want an abortion because I'm afraid it will leave a scar on my mind forever. I am not a Catholic, but I have this feeling about murdering an unborn child. My friends think I'm crazy but I want to go to a Mother Loves Wisely By ERMA DOMBECK l~t you see anger, dlsap- ··vou don't love me!" pointment, disgust and How many times have tears in my eyes. ' your kids laid that one on I loved you enough to you? not make excuses for And how many times your lack of respect or have you, as a parent, re· your bad manners. sisted the urge to tell I loved you enough to them how much? admit I was wrong and Someday, when my ask your forgiveness. children are old enough I loved you enough to to understand the logic ignore "what every that motivates a mother, other mother" did or I'll tell them. said. I loved you enough to I loved you enough to bug you about where you let you stumble, fall, were going, with whom, hurt, and fail. and what time you would I loved you enough to get home. l et you assume the I loved you enough to responsibility for your insist you buy a bike with own actions, at 6, 10 or your own money that we 16. could afford and you I loved you enough to couldn't . figure you would lie I loved you enough to about the party being be silent and Jet you dis· chaperoned, but !orgive cover your handpicked you for it ••• after dis· friend was a creep. covering I was right. , , .. AT .WIT'S END • Weddings ~ · and Engagements To avoid disappointment, prospective ·brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy photographs to the Daily Pilot People Department one week before the wedding. home for unwed mothers, have t he baby and put it up for adoption. • Please tell me if you think I am out of my mind. My parents will let me· make the final decision but they are trying very hard to get me to see things their way. Help m e, please. -AN .. NAB ELLE DEAR ANNABEILE: This de· dsion should be youn and yours alone, If you fear the psycbologlcal consequences of an abortion, then don't have one. For some 16·year-olds it's the best s0lutlon, but for you It might be the worst. Do you feel awkward, self· conscious -lonely? Welcome to the club. There's help for you in Aon Landers's booklet, ''The Key to Popularity." Send 50 cents in coin with your request and a long, stamped self-addressed en· velope (13 cents now> to Ann Lan· ders, P.O. Box 1400, Elgin. Ill. 60120. ........ 7 .,. ~-... ~.-.i / % Off • KNITS •TOPS • CAPRIS ( . California Elected Women's Association for Education and Research. I loved you enough to I loved you enough to make you return a Milky shove you off m y lap, let Way with a bite out of it go of your hand, be mute to a drugstore and con· to your pleas, and in· fess, "I stole this." sensitive to your de· Pictures recei\'ed after that time will not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accom· panied by a black and white glossy pie· ture, be submltted six weeks or more before the wedding date; otherwise it will not be published. •SHOES The day-long event, which focuses on the Emerging Woman in Public Life, wiJI begin at 11 :30 a .m. Saturday, JIU\. 10, in the Balboa fBayClub. I Two seminars planned for the afternoon are entitled, Do You Want to Run for Public OCfice?. and You Can Reduce the . Dr. Mellon I loved you enough to mands • . . so that you stand over you !or two had to stand alone. hours while you cleaned· I loved you enough to your bedroom, a job that accept you for what you would have taken me lS are, not what I wanted minutes. you to be. I loved you enough to But most of all, I loved say, "Yes, you can go to you enough to say no Dis n e y W o r 1 d on when you hated me for it. Mother's Day." That was the har4est To heip fill requirements on ooth wed· ding and engafement stories, forms are available in al Dally Piiot otrlces. Fur· ther questions will be answered by People Depart~ent staff members at 642-4321, Cost of Government. I loved you enough to part of all. --~~-:.~-:.-..• -.-... -.-~-.,--:~--~..,.-h ... -...,.-...... -..,._,_ ................ -... ·.-·--"N-i'f-~-~-Uf fRL'S :-t,i···'ri· .... ,,,. ·~ Shaon A11 • ,. • w 0 R K s H 0 p : Gould. who can be u~,L-STW~y 1·,~ .• ·.: ... ~.·_}>:; .· .-CERenEt N ITV "';1.:!.· Pre paration for a heard daily over KFI, ... _ _ . l , car eer, comm unity will bring out lit tle ....... • · ·· ,.ervice and personal known facts about social tt22 H...., lf•cL '·t' : . , ~kin Care Center ~ mnchment will be in-progress in America and ~~c~~··~......_~~'~·~•~.o~z~1t~!!! •• .~ JANUARY SPECIAL ~ c;t u de d i n an Op.. stress its strengths. ... . .-· ·~...:;]_.:·~ ~~, FACIALS -100/o OF.F l JIC)T'hmiUes for Women : '. . A wom.n•1 face deten. the '1 "1bbop. MYSTICK KREWE i . fl,_. ctte. Serenity °""' /A i Ruth Bennett, Golden· OF KOMVS: Reigning unique tlOlal deefgned fat-you. t ~est College Women's as Her Royal M~esty ol A complete program -• ~er coordinator is 1n 1976 is Mrs. illlam · '"·t'·...;,>·• =~~ '::"'..= ; ab.arte of the program. Peaker, with the Mmes. :."i~;~i,0 equl pme.nt and purest < It will be presented at 10 Russell Manaold, Robert ~... ..t~,~; i·" cosmeuce. ·A feolel to help , m. Monday. Jan. 12, in Rappaport, Sherwood -,,. ·ilJ_,·~·: · pre>bfem skin or m1fn11fn a r e Huntlniton Beach Kini and J ack SmUb u ·· ~~·· · l~ ~•xlon Is """'',. Ill J €astral Library. ladles of tbe court. . ... ;; · ~l.:'"''P'' ,_ t-... .,. ........ f •ONDAY MO&NJNG CLUB: The Laguna Beam ll'OUP wut open Jhe blcmlftmlal year on a po1ltive note with Val OcMaJd dlaeuulnf What•• • .Bl&I¢ Wilb America. • · 'f'be meetiDS will beCin Ill ll:80 a.m. Jan. u , io Ben Brown 'a restaurant. I I EXECUTI VES' SE CT R ETA a 1 £8 : Patricia Ma..cy j~ the. aew president or the Oranae County Chapter. On her board are Betty McNeel1. vice prn1· dot; Jolene Petraa; 1ecret'ar1, and Petty Michel, treasurer. , °"" .... DllJfllat...., .... ,.. ....... ...., ... ,.. ...... .... u.,_...,,dtjj lfi!id11ijiUll ,__ _______ _... ............. _,_OlerC-• )! ...... ,...,.., .. Int • Gift Certlf lcates . . leO . In Lido Viii age 3400 Via Oporto, Suite a · · Newport Beactl --.w.· ~:o.>· • 71 ~75-6191 ~--........ """'~--'""" .. ,.._! _ _.,,,,.:~-:;,;,:;;;;;,;..;::._. • DRESSES •COATS •JEWELRY •PANTSUITS eta · Dally 1 O:OC>oe:OO p.m. ThUf9day 1H ·1044 IRVINE NEWPORT BEACH In Westcllff Plaza 548-8365 IOOMEI . ' .. . . :- 4' . FUNKY WINKER8EAN FIGMENTS NANCY [' NANCY, 1 WANT YOU TO PLAY I'M HAVING MY WOMEN'S LIB MEETING HERE OUTSIDE TODAY TODAY TODAY'& CIDSSIOID PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Evidence of an injury S Curtail sharplv 10 Besides 14 Residenee 15 Numeral pre· fix 16 Simple· minded per· son 17 Elt<:tlon em· plovee 19 Vein of ore 20 College ad· visory board 21 Spanish coins 23 Empty 26 Fa~ 10 keep pace 27 Calls .ncor· tectlV JO Promoting peace 34 Hematite and bauxite JS Expiate 37 Resemb· lance: Suffi1t 38 Fot every 39 Peculiar 41 Bl_lldltader ···l>ollack 42 Single: Prefr1t 43 Ntutical . sticks 44 Blind strip 45 Drawing implement 47 WeirdneH 50 Judge of Israel Yest If clay's Putrle Sc>Md: SI Narrowness: Prefix 52 Ot hnle worth S6 Skin abrasion 60 Window part 61 Kept up 64 Lion in "Born Free" 65 Be of one mind ' 66 Greek music· al term 67 Pe1former II A H I I ~ TC [! A !i2. T R H l T H II A I y T E s p E N 0 f 0 S K A T w < " n I S £ T A R A I n r ft A p P IL A y £ " II p ti A L • A II £ S T I A u n-1' a " P K E ft S .. II A Y P 0 l [ 5 i!llTIO a, II r n , .::. SIT It (lll•T ft I P A C T .. H [ ftlE S • 0 T T J ft I 01£ S -s ~A T H S A l: Alft-S T A ft ( p £ " S T E N C I L 5 T ( II C 0 L 0 ft A D I T 0 I\ £ R I A N 0 0 R A H S s ( T T S E L A N 68 Stripped 18 Italian 1101· 40 Good luck 69 Actress ••· cano article Verdon 22 Hindu ger· 44 Breathing vi· DOWN ment:Var. brantly I Females 24 Approaehes 46 Wine · ····· • 2 Geometric 25 Si1able 48 Snooted solid piKes of 49 Indian of 3 Egvptlan god land Peiu 4 Ancient ruins 7:1 Complete a 62 Worn 6 Vtry lunny task: lnfor· 53 Ferm bu~d· pet1on: Slang mal 1ng 6 Grnsland 28 "Good 54 Otherwise 7 Aardvark's Night" girl 55 Long narrt· morsel 29 Can1ry's rel· tive 8 Cease etive •57 Ftel likt • - operating 31 One of high man g Mercenary birth 58 Petroleum: 10 Declare 32 Notions Slang 11 Stolen goods 33 co;ns 5'9 Tree of 1111 12 811 beYerlgl 36 ASStuh site 13 Posseuiv• 39 Facitl tx· 82 Annoy word piewon 63 Born , by Dale Hale Ernie Bashmiler WHY DON'T YOU GO OUT AND BUILD A SNOWPERSON ? PEANUTS , .. , . . JUDGE PARKER WHEN I !A.\1\5 l(Ot>N6, I Wi\5 ~ I ~5 60IN6 TO 8E AA ART IN5TITVTE OR A ~IC COLlc6c ... DOOLErs WORLD t DR. SMOCK "'OW, PE:AR, R lcSH1"' AF.,-ESR NUN\ NUMS O R a:> PIN PIN ... 'GORDO WASH ONe oF -n-cese L.1 'L.. Pt &..t... Y Wlt...L-IESS DOWN Wl1"'H W A.WA b Charles M. Schulz 1y 516HT-SEEIN6 TOl/~5 16NORE ME ... l'M JIJ5T At..IOTH~ SCl-{OOL. •. .. ......... --. .. .. l1YeNEVEK EVEN 6EEN ON A Po5T CARO! . . . ., by Herold Le Dou .....-~-..--~~~~~-.. OAJL V PILOT ., . by Rodger lracffielcl MYWOf2D! I'VE GAINED 4-0POUNDrd IN'SPITf OFMY WORKOUT. PID ~ t'fA.UZ£ TUE CEILING NEWS f>\JN"OHG? by Gus Arriola •, ·' ·' . ' "l ju~t dropped by to tell you my fish-tail palm simply loved Bach·\ Christmas album." MISS PEACH • A flrt-1u~'.r I IRAVEt, ! ~Et'l VI Lc l ~ > ! F'2€t A 0 VllE . .. DICK TRACY • ~~THU~, iHI? YE.All' ! WANT l'O SPLUGI ! MONEY I? NO 09JECT-1. WANT A ll'EAL.LY eXPEN?IVE VACA'flON !! WHE~~D t G;O? . • .. ' by Mell DENNIS THE MENACE ANYWHE"~. by Cllester Golld ~ "'~ 'Tll WA'1 I (00( AT rr .. : ., "6EE WHIZ, I WASJS'r" ~'AT IT: . t ' r • . J (' .. • l • ~ t' , I~ I I j TOMAAONS San Ctemente MARK MERWIN Mission Viejo MIKE TANNER Dana Hiiia 7 Area Grid Stars Earn CIF Honors Seven South Coast League stars have been named to the All· C'IF 2-A football team as selected by the Citizens Savings Athletic Foundation. Champion San Clemente leads the area contingent with three players-first team selection Tom Arons and second team players Brian Wood and Ron Wade. ;\hssion Viejo's Mark Merwin and Dana llills High ·s Mike Tan- ner were also accorded first team honors. Second team berths go to Mis- sion Viejo's Eric Schmidt and l 'niversity High 's Sean Graham. Co-players of the year are Agoura's Darren Rogers, who ran amok against Dana Hills, and Tim Hanifin of the champion Sonora Raiders. Arons carried a 6.6 average as a fullback, but his Corte was blocking and in defense at linebacker. Wood scored 15 touchdowns in 8"7 gaines and was the league's back of the year. He ran for 1,020 yards and a 6.2 average. Merwin was Mission Viejo's stickout in the line and had 11 sacks on the opposing quarterbacks, among othe r feats . Tanner is a repeat AJl-League center and was the Dolphins' steadiest performer. Schmidt was an outstanding receiver in addition to his ex· cellent punting. Wade was one of the keys in a defense that allowed only s ix touchdowns in 10 games aside from the 20-18 victory over Laguna Beach. Graham was a standout as a Defensed .,,_ Pole? Ul"l'r•_..... Cnivers1ty of North Carolina's Mitch Kupchak appears to be climbing a pote as he grabs a rebound against Yale Monday night, but it's just the camera angle. '.'iorth Carolina rolled to an 81-42 victory in college ba~etball play at Chapel Hill. Vikings' Tarkenton Tops All-pro Team "'"ST Tll AM Ol'l"•NM WR-<llft 8ren~n. 001.tnd; Mel ~ty. SI. receiver and in the secondary for University and was generally considered the Trojans' best all· round athlete. All·CIF 2-A Football First Team Offense Pos. Player, School Wt. Cl B-Rogers, Agoura -185 Jr B-Haynie, El Dorado 170 Sr B-Mussack, Agoura 190 ·Sr B-Jones, Kennedy 180 Sr R-Thompson. Gahr 175 Sr R-Dressel, El Dorado 185 Sr E-Pittman, Norte Vista 165 Sr T -Jaramillo, Neff 220 Sr T-Merwin. MV 192 Sr G-Stack, El Dorado 235 Sr G-Sanz, Leuzinger 192 Sr C-Tanner, Dana Hills 190 Sr K-Peterson, El Dorado 170 Sr First Team Defense B-Hanifin, Sonora 175 Sr B-Wallace, Ant. Val. 180 Sr B-Cavender. Nor.Vista 170 Sr B-Jellison. El Segundo 165 Sr LB-Igarta. Lawndale 185 Sr LB-Arons, San Clemente 200 Sr LB-Brown, Norco 190 Sr LB-Meyer. Sonora 190 Sr L-Franklin. Agoura 188 Sr !.-Jordon. Kennedy 180 Sr L-Grzechowiak, R. Oak 235 Sr Second Team Offense B-Quiller, Leu zinger 187 B-Wood, San Clemente 188 B-Kenlon, Sonora 180 B-Silvey, Neff 185 B-Hilliker, Ant.Val. 168 R-SChmidt. MV 182 R-Keller, Bald. Park 160 E-Branch, Barstow 190 T -Winsell. El Dorado 230 T-Walsh, Walnut 205 G-Reed. Walnut 198 G-Mertz, Bonita _ 210 C-Malone, Bonita 190 Second Team Defense B-Griffin, Coa.Val. R-Esparaza. Lawndale B-Ferm, Harvard 1 B-Grabam, University· LB-Herrera, Chan.Is. LB-McJunkin, Burrghs LB-Espinosa. Azusa LB-Veselic. Walnut L -Hogan, Brea L-Hays, Rio Mesa Lr-Wade, San Clemente L--Stockton, Hemet 165 175 145 165 195 190 175 167 190 230 187 180 Sr Sr Sr · Sr Jr Sr Jr Sr Sr Sr Sr Sr Jr Sr Sr Sr Sr Sr . Sr Sr Sr Sr Sr Sr Sr Irvine Hosts Bethany Five UC Irvine's basketball team goes after its seventh straight victory at home tonight when the Anteaters of coach Tim Tift take on Bethany College of Oklahoma at Crawford Hall. Game time is 8 o'clock. The Anteaters are coming off one of their better games of the season Saturday night. an 84·73 victory over tough Cal State <Northrldge). That win ran UCI's overall record to 6-4 and its home mark to 6-0. Bethany. which dropped a l 18·78 decision to Northern Arizona Monday night, will have a definite height advantage over the Anteaters. Bethany has a seven-footer (Jack Johnson) and 6·11 and 6·9 forwards. Tift is expected to start Kevin Davis and Nate Jones at the iuards, Mike Fitzmorris at center and Steve Cleveland and Scott Jenkins at the rorwar~. BRIAN WOOD San Clemente RON WADE San Clemente ERIC SCHMIDT Mluk>n Viejo SEAN GRAHAM University Sports in Brief RolUle Scores 27; Braves Are Sold TULSA -Freshman Dave Rohde. former Fountain Valley High star. scored 27 points Mon· day night but his Loyola University Lions dropped a 90-65 decision to Oral Roberts in noo- conference basketball action, here. Rohde had 12 field goals and was three of four from the free throw line but Oral Roberts, which raced to a 38-25 halftime lead, had four players score in double figures including forward Anthony Roberts who had 20. Sophomore Jeff Wharton, who prepped at Corona del Mar High, sank four field goals for U>yola, winding up with eight points. Bra.,es Sold ble, they should take their $25,000 World mixed double tennis championship winnings to Las Vegas. Playing aggressive, wide-o·pen tennis, the Casals-Stockton team routed Britain's Mark Cox and Virginia Wade 6·3, 6-4, 6-4 in the best·of-five set final Monday, . Steelers Fa11ored LAS VEGAS -The defending ' National Football League champion Pittsburgh Steelers were made a seven-point favorite over the Dallas Cowboys Monday to win a second consecutive Super Bowl. Rams' Olsen To Quit? LOS ANGELES CAP) -Merlin Olsen, a 14-year veteran of the l..os Anteles Rams, said before the start of the 1975 sea.son he had decided not to retire for one reason: ''One mote shot .. at the Super Bowl. The Dallas Cowboys, playing what Olsen termed "maybe as good a game as any team can,'' ended that shot with a 37-7 victory over the Rams SUnday in the National Football Conference championship game. Monday, Olsen said he faced one of the toughest decisions of his life, andhedidnotplantorusbit. "I don't know whether I'll re- tire or not," the 6-foot·S, '270· pound defensive tackle said. "J want time to get the seaaon out of my system before I m~e up my mind. It's not going to be easy, and I wan~ to sit down with my family and think about it." Olsen. who holds a master's decree in economics, has a number of business interests and also does television com· mercials. He said he would like more time to devote to pursuits outside football. ''I'd like to do some more work in broadcasting and maybe some acting," he said. "I'd like to find out if I'm proficient enough at that to make a living." But be said quitting football would be extremely difficult for him, and that playing for the Rams would make it even more so. "For one thing, being on this team is really enjoyable. They're a fine group of people.•• Looking back on the l~s to Dallas, the 35-year-old Ram co- captain said, "I think it would be a shame to let one game destroy all the good things we did during the year. "There's no question that los· ing was frustrating. You don't pour that amount of energy and hard work into something without really wanting it. But we overcame a lot or problems this s eason, injuries among them, and I think we really can'tcomplain." Olsen, the last remaining member of the Rams' famed ··Fearsome Foursome" front line, said it seemed' a pity to have a good season essentially go down the drain in a three·bour period. "But that's what makes football interesting," he said. Olsen has been a member or. some quite successful Rams teams since be was drafted by Los Angeles in 1962. The George Allen-coached Rams l~t just one game in 1967 before falling 28-7 t<> Green Bay in the playoffs. Al· Jen's 1969 RamYiam again won its division bu t to Minnesota 23-20 in the playo s. ATLANTA -The Atlanta Braves· National League baseball club has been sold to Ted Turner, an Atlanta advertis- ing and television executive, it was announced today. Readers' C·orner Purchase price was not dis· closed but it reportedly was in the $10 million range. The club had been owned by the Atlanta-LaSalle Corp., with most principals involved in the. baseball operation residing in Chicago . Ttte sale to Turner means "home ownership" for the' club, a situation which many have said is necessary for suc- cessful oper~tion . Wortlag Bit• 15 LA MIRADA -Former Hunt- ington Beach ffi·gh standout and Orange Coast College standout · Jim Worthy scored 15 points, sparking Bio1a College to an 81-77 overtime victory over visiting UC Riverside Monday night. Caaab, 8toeld.•• lt'I• DALLAS -The way Dick Stockton and Rosie Casals gam-. Cage Ratings TM ToP T\ilel\l'I' ... ,,..In T""'uoclllttd l'r"5 coll ... &aslletball 0011 with s .. SC>ft rtCOf'A 11\rOUfll SuncM, and total points. I. lnillMI 10.0 1,330 II. No. Cir. St ... , nt 2. Mtrytd 10.0 1,11• 12. """'" 10.0 117 J. VCLA 10. I I ,034 1). N. Dame S·l :w· 4. Mlrqvette 1>1 ll03 u. St.John's 10.1 is• s. Nev. IL.VI 13.0 603 u. Cincinnati 9·2 202 •· No.Cir. 1-1 512 t•. l.OUl111lllt 1·1 101 1. Wa-• For. 10·0 49S ,, • MlnntSOIO • 1 41 I. WHl\"9111 11.0 4M 11. VSC IM 44 t Tenn. 10·1 376 tt. Mle:hlQtn 1-2 42 10. Al•MN I· I 34 20. USI' 10.3 U Dear Mr. White, No. I am not a UCLA ran. Nor did I off er emotional cheers as a partisan Californian because UCLA pulled off that clean victory over Ohio State in the Rose Bowl. One more thing -1 neither hate nor like Woody Hayes. So I looked at your Sunday col· umn on Hayes' after-game behavior not as a rah-rah football "fan, but as a sometimes sports fan who cannot abide your twist- ed logk, strained analogies and your strange, perverted defense of boorish conduct and petulant, childlike performance by a poor loser-namely Woody Hayes. You compare Hayes' refusal to face the. press with failure to ap- pear in a civil court. Straining even f urtber, you wonder if General Montgomery should be chided for not holding a press C·onf erence after l~ing a battle in World War II. Then somehow you run through the Munich Olympics and the John Kennedy as- sassination and find more thread to weave a cockamamie in· ference that the Hayes performance had a historical an· tecedent in those two events. The fact ls Hayes got by with more than he should have. He made an unnecessacy (and iJ. legal) entry onto the field in the closing moments supposedty to check on an injured player (when he'd never bothered to find such concern an season). His walk across field to off er lame words and a limp wrist to UCLA's coach was done before the game was ove.r. As it turned ou~ the reason for this timing was so he could get off the field so be wouldn't have to face the press. Most incredibly, you -a sports writer who must have con- ducted hundreds of after-game interviews with both winners and l~ers -find it perfectly normal that Hayes wouldn't face up to the l~s. that it's justified and normal for a big-league coach to pout like a sixth-grade Little Leaguer. Would Dick Vermeil have act· ed similarly if he had lost -even 40-0? You know he wouldn't. How about occ•s Dick Tucker; if he had dropped bis great win in the Avacado Bowl by 30 points, or by one point, would he have acted like anything other than a gentleman? Or would any other coach in college football -save the stuffy • little man from Ohio who swag- gers in victory and bares bis re- al, mean little soul ip defeat. sure, Woody's a great coach. just as you say be Ui. It's as a person, however, thatYoUdefend him. And your arguments, baby, just don't make it. He's the poorest loser in sports. And 1 find it immensely satisfying to watch a poor loser lose. Mike Patka, Costa Mesa NEW YORK (AP> -Record· shaltering quarterback Fr an· Tarkenton of the Minnesota Vik- ihp heads the National FootbaJI League All-Pro team telected by The Associated Press and an· nounced today. LAllll; TE-ltll•'I' Odoms. O.nv~; T-Ron Y••v. MIMesola; c;.ore-l(vru. B~lll!nore; G-JM OelAmleltwr•. a1111a10, Larry L.1111•. Mlamt: c Jrm l._,.r, Miami; 08-Fflln Ta1'11tnCOft. Mln-n.s.eta; A 8-0.J. Slmp5on, 811ffalo, Ch11<11 Fot-M. MinMSOlai PK-J f"' ---.11. UIM, Olym.pies Building Phase Begins Jeining Tarkenton in the All- PrO backfield are runners Chuck P"ol:aman of MinneSO(a and O.J. S\mP'Oft of Buffalo. TM'katoe enjoyed a brilliant 11••· dJrectlns the Vlkinp lo their ••¥ nlt, NFC Central di.._ title ln the last etiht yean. The veteran quarwrback ~threeor J~Unitas' fU:SHll r~. aettlna iNrU for au.em (S,22$), letto1u u,Wi > and t owns <291). The Mtn· ~ qUarterback led all NFC ~. ~pJ~ln164.2 per cent ill t atte1npta and burling 2S tc --w.., puses ' o•nNs• f -Jacll Youngblood; \.OS Aft9eln, '-·C· c:.r-lllOOd, Plnsovrgll. T-Cwi.tr Culp, HNIMll; AIM ...... Ml-sot1; Ol.8~ HM!\ l"lt> t..,.._, Owls ... llbv~ W~; M6.l-l!M ~ .. ,, l"tlll1•IP11l1; S1-«a11 .-... WMN"""'; l'S-Pavl krallle, MIMI-..: Cl-Mlf '6Nlt. l"lnHurQll, ._ ... , Wttvll. St. I.Mii. HeoteOTIAM Of'PINS• ~JM Sw-. l"ftt~ ISNC Cut1ff. CIMll!Mft; T£-oien.t 'ffUftO, '91ileOtljll\lt; T-Nt-..1, 0.111_., 0.n ~. S.. Llllft; L.....,• •"-Mt•, ~Ha'!,_~ IJjKMW, -1111ii(; C-l..IM H-. Wa\_.,, ~~ ~ ClflClllMtll lt8-1't#ICO lilrr4~, l"lt• '"'°''"'· Tift, Metcalf, St ~I•. Pk -J• S...Ud, IC4tllw• Cl .... ....... l~n Ovtt9'1, tatttmtrt, fhlln let._., "9vttet1: T-.ltt Of•"lt. l"flhbvrtfl, W.tJ, Ole"'""' ClllUto; OLI Phll v111 ........ ()HIMll,, I~ ltthrttofl, l.CK Anteltt; Mf..1 - J.Mlt '-'"'11911, Plthburott. SS ~ ... 1!1"9lldlr1, w """""'; l'S-Jeko kott, Mamt; ce ltlle'f, CIMlnnatl, £1111'1\llt fl!omes, ICanw•CJtv MONTREAL CAP) -A new phue in construcUon for the 1976 Summer Olympics opem today with authortUea fully committed to the stadium cf~slped by French architect Ro1er TalWbert as the main st{e of UM Games, Tbil was annot1nced Monday bJ Vl~or Goldbloom, Quebec lmD\LclpaJ affairs minister, u he ~mpanied 7~ reporters and ~Olfapbers GO the n.._t major tom' bymedia rtpreseatativ• of Olympic park Jn eut-end Montreal. "It'• lot to be the itadlum and It '1 got to be ready in tlme," said A Goldbloom ln reportln1 that the PoS•lblUty of alternative sites bu been discarded. The Quebec co.ernment estimated cott of it.e lladlum and adjolnln11wamft1lnllaa1J and cycling velodrom e at $5&4 mllllon when it took over ~ponalb6Uty for consturucUoa from .. City of . Montreal ta N•enibcr. Workmen were eeMdaaid to start tocta, clearin1 away a_.. of lattice-scaffolding In the lwbn· mlng halt. loeated in the baieof.a projected leanin1 tower ii the Tallli~rt concept. Thouah now invisible befaase of temporary flll. the ex· • k cavatloua for tbe awlmmtn1 pooll were made at the outaet of the proJeet in 1973. Gol4lbloom JNdlcted that tbe Job ol f lllbkm· Ina competition and pradle. PGOll should be complettd tn three months after tbe latuee:. workt.cluredaw91. , Workers chueldecl u the1 watched reporters lltl..tnt In 1ub-1ero temper Munl under the 1tlidlbm'1 towerin1 ~crete con- IOI• eumng into the°'*' lky. Tbout• mainly enclosed, tbe 1wlmliliri1 ball waa mo frisid ID contra1t with the heated velodromt, which ts nearin1 comp1etJon with workmen con· • structln1 the cycllng track. Goldbloom told reporters who are scheduled to make atmUar toun on tbe first Monday of each month -he fa con· 1lderata11 more optimiltlc than when tbe SOYtl'Dment toot Ofer corwtrucUon. But the min tater lb" !tied the need al reali1Uc appraisal of the winter dlMculUe• and cJeaclllnes. The aame •=• was aitlopled by Clatlde R au, et.lnnan of the MWly c t.cl OlJlnpla ln· _. atallatlont board, aod Ro1er ; Trudeau, direetor ,._ .. al the board. ·. ·. •R T~ay. January S. 197' OAILYPtLOT as • ID Action Los AI .. Mission Viejo Hfgh's Dlablos, ftvored to wln the Soutb Co a at L-ea g u e basketball crown, step Into .a potential hornet's nest tonight m the opening round or circuit play. Results a 7·2 record and pul4 the ders against visiting San sophomore, ln tha backcourt. pressme on the op-posit.ion Cleml'nte. b ~·• ..,. MOflloAv -wttb 8·5 Steve Sawyer. Ounham u averag ... " 17.2 o.11r. Tr•ca111a~1 Sawyerh.as averaged lS.6 and Coach We ndell Witt 's points per game and is o!:.'g!.!i~.·~-~~J:;."', _. ts dangerous from 10 !eel out Chargers display a balanced generitlly considered U1e best PrlwataReQUe\t <Aoatr> ._... i-t d k ofr~nse and only Mike Hill Is guard in the league. oo , 20 Ho WIUOD haa nsl e wor . seorlng in double fiuure~ -at AllllO\I ,,.,..U..-d .W.1(111 1.40 uo University, however. has lO.O per start: " l>Ma HUis wUI be trying to Sullertlrte 1Tre.tsure> uo Coach Pat Roberi.• Diablos . muist travel to University where the Trojans or coach John Driscoll await. Tiport is at 7, as is the start at the other tw~ conructs-San Clemente at El Toro and Dana Hills al 6·6 Roger Poirier available to stop a four-gn m(' losing ~:z: .;;~·~~1~ P•<k-oe. 111~11 counter~ct Sawyer and it he Among the El Toro arsenal streak and get new coacll Art &•r ron1, Go Min Ets••· FuMv can n eutralize the MV are Mark 111 ll (Mike's J~nklns off on the right root in ;.~!~ec~:"' swi119s. vino" Moot\, standout it could prove to bo brother) with a 9.J average, itsopener. k retc11M-Sttroan,1..oo11s L111.e 11, theupsetofthenight. Marty H eim (8.5) and Jeff Paulson a nd Jlenry '°r.'~~::.~::·~~ .... a._ El Toro High's heightless sophomore Bob Charles (8.3>. Mikiewicz pace the Dana "''""'"',,.... •• ,., • .,.,.- Laguna Beach. • Chargers wil! get a gOOd in· San Clemente . meanwhile. Hills Dolphins , while Laguna d.!cation of their chances to has junior TJ m Dunham, a 6·2 &>ach operates behind Dusty o1!=:~,~~~ • .-,=v•rcts hear Mission Viejo has compiled becorri'b bona fide title conten-A 11 ·Le ague p I a yt"r as a Dvorak and Ren Bacon. 8-l<lllQ 0ot1 CM•1r1 uo s.oo A,20 ----------------------------------T•l1t1lne (CMCIOta) 4._, 3.00 Century Outlook CdM Tabbed For 1st Place Tea!TI for team, down the line, the Century League 1s the best prep basketball circuit in Orange Co_unty.' as evidenced by three of that loop's quintets berng m tbe Top 10 rankings. And it 's also the toughest league to pick a winner as action begins Wednesday night with a four-game salvo. Undefeated Corona del Mar, the county's No. 1 r~nked team, gets the nod to win it all-although V1Ua Park and Estancia are considered equally tough and given solid shots to win it. Tustin and Costa Mesa are also strong threats to garner a ClF playoff berth. Here's how the Daily Pilot secs the 1976 race: J . Corona del Mar (11·0) -Alex Black, the Sea Kings' 6·6 junior, averaged 20.5 points per game through nine victories. but has been slowed down by injury and may not be ready to play for another week. STEVE POPOVICH Tabbed to Win RICH BRANNING AJl-CIF Returnee Maxi Roni (CtHQUI 1.40 Tome -11.ot Also A<ln -Sflawln• Oetk, O\aflle 8uckel, Flttl Anne, C•nterbury Belle, Cue Tee Pet, StvtnlHn S..me>'n-, Beau Too Scretched -Oon's Go INn, c;.u. T•paTosle THllllO..ltACE -810 yuds 3 .,..r ol~ & up, Cl•tmlng Purse '1100. Amidi vi IRltMrds) 46.?0 27 IO t.20 O'Ol•I !Pe~ l \0 20 • .0 Tru.san IWOOal J _, Tlme -... 28 Also Ran -Un anct Only, Fl"°' 'n ~. Geberino, Royel Go Flttt, Jlln9l• Petrol Strate Md -Play House, Mr. SC>Md Count, N•llve Twist, ldlll'IO Go FOURTH ltACE -170yards.:t.,.ar Olds & Ul). Claiming. Purse '2100. "'Wlaiil~~rl 8ud's Lodi ICalll 33.80 13 20 • olO DAVE BROWN Picked for 2nd Gr•da INicoclemusl 11>.80 t..20 Mel f<Nllal IC11rc:lor1 I 3AO TlrM -... os Also Ran -Mr. Tl9er Rocket, Flc111e 'n 8r1Qllt, Earley Chu~. Ja y Joy, Phoetws Golomil ScraltMd -Shadow Fht, ~91• Larding Marina Gets the Nod f'IFTH ltACE -3SO yard\. Al· lowance. ) year old flt lltS. Purse '1.00. FlyongOuci.ette I Richards) '·"° 3 80 l.00 In Sunset Hoop Derby Ha,,., Mort Fun !Ward) 6.60 S 40 Ml" Te T Te (Adair) •.60 Tlme -11'2 Also R•n -Casabona, IComdo<ky, Olar~ 10 Olance. war Copy, Torrw f« Low, Easyanna Noi<ralchH StXTM ltACE -350 yards. l Y"tar old\ & 1.11>. Allowance Purw UOOO. Moo Vin Mary !Adair> Lo Alamitos I Race Entries Otfflcll (Clarl\lotl Sliver"•"'"' IRl<Mrcb ) UmO'• lll•oercb IH••)urel Oll(09yMt CW•ltonl ANl9te R9<ket ICerdotal WO, Utebo IAClaH l "' n• 11"1 "' "' "' · PlltST ltACI -JSO y•reb, 3 ytor o•cb • 1111 c1a1m1ne. Pvrs.e 11100. Cl1lml119 ptlt• t1600. Vtif\OH0.0 IGerHI ltXTN •AClf -400 yard\. J yNr okb. (lalmlr.o. Pvrw $1400. C:.telmu111 prlc.e$7SOO . Oupjlul• Lad 18an•o Mt'.JoeWuvtr 1L1.-..ml M<.~y (P1911) Ooolln') "time ITr ... 11rel O\ef91"9Chartt. (NltodtmllSI Rocket To""" IMltthtlll Spffdy She 18roo•n> Little JoeQuln (Ad.alt) IAOta's Olal (Marl) 172 O.erger Go Ber (8..,lul 118 Jw.'o.ndy(Pa91l '" 0.Mrt Gem IW•tsonl l?l Wlnlle11 Ootpty 1ci.r1sw I 112 6end Rl ... t'AUltafl IT rHsllfe) , 19 ffo•y Giere ICMdOt• l U1 FanRen O.~ lWtrdl 1» Slvennaf\One Time IC.ttl I It Frouy hie IAl~rd•l '" FHI Breallff (L.lptMm l ,,, 121 IU ,,, ,,, IZ1 ,.. tit lit llt SICONO 1tAC•-400y1rdl.Jye.r SEVENTH 9'ACE -400 yerm. J old ~ldenJ PllrM $1100. yoNrotcls & uo. ClalmlnQ. Purw t.CIOO I'm A TO<n Bey lHldenOtt'I 111 ClalmlftO prlu $1500. TM Sou111 Trewll119""6fflaft 1Nlc04Mm~I ,,, M-lmllmel.t,)Out. ToroS.. IC..rdotll) 111 Easy OuSll ILopfl<im l Okkey$~U$1 IMll Cllell) 111 °"""lr>gGUft IClerl,se) Ullle Reollce IHtrl 1 111 Step And Gone <Mo.-n'I Fleet Convoy lllph•m > 121 Kan Kan IC..111 WIMlngSonll (AClaorl 122 O\armera.n !Adair) LllOy 81J9'S Gal (l(nl9!11l 111 Grand Bilr (8aflks) TMl ltO ltACIE -110 ya ros 3 Vff>r olm & up. C••lmono Purli.e ,,,00 Clalrnlno Pritt ' HOO c;oven PKilk INicooemus) Mvrt's O\tf99r (C•rdOu I Olerlie9o I Brooks I 112 112 ltt ,,, ,,, 11• ,,, 'n llt Jaell Simon ICtrdoH I Swift 8o (Gert.a) OleMvsletYMat1 tTreectl Joyous!ioffOY IHtrO S.ndy Vtnnall (Morris I IW. Speed Count IClero>se I Cawace Sir Ip ICrttQer I Native Twist INlcoo.rnus> II' EIGMTM ltACl'. -•OOyerd\ 3~ar 111 otOS & I.IP. Cl•lmlno. Pvr!>e UlOO. I It Ctaltnlng prlc.e POOO. 11t MoonVoy~ !Morrison) 17' Valley8uu !Pagel 11Y OllcUmoor (Morris I 1n Alareb ITreesurel 112 l(letle'9'S lllt~I (Ad•lr) Dl•l• El Toro I Rlcllards I Sniffy Oee (Myle\) Ucreme De Cl•l>l>tr IC•ll l Swoo\11 llCnlghll llOl.lltTH ltACIE -'70y•rdS.3'1'Nr old\ & up. Clllmlno. Purse UlOO. Clelmlno price ssooo. The Outwr Dooley's Herdw•r• Marl. Peppa'suu IMylts) ,,, TM Rtd Pony IWardl ,,., f It ,,, ,,. . IU 1n '" ttt 11• 119 Of' Dan IMOrrlU Sherm ll~lcllard\l 117 NINTH ltACE -350 yard\. 3 year 119 Olds & up. Cl.,lmino. Pur!>e $1700. Royel Pus 11 .. lpllaml Mandell'-IHtrO O.,N90Gtt !Bank'> Nutller Wiiiow (Wa l$0ftl 119 C.lel"'l"ll prite 11600. llt Dl•I Ven IC-..ssell 119 Re91I Offer (W•lktr l 127 Trl~C Truly (Myltsl Gueru C.nlin• IRlcll•rdsl Fo•y Oon ISteeo I "'"" ltACIE -3SO yards. J vear olds. Allowtnn, Purse 12600. The Oo Rkk Oo !Clerossel Al'•on Mission IC•rdoliJ l ui.•s Cork Room "ThtTlllrdO'lt INlclMMmusl TruSltlt IMylnl RUMlrtgHot IH•nl 1?2 IWdtbeyou IH•rtl 111 vet's e ... IHidl~rl 11• Counl Of Honor IBanl>.sl 127 119 122 ,,, 112 112 119 tit 122 127 'Anita Entries f'OUltTM ltACE -11116 mlles. .,. .. ~ . ,., But the Sea Kings of coach Tandy Gillis have several other outstanding players-namely Jacque Tuz, Rich Nebb, Jeer Ruzicka and Chip Stassel, among others. Among the victims in CdM's season are Compton, Villa Park, LB Millikan and Lynwood. Unlike the Century League where ther e are three bona fide conten· ders for the crown, the Sunset League has only one t eam which can c la im th a t honor - Marina. The only teams that seem unable to finish as high as th ird are Newport Harbor a nd winless Western. Arroyo Grande tourney. But they couldn't handle El Dorado's press and there's trouble at the post. Guard s Mike Zumbo and George Bar- rios are quick. but Jon Holl and is nurs in g a back injury HO J.00 2.60 1>00 00 •. 60 f'Olt WllDNIESOAY Cl.llAlt & PAST fllltST l"OST U;•'·"'· Flllltt & mues, • yur olds & up. Oalml"9. Pllrw '7000. Oalmong PrKe -SI000-\1000. s.n 0"'91> . .. 2. Villa Park 00-3) -Ron Lindsay has been selected coach of the year twice in his two years at the Spartans helm and he has a bundle back from last year's title winner. Leading the attack are Jeff Sanderson (16.0), Dou g MacGinnis ( 14.2) and Harry Heinaken (12.3). Villa Park was blistered by a Katella full court press and it could be the Spartans' undoing against pressure defenses likeCoronadel Mar and Estancia. 3. Estancia (8-1) -Talk around the league has it that Tustin enjoys the best talent in the league- but it's hard to overlook Estancia in that category. The Eagles h ave 6-6 Jim McCloskey (26.3), a good pair of forwards in Stu Van Horn and P ete Neumann and depth at guard where Gary Confer and Kyle Bischoff have offset the loss of Ray Orgill. Orgill, an a u:teague pick in 19'15 as a sophomore, is on the mend from a back injury and could be re ady to taJcc over as the Eagles' floor leader in another two weeks. McCloskey has 20-foot range and is also a returning all-league player for coach Dave Carlisle's crew. 11. Costa Mesa (7-4) -The Mustangs have a tough front line with Stan Miller, Dan Byers and Steve Kiley up front and they make the mos t of it with penetration anQ rebounding strength. Byers has been in double fi gures in every game and Miller had a high or 27 against Savanna in a 74-69 win over the Rebels. Mark Oman has also been consistent in the backcourt, averaging 9.2. 5. Tustin (7·5) -The Tillers have not jelled yet-but if they do, watch out. Coach Gary Larson has four returning starters back, although three of them-Doug Gray, Ron Ray and Dennis Junor- have been injured and ill during a practice Ci\mpaigri that has seen Tustin less than awesome. Kevin Kiley, a 6-8 transfer, Tom Banks or Phil Desjarden figures to get the other starting assign- ment. 6. El Modena (2~) -The Vanguards boast a 6-8, 6·1, 6-4 front line, but there's trouble in the backcourt. Returning starter Richard Ruiz (6·8) is averaging 13.4 per game and 6-7 sophomore Steve Trumbo has been scoring al a 15.0 clip. 7. Santa Ana (7·S) -The Saints, under former Lowell junior vars ity coach Jere Watts, are off to a good start. The Saints are small (only one starter is over6·0), but qui ck+ 8. Magnolia (1 .8) -The Sentinels are still ex· periencing hard times and don't figure to do better than seventh. Junior Gary Camara has averaged 11. 7 per outing. The Sentinels are inexperienced and have three sophomores and four juniors on the squad. The Vikjngs of coach Steve Popovich are over· whelming choices to capture the 1976 Sunset League crown with two· time All·CI F player Rich Branning pacing thr al· tack. After M ari n a it's anyone's guess who can gain the runnerup spot and a C IF playo ff berth-although coach Dave Brown ·s Fountain Valley quintet gets the nod by a slim margin. Here's how the Daily Pilot sees the race: I. ~farina (10·3> -The Vikings seem to have too much with Branning averaging 28.9 points per game. He's the floor leader. top assist man and tough on the boards. All that and 'Matt Cook , Make Ruhter, Dan Boldt and Tom Ugland, too. 2. Fountain Va lley (8·3> -The Barons ap- peared to be jelling with a three-game victory set up north in winning the CdM Still No. I Unbeaten Corona del Mar, the o nly prep basketball t eam to go throug h pract ice and t ou rn a m e nt ga mes without a d e f eat. re- mains atop the official Orange County Top 10 cage poll with league action next. The Sea Kin gs of coach Tandy Gillis have won 11 in a row, the last two without ace center Alex Black, the 6-6 pivot the offense revolves around. Mater Dei has moved into the No. 2 slot vacat- ed by Ma rina , which tumbled to sixth after a six-point loss to Hunt- ington Beach. The latter * * * ORANGE COUNTY TOP10 1. Cd M 0 1-0 > 2. Mater Dei 01 ·2) 3. Fullerton (6-3 ) 4. Katella ( 10·2) 5. Hunt. Beach (8·3) 6. Marina (10-3) 7. Villa Park 00·3) 8. Estancia (8· I> 9. El Dorado (7-4) 10. (tie> Troy (8·2> Pacifica (9·2) 58 53 37 34 33 27 20 J4 12 8 8 has moved up the ladder to fifth following its, seventh win in ihe last eight outings. The key game tonight involving ranked teams is at Troy where No. 3 Fullerton invades for a 7 o'clock test with the No. 10 Troy quintet. Olympic Hearings The president's com· mission o n Olympic sports begins two days of public hearings in Los Angeles· Thursday, de· signed to analyze the or· ganization and operation of the United States Olympic committee. Thursday's session will be from l to 6 p.m . and Friday session from 8:45 to 6. Both will be held in the Champagne Room a t the Beverly Wilshire Hotel. College Basketball HB Hosts Orange Amon g th o se scheduled to testify at the hearings are: Col. f'. Don MilJer. executive director of the U.S. Olympic committee : Don Schol lander, former Olympic swimmer with five gold medals in 1964 and 1968; Ken Moore, Olympic m arathon run· ner and Chuck Neines. Big-8 conference com· missioner. Huntington Beach lllgh's Oilers start the road to their second straight Empire League basketball championship tonight as they open drcuit action with invad· ingOrange. Tipoff is at 7 nnd the Oilers of coach Elmer Combs are tabbed to get ofr to the right start and keep pace with le3'Ue favorite Katclla. The Oilers have won seven of their last eight games. capped by back· to-back wins over Marina and Los Amlaos Friday and Saturday, Pacini Huntington Beach are forwards ·Perry Harbln (17.0) and Jim Spowart (16.5) and Ctark Sima (14.l) Guards Ke\rfn Karkut and Paul SoCal Facee Cal Baptist Five RIVER6fDf;- Southern QalUorn•o Colle11 of Cotta Mesa will fact hl1hly re1anted OalUornia Baptist ~et.~ her~ tonl1bt. (8) lftno"·leaaue basketball. Rick Bauer, a former San Clemente Hl&h and Saddleback College playeT, ls a starter for Cal Baptist. Finchamp were the sparkplugs for the Oilers in their triumph over Los Amigos, however. Orange's leading scorer is 6·3 forward Peter Koehnke. SMALL BUSINESS LOAMS · s 50,00(J.$ 400,000 · 5·15 Years SBA GUARANTEm Steve Grief & OUMGI COUNTY OFFtCI •• 11 ........... ., Me..ltl~A ... C.. 135-3117 .......... M•NY U\lfUM. "' Ht w T'()ftl( Ufe ..... -.c •. tf _, ...... ~111, ............ ,.,9".. 3. Westminster (5-•t> The Lions are coming on s tr o n g with three victories at the Santiago tourney, including a win over El Dorado, which de stroye d F ountai n Valley the ni ght before. Mike Sodders. Brian Rodgers. Al Seguin and Tim Page are all averag- ing in double figures. 4. Los Alamitos <7-6) - The Griffins rely on 6·1 Greg Drake ( 12.9), 6·8 Tom Reckerle (9.7> and 6-3 Kevin Mead (9.1 l for most of their punch. Los AI beat a Long Beach Millikan team, which de· feated Marina. s. Loara (6-5) -1'he Saxons have 6-6 r-~inland transfer Kari Kaario to work the inside game and he's averaging 13.l points per game to com- plement Mark Roche's H .3 average. A 55.54 win at the buzzer over Los Al is a good indicator of Loara's comparative ability -..iith Los Al - nearly dead even. 6. Edison (3-6) -The Chargers could be the da rk horses of the circuit. T he r ecord is camouflaged due to tough non-league op- position and new coach Lionel Purcell has been using about 10 players a game seeking the ri ght combination. Guard Bob Vogelsang leads the at- t ack with a 20.0 average. 7. Newport H arbor 0·7) -Lack of height is a problem at Newport Harbor whe re the Sailors lost seven s traight before edging Rancho Alamitos. Kim Cooke has averaged 20.6 in his l ast three g am es. however, and forward Bill Wilkenson has s hown promise recently. Goc)olak IWardl ,,,,.n to.-Now (Oroer I TJme -11.00 Also Ran -Mr Top euv. F"ff Bao, Top Expl~ion. Chot Comm.nd, Mr Capri Deck S<ralch~ -Cle lone, Gray o.nc.er U Eucla t-MH Vin Marv & >· Go901•11, pei. $U,OO SEVENTH ltACE -•OO yard\. 3 year olds & up Fi I hes & m"res. Al· lowance. Purse SSOOO. Smoolh Kitty (Brooks I ~.10 , ., 2.60 C-tta MIS\ INlcod~mus I 1.10 2 ID O.cko's RoO Candy <Cardora> •.OO Tlme-20.03 Also Ran -Jets Lltllt Lady, E.llsy Jet's •oe , Wand4 Wlltfl, Moss Conclusion, lmpresslvtly S<ralct>ed -Silvertown EIGttTM RACE JSO urds. 3 .,..r otds. c1a1m1nt1. PurS<! nooo Moon Gi ant I Richards I 61.10 ,. 40 10 00 Moon ES<ai>ade lLIOflaml •20 lCI Rosy Joyous IHarll 1.IO Tome -11.'19 Al'° Ran -Sold Ouift<:y, Liiie L.-l\. ~Id the Gr-. Fr..,kle Cot· ton, S.tin Rose. Ooclor Glad, OHm PllffTammy Scr•lchl!d-1...iltle Aew~. Tucson .HI, One More Doi. D•rlln's Demon SJ Eocta ,._Giant & 2-MNfl £.supade, paid "°S.00 NINTH RACE -•OO yards. J ye.ir olds. Clalmin9. Purses 1100. Sto.-mln' IR1c11Ardsl 8.•0 •.OO 3.80 Tonto B.lrs Vic (Watsol'I) 11.40 9,olO Al.,mltos l'Mws INltO<Mmu\) '' 13.60 Timt -10.3S Also Ran -Hi9h Tld~s. Calculla 7, U DAiiy OMMe 9lt Ht & 2M ltkft. U E u clas.t!Stll, 7th & tth Rae" l"lltST ltACll -• lurl0ft9S. • vear· olds & up. Clalmlr19 Purse $6000. c1a1mtngprlce s.ooo-nooo. G;tllsteo (Toro I SonofSl.Crlspln IRos\I M'ITl'm•oswe ( R•m1 rer I Broad Mlllded Man (Munor l Joe'\ Swep (Skln.,er l LlllO Lillo IH1mH1011) Peel&• IGonreltz > Setln Panaoe !Meno> Rulull !MortlU) Tl lit Trend IOllv.,es I Jet Pon !Loper) ,,. 116 "" , 13 121 113 .,,, 116 ,,, 116 11• HC:OND ltACll -6 furlongs • vear Olds & ue>. Clalmlno. Purse "°°°· Oelmlnol>f'luS.000 '1000. Rotk'nChalr O.n IMunor> 115 HS H• llS II• LOIMIY S.llo.-!Morales> SciuclP•l<h IRose ln l FnnchRlval IPanenonl <:armui 11 (Toro> KnillfltMake< !Hawley) TtninoVllle IPltrcel Counlng's Boy !Cesoedl!s) Comic Rogue ICamp•sl IM4,,,.r>OK Prince (Gontalerl flltel"911tn1 CLope1I "" ltl 116 Ill •111' ,,, TMlltD •ACE -II furlonqs l year old maiden 1111i.s bred In C..111. Purse ii.sooo. Cl•imln9 prltt S20,000 - SlS,000 CrlmsonAn91l !Art90nl KnlQtltlySHtnede !Toro> ~lle~lsse (Sellers> C.telu (Shoemaker) Sew a Lillle IHtw lo l Our Trudy (Vtlc:lell Mit911lru Special IO~rWHt I Troe>fly CuP ICes~des > ProCMtr Pride !ROH Its) •111' ,,, 117 , ,. 117 111 117 111 1l7 l(alll Gold, Joe Moon Too, Palleotn'\ Tltl•llEqul11t IC.mpAs) Dendy, Oandy 's Jet, Mr . Cute Etnp(tUOeelOllv•res) er~;~~clled -Cnar9ln9 Cllarlle, Cheri Merl IWOlskll "' 111 117 AIMElltllllt Triple C Trulv, Berenda's Olargt. Bal<ony's0tll9"t IOiarl "'9uWSMoon • • Carousel Melody IVt ldetl 111 111 ... 111 SS Eoc111 e-s1ormon' & J.T91tto ""°"lmsicalWttllll 18acon) Bars Vic, paid $U7.00 CandySllar (Olivares I Golf Roundnp Ann Lewis fired a 90 to capture low gross honors in A flight in a low gross, low net tournament at ,Huntington Seacliff Country Club recently. In net action, Joan Stegman had a 76 lo top the field with Corinne Richardson and Mabel Christianson lied at 78. Pat Penewell had an 89 to win B night gross with Terry Camillo the net victor with 71. Virginia Kendall was second in net action with 72 and Esther Kneeland third with 76. In C flight, Gloria _Pirates Play· Boland was the gross winner with 99. Alice Acklin (75) and Betty Peterson (77) were the net winners. Dolly Secord won D flight gross with 105 and Irene Pere was the net victor with 80. Madelaine Adams was the victor in · a putting tournament with 26 to complete her round. Barons Awards Fountain Valfeyl High's vars ity football team will be honored with a sports awards banquet tonight at the school cafeteria, begin· ning at6:30. LA MIRADA-Orange Coast -College 's basketball team warms 8. Western (0·7) -up for South Coast ~.lo.yd Johnson, a 6-4 Conference play tonight Jttmor, and Mark Saucy, with its final non-circuit a 6·2 senior, lead the game against host Biola pioneers with 12.8 and College frosh. It starts at 13.4 averages. 8. The Barons were third in the Sunset League, but advanced to the CIF quarterfinals before fall· ing to CIF 4·A finalist St. Paul, 24-17. FOIDUllRYSlERS IDEUL IOTOIS-AIC -FOIEIU CARS & TllCIS ... rr llfl/rflY MTW.S OPEN& CLOSED LEASES TIE ODORE IOIHIS WSllll CO. 2096 ......... lfvd. COSTAMUA ..11 MN21 Cl\Ala9al !Morales) 11~ Scurrltous IMunor) 11' s-.tScounclrel 1Ara90fl) 111» 0.-.•m Pie IOloveres) 114 8oldTrusure (Skinner> "" Or.ams of Fortune (GonHIUI •ll2 NorloO•lt !Olar) 116 PIFTH RACE -l 'lt mlln on turf.• year olds & up. Allowances. P\lrse $15.000 c;.nant Lamb !Haw ley I Mount Ha111>y (Piere• I TrondStno (V•l<Mil A·Juslimus l~mkonl ~ler Ptompt !Toro) T.V.Miss~ (Morales) StellaMarcll IGrassocltl * Bold S.tter IS'-m•ktf') E•rly Release IPatten.onl A·Principlum (~mkin) Ou<h IOhvares I Pfi~Mlsty ILtonardl A-AL WtMelertralnedefl\ry. Ill 113 llJ )lilt '" ,,, lllOt Ill n• SIXTI4 ltACE -II fur~~. 3 ~ar Old rNIOen colls & geldinQ~ P\11 ># $'000. e• Portuo"" 1um0ert1 Alphy 8oy <Pierce I GoklAccount IMor•lesl A-GobetJUIJgM !Olivares) ni.tCMdHlmwll IMe-1\1) AcltAdtWar lsi-tnaker) Ol)eE"'"Gunner ITorol Ltt.'Htope (Srnltll) VIOllW" (Herrlsl Misty St-IHIWttyl A·T~vo (OllvAres) A-J Fanning tralneclenlry. 111 111 111 111 -118 118 111 111 118 Ill 119 SEVENTH ltACE -11116 moles. i YMr olds & up. AllowMces. Purse SU,000.L.£. Pattersonranth. Stl11ersofGlass IOiarl · A·TheScolsman IVatderl CofteeGrout1ds !Rosales> 111 11• Ill 113 llf 113 113 113 111 11) Mll\'arel !Toro) Cof\)ejo IC.mpes I TlllH Bride IShoem.alCtr) FlrstScleech IOhv•resl A·S°""'nttlsnAblr 1 (Pierce> Bold Witness IMunotl 8ar9'"9 In I Hawley) A-N Of'ysdale trained tfltry. EIGHTH ltACE -6V) lurt~ J Y"tar old follies. Sttku. Purse $1S.OOO added. Gross $30,000. To wlMer Sl•..150. wcond 15.000. llllrd SJ,750, fourtll Sl,115. filtll St.25. La CMllnela stakes. FleetlftQMlld llMMI E•stern Or-earner ICrspedes) Pitt t...eoet I Pierce I Gr~(Hawl") OeM Alla 15"ol!m•ke< I CKtus V•lley Rose IValdtJ) Ha1111y Fawn ISrlll!rsl OitnclnQ Ftmme IOIH) Rudimenh I Torell NllwP9ndl"9 IMunorl MIOOle'sClue IVrlasquerl Or9emof~i"9 (Lambert) Siient Flicker (Skinner) ,.. 111 ,,. 118 118 119 "' 111 tt• Ill 111 11• 111 NINTH ltACE -11/16 mlles.. irlllles & mart\, • year olds & uo. ClalmlflO. Purse '1000. Cl•iml"ll prlte $IOOO - $1000. Ma<)lnery (MeM) crio.-.s 11...amllerll M1"1910 ISl>oema~rrl OoP1NW IPltrce) IQyejoMlu IC.spedl!sl Oulla Honey I Howard l MOrnlng O.nctr (Rosales) # llVIN ADYANTAOIS OUI PAGll onus lit. • llS 119 HS ,,. 11• llS .. , .. lllillilll .. lo..\. that yours may not! COMrLm OllANGI COUNTY COYRAH l11eh1dh•t: ...... ..... s.c..__, ....... YJ.fe. o-'""· -... -LMt .......... .,LA. ... MONTH TO MOtml HNTAL l.Utl No NPOsn uocnm OM APPIOYID CIDIT OMLV l l1.\0 PD lllC>Nnf TOTAL COST ,.......,,...., NIW COMPACT ntf stn 11 v. , •, v.t , 6 VOICI MGSAM PAMIS AUO AH AYAH.AW 1 PUU Ra MAHfTIMAMCI oru ~Gl mu N'H tr ~ounr t L l'HONl s r rwr n ... r t114) 135-llOS ..... IANTA PL IA'"A A'IA ...-u..e~---...... .... ~S.C:I-'• .. .... ~ll T __ ... ... 4tt.Jtt1 \ '. • .. .. .. .- I \ \ '. 1. IJI OAILYPILOT Tuesday. January 5. 1976 By Bil K~ant> "Will you pvt my watch on so it's lookin' at me?" L.M.Bogd Let Them Eat Flies? Over the years it has been reported that parents here and there have given their little girls such names as "Malaria." "Alto'' and "Cameo." All of these sets of lovely syllables are from the Jtalian. More recently, the re· cord shows that a California couple conferred upon their newborn son another unusual moniker of Italian origin: ··zucchini." TATI'OOS Rapidly rising during the last 12 months on that hst or most popular tattoos is the Social Security number. Not only do houseflies contain more protein than prime beef. but they have less fat. That's why a professor at Colorado State University s uggests we eat flies as a part of our regular diet. And ter mi tes and grasshoppers. too. Not to- day, sir. Seven out of every 10 people in this world never read news papers, hear radios. watch television or talk on telephones. And who can blame them? Wait, too flip. It's a little like that let-them- eat-cake line. Still. there are moments when all these words seem less IJlessed than silent solitude. what? S PORTS DEATHS Q. "Wh ich kills the more athletes. football or race car dnvin~" .. A. Football. Figure about 25 players die an- nually. From 15 to 20 car drivers get killed each year. Mister . all you need is just one simple little fresh idea to put your business in the black. Take N<>t>I Mitchell'~notion. ln 1908. his real estate operation in St. Petersburg. Fla., was a little slack. So he contracted a carpenter to build 50 large benches. lie painted them orange and decorated them with advertis- ments for his firm. then set them out along St. Pete's m ain street. Other merchants did likewise. So many so. in fact, that the city fathers finally had to pass an ordinance. stipulating that all the public benches there be uniform in size, wide enough to seat five persons, and painted green. Never mind. Mitchell 's business was booming by that time Address mo1lto L M &>yd. P () Bor 1560. Co~to Meso.91616 A DOCTOR LOOKS FOR PROFESSIONALISM in Banking as well as in medicine! Over the years. I have been a customer of several banks, and one of the prerequisites I look for Is professionalism. Next in order is efficiency, and then a friendly Interest in me and in my ac- counts. When I recently changed to South Coast National Bank, I did so because I found all three of these att ributes abundantly apparent in this friendly. "people-oriented" bank! The manage- ment and staff have had many years of banking experience behind them which results in a pro- fessional and efficient financial operation. Equally important to me Is the warmth and friendliness with which I am greeted wtlen I have ol::casion to visit the bank! And I notice that all of their cus- tomers are welcomed in the same way. In my opinion, this is what banking is all about! I know my funds are safe, that my savings earn the high· est legal interest, and that I personally mean more to South Coest National Bank than just a name or an account number! I would s uggest that you visit "my bank," and see for yourself l (1f) SOUTH COAST NATIONAL B ANK !.AtMl>tr FDIC 141 Sunfk>wer SL. Coeta Mn• 111 the comer of Sunflower and Baar (714) 540-1$00 Now There's a 'True' . For Several Tastes By Mil.TON MOSKOWlTt Last Ausust we prematurely burieJ u magazine in notin1 the impending demise or TTu~. a men's magazine founded in 1937. We said then that True was "an apparent victim or the porno tevolution," Money .. Tree Well, True is still around. It's in new hands -the third owner in less than a year -and what it's trying to do now is joint he porno revolution. THAT WOULD BE a neat trick if it could manage it, for in seeking new readers with 't new editorial slant it risks losing its present sub~cribers. The new publis her, Adrian B. Lopez, has found a way out or that dilemma by publishing two different editions. emerging strategy of Adrian Lopez. To see it, though. you have to get hold of two different Trues, the one that was mailed to subscribers at their homes and the one that was placed on sale at newsstands. They are not one and the sam e thing. True rao into trouble in recent years because of the intense com- petition from the sex-orie nted magazines which now flood the newsstands. True stuck to its old blood-and guts formula -hunting, fishing, bullfigh ting, he-man fiction - e1nd saw its circulation plunge from 2.5 million to less than one million. Th~issue mailed to subscribers ran to 66 pages. was printed on pulp paper and featured on its cover a picture of a shark and headlines directing your at- tention to articles on the •:Jaws" s hark scare, the Green Berets and a supersn i per of the American Revolution. Honored AssemfJlg Oil and ·natural gas well drilling bits pass (lown production line at Smith Tool Company's new. Irvine plal)t. The plant recently ~on an award from Southern California Gas Company for adoptmg energy saving production methods a11d equipment. Fawcett. the original publisher. sold it las t J anuary to P ete rsen Publishing ·Company. which moved the magazine from New York to Los Angeles but didn't tamper wit~ the editorial approach. Petersen qwckly decided that True was not going to make lt, and in the fall it sold the magazine to Lopez, who moved it back to '.'Jew York. The issue placed on newsstands contained 82 pages, was printed on coated magazine stock and featured on its cover a photograph of a semi- nude lady and a headline directing your attention inside to '' 12 pages of HOT NUDES!" In some markets the distributor also pasted on the cover a sticker which screamed: Oil Labels Specified "THE ENTIRELY NEW TRUE. WASHINGTO N <U PI) Cholesterol counte rs a nd weight watchers could benefit from a new re - gulation issued by the Food a nd Drug Administration. ander M. Sc hmidt. "They will also be a ble to select the fats and oils they wish to consume for health and re- ligious reasons a nd personal preference.'· ~OW ('O)IES THE J anuary. 1976 iss ue of True, :rnd we can see the Featuring CRIME, ADVENTURE. EXPOSE, Behind the Scenes SEX." Ford Facing Capri Recalls lnside the "ne w True" are articles on "How to Run A Whore House " and "The Massage P a rlor Exposed.'' And there ~re ndeed full-color photo- graphs nudes, a la Playboy and Penth se, including a centerfold spread devoted to "Wendy, True's cover girl." The FDA said Monday the labels on all foods containing fats or oils will have to list what kind or oil or fat is in- volved so consumers will know what they are getting. Some fats and oils are considered more likely to lead to a build up of cholesterol in the arteries, increasing the danger of bear.t attacks. SCHMIDT SAID CONSUMERS "'have a basic rig ht to know the source of fats and oils in the foods they eat and have overwhelmingly requested that the labeling of fats and oils be more specific. WASHI'.'JGTON CAP > -The Department of Transportation an- nounced that Ford Motor Co. has been directed to recall an estimated 185,000 1971 through 1973 Mercury Capri autos because of a defect in the windshield wiper system. Subscribers who get their copies at home are missing out on these treats. But then True probably figures that if they were given these treats, they would proba bly cancel the ir sub- scriptions. THE PHRASE "VEGETABLE oil," for instance. will no longer be enough. It will have to be followed by an explanation -"com oil," "soy- bean oil" or whatever it really is. "Cons umers will now be better able to follow doctors' orders to restrict certain kinds of fats and oils in the diet.·· said FDA Commissioner Alex· Under the rules, the terms "vegeta- ble oil" and ".vegetable shortening·· may still be used but they must be followed by the specific identification of the oil involved. Departm ent officials said the recall affects 1971 and 1972 Ca pris and 1973 models built through :-.lovember 1972. Lopez is in the process of finding out whiC'h True has the greatest audience appeal. Which version do you think will win'> Oz one Flap Aerosol Firm Closing Plant MILFORD . Conn. <AP > -An aeroso l manuf act 'lrer says it ts closing its plant here because of a decline in business a ttributed to reports that some sp ray can discharges may harm a pro- tective layer in the earth's atmosphere. Aerosol Terhn iques Inc. :mid it plans to <:lose its Milford plant, which produces spray cans pro· pelled hy fluorocarbons. Some ~dentists. includ- ing nt uc r . have theortled that fluorocubon cans dis- l'harge chemicals that collect in the tipper ~~tmospherC' <rnd de· teriorate a dehcate layer ofozone. THE ozo~ E LA YER shields the earth's sur- face from the sun's powerful ultraviolet Hi-fi Firm For Mesa Dixie Hi -Fidelity Warehouses has leased a 1.400-square foot store at 557 W. 19th St.. Costa Mes<'. announces Pres1 dent William Rivas . Jim H eise o f the downtown Los Angeles office of Grubb & Ellis Co., representPd both lessee and the lessor, Dr. Michael K . Daskalakis of Anaheim. rays, which scientists say can cause skin cancer. Company officials said revenues dro pped to S47.9 million in 1975 com· pcred with $54 million in 1974. They said the firm suffered a S238,855 loss last year compared with S13'1.054 net income in 1974. H. R. SHEPARD, the firm 's president, said the d ecline was "du e primarily to the un· warranted, adverse publicity that has been given to aerosol products as the result of an un- proved theory that the discharge of fluorocarbon propellants is causing a depletion of ozone in the ~rth 's up- per atmosphere ." William Hirs t , the firm's treas urer, said the plant shutdown will put between 100 and 150 employes out of work. Hirst said another firm. which he declined to name. would take over the premises and that many of Aerosol Te<lhni· que's laid-Off employes would be able to find work in the n e w operation. Tijuana TourisDl Hits Tough Tiines TIJUANA, Mexico CAP> -Times are tough in Tijuana, say merchants. with tourism reported down a nd unemployment rampant. An estimated 40,000 people are believed out of work in Baja California, ol" about 14 ~rcent of the state's able· bodied 'Yorkers. ALTHOUGH 0Ff1CIAL FIGURES S HOW a slight increase in tbe number of Americans cross- ing the border. busioessmen say sales arc poor. Eduardo Moreno Villasenor aald they are driv- ing on past his shop and others now that the transpenlnsular highway is completed, and says they buy Jess when they stop. "I think the sltuaUon ii erave," be said, ex- pressing belief that tourlsm in TiJ'*1• may be down 20 percent. • IN JIEXICAU, A FEDEJlAL economist says 111 border assembly factories are recoverlnc slow· ly from the economic slump of early lut year but that one·thlrd of the 18,000 factory workers ln Baja CalifornJa are out of job8. Ten factories were closed last year tncludlng Mexlco·s largest assembly plant. There wero 3,000 layoffs at Mextel, a division of Mattel. The Tijuana Chamber of Commerce esUmated lhot S9 was spent by the average U.S. tourist In 1974 butsays lt Is too early to give the l97~tlgura. ' Over 1,he Counter NASO UstilH)s Thew quot1Uons Buckey • 9V1 Firm Br lS'IJ 16 Kr~r • 10 Pf!lrolle MIC!Plied by the NI · Burne> SI S'h 6 Farm Gr S6~• S7¥• l..ICltd SI 2S 26 Plnkrtn 11on11 Anocl•llon ol 8"tler M 2tl'i :n•;, FlllQrllt l'-' 4 uncut •l'i 10 Pion HBd »<urltln DHlers. c.1 #k.rw 10\4 11'.4 F1>t Bostn '6'/• 11 ut>Ge 2114 13 Pioner w Me bids •nc:I Oiiers C.IW\ Sv 2S'.I. 26V. 1st T1tF1n I~ ll"t uwsn Pr 11 19'h Pttt Ncp quoted by OWr•the· Clm Iron ISi Unlnc 33 33\4 Lawter C U V, 13 Pr1t Hen counter dHlers to 117 1:n Food Tw •1 4J 'I> uiy Boy ISYt 16 Preo Mt each other as of c.m T19 31'1> 36'4 Fotest 01 ,...., U•lo ugvet Pl 7.\1. e•'t PrOQnS clO!oe <Eastern C1non Ml IJl'a 14~ Frank El • 6'h 1 Loi Olmp SV• S~ PSN Cir llmt.) The quota.· CllJe< Bk 10 1~ F<1v MQ 8\4 9 L1mtd Sir 16'h H Y, Putn C1p tlons dO not Inell/de CnMt9 RI 3~ 3t1 Friend le 24'1> 25'4 L>nc Bdsl 10 10~ Oulkr Ch rewll m11rkup, tn11rk <:en VIPS nv. 12¥. Fro1 FdE 1 11/• L..octlte 1~ IS~ OuHft ~ dow<'I « commls-CFS Cllti ISYJ i. Fuller H 10'\lo 11'1• i.-Star 7\<'J a R1yun slon; lltld do not ()Imp pt 3~ 4 Giie Lr J 71.oo IV. Lewes co •6•4 •1•t. 117 192 Kil Volume reorosent 1cti.•I CNnl Co ll'h 12 Gllr# Tr S S\4 MOerml s • R•ymd ''" 1011'1 urnup Sims 16-4,100 tr.,,Hctlons. Olem Cp 18 19 ~lco Cp 1011> 11 Mild Gls 1l lJll'l RHM Pac 7~ I •/• m Express 101.soo INDUSTIUALS Ch< Br Ir S9'h 61 Gn Autm S1 > 1> ""'I Riiy 13·16 1S.16 Recog EQ 6 6"• btned Ins lOS,900 AND UTILITIES Olrls Sec Gn AutoP 2611> 1711'1 Ml l1tkl 41 O Re!lf Belo av. 9''-Grtellnq 91,300 Monc:l•y 1?9Yi 1321h Gen Bind 12 11"4 Mlrine c 24 2S'I> Reo Ette ?I 2111> Oonnester Gas 11.100 Jenutry s. 1976 OIUC>b Cl> 38''11 38"' G Energy 10'4 11'1• Mtrlt Frt 311J 4 Rell Univ llllJ t V• Pl!M Ofhh Gls 74,700 Bid Ask OI FrChk 20'h 20~ Gen Rein Mary Ky 1w . 16'4 RellUb Tx 27"4 28'1• P1bst Brew n, 100 Acus""t 1114 191/• O t1 SoGa 6"e 6"' 1S9 163 MC Cmck 33¥. 34'1'1 Rex Plas 5°1'1 6'/• Renk Oroanlsatn 71,600 Advnu R I~• 21111 OIVIS Ut 77h 18\;o Gnl Shale 101'4 10~. M<Owl E 6V. 6'111 Ru P Pr 9'11. 10'1J vt Employe In$ 59,700 Ad Micro 1Ho 13:\lo Cltr UtA 27'11 29~ Gilber1 A 14'" lS'I• M<Ouav 12 12'14 Reyn &R 13°/J 1411J y Glln Electrns SS,000 &hll Aslled °". 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WIMISt.PI s .. zlOO ·s~ .. "" ~ .O 10 1" + \It Wl'1tl000f .IO 20 Mn 16 • ~ '' 1'• 4 '~ .... =~~~.~ 1, ~.,.·.~ T~y.Januery8. 1976 s DAILY PILOT 87 Those Telephon Calls Steeper By SYLVIA PORtE& To the average telephone user, one ortbe m05l irrilatinlt boosts in living costs hal) been in the cost of calls from phoru: booths and to the ln!ormation opera tor. In recent month.Ii, phone companies in 'l:1 states and the Dlstrlct of Columbia have increased or sought authority from st a to Public Service Com missions to jack up tho price of pay phone calls from JO cents to 15 or 20 cents. IS SEVEN STATF..S, CUSTO)IER who need the help or the information operator now have lo pay a charge of · either 10 or 20 cents per request once they bave exceeded their free monthly allowance of from three to five calls. In 13 '1ther states, phone companies have requested .similar taritrs. It"s a nationwide trend. In 1975 alone, for instance, Bell Sys tem companies in 34 states were granted autboriutioo for rate hikes totaling Sl.2 billion -and action is pending in 26 states and the District ·or Columbia on rate-rise r~· quests amounting to Sl.5 billion. Hard as the impact is on u s, residential phone users, these and other •types of rate in· creases hit businesses, both large and small, Money's Worth much harder. The reason is simple: businesses pay more for the same phone service than we do. In Washington. D.C .. for instance. a residential user is rharged $10.96 a month for a touch·looe phone and an un· limited number of calls within the city. The installation fee for a home phone is $17. A business firm, though, must pay Sl2.50 per month ror the same phone. is allowed only a specified number of free inner city calls, and is charged $2S for installation. HERE, TOO, JT•s A NATIONWI DE pattern. According to a study commissioned by the U.S. Independent Telephone Assn. -a group of 1,641 independent telephone rompanie::t that own and operate one out or every six phones in the country -the average residential user pays less than halt what the average business customer does. The independents figure that it costs their average re~ sidential client $5.51 a month for a main phone, while the average business customer pays $12.85 for his company's main phone. (The Bell System's statistics are different, but tell the same tale: the lower rate for residential users is sub- sidized by long-haul and business services.) Underlining the contrasts even more. AT&T says that the $.165 million increase granted for out-Of-state calls in 1975 hit businesses much harder than individuals. The hike cost the average business an extra s.1.29 a month or an ad· ditional $39.47 a year. Meanwhile. the average home user's bill rose 38 cents a month or $4.52 a year. OF COURSE, THE PHOSE COMPANIES -both in-; dependent companies and the Bell System, which owns aitl operates about 85 percent of the phones in the U.S. -argu' that phone service is comparatively cheap. Specifica'ly: they point out that over the past decade, the price of pho~ service has climbed only one·third as much as the Consumer Price (cost of living> Index. And in recent months. the average residential bill has risen less than 4 percent. --. Moreover, they warn that such relatively low increasei in phone rates are threatened by the Federal Co~ munications Commission's rulings the pasts,even years th~t AT&T and the independents cannot prevent other firmt from marketing special services and telephone attach· ments. Among these new devices are automatic dialers. answering m achines, office switchboards and fancy French telephones. ''Nonsense," retorts John Eger, acting director of the White House Office of Telecommunications Policy. Eger in fact. recently told a House subcommittee that the telephone companies' claims are "grossly exaggerat- ed" and not based on reliable data. He praised the FCC for enabling new firms to compete with AT&T's Bell System and said that the telephone giant's marketing innovatiorts are a major reason to believe that it will retain a major portion of the telephone business int his country. WIDLE THE FIGHT IS GO~G OS at this high policy level. however, the price hikes continue to hit you - particularly as today's report has underlined, you, the busi· ness phone user. What can you do to cut your phone costs in view of the clear trend toward ever more costly phone service? How accurate are your phone bills, anyway? Wednesday:CuttingOusinessp~costs. $219 Million Budget Adopted by SDG&E Speci~I to the Daily Pilot SAN DIEGO -San Diego Gas & Electric Co. says it bas adopted a $219.2 million capital budget for 1976. Of the total, $152.6 million will go for electric production projects. $55.9 million for ad· ditions to electric transmission and distribution facilities and $10 million for improvements to the com· p a ny 's gas storage, transmission and distribution system. MAJOR BUDGETED ex· penditures include $75 million as its sbare for continuing work on generating unjts 2 and 3 at the San Onofre nuclear gen~raling station and $16.8 milllon for the start of construction of generating unit S at the Encina power plant In Carlsbad. In addition to the ex- penditures for construction of Encina s lt!el!, the company budgeted $4.S mtllion for the start of construction or a 4()()... foot stack to serve the new generating unit and the !our ~· P I "1•1 (.loll> (l'IQ -··-Wiiii. MDlor , 50 1.V. ... W!llttlllr ClD . . u~ ' -\Ii Wl'11es .1Sf I Ill 10 •• WltttoldtJ I 10 •14 .. Wllll•IN J $1; >\---.... lic:.1 , 4) WI'""' I rt> s._ • " M()Jrl .. 1' .. • "' ....... ,,. 5'-• .. tEJP f.tt U n ""' + ._ i(lllf uo .. 1100 100 •• Ill Ill!_~ . 1)0 M'--114 ~Gt "!t I 100 mh ~ existing units and $3.3 million for the start of transmission line construction for Encina 5. AMONG OTHER ex· penditures budgeted for ma· jor electric production pro· jects was $9 million for geotect\nical aOd environmenta1 studies, p-e. liminary engineering and licensing activities for the company's p lanned Sun .. Desert nuclear plant n~ Blythe. The largest expenditure budgeted for the company's distribution system is $18.5 million for undergrounding or electnc lines. including $1t .7 million for underground.in~ lines to serve new customers and $6.8 million for con~· ing existing overhead Unea to an underground system. Expenditures budgetect lor gas projects include $4.3 mJWon for installation of 41.s· trlbuUon lines to serve new custom en and $5. 7 mlllloa for rentwal and up1radin1 of present facilities. , J DAILY PILOT Tuetday, January ts, 1971 She'll Retire 23 Years in Office From Wl.reSenlcefi ' .Msemblywom a n Pauline Davi., CD P o rtola). recuperating Crom a gall bladder operation , de· dded to retire 3fter serving 23 years -the longest tenure or trn y w o man legisla tor in CaliCornia bis· tory. heromce a nno unced. Mrs. Davis. who celebrated h er 59th birthday Saturday nnd did not. attend the first day J976 !iession because of doctor's orders t o rest, made the ;mnouncement throug h her administrative a ssis· tnnt. Las t year s h e was n a med to the n e wly created position of assistant-Assembly speaker pro tem. S he is o ne o f two wome n who serve in the 80-member Assembly \I nd is ch airman of the J omt Fairs Af· location committee. • Judge Ted Abrams of Klamath County (Ore .) Circuit Court ruled that the lo ne surv ivor of a Dec. :?I plane cras h , l l·year-0Jd Theres a Seymour, will be returned to her natural fa ther in El Paso. Tex. T h eres a was a passenger in a sing le engine plane w hich smas h ed into the side of Bryant Moun· tain, 35 miles eas t of Klamath Falls. Killed in the crash w e re her stepfathe r and the plane's pilot, R obt-rt I.. Conduff, 37, o f Ft. Hood, Tex.; her m other. Frances M. Conduff, 47, and her half-sister, )laria Frances Fosler , 14. Theres a s pent several hours in n ear -freezing weather, w <)rmed m part by he r pet puppy, which also s urvived. ... Agriculture Secret ary Earl L . Butz l aughed, t elling the Ame r ican F a rm Bureau F ederation eon· vention it had given him only three minutes to speak. "Hubert Humphrey ('an 't even say h e llo in that length of t ime." the Republican Cabinet member said amid laughter, in St. Louis. Rut z also got a c huc kle whe n he said it interes ted him that he came o n the platform as the or· ~an pla yed "Back Ho m e in In· Bvn diana." Butz grinned and asked 1( th at meant the crowd wanted hi m "back home in Indiana.·· • Actor Marlon Brando h as been released a fter eight d ays in a Santa Monica hospital for treatment of a blood infection. a hospit al official says. The S l ·year -old Academy Award-winning actor was admitted Dec. 26 a fter flyin g there from Tetiaroa. his South P acific a1oll near Tahiti. Brando was s uffenng fro m septicemia, a bac· t er ia l b lood infection that no rmally 1s treated with antibiotics. s aid Patricia K e lvin, the hospital's public relations director. • Mrs . Judity Qu.i st, 29, wearing opaque s tock· ings to h ide he r leg h air, returned to her job at the Plaza Restaurant in Som ers. Conn . She was fired almost two years ago b ecau se s he refus ed to s h a ve he r legs, but rea ched an out-of· -----------.] court settlement with the ( PEOPLE res taurant's owne r . _ _ Jerome Young , allowing her to r e turn. The agr eement allows her legs to remain un· ~haven as long a s they are covered by navy blue or black opaque stockings. .. Former Oregon G ov. Tom McCall returned to the state Capitol for the firs t time in his c urrent r ole as a television r eporter -commentator. McCall, who left the office of governor last January. covered the m eet ing or the L a nd Conservation and Development Commiss ion as the commission consid ered applications from various local goveq:1men ts for extensions of plannin g de · adlines. McCa ll now works as a r e · p orter-commen t a t o r for Portland tel evis ion s tation KATU. • King Juan Carlos celebr ated his first birthday as S pa m 's m onarch . Carlos. who tu med 38, spent the day quietly at Zanuela P alace. He became the country's first king since the Spanis h Civil W ar following Generalissimo Francisco Franco's d eath late las t year. .. A bulletproof 19-14 Me r cedes 770K, built for German Luftwaffe chief H ermann Goering, was sold for $160 ,000 at the Kruse Classic Auction Co. 's annual classic a uto s ale in Scottsdale, Ariz. The buyer, who refus ed to be identified. said the car will be used a s part of a traveling dis play which eventually will become stationary, "hopefully in the San Fra n cisco area ." The display will illustrate a history o f America's m ilit a ry conflicts and feature the 5~-ton Mercedes. World W ar II German airpl anes and r e· lies from th e Spanish·American war, the buye r said. • French Pres ident Valery Giscard D'estalng said he will fly to the United States aboard the Concorde s u personic jetlin e r in ' May to pay an official visit to Washington. Giscard D 'estaing made the s tatement while U .S . authorities pondered a decis ion on whether to le t the French-B n tis h jet land on U.S. soil. Powerful American ecological circles are demand· ing that the plane be d e nied landing rig hts o n the ground it is too noisy. (Story, A<l). • Gl~RD Legislation t o close the 24-mile gap ot foterstate 5 freeway fro m Stockton to Sacramento County was introduced b y an assembly m an who has ridden the route on horsebac k to dramatize h is bill. Mokelumne Hill Democrat John Garamendi s a id his bill w o uld suspend the law that requires a 6().40 s plH o f state highway construction funds, with Southern California getting the larger share. • A six-man U.S. co n gressional committee. headed by Rep. Lawre.oce IL Foutain <D·N.C.), arrived in Cairo for two days or talks with Egyptian leaders, American of'fkials said. The group will meet w ith Forelp Minister Ismail Fahrni 3nd with President Anwar Sadat beloredeparture. The visitors. representatives on tbe H ouse In· tttnational Affairs Committee, are WUUam S. Broomfield (R ·Micb >:"Paul F indley CR·lll.). Oarlet Wiison (D·Texas), IArry Winn Jr. (R· Kan .), and Robert J . Lagomanlao CR-Calli}. Committee Chtiirman Thomas E. Morgan (D· Pa.), wa$ forced to remaln ln Naples. Italy, beuuse of a medical ailmeat, U.S. officials said. • Te4 L. wn ... , promising an eye toward baJaou and development, became Salt Lake City's 2Mb mayoT, and at 38 lhe youn1cst chief exec:uUve olthecicy ln tbb century. • o.u,~o ... ..., ··~ ~· r11a» II yo.. oo "'11 ~- -.,_, l>Y ~ 30 "'" .... ""~·· I om •NJ YO\H COOY ..al °'-~ IN("O"" S..""'•v and Sund•Y ti 1'0' m ,..,. ttK..-.vv VO\H (00\f t)y 9 .. "' !i.ttu1 0..V f'\f ,_ • 1'\ c;Vndit\f CMI tv"~•· 10 '"' •""',...,.,,,<UOY .. utoe O•htof'i .. J Cft...._T~• Molt Ofi""Or-(Oul'HY AH~ H J4UI Not'l~w•~f Hununotnn Stl.IC"tt .no Wt-\fm1flslrt 14 .. UH s.tlC'Mmel'\I, C'.ap1\flt"°EM!llC.h. ~n .Jv•n (<110•1ih Jn(' 0.MPo.nt :;ovlhl.~ L~una N1QotU ,.,._..,. Military Warring On Abuse WAS HINGTON CAP) -The armed services are launching major e f· forts to combat c hild abuse a mong m ilitary families. Military expert s believe som e child abuse proble m s in service fammes may stem fro m stresses peculiar to what one called "the m o bile military lifestyle." AN AIR FORCE medi ca l se rvi ce publication said "Recur· rent o r prolo n ged fa mily s epa ration by duty as- signment a ll too often leaves the m othe r with the run r e s ponsibility o f hom e a nd c hildre n. PUBLIC N011CE PUBLIC NOnCB PICTITIOVS aUSINttS1 NAM•ITAf&MIMY Tht fol !owl 110 !l«$0f!S .,_ ..... Nf- ntSS H : KIMSTON£. '200 south V•I• StNtt. S.nt• An•. Cellkiflll• '271M l(lmstoc-. Inc, '200 SOutlt V•la Strwt, Slltlt• Ana. Gellfo,..,.. tUOC This bullntss Is condu(ttd ~ • Olfpor.Clon l(IMSTOCIC INC . ....., ~"' ...... Ttlls stalef'flont .. , fl..., -.,.. C.O\lll'Y Cle'll of OtMI .. ~y Of\ Otctmtiw 23, 1975 l'l9U PUOllth.., Or-"09 C-st ~lly Piiot, -----.,, .. -,,~u"'s-----1 ...... ~ -IOU and an. 6, I~, 20. tt7' .... .... ....... -· 4'12·1S California E•rly mornlnQ cloud' hunc;i •long Ille Southern C..lilornla cOISI today but <1ur~ away during "'9 morni119 In ~1 •reu and there were sunny SltlH .-1th temperatures In tile 60s. PUBLIC NOTICE SV,.EltlORCOVRTOf'THE STATE Of'CALI f'ORNIA FOR TMECOVNTYOFORANGE No.A·l.OS• NOTICE OF HEARING OF PETITION FOR PROBATE OF WILL AND FOR LETTERS TESTAMENTARY Esl•t• of MAURICE GOULO. Dec.ea~. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN !hit JEAN GOULD toas flled nerein a petition IOt' Probate Of WHI •ncl '°' Is- suance of Letters T11~t.imenlary to Ille ~tllloner reference to wto•cll Is made for lurtr.er particulars. and !NI the time 1no pl1<e ol heannQ Ille samt ~ been wt lor J1nuary 20, 1971>, at 10·00 •.m .. ,., the courtroom ol Department Ho l ol said court. al 700 Civic Cenltr Drive Wesl, In the City ol Sant• Ana. C.llfornl1. DltedJ1nuery2, 1976 19'WINGOLDlllNG ISJOWilslllre 91\td Suite~ 8e"911y Hiii,. Ca 90211 AUorney for "-111 loner Published Oranoe Coast Oallv Pilot JanuarvS,6, 13, 1971> IH6 PUBLIC NOTICE TUESDAY NOTICETOCltEDITORS SUP•ltlOlt COURT 01' THI STATE OP CALll'OltNIA flOlt THI COUNTY Of' OltANOE A..u&>t SecOM Ill~ 11:361.m. 4.3 lntt•Mal1erof tl'Mt Est1teol HELEN Second IOw •:241).m, 0.6 C. SICKELS, 0.CH S9CI. Twin F•lls, '~"°· IOOUd like • seen. lrom Ille 00WIL1rd 01 Oi," bul Ille sceMrlo In most of lllt r.st ol lhe netlon wes tn0re Ilk• so..,.thlno from "Jlclt Frost," A storm Monday stnt winds .nip. 1>1111 111rou911 Twin Fells 1t 50 mlltt PUBLIC N011CE WIEONESDAY Flnt 111911 1: 11 a m. 4.2 Flrsttow 1·oea,m. 1.4 SKOfld 111911 n ·2u .m. J.7 Secondlow 1:01 p.m. 1.1 Sun rises 7:00•.m., selS4:S7 p.m. MOC1nrlsest:SS1.m., sets 10:12p.lft. PUBLJC NOTICE Notice Is IMreby given to c....Siton 111111119 cl1lm1 •1>alnst th• sel4 de<e-dtnt to llM u ld cl1lms In th4t office of the c,.rtt 01 the 1forn •ld court Of" to ~wnt them to the unoersloned •t lhe olfln Of STEWART, WOODRUFF. & FRAZEE -A\tOt'ntYS •I L.aw -IOSS Nonll Main St. -Suite 1020 In the city ot Santa Ana, In Or•~ County, Wlllch 1111~ office Is the pl1ce ot bu!Jness of !tie undersl'JM(I In all metlers pertain.. · 1119 to said es11te. Such c111ms with the STATEMENTOFWITHDltAWAL f'ICTITIOUSaUSINEU MC.SIMV vouch4t~ must be filed or l'ltOM PARTNEIUHI P NAM• STATEMENT presented IS 1tores1ld !#ltllln four OPE ltATI NG VNDE R The followlnt Pff"SOI\ IS doing Dini· montllutter the first publlcatlonol this FICTITIOVSIVSIHESSNAME" nessn: llOtlce. The lollowl"9 SMrson hu withdra-E X E CUT I V E SAUNA & 0.ttd Jlfl. 1, tt76 IS o1 unerel P•rlntr lrom the MASSAGE. 1121 W. South Street, UNITEOSTATESBANK ~rtnershlp oc>erali1>9 under tne llC· Anenelm. CA '2to'l Encutor of Ille wlll lilious t>uslneu name ol MADERA ~otlly Ml• Seawortll, 1m W. ot wldde<tOent CREATIONS 11 2940 Gr•ct Une,C.OSll Llncoln No. 14,Anahelm,CA'l290l STEWART, WOODltVf',., l'ltilEE Mesa. Cl lltornta. Ns bvSlneu Is condU<ted by ll!l In-AIWMV ... t·UW The flclttlous business n1,.. stat•· dl1tl~1 ... __ ,~ "••woflh ttssNefUIMllll St. ment l0t the partnerS/'ltp was filed on ....,..,.,.y _,. s.tte 1m 1.2 .. 1s 1ntl-..CountyolOranoe This state,..nl wotS filed wlltl the ~""' CA'210I Full Name 6lld Address of the Pwfwn Ownty Clerk 01 Or1nge County on Publl~ 0<1nge Coast Dally Pilot, Wlllldrewlng: Dt<emtlff 11• lt7S ,._,.. .JM!.•. 13,20,21, lt7• 24-16 Siiiy M. •nd Jofln L. Newton, ?224 Vlst• Ho 9er, Newport Beech PubllSlled Ore~ Coesl Dally Piiot, lltornle '26'r0 DI<. 1•. 23, 30, 197hnd J1n. •· 1t7• P UBLIC NOTICE Sl9neo S.llyM,NeWlon,_, •nl·7S ------5..,_1-... ~----- Pl.tbHsl-..d Orin~ C0otst Delly Piiot. NOTlCE TO CltEDITOltS <. 23,30.endJ•n.6, 13, 197S 4114·15 PUBLIC N~CE SVPllUO" COUltTOFTHE v aa STATS 01" CALI l'OltNIA "°" PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMI NT Tiie followl1>9 person Is OOing busl· S-116.S neu»: NOTICE TOCltEDITOltS THE PLAYERS EDGE, 41'2 CMn· SV .. IE"IO" COUltTOf' THI pus Ortve, Suite 8·2, Newport 8e1<h, STATE 01' CALI l'O"NIA fJOlt C.lllornl•'2..a THE C:OVHTY 01" O"ANGE OoMld E. Dav. ass M•Qelllf, C.OSt• THECOUNTYOl"OltANGE A.esM7 In Ille Malter ol the Estete ol ELIZABETH 8 . HINES also llnOWl\CIS ELIZABETH BRUCE HINES also llnown es ELIZABETH B. HINES, OtcNsed. . A·tffel Mesa. C.lllOrnle 91626 SVPERIORCOURTOFTHE In th• Metter ol thir Estett of This business Is conducted by.,, In. STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR OONAt.O R. SMITH, Oeceued. dlvkkill. Hotlca Is hereby 9lven to creditors hlvi"9 C11lms 19alnst Ille sal4 ~ dent to lllt said clelms In the ottlce of Ille clert of the elortsald court or to prewnt them to the undersigned at the olflce of HARRIS ROBI SON -Al· tomty 11 LAw -550 So, Fl-r Sl , Suite t10. In It.. city of Los Angeles. In L~Angeles County, wlllcll 111t..-Offlce Is the lllKt of buslneu of the un. dtnlgned In 111 maners 1Mrutnl119 to wld tstlle. Suell cl•lms w1111 the ntcftS,lry voucMrs must ~ II~ or present~ •s •lores•ld within lour monthsalter tllt first publlc1tt0not this notice. THECOVNTYOF OA ANGE NOi iet Is h4treby Qlven to c....Sll°" OonaldE.Oay No. A·l'°'4 i..v1119 clelms •o•lnst th• said «Mte-This st•te1Ntnt was flied with the NOTICE 0 F HE A It IN G 0 F <lent to file said cl elms In Ill« office of County Clerk ol Orange County on PETITION FOii PROBATE OF WILL the Cl•rk of Ille 4,IOrewld court « lo Oecem~ 19. 1975. A N D F 0 A L E T T E A s present them to the underslQneCI II the FS01W TESTAMENTARY olllct of BOYLE. A.TWILL ANO Pl.tbll!.MO OrMge C0otst Daily Piiot. Estate ol CARL F, SCHUHOt.Z, ROBINSON, Attorneys 11 I.Aw, 170 Oec.13,30,lndJln.6.1.J, 1'7S _, .. 15 OeceeH<I. South Euclid Avenue, In the City of------------NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal P•saden1, In Los AnQtltS County, PHYLLIS H . SCHUHOLZ lln 111~ Miich lltttf" office ls Ille pt•u of busl· PUBLIC NOTICE herein• ~tltion for Probate ol Wiii and neu of Ille unotrslone<I In 111 "'9tt•rs ------------tor 1ssu1nce ol Letters TeslaM<l'fltaryto per11lnl11Q lo wld tsllte. ~II clllms S-t4S2 the pelllioner reference to Wll1Cll ts with tne MCeuery 1tou<hers must be SUPEltlOlt COVltTOFTHIE ~ lor further particulars. and Illa! Ille<! or presented IS •lor-lcl within STATE0FCALIF09'HIAl'Olt the lime Ind P••ce ol hearlngtht sa~ ,_months alter,,... tint Pllbllutlon THICOUNTYOFOAANGa lllS been set for J•nuary 20, 1976,1110:00 of ttlls notice. He. A~> a.m .. In Ille courtroom of Department Oeted DK. t 1, lt7S N 0 TI CE 0" H EAR IN 0 0 F Dlttd Jon. 2, 1976 PAV LA. HINES. J R. E"'lll« of t"41 wl II ol »Id decedent PUBLIC NOTICE -$-tW NOTICI TO CltEJ)ITOltS SVP•a10" COURT OP~ JTATE 01" CALI l'OltNIA PDlt TH•COVNTYOPOaANOE .... ,. In tt.. Matter of tM Est•I• of HAZEL f'. FOR DER, OtcHsed. Notice ls hereby glvet1 to cM!ton hiving cl1lms ~Inst Ille wlcl dice. dent to file wld cl1lm1 In tM olflc• of tlle clertc of the oforuald t-1 or to pre1t11I 111em to !tie undersigned attn.. olfk9ol LESLIE MANN,Jlt.,AtwMy al Law, 2040 l'lortll Glrvev Aw., In tht Oty . of Pomon•, In Los Aftll9IH Cou!rty, W'llldl 11ner ottlce Is tlle 111- 0lf business of tM u!MMrslQn«I In •II 1Ntters pet1elnlnt to wlcl eslMe. Such claims with lhe necess.ry VOUCMr-s n.Jlt be flltd « pnwnted n ofofesald wltllln four montllS after the first pullllt1tlon ol tllls notice. Dated OK. 11, 1'75 MARIE E. GOL0f'AR8 E11tcutoroftMwlll ol wlcl decedent. LESUIMANN,.llt.. -N9rtll oe,..., Aw. ,.,.......,CAtt7'7 P\ltlllstltd 0rlf'l9l Coast Deity PUot, DK.1,,23,J0, 197S•ndJ1n,6, "" 411'-1S PUBLIC NOTICE NO TI Cl 01" SALE 0~ ltEAL PltOf'EltTY AT f'ltlVATE SALa ASAVNIT He.P•tt~ S.,...lef' C:.Ur1 ..... St.-te tf Cllli.nll IW *C-IYltfLMA"'9tft In Ille Matter of the Es!Alt d JAMES HARRISON CRAVENS, Otcused. Notice ls hereby Qlv•n that \lie -derslgne<I wlll sell •t prlv•I• wit, on Of" lft.,. o. ttll dly of Jen ... rv. 1976,lt the otflc• of G. w. STACl(MA ... at Trust Reil Est1te Division ot Securll'I' l'Oaclflc H41tlonal S.nk, l3J South HOcie Street, 40th Floor, Los An<)eleJ, C.llfoml• 900S1, Telephone '1).71t9. County of Los Angeles, Stele of c..t lfoml1, to the hlgllest and bt5l 1116-dtr, and subJect to ~onfirmetlon bVWIO S..S-lor Court, all tllt right. title •"' l""'"t of wld dec~•se<I 11 tllt tlrnr ot ONtll and all !he rlgllt, tltle Ind llC«ftt !NI the H1ale of said Cle<Hsed -«• quired by _,.tlon Of 11w or ottlerWlse, 114Mr ttllf'I Of" In addition to \hit of salct dKMMd, at Ule time of de1th, Ill onct to 1 " ••. M a ny younger serviceme n a nd their wives are often una ble to adequately manage their fina ncial ~ffairs, thereby provoking additional problem s for themselves . No. 3 Of said tO\lrt. at 700 Civic ~!er ROBERTL.SMITH-PETITION f'Olt PlllOBATE 01" WILL Dflw West, In the City of Sant• Ana. l.l.OYDS BANK CALIFORNIA A H 0 I" 0 It L £ T T E It S C.llloml1. E•ecut0tsof the TESTAMENTARY O.teoJ1nuery2.1'116 wlllof Sllddt<edeftt. E stl te o f BE AT RICE B. HAltltlSlllOllSON Altlnty.al·UW s.ttS. . ..,_rSt. s.i.t1o '-"A ...... s,CA •II !tie ~In ~II pr099rty sltOllM II\ -Ill• County of Or1nge, St•t• of' CMlfornla. 119rtlcul•rly de•rlbecl as "SOME JOINED the service b e cause they we re n eglected by socie· ty, and because of this they may b e poorly equipped e motionally to be parents ." T h e Army a nd Air Force a lready have in- a u g urate d n e w pro· grams to cope with the c h i ld a buse pro ble m , while the Navy said it is preparing to establish a s imilar prog ram for itself and the M a rine Corps. UNDER THE Army's plan, special "child a dvocacy program of • ficers'' will be assigned at virtuaJJy all bases. Pv1>11Shed Or•11Qe CoHt. 0.lly PlloC. Jan. 6, 13, 10, 27, 1916 2~16 JOt4NT.HEl.MICI( IOYLE,ATWILLIHltOalNSOH TOMLI NSON,Oeceawd. 22.SSoutllEUUlyptusAw. 11t5elltll£uc114Ave, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tlllt 11191"'"41,CUOlOI ... ..._1,CAttt•t DOROTHY JEAN MATZOORFF UI Jl6n-6907 Put>llSlle<I Or1nge CO.st Delly Piiot, (TOMLINSON) end OONLAO &. .Attoniey for "-litlOMr Oec. i., 21, JO. 197Slnd Jen. 6, 1976 TOMLI NSON his fifed herein 1 petition Pub11Sl'led Orange Coast Daily ~lot .cm.15 I« Prot>ate of the Wiii and for issuence .J.tnu.\ryS,6, ll, 1976 17-76 of Lellers Testemenlary lo Ille S-141' ------------1------------1 petitioner rtftrtnce to which Is molde NOTICaTOCltaOITO~ IOt' further particulars, 1nd 1Nt the He. A••MS t1rneandP1a<:tofheerln9theSMNMs ~lef'C..n•ftM ---.. -1-CT_l_T_IO_U_S_B_V_Sl_N_E_S_S __ 1--HO-,.-,c-£=""'"0 ... F ... P-U ....... L ... IC~H ... E"'A ... R ... IN ... G~I bten wt for J1nuarv ,0, 1976, at 10:00 =-~~·=:..: NAME STATEMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a.m., In the courtroom of Department E _. RVTH The followlnQ persons ere dolng busi· the Cily Counc 11 01 the City 01 Newport No. 3 ot wld court, at 700 Civic Ctnter In the Matter of the st1te ... Beech will hold 1 public h .. rlt19 rt· Drive 'Nest, In Ille City Of SWiii Alll, J~IACHVRCHILI... Oet•H•d. lleS$1S: N 1651 be" AN C.lltornl.t. ~le• Is lier.by given to cAdlton BRAMAN'SART GALLERY. 17912 9ardl119 OrdlNnce o. , 1119. DlledJanueryJ. l'76 hlvl"O clilms against tM Yid dtQ... Molgnolla St., Fount1ln V1lley, CA ORDINANCE OF THE CITY O ROalltT a. LISKE" Otnt to flle s.eld c11IMS In !tie office ot 92109 NEWPORT BEACH REZONING 1•N9'tt!H19'11"41Ave.,Sltit9S2t .,. Clerlt ot the aforesaid court or to IC.enne111JamesBr•man,llS1SSan. PROPERTY ANO AMENDIN G -I--' t....._ t• Tom1w Cir. Fountain V•lley. CA DISTRICTING MAPS SJ ANO 64 usA"991es,C.._... ="c!/~~t0~r:K~v'~e~'R 9210t (BROAOMOOR·PACIFIC VIEWI. "'==~:~~Oolst Delly PllOt J.MELCHIONE, AtlOl'neys 4ll uw, •17 Donna Joyce Bramen, 18515 S.nt• NOTICE IS HE A EBY FURTHER I 76 1 •• 21 I ...... 0 of T~··Clr.,Fount1lnV1lle",CA'2108 GIVENlllllllleY1dpubllchffrl119wlll Jlf'l ... ryS,t.,13,1916 ~. So1Ah0tlve5e.,SU ... 1 I nu,. ty -·--' Lot ...... " In LOS Ange .. s COul'lty, This business h conducted by • be held on the !?Ill dly of JlnUlfy, 1976, wtlidl i.tteor office ls tN otace Of bus!· g1ner1ll)M1nerS/'llp 11 the hour 01 7:30 P.M, In the Councll PUBLIC NOTICE """°' tM und9rslgned In •II~ Donna J. ereman O\ambers of Ill• City H111 of the Oty Of penalnlng to Mid estale. ~h clllms ThlJ st1temet1t was flled with tllt Newpof1 e.acll, Clllfornle. et which ______ s-_1_11_1 _____ wltll t11e necess.vy vouchers mm be County Clerk or Orange C4'.lnty on time ind plice lny Ind •II~ I~ NOTICITOC"EDITOltS fli.d fl' prtMMed as 1foresal4 •Ollln DI<~ 11, 1'75 IH"Hltd mey eppur •nd be llNrd SUPEltlOltCOUltTOl"THE four months aftet the first ~icMlon f'51563 thereon. STAT• O" CALI POltNIA fJOlt Of tflls f'lllClc:.. P\ibllshed Or1n~ C~st 01lly Pitot. Lluri L.aQlos nt•C:OUNTYOl'OltANGE O.tedDtcemw26, 1'7S DK. 16, 23, JO, 197Sand J1n ... ry6, 1976 City Cltrll .... A-e561t Robert L. Olurchlll 4127.75 CltyofNewportBH<ll In Ill• Metter of the Est•t• of E•cutorolltlewlll PubllSllecl Orente Colst Dilly Pltot, PATRIO< ELLER JAC08AZZI all• .i salddteedent ------------J1n ... rv•.1'7' •1·16 PATRICK E . JACOBAZZI •11• Ulll&.OAKLEV ... PUBLIC NO'l1CE PATRICK N, J11cou~z1 . •II• aDOA1tJ,MELOt10NE 1------------1 PATRICK NICHOi.iS JAC08AUI, ...,,..,..u.1w --,.-1-cr-n-1o_v_s _a_v_s1_H_E_s-=--s--PUBLIC NOTICE Ike "OBERT JACOBSON, o.c..-. •17 llMllllottve """' NAME STATEMENT Nolle• Is Mreby given to cMlton W.1111 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "°''°"'· t<>wit: 40/400CICN mlnerel Interest n te- n1nt In common of lands In Oranve County, Galllornl1, known • eotse LlndS dlKcrlbed es 1Nrce1s I to ' in-clusive E1111lblt A In deed ).U.U re- corded lS7'1•71 6+43 Offlclal ~onb ot 0rlllQ9 County, Cltlfoml1, Giiiy In to fer ~ said Interest 111trt1lns to the .001"' declm1I l11te,u1 roy•lty re-c.lwd "'°"' Stlftdard 011 C.O-v Of C..llfoml• tor their oll IHS>K kl--. u B70and871. T ... ms of wit cesll In lawful money of tN united St•les on conllrmetlon of s1le, or p1rt c1sh end b•lence evidenced by note secur~ by Nlort~ or Trust OHd on Ille pniperty IO IOld. Ten Ptretnl of 1moun1 bid to be dlt!OSlt· edwltllbld. 81cts..-offen to be lnWl'ltlnglid,..11 llt reulwd et the •f«itWld Offla .. llllY llme •tttf" the first publlutlon haAof lllld before date of Y le, Ott.cs OtcMiber 2•. 1t7S SECURITY PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK By A. C. Perez Trust Offlc~ Ea<ut0t ot tt>e Esta1e of said OKtdilnt JOSE PM J. JONES I 1MI-.. Ot.,,,.k ..w. Lal~c:a· ..... ·•ts Tel:--. ...,._, .. £~ P\IOllllle<I Ot11>99 Cont Diiiy Piiot, DI<. 30, 31, 197S.nd Jin.•. 191' 4'1'-7S PUBLIC N011CE "The problem calls for identification of child abuse cases, protection of the child's righ ts and professional help for the pare nts ," the Army circular said. The fOllowlnQ ~rsons •re doing M l· s.1449 hlvt1>9 clllms 991lnst the said dt<:9-.._.,....._c:atlfwN••H ness .i: SUPEltlOA ClOV"TOf'THE cMnt to fl .. said clalms In the office of PllllllW<I 0rlftg4t Coast O.lly Piiot, --HO~T=,,..,c,..,E"'o"'F~F=1,.,.N,..,D'"'1°"'til~G""!O,..,,."'NO.,..,.._ STORE SE RV IC ES CO. STATEOf'CALlf'OltNIAflOlt ttle cltf1l of tM aforesaid court°' ID 0.C. lO, 1'7S and Jaft, 6, 13. 20, 1976 SIOHIFICANTEf'l"ICTC*TH£ 11'SS Slly Perk Circle; Bulldi1>9 17, THE COUNTY O" OltANGli pr-..nt them to the underslgn9d It Ille .fm-15 OVlltONMENT SulteG,lrvlnt,Calllornle92114 A .. SISI offlC! of STEARNS, GROSS & ------------Jenu.ry,,lflt.. Ops Newport Auto Su1>9ly, Inc., • tn Ille Matt~ ol the Estlt• d E. MOORE, Attonw~ at Law, 15111 E. PUBLIC N011CE Cellfoml• COt'Por•tlon, 1"02 WtS1 Goist RUTH HINK ELMAN, 0.CHs.cl. Whlttl.r .. .,,... In lM City Of Wlllttier, In Hlgllwn, Newport 8el(h, C.llfornla Notice Is hereby 11lven to creclllors LosAntR191Couftty,*fllchlatterdfi<•t-------------, ALL ALLEGED '2660 hlvlnt cl1lms 1galn11 1"-sakt dtclt-Is ti. p41C• of buslness of the un· NOTtCaOl'SALEOP cases This ~nus ls conducted by I cor: dtnt 10 file said c11lms In tllt office of dtrllttl*l In all matters penalnlng w PaltSONAL ""OPalllT'W' O( Child abuse WilJ re· porltlon. Ille cl..-k of the elorewld court« to Wld estate. Such Claims with llM N9 ... _..541 · • t• b OPS NEWPORT prtwlrt them to the undersigned 1t tllt _,.., ~hen mu" be meet or In tlle Slloerl« Court of tho Stat• of qwre examina lOn ya AUTOSUPPLY,INC. office of RUSTON, NANCE, Pf9Wnted IS aforeuld wltllln 1°"' C.lltornle,fortlleCountyolOrange. military doctor. After an This S1atement wes fllecl with \ht McCORMICK & DICARO -Attorneys rnonlhUft•rtlleflrstpul>llullonofthls lntNmat1 ... ottheest1teof VERNA ,.__ • notice initial exam, a n Army County Clerll of Orange __ .. yon 11tLlw -2SSSE.011pm1nA..,..,ln"'9 o.t.fcsoec tt 1975 M. 81t0SSIA, aka VERNA MARY l d Dec.miler 22, "75. city of Fullerton, In Or1119t County, · ~ A JACOBAZZJ BROSSIA. 0.CMMd. hOS pit a C 0 mm a n e r FMltt Miich 11tter olfke ls the place o1 bull· CH"IS y ·I of ~IC9 Is hereby given ttlet the I.ft. may report the ,incident P\lbllshtd Oronge Coast 01lly Pllo1, nns of the undersll)f'led In 111 metters Ac:~~tr·.::~ dllrt19Nd wlll sell It prlvalt sale, to the t 0 la W e n f 0 r Cement DK. 30, 1975 Ind J1n. •. 13, zu, 1Ylt pert1lnl119 to said tstete. Suell cllllms n•••NtsS.0 -..": a MOORE hlgflest Md llHt bidder, sublec1 to con. 4'1).75 wltll lht necHwry vouchers must be .... ""'-nrm1tlon of said Suoerlor Court, on« agencies, if n eceSSSry, 1-------------filed Of" prennled IS llOt'tsekt "'4Ulln lS111 a • ....u.r ...... • after Jan1,11ry 12th, 197'. •t the off le. ol Jn general. the Army PUBLIC N011CE '°"' montllS 111.,. the first Pllllllcatlon ~l-~Or...., ,.. __ t .,._,1 ..... HAAR\' V. GOZA, JR., 1111S OranQt, , olttolsnot•~ .--...... Mll9 ..-s ...... Y ,...,_, Norwell\, Clllfornle, 111 tlle rlQl'lt, title said its progra m isl-------=-4''"'1""90:------DlledJ1n.2.m• DK.16,U,30,197SandJll'l.6,lt'7' and Interest of said dt<t41Md et "'9 aimed at d eveloping SUPllltlOltCOVltTO,. HAROLOC.ELDER . 07S.?S tlmeofdNtll,tnd•llrlgtlt,tltle,andln-CALlfOltNIA En<Ulorof the will •K1 tlWll IN at. .. of Wld decffMd "emotionally h ealthy COUNTYOFOUHOE otseldde<tden\ PUBLIC N011CE ,_ ecqulred t:IY oc-•tlbn of 1-or families rather than re 7tlOvkC.fttef'Drlve... ltUSTOff,HAHCI, lllMfwlM other tMn or In addition to . s. ... M•,CA927tt MtCOttMIO< &DICARO SUNltlOttCOUltTO,.CAUIJOltNIA tNtehalddKMsed, et !tie tlrreofde-moving the child Crom CASE HUMHlt ,...,.., ... '".... COUNTVOPOUNM ""· hufld to •II !Nit certain~· the home and punishing sUMM6:S'1.!.T1t1tlAG1> =~Aft. . =.a..".':'S:::a ~-:.:~:':~"*""'.; "°· the parents.'' '"re tM marrl199 of "-\ft~: "'*11119<1 Orllft99 ColSl Ollly Piiot, ..c)ttCHANO•Ol'NAMll 2'1tol1, Sertes "°"Cit Second LA0WW INDIVIDUAL AND OOU.Y CAIA .. S SMITH end Re~ •••• 1~.20.21, m• ,,..7' tn tlle Maner of"" ApplkalJGrl of MlbMutuet,. llOnoPfollt OWporlltlon, dllnt:SCOTTCHARLESSMITH st!AN f'ATltlCK WIL80URNI! and •OlflfWllllOWllOfttlon. group therapy, counsel· a::T~~i_::.:.u.:.="' ,.:-_...:: PUBLIC N011CE :·=~ ~~~="!~.::: 0trt~ic~!·~:.·~:ti:-~:!,'~~11~ i n g a n d c b a n g e 0 r ,... ...... """' ..... " , ... ,....... tNlr natural motMr. For 0-. ., f'OurldatlOll,. -·profit corporltlon •• e nvironme nt are listed .-.. • .. , •. "•Id, .. lllf"""9Utft NOTICET~·~::so1T011S ... s:=; Pttnc11 wi111oume _,DI-. ce~~C.:.~~.:~':'.;1.cttotN,,,ies, 8S forms or treatment. -::.Sol UstM N ll .. -.m ....... El NII. A•7U ... ,.. Wll~ Nive flltd 1 petition In ~·I-afld r-t0ulttlons of Mid wr· Army Officials alSO are ~.....-•cl411rctfttr•\H.sln-~lwc:-1.... this COUrl lot an Order •llOwlng pOl' .. IOfl. ontlllt tllt O..,.,er ol t11e UM i 1 h ·-le• -MS 4tH U•. """""' ~•efClllftf'Alafler pltltloMr to Chtnttt lhtlr -frwm 9ftdoc:cupancyoft,trtllndwtlllngun. pJ aon n g l e ep One ........ JO .. at.LA1la l111oinM<IM .. c-ty.tOr.... $Nn,..tt1ckWlltloumundO'-lllittle lt,~tHML4t2,Trac:t6204,lntlle "hot lines" m a nned by -lleM· In the Metter of the lstatt of Wllbtunlt to Seen P•trkll Ntltlfl alld Coutlty of Oranoe. State Of c.tlfomlt, . d I t tTethellleuionoent GERTRUD! WINPIBLD, ~--Hel-.T"OtC\lvetY. atptl'INPf'tCOt'dedlnBoM, •• P19n tra1ne vo un eers, •• TM""''-'"umect•l*ltton M<MI04AE~ ... o•RT"uoa w. u 1s 11ant1vorGef'Mt11ata11,.,_ ,.""" t2111C1vt1~. ot Mltcen-..parents anonymous" CGllC.'.,.nlng vour m•rrle09. You mtY MCMICHAl!l..0.C..Md. ~In tlle IMUtr •'-"*'• lttcorOt.. In V.. olfl<t of tllt County S for g roup fl,.•wr1tten~wl1111n •ci.no1 MoUu 11 llertlly e lwtft to tlle,... ...._ ttlls aurt In OttlW1-1t __..,ClllMlctc-ty, program ... dltethlttlllssummontlsMnl'IKIGn credlton ha\11119 c•••-.............. , .. JOOCh,l<Ctll~Otlvew.tt AL.SO KNOWN AS: toot.I VI• t he rap y a n d o t be r '°"" 1c1-...... .. flM ...-c.1ai-"' .. s.u AN, a111fof'lll.., .,. .,._., a. Mmr1,... ~ Hiiia. c.aot. eduCltiOna) approaches 11. II YOU fell to f11e a -ltten tftllttclertltftlleef""*-1 "" .. 11 •'cltdl a,lft., .... 9*'MO In .-it ... tfM Mlalt wlll 9'ft .. th Within wctt lllM .,_ llitfllUlt ., '° Pr'tttflt "*" '° .. _.,•.-et ..,. ...,. UUM, ".,,., ...., IWW,""' llld C91111ic.tta, tt1t tel,_119 ltlrnl Ill ••to help parents cope =-M'Qred9ftdthec0:.,..1Ny....., the olflct af CH"ISfO,...lt L. Mld......_fw~af-lllNcl tlldllftlt; with the frustrations ol • f\ldOl'Nflt c.ont•lnlllQ lftJUll(tl.,. or CARPINTllt, IHT, lftf, ... _.It ... ~~_... ..... ~*..-s. IMfft. alrQlld. • I di I lonof ~ KltlEGElt, cm Or .... tt....c. P. 0. •• ...-.--...... _, -11-r. dl-"-•har, TV <•l>I• encl raising a family.• =~~ c:,:i, ~ ... tm '" .. aty .. "1---. 1111 ..,.,,.. .. .._,_.,.."'""' tnnata -.ca.......,,•en1..,._,... The Air Force pro· 'dllld~ att-y·~1ees co.cs.W. "'_.*CttYM•,ftldl 11n1r11Mmts Dllll't ,..._ • 1••u .. ., .. .....,.., .,...,..c.,..,.1:1r •. • • ~i.t 11e ' ...,... 1:1y ... ptecefll -..i...u., IN"''*" .. ,.. ~_. ..... Iii""' <*IM'r • Termuf Ml.c•lt In i.wtut ,,......, gram lS similar. An Air :;:"~~ ""'""~;::; r~i 1n t1te' ..,.,,,,....._,.,.._ .. _......_ ..._w.e1WM4ltor1oWCOM101tlve .. UllltM stan • cent1r-m.i• .. Force reoulatlon pro--nlYwnaftlflhHOH .. 1.HlllQlf-~ Sucl\ Cl•llllt wltl\ t .... _..,., ..... ..,..,toei.cs.vofat141'-'1fte. ,.... Ttll ,.,, ...... tmovnUW • 11t • .,..... _,_.. mnt ._ fl!M • ........... a It It f\ll'ttltf' OfOtfed tNt Ille CMriey .._,,Mw4tll M. vides for ~stabllsh.metlt •""'*1Y.~oCher,.IMf. M .......... .itlllft ... ,...._,....., .. a..119'1911 fftllll notlC•af.,.......... .... • .,.,.,.. hi"' In wrttl"O .,.,,.411 of child ~dvocacy com· ...;.::-.. '::::" ... ~ .. fl"'11111M1c.11tlefttttt111Nt1ct. ttma of 0111 llMrlflO •• ""iwturt1 •,_._.at uw ...... 1e1 ott1et.,. . nd · • OIMC.C-w».ms falllaf,LflNfl,..ulWllllol#'f'lttt· ..., u,,. •tw t,,. 11'1I !Mlllc.ltlen m1ttees directly u er ........., .. ";;"':,:!"",.......· DAUAHCOTTH«.Ma LYl'IWI "•Ill Wllt>ourne,"""' \Ile ""'90falld'9foru.-tt111e. base commanders. "~~ .. ~' • llK\Mrel1Mwt11 ... e.11tr-1tK11,c.amom11.. o.tt0 tlllt m1t •• .. o.c.n•. i ll ...... Ml $!JOHN°""' ...... ~ Dtt9110.~emWl7,1'7S ms. These comm e(!S wlll :;~1:.1..,.·ceion otll'A• ett••nohtlf' ._ u•H'"••· , S.\~UELO"EIHN include medical ;:,t•J, A IULUVA• • ~ JVOOI 04' THE • ...t • • ATTCMIMIV AT I.AW SUP•JUO,_ COUltT cb.aplaJn, HCUnl~ c Mft~VO.WUT ~.u,........... WAY-.ltl.Mta.AS••Y and Special HTVICetJ • MMM.CAU,.... 1 _........... ........ ,.. • fl ft CJ'Ml .... Mlt 1 P.O. ... ._ ...,.,......_,_ .... ce'I. llTITtOlllll .---.a........... ...,._, ,....,._, Detalls of the Nsvr· ~..., "011 P Niii"*' ~.,. c...st Dally ...... nt1 crw1 .,.,* l(arlne proa:ram 1Ull are . .._.., .... onnwt c:oett o.i1y """'-o.c.. •· ms .,,. .Jan ... ·~ -. ..,. "'*'' ..... ~ ..... OMat Dlf'1 "tot. belnldeveloped. _,.,,ll.-.11,m• .,.,, I •ws ,,._,.,., •-.ao.v. ,,,. •1• ' County of Orano-Eti1tlroMnentet Ml1141Qement ""11ftCY Housing PltnJ Branch P.O. 8o114108 s.nte Alie, <:allfomle t21ot TO ALL INTEffE$TEO AGENCIES. GROUPS ANO PERSONS: The County ot Or •noe prOSIOlft to -QIMI the U.S. Department of HOusifl9 •rid UrlNln Development to rtlMM Federal funds under Tiiie i of the Holn-lng •nd Community Oevelopnont Ad °' lt74 IP~ n-3131 to be llse<I tor the following project: Unincorporated Art•: t.os Rios HIUorlul Site Acquisition Coootf"41tl.,. Venture City ot San Juan ~r-: Tiie ecquhltlon of the Montenn AdDtJe on Los Alos Stt"Mt In the Los Rias HI• torlcll 01!.trkt or Orange Covnty. S.. Juan Cac>lstr-. Or41n99 Co., SU,000. II his eaen deterlftlned tlllt wch -QUtSt for rt1"M of IUflds Wiii ,,_CM-Slllute an ectlon slefllfkHttv ~,,. "'9 CIVIiity of tl\9 hUfNlll .._,,.,._.,. and, accordlflOly, lllt CoNnty of or1n91 decldtd not to prto•r• 111 lMll'ellmefttal tnipac1 St.I_,, -d9r tt.. Net tonal E11otl,_,_.. .-..iq Act Of"" IPL tt-ttO). Tllt ,..._tor WCI\ dKlstoft 1111t .. pt'tfMIN WCh ~ment.,.. u folloM: Tllt tc411lsltlon of tM 1li., ..wcfl la 11-..0 Oft the N•tloflal "•olster • HI .. tortcat Pieces, wlll result In °'1IY temporary mecslflcttlons to tit• environment ttur1119 re1tor1Uon. An f;nvlrori,.,tnt•I Rn•-IOilwd ~tl"9 tllt within PfOJtct '* ...,. mllff t:ly tlM above·fllmtf C-Cy Wiiiett Otc'lll'nents the tnvl,_,..,. review or the proje<t tntt niore fully Mts rortft "" ,..._ ""' WC1' Statemtnt 11 not nci11lr-•tt. Tl\la Elwlf'*W'lltlltal RtV!aw lttcent It 01t Hit .. tM ...._ Mllfffl IM It ....... _..,.,,.,,<~...Cloe ... ~ ........... t it EMA ........ ..... 8rlftCI\ ... "· .,._,_.,, s...e ~ ff'Mll:•llD s:•Htry, ... fwttlet-1~ ,_...,.., Mlt~lt .......... M~ • ..,,.., .. ftlt,..... -......... .,....,. .. ,, ..... All I~ ........ .,.... .... ............... ,., ............ ..... -lfwl)tf M IUC!mlt Wl'I""" C.-ter CltiWlderet .... by ... ~ .. .. £tM "'-11191'1-~tl. ~ .. ... ""COIM'ltfl41 ...._ .... taa!W!ll .. ... ....tfflt(lflt!J, Oii MtltfWW......, 2', t.,._All Mftc.Ml!MMS ......... "'"' ... ~'"· Tiie "......,"'" .. ,__. ... ,.... .... , ...... ""*~ ...... .........,.., ....... .. wltl\lft r•JeU .. rlor to tM .. ,. ~ ...... ... .... ~ ... ,,.... ,...... D4*flct ., . ...,.~ ...... c.t ... .., ,. .... DrMlll CAMt DllfJ ....... ............. DM c I j J J ' -1.-. ·~e 9'AS IH'S POP'cEY6S t Pop ~VES ~ .. s; He's a Pro At Dealing I InDfath LOSANGELES (UPI)-Inthe shadow worl~ of the mercenary' soldier, Jim ~gel is a pro. He knows i~all -weapons, de· molition, parachutes, guerilla Guns for b · e are big business tactics -ho~o kill. · in a world fr mented by hatred. That's Rang 's ace in the hole, batred."lt's what makes him tick. "EVERY NOW AND then r have to go back and see the blood," be saJd. "I still got to stay loose. "I'll do it unr,1 I get the hate out of me, I guess, ' Rangel is !lexican-American, raised in a sm~l town in Wyom- ing. "There waj a lot oJ prejudice," he said. "I g'ess it was the way l was brough• up. That's where it started.'' Rangel isf29. He was educated mostly by µte Army. He spent more tbaq nine years in the· service, leaving in 1969 with the rank of E·f, and injuries which made it impossible for him to re· turn to the ktion in Vietnam. "I TOOK THE PHYSICAL and couldn't pa&s it. So I said the hell with it. A major I know ap- proached me lhen and asked m e · i! I wanted to ~o the same type of thing. "He gave nie $21500 cash and a • plane ticket rand I was on my way." Since then1 he has fought and trained otbeas in the sciences of · war in most of the Middle East and several countries in Africa, including EUiopia and Biafra. He wants to goto Angola. He ended ~ in Saudia Arabia on bis first asagnment, be said. "NO WOMEN, NO booze. I t aught parathute training. At this time I finally found out I was working for ~mething called the Arab Republc of Nations. I was getting paid very good mooey. "J got aloag with the people. I speak Arabic -I learned it in Special Forces -and look like an Arab.'' He bas been working off and on for seven years on a college degree, but can't stay with it very long at a time. "I have a damn good job offer, too. It isn't the money. I've had everything and I've Jost ev· erything. I went down to Mexico and blew everything l had. Now. I'mbrok~." HE WORKED IN Jordan train· • ing the El Fatah. He once signed up to fight for Israel in the Sinai. "But they didn't want to pay me enough and I went to work for the Arabs. I used to get paid by the bead. I learned that in Viet- nam.'' .. By the head" means he brought back from raids a part of the kill. usuaUY a band, and was paid on the spot. "Sometimes we would bring back two hands and use the other ·one later," l:\e said, "but they got wise to that. .. I Air Force Suit Filed OGDEN. Utah (UPI> - A couple ue suing Hill Air Force 'Ba•e·s medical de- partment /or $1 million, al· leging mi•treatm ent which resulted " birth detects to theirdauihter's hand. Wllllam Bradshaw, m. int a suit in U.S. District Court for his 2·year.old· daughter. Clndy, 4llesed the bue'a medlcal taclllty "careleuly. negllgently and recklt1sly" treated bis wife. Linda, wltb X-ray equipment and drugs dur· Ina the nm three months other preanancy. Bradshaw said the com· blned treatment caus!IKI mutaUont in' the dcvclop-lnC fetus that resulted in the "co"n1enltal de· · fonuatlon of tbe cblld 's rtlbt baud.,. ARUNGTON, Va. (UPI) -A tbree·alarm fire damaged a cafet eria and hallway and caused smoke ..damage to four noors at the Pentagon. but of· ficials reported no "critical or :;ensitive materials" wete destroyed. Arlington firem en, hampered by tbe ~moke and com· munications problems, fought the blaze for more than three hours Monday before putting it out. A spokesman for the General ·Services Administration, the agency which operates govern- ment buildings, said the blaze started in some crates and boxes containing furniture in a cafeteria on the second floor. Food Cut 011 BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Christian militiamen defied a Palestinian ultimatum today and prevented a food convoy from reaching two refugee camps on the edge of Beirut for the third time in 48 hours, a police spokesman reported. The spokesman said two trucks loaded with 30 tons of flour were disabled by machine-gun fire and grenade explosions. Al Fatah Yasir Arafa~·s guerrilla group', had been trying since Sunday to send truckloads or sugar rice dry milk a nd flour to the c'ampg: which house more than 25 000 Palestinians. ' Trial Reopened NORTH PLATTE, Neb. (UPI) -News media will be allowed to cover the trial of accused mass murderer Erwin Charles Si· mants after a ll. The judge changed his mind. Lincoln County District Judge Hugh Stuart first order ed the ( IN SHORT ) courtroom closed to reporters and spectators on grounds news reports might inCluence potential jurors. Later, however, be said his fears were gro\Dldless, and , opened the courtroom for the re- mainder of the selection of 12 jurors and two alternates. FBIS11ed From Wire Services ALEXANDRIA, Va. -A woman has sued the FBI for $350.000 because of a raid on her apartment in a search for newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst. The suit by Elizabeth Norton alleges she "became hysterical and opened the door" upon being threatened, and that the men would not identify themselves for 15 minutes as they searched her apartment. The FBI has said it was responding to a report that Miss Hearst was in the house. The bureau said Miss Norton's room· mate, who was not at home at the time, resembled the fugitive newspaper heiress. E•rope 1t'lalJfped STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UPI> -Furious hurricane-strength storms that walloped Europe for three days headed out over the Baltic today, leaving at least 79 persons dead -including 26 sailors los t in the perilous North Sea. The killer storms, ac- companied by driving snow and rain, cut a path of death and destruction across Europe, Scan dinavia and Britain. Damage to property, crops and livestock was estimated in the millions of dollars. Pupil Stabbed In High School Drug Projec~ GODFREY, Ill. CAP) -An Alton High School student was in critical condition today from a stab wound suffered while performing In a skit with three students for extra classroom credit. Ned Nillsson, 16, of Godfrey, was stabbed once through the heart by a fell ow stud e nt , authorities said. A piece of towel· wrapped board taped to young Nillsson·s c he.<tt to blunt t.be blow fell away at the moment of lm· pact, authorities said. OtriciJlS said the weap0n used was a knife of some type but lts length and description were un· available. ' The students were prodtfc1ni ' and filmlng a s kit Saturday at Rocky Fork Park near Godfrey at the time of the accident. Blaine Bonynge, Alton hJah school principal, sai.d the stu· dents were working on a non· mandatory assisnment for a creative medla class. Bonynre said the teacher, whom be declined to tdenury. was unaware of the content of the skit wblcb simulated a drug transactl.on that went awry between the pusher and buyer. • \ , Tuadmy. Ja11uar118. 1918 DAILY PILOT 119 Angola: Another Vietnam? f Opinions Vary Wulely on U.S. Involvement in African Nation By PETER AR.NE'IT ,.,...,.....o... J rt •• ls Angola a mirror-image of Vietnam for the UnltedStates? It depends on who you are listening to. Secretary of State Henry Kiss· Inger argues eloquently that it is different, yet uses language re- markably similar to that chosen by the late President Jobn F. Kennedy to justify American aid to Vietnam in the early '60s. CONGRESSIONAL CRITICS declare that Angola and Vietnam are look·alikes but concede some differences in time, place and politics. What is the truth? A look at both countries sug. gests that in some significant ways As i a's Vietnam and ( NEWSANALYSI ) Africa's Angola are very much alike, while in other ways they are markedly different. ~.; :.5.-·:.·; ·:.:-\".=.;;~'.;';';~~~:·.:.~::;'.':'·:.;:·:·~;:.: ... ·.--·."" ... -.. 'l"I. ~~::;~ S.W. AFRICA Their histories began to merge in the Middle Ages. UPI NewsrNp Portuguese adventurers were the first Westerners to reach both .countries, exploring the coast of Angola in the 15th century. and sailing across the Indian Ocean to Vietnam 200 years later. THE PORTUGUESE r e · mained in Angola until last Nov· ember. It was another European J>C\Wer, France, that eventually co\onized Vietnam, finally de- parting in 1955. TIDE TURNING? -Despite a massive arms buildup by Soviet-backed forces in Angola, the civil war appears to be swinging in favor of pro-Western forces. Territory between two dotted lines is approximate area held by Soviet-backed Popular Movement. Arrows indicate points at which this faction has suffered setbacks at hands of pro· Western forces. The French found the Vietna m ese to be a proud, nationalistic people with 2,000 years of written history and an elaborate governing system that was allowed to continue function· ing under coJ,onial rule. The Por\uguese found in Angola groups of warring tribes who in five centuries of rule were allowed few opportunities for self-improvement, and who en· tered indepe ndence im· poverished and illiterate. BOTH COLONIAL MASTERS offered their subjects Christiani· ty, and it was an ardent Roman Catholic, Ngo Dinh Diem, who formed the first government of South Vietnam in 1955. The three leaders ot the con· testing factions in Angola are the sons of Protestant lay preachers, and were educated in mission schools. The independence of both countries was preceded by years of war against colonial rule. With self-rule came civil war. being a puppet of Western powers. It was the Communist Vietcong that caught the im· agination of the Vietnamese peo- ple. THOSE ARGUING THAT the United States s hould leave Angola completely alone, point to Burma, Indonesia and other Asian countries as examples of the possible !uture course of events. With no political faction strong enough to take over complete power, these countries eventual· ly evolved governments that were able to contain the Com· munist minorities. Angola is seen as a similar situation . Even though the !action backed by the Soviet Union and Cuba -the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola, headquartered in Luanda -is seen as the likely victor il foreign support is dropped, many experts doubt this group can establish total, permanent power. IN VIETNAM, THE Com· munist party harnessed Vietnamese nationalism for a real social revolution. But nationalism and ideology are less factors in Angola than tribal • politics, and the civil war maps of today bear close resemblance to the colonial charts of tribal re· gions drawn up unde r Portuguese rule centuries ago. So central rule from Luanda most likely would be contested. The geopolitical picture is vastly di!f erent. The South Vietnamese Com· munists, fighting fi rst Saigon and then American troops, had the backing of North Vietnam, which secretly smuggled arms and men over jung le trails. North Vietnam was in turn supplied by her giant Communist neighbor, China. The Soviet Union also s hipped w ar goods t o the Vietnamese through China with relative secrecy. BUT THE ANGOLAN group currently aided by the Soviet Union and Cuba bas no such easy routes. In fact, the immediate Angolan neighbors of Zaire and Zambia support the two other factions -The National Front and the National Union -as does South Africa. which administers IN ANGOLA, AS IN the former Southeast Asian colonies of Burma, Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines, a ll the nationalist groups now compet· ing for power fought against the colonial government, and can lay claim to the revolutionary man· tle. Not so in Vietnam where, dur· ing the long and bloody war against the French, the Vietnamese Communist party under Ho Chi Minh completely took over the revolutionary mov· ement. Supporter Def enJs Korean Evangelist When the battle for South Vietnam began, the American· backed Saigon government found itself unable to shake the label of BOONVILLE (UPI) -Noah Ross thinks criticism of Korean evangelist Sun Myung Moon and h1s Unification Church is unfair. Ross, director of a ranch owned by the church here, denies charges that the organi~ation tells youngsters theii; parents are Cuts Suggested In State Bureau SACMENTO (AP) -Elaborate newsletters, fat budgets and unneeded employes typify the state's in· formation services, says California's first chief information officer. The report by Harvey Yorke, quoted in the Sacramento Bee, recommended that the 150 full-time state information officers be reduced to about 100 and redistributed. YORKE, APPOINTED BY GOV. Ronald Reagan as chief of information services, was replaced last November by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s appointee, Fred Epstein. His report to Brown will be forwarded to the Legislature. The state spends about $4 million a year on information services, with "little or no apparent relation between the communication needs of the various pro gr ams and the staff authorized,'' Yorke said. He added that some departments had far too many of· ficers and others far too few. FOR EXAMPLE, UNTIL RECENT cutbacks, the Department of Transportation had 20 information officers and the Department of Consumer Affairs one. The report also said: -Besides its own printing plant, the state has at least 10duplicatin1 centers employing 186 persons. -Ma ny publications cost too much because of ex· pensive printing, art work and photographs. The Depart- ment of Cottections spent $.1,600 for 1,100 copies of its 32· pa•e annual report. -MANY D EPABTMENT NEWSLETTERS are elaborate and costly aod contain too many feature articles. -The state baJ more ohotographtc equipment than it needs. In addition, the state bas a complete motion picture and vid eotape s tudio at the Department or Water Resources, but Yorke said he heard complaints that private filming would be cheaper. -Information officers appear to spend about half their · time on administrative tasks. The report said it wasn't clear how much of the material published b)' lbe state is needed. Jt recommended that departments share tn!ormallon officers and that Brown put Umlts on the state's information aervl~. l Satan, engages in brainwashing and requires converts to tum over property. OF THE RANCH, Ross says, ''There has never been and there never will be armed guards there." As for parents of young followers: "We do not want to alienate parents ... We have never res tricted anyone from seeing their parents.'' He adds: "Parents who claim that Rev. Moon is breaking apart their families should note that the American family bas been decaying for the last 15 years. ''IT IS CLEAR that it families. universities, churches and other institutions of today's society were meeting the inner desires and needs of man, then Rev. Moon would have no appeal." Ross said Moon "is one of the most honorable figures in the world. Who else bas been able to awaken the young people of America to morality and r esponsibility? "Church members are ln· spired to stop smoking, to stop using drugs and to dress in a clean.cut manner." Responding to claims that the evangelist wants to rule the world, Ross said: "REV. MOON IS accused or desiring to rule the world in the name of God. This is true to the • extent th3t be wants God to r ule the world, but it is also true that Rev. Moon supports anyone who is willing to guide the world in a direction of goodness. Ho wants to bring the world together by serving lt and solving the pro- blems, not by power politics or military coups." According to Ross, ''The charges of brainwashing and hypnotism are completely absurd. How can 'techniques' such as singing and participating in lectures and group discussion becorsl(lered bramwashing?'' ROSS SAID T HAT "from the first meettng, God ts d.iscu.otsed. but not Sun Moon because he ls not the main point. He i5 impor· tant, bul God is the key point.'' ' Southwest Africa on Angola•s soutbem bordtr. Only the Congo has sympathy for the so-called Marxist group, and it bas no dlrect access because the northern part of Angola ls controlled by oppo:stnc factiorus. The Soviet Uruon and Cuba · must, therefore, move in sup- plies ope.nly across lntemational borders, as did the United St.-tes in the Vietnam war. THE S TRATEGIC situation of Angola today is seen as vital to U .S. interests, just as Vietnam and the rest oC Jndochlna were more than a de- cade ago. President Kennedy, on March 23, 1961, read a statement to a press con!erence about a small. remote nation called Laos where several factions were fighting for • supremacy, one backed by the Soviet Union. ''It is this new dimension of ex· temally supported warfare that creates the present grave pr<r blem ... We strongly and un· reservedly support the goal of a ne utral and independent Laos. . .If these communist at· t acks do not stop the United " States and others will have to consider their response,,, K en· nedysaid. THOSE COMMENTS, WITH • the substitution of Angola for • Laos, were almost the text of re. : cent statements about Angola by _; Secretary of State Kissinger and ; President Ford. . U.S. government spokesmen · also have been using the "dorqino theory" for Angola. They argue that if it should fall to the Communist· backed side, then Zaire, Zambia and ultimately South A!rica might similarly be overwhelmed by leftist govern- ments. The same argument was used for two decades in Vietnam, with Thailand, Malaysia, the Philip· pines and Indonesia numbered among the falling dominoes. Events h ave proved this pre· diction wrong. · SUPPORTERS OF American involvement in Angola argue that victory for the Communist· backed side woutd give Russia a port in the South Atlantic and potential control of oil shipping routes. That argument is an echo of the early Vietnam years when those supporting U.S. intervention• argued that ports s uch as Danang and Cam Ranh Bay were .. integral to the defeMe of tho United States and should never be allowed to fall Into Communist bands Just as the U.S. government has perceived the threat to American interests in Angola as similar to the threat it saw in Vietnam, it has reacted not only with simnar rhetortc, bat-with similar actions. REVELATIONS 111AT secret aid was channeled to Angola through the CIA in early 1975 had a historical ring to them. Similar secret aid was sent to anti· Communist factions in Hanoi ln 1955, also through the CIA. Covert American entry into the Angolan war bas changed now to open requests for public support for that policy. But what took years to develop in Indochina has taken only months in Africa. The escalation of m ilitary help from all sides seems to be faster. too. The Vietnam example bas brought a new factor into the Angolan equation. That factor is the perception of f Ol"eign policy from within and outside 1tovern· ment. WHEREAS INVOLVEMENT in Vietnam received the un- questioned support o( U.S. gov. em.ment officials for years, a senior official in the U.S. State Department quickly resigned on: ly a few m onths after covert Angolan aid began because he dis· agreed with that policy. Congressional criticism and debate quickly fiowered when the CIA·Angolan connection was revealed, and the Senate bas vot· ed to cut off all aid. The House will consider the question in January. Congress h ad only slowly questioned the Vietnam war, finally cutting off funds nearly two decades after American in· volvement began. Newport Aide; Set to Return •! J ate Mynderse, director or I general services for the city ot NeY'J>Ort Beach who suffered a heart attack in November. will return to work Jan. 19. Wade Beyeler, actma general sel"Vlces dh;ector, said )(yndera.e received permission boom bis doct01' lo return to his Job on a part time bull. Mynderse was strlcba Nov 23. Beyeler bas been ad1aa bl bli placesln«!lllen. ') , •t -· BJ• DAILY PILOT Tuesday, JanUArf 8, 1976 " t ''"""'--------------------------------------------------------------------..... n. Blgest MartcetpiKe on ttt. Orqe Coat DAILY PILC>i CLASSIFIED ADS ' ~=-~" ~~ :\= ~ ( 642-5678) R1tta1ta1£!tot• · • • • • • • • :::9999 lost & F=~·. ~ soso~s..99 en • · · · • · • • • • • Services & ltepain 6000-6099 lusintn. ltftlHtlMftt & ~yment & Rnancial .•.•.•••.. 5000-5CM9 : ..•.. 7000-7199 One Call Service Fast Credit Approval Mef'chondiM .••••• 8000-8099 8oat1 & Marini fqUipment •..••••• 9000-9099 Automobhs & other T ronaportation . . • . 9100-9999 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• --------rG...-1002 GtMral 1002G•Mr... 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• EltlORS: Ad•erffsen PATIO TOPLdcATIOtol NOWVACANT sa.o.iad check tt.ir.. JACUZZI NEWPORT IEACH Owne r transferred daily .ct ,.port H-Th.is is an out.standing Exceptionally fine home must have fast saJe, "'°" ifRIMdiahly. The t-xample of a home that in BAYCREST area of Popular Came.lot model. DAILY rllOT 0 11.._.1 has been totally up· Newport Beach, trour 4BedrmwithlargeCami li.aity for tt. first._ graded, with lavish use bedrooms. new drapes, ly room. living room, correct lftMf'floel ....a.. of mirrors, wallpaper wall to wall carpeting. formal dining room an I ~~:!.~~.~~ ....... 1~~!!!.~~-~ ...... . GtMr... I 0021 G......a . t 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WATERFRONT DUPLEX With pier & large dock. Both units completely redecorated & loads of bltns + fireplaces. Huge decks, rirepit, etc. Great Location. $137.500. BEACH TRIPLEX Only one door to beach . Three furnished units -Heart of Balboa Peninsula, near shopping, schools and te1mis courts. Large decks over garage. $95.000. JACOBS REALTY • 675-6670 2919 Newport llvd. conter 30th · .._,. and custom fixtures. The Recently redecorated. kitchen eallng area. Pie ---------•I jacuu.i rost more than terrific locution, priced lure perfect conrution. G _. I 002 'G~-• f 002 at $79,500. Call 673-8550 Great location. Askin e•r-CTllST-most pools and it is com-for more details. $67,600. Call 540·1151 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ti r..blsw•s Motic:•: pletely secluded io a lush Ol'fN ,,, 9 • 11 \ iuN , .. , ~1 ,.. , • • All real estate advertised Pa t i o s e t t i n g. 2 · in thts newspaper is sub-Bedrooms. den. 2·balhs, Ject to the Federal Fair formal dimng and a price Ho us ing Act of 1968 or only $69,900. CALL which makes it lllegal to now, 556-2660 advertise ··any pre-.SELECT ference. limitation. or PROPERTIES NEW LISTING dLScrimmation based on _________ 1 race. color, religion, sex, Sea Wind Condo. Npt. or national ongin, or an SECURITY Beach. 2 Bdrms., 2 mtention to make any b a th s : u P g r a d e d s uch preference, limila-Gated community on carpets, draperies; tion.ordiscrimination." private lake near So. was he r/dryer. Never Ttus newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in viola- uon of lhe law. GeMral 1002 Coast Plaza. 2 Br/den/-lived in. Spacious & airy fam rm. On lake w/pool, corner unit. $57,500 c I u b hou se. $6 7, 500. 673·3663 642-2253 Eves Owner helps finance. HALPIHCHIH REALTORS 27Z7 E . CQasl Hwy. 675-4392 associated BROKERS-REAL TO RS 201~ W Bolbo o b 71 lbt> I ~,.. HERITAGE • • REALTORS •DUPLEX• St.eP6 to bay & park & shopping. Newly decor. duplex. Bargain priced at $64,500. Seller will finance. Balboa Bay Prop. Realtors •675-7060• MESA VERDE POOLSIDE Yl:.A~ BAY AND BEACH 675-3000 c>,'107 L COA!::iT M\IVV C:OROl\IA DEL MAR LUXURIOUS BIG CANYON A reaJly gorgeous Versailles (the largest town home), a djoining & overlooking the golf course. 4 Bdrms .• formal dining rm., 4112 baths & private courtyard, jacuzzi. $210.000 BAY & BEACH REAL TY OUR 26th YEAR 675-3000 ....................... 1.----------1 OLDEC.D.M. This beautiful and Getteral 1002 ,Getteral 1002 dramatic entertainment ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• home is just wailing for a AIAMDONB> 4 BR NOT OFTEN ••• 2 STY·IEACH .. in Old CdM. can you $54 900 find good income proper- • ty, with spacious rooms. Formal entry to spacious in a house & apt. + a hvmg room. Formal din-pool-but here it is • 3 mg room is conveniently b d' · d r h d bdrms., 21,2 a.. trung :.~rve . rom uge gar en rm. & brkfst. area . lge. 2 view kitchen. SLIDING bdrm .. 2 ba. apt. with WALL OF GLASS leads 1 19x22 livmg rm .. Jge. to covered terrace and guest suite off pool area. ramblin.g gro und s. 4 ga r ages . Asking New appliances. new copper plumb1n~. 3· bedroom charmer, on corner R-2 lot. $68,000. 1 Yr warranty inc. Call 675-7225 • 4~i.. .,,, J ('>A A ••(l t:Sf•WAlf: Of \'&lUI large family 4 or 5 bedrooms and 3 baths too. Stunning warm and inviting architecture. Near the golf course. Ow n e r h as been transferred and property 1s pn ced for quick sale at $79,500 ,._\IJ~~:\' HE..\l :fY A BERG ENTERPRISES CO. Or a ma t 1 c s la 1 rs to Sl62 000 hideaway m aster swte & ' I ' 1Quail ~ ~~~~:e:~~iiuus~r~~~i C. F. Colesworthv Plac• , sacrifice! Hurry ! Call Realtors 640-0010 -----..-----Properties 96.1-7881 . $39 500 752-19 20 1 1'00 OUAILST. NlWPORT lfACH Little doll house on huge M ES A N 0 RT H 4 LR with beamed cell PRIVATE ROAD Charming 4 BR. family rm. Park-like setting. Sunny patio. Community pool & putting green. $94,950 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Drive N B 675 -6161 General I 002 GeMral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I® ~ JUST LISTED lot with dream kit, lri! CHARMING · · Bedroom. 2 baths, fplc. ings, 3 bdrms, 2 ba. Walk BAYSHORE ':·==========~I complete carpe t ing to all s hops. New on tht' COTTAGE ENGLISH ESTATE Housn Fors• •••• 1 ......... !!.~~.~~••••••• ~:!!.~~-~•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• J Gt•rtil I 002 GtMNI I 002 81Mr.. I tOJ ·························•···················· ...••......• , ......... . .................. _.._ ______ I •-susaDECHALIT0 llG YARD. SMALL NICE IRB..A TIVIEL YI Mesa North estate, '..4 acre yard and an added f amity room that serves as a . teenager's billiard center. Sound great ? It is! It is also close to a school, has 2'Stories, 4 bedrooms and a view of the mountains. It. does back to the · freeway, but there is plenty of open s pace. This estate is relatively inexpensive at only $.55.900. U~l(.)UI: li()Ml:S REALTORS~ 675-6000 ?443 EaS1 Coast Highway, Corona del Mar WESLEY N TAYLOR CO. REA I.TOH.S ~.1 1H'e 1 H46 DRAMATIC -B.EGAMT-UtolUSUAL Tremendous view from this fantistic 4 BR home . Pool w /oversized patio. Lge fam rm. formal D.R. & surprise bonus rm. Prestigious area. $198,500 1608 Galaxy Dr. Wed/Thurs 12:30-4:30 211 I San Joaqyin Hiii' Road NEWPORT CENTER. N.I. • 644-4910 G~al f 002 Geweral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sum merllm• baarh relrcatl Few •leJlll to oceao~ Total prl\tafy with ~b walls. A·rrame styling. House of &lass . Indoor guden atrium Joadd with tropical plants & terns . Ruued beam cell in 81 an a11 r ooms. Log burnlnt: tlrepla ce. WI ndln(( s taircase to b alcon y landing Privaleaundeck t erra ce off m astl\te master suite + 2 mor • bedrpo~s. One bedroom downst(.lrs could be den . FOrrna1idtnlng ort brick decorat)td kitchen . Coun- try patio. Plµs Olympk swimming pool & tennis courts. What more could yoo as• for? Call today 842·2531 OPIN m II• II S IUN TO 8( NK I• [ '4llft&H11 . ._..."-ter's . A fli:NTION!1 Just listed. 3 bedroom and fa~y. rustic beam patio, b ck B-B-Q and fire rin Super sharp with lotspf extras. Near new. Aiking $57 ,000. Must sel Call 540-1151. SHRTER OC ASOUTH oti~SIDE COM LETELY furnishe professionally decorat model! ($4,000 invento ) 2BR, l 'liBA single story condo. Enclosed garage. Palm GI NO DOWN with vrought fence & C.-o Hiahlcmds .. area where t1le livin' is easy. Four bedroom home, or 3 & den, with quality decor, in fine con- dition ; spacious patio, f ruit trees. privat e beaches. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. Coast Hwy. 67S.SS 11 2 STORY gate. Adult tover 40 ) W •uc T SURF co m ~ u..n i t y . po o I , A 0 jacuzz~ clubhouse. Nr. Priced at government El Cafl\ino Plaza shop- appraisal. Prime r e· ping center. Walk to bus side n l i a I beach line. 3) min. to San neighborhood. Elegance D iego: Avail. now. with a continental ac· cent. Tiled entry. Stately $32.500 OM PLETE. BY OWNE 548-3036 livi n g room w it h --------- fireplace. Pub type I NEEDtOMEBODY go u r m e t k i t c h e n . TO OVE ME Formal dine. Gracious ( ·1 ·th kl I may notbe a doll house, am1 Y room wt crac . but they ~ay l 'm really ing fireplace. command· built. My vital statistic::. ing view of grounds. are: 5 lge bdrms, 3 ba, Huge master retreat. ~ Secluded childre n & brick frpl • fam rm. I'm thruout. Drapes. Bltns. market. Can't last. Only OtolLY $64,900!! fQURPLEX $44.950 --A•TT-•EN-T•l•O-N-~ Obie gar, Covered patio. 2 miles to beach. Can be Mingle with the movie 2 STORY-VIEW All in very good condi-purchased subject to ex-stars only s teps from the $59 950 Winding roadwar leads SPANISH VILLA BUILDERS tion. Reduced to $44,500. isting GI loan. 646-7711 prestige of Newport ., to secluded driveway ON THE BAY LIVE IN THIS NICE 2 Roy Mc Cardle Open Eves. waterfront. Rustic cot-These bread. and butter 2 amidst towering pines & $39,900 guest s uites. Owner a 2 sty. 2 Sq. ft. ugly trans ferred. Anxious! duckling '1ilh unlimited Call 963·7881. possibilit~s. To know Of'fNllt9.,ISIUN IOlllNI((' me. is 1X> love m e. [ !tllE&llil •-:--~....,,~-·~-~-~-:-!-~-LT_EE_:-0-07 bedroomhomcwh1leyou Realtorl810Newport WALKER&LI-:E tage nestled in huge bedroom .umts represent eucalyptus trees.Spiral-Winding walkway lo bwld your units on lhe Costa Mesa 548 -7729 REAL 1-:STATE trees provides once in a a gre~t mvest_ment .0 P· ing staircase leads to elegant bayside living at R-4 lot. Room for pool ta-1---------•I bfe time bargain. Home portwuty. Located JUSt private 2nd story en-a fraction of normal ble 10 large converted SPIRIT OF '76 1s loaded with personali-north of South Coast trance! Lavish living cost! Adjacent to docks family room Walk in Classified ads sell big Treat yoursetr to onl• of ty ++.You must see lo P~aza. Walk lo all .shop· room overlooks s ur-and maritime living! dosets. panehng. gas bit· . all Mesa Verde's fine t'X believe for this price. pm~. Assume existing rounding area! Euro· Custom carpet and it.ems , sm items or any ecut1ve homes. 4Br & Hurry owner must go 71 •'' VA loan ins aod covered patio J l all642 5678 ~"' • ""an gour met kitchen ! drapes highlight formal ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS • iLem. us c · · Den+Pool. Outstanding Take advantage. Call 640 6161 ... -enhance this property. • Dining entertainment. dine! Gourmet sunshine Don't delay on this. Only --------... value al $82.500. Call now S46-2313. Sweeping master bdrm k' i t ch en for the S4-0,500.CallS46·5880. CLASSIFIED lo see lhis lernric new· 0'1N''19 "'HlJN/O afii ~r retreat! Separate mom· epicurean! Walls of listing. [® I t t I • s · t HOURS DAVID BOURKE m· aw quar ers or gues g ass. weeping mas er or maid room with bath! bdrm retreat ! Winding Advertisers may place C~LL~~.9950 l'.::~~~~~~~~J Workshop! This hilltop staircase to sun terrace! their ads b~ telephone ..: estate can be yours for Red tile roof & Spanish ······-··············· --------.... ONE OF A KIND 1975 PRICES The r e's a home in Cotta1e.Balboa$55.000 Harbor View Hills that Duple't Newport S87 ,1)5() has b een r e duced a Duple~ Balboa Sl05,000 second time. It's like get-DuJ!ex, Newport ling a discount on the "$ll3,400 Mona Lisa. Truly one of Duple_~ Balboa $l lS.600 a kind . Lattice work, Tn)lex, Newport go r geou s g a rd e n s 1 $l.29,000 ... ·-----·~--~ s·ooa.m. to S 30p m. 3 BEOROOM BE•UTY 1---------•l ----------i $4500 total down or take alcoves! Try $3990 total A over existing loan at $215 down or take over exist- w/greenhouse. 210' wide Marsh 1 Realty 575·460<, lot and spectacular view. ~ll"GlllCil:lll Mar I 022 .,, "' • 1 LUXURIOUS W ATERFROto4T Mltoll·HARBOR ESTATE + 3 BOAT SLIPS Pnme location. Secluded entry unfolds charming waters ide atmosphere Open noor plan. Wall of ~lass overlooks magnifi- cent dockside terrace. One of a kind opportuni- ty. JN COMI:: FROM YOUR OWN .M I N I· HARBOR + $200/mo. Take advantage of this rare exception . Call 546-2313 n<>f._ I Q • 11 ~ ( ..,~1 "f'l 11( N<(' THE REAL ESTATERS Need aports e4ufpment 1 •rcJs. f or Classified Ad ACTION Call I. DAIU PtlOT l.D-YlSOlt 642-5678 DAILY PILOT 642-5678 Monday lhru Friday 2 Story carpeted thruoul HARBOR VIEW th F · k I $249 8U>noonSaturday · MEAR .... EW per mon . or qu1c ing oan al per with fireplace locatN.1 . ""' appt. to see. Ca l l month. It's unique and Has 4 br, 2 ba, pwdr ••••••• room, 2!plcs, library and much more. Now only C"OOTA MESA OF flt'€ 330W. Bav 642 ~mf NEWPORT BF.ACll 3333 Newport Hlvd. 6(2 567!1 HUNTINGTON BF:ACH 17875 Beach Blvd. !>40-1220 LAGUNA BEACH U86 Glenneyre Laguna Beach 494-9466 SADDLE BACK 25201 l.J Paz Road Lag~a Hills 581-6310 NORTifCOUNTY dial free540-1220 CLASSIFIED OEADLIHES Deadline ror copy & kills is 5:30 p.m. the day before publication. ex- eept for ~unday & Mon- day Ed1t1ons when deadline is Saturday, 12 11()()11. CLASSIFIEO REGULATIONS ERRORS: Advertisers should check their ads daily & report errors 1mmed1a tely. THE DAILY PILOT assumes llabthty for the first in· correct if.sert1on only. CANCELLATIONS · ~n k1lhn~ an ad be ~Ill? to make a record of the KILL NUMBER ~lVen you by your ad Ltker as receipt of your rancellalion This k i II number must be presen· ted by the advertiser in case of a dispute CANCELLATION OR CORR .. :CT I ON 0 F N t; W J\ ll ll Er 0 R F. RUNNlNC: ~very effort 1s made to loll or corrc.'<'I a new 11d that has been ordered. bu1 we cannot ~uaran­ tee lo do so until the ad has appeared 1n the paper UIME-A-1.J N t; A OS· ~ ads are strictly rll!lh 1n advance by mail or at any one of our of-ricea. NO phone orders. Qtadl1n" 3 p .m . Fnday. <4~ta Mesa of- fice & 12 noon at all br'ltn<'h 0Hlce11. TllE DAILY P ILOT T("Wf'Vl'!I 1 hf' r1 a hl t o t'I 1ry, ~It. ~nsor or rt'fUst' 1ny advt'r ~ment. and to ch&nit' lt1' ratrl ~ rdulatlons ~thoul pnor notice •C&.AIH'tlO MAIUHGADDRESS PO Rox IMO. Col!ta M eH 92826 I acr<,ss lrom hcaut1ful Lusk Home Hunt ingt on Beach 4· 847.6010. won 't last! Hw-ry call Mile Sq. Park. T otal PLEX-4blocks rrom ~IN~11u~•ls1w,;.1 •• u.s~ .. 847~10. $167,400. ~~~11~:,:~11 ~~i~1 It f ~]~;:it~~~~] ~~~~! [if; ! [ij{' "'"'o" "'" ~ FAMILY HOME HARBOR COMPANY R E7\t:1'0 RS SINCE 1944 11 Newl)O!! II. -----------3 Bedrm, 2 ba, POOL. TRIPLEX ~.!Ssn Eastgate area. Fplc. Din 2285Miner,C.M. 4BDRM rm. bltns. $52,000. Top cond, shake roof. all • ANYTIME HOUSE OF GLASS 536-8836 bllns. cpts, drps, frplc. Formal entry into huge -~I lovely patio. $74 .500. 10'< ~~~~~~~~~living room. dining _' '· , .' _' dn. Principals only. room, with sliding glass 960-1200 Bkr. door to patio. family --------~ R.E. APT. SALES h. h l ~....._____.__...__;. EstablJshed, aggressive room w 1c opens o cov- Panoramic: View office. s pecializing in in· ered patio with gas fire 1--------- l t. & pit. Huge master swte · Newport Heights. Yard vestmen proper ies . h . l II r I BALBOA ISLAND 1 h r exchanges. needs 2 wit pnva e wa o g ass arge enoug or tcnni!., highly m otivated R. E. overlooking private patio New, 2 unit. Make offer. croquet. horse shoes. sales""rsons who need plus beautiful manicured . 1 d Situated on bluff over ... ~ Large 2 story. m an pro· $50 000 a Yr J·ncome grounds. Be first to see perty on the Is land. For looking harbor. Ideal · · · · th. d h C II r a m i I Y ho m e ; 4 Will train. For appoint· is ream ome. a information call , ~!~r~?n~~sg ~~m~a~i~~ _ment.call556·~7_1 _-1 9'fJ~?/~/.; . ., "' "•"' 400lll"ft(;'M ~~d :;~~;;~ [~: i1 C.M~ R '"---------WeTriHarder -EALTY-~ ~,, Public: Hotice otTRI HARBOR 642·5200 675·4060 ~ GonmrMnt ~ Assumable Loans S,-ish Villa OCEAMVIEW L Available to everyone! )Ill""""""~ Low interest & rent-like ~ payments available. Easy to qualify. 3 & 4 -bedroom home11 availa- ble. For details on how you can own one or these homes, call Tarbell, Realtors. 540-1720 $55,900 Lovely 3 yr old Mesa Verde home. 3 BR, 2 BA w/cathedral ceilings. patio kit & corner lot. Low maint. yard w/lge patio & fruit trees. Call us for compl details. 546-5880 673-4400 $47,500 Bargain A r eal home wit h 3 --------• /Jn NIGEL GAI LEY & ASSUCIATES spacious bedrms, a big family room, an island kitchen with bltn oven, range and dishwasher. Cl05e to great shopping and excellent schools . You can't wait. 546-4141 ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE . INC. 2 STORY..fAMIL Y POOL·S26.950! Two s tory bargain ! Just SPYGLASS HILL 4 BR.~ $26 950 full price• Large Ba, fam-rm, din-rm, • · pool, J·acuzzi & ofrlcl·. living room. VERY large farnily·dining room COID · $175,000. By owner. bo! Bright & s pacious _640_·_17_5_1 ____ _ tiled kitchen·step·in pan- try! Wrought iron stairway to king size bedrooms. Secluded master w/buill-in vanity. Redwood fenced patio overlooking wrought iron LIDO SANDS ---------1 en closed super-pool. Well kept 3+0en home w/beautifal covered Lanai ringed with col· orful flowers & greene ry. Only 144 paces from ti sandy beach & short walk t.o pool & proposed park. Only $65,000. Call 644-7211 quick. BEACH GIANT Just 500 yards to sand beach-3.000 sq. fl. of lux- ury living. 4 t o 7 bedrooms. War m , charming family room. Oriental plank patio overlooks mini orchard in private yard. $89,900. fuJl price. 10% down. For appointment.. CALL KEY, 962-7788 .. KE:Y I RE: Al TOP-SA ~closed garage + extra parking. Take advan- tage.call now 752-1700. Ol'fN Ill q •I/ S llJN 10 Bf Nl(I • [1-lftlJtl FfXERUrra 2300 Sq. ft. custom home on ·San Clemente Golf Course. Poot , choice location. Owner anxious· Make oHer. BKR. 492-6643 /Jn. NIGEL GAILEY & ASSC:lCIJ\TES Duplelf.I Price reduced to $79,llOq. Corona del Mar s ale. tor sale by owner. ExceUent cond. Sec owner '142011!1 Larkspur, CdM ot caU 644-7326. F«trplea. Price reduced Find what you want In to $161.300. Corona del Daily Pilot Classifieds. Want ad results 642·5678 Mar. Ftr sale by owner. Courtyard entry. ca scad ing fountain. thick adobe walls. 3 levels, spiral stairway to huge mast with flickering fireplace. ha9d h e wn beams, wrought iron, formal dine .win e cel l er , magnificent ocean vie w. ~·HERITAGE • • REALTORS Excellent cond. See The fastest draw i.l the Ge.rol 1002 GaMrel 1002 ownerat420'h Larkspur, West. . .a Daily .Pifot •.-•••• • ••• ••••••••••••• •••••••••••~••••••••••• CdM oscall 644-7326. ·Hurry, can 't last at $74,500. ROIERTS REALTY 841-1688 IESTIUY It-I TURnEROCK HILLS SpacioWJ 4 bedroom en- tertainment ho me with valley and night light view. many unique c~t.om features, 5-acrc tennis and swim club plus your own pool. Price just $117,000 which ln- c I u d es l and . Ca ll 673-3560. Ol'!N r11q•1r ~II.I'~ t( I/IHI [~6Altl tolOJICE how Dally Pilot Clas~· 1ricd ach d1 ~1,1.,y lh~1r l'M"S81(C!S With lcalb1llty und Impart., Our ads, wc are proud to suy. rully ((Cl results . Phone 642·~8 is a good day to acfvertlse 1n the Daily Pilot Classlfled Section. ~. Classified Ad. Phone 1----------i ___ ..._ __ _;_..:.__ 642-5678. __ __ SeU idle items GeMral 1002 General 642·5678 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab / Irvine realty "LOFTY LOCATION .. And a full ocean, Catalina & night lights VIEW set off this lovely 4 bedroom home in Harbor View Hills. Family room w/nreplace, fo rmal dining & heautlfully landscaped gardens & p atio. $119.500. Belle Chase Lee 644-6200 <P39 ) 642 .. 215 644-6200 Ht Ocrfw Drive 1644 ~lwl Newport h•Ch. C.hl'ornla t2 .. J ; ~~~-~ Kt~Al.iTftHH 644-7270 VllW YllW! ~ Immaculate Lusk 4 bedroom, U rami•y room, d in in g room home. New off-white carpets, mlr· rored wall in dining room -enter- tain around your 6eautlful pool & jacuzzi. You must see to appreciate. $ll7,450. 2828 e Coo1t High lftl ... II IOt 11¥111(; UO("'H Wf (U "'' fH '"·lit&. ot ,,.N .. ,,U fl .. IM l.lflM *VIEW!* New~isilng ln Irvine Ter- r '* cc! 1,tm.m ac. 2· 8 R +convert. den with great ait·dowa 'view or lllirbor le Ocean . $92,SOO. inc. land! CU.L today Jack ..,well & Assoc 'g 6'4·1156 (24 Hra.) C.t.Meio 1024 ........ ,. ......••..... VACANT WESTSIDE Don't Diss thls onc-4/BR home •Ith huae famlly room wtopen beam ce1l- ln 1 and brick frplc . Neeu some TLC-All terms. $38,900, CALI, PretU19e Homes. 645 6640 ... ..... $32.5001 LC 2 br, 2 ba condo, xtra lg Hvrm, prtv patio/pool. Sell flit At this price. Open llou.e Dally 1·4 2tOO 'tlteo No. 14. Don Tbompeon, Bin 548~ • • k l (' d I· a t d II " r l' d I e r . . -· HCMIMI .... S. , ....... Fw W. . •••• .. ··:;::~···0·...... ..................... ....... Fol' s. HOMM• Fors. Co~.. 1600 ....... u ..... .a.d T~.January e. um DAIL y PILOT • I I C-...... I 024 I IP •• ••• • •• • • • • • • • ••••• • ••• • •••• • •• • • • • ••• • •• • •• •• • ..--ro,_ q •••••••• • • • •••••• • • •••• .-...._.....,....,-.. ___ ......__.._ ________ __;;;.;..;;.;;;..;...;:...;.:::.=...:_.::::...::....:. ....................... • __ .._. 1040'•• 1leat. t041 Newjlllllll!llffle.clt 1069 ....................... ....__. ...... ., Ju• .._..u---..~ u--•U•f•-'sbad •-hae11t1Ftlrwls1ted ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ee e e e r-" ........ A -~ ~ ~ ........ $29.99 5 Pool + .... • •• . .. . ...•..••••• .••••.•••••••••.••.•••• •••••••• •• •• • • • •. ....•......•.......... . .........•.•.................................... , .. llYINICOVI llAUTIFUL CO~BLOT l .... n-o.•odt 3240Lo,aua•ech 3241 taMna 3724 lest Side . $41,IOO M.apU1cent ! BR homo. DOVB SHO.lS 100xl22 on Edina r Wann11 decorated 2·BR. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... h'' ' ir-• ... cyS-'· Ele••nl decor. FamHy LOW~PRlCED between Broadway & house with fireplace ..u • -.----CA> A Main c t m clal Call ....... DIU • SWl M TIIJS Wl'NTt:Jt htra Laree 8ach. Adult: Chance to reaJly save• Great opportU,nit)'l Surf room w /weL ·bar. HOME;ON l~ation~eTe~~~ :!au. u•~7ora73•1292 VillateRulEstate 3br,trplc,maa.v1~w over 3S. Uul. pd. $130 Bia. prival• lot, room Co; n sand Ju.st walking ~ls· Jourmet kltchoo, •ep. CALAXY.DRJVE Asking only $58,900 IMMACULATE 3 br, 2 ba. No AaenlS Pee 111-;ATEl> POOL Pb. S48 2A07 • your camper• boat lance rrom thls tern rtc .. ~~~~~ ~~~o't,1:;:~~ lvanWellsat:num.•BR. SCOTIRIALTY lmmed~te possession. •Yorklown/Bu1hard 890 Canyon V1ew,•--------- farrn·styled homo with l)001 home!, Bl1 pool with • "" 3 Do. Marvelous diay & 644.()030 2 BR. 1 DA ... ~ .t9'M.532 l or 2 Br Trailer. water & versatile noor plan. Coiy heater Ir filter for year-views. $295,000. nite view. Pool" jacuui. 536-7533 •Yorktown/Magnolia gu pd. $1.U LO $165, also den ole charm p rior round ent.ert.alnment. 3 TUltMHASSOC. Price reduced below ap· N!::WPORT OCEANVU OceanaideofCout 38R,28A ... $300 EXCEPTJONAL2brvlew Lraller s pace avul. 133 cou'otry kitchen with ~~ t_dlntlnlng den, UO$N.Co.utHwy. praiaal. 1B24 GaJuy Dr. 6000sq. n Co mm. Build· ExceptlonaJqualJty •Oarfield/Brookbursl home Frplc, 2 car ttar . E, 16lhSt.CM642·126$ wood cabinell. Jo'or com· ,. ..,.a g, real Laguna Open Dally &Wknda. l·S. ing nr. Hou liospl l·BR,fum ......... $2SO 3BR,28A ... $32S patio & yd. l blk beuch. B r s M t pteto details, BKR. call =t1fuia w~ bcab~et.a, 494-1177 · Sl~.500. 645-8498 $270,000. 548-8632 ~ :r, ~·<'rum ·· .. ·· $3'1~ •Warner/Buch ::v:i~·4~~rrly. 229 lad~lts u:i/~0· pe~. ~~7 540-l720. Un~llev'abl: ~~in:~: W~TERFRONT W /SUP F-0r sale or trade. Com· 2 iJi_ 2 ~. :~~ '.::: ~ .~::,;;1!~£d~er Mh.-. Vlejo OO E.18tb St 642·2628 .aK.R,call842·88S4. Bill . Carroll 640·5560. mercial property, San 2 BR. 2 ba. home .... $400 38R 2 BA $3lO 4-=thNJI-.. -.la. 37 .. 0 ._.asling •· C R 1•A • •• • • • • • • • • • • •• • ••••• •• ,,.,.. --acw .. ~Ian REAL ESTATE <JOO c.1 .. ,,,,. . .,, .. ~' .tV~..,4,'l ~..\Qt1Jt6 SHARP VACANT .. #I iR CalfonH0 2 Br. Stu dio Model ACT MOW! S36,900. Owner/Agt Rar e 2 Br B eauty . VuoCswf&rocksonViC· 64&-3013; 546·7739. Secluded. 31,'J yr old, cul· toria Beach. Fplc. brick __ _...; ______ _. d·sac. $46,500. 581· U 2 bd $36,000 Full Price own. pa o, rms, 1·~ ba, 2 Must sell lrg 3br ranch ----------' car gar. $62,500. house. Assume. 6% FHA LAST CHANCE! loan, paymnts only TO BUY A BEACH 5 IMCOMEUNITS fl.42/mo. tall S.0-3666. HOUSE ln North Laguna. Just For only $29,995. 4 Short steps to sandy beaches. blks to bch. Bjg lot. 2 across from Heisler Bedroom. l bath. Park, with rantastic SCOTT REALTY ocean views. A whale of ~ ... o. ea ..,r Clemen•e. Cho·1ce l•ase Unive""'ily Real•" • ... ~ " "" ..., Bot /B kh L 3 Or, 2 ba, d""', "'""•'. ••••••~•••••••••••••••• income $8700. Priced • • 673-6510 • • * sa roo urs · ...-. ...... .., .. THEILUFfS 3BR 2BA $32S view lot. $375 mo. llEAUflFUL 1 br rurn $53,750 :::.;. Principals only. Costa MeH 3224 •Bo~a/B~~bard 837·8900. ext 17 days upts $170 & $180. Spanish OEM + pool ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR, 2 BA ... $345 Ch . .,_ ·11 G d. style bldg, pvt encl Rar • The fabulous ''S" plan! Condominht1M/TOW1t· PRIME AREA •GarfieJd/Brookhurst arming ox:v1 e ar en pool, sauna, lndry • adllli. n ......_ __ for 1-i.,_ 1700 2 Br 2 ba d .. BR 2 BA $0111:. Hme. 3 Bd, lam.rm., A l 17301 Keelson Ln. l blk ed tile roof. Raised _... -• • new ecor " • ··· ~ cond $425 644-8067 w f Be h rr Sl te portico entry. Step up to •• •••••••• ••••••••••• •• $31S. Gardener /Wtr pd. •McFadden/ 8rookhurst · · · 0 ac 0 a r · huge living room·view to NORTH LA~UNA Adults, no pets. 673-63'72 4 BR. 2 BA .. .$350 Newport leach 3269 142 · 7848 sparklmg blue common CO .... DOS Exceptional 3 br, 2 ba, •McFadden/Newland ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 bdrm. 1 bth .• cpl • pool. Comfy gourmet . " . ltlnlloc. $375 mo. Refs re-4 BR. 2 BA ... $360 Univ Park Homc-4Brs. drps.garage. $l5S mo. kitchen. Queen size Whitewater Views· 2 & 3 q'd. S40·1.S42, 546-9'60 •McFadden/Springdale FR, 3ba, Pnvate yard 7841Slater H.8 .. 847·3'751. bedrooms. Den or extra bdnn. units from $54,000. 4 BR 2 BA $345 lea3e~75 644 11101--------- bedroom·your choice! 420 Cypress , North Back Bay Condo. •Br, •Bols~/Spri~gdale · · Irvine 3744 Decorator wallpaper! Laguna 3ba, new cpts, drps, 3BR 2BA HARBOR VIEW. 2 BR. ••••••••f•••••••••••••• Seller has purchased C• 675-7225 paint.$42Smo.492-2796 ~ ~86 Den & 2 Ba, nr park & $70 wk or $300 mo in new home.ANXIOUS! or school. No lease. $525 eludes maid service, TV. Take advantage $53.7 3br, and family. Jo Mesa mo. 1812 Port Ashley. sauna, jacuzi.i, pool & r u 11 price ! ca 11 Verde. $375/mo. Agt, Ask Fireplace, 4br. 2ba, bit· 613-1148 phone 1717 E. Dyer Rd. todav·752·1700. for Les, 54().1151. ins, new crpts/drps, . , Irvine. 54().1515 OWHERANXIOUS m· QrtNl119 ·11~1UNf0Hll"'F' . $335Lmo. 963·4569/ l Br. oewly.dec:ortd. nr 4 + 2 FAMILY fi"MbtP© [' ! EAST SIDE 96.l-l7S6 park & bch s. NO PETS. + OO©&Il~~ ~ • • 3 Br,, dbl garage, lg fncd · Front f>C 210 44lh St. $2.50 LCICJIMCI leach 37 48 DINE 499 • 2800 ~: ~ ~xes/ yd, JUSt dee. $350 mo. Frplc! 3br, 2ba, enclosed incldn g ulll. 673·2256. .. ..................... . ~~nmt!dyi~~':s f~s:t~S:Sii~ne fJnits sGle 1804 lease S48·3561 pat 1 o, c r pt s / d rp s . NEW CONDO· I level 2 Br• 2 Apt s · 1 BR. 1 Ba. ~· used brick accentuates •REDUCED• •••••••••••••••••••••••FOR LEASE 3BR 2 BA. S 345/mo. 963.'5691 2 Ba. bltns. frplc, pool ~lor-$ 185 · .Ocean· _________ 1----536-....:....:7..:.533:.:.... __ _. a buy at $189,500 this country style home. Real Estate By owner reduced from OCEAN ~· DAMAPTDUl'LEX lrg. fncd. yard. $460/m 963-1786· We s t Cliff $400 mo. w. 494 · 5145 • Every woman's dream by Ji&!VAY $76,500 to $72,500 Below VIEW BARGAIN $70,950 631-1830 Super 3br, 2ba. Bll·ins 615-1957 SlSS. Furn. Cozy Bach Nr kitchenwithall thewife· Fee Appras1al, Agl. 4BR+f ·1 t 'I I Sparklingclean,3years . crpts,drps.$315/mo.See Bch . Util,pd. R es p. s aver conveniences. .._.O DEPOSIT·· 494-1962 p ami y, n · eve · old. Large 3 Br, +2 ba Beautiful 3·BR, Z·ba Con· today.963-4569/963-1786. SHARP spht level 4·~R. empt'dadlt.494·4200 " restige Newport com· units. Decks + patios. do. All xtrs, pool, club 3·BA c~ndo .. tennis, · M a m moth b r i ck -HO RETUR..:..1 munity living. Sacrifice. Builder must sell to com· hse. $325/mo. 645-3777 Frplc. supe. r nice. 3br, sauna. Jacum & pool. Newport Beac h 37 69 fireplace. Five king sized " OCEAN VIEW $62,500. Cati 645-0303. 1 t h Be. t b 2ba. Bit-ins dshws hr $450. 642·2422 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bedrooms, with massive A small deposit & the re· FOREST OLSON IMC Pee exc ange. s uy 2 s uper 3 and 4 bdrms. , • • ----------• master suite. Enter· tum on your investmen *LOT*' •• io..Dana Pt. $9300 down. Crpls, drps . dshwshr. crpts, drps. $l&5/mo. Newport Shores. 23062nd, S40 WK UP l&2 Bdr &. tainer's covered patio. will astonish you. Sharp ~xlOO rt. b~ldabte lot in * llG CANYON* Westbay Income Homes. $345/mo. 963·4569/ 96J-4sm/96.l-l786· 3Br. 2ba . clean, nr =~b. C~lohli"i.i~Ad Assume low interest VA Condominium with DR, highly desirable area. Elegant living and enter· 3 412 1 Coast H w Y. 963·1786. 3 Br, ram. Tm. 2 ba, frplc. Ocean, pool, tennis, club 415 N ~e.wport 8 1 N It loan. Seller's los5-your frplc. 2 car gar. Only $26,000 + owner will tainin · this 2800 sq. ft. 496-3431. On MV GoH C bl.tns, 2 car gar, fncd yd. $375. Ph: 673·2654. No 646-968l • ~~~~. cta1~!;!5~6.fi~~~ $34.000! 9684456 . ~~loo~:. ~:a?torH . profe~nally decorated Income Property 2000 4 Br 3 Ba w/eve;!g, ~~!~~: ~:~;5 mo. dogs. Dix rum duplex. 2 ·Br. ONNr•1 9·1r~1UN rOM "'1~1· Irvine 1044 ••494-8611 •• and l~ndscaped 3· bdr~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• grdnr inc. Avail. Feb. ' * * * lower unit on Seashore [~·11~1. jli·~··tl .. ::·:::D•O••::ED•••2••S•T••y•• L0990Micjuel 1052 formal danang. family Multi tenant industrial & '76. lse, $600 Owner CUTE 2·BR or bch. cpts, Roberiloeu~ w/gar. Winter/ s ummer. ____ , ...... _ -·"" " ~oom. home .. J:>oo l , office bldg. Orange Co. 540-6005 gar,fncdyd,slv.ref.No 2169E.Oceanll'lcl. Agent~l61 J3C\.!ZZJ, B·B·Q pit, IO fan· Airport Location. Prin. dogs. $225. 842·5165 l=~;;~~~~~~~' SPANISH ••••••••••••••••••••••• tast1c seumg. 3·car gar only 549.1480 3 Br. 2 ba. crpts, drps, lalbo~ OCEANFRONT Winter • .::. + 2 PATIOS W/ elec. openers. $195,000 · · kids/pets olc. Fncd yd. You are the wtnnet:' of 2 Neat 2 Br, gar. adlts, no Mesa Verde North, 4 Bd. 3 MEED OCCUl'AMCY? TAX SHELTER Fruit trees. Wtr pd. WALK to beach 2 br, uckets tot.he pets. $250. 213.795.3018 ba, Cam .rm .. diorm., Vacant & waiting! Move OCEANASOUTH Familiesoniy.557·3850. fncdyd,garage.$225. Sports, Vacation 2100 sq.ft. choice corner in 1 t d d IN CLOSE to ocean 2 br & R -...A:--...3 l Br Nr. Hoag Hospital location. $67 ,500. By as an ecorate your OCEANSIDE Sharp. new decor. 3 BR. 2 duplex. garage$225. ec~nunua $200 mo. 1481 Placentia owner.540·4484 . heart out ! CLEAN & C 0 Mp LET EL y ~·pool. No pets. ~5. STEPS to beach 2 br, V.tlicleShow NB.Adltsonly.646·6973 ---------1 ~!i:e~~~rt~~~~pl~~~: furnished, professionally F1rsl, last & cleaomg fncd yd, dbl, gar. ANa~~lM Winter rental. ~-~~!:~~···••••••!?.~~ ings. Bright as spring all Anociotes. ReohDrs decorated model! ($4.000 dep. 548·6187 children/ pets ok. $250. CONVENTION large 1 BR, $175. tiled kitchen. Gigantic NEWPORT SHORES i~ventory) 2BR, l'h BA Mesa Verde pool home. 4 HOM:f~ERS CENTER 675-8224 2 BR Condo. Ocean/ "fiesta" family room.. 3 BR (or 2 & den). in single story condo. br ranch, $425 mo. For J an.3thruJan.11 . . Sunset Vu , Tennis, Pool. Winding staircase lo move·in cond. Choice E~closed garage. Patio appt call bef lOam or art 3 Br 2 Ba Bonus Rm, rncd Call 642-5678. ext. 333 to Oc.ean Front with v.1ew nr $44,950. By Owner. (714) Queen of Spain hideaway loc. nr. pools & tennis; with wrought fence & 3pm, 979-2807. yd cpts drps $325 Isl & claim your tickets pier 2 Br, furn or unfurn, 833·4669 Wkdys, (714) suite. Super size walk·in ONLY ONE LIKE THIS. short walk to ocean. gate. Adult (over 40) . 1st'. Nr: Heil • & Beach. * * * yrly lease $400 mo . 496.Sl74Wknds. closet. Private Spanish lmmaculate3·Br,lgfam community. pool. Newly paint~ 4 br. 1% 968-7146 54().2()18, 536·3624, (213) ---------• brick patio PLUS large rm w/fp. Plush carpel· $56.ooo jacuzzi. clubhouse. Nr . ba, fam.rm., $395.mo. 3 Br 2 Ba. D/W. frplc, 79341080 Hwttin(jton Beac h I 040 backyard patio! Low ing and window treat· CAYWOOD REALTY Et Camino Plaza shop· Ref's. Families only· 3 Br, 21,'J Ba, heated pool. refrig etc. 1 Block Ocean <--&---.. _-_---- •••••••••••••••••••••••maintenance. Try S6l00 ments . COMPARE •548-1290• pingcenter.Walktobus 1608 White Oak , v.mitobch, Edison Hi $340y~ly.642.3361 . ~•al'UIU 3780 H•.1.1-~-down for instant home! AT .... $83.500. Uni v. ParkHome-4Brs line. 30 min. to San M.Verde .545·7359. area$425.968-8068aft5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ,. ..... , Sharp-don't hesitate-call &tiftytheGoodLife! Diego. Avail. now. 3-4 Br, 31 h Ba. Bonus Rm. H--1...-..·r today752-1700. 323'-25So.CoastHwy FR,3Ba,Privateyard S32.500COMPLETE. BY 4 -~drm, l'h·ba. ~ast· 1"· 3244 c:pts & drps, lg e ....-i1i111'V9 Lse/SaJe 644-7770 OWNER 548 3036 side. Fncd yd. 226 S1erks me · JO h· AMBASSADOR IMNS OFAMHICA TWO LOCATIONS WEEKLY RATES FULL SERVICE TOWNHOMES Of>tri ''1 9 • 1 \ 1"1110 "' ,.,.,,' 493·25 I 3 499-4584 · · St $29S Ph· 548·6680 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pat!o ver ang, au~o [ I Do .. IL · · · · BEAUT s J · spnnklers. pool/teo01s 3Bdrms quiet area ~l~~~'lit A R. E LagunaBch ·Older4unats • an oaqu1n priv 640·1327, 640.1500 a~ross r~om Harbou; .:· I ;, TWO be~room. two bath "A" FRAME $70,000. lncome.$740, 25% 2 ~R. m ed yd. gar . Twnhme Laq~e 2 Br, 21,'J ext 1465 Mall. Pool. jacuui, ,. __ ·~ .. • _1 West Nme Con~o. near WALKTOIEACH dn prin only bmkr ch1ldren/pe~ok.$225. Ba. 2 sty. View of g@U ----------1 clubhouse. New & re· , golf course with air· 615·:U72 2 .BR. cpts. drps, gar, course & lake. $550. 2·Sty. A·frame; 3 BR. 2 2277 Harbor, C.M. 2909 Bristol. S.A. 645-4840 & 540·2300 l f $ .. A 900 cond.. refng. bltns. Only Perfect for weekends, children/pets ok. $225. 547.7044 ba. Dlb. gar. Pools ten· sa es, rom ..... · TURTLE ROCK $41.900. Avail. immed. rental. or permanent re· 2 BR lge fncd yd new · sidence. 3 Bedrooms. 2 $42 900 cpts. drps, gar. Chlldren· Univ Pk Terrace 2 Br. 2 rus. $425. Agt 548·t290 PLA111r..1 4 * IOND REALTY * b th 2 v B h dbl =--1·~~~~~~~ ..,. 13 1 •9 .. 11 a . s tory . ery ._,, /petsok.$235. a, twn se. gar. "' modern kitchen with lots 2UNITS HOMEFINDERS frplc$375552·7896 San Jue:.. ~ lniNb 1 4 Br. 2"" ba. Lots of room of charm. + + + Large Let's Deal 642·9900 . . C-.lstrano 3278 U..furnished for entertaining. Choice La N , • protected sundeck com-Univ. Park II. pnv. 1 of a ..,... ••••••••••••••••••••••• location by tennis & pool. guna igue plete with wet bar. Great REX ~~~gGES Beaut. 3 Br. 2'h Ba, Sep. kind, 2 BR. s uitable ~::~:;;.;;;·;;;;;~:·;;·; Corona del Mar 3&22 REALTY INC. 714/846-1371 574.500. the choice community for parties or private sun REALTY Din. Rm. Twnhse. W/D adults. New crpt, dbl ll h '2 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• LE RAISOR bathing. Don't miss this lncl'd. dbl.gar. pool. $340 gar, xlnt storage. pool & car a ac · ~ar, UP · ** NEW LISTING •• one for just $67,900. Call 19% Spendable . Trade mo. l\va1I. aft. 1/15, jacuzzi. $375. Call graded crpts. tile. drps, -REAL TY 3·BR. 2 "~·ba home on now 646·7l71. your local property for 557.()865 Owner, 552-8357 · $26S mo. 493·0209 ~ SHOWCASE 4523 Campus Dr, Irvine quiet cul·de·sac street. , "I"'" Q •• , "'N ••.ht '•-rt fixer trlr park in Corona. E S'd l B . t d I Cul erd I 3 B 2 Ba Lux 4 Br 3 Ba 3 car gar, ~I ' Great family area close [ ~ ""«II' dn-owe tsl A tt1 • 1 e r, JUS ec. ge v a e. r , . ts d ... ~ d '[/,, ,. Campus-Valley Shop Ctr to schools, churches a nd ~ ~. · • ..., rot wtr&gardener pd. Community park, pool. crp • rps . ....:aut. Y · 'l.':':~5. HOME 833-8600 shopping.$51 .750. 642·9666 $350.642-<>835/642·5280 tennis $380 mo. 552·9606 Clos e lo b ch. $400. A "one or a kind" on ar---------•I Laguna Niguel Realty l Lots for sale 2200 owner _4_93_·_34_'.fl______ CORONA DEL MAR large. irregular lot. 4 830-5050 496-4040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br, Fam. Rm. newly re· New Home. 4 +2':i. FR, 2 Br Townhouse, frplr. Bedrm +bonus room+ RETIREMENT BAYFRONT decor.$395.Ref'samust. •RENTALS • DR,frplc,dshwshr,com· Pool. tennis, continental faml.ly room + form""I CONVENIENCE LEVB. 1·3 LOT 548·3337 UNIVERSITY PARK pactor. wtr pd. Mission breakfast. Some ocean&. .. E d · d 'th .................... This delightful Lido 5 Br 4 BR2'L Ba furn $500 c 1· c dining area. 2400Sq.ft. or n unit con o wi 4 or possibly 5 units . 4 BR's. 1 balh. Fam rm. yz • • Bell Ranch. off d el ata ma views. lose to I . · 2 w d greenbelt location. light· Home with pier & sUp. r d I L k d THETERRACE Ob' M' f M · shopping & ftne beach. luxury 1ving. oo Just redu c ed from Area o e uxe apart· ge bac yar . Brand 2 BR.2 Ba. $36S/$38S 1spo. 1 rom anna. burning fireplaces. one epood ~~~dJ·~~~~t~!rk~~go Newport Beach I 069 $325,000 to $297.500. Call men ts. Selling at as· new cpts, drps & paint. 3 BR, 2 Ba $425 $45013)33894162 Paseo Blanco. ~644~·~26~1~1~~~~~~· in master suite. 3 Car • •••••••••••• ••••••••••• for Appointment sessed value Horse stalls avail, tack TURTLE ROCK (2 ·2J21. h fr distance to new· 3928 548356 · 1 garage wit 5 o street complete shopping 646-.eves; . 1 room. $375. mo. Ulcdg TERRACE s..taAna· 3280 2Br. lba. below Jlw). parking.. ce nt er. Ther e 's 3 gar dene r & water. 4BR,4Ba.Pool $1000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Patio. garage. $285 mo. $72,000 Bdrms .. 2 baths. large *REDUCED* ~~~~~~e:n t p~~J~ DEERFIELD Super clean 3br 2ba. bit· Ref. req. 675-3446 d ai.. a~1 • t 11 1 . bright kitchen, formal And owner is very anx· aft 9 AM. Avail. Feb lSl. 2 BR, 21,-z Ba $350 ins. crpts, drps: $350/mo. 644-0997 eves. djning. wet bar and ulili· ious because he is 3BR,2Ba. $425 963-4569/963·1786. tyroom.$62,500. transferred. Townhouse n~yfront Luxury 2 br 2 3 BR pool covered extra WALNUTSQUARE 2$325BR, Sntewd~y dSelc7o5raUletd.l with 3 bedrooms. 2 baths . .,... · · · ' · 3BR, 2 Ba $325 3 br. 2 ba, blln!>. cpts. · u io. · 1 ANYTIME ba condo. $125,000. Agt. room. Obie gar. Close lo 2 BR, 2 Ba $325 drps, gar. Nr. Warner / Paid. 2 blk from beach, 552-7500 ultra·modem decor just 645.1564. LAKE ELSINORE 50xlJO schools, one blck to San GREENTREE Fai'rvi'ew. $350. 642.5583 CdM. 633-3884 $ 6 8 • 9 5 O a n d n o w Lot, ltlnt terms. · D i e g o F r w y o f f red h , 1 11 VACANT l i9 Canyon Condo 549.2509 Fairview. Agt 646-3255 2 BR. 1 Ba .$340 Condominiums 2 Blks to Sch, 4 Bd. 2 ba, • OPEH HOUSE * 1123 Main St.. 12.spm Must sell lrg. custm, realtv 4·Br. No qualifying, ~ quick possession. Price ~ reduced. Ownr/Bkr .1~~~~~~~~~~ 536·0133 I· . Lc1cJ11na leach I 048 lmmed. Occpy. View of ••••••••••••••••••••••• Huntington Lake, 4 BR. •OCEANFRONT• n~ Ba. R. V access. Rare a\ $199.500. By ~~.~~0 · By o wner. owner. 752·1171/499·4384. TerriflC Exec Neighborhood LAGUNA J~\i· f.STMl:JITS CAPICOD By The Pacific Walk to Beach & Shop· ping. Ocean view. privacy. Even an Artists Studio. Call today-Gone tomorrow. $86,900. 839·1710 B U I 2 + D or 2BRRan2cBaboSanJoaqw" •11-.&.-1'sL-d 3 .. 25 or3Bd.2 ba,675-8772or REX L. HODGES ,eau i u . . en Rentals Nwpt Hghts. 3Br, den. $550 vnTilnl nc ., REALTY l',orm .. Dm: 1780 Sq Ft. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lba, on cul·d·sac. Pet 2BR:2Ba,den $460/$500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644.721 1. • End unit pnv + secur . Houses Furnished OK. Avail Feb 1. $350. Nr. S. Cst. Plaza 3 BR. l'h 2Br Near beach. Pool. THE BLUf'FS Owner 644·6249 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-4166 552_7500 ba, 2·lev. $300. 835·7l0l $240 mo. to mo. 675·7033 $58,000!!' S Cl t 1076 lcltboalsland 3106 after 6pm. days.494·'.f12oeves. 3 BR. 2 Baths .~ •• :.~.~•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 BR. 2 ba .• w/w cpts. & d h 11 T Wfthou -- /\gent 640-5560--GOLFER'S DREAM Quaint 2 sty• 2 Br, util pd, ~Tae~rt~~~.~ Per r 8 i 0 Unfumi:tted 3525 Sit~~i1'd ~ ~~~j .be~~h~;1~': 2-bedroom, 2·bath Condo nr beach. $295. winter, • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644·7211 & 644·4993 on 15th fairwa y. $325.yrly.673.s97o. FountainYalley 3234 realtv 3 Br 2 Ba, 2 sty. Costa ---- Panoramic ocean view, CoronadelMcr 3122••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Mesa. Dbl gar. Pvt Lge l Br. below II~>· Your own home-one highly upgraded. Only ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br2BaCondo.2cargar, ~ patio.$300.963·4058 frplc . r ange. re fri g. block to beach, com· SS? 750 clubhouse, pool, all facil. water & elcc. pd 673-14 l!t munity pool. delightfully RISLEY REALTORS Furn. 2 Br, ~wnhse, W/D, $295 mo. Call Ed Quinlan RENTALS .,.a.xes Unfvm 3600 Eves.or Wknds Newport leach $17,000 decorated. 2 bedrms, 492.6643 2blkstoChmaCove. 213 . 3 6 o. 3 11 9 o r ••••••••••••••••••••••• -- -dining, fplc. priv pat10.1---------~ S400 673-8936 714-831-0645 29r,lba ~~ CDM.3Br,2ba,oceanvu. View. 3Bd. 2ba. frpk , 2Br+den,2ba ~ N o Finest adult living in arpNewListing-6one Costa Mesa 3124 ----------1 $380 deck, Crplc, beam garage. e w. wner. bea'Utiful Bays ide s tory economy units.••••••••••••••••••••••• Clean4Bd.2ba,frplc,lge ~=~:~~NB $l200 ceil'ng, cul·de·sa c. 2 car 61s.4868or631·2333. Village Mobile Park. walk to State Park B k 8 1 Bd f yd., pets, $3SS. mo., No 3 Br,2ba $430•$470 gar. Pvtbchprvl'g$450.CostaMesa 3824 Central to all that Beach, & Public Golf ~e.,;%tur~ad~t.$~~S lease.839-4945. 3 Br21,'Jba $380 615-3203. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Newport" means. Ca 11 Course. Income $11,100. · l t'l .,..2 1272 Ex · •te s B 2 to 3 Br 2•L b NB $1500 S40-992'l $95 500 AA Realtors inc u' ·"" . quasi r s ry on 'T.I a 2 BR. 1 Ba. CdM. no Lrg 1 bdrm. Blt·in:-.. 492.2100 ' Lmsmo .. odt 3148 ~~.!tcrecuJa':!:o-s!:0•tn.err.rr:;5 4 Br, 21,'J ba $325 children or pets. $275. adults, no pets. $150. ~· ... ·~ wv ..... -4 Br2~ ba $500 mo. 644-6800 <Susie) Shalimar St. 642·1679. Sall...,_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• m o. 892·5SOS days LE RAISOR Capistrano I 078 Pool-Ocean .View home. 963-m94eves. One Bdrm. $160 mo. StudiJ> Apt. Nice residen· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adults prefd. Jan.J une. . REALTY mature woman only . tial area. $140. Util pd. Ideal home for lhe grow· $495. f¥. 494-0451. owner. Hoaatlftc)ton .. ach 3240 . 4523 Campus Dr• Irvine Nwpt Hgts. 360 E. 15th 642·3555or 548·7693 494-6525. Near pool. rec:rcation and ocean. Newly de· corated. One story. large 3 bedroom. 1~ baths + formal dining. Private patio wlth BBQ. Sec it now!! You'll love lt! ! ! lJ, . The fastest draw in the I SELL idle items with a Wcl\t. .a Ouily Pilot ing family. 5 Bdrms .. Newport leach 3169 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CampusValleyShopCtr St.S42·5939 EVERYTHING! den. family & dining ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR. l~ ba, lge ram rm. CALLlll-8600 • New· au conveniences. J rooms. Many extras! Oceanfront Penin . Nr. $385. Nr. Adams & ApoitR•nhFumished BR. 2 Ba. Frplc. ground $89.500. NHYC,$650motl1Julyl, Brook.burst. 645·3147 or Univ.ParkTerrace,3 bd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• noor. e ncl. yard. Prlv. ~9~6~~~·~44~11~~~~~~l oaiJy Pilot Classified Ad. Clussitled Ad. 642·5678._ -------IN.wpor+ leach I 069 N..-,orl leach I 069 A BANDON E 0 COT· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• TAGE in &ecJuded tree shaded atmosphe re. Used brick frplc. warm wood paneling, bookcases. famil y c nte.r. ltc\lle kitchen and bar. 3 BR. a mall den, neat aDd cleau 18 a pin l A11ume $11,$00 loan balance, 1217 m onth Pm. i~ lntue~L BKR. SIG-S.Sll. MEREDJ'nl GARDENS 4 br, 3 ba. 3 car pr., 3000 I Q ft Larctfl lot •vol)., w/r,e p te for t>o•l or motorborne. Many mort xlru in le out. Jult prof. decorated completely. cic.e to everyU'llnt lncl. be.ch. Thll hou1 haa clUI. By owner. Prfn. onl.y. •-*· 811·'7444 IEAUTIFUL UDO Family home w /4 bedrooms & ram. rm. 2 master sultes. Completely re· modeled & redecorated. 40' lot & al· tractive, lg. south patio. First time offered. $159,500. A COLOWaL. IA.MKM CO. 644-1766 3Br2Ba,213·795-o635 549·9511BradCoons. 2ba, twnhse, frplc, gar. lalbool'etHnsula 3707 garage. 2445 Ornngc AMCHORAGE $375. 552-7896 or 586-3955. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ave. $360 mo 540-2345 IMVESTMIENTS San C'"""'te 3176 Spanld ng clean h.ouse . 2 BR rum. Steps to beach. · · •••••••••o•••••••••••• Oc~anvlew Sehl D~t. 1 EXEC HOM E. Untv. NowloJulyS225 Enjoy the new yeur 111 a 17141496-7711 Luxury oceanfront Condo child OK $335 Mo. mcl. P~k. 3 BO •. 2 ba. rec 673·6640 spacious 3 br. 2 ba upl. 3 Bd. 3 ba, furn. all wtr" 1ardeoer. Ask for facil., m'ny xtras, $475. w/patio. frplc & pool. MobileHomtS amenities, $375. Agt, Nen982·178'1 552-9346. CoNMdtlM• 3722 Adults only . $275. For Sllle I I 00 492·5151or492·0743 ••••• • •••••••••• • • •••• • 645-3381 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 1 B1k to be~b 3 Br, z Ba, Univ. Pk. Terrace 2 BR, 2 Outs~nding z-Br across•--------- 8• X .,... SPARTAN f'nua· u.a. -IL.cl $350 mo. 4 Br, 3 Ba $4TS. B a ' l ' e r a m . Fashion Is l .. utll pd., AI?ULT large ~ br. 2 ba. . ~ . -" ..... ...,.. &U·l802or963~ rm./lrllche:n. (rplc, $375. 0 / Mt v • Like new Pabo dshwhr with 21 add-on, nunt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nr Pool ss;!..J016 c ea n n u A • I . 644..osis • cond. Com pt. setup in lalboe 1st.Ml 1206 3 BR, l~ ba. cpts, drps, · · Walk/Bch, Pk/Olk, FA enc · gar • C.M. coov. toe., 19th & ....................... bltns, fenced. Gd area. L•••• •och 3241 heat. frplc. WW Cpts, l BR util pd cpts drpi:, Harbor. Make reasona· Channing 5 Br 3 ba. 2 $325. (714) 842-8263 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• W/Oryr, 1V, Gu, lse. rern'1 at sto~e. N~ dog~: blc orrer. Call 642·•780 story. encl pat, 'gar. Yrfy (213) 886-0909. 1.Br. Ocean vu. Stove & $400. 673-8617 $175. 831·9276 ~~·w~~~~AM or al\ $475. 673-0686. •Meredith Gardens Tri ~·· ~Ualturepdla~?AP,.';}2· 2 Br aar apt w/garage. 1 BR $140 Util incl Oldc:r ~~ . l el I Bd 21t\ ba den -·· .. · ' .. '"""'" Good Locatt0n CdM . ' · -S 1 -.-.. W- 1 -' 8 --RY_P_ .. _T_C_H_13 Br 2 Ba. near N. Bay. rev, .a•-• -1 ..... • (213)~ cau 67~ • tenant only. 645·2020 or -A Yrly lse. $400 mo. rp C, UJD.rm .• aaro.e .... r, 642·6560 l Bd. adult prk. C.M. 613·3891 leue,$415.968-'911. 4 BEDRM. & FAM . RM . Coste~ 37241-------- Stores . bus . $4 ,500. •Br Zba bou tlngt ROME. Built in kitchen.••••••••••••••••••••••• BACHELOR. no k1tchf'n. MA·l91S Corona dtl M.-3222 La~ Klds;'e lor oil Lge. 1un deck with No pets. $87 .SO mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~e. 968 S:.1pct.a · Ocean Vaew . 2 Ca r Sl BR ~m Sl8S _642_·~------ Trote.r Spou Large 2Br + den/ramlly. mo. · · gara&c. Vacant le read,y LoU of blua. 1>001, walk 2 BR, around Ooor. polio. A--oH. 2 frplc-. all appliance~. Reoler/Leasewllhoptlon. t.omovelnto. to s hopping. "J Mi. new cpts, drps, range. $8$. per mo. mcl water & aar pvt. patio. 621 Lovely •BT Condo. New $400. MO. beach. 931 w 19th St cat-port Noo·smokcn gas. 133 i.-:. 16th Sl C.M. Lar'kspur. $450 mo. cpta. bllns. By owner. MISSION RJo;Al.TY 54)l-0492 • $190. per mo. 645~4532 or 642-l2l6S. 675-8496 (213) IMB·9'.MO/MM046. PH. •94-0731 Srl8·1720. • ... c • • OALYP'fLOT e ""' Add it. .. Buitd it ... Olaper it...Hammen It ... Carpet SERV CE it ... Cement it...Wire it...Hoe lt ... Clean IL.Move -I it...Press it...Paint it ... Na1t 1t...Plast.er it ... Fix it. .. DIRECTORY "ffl•c• 1.,-r c_,..,,,. ChHd c.. ¢1w al SenlcH Haliilt9 ~ Mal• 'f ..... /Pap•rlllt ,._Mtg · •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• APPUANCE RE.PAIR REMODB.IMG 8abys1tt.ina. StarUng Feb I DO IT AW Hauling anytbl.f\I, 1arag 2 rup School 11r11 need MASONRY·Tlle, brick, *PAINTING* MAR~'SP~!lNO SlO -ServfC'eUlll Aherattona, rap irs, 1st. F\all ume hrst atuft. Electriul, Plumblns, dea!'up. Rebable, fast housecleaning Jobs alt. b!ock. concrete, a tone. Uc/lns979-3335Tryme NOJO~SMALL • <714) S49-Z422 ~tores, addJllons. b3th.~ & ·Ho t m ca Is. Cathy etc. Reas rat.et. ~957 servtce. 963-64s.2 2:30pm Wukdaya & Sat. Uccnsed. 968·2504 c. t kHeheos cabinets 646-172D F li , H l' •SUn. Have references. Prof. Paint.er. lot & Ext DRAJNCLt;ANEDr plli..,. patios cement 'l\ k , HANDYMAN·HO}DU ast De very. au tnl, CallSUem·9Ul Quality brick, block, stone Quo.I work & reu. Fr E Im rom ••••••••••••••••••••••• Contracto d w.,.r . e.ctrical Apt1. Conscientious Movlog & Cleanups. & concrete work. Lie. & est. '75lo-06M/5e·Z'7S8. $4.50 ves, w dssame Custom Books helves, work. Pat!m~csco~~~ ;••••••••••••••••••••• craftsman.'4S.6SS8. S7up.Pree~t.842-4S97. Expcrtcleanln&lady bonded.538-1108 Cl.ls W 11 rin prico.Guar.558·7380 tbles,roomdividers.etc MemborB.B.B.Allwork _LECTRICIAN ·~rnall HciU1eca.-llH) Pboncr Block & Slum stone to~ a .cove as R•1no .. &lt.,... Call Vince Lenhoff, guar B62'83l4 Jobs, maant/repa1rs. 22 HANDYMAN. ~auUng, •••••••••••••••••••• .. • 673-8'?1Mor642'4870 W 11_ rid lkspDri ,.., Painting. Licd·20yrs ex ••••••••••••••••••••••• SJ6.84i5. · · yrs expr tf233108. 548·5203 palnUn&, plumbina, etc. • au.>,~ ewa • v.... pr. Very neat635-8611. c--• Senlett Lowest rates. 493-0'171. Want a REAL~EAN Thorouihly! Good refer. &PaUos. 84$-8720 RmAdd_!!,!,f!· ~~~ REMODEL BUILD •• -•• F"""". Fette'--""hrs HOUSE?CallGmgham Windows, apL rcasona· PainUnl', lnt/Eict.custo Frest • .---1 -/rm 'P'"CIAL I I t •••••••••••••••••• '"V .... • Mo•'--l • h I ( XJ t ................ -· ~ "' oo nsu n e . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Glrl. l'"reeest.8645·5123 ble. --. pa nt. Apt., ouses uic, n --·--. REFS, LIC. 64S.3439 C~ll United-Professional Redwood fence s cial. Handyman. Can cleanup , S41·3'74 ••••••••••••••••••••••• molel!I, Free eat. 493-3882 ---------- ---------. Cai·pet, uphlstry, w10· Q lili I be $4pe f & haul Minor r epairs & HOUSECl. EAN ING is -Movin&Jffaullng. Student Roof9c) ~ASTER Craftodsman dRow & floor clc•ming. l:bot; &mm~'terluanl;· painlin.g.548-3983 ' Our ~uslnoas. Call L..dlctipiltcj w/largo truck. R eas. Pkllt.../Repolr •••••P•Al··~:·ALL•••••T:P·~=· Specially. Rem ehng, eas prices. Balboa 645-85L2 • -Janices R.aggedy Al\os •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• BarryMS·W723/839·5779 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RE n..,.-• 'r-" fmL'>h work. Refs. Free lsland.675-9024. · ARPENTRY, Painting. 675-GS.53 Rototilling-$25 Landscap-VERY NEA1' PATCH Reas,f~ests,lic. est.guarwork499-310S C____..1,.__ .._ Minor repairs. Free KATHERIN , HJ E ing Sod-Btue°grass 16w MOVlNG? Let2expmen JOBS & RESTUCCO. Walt830-5020anytime ........... 'VVnC,..nr Gc:rdeft'--estimates S45-1'08 ES W T • 1 move )OU. Reas. Refs. Fr t 893 1439 \dd1ts, Remodeling.••••••••••••••••••••••• ...., GL<>VECLEANING Sq.Ft. Tom960-2 70 .,,,..._._.A&•""" .. "l. eees · · · Tree Senic• ••••••••••••••••••••••• o.;Jii,>~ ~"'O~ patios, rabinets. par\el-Brick & Block "•Itel 640-8080, 5pm to 7pm. M ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 n g. <'on c r e t e · Palios,curb&gutter. E~prHawaiaanGarde!ler •••••-•••••••••••••••• OION"Y r~ta-....i PATCH PLASTERING Removals, limbing, top· .i<Y>.9739/750 tH60 Jacko W o '\ d. Cleanups & Hauhng HAULI"'G Xlnt housecleaning done ••••••••••••••••••••••• -·~1·..,..... ·"CJ J""'ohn·. . ayne642-o673 Trim&prune646.,.676 "A'*RDCLE,,,AN.UP by lady w/experience. WILLIAMS&SONS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••AI.J..TYPES•• ping• pt' uni n g. C a ,.._ d bl o t Masonry, Brick/Block PETERS PAINTING Free Est 540-FIREWOOD $7S cord/· Pus tom Brack Work. Don't give up the ship! ••S.56-0347•• W~~a e. wn rans. &Stone.CalJS81·7829 Int/Ext-Reas Rates ----------; del, lie/bond/ins. Have something you wa'n lo sell? Class1f1ed ads d tl well. 642 5678. a t1os &,wall sour "L1isl" it'" classified. . Cal1Geneat552-<H58 Houses,additions,restuc 642-2634. specialty. f ast-efficient Ship to s hore results! Have something to sell? SELL idle ilems with a Find what you want in ----------1 co. patching over block---------- 645-8512 642·5678. Classified ads do it well. Daily Pilot Classified Ad. DaUy Pilot Classifieds. ant ad results 642-5678 walls. 586--4892 Sell idle items &U·56'71 _________ , ---------- .&.-fMenh UMum. •-t t u..twt.. •-1auw11hFvmiahecl Offic:e.R...tal 4400 Industrial Rental 4500 Lost&Fomd 5300 renonals . 5350 HetpW..ted 7100 Apa lwwh .............._ ~ ~'''" s ...,....or• L-.11.._1.... ... _d 3900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• unn.-nra~ c ta MHa 3824 a Toro 3832 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 150 I Westclff Dr. ··;:ia~~.~:~~~s~;::· ~::~,;:;:;;i,:~;·;:;,~'. ~~~~;~:··~~.~! R. ES 0 RT ~~Ef i;~:CJE~~ or F\Jrn. gas(wtr pd. Pvt patio. 586-8137 Easlbluff 3 br, 2 ba, ~se. (714)642-3111 ext246 Adults·No pets Sec. i.:atc r-.-t . V II 3834 l~cl. spuc master swte, rvun am a ey din rm & dbl garage ()(r. . Ind · t LOST: Dog·Help, blk-wht ace/. ustna space, Collie mix male 12/27 Lag Niguel area 400/3000 ' S.fo'.NrFrwy831-1082 ~-~7l~ay. Reward. PREGNANT? 4600 Carin g c onfide ntia l counseling & referral. Abortion, adoption & Lost : Blk Lab, ·4 mos keeping. m a l e. 12/23 . Nwpt APCARE S47·2563 AssemMyWortt Perm. J>06ihons. No ex· per. necess. Must speak English. Costa Mesa. 714/6.31 ·0iOO. ASSEMBLERS Pool. rl·C rm, elevators •••••• •• •••• ••••••••••• A d · 1· 525 Vicloriu 642 8970 . uto oor opener avu1 . · -· Nr. Mile Sq Pk. Allr. adlt Pool & recreation area. LIVING . FREE RENT eat. clea n house w I Offices as low as 35~ per fenced yard. For myself sq ft. Mis~1on Viejo & & 2 small dogs. Up to Laguna Niguel. 200 to $300. By Jan 20. NB or Bl/32nd. NB Rewa rd ---------·• 540-4847. Lose your cool with your Coil Winders. Exper'd children? Help is availa-coil winders for hi-Ci LOST: FV Class Ring of ble 24 hrs. 549-8939 speaker manuf. co. $2. 7S '76. Vic. Metro Car Wash ----------• to $3 per hr. Apply, Garden Condo. 2-BR. Adullsonly.nopels. 1'2 ba. drps, cpts, pool. •FROM $332• Beach & Ellis. 118. MASSAGE B.E.S. 345 Fischer St, From$175 •l MO FREE.RENT• Proc. woman w /well Reward! 962·0307 FIGURE MODELS Costa Mesa. <Nr O.C. S200 968-7437 art 6 865Am1gos Way. NB Huntincjton Beach 38 40 •>44-8064 or 536· 1487 ~sq fl. 831-1400 CM· Area. 548·1604 Oakwood Orfers the 1·2·3 Rm. offices .from behaved 16 yr old ----------• Airport).S49--3833. $135 per mo N e ar d h · h I FOUND; female Collie, ESCORTS (}nest in resort Ii ving at a . · aug ter WlS es lo ease ••..................... 1\1 an aged by William Walters Co. I Block to Oc:ean I Hr with View. rcfng Bayfront 2 Bd. 2 Ba, Pvt stov~. s ml pet OK fo'rnm Bch & pier $550. yrly. $175. Mgr 214 A. 14th St. 979·1935 & 644-4510 536·8400 or 645-8107 price you can afford . Airport.Nolea~e req . unJ'urn 2Br, 2ba apt. nr. Dec. 21, Vic. Hunt. Bch. Oulcall-Appt.only. Assembly, exper'd in There's Sl million in 833-32239T1lnoon beach in Nwpt. y rly. SJ6.759lor 536-4379 Home.Office-Studio loading, audio cassettes PIMECREEk LIVES UP St t F b 1 646 2125 or related magnetic tape rec reation facilities. MESA VERDE·SOO sq n. ar e · · · Lost: Sealpoint Male 631-3811 products. International UTILITIES PAID BLOCK TO OCEAN Deluxe Pnvate 28r, 2ba. Lge walk-in closets, bllns. garage, ea ble TV, Adults1 no pets. $300 mo. till June 15. $375 mo. on yearly lease. See to ap- preciate. Call for appt 551 6042 after 6 PM NIGHT LIGHTED TEN· new bldg. Cpts, drps, AM. Siamese. NB. R,cnt scar __ __..... _______ , Audio,556-li87ofc hrs. NIS COURTS. A Cull time Cum (optional). $25-0/mo. lusiness/lnnst/ base right ear • .neward. PROBLEM TO ITS NAME ther soo t.ill trt>l''> Jnd I 0 s I r t' ;i m ' \\ I I h .... a I l' r r ·" I ., (' r (' •• I (. ·' I rl'l:t\1ni.: "<'lllO ).! tor \OUr <;p;H'ltlll., Ill'\\ I or l Day Free Rent 1·2·3 Bedroom Apts. Walk To Beach LIONS ESTATES 536-2579 592 5010 :! lwdr1M1n1 JflJI tm1·n1 WALK TO BEACH 1-·ro111 S2:!0 l .. u rr11 ll11 • ·•' J1lahll' S mJll pl'I ~ 2 Br. cpts, drps. bllns. 1 l!-;. ,\dull' 0111.\ Ol I 11·1· gar 22116th SL 536-2064 or 847 3!>57 •'1"-'n !.I no lo ti uo . 2:100 --------·---------FJlr''••'" Hd . Co ... lJ Spar1ous ne,.; triph'!\ one \l~.1 l'horw 515 :.!:1110. milt-to ocean S345 3 Rr. 2-b:i . bltns. lg frpk. s~p. gar . wJlndry. tonn. OCEANFRONT 2 BR. l ba. winter $300 activities director who Mr. Wood, 675-6000 or Rnanee 640-01~ PREGNANCY plans parties. BBQ's, 675..Q)61 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -,-~t-·-F-'--1-,L-L_b_'-LG-Testing-Counseling ln""" & more' Free Son-•·-'----...,.,.. · ema e ~ a TZ • Aborti'on Referrals da:;-'brunch. · Offices. 2 lge. 2 sm. $75 & _ _,s • Shepherd. Blk w/white J Op_...-ty SOOS 24 Hr. Help Line Plus beautiful singles $150 per mo. New M·l ,._. ·-·• 0 n c h est ~ f ee l · Alternatives 547-9495 1&2 bedroom apts'. comp l ex. 1 7 th & ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Barv<?Sa". ~1c: Puen-1---------- fumished & unfurnis hed. Pomona. CM . Corner loc. DRESS shop for sale. Top t e I V 1ctor1 a • CM . , __ LADIES , Rents from Sl75. Prices Can be used for lite Costa Mesa location. Call Reward. 548-1430 vary by locations. comm111 5m51fg4.286946-4296; Patu21l838 l-1400or 645-SOOO Lost: Male Cock-a·Poo. Havcyourownpersonal Models open 10 to 7 eves ca · . ap A . t /blk & masseur. l will come to Sorry no pets or ch ild~en : FREE RENT. l month on COCKTAILS-uflt~nt Valle~n nera~ile yotu968r ~~· Aft5 ks for Boalbl Roommate serv ic e S p k n' a "°""a pm, av<1ilablc. Month to 300-llOOsq.ft.deluxeofc. DINNERHOUSE q . a r • e ward. daySat-Son. th No. C.M. 54-0-2200. GROSS $20 000 .. 10 839-1624 mon occupancy. . . ·~ . ----------·~ New bldg 2500 sq. fl., M-1 Neat small & intimate. Lost: Female German Y'""'t.& AYON Why Get Snowed Underly Christmas Bllls?Eam money to pay them as ao AVON REPRESEN- TATIVE. I'll show you how. Call 540·7041 or Zenith 7·1359. 2 BR. 1 Ba. pool, 2 adults !).$6.563Jwkend!>9rafl6 max. $255. mo. 1632 B Walk to bch $180 & up. No Iowa. 549-4338 Summer increases. Pool, STE.PS TO BEACH 3 BR. 2 ba. S300 winter 2 BR. 1 ba. S250 winter 3 BR. 2 ba. S350 winter .J BR. 2 ba. yearly $495 w1n ofc. Lge rear fir. Seats only 58, but always Shorthair. Ans to J ane. atiOn ~5 mo. Days 540-5710, busy. Owner leaving Lost l/1/i5. Atlantic/· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------- eves. 646 -0681 area & must sell. Terms. Beach. Reward. 536·6425. Jobs Wattt.d. 7075 BabysiUer. Weekdays. VILLA MESA· From $205. re<: rm, ilrps. crpt. Adlts, 2 BR patio pool no ~>els no pets. 220 12th St. 719 w. Wi'ison. 'tH6-l2Sl 536·!1505. 219 15th St, SEA WINO Condo, 2 BR. 2 b:i., den. unfum. Yearly $475 Oakwood Garden Apartments ----------• Agent 8'J7-4200 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3pm-6:30pm. NEWPORT BEACH BIKE REUT"'LS ~ST Male Insh ~etter 2 High School girts need 551-3081. STORE ~ ""' Vi c Newport Heights. housecleaning jobs aft. --------- Across from Newport $6.800 FULL PRICE Cbildrens pet. 548-7939. 2:30pm weekdays & Sat BEAUTY OPERATOR. ·~5) _:>36_·_70_3_1 ______ _ s:J,effSec. Dep. w/ad 2 Br 1 Br. newly refurbished, 2 #Ja. child under l OK do~e to beach Isl mo. + s & up. ilO w 18th St. S50 dep 962·7788 Days. 962 8050 Eves associated Mewpart '-ell 880 Irvine Irvine at 16th 645-0550 Beach City Hall. 810 Price includes $3,500 OUN S 1 . &Sun.Havereferences. Exper ienced Male stock. Some sales & F _D; m · fem. m.1x. Ca11Soe979-962l Stylist. 557-3986. square feet. air condi-service. Needs live-',\ire Te rrier. Blk w /wh1te . lloning and carpeting. operator. Xlnt be~ch markings. 02·~·75) at Dental Assist avail for Beauty Operato_r, 2 .Assis· BROKERS-REAL TORS Z0 2S W Bolboo 67l·Jb61 Lighted sign available. area. Warni:r & Euchd, F._v. full/pt-time work, exper tants & 2 manm~nst for- __________ , S400 ~r month on l~ase Agent 837.4.200 Has silver choke c hain. backoffice496-2213 new salon. Richard NR: NEW 3 BR. 2 ba. _ frplc. gar, no pets. $315 E-Costa Mesa. 642-1003. Rooms 4000 with sign-up concessions. 897-0175 Ouellette Sa Io n 200 Just Completed ----------Look at 3333 Newport Barber Shop For Sale on NEB> Newport Center Dr. Ad It I C d 2 bd ••••••••••••••••••••••• F d "'" lb Bl k Do Deluxe Triplex. Lrg % u uxury on o. . Blvd. and call 642-4321, the Beach al Newport. OWl : "" · ~c g. 7 1.0684 Design Plaza N.B. Brs. Di~hwasher. bltns. 2 ba. frplc , patio. all new FURNISHED ROOMS Ext. 276 Established 5 yrs. $lOOO Male. Looka like Lab. ----+------=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;;;; 2 Br. 1 Ba, Pool, Bltns. frplc. pvt patio. encl. drps. cpts & appliances. Crom $190. Pool, i:na1d. or Pickup lruek of same w/wht spot chest. Top of HtlpW 7100 • Drapes, Shag crpts. $190 gar. No pets. S250 & $340. Walk to Wes lclaCf Shop-phone, laundry. V1llag FREE RENT. Npllch nr value. 642.4758 the World, Lag . .Bch. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bovs &Girls 642·9367orG31·Z383 Eves 1s4s2 llunlington St. ping Center. $385 . lnn.494-9436 airpor t. Free u til & 494-2382eves. B b f lk 557 ~ &530 5775 mo 645-1528 1o janitor! Garden s uites Mort-s, Trust 3 r. 2 a. 1600sq. l. wa · _ · ., · Room s $25 wk up . from$88.979-6666. Dttd;-5035 FO~D; Vizsla, w/choke ACCOUNTING toshop'ng, 2 car ~ar . pat LGCJUIKI Beach 3848 Spacious Yrly 3 Br. within w/kitchen. J\pts $37. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cham, dark brown. male. NOPETS$365.G31 ·2018. ••••••••••••••••••••••• steps of beach & Bay. wk u p. 548 -9755 or Plcr1a Vic. Heil & Bolsa Chica, NowlsTheTlme Offle t P th Drop a -pebble into the Availjuslhef. Feb. l .On-645·3967 Exe-cutinSuitH LOANS up lO 80% H.B.840·1924 ForAllGoodPeople 2 & . 0a eon dal Ocean from your Apt. ly S374 .95. Leave Msg at SI · k · h Custom decorated full T Co T T l. . 3 r. A u ts. no Le L . 673.1909 eeping rm. w / ate . . re · lstTDLoans.Sl/4o;0 FOUND, black male o me o he pels dshws hrs s ha ~ ase. uxury, sccunty, -privil. fo r sincere size vie w 0 ices. z-~TDLo-.. Coc.kapoo •. on leash. Vic. AidO!TheirCountry cpts'. closed g~rai1e . Mature adults. 31755 Cst. PARK NEWPORT trustworthy gentleman. Services of Cer tified nu -·· 1 di li & N 1 d frplc. BBQ. Gas & water Hwy. 499-2835 APARTMENTS Dana Pt. area. $25 wk. Professional Secretary, Fairest Terms since 1949 ~=po s ew an · d p 1 Pref. 4 wks in advance. reception & equipment. 1 r ......... _ M'--Co. P · 00 • OCEANF RONT year Bat:helorlor2 lk · l ~ '7 LA MANCHA ·APTS ·round 2 br $'J75. bat'h u~drooms and 496-5919evesor early am. lb Airporter nn. 2082 642-2171 545-0611 FOUND; Keys, Vic. 22nd .,.,. ---~------• Michelson Dr, Irvine. & Santa Ana. Costa 778Scott Place, CM $175. Kids/pets. Ulll pd Townhouses Room, Pleasant, pri. en-Call Eve Moore. 752-0234 2-dTD Loans Wanted Mesa. 645-4190 642 5073 :>36-0321 F'r S239.50 tr k' I · ance, l'OO mg, c ose m. •--· R _. 4450 Buy T.D. 's for cash. 2 BR g Sl85 W l Oc V I 0 d 1 blk Open 9·6 Daily LagWla. 497·2014. IMDlltHS ettfUJ Loans on 2nd T.D.'s , ar, mo a er ean 1ew. ., rm Spa-Pools-Tennis ••••••••••••••••••••••• paid. 2176 Placentia, apt to b<h. s tove1refng. Across from Fas hion Laguna Bch. Pri home. JDEAL shoplocatedinthe NewLoans-2nd T.D.'s FOUND young female black kitten. 4lst St. Newport Bch. 675-7983. LET'S GO TOWORIC! IO key Operators A/P"'f & A/Rec lookkeepen 10to1('years of age. Dai- ly Pilot deliv.ery routes may be available in your area. Earn profit for de· liveries & cash, trips or merchandise for selling new s ubscriptions. For information please call 642-4321. Yrom San Clemente-San Juan Capistrano area, call 495-0630 and Mission Vie· jo-EI Toro area, call 581-6310. . Equal Oppor. Employer "F" 63&-4120 1·5pm. furnished. Pets kids OK Island at Jamboree on Light cooking facil. mallatlheFactory,Can· SJ000.·$30,000. Longor shortterm ,, 1 d S20U. Ph: SH -0993 & ..... J H'll Ro d 494·6176or 838-9615. nery Village, N.B. SllO. Equity Invsmt. Div. FOUND Chihuahua Vic local jobs avail now. loaf Electricians ... ew Y decorate lge 496·1981 ...an oaqwn • s a . G d P t 1 d It "··t 1714) 644 1900 mo. 6'73·9606,· 67"9393 BARNETI' MT ·CO. Adams & Bushard, H.B. Check Out & Diesel (nni-stu 10• ~ •o. a u · ~ • Priv. Home. room & bath, ..,.. 20 Yrs in Org Cly. 536-7476. Temporary Work At "2-·-ok. Appliances. Ut1I pd. u rt•-h 3869 ---· tr 0 cc ~.-c:2134 t· IMtallen S160 859W 19th 642-3452 "ewpo 11eac WATF:RF'RONT-UTIL pnv.en ancenr. · · · BALIOAIHH .,..,,. any ime 3723Birch Street. Must be exper'd. Good · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• PD 2 br, large patio. yrty 545·2605 Com m e r e i a I space ~h/ Lost : Blk/gray male Cat. (Between co. benefits-medical & CASA HERMOSA Newport Isle. 2Br. 2ba. S'J75.Uockava11673·7381 Rentals to share 4300 available, $100-$300 util. PenoMJs/ ~~n:S%ig~~~~~1~· Bristol/MacArthur) lile ins. Paid vacs. w e 14.w.wils-,CM Upper deluxe duplex. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lOSMainSt.675-8740. Lost&Folmd 9-llAMorl:J0.3:30PM are looking for good ..... S3SO yrly. (213) 791-4348. 2 Br.112 ba. frplc. 1 Blk lo offfceovertoad 1 I 1 Beautiful (213) 681.5315. bch. Yrly. $JOO. Call Fem. room~ate 25-35. NEWPORT BEACH •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• Found Boxer/Brindle vie perm. emp oyees or as&. · 645-70S4. Share home m CdM. Call Anno.tcemenh 5100 So. Coast Plaza Jan 2, 557.0061 growing co. TownhouH Apt 2 Br l ·Ba $275. frpl, sun 673-7235 STORE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 552-3052 days 551·39801•---------Apply In Person Just Completed d k . c pt, d r p. n at 2 Bd, l '2 ha near Hoag, Across from Newport * * * eves. AIDES Pacifica By Accept. Child & Pet rah1nets. range. d1.sp. S230. mo. ,,N? Child ren/· WANTR'~TOAV~l~HE Beach City Hall. 810 Fr-L•:-H--~---Found Fem puppy •"'i~-Trat-tn~* KipperYachts j!Jr. W!>hr /dry. clean & pets. 645·6.>5'l. f Amit square feet, air condi· -'"' ftMR'•-. ""'us "' 928 W .17th St, C.M. . lncl~s: . neat. ti75 -i8l2. 6lG ------CAL HOUSE-MATF..S tioning and carpeting. 2933~1 Cockapoo mix nr Spr-Mature individua s in-1•--------• Pnvate patio. carpeting, Clubhouse Dr. 3 Bel, 2 ba. very lgc, f~plc. and find someone who is Lighted sign available. Costa Mesa ingdale & He il H.B. lerested in caring for oraperies. was h ers . ---12 blk Lo oc·ean. Winter $400 per month on lease You are the winner or 2 846-2336 others. Training class to IOATREPAIR dryers. dis hwashe rs . LIVENearTheAeach' SJ(>O. Yrly$375.675·6G82. Den.1andable withsign-upconcessions. ticketstothe Found pr. chit ... ·· glasses start 1/12/76. Apply 9·2, Apprentice needed to a· rbage d spo I" gas C ~-1 S I t h r~h · · h Look at 3333 Ne t ""' Moo thru Thurs. Rovale work bard & learn boat ,.,a 1 s<1 ·•· asa UC' 0 Lido Isle 2 Br. Ut1I incl. 0 s are ousmg wit · wpor Sports Vac....a.:--1·n blk case v1·c W 17th St -1 t bl 11 r Bl d d II 642 4321 • 'llTIVn • • Conv. Hospital, 1030 W. repair. Must be neat & s ove. mar e pu man. Beauti ulAdultApts s375. 213 _681 _8406, 832-4134askforJim v ·an ca · . &R ......: __ _. C M 5489452bef 5·30 1 M . d r. 1 Ext 276 ecre~ · · · · · Warner, SA 546-6450. c ean. echan1cal ap· pow er room, ire a arm From S 190 Evestwknds 675-2342. · · d d d -.ystem, forced air heat-21661 Brookhurst,HB Male to s hare 2 bdrm. V.Mca.Show Found Siamese old AIDF.S titu e nee e . No losers ing. enclosed garages. 962-6653 duplex wi. older man nr. Lease. Art Gallery• Bay at the neutered cat, collar vie ... UIS_. please. Blackie's Boat. parking spat•e. Hunt. & Atlanta sh. ex-loc. Walk-by traffic. Gd. ANAHEIM Harbor & Hamilton CM *" "~.AIDES• Yard,N.B. Pnor Rental Refer Req San Clemente 3876 pen. 536-3488. for .gift shop or compati· co "' v E N T J ON ., .. ,,5150 We are seeking exper'd __.. _______ _ . . 1 Br Nr. Hoag Hospital • • • ••••• • •• •• ••••• • •• •• ble items. 962·6009 i" CENTER ....,.. Aides & Orderlies who Boo~~eeper F /Chg Cl) 2 RR S33S $175 mo. 1481 Placentia M 1 No Lag, oceanview, lux· Jan. 3thruJan. ll Found ,· puppy, nea r are sincere about tiving pos1t1on .. & General Ofc 3 2 BBRR w,frplc $34$395 5 NB. Adltsonly. 646-6973 ature coupe to manage ury 2 BR, newly arrived For Lease. lSOO sq rt Store ood (1) position 642-8400 7 urut apt. E·Z access to Businessman will share Bldg. in Jr. Shopping Call 642-5678 ext. 333 to Palaris & Evening Star. e paUent care. Apply 1 ___ . __ • ----- Inquire next door: · b-Leasc Park Newport beach. Normally rents w/resp M o r F, non C n l r a l Beach & claimyourlickels. N.B. Discribe & it's 9·2 Mon lhru Thurs, ~F/Chg Hacienda De Mesa ApLc;., lovely I BR. till for $200 mo .. Reduc!-Jon smoker. Lge pvt. suite, Yorktown. HB. Plumbed * * * yours.642-5607 ~~[~l~~Wv~r~~pi~~ Must be ab"le to work in· 160W. Wilson. Aptll l JWle. adults onJy. $200. for ma,nagenal services pvt. bath, W/W closets. for laundromat, will con-Lost: Reward. Charm 546-645() • dependently w/several Costa Mesa 640-1218 nego.t1ablc . 547-8017 $200. mo. Plus ulil. vert.Ph:962-8996. * * * bracelet in C.M. area. . set.soCbooks.Workyour 2 BD. patio, enclosed YRLY 3 br. 2 ba, by ~':Ji~~. 542·9009 eves & 675-6421 ask for Secty, lndilstrial Retttal 4SOO R.C. Uttdef'woocl Call 963-1533. Apartme nt manager, own hrs. Fantastic op· Rarage. East.side. adults. beach. Near new. bltns & JiU. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4220 r..ttHewport LOST· Ai ed 1 "Be .. mature CO'.Jplc. 7 Unit, por. for right person. Sl75 1u" .. 431 ""6 .,.,76 $390 .. 063 Sant •--3880 ... _.... • h · r a e, n • San Clemente, EZ access REply to Classified ad . .,..,.... or ..... .,, · garage. .S48-. a-Now! Roommate for *MEW* ne .... ,..... •. tlC 1/2176, Vic.20th&lrvine to beach. 547-8017 days; no. 606 c/o Daily Pilot. Lovely 2 Br , cpts/drps. Br. 2 Ba. yrly 2 blks to 2••8••••to•••••d•••h•••h•••d·~· s pac. 2 br.Neat, non"' COST• MES• youk aret ththe wmner or 2 CM. Tattoo inside thigh 542-9009eves & wknds. PO Box 1.:560 Costa Mesa stv &refrg.$220,rhldovr beach$365mo r,s ve. Is ws r , ts· s moker. SSS. +dep. A A .. c els o e F -73/75.548-9610 Ca92626 7.702JamesSt.673·3078 642·3l88 pos, arc . shag .crpt, 548·4371eve. <Near Harbor & Hnker) Sporh,Vaccrtioft 1----------drps .. encl pat. Nice re-1360 to 3480 sq. ft. 18' per & RK....tiOftal LOST; white Wirehair Assemblers Bookkeeper, 4 hrs. per $©\t~lA-"£tfS8 Tliaf lnfriguing Word Game w;fl, o Cliudfe -----l<l ... 11 lty C\AT • rOllAN ----- •It~ '-'•• of ""' fOllt Kro...Oled wo<d• bo>- low 10 fett,,. fOllf 1t-'e -ch sid area. Close to s hops. 4Br. 3ba, 3000 s r home. l sq ft. 110-208. 3 phuse Vftlicle Show Terrier , female. Vi c. dly in real estate ofc. .Mature adlts only. No blk ocean.' Man over 40. power. avail mid Dec.. althe Joanne & Wilson, C.M. PRODUCTIO.._. Contact William Winton pets. lnq. 415 So. Orange, non-smoker. $160 mo owner (714) 540-4058 or ANAHEIM 1/1176. 646-7950 " • • 675·3331 * * AptC.S.J\. Refs.S42-1802&96J·SS49. your Broker CONVENTION LOST: Male Cockapoo, ASSEMBLERS , ___ C_A_S_H-IR_/ __ •-hnents f'llntished Office R...tal 4400 CENTER tan w/blk ears & lail. CRIDIT CLHK ~ furnished 3900 •••••••••••••••••••••••Lease 1,000 sqft w/office Jan.3t.bruJ ao.11 Wearing brn colla r . Electronic Assemblers ••••••• ••••••••••••••• 110·220 V, heat , hot Call 642·56'18, ext. 333 to Name "Peppy•·. Vic. withatleast6monthaex· ~~n!~~~l~:~'?' t~~':~ 111 Exc'TrNC water. new building. ad cla1m yourtkkets. N.8 ._()7_3_-23_19 _____ , perionco in cable bar· I A D A M u R I , 1 t * * d Mr. Riggs, 897-0327 rof' . PALM ESA Ans. oca e. 64~ 2244. •w-=-1-5350 nesslng, solderir n e1 and appt. 11 ( I f I r-...--. touc hup o pr nle ,_.._ _______ _ II MIN 1-;sTONPT ./'~....,..w Lost&Fo-.4 5300 ....................... circuit boards. U you ,_ ________ _ l l U C E N 1 1. ,_, h ~ .. BR ~..,,,.. AIRPORT ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drinking problem ? qualify and are a Cood cmsus . _ e,.,c • 1,,_ · ~==-......,... 3200 Square Feet LOST New Years Evo, CaJI Alcohol Helpline rellablo worker, please tft, I I r I f from$180. .,..,....,... 191,itr p rSq. Ft. yr old German Shor 24hr"Sadaym.383Q appl)'lnperson. • _ . _ . AdulU.NoP& .I'....,~-. 2AJNondit1oncdoffices, Hair Pointer. Blac ENUMEl1 TORS ~ • , 1561 Meaa Dr. ./...,.. ,_..., ample parking. w/whlto &Pota. Iona ~ii SPIRITUAL READER ST• .._.DARO " I PAYAT t (SBlu EastotNewport Hcrborle•est.Co. NamelsVlctor.Anylnf OpenlOAM·lOPM A" CITYOF :•::1::1:•=:1=:1:•: wa~c" ~~::':_::::;::: ~t:.:Jo a..tto.a 67M4oo pleasecauscs .. 121· 3~~~~fc!~~~t~~':1', MEMORIES, ~:e~:!.~cn -""'' •nd hoc>e• they'll do S140 U!) 1tore-offlces cpts o.-. ,.~ M 1 000 Loll: German Shcphe San Clemente. f'oroppt. l.._.C T•mporary positions l,.._S_P_t_C_B_E_'""I ~ on the lnttani -, • LUXURY duplex 3 Br, 2 drp1 ai r batb. 1730• ~ • ..000:~ n J,1~·p1wr. rcmalt. Vtc La1run 492.9034 492.9136 " • beglruUng Jan. Appl)' by . G ,... dl«•I• t1u61ed ba, unfurn3rb' IMS mo. Btacb81,H.B.SU·m34 EY 6'TJ.Hl7 Hl.rh. 1/3/76. car o Aaub ldiaryor J a n. 7th, 19'7& at the ( ( I' I I ~ 1,~,.11 lfl "'• ,.. ... 1 wetd l'Um. 3 Br, 2 ba, tJuu SJNOLE to 6 'tea · stomach. Heward. OUTCAU. APPLIED Penonnel Dept., 3300 ..__..__....._....._ __ .-J .,..-....io. ,,_ ._,..... t.eio.. JUN: aoth, $3'7$ Slee-to Avell In lu~'f: ~r/ice 2000 Sq. rt , orr. & 497-3189 or daya 811·9 MASSA.GI& MAONF.TICSCORP Newport Blvd.NB I' r I' I' I' r I 'ti[l) 209 ~~:;.rNPB. bld1 n'r. OC~rport. •vii r•re~se •P;Cf! dlroctc a~k ~_o_r K_•_'l_·-----i ESCOITS Sa~~-~~~ · -· · · -· urvlc• Incl . Recep-1 acroo rom Loll; Slamc1e cat, male Forlho extras In llfo 11nd - j I j j I .I l $190 Clean 2 br, pool. Sr. llcJnlat, coolerenre rm. Alrport.S49·l4SO. Scar on rlaht front tog. the Foxiul 1irl1 You All f;qualOpportunllJ ~es~~~ ctr0a1tillyinPllhclo· l . . . . _ . . Clthen• weleomc. No1 xeros, automated lJP.. Lo!l Bal. Penin . an.a. cal.I: Wee!Ome. Em ..... _r ..... ,g ~sc===~::::~!.!~~:.!.:~~~:=:!~~..!!:.=.-...J.::,:,hl=ld/==pe=la.==C=M=.=Gd-==2731===.l.=m='=·=et=~=Ca~ll=l33==...0====:=!.:Q=·=aas==U=ied==A~cb====64=~=1=='~R~~~W~A~R~0~.~87~3~-~~~~:;;:d:~"°~-y~G~l~r~~~lo~c~.~5'2~..:rt~89;;!~~~~--~l~-~-~~~;i=Cl=usifi====ed=A=~==S42==,5"71.~~._· 1 • ' • ...., w-... 71 00 tW,W..tM 7100 . ,.......... • ' I Tu.ctay.Januaryl. t078 DAn.VPfLOT 8Jf •••••••••••••••••-• ... ••••••••••••••••• ..... W...... 7100 ..... W..tecl 7 100......,.W•ted 7100 •----ll!i!lllJlll_llil.,. .. _._~.;.;.;..;;.••;.;•;.;;•;;•• ••••••••• ••••-•••••••• • • ••• • • • • • • • • •• •• • ••••• , .. ••• • • • ......... !•••.• ...., W..t.4 7 I 00 ...., W..tect 7100 H11p W ..W 7 100 H1fp W _... 7111 ~ BOYS All GIRLS P'1st~~ICJ~r1r tn .............................................. ·;;;;~~;;;;;· ..... -;;=· .. -, 1f you arc 12 to 16 years old and would ~Pdlum SI~ Produc-JUNIOR SALESMAN SALES MANAIER TRAINING t:icpet"'d. G Ir w Towing, Full " p /U me. Top i likeklo e.alhm $20bto $50 ~rut more per ~1~"~c~::,oc~~ Newspaper promotion company has ioootrvLM,NB&42-1252 bf'neli&.s. Apply betw11 ' w~ • wt ~ c ance lo win a trip to backiround. Peo11on openings fot' people with vans or station 2&i5pm. DHDJ'~SH Phal~delph1a. Cape Kennedy or plan " xlnt co. p~11d 10TO15 y~ Old wad,_"-. Earnindc $150 to $300"or more TYPIST •/TBJI( Selectric Avenida~.Sao m. W Shingt"""' DC d 1~ N b 591• evawo -lo t ype al home oc ia a · ...... ··an cash awards nsurance. 0 P 00~ per week . Good chance for casionally. Box 4S09 •WANTEJ>.bff ~ . bikes 1fd other Pri,zes, 1 have a Job fo~ ~~':!cit ;rt~ Earn $20-$40 per week tAwking after advancement. Mt.nt be able to work Irvtne,mu1. ~:d:~~T ~v! ti:~ you. YOU are ':rilling to work bard, CoolainerLn. HB school le Satu rdays. Huntington with teenagers. This is not a paper Nunsla1 up .• cook 1c learn responsibility and the value or Beach & Fountain.Valley areas only. route. TYPISTS shop. Needed immcd. money, call Mr. Scott, 642·4321. J-8orfS'~1rtllor Leavename,address&pbooenumber Call Mr. Scott at 642·4321 for Call ror lnt~rview tk ) ~::r:,~ro:io:~ be fumlshed. This :uxafJ~~u!:s t; P ~~B!! on tape recorder. Call ~-appointment. Mow h n.. r.,.. salary e~pec.ted. 548"3688 176, Cost.a Mfta. a2U1 • fGf-Al Good r ..,&e Equa l Opportunity Employer JANITO•S ·Equal Opportwuty Employer To Come To The ~~·kfJS Exper'd only. 3·4 Hrs AJdOl"l'be-irCota11t.ry Maraud-Unit! - night. 5 Da~ wk. Matt • .W,W..t.d 7100 ....,w..e.ct 7100 HttpW..ted 7100 HetpW.ted 7100 party-Biceps- Help W.ted 7100 Help W..W 7100 fem, or cpls. Irvine•~•. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• f.,ET"S GO REPLAY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••-..• Call belwn 2:pm & Spm, M•a,.Mltf REAL r.sTATESALES R.E. SAL~ TO WOtt•! An o•"mist is anyone Chef & Cocktail waitress M "'" '"~ ...,. · Exper. New l>lnner EIGHT• .a.DIES on-... 1,7~·'1292. Will 1976 be~ year o ATr'ENTIO~ STA.IT THE SALES CopyTyplog who ,.,a1.ches bas team "'t y rd Ba • ....,_ independance for YOU UCENS£0. Lado f Children's Repro&Statist.acal lose on television and House. "' Y 1 rm ·· for part tlme tern-JEDROS Waitress, ovt'r YOUR FAMILY! Pu UNLJCE SEO. HEW YEAR Speclalt;rShop in Mis· hopes they'll do better Ofl GriU, 111 W. Pallcada, porary omce promotion 2l, Dishwasher, apply ln your unproductaYe tJm GET THE RED Rl'1!..HT• saon Vie~ Ex per. pref. SECRET ARIES the instant REPLAY. San Clemente. Mr. work for South Coast person. 3000 Br11tol. to work & make it ba CARPET .., • Full time. For appt. call Executlve&Gen'l LeiSten. Plaz.a Hotel. Must have C.OSta ~tesa. pen! For executive in-TREATMENT! Sell~ aft 6 934704 Men:ll••w ChildCare&lt.hskpgex-pleasn.nttelepbo!levo,ice. Kitchen Helper. p/time. t e rvlew appl. call We train you to sell lecrftle•H._..h · p.m .4 · Looiorsbortt.erm . change Free Room, N ° ex Per 1 e 0 c e Raleigh HUls H06p, 1501 641M067. homeswithanac:celerat· Eom Mon localjoblavaHnow. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8005. Board & home. plus $200. !"eteSSary, day or even· E. 16th St. NB MS-5707, ed course that st.arts 1m· Our r~1dent1al division Secretary w I stock Check Out mo. 9 Yr. old girl, nr tng work nail. Guaran· bet 8 JO-.-& MASSAGE TECH. media~)y. II you are in· l.L.slS and selb more 1n-brokerage firm. Prerer Temporary Work At Wels h Dresser Ba ses O.C.C. MS-4619 teedh bonhourly Awagl e 1~lu80s wn · · TR.AIMEE teresled m ¢•mini b•C vestment propert.ses than some cashier or wire 3723 Birch Street. Circa 1760. 2 aulhentJc cas us. PP Y • 1 Lady who needs $500 mo fr ~Y from the start. most investment office.$. room exp. Xlnt working (Between hand-crafted reproduc· Cook, middle aged Beach Blvd., Room 203, up.Salesorlenled.Phooe Young lady (1.S-28) for get indlviduallttd Cree PersonalTramang Video cond. Contact He1d1 , Bnslol/MacArthur) lions. U>Pine $27~. woman preferred, (13t~ & Beach), Marilyn,968.a378. legaUmatefullumeposi· tramingonlhejobinoee Traanang. Prestage Of. 640-1460 9-llAMorl:JO-J•JOPM ll>Oak $325. Antique CocktailLounge.548·9006 Weslminster.Ca. uon. No e'ltp. nee. We olmanytopoificeslO<'at· r1cu. Full facilities~---------offfceon rtoad restoring & refinishing.. L--"'-'.Janltor send to school, earn ed thruou o c SECRETARY CooKS & PREP COOKS Experienced waitress af. ---r while you learn. Apply in t ranee oun Propert) Purchase Plan, 557-006 I Jorgensen Custom Furn. • l & h'f Full tame . .Newport ty., call for further de-Praoge Benerats, Top Noc.ch. Xlnt typist. 957 Newhall St. CM . Taking applications. ernoon eve . s 1 t . Beach Travel Lodee. Ap-person any afternoon or tails. Arlene , nu 1 Supenor commission. Sb. Use transcribing1---------i . Male or Female, over 18. 494 ·8385 or 998 South ply in penon. 6208 W. Cst eve. 2930 W. Coast Hwy, ~-3742 Oynam.ic Organaiatioo. machine. Xlnt benefits. TYPIST (part time) at _M.S-OJ __ 1_0_. -----.-;~~riln:~~:; re:1P£~i: CoastHwy.L.B. Hwy. Nwpt.Bch. REALESI'ATESALES t..u.nung Environment, Equal Opp Employer. bomeOK. Large BruMwick wind· M 1 N 0 w A y S , 2 1 7 LIFE AGENTS Medical Insurance FUii lJID4! bcensees who Salary $550·$600 mo. Call 645-2111 up. mahogany Victrola. Marine, Balboa Island, FOOD Biller needed. Joi"n -H-1 1A1U ,.,od ror ea.rmngs in Mrs. Baker, 833-9550. Has storage area for PROCESSING Interested in ma.king a 842-6261 TT' excen of $25.000. per Secretary /Girl Friday TYPIST albums. Plays excellent• COOKS ASSIST. Applications now taken change? Newport Ctr. T..tMll.Rffllton year are encour.aged .to Secretary & Recepl. &Gcn.Office548-2888 Jy.$250.00.640·7475 Mauhces.48-'1418646-8251 for: Call Ray De Motl, MeclcalSec...twy •Free 15 day training apply for a position with Skills required. 556-6646 ---------1 64Q-1752before3. With recent exper. Ac-course our Investments or 9-6PM PUii.iC ANTIQUE CPA Wanted to share suite 13 x 14 ofc. $200 mo. inclds recept and phone. Ac:ctng secy avail. Newport Ctr. 1303 Avocado, Ste 245. 640-8500. ~~~~~·-~n Live in babysitter. curate&fast typi.slMust .cadillaccarprogram Residentia l Divisions. *UTOTEM* AUCTION --... .. -housekeeper 2 boys, good know all rrool ore pro-•Hawaii. Acapulco trips Call DOD Berman, Presi-SECURITY GUARD Thurs. Jan. It. 6:30 PM'. Exper. helpful. but not pay, some English nee. cedures. Send resume to •Isl place-sales 1n dent. QUAIL PLACE FUil time or part tame. EMPLOYMENT Two40' Van Loads to be. necess. 64uS37 Classified ad no. 607 c/o Orange County PR 0 PER Tl ES INC. s · & G y d OPPORTUNITIES sold. Huge selection 0£ Apply In Person Dally Pllot, PO Box 1560, •lsl place-hstings taken _7_52_·_1920 ______ _.. o~~g 21. 1::i~~ a~a : Full or Part-Time American Oak, Victorian 16'12 Reynolds Ave Costa Mesa. Ca 92626 in Orange County Ca ptain Ca rpenter. No Exper. Necessary & French Furniture. Roll Santa Ana LOAN •1st place-listmgs sold m RETAIL SSl-40S4or S51-18Sl Age 21-65 Ehgibl9 Top Desk. Chin a Equal Oppor. Employer flROCESSORS MODELS-MASSEUSES Orange County ASST. MANAGER Go To The Nearest Cabinets, Round &: Vcli/Counter Help & Fooct i---------1 f'lgure Models. Fscorts •1st place-advertismg in F or n at 1 on al Jr . Security Ofcn TICTOC MARK ET Square Oak Tables, Din· Preparation. P lime. needed. Top money. New California sports"ear shop. Retail FUil & P time. lrd Shill For Appltcalions & Info ing Rm & Bdrm Sets. Will train. Sam's ltali1tn FOUR PEOPLE Downey So•iftcp Studio. 631·3811 •1st place-advertmng an exper. pref'd. Opporturu-Retired or pensioners OR CALL (714) 64.2-7702 Yery fancy Victorian _ Market, 1909 Harbor Bl, ... for part time tem-& Loan urses Aides & Orderlies, the U.S.A. ty for advancement. pref'd. Phone & car re. Tic Toe Systems, Inc. Parlour Set. lOO's of CM 548-7822 porary ute city delivery Has immediate openings l·ll & 11.7. Exper. pre-•1st place wmner RELO Generous benefits. Apply q'd. Uniform rum. Plant items, too numerous to work. Must have car. be in Orange County for Home Buyer's Contest Mrs. Craft. Pelrie's, 147 · I · c II L w -----mention Be sure to at.- Deliveryman. LA Times extremely neat in ap-conventional loan pro-r·d. Mesa Verde Conv. U unlicensed. let us as· Wes tminste r Mall, ~n r~~a lOa~-lp~· YClrietyfitled! $650 tend Uus sale. Preview: route. C.M · area. No col· pearance and know area cessors. Must have ex-H06p, 661 Center St. CM sist you in oblainmg your Westminster. Mon thru Wed. . · Like the 111trigue or a 3:00till sale time. Moved lect. Must have depend. and streets well. Ex· per. in processing from ursing Attendant, ex-Real Fstate license. Call 007? The speed of a 747? for com·ience ol sale. to _c_a_r._546-448 ___ 1· _____ 1 cellent salary. Apply documents through fund-perienced. Bayview Iii Rory SECY /TYPIST Well. this could become the Royal Inn. 1855 So. Deliverymen over 21, 14180 Beach Blvd .. Room ing. Conv. Hospital, 2055 842·669 I RN Excellent typing & yours! Strong ofc skills Hai:bor Blvd. Anaheim perm. p/t. Early morn 203, (13th & Beach), ConlactPersonnelDept ThurinAve.CM642-3505. transcribing s kill s . neededhere.CallControl (the Monopoly Room) LA Times deliv. to C.M. We$tminster.Ca. 549-0902 CCU/ICU Newport center area. Career Employment Sale Conducted by A.& h $250 C II Equal Oppor Employer ()(fice Typist. part-lime. FUil & p/time. 3-11 :30 & s a 1 a ry ssoo .·s 600. _A_g_e_n_cy_._S56-8 __ sos_. ___ 1 _F_._ENT __ E_R_P_R_IS_ES __ _ omes. mo. a Gari Friday $2.75 hr + in approx J hrs per day, 11-7:30 shifts. Contact '"5 •920 Benefits. Equal Oppor .................................... Iii .. Q't ... • shop sales commission ---------1 60WPM. call 640·1600 Mrs. Jensen. 642-2734. Employer. Send resume Dellnry & Must be personable. Call LYM W ....... TED Cost a M e mo r i a 1 to Classified ad no. 491 Dan673-7162 ~" Real Estate Career Hospital. 301 Victoria, c,o Daily Pilot. PO Box Stock Man Bay--1·ew Conv llosp. ••u C u E 0 E • .,.,.. ORDER DESK for~~ I 0 day •• ·.'"·· -· ··-· ____ , 1560. Costa Mesa, Ca F lime. Must be ava11l•--------•1 per s hift. 2055 Thurin wknds. See Harold, 4!)5 HOSPITAL Ave,C.:\1.642·3505. Duties will include ; trainlncJcoun~. 92626. E.17th St, C.M. ADMITTING/ ---------• handlang o r orders & PIX MACHINIST customer inquiries by Dental Hygienist. Beach Area. S60 per day. Call 962-1345 DENTAL ASSISTANT. Orlho-chairslde. N.8. 411 days/wk. Orlho exper. req'd. 642-2626. P /time relief 11 ·7 shift. AJ I around machinist to telephone. tracing or· E f 'd G d work in medium sized ders. & coordination of xper · pre · 00 production & shipping Workl·ng conds E O E Production Shop. Able to · · · · dept. Requires 60 wpm Contact Mrs. Cygan. do lite tooling.& produc-. ud Costa Mesa Memorial tion. SO hr wk week. Com-typing, figure apllt e & Hospital, 301 Victoria. pany paid Insurance AP· xlnt telephone ability. C M ,...,., 2734 ply in person. No phone WUI be trained as backup • • <>'Mi" • o n c o m p a n " calls please. Beach Mfg. ,, Dental Asst, Chairs Ide, 15602 Container Ln. HB switchboard. Similar ex· for Pediatric Dental Ofc. HOSTESSES . . per. with a manufacturer • Exper&/orFormalDen-Applyinpersondailyaft. MaJCisforsmallex.!lusave desirable. Apply in tal Education. Age 18 to 5:30PM. Airporter Inn motet. Hrs can be ar-person, 21, Dr. Donald D. King, HoleJ , 18700 MacArthur ran&ed. 49Hl521. CAMIRO 546·5613 Blvd. lrvine. Ca. Ask for Ma ids . Th c I n n at Manufacturing Co. De •-1 A . t t f/li Mr. E. Paulus Laguna 211 No Coast i601 Clay Ave n.... ssls an . me. · ·Be h Huntington Beach Exper'd only. Must be Housekeeper, live in. Hwy., Laguna . ac · WestorBeachBlvd mature & enthusiastic. Pleasant Ja rge beach Ask for Mrs. Gobiel South or Garfield H.B. 846·0697. hof!le. Father, 11.yr. son. Maid wanted. Sea Cliff Equal Oppor Employer Drive. No children. M t I 1661 So Cst Hwy DENTAL FRONT OF· 892·1006 days 894-4468 'o e ' . . ··---------L'ICE Mi'n 1 yr exp • Lag.Heh. 494·4892 ~ · · · · eves. Refs. req. Salary open. Hunt. Bch. Man.igemenl •Classes st.art immediately. •Special, Personal & individualized help. •On the job training FREE •Management opportunities. •Challenging current expansion program. •To80% Commission. •Lie. prep day or night classes. •Top office locations. No license necessary RN Service Statton Atten- dant, exper'd. Day & Eves. Full & p/time. Ap· EIMrcjency ply. Shell Station, 17th & P/time, 11PM-7:30AM. Irvine. NB. Xlnt working conds. ------.---E .O. E. Contact D. Store Supervisor for Roache, R.N. Cost a several stores in Orange Mes a M emo r i a 1 Co. are~ .. Must ~.capa· Hospital 64.2·Z134. ble of hinng, trammg, & ' supenising sates clerks. 1----------1 Part time or full. Call 1--------i 630-4250 • RN'S Cfull-Time) Med Surg. 11-7:30 shift. Exper. acute care hospital only. Excellent benefits. Contact Mrs. Jensen. 642·2734, Costa M e s a M e m o r i•a 1 Hospital. 301 Victoria C.M.EOE. 1-----~---T NC:hen..P~nts Social Woncen Field Enterprises Educatibn Corp. needs people or integrity lo de- monstrate various educational aids. F /lime & p/time. $750 Guam. for 100 sales intervws. Call Virginia Calkin s. , _________ ., 557·1041. 962-5:>46 Housekeepers wanl~d. PEOPLE PERSON weekends, 7·3. Bayview Exec. looking for part DISPLAY Conv. Hosp, 2055 Thunn. time business associate ORTHO·ASSISTAMT Good job for right person. Exper . pref'd. Costa Mesa. 546·5170. to apply. SALES COUNSELORS TELEPHONE SALES ADVEITISIN<i CM 642-3505. in wholesale supplies. CLERK . Housekeeper for guest B u s i n e s s f u I I y Needed lo assist Display home. llpm-7arrt shift. capitalized. Inte rview Advertising secretary. Call betwn 9am·5pm _6'1_3·_2223 ______ _ Opportunity to le.arn lay· 646-6716. ' out. ad processmg and . scheduling. Interesting, Hou~ekeeper I Ba bys1tter. varied duties will require 2 girls 16 & 9 yrs. Approx go o d t e I e p h o n e 3 days wk, some eves. · personality, accurate Own trans. 968-4111 typing, ab1hty to meet . the pubhc. Good salary. Housework,4PM thru Dm· ·fringe benefits Include ne~. Mon. Tues. Thurs, paid vacation arter one Fri. $40 wk. 6'73·1879. MANAGEMEN"l'TRNE National Jr. Sportswear s hop has opening. Qualiricatlons : Retail exper pref'd. Highschool grad. Willing to relocate. Motivated. aggressive & fashion oriented. Apply Mrs. Craft. Petrie's, 147 Westminster Mall, Westminster. year; fully paid merlical Housewife, p /time de- plan. pension r~lare~cnt livery for dent.al lab. plan and credit umon. Call 646-5068 ·--------• Submit application in ---------• person to Personnellllllllllllll_...._ ..... _...._,_....__, Dept .. The Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa OPPORTUNITY knocks often when you use result·1etting Dally Pilot Classified Ads to reach the Orange Coast market. Mesa. DISPLAY person for re- tail clothing store. Patouche·S. Cst. Plaza. 54(}.SlOO DOCTORS ASSIST. I.E. Mfg/Hydrau $18K Mktng Secretary $800 Exec. Secy/AIA $800 Ordet Desk $600 CostActngClerk $600+ Irvine Personnel Agency 488 E. 17th Costa Mesa Phone 642-5678 SUite 224 642-1470 --------- Young ladles (18·28) to1---------Find what you want i.n work with leglmate Inspector Daily PilotClassafi eds. For details please call For Newspaper Promo· Motorcycle Accessories PH'fed LandaSS8·7555. tion. Must enjoy working EASY MONEY with young people 10 to Nat'l dist of motorcycle Working Receptionist/Typist. Ex· 14 years of age. Reliable accessories & sporting H ...... -per. Wed. thru Sunday. transportation required. goods has 3 telephone -· • Send resume to box N425, 9·2:30pm or 3:30-9-CdM,9262.5 Excellent part·ljme posi· sales positions open. r-· hon. High pay for 2·3 CALL ON Earn S4 hr puttini your RECIPTfTYPIST hours each evenlnc. half· ESTABLISHED peTSOnaUty to work. All day Saturday. Ca 11 ACCOln'ITS work done from our ne.w Prestige ofc near O.C. 642·8102 for interview STEADY Irvine ofc. You must Airport. F /time-busy before6:00 EMPLOYMENT possess a pleasant clear desk. Call 979-8533. ---------1 COSTA MESA OFFICE voice & ;i confident rt)an· RECEPTIONIST & In-Sales Clerk for Photo 979.4122 ner. Pt>rf~ct for students ventory Control Clk Will· s t ore . I d e al r '? r --------- & house~1ves. No actual ing to work. Experienced home~aker, work while --------• selhn.g involved. For only need apply, Good the k1~ are ~ school. TRAINEE more info. 833-8098 betwn benefits, pleasant office. Part tame, flexible hrs. ASSEMILERS/ 9am-5pm. Send resume to Ad No. _646_·23_64_·------1 rACKAGERS Plastfc1 Moldhtg 575 Dally Pilot. P.O. Box SALESMEN Experienced Assemblers Machine o,.rator 1560 Costa Mesa. Ca. Direct. Money daiJy. SSOO Tempo Temporary Help · h t d 92626 Comm per wee k. Small li802Sky Park Irvine Expansion as crea e music package. call 9·12 Call 540-4455 additional openings for NOW IS THI TIME 831.9231 for appt. ·~~~~~~~~ in J e c ti o n mo Id i n g for job seekers to check ~-----=--'-----I- machine oprs on swlng the Dally Pilot Help --------------------. shifts. Wanted claasiflcation. If SllK & If ND'.' UTAH Apply In Person the job you want is not 8AM-3PM there you might consider Callfornfa lnl-dlan offering your services Moldhtg Company with an ad In the Job 26S Briggs A Ye, C. M. Wanted category. Phone (Irvine Indus Complex) 642·56'78 ---------massage in Health Spa. No exp. req .. we train. Hefp W_.ed 7100 W•hd 7100 tfflp W•ted 7100 Apply noon · 8 pm. 2112 RECEIVING ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••··~··•••• 0 E 0 l C G R E A T S A l T L A K E T H U G T W R N 0 S L E N A E N R P S D R S D K S A E S 0 0 G S K S 0 R 0 Y [ G R E A T B A S I N N K E C 0 U B T S W E N 0 0 l 0 T t P A C P V G R A I R 8 R I E V lillE E B R G 0 L Y E J C E Y D S 0 G E A M E R H A W C M E H E l R E R C J U T E P I C 8 E 1 0 F A K L T S E N C H C A L T C L A K E C A I S E G 0 l I L Y C H A N l H N A V L V U R I R W B Z I 0 N S P R U C E Z T E 0 E 0 BA 0 SN Y t ARCHES G-L H NT ALFRHOGD WA SAI RB AN t 0 E U l V N Y R 0 X L l U G A E S 0 MABEACHGNUO Y MA HGIRB Harbor Blvd, Costa Mesa. INSPECTOR DRIVIRS W AHTID Men or Wooten MIASt be 2S or over Apply In Person Y.etowCab 11251 Slater Avenue t~ountain Valley Earn Sl8-$50 an evenlna withou t exper. Sell Beeline Fashions at In· home shows. t.Jaoor car & phones. Wkly prom check. No lnveatm. Fre umplet. Call &&7·0453 o 963-7470. Earn $200 mo p /tlm e ft\aller Brush Salea, loca area. Bill, 96N3"1t. . Call &U-5671 1st 1hlft. Minimum 1 year related experience. Must have ablllty to test and inspect fabricated parts, electrical and mechanical parts. Must have knowledge and use of s mall lnapection tools. STANDARD Memories, Inc (An AppJled Ma~etlca Corp) 2221 South Anne St Banta Ana Ca 92104 An equal opportunity employer ISLANDER YACHTS Assembly Carpenter Finisher /Detailer Hardware I nstaller Cabinet Router Opr. Bonder Electriclan Mold Repair Specialist Molder Al,..,.._ • ...,.,,. ....... be...,,.,, f11 ai.1M11..flta..1e1~fitl- A"'1 "',... 1922..,. .. i:•IMd.lnlM 1,...-..i-1"ni.h~•-,....,. ...... ,....,.,_., •. r liectlftM. ••• ..... _. 4..,_Jb .. IM ........ ~1"4 H th ,. ..................... ll '" .. 1"9w•: ;;. Oeseret Great Basin Brigham Young • Moab Lake Powell Bryce Canyon Ogden Sea Gull Salt Lake City Pro~o Sego Lily Wasatch R4nge Tomorrow: Movie Stars of the !h1rt1es Enpy 11\uch lar,.r "S"IJI 6 rind• p1111l11 with nvtr &O ditc)werft• ptt pentl In an all-MW Mrill of 24-peJ• boolllth. To Ofd" vo~"'• l. II and DI. Mnd ll tor NCh. m•lllna chtcki ~bit to• SHIL 6 rtftcl" in care of this """.,."". Find Your Name Win Tickets Worth s500 , Wt ta1y. Look f• yom-.._ lft todcr(s cl•llfled lach WNff .... two ttcllets to H. w ......... e.c1t•1 llCflott. If you fW J°" ew, c• 642-5671, •• ~ Voc.tfon -.d lecnaffonal Sllow -J-. l 111111• JJJ. We'I • 1 •11 for ,_ to plCk • , t. 11 In th A11ahal• C0rtetdloft Cffthr • .,... tte•tta at .. newed office of ffw D., ..... DOORS OPEli Wf£:K£NOS 12 NOON W££KDAYS 2 PM ADULTS $2.SO JUNIORS 112·16> $2.00 KIDS (611) $1 2~ . Leaders' look! This slee~ p1nts111t •S fllt Girl Scout lead••, Of41c1a P•tlern• So 1oocs.to1k1l'la. yol don I hne to bt a Gnl $(011· to wear 111 Hu lots of IUsh 1r checked polyester too P11n1ed P,tttrn 9203 M1sss• S1rrs 6. 8. 10. 12 !4. 16. l E 20. Womtn's 40. 42. U , Send SLOO fOl each Pff1tt11. Add 25c for uch pattern for flrst~lass mail .llld llandllnr. Su4t11 ........... .............. ., .., ... Ill W..t lltll St-Mew Yw•. MY lotl I. Prl•t ~ AMllSS. llP, MD _.snu..,..a. 0t Ytt •11tw lttw It ftf I (llltt,. Ired Senf ne" ltr our llew hit.Winter '•tttM C1t1lo1-cllJ etupen lnlldt tor tru patttrlt tf JOllr clltic•. s.11; 7h n .. ! Stw -Knit Ito-S t.25 1115t111t ..... , Cratu SI .00 lut..t F•sltlt• lttt St 00 l•stallt Stwlq IHll S1.00 Bulky Crochet~ Rt1al '" lhe wJrr.11!1 of ttug big-rollared 1acket. . TWICE <JS war111. tvl1cr 3"' Q1111 Ir. lo c1ochel. It"; wor~er w1111 2 str~nds .t0rs1ed·wt'1r.11· 'ynlhtllC yam. Combine 2 rr•· ors P~tlrrn 71 lfi; d•rtttioo~ \tUS 8·l8 1n1 l11dt<1. Sl.00 tr.r e1:11 ra:!etn .. ~d<'. 1'it" earl't PJllWI '"' :u~t<IJ mail and h.tnn·1n;. Send to Ake ..... Mu•u w4' o.,t. I 05 D.itr .... ... 16>. ow e ...... Sfa. Mrw Yert. MY lotl I.,..... ............... %.lp.P....,_ ....... MORE t~ ever b<'forf1 :!OC des1.:11s plus 3 fr11 pnn!ed ,,,. $Ide f\EW 1916 N[[Ol(CRMf CAIALOC! Hu n'tf"Ytll•n~. 7'-r Crocbrt witll S•ores S 1.00 Crocllet 1 Wardrollt -· Sl.00 Nifty r1tty tfilts SI 00 Ripp le Cn>chet • S 1.00 Stw • Klltl lo•~ • S 1.25 llttdltpoiftt lo~ SI 00 rlower Crotllel loo.. . . ~I 0() liairpln Crochet look St .DO lnstaAt Crochtt look •• Sl.00 1t1st1nl Mac11111t look .. ~ 1.00 Instant Mone. look ~ 1.01\ Complete Gill loo., > 1 00 Compltlt AftllaH ;t4 Sl.00 12 P:llzt Ata••• r 11 SOc look ti II l•lltl :t • 50c Mun• Glfll I .... •2 SOt • U Qllilh ftf ttay :J . Soc look ti ta Jllfr lllP • 5'I e 8 J4(Wl.VP1L.OT lueeday,Januaryl,1911 loah,,oww ,0 40 rucks • 9560 Aldos.l•porW ~ l•pon.ci ...... lmpwted Alllel.UM4 ~ ... .:··· • .... 1010 ~...... 101 0 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........................ ....................... ..................... I r ' 1 ' ••••••••••••• 040 1010 lG' Johnaon Runabout W .. 2 Cb ... p U v...t 97' 7• r.......-.. tt•• _ _ •••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••--••••,.•• V·S J.O. w/110 hrs. Hv) ' tV)' 1.CU• · • IMW 9 712 MimMlea 9 7 40 •911'f0 6 -r~· .. ... --.~ dut)' trlr $2695. 67s.74587 Good condition. ••• ••••••••••••• • •• • ••• • •• ••••••••••• ••• • ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• •••••••••• fashion Boutique MO 0945 LeaM "'1 Newport. $550 or .. UNCLAIMED ~· =~rG~~erj ~PO Eoonom.y, clean, sharp Me-,.__..,. 16'$ ~ ~;nechaoic:.~ F d c 11 r · Dodae ..,2 pickup ..... ton, "" • .,.... o~ · · · PEISOHATLTPIOPBTYHRU WID SALE 71~~. a l Gpm ~w.l.~~~r{!i!r~!~" M~HCIDIOOIS YOLY .l SA • • . 7 s s k I J k • CM.I'. 64.S'4832 • '""' HERE ~ .... P a c 24 · OH DISPLAY ALL SPACE =?g~ 8:.:J.~.t.oe~ '6S Dod&e \AJt.on Loni Belt. '7 6 BMW's House of...._.... •TOP C~H! I 1 ...... SEl.F ST ORAGE WAl&tOUSISl 8564 HAMILTON ST. (Corner Hamilton & Newland) WHIDA YS a.7 WEEKENDS 1-5 &75-7l04 6 cyl stick, good cond., .._.OW HERE AUTHOnlztt> NOW l'"or Corvettes •nd ot.berl $'7SO.P/P,642·8627. " M£RCEDESOEALER •NewEn&lne used u rt & lruckJl ~.~:.~! ........ !~.~~ Vms 9 570 .... .._ ..... -. 6SG2Mancpheskter, :~e:~r;_mls1lon ~~~R<Pua~b$;.'~:: 'SI · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·.-~,. Uuena ar J amboree, Bristol,.~ 26 ~~i~~:Oat. '53 Inrt Cstm Cmpr Van 111.: :~,.. · 52 3·7250 All 75'S MacArthur. NewpoM 645.9182• Wood int.r., nu cng., Ulll A~'-•wwtW OntheSant.aAnaFwy. .u ... •DD•uo•s ·Beach.83S-OSSS UMPC , $1600. otr . ._._._ •• .67 280SL AM/FM · "'" 5ltl 25' N t I d h 496·5519 --xi• · • oar. MUSTGO Doclp 993 d ew~r .w m ~ P · immaculate. $8500. ••••••P•• .... • .. •••••• Antiques 8005 MisuUGMOUs 1010 &ec:p~n~a·~~:f~~ 1~er~~ '71 DQDG E SUR F£'.R ORANG E COUNTY'S 646-1514 THIS MONTH Dodge Stat.ion Wagon, (ff 333 E. 17th St. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Head Pri pty Ask$5600 VAN. Auto lrans. radio, OLDEST BUY good cond., Bst oft RUTH'SAMTl9UES WA .... TED Cal1Adanis,2U·68S·S2l7.' heater. (790~0)$2733 $ MG 9742 646-8459. JCINIClf'J Ca.Clf'Clftc~ 1"'1111 TModore Robins ....................... Ott •---------~....;. Costa Me sa llehied httffttcrtlOllal Hou:se of Pancatc.sJ lOto20'" OFF TOP CAS H DOLLAR Sol Cal 18 , f'ly r ace FORD '68 MGC Healy Eng, Red LEASE ,, 9f4Q ON ALL~'TOCK PA ID F 0 R Y 0 UR equip'd, Calif Regional 2060Harbor Blvd Sales-Service-Leasing w/wire whls. 54.000 mi, ' ••••••••••••••••••••••' WedlhruSunNoon·5pm JEWELRY, WATCHES, Champion Trlr, $2,000. CostaMesa 642.0010 RoyCcrYer, Inc. Ukenew.$2400.646·7925 USIDSPECIALS '70FordCortlnagd .. cond. S04'1S Bayfront ART OBJECTS, GOLD Terry,541·2285. Rollsltoyce BMW n.-1 97,.6 •74 V_._o 164 ~tg. wbls,,c_d. ml. nu.· BALBOA ISLAND s IL v ER s ER v I c E . 73 Ford l ·SP 302. Cust. int. -.-"' V'IT tires $825 962 2073 F IN E FURN &. AN· loats,Sllps/ 36000m· $2995 w·nt k 234 E.17thSt. •••••••••••••••••••••••Automatic, s unroof, · -·---<Nexti~5~:;:~erry) TIQUES. 645·2200 Docks 9070 part t:ade. 96;.3i:2~ Costa Mesa 546-4444 •74 Opel Manta' spd. Lo AM /FM stereo, leather. '73J,,GRD COURIEk ••••••••••••••••••••••• 968~104 mi's. Real Clean! $3000. Luxury al its besl. #SOOS. pickup. 4·speed, AM/Flt Ong. Anuque Murphy bed Firewood Org. Euc. $8() Slip wanted 32· Garr 1976 BMWS Ca11968-3426 · $63SS ~eo tape. (26S14T) For P•rsonali1ed with new maltress. $125. cord, del. Oak. Coast Rigged Ketch• Newport Auto LeasincJ 9580 _..,., 613·7170 S8Fli·rl et,,-:;.ood Supply , AreaS36-4405 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Porsche 9750 '74VolYO 142 TlltocloreRobilts Convenience "' '75 MK-4 lux. group lo ml. ARE HERE ••••••••••••••••••••••• FORD PRIVATE SOUTHERN Bo 5 ats1c.,'Speed& load'd, mint. 22 mo lse 73914 Air. loaded. silver, 4 Speed, overdrive, 2060" bo ANTIQUE FURNITURE Firewood/Stock Up 9080 asmpt. Pvt ply 673-7311 xlnt cond. Musl sell. Best leather, AM /FM stereo nar r Blvd COLLECTION Car \'ed S75cord/del642·2624 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ofr.833-9264 cassette. s unroof. A CostaMesa 64.2·0010. ENTIRE INVENTORY SELLOUT Starts Mon .• Jan. 5th at 10 AM Thru S1m .• Jan. 11th SAVINGS UP TO 80% OFF Oak dresser & mirror . INB/08 Monza. 325HP. Autos Wanted 9590 Roll 9 6 sports sedan. 752LEQ. '74 MUSTANG JI 2+z $795. Oak Icebox w/iron f arewood.Euc/S 7 S Holman Moody. Mech ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 Royce 7 5 $5399 V-6, auto trans .. factort legs $595. Oak square top cord perfect. $4000/lrade for "'WANT TO SELL $ ••••••••••••••••••••••• air conditioning, power dmmg table w/_claw feet $42.50 •,2cord/del 830·9740 late model auto. 673-8011 YOUR CAR?" 1 ST 6 HOADWAY #l DEALER IN U.S.A. GJ··· W\ lWJtA. • steering, AM /FM alered. legs $495. Oak library ta· Let us sell it for you SAHTA AHA ROY (308.KZJ) $3250 ble $225. Call art 6 PM Pool Table. 3pc s late, ac-T ~ation CASH' w l k . l d ' 835·3171 JR{ Theodore Robins Mon-f'ri only 960·3462 or cessories. Gd. cond. rans,_.' · e 8 e an ra e rweuLTIMATEDR1v1HGMACHINE CARVER · ~ 963-7061 Make offer. 557-6616 ••••••••••••••••••••••• a n Y m a k e o r ROLLS· ROYCE ~ VOLVO FORD ·----C~n, Sale/ model. .. cars, trucks, 2060Harbor.Blvd. Appliances 8010 INTERIOR DOORS Reftt 9120 vans. recreational 1973 BMW Bavaria. A/C 2 3AE.l7thSt. Costa Mesa 642-0010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIKENEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• vehicles imports & AM /FM tape. lmmac'. ~~:~~ .. ~!SA 19 b6Hnrbor C.M.6469303 Apt. size Maytag washer WlTll HARDWARE '67 vw camper rblt eng, domestics. Mus t be in lhruout. 30,000 mi. Must CLOSED SUNDAYS Autos U ed '71 GalaxJe 500. PB, PS, & dryer combo. Xlnt. $10.00 trans, nu tires, drapes, running condition & meet sell. Days 631·1323 eves • 1 air, a uto. Clean, Orig.'' SlOO. 963.87381645.8913 846·8579 846-3975 nice-$l6006?5·4816 California safety code 673-3028 ' Rovet" 9757 ••••••••••••••••••••••• own. $1250.or bst,• eve. ---------standards. ••••••••••••••••••••••• General 990 I 493-1601. --------Select ri c IBM T~pe · 74 Kentcraft 8' Sleeper, EICaminoAutoSales Datsun 9720 Wh • •••••••••••••••••••••••l--------- 15. Wh . I I R C . wnter New cond $225 Ja"ks 11·k $650 498-1400 D"'al"'r ••••••••••••••••••••••• al s a Rover? A Briti~h * * * '73 LTD 9 pass wag, xtra 1 r poo c ri ~ · • · · -. • e new. . '" " 4-0r 2000 Tc. 4-spd rad_ 1al • • • clean. Ma"cbelins, Konis' w/iccmakcr. S75 6?3-8011 962·3632 WILL BUY YOUR t Be t I th t n..: a.:-W I · WEPAYTOPOOLLAR .rs. a u · ea er tn · .,._nnn e son AM/FM, air ·cond' ___ 673·7~ 25" elephant tusk · teak Motorc~s/ FOR TOP USED CARS g~~ci1tKl~X8~~· 68. Ask Sl850/best ofr 3065 Royce Lmte 15,000. orig mi. Hi·perf: Will buy some refrgs & wood s tnd . e t c he d Scoo 9150 FOREIGN.DOMESTIC PAIDFOR 640-865l CostaMesa eng.Seetoappr.$3500or appliances running or dragons design. $800. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or CLASSICS OR NOT. Toyota 9765 You are the winner of 2 bstofr.548-6298 not-also scrap metal &W..SG88 '73 YAMAHA TX·SOO, Ex· Ir your car is extra clean TOP DOLLAR ••••••••••••••••••••••• tickets to the 615·5258. celent condition, $995. see us first. CALL s-.... v ti '70 Torino Stationwgn, nu SMOKE Call 752·1700 d ays. BAUERIUICK SALBERNADENE 0-Tolnc~ase U;~~::..: tires, brakes, A/C gd. Bicycles 8020 546-3286eves. 2925 Harbor Blvd. 540-0442 in New Ccr Sales v-1..:-•-r&.-w cond. $1t75. 548-8892. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa 979.2500 We have become over· cm;t~h-:-' Merc..-y 9950 For Sale Schwinn Boys St· DETECTORS Bonanza Mini Bike. '74 DATSUN 710. 4-speed, stocked in excellent ANAHEIM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ingray 3 spd, Call aft Everything but motor, TOP DOLLAR factory air, radio, ~ trades. CONVENTION '65 w- 6PM. 644·5728 Your best life insurance Gd. cond. $30963-4874 PAID $3666vinyl roof. (505KJY). STARTING PRICE -~ Batavus 10 speed racing a ga ins t fi r e. K ay YAMAHA '72 MX. Konis, $895 CENTER $l9S. 548-S638. bi c y c 1 e. se w . u P 5 • Weeger . 846·9060 incl helmet/boots. Gd IMMEDIATELY Theodore Robins Calt~2~~~~~ ::r ~ t.o Musta.g 9952 simplexgears,$100lirm. * * * cond . As king $350. FOR ALL FORD ANY claimyourtickets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548·4776 646-6146 FOREIGN CARS 2060 Harbor Blvd REASONABLE * * * Must. '72 -Convert. 37M DlMK 8040 Robert Carlsen '76 KAWASAKI 900. On CALL OR COME IM Costa Mesa 642-0010 mi., air,.auto, P /S,'like -~-2 375 Colgate Dr. OFFER '73 Pinto Sq Wgn or '73 new$2895.645·6597. CostaMH a wurranty, 2000 mi. TO SEE US Must sell '74'h 260Z 2+2, will be acce pted during Fiat 128 Sed. Both x.lnt -.--------- You ;ire the winner of 2 Kirker headers. Beslof· silver w/blk. 4 spd., fl y this week's liquidat1on cond. Call anytime. 69Mustang.Needswork. fer.962·5748/968·4111. eqp'd. lo m1., bst ofr. S<lLE 645 . .,.,41 Besloffer Co(•kers. Chihua hua. tickets to the 645 42829 5 '.kd ~ ..., Poodles. '"'h1h·t zu. S _... • MotorHo-s, -. . w ys . 100('1 F. . & Call495-4606aft6pm ' ..:> pons , Vacahon ""' E lo ma~cmg . Buick 9910 • Maltese. G. Shepherd. &Recreational Sale/Rent 9160 '7H2 260Z 2+2. auto. .xtendedFmanctng •••••••••••••••••••••••Oldsmobile 9955 Samoyed , Jap. Spaniels. Vehicle Show ••.••••••••••••••••·~··• mags, am/fm. air.15,000 AVAJLABLEO.A.C. Buick 73 Es tate Wgn •••••••••••••••••.•••••• m101 ·Schnauzer, Porn s. at the 15 Shasta House Trailer, Mi.$5995.640·1728 REDUCED PRICE Sales<1ndServ1ce !~ ~~~dbie~~~e~Jt~~ ANAHEIM Xlnt cond. $500. Dan. 3100 W.CoastHwy.NA COSTA MESA 1\1t11 .a LA•~~1 loaded $3200 or Best orr'. OLDSMOBILE 17th at Fairview. SA . C 0 N V E N T I 0 N 548·6432 642 ·9405 .Uln. UlllO SJ6.7291eves. GMC TRUCKS Open eves.531·5027. CENTER AutoSenic:e& ~-·• Codil 9915 HOMDACARS Jan 3thruJanll Parts 9400 or-County's ~~ TOYOTA I ac • ._. 1tyo•..a.. AKC Be I 3 ' I C II 2 -·,-••• ••• •••• • •••• • • • ••• •• vwl•..-S Rm a~ e mo s. ma e. a 64 ·5678, ext 333 lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• H . ...a... t .$ ..... 2850 Harbor Blvd. AJI shots. Housebroken. claim your tickets. 4 Mag Wheels & Tires, ,._,. ... s -,er 1966 Harbor, CM. 646·9303 · "CADILLAC" Costa Mesa 540-""~"' Call640·5156· * * * G60·15, 2 motorcycle on Imports ......, Free toYou 8045 tires. set e.xercise BitlMaxeyToyota '71 St. Wgn. Xlnt Cond. QuaHty & Price Pinto 9957 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * * * weights, $30. 673·7348 Call Roger or Bill New radials. R/H. $1395. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 male lab/mix puppies Mary Sc hroeder ~s/ 847-8555 Pb: 675-8038. Over 70 Must. sell 1975 Pint.o. Cop· All black. 6 wks old, 1812PorlManlelghPI Classics 9520 SELLINGYOURCAR? Triumph 9767 taChoole From per. 4,000 miles. $3100. w ea ned , p a rt i a 11 y Newport Beach ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP IC ••••••••••••••••••••••• For the best prices, the CaJI 646-4871. housebroken. Very arrec· You are the winner or 2 Ford .14. Model T Speed· F~~Im!:r~AID Lar«Je Seledion of Triumph Spitfire· '64 roll lowest lease r!"les, & de· •72 P INTO WAGON 2 ~~~a~6~l~~althy. Even· tickets to the ster. restored, S3,000. Paid for or Not Previously Owned ~{oo~e;no~b:::O HT red. pendable service •. see door, auto trans., fact~ry Wanted home for Lab. 5:°.t~:~:::~:n '56 Cadil::·s::;~rse. Lo D~=~ea~:!:~t.:i~s Low Mileage • Yolks:~". 1. 9770 NA!R§a~rDJ~~AC ~4~~~~~~oning. Fem. Approx 1 yr. xlnt Vehicle Show mi., Runs. Needs some 646-9303 Datsun Z Cars ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA 540·9lOO T1Moclore Robins ••••••••••••••••••••••• •PET WORLD• w /children. 540·11 93 at the restoring. $900.or ofr. 2845Harbor Blvd. '69 VW Sta. Wgn. recond. OPEN SUNDAY FORD Jack Winter Pants Eves. ANAHEIM 642.8627. TOP Costa Mesa eng, new brakes, A/T . 2060Harbor Blvd. ReCJ. $2 0 • Now Basenji AKC Reg shots. 1 CONVENTION 540·64 I 0 Clean. $1250. 581-8357 '73 Eldo, fly eqpd. 38,000 Costa Mesa 642·0010 $12 Blouses Up to yr old to good home. Jan~~~~~nlt ~.~~.~~-~~~ ••• !~.~~ $ . . '69 VW Camper. Rblt ~lt~~~~;,s!~~7;tc. '74 FORD PINTO • 842·7887 Call 642·5678 ext 333 to 7124oz 4 spd, aar, m~gs, eng.,lomi.,nuclutch,nu · • Runabout. 4-speed, S 60°/o off . All 3vr.OldMalcGldn .Rtvr. claimyourtickets LandcruiserS Paid very clean. Nu paant. rubber. 673-3525 or '69Cad,xlntmech'lcond. radio.C345KEJ).$2444 W e a t ~ r S & Pure bred. Loves kids. * * * FOR $3800. SS2·3506 431-6687· Needs painl. Best. ofr. Theodore Robilt$ J a Ck -t t T d h 968 °90 '71 Thru '75's l!!at 9125 644 · 0554 • S3Hl 23 FORD "' S Up 0 o g ome. .., 7 MINK COAT, full length. U d YW' n '72 VW BUG. 4-speed, air 00/o off & MORE! Poodle.Approx.3yrsold. w I Hat . whit e 7ToChoosefront se s ........................ conditioning, radio, 1973CoupeDeVille, 2060HarborBlvd Wrangle J Blk .. long legs,hasshots. tourmaltne. Worn 2 EXAMPLE: PaidfororHot Fi•a·• heater.(178FPD)..$1788 lomi,loaded,$4.300. Costa Mesa 642-0010 r eans 556-7169 Limes. seH ',2 pnce. Grey '71 Hardtop • Theodore Robins 556-6965 '73 Wagon, A/T, new tires 3 0 °/o off. Long . Lambs Wool w/fur col· 611 DLJ FORD '73 Eldo. Black on Black & .exhaust. $1750./offer. dr•s t 600' Fvntiture 8050 lar. 534·5643 I:~ -I Before you buy .. ~....... 2060Harbor Blvd Jmmac cond., l owner. 494-2593or494·7918 .. ses up o 10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3495 ~•;tl•JJA'f '-" Cost M off. Shop&Save -new&usedl GOLFMEMBERSHIP -• ··n1"11eac--m-·-Mission Vlelo a esa 642·0010 645-3334aft6pm. Plymouth 9960 r urn . gifts. misc. m J.~.C. for s ale. J) LWtiA• HunL B<"h. 842·4435 '65 Bug. Xlnl cood. Chevrolet 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• UIU. STUDENT NEE s ••••••••••••••••••••••• ATLAS 545W.19lhSt.C.M. 1Gloria Marshall mem· • D GD AveryExlt.S.D.Fwy. 645·9215 Wilson's Bargain Nook . •644·2238 * GJ IJlllil •. llnportlJ Mags. $800/beslofr. MANY OTHER BARGAINS NOT LISTED! Storewide Clearance Sale On ALL Stock! For Sale: two walnut bership for s ale. 160 ·v· 0 LO MI ECONO CAR 831-1740 '68 VW Auto. $750 or bst. CONNELL lamps.Cost$120,willsell treatments $420. Mary, LVQ (CASH!>9794256 ofr. Eves-675·8638, Clrvsler/PtvlftOUttl Cor $40. 551·5386 642·2588 1966 H!Hh.01 CM. 646 930'.l TOP BUYER Days-548-9960 Open Daily'& &an. 'tU 10 Small desk and chair Musical See us first, & last! Top COSTA MES.A CHEVROLET PM 2929 Harbor Blvd., Gd. Cond. $20. Instruments 8083 !~.'?.•••••••••••!~.~~ dollar paid for imports. SALES &SERVICE Costa Mesa 968-6772 •••••••• ••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA 2128 Harbor ll•cl. 546-1934 . . Must sell Guitar, Suzuki 75 CHEVY DATSUN COSTAMESA Matchmg Maple T~in 12 s tring. Sac. $100. 1/2 TO..._. SWB 2845Harbor Blvd. 546 1200 '7 3 p Ly M 0 UT}{ Beds. Comp. Med. Firm 493.5375 1"'1111 Costa Mesa 540_6410 • DUSTER. Economical 6 Mattresses, very good I d cond. $100. 67J.5099 Office Furnitur e & PICKUP '72 Monte Carlo. super ~kH). ~0• heater· C . Ecppment 8085 Like new. less than 4ooo Aalfos, 1-....d sharp, loaded. Reduced Th-....__ Robt- ustom made 1n Den·••••••••••••••••••••••• mi· I es, Auto at· .. .,._.... $500.·$1995.67.,9063 -• •5 mark. beaut oiJed 8' oil · m 1 c ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,. FORD Walnut Sol.,d lop di·ni·ng Sey chrs SS/up, exc svl transmiss ion, radio, General 970 I h $15/35 d k .__ te t · ~ ••. ~ '70Nova V-8, 2060Harbor Blvd tabl e, w /8 c ha irs. c rs . scy . s s. n~a r, power s eenng, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Cos matching 7, buffet, pad & Elec typewnters. Pierce. air conditioning, plus * * * E ,6 Coupe. $1200. ta Mesa 642-0010 lmensmcl.$1400,6J6·l938 867W.19lh,CM645·7411. many more extras. See MILL R 9VW 830-6398afl.6pm. PoMloc 99•5 i----------1,. & 0 8090 this one! l64872Y). Ray Haworth MOTORS 4 SpeedFASTl~CK Chrysler 9925 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bdrm & dining rm. set 3 eanos rCJGftS $4895 1542 s..ta Crvt l • rald10, bel at.er, ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Gran Pn'x Model J mo. old, $600 for both, ••••••••••••••••••••••• L •-h ~DS'CJ ex re me Y c ea n' • • H d M _..._. M 2 CICJllftCI _.ac ' (#2'170). • '10 New Yorker, needs loaded. Must selL Tt>o oosl$1200. 848-0564 Siiill0t• _, • You are the winner or 2 k Sa rifi $1000 ma P t --------~ $470. 496·5919 tickets t.o the FACTORY Priced to Sell wor 552.91~ ~~~--059i 846-~lc, cars, v Pt)'• Hanft 1060 TV, Rocio, 1970 II arbor. C.M. Sports. Vacatiotl AUTHORIZED 2.845Harbor Blvd. ....................... HiR. Stereo 8098 6 3 I· 127 6 & R.creaffa11al S9es • Ser/ice Costa Mesa '68 F1REBIRD. 400 Cu.In. NEW Western stirrups.•••••••••••••••••••••••. VehlcS.Show Parts•LeasiftcJ 540-6410 Toplaceyourmessage ~~r·:es~·~:tcoo"t~: Retail forS24, sell for $14 . RCA Color TV 25'' Screen '76 at the 1.20W. Warner al Main •59 vw Van, •6urans, ods before the 830-2301aft6. Ph: 646-7531 $200. Xlnl Cond. · ANAHEIM Santa Ana 557·2U2 work no reasonable ot reading public, Must Sell Jumping Sad· 631·3769 TOYOTA C 0 N V E N T I 0 N turned d 493-1379 r phone Vega 9f14 die, like new w/fixtures. CENTER '74 FIAT l28. 4-speed. n Dally Pilot ••••••••••••••••••••h• pad & cover. Best offer loafs & Marine TRU"llS Jan. 3 thru Jan.11 C56lKM8) $2666 '72 Super Bug xlnt cond Claulfied, 642-5678 '73 Vega Hatchback, auto. over $200 lakes. Barbara &qui,_... W\ C~ 642-56~. ext. 333 to Theodore Robins loaded xtras.' call BiUy~ air, 549.0331 or 496-1428 Days, 642·4000 x. l7, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 16 To Choose From claim your tickets. FORD 640-0140 ext 40, or ~~~~~~~~~1:Pri:::c:e:$:1:6SO=·=:;:~~ Eves.968-4158 loats,M_...• 4 Speeds, 5 speeds, *** 2060HarborBlvd 963·3237aft6BM. r 2 P I M lh Sh ll d Equi,.....t 9030 outomalics, long beds, Audi 9707 Costa Mesa 642·0010 '73 VW Super Beetle "el ~.i ST AR G.A:,_E._.irfe ¥.' on es. o . er e an ••••••••••••••• • ••••••• ahort beds. 1 ~'i1; .~ --'-·• &. b a by 1.~ w e I c h / ••••••••••••••••••••••• '00 Fiat 850 Spider Con· ext, blk int, AM / .FM xlnt . Br cu.YI. l'OLLAN---.---.....;....1 Shetland. Sulla ble for *A TIEMTIOH * Aho 6 Used CollilPod '74 Audi Fox. Automatic vert. Good cond. $1000/ cond. bfr 5 (714 )540-5940 ~.:!.':, M ,_ Ooif7 MMI>' ~ K uta• T 1.-I ft 0:: (7 ,.J. " ...,.. Accetd/-ft HI. ,,.,,, y UP!• 11 ~ child. Very gentle. Will· 1968 SO Horsepower ,... Aircond,23,000mi. ofr.545-1202. a ,,,. 10832·7388. ~. To....,~for~ ocut~ ing t.o split. Tack avail. Mercury outboard. C.O. tochooce from. 55!Hl15 PM • ••l2> 21 reoc1worctsc:orresparid~to.__ ••un SS7·1198 aft 6 PM , IICJ1.itionwithmercontto1.rd · l • , · · FIAT 850 Spyder 1970. S9VWBus,needsename. o4yourZodlocbltth~ 64S-4330af\9AM. New water pump. MUI '•"91. AIMli '70, reblt eng, body AM /FM, mags, orig. Goodbody,part.s.$300 H~~ J4g:., Engineinexcellen\cond. ~ ~ WllO good shape. $1'00. owner. $1200. rlrm. 673-3821Alters >" »Moor Jewilll' 1070 SUPER CLEAN.~ or . · ~ask rot Dennis. 845-5619afterl5pm Voh•o 9772 IC>il~~ ~t:'.i,,.. ~=:. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... t otf ea11 """" -TOYOTA """ia.ir:.u....i •0-. ~,.._ W _. .... TED ~.A~ is roo71i'-· IMW t112 9730 ··;;;;.:;:·c··0·::.::;:.. iE !~-~" runabout. new ae•U l966 Hofbot, CM 6'6-'303 ..... •••••••••••• ... ••••• •••••••••• ... ••• ... •••••• __, vn• • 10•"' ~.._ i~~ De A;~ R 0i1<>L~: ~r·r:;r;~ir.~{1 .:1!~ce11 •• ~al.ly clean '(9 Chev~ HAL GREENE ~~."t~~·.r: ;:.1::;.~ EXCLU~~r~VOLVO ~=~ !iS ni:" JEWELRY~ WATCHES. cond. $400 or best offer. tnck. But ocrer or BMW 6'4 SO!WI. Largest. Volvo Dealer :;~ ::~ ART OBJ £CTS. C',()t,o. Will sell both for $950 o trade. 646-S37l, after Son in Oranae Count I :'~ !;T:-· 333 E. 17th St. S ILVER SERVJCE. offer.Call96U738evet ~.days.Gooddeall ~ Mtrce•11Hs 9740 BUYorLEAS~ ''"-.. ..._.. FJNF. FURN & AN· ..... Power '73 CHEVY ii. PICKUP. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• DIRECT ~s~ ~::..... Costa Mesa .~:~=~&4~ 2200 1011 ;,;;~~·~:~·;:.:;·;~: ~~o)" •. 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' Today's Closing N.Y.Stoeks . 1 ' TEN CENTS 2 ·~e~~· ·Hospitals Paid PoliticoS· Campaign Crew On the Payrolls By GARV GRANVILLE Ol IM 0.lty Piiot St.Ill Two hospitals once controlled by Dr. Louis Cella added personnel to their payrolls in 1974 who re· portedly did nothing more than work on Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. 'selection campaign. tJse of hospital.paid employes in the Brown campaign is under investigation by both a Federal Grand Jury in Los Angeles and the Orange Coun· ty Grand Jury, authorities said Monday. · And a spokesman for the hospitals said Internal Revenue Service agents have already asked for and received copies of payroll records covering the workers who manned campaign phones anchored in the hospitals. CEL.LA D.iitly Pilot St.Jiff Plloto RATE HIKES BLAMED FOR CROWDS THAT WAIT IN LAGUNA BEACH POST OFFICE Postmaster Rios Suggests Buying Stamps By Mall But Said Some Like Lines T HERE IS NO INDICATION that either Brown or his statewide campaign managers knew the workers were on the hospital payrolls. Wanna Play Post Office? Cella, California's top campaign contributor in 1974 with declared donations of more than $500,000 to 54 candidates and causes. is under investigation by federal and county grand juries as well as the In- ternal Revenue Service. At the forefront of the investigation are allegations that Santa Ana physician inflated two hospitals' Medi-Cal and Medicaid reimbursements bases by illegally charging political costs to the hospitals. Just Go Stand in Any Line for Stamps By JACK CHAPPELL Of IM DAiiy l'iMC ,._ ~ If you like the minute waltz, you could have heard it 34 times in a row \li.!lile waiting in the line ~t the Laguna Beach post office Monday. And, Laguna Postmaster David Rios said today the t-aguna Jleach office was not re· ally the busiest office in the area. The Laguna Hills branch is. • Rios said the problem of lone lines at the post offices was one of a shortage of qualified personnel find huge demand brought on by the change In postal rates. "It is like that all over the nation right now. People are buy- ing the three·cent and 13-cent stamps. lt1iappens every Um~ there is a rate change,•• Rios said. He suggested rather than com- ing to the post office to buy stamps, that people buy their stamps by mail. All that is needed is for postal customers to mail a self-addressed envelope to : 'the p0stmaster, include a check payable to him for the amont of the stamps plus 40 cents return postage and handling charges. Rios said the stamps should ar· rive within a day or two. Contributing to the "crisis" at the Laguna Beach station, Rios said, one of the qualified window cl~ka is out J>ecauae of illness. ''People standing in line will look into the back of the post of- fice and see other people back there who they figure could be selling stamps. "Only certain qualified people can sell the stamps. They are ac- countable items and the clerk is just like a teller at a bank. "The people in the back are processing mail," Rios said. In addition, during the mom· ing tiours, some of the qualified window clerks may have to pro· cess mail in order to have it re· ady for the carriers to distribute, Rios said. Brown campaign disclosure statements filed in Sacramento show that Cella and his wife, Marian. take credit for contributing $4,806 worth of in kind services to two Brown committees. A statement filed by Orange Cowity Friends of Brown indicates that Mrs. Cella in 1974 donated $1,806 in unspecified "polling costs." AN AMENDED STATEMENT of the statewide Brown for Governor committee shows that Cella con· tributed $3,000 m undetailed "phone costs." Managers for both committees said Monday they could not furmsh details covering the Cella con- tributions Though a minority owner in both Mission Communi- ty Hospital, Mission Viejo, and Mercy General Hospital. Santa Ana, Cella by his own admission was m operational control of the hospital until last fall .. ·Motorhome Driver ·Flees Viejo Crash Rios said that simply hiring more people was not the entire answer, and was not possible because of budgetary limitations "The budget is not available and the postal department is looking very seriously at how to reduce its costs. It was m the s pring of 1974 that extra phones were installed at the two hospitals to accommodate the need of at least 11 specially hired campaign workers. Robert Zunich, controller at Mission. said he doesn't know who ordered six telephone extensions in- stalled in the hospital's personnel department in April, 1974. Nor does he know, Zunich said, who authorized the hiring of five persons in September of 1974. to man the phones. ~ Things were hot for the driver of a luxury motorhome that burst into flames after an early· morning ·collision today with a wrong.way freeway driver in Mission Viejo. The motorhome driver fled the scene. of t~e crash near the Police Seek Fatal Laguna Crash Witness Laguna Beach police are seek- ing a mystery witness to the traf- fic accident which killed one Ballet Pacifica dancer and in-·;ured another Saturday in the Art Colony. Traffic bureau officer A.J. DeLuca said an unidentified woman had approached an of- ficer at the scene of the accident and told him she bad seen Uie in-· cident. • At the time. the officer was busy wltb the emqency ·and asked the woman to standby unt.ll he could take• her name and a statement . T he woman left before police could 1et her story, DeLueaaald. DeLuca said the witneu Is i,e. \f\g sought to p.-ovlde f~r in- formation Into the events aur· roundfni the n,lisbap which kllled Terri Bycbak. 18, of Sa,lta Ana rand seriously injured Allison Bryant, IC, also of Santa AnL •. Rosary wUl be held at 7:30 'tonJsht tor Mias Bychak. Mau will be at t:30 a.m. Wednelday. Both are at Holy Family Calbollc ;church in Oruge. Mila Bryant was n!PO(ted in f11r condlttoa today at lbe tn· temlv• ca~ unit at _.. Coat . Comtnunlty Hospital. Holpltal <See WITNESS, Pl .. AZ> - Crown Valley Parkway over· crossing and the California High.way Patrol is still looking for him. "We don't know if be ran out of sheer terror or because the motor home was 'hot' -stolen that is," a CHP spokesman said today. "There are some post offices in the country, that are not as busy as we are ... We're looking at transferring people from where they are not needed to where they are needed," Rios said "THEY CAME IN DURING the evening hours so most of us never saw them.'' he noted. "Hopefully. we will be getting some," he added. The local re- gion just did hire three new workers,he said. Zunich em phasized that none of the hospital's medical employes was involved in the campaigning and that none of Mission's present operators was in- volved in the political activities. The large vehicle burned down to its frame and investigators are having a difficult time determin- ing who it is registered to, the CHP spokesman said. <See CELLA. Page A2) Meanwhile, the wrong-way driver who started the whole thing was taken to Orange Coun· ty Medical Center where be was listed in serious but stable con- dition with bums and other in· jurie$. Another part of the problem is the inability of the post office to predict the buying habits or the customers. Rios said He noted that the stamps by mail program bas been in effect for a year, but has not been successful. He said some people like to stand in line, that it apparently serves as a "social ouUet .. for them. SkatebOard Park Proposal Mulled He was identified by the CHP a5 Robert L. Nunno, 31, San Diego. "I look out t here and see the same people standing in line two or three times a day,'• ruce said. A proposal to create a skateboard park in Laguna Beach will be mulled by the city ·council meeting at 4 :30 p .m. Wednesday at city hall. Th e CHP spokesman" said Nunno was driving north in the southbound lanes of the San Diego Freeway when the 1:50 a.m. crash occurred. He said he bad received com- plaints. The skateboard park is the idea of Alan Ribera, a landscape architect. He proposes a joint vent tlre between the city of "The complaints are coming, and some people call before they . (See POST AL, Page A%) M.otoriatB Ignore P.~ Girl Diea in Fire LAUREL. N.Y. CAP) -With his 3-year- old Claupte:r trapped tn • namtni bedroom, • deqerate f atber tried in vain to naa down 11 .,...m, cars ln an effort to call the fire depart- ment. Tbo 12th car stopped, but by the lime firemen arrived at this small community on tbe norUt tork of Lona Ialand Monday night. the two-story frame home bad burned to the ll'OUDd. tallinl the life of the dauahter. Mae fWen Geranl. . llaJT7 Oenrd. 58, and hll wife, Bertha, 41. both auffered burns wbell they tried to ext- ln1ui1b tbe blue themselves. Another dau1la.ter a lso was loJur". Three. sona .. escaped witlloat serious IAJury. Police said the fftt broke out in a dowmtaln bed.room about 11:20 p.m., and Gerard f ou1ht It with a bucket Of water. When that !ailed, be ran outside to 1et help because the house bad no telephone. Police •Umated that be was trying to get help for elsht to 10 minutes be.lore a motorist stopped. Pireasea actually received the alarm from pollee, wbo recelftd a teJepbono call from a neilhbor whoaaw the nam•. Germ and da~ter Donna, 7, nre list· ed In fair condition .ta holpbl in Rlftlh .. d, N.Y. Tiie moth• ~u llltedln poor CODdltioo. I Laguna Beach and his f11'1Jl, Alan Ribera & Associates. • As proposed to the council, the park would be located within Bluebird Canyon running from Bluebird Park to Pacific CoasL .. Highway. Ribera is seeking conceptual approval of bis project and city aid in acquiring the lands and rights o!way involved. Other council business in· eludes: <See P ARK. Page AZ) Woman Threatens Blaa~ Robs Bank CARSON <UPI) -A woman robbed a branch of Security Pacific National Bank of $1.000 after walking up to a teller and . threatening to "blow the bank up" unless her demands were met. Sheriff's deputies said the woman walked into the Del Amo branch Monday and handed a note .to the teJler demanding money. She then potnted to her purse and threatened to blow '-P the bant. depuUes said. I .J" ~\ 0.lly Pflllt St.JIH .,._.. RETAINS GAVEL County Supervisor Diedrich D iedrich To Retain OC Gavel By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of UM O..lly 1'1114 SUH Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton was re·elected today to serve another year as chairman or the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Supervisor Laurence Schmit of Garden Grove was elected vice chairman, succeeding Anaheim Slfpervi!or Ralph Clark. Both votes at today's board meeting were without opposition. though Diedrich abstained from voting for his own election. ·Diedrich 's selection came as no surprise despite his emphatic statements last month he did not want another term as chairman. At the time, Diedrich said he would support either Schmit or Supervisor Thomas Riley for tbe job as nominal head of the five· member board. But reports that Diedrich in- deed would seek a second term started mounting two weeks ago and Diedrich himself changed h1s s tance from a position firmly against re·election to one of a noo·committal nature. In accepting the nomination and election for a new term Diedrich said he considered it a "great honor to serve even though it means a lot of extra work for myself and 'my staff.'· Diedrich conceded that 1975 was "a tough year in many ways but Orange County is in better financial condition now than any other county in the state.'• Reading from a prepared text~ indicating that the election had apparently been in the works for at least a few days, Diedrich said. "There are many major tasks in mid-stream and many new tasks that will start toward the middle of the year.·· Diedrich ref erred to the fre-I <See DIE DRICH, Page AZ) ~ Coast We a t h e r Sunny skies Wednesday . Warme r temperatures with highs of 65 at the beaches rising to 70 inland. Lows tonight 35 to 45. INSIDE TOD~ Y Cotl Angola become .another Vidnam? Ptiu·toinning ~ • J>Ortu-photographtr Peter Arnett, one of the most Jomflior bylinei from the SoellMoat Alia war, emminei tM po11ibiUtie1. B9. ·, "' A2 OAIL Y PILOT L/SC Tu!!d!)'.Janu!!Y6. 1976 CELLA CAMPAIGNING. Mlss1on Hospltal personnel dJreotor Pat Wood. who wu also Mercy's personnel chW .. 1974, !'aid !be h as already testified before the county Grnnd Jury re - garding the e mployment of the polttlcal workers. However, Mrs . Wood refused to d iscuss d etails of he r testimony because of tb~ jury's iostruction to her not to talk a bout b~r test imony. THE CAMPAI GNING AT Mercy Hospital reportedly was heavier than th<lt at its Mission Viejo counterpart. Those employed to man the telephones have already been in· terrogated by iyvestigators. One. a college s tudent. said in an interview that he Wldcrstood he was hired to work on the Brown campaign. However, he said his duties in- volved calling the homes of re- gistered voters or both parties to ask election re lated questions not specifically involving Brown. Police Kill Beatle Agent LOS ANGELES (U PI> - Malcolm F . Evans, thf:! Beatles· longtime road manager a nd person al friend of members of the s inging group. was shot and killed when he alleged- ly pointed a n fle at two policemen. the police de- partment said today. Evans. 40. was shot Sun· day night at the home of Frances Hughes where he had been Jiving. Investigators said Miss Hug hes, who is un · employed. told them she got into an ari~ument with Evans who was having bus iness problems and E\'ans went to an upstairs bedroom. takin~ <'I Jar of pills and a rifle with him. She called poli ce who responded to a "man with <'\ ~un-suit'1de attempt .. call. Frorn Page .-11 WITNESS • • authorities s aid t he young woman IS improving. She suf· fered internal injuries and a broken leg in the accident. Both young women were dan- cers in the Ballet Pacifica and had just left a ballet rehearsal when the acc ide nt occurred. They were crossing Pacific Coast Highway at P earl Street at about 6 p.m. Saturday when the acci· dent occurred. Police identified the driver of the car as Will iam II Marriott, 66. of 17662 Ash Tree Lane, Irvine. He was not held Officers are continuing to investigate the accident. "We just don't know all that we'd like to know about the acci· dent, and we're hoping this wit· ness could help," DeLuca said. Other witnesses were across the street at the time. DeLuca asked that anyone see- ing the accident contact him. or the watch commander of the Laguna Beach Police Depart· ment, 494-1124. County ~irport Chie f R ecovering Oran ge Count y Airport Director Robert Bresnahan 1s re-. <'overing from a s erious bout with pn eumonia. A spokesm an for Fountain Valley Community Hospital, where Bresnahan was admitted last week. said today the airport chief is "doing satisfactorily." Betty Paul , Bresnahan 's secretary. said family members told her he is '' getting better.·· ORANGE COAST L ~ DAILY PILOT T'1W' Or~ Co.\I O••h Pilot -.•ll1 w!>ocl""°"' ~l .... N•w\ PIO\\ "P4'b11\llH!0¥1""0<M<> c .. ,, PubU"'•nQ Comp..tny 5'fow•'" 1'4,t•Gn\ /jr •• INtlll\114'(1 MOflCIO 11\r-fl l'rld<I• IV< C.0.1• ~ N••~l &fo•cfl H""llflCllOf\ l;lo .. n,r(ki<I , .. ,.. v ....... trwuu•. !:l•dOO•PM"-V•Hfy .,"" ~ul\ot f\~j\(h \OV!h(H\I A\•f!Ql•••Q<""'4f1d1 llofl I\ PYl>l•~O Sllurd••• """ Suno.o.-,.,,. pr~ ~ .. 1 oubUSf'Hf'MJ pl•nt ·~ "' llO Wf\t IUv ~trH1 ""'• Mew,1C111torn1•'1!.1• Robert N. Weed Prolel"'11 •f!CI P..OOW>• Jack R. Curley ""C PrOIOofll•ndGtnct•IMt- ThomaS Keevil E.dolOr ThOmas A. Murptilne .MIMOlllO t:O•IO< oi.rtet H. Loos Richard P. Nall AU l•l..,t -.101119 (-IO<• u.-a leadl Offk• Tt•<.te...,..,.estr"t .Mellt ... ~··" ,, 0 i.o,. .... ~~ Offices C•te-W lJ0WttllMY"1°ffl H""'l"9t..,fl<l•<h 1111Jl\url\llo>ut.-d .._i.-,V•lley )S)OIV.P.il!Md •t !M111 Oof'tt , ..... ,. ln 9Cklltt t~ a $18.300 eon· ttjbutlon fro• the ~ Ooun· ty Frieods of Brow~ C)Ji!ome.'1 governor r~elftd $19.5e0 a. Orance Cowaty CGD&ribllto.. mott ot it from a Sept_ S. 1974. SSOO.a ·plate luncheon at the Villa Fontana in Orange. Present at the exclusi ve luncheon with tho tb~o future gov~mor was bi$ father, former governor Edmund G. "Pal" Brown.. LISTED AMONG DONORS to the Bl'own tor Governor commit- tee that received tbe proceeds-for election we r e non·Democrntic party membe rs Loran NortQn and Randall Smith. The October, 1974, state ment filed by the committee shows that both Smith and Norton con lributed Sl,000 to the committee Listed as a $5,000 donor to the Brown committee was Balboa Insurance Company of Newport Beach . · Although Cella, a registered Republican, reportedly attended the Villa Fontal)a luncheon, he is not listed as a cash donor in the schedule of those present at the Orange fund-raiser:. Viejo School Construction Contract OK'd Trustees of the Capistrano Unified Schoo) District Monday authorized award of a $1 million <'Ontract for cons truction or a new elementary school in Mis- sion Viejo. Joe Wimer, director of dis· trict administrative services, said it is ex.peeled the Barcelona site school will be ready by fall. The school is located near the in· terseC'tion of Trabuco Road and Alida Parkway. The low bid of $1,033,000 by Near-Cal Corp. of Anaheim is about $200.000 below estimates for the project. The total cost of the school and land. utilities and equipment will be about 51.8 million. The Capistra no Unified School District includes San Clemente, Capistrano Beach, San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point. Laguna ~iguel and part of Mission Viejo. lt operates 12 elementary schools, two junior high schools, two high schools and a con· tinuation school. Front Page Al PARK ••• -An addition to city hall to hC'use the Human Affairs Depart· ment. Previous council action approving purchase of the pre- sent rented facility at 570 Glen· neyre St. came too late. The building was sold. -An extraordinary session discussion of charter city re· search and requirements for Laguna Beach -Appointme nt of a seven· member tas k force to aid in a pilot project of the state coastal C'ommission and the city of Laguna Beach in drafting local land use laws compatible with the recommended coastal plan. -A request from the Laguna Greenbelt for formal establish· ment by the city of a land ac- quisition fund. -A r equest from the planning department for council aid in ex- pediting planning for Sycamore Hills . Unde r the council's 7 :30 p.m. public hearing agenda, coo· sideration will include: -A presentation on the South East Orange County Circulati~ Study. a proposed system for~· grading existing roads and build· in gs new roads. The city has been extremely critical of the plan. -A hearing on the human needs element of the general plan. Th~ ele ment includes provisions bar· ring discrimination in hiring of public safety employes because or sexual orientation. Fro•PageAJ DIEDRICH. • quent clashes between board members during 1975 but said, "Our differences were always honest." Diedrich. Riley, and Supervisor Robert Battin all face r~election efforts in June. Clemency Unit PraUesSel/ WASHlNGTON (UPO , The PresklentiaJ Clemency Board, in an as yet unpubliahed report, has praised itself as "partners in a mita ion of national re · condllatlon, wls~ly conceived by U\e Preslde.nt. " But a critic of the board said such a self-appralsaJ was an al· tempt to ••make a vindic:tin pro- ara~ appear matnanimout ... \ OA1l y PllOI SUlll ,,_.. HEADS HELP PROGRAM Hospital's Uarda Olinger Hospital's. . lifeguards Not Burly By JACK CHAPPELL Of tlle DAiiy Pl tot SUtf Lifeguards are those big burly guys who sit in towers along the bea<'h and pull helpless people from the wa ter. Right? Right. But, lifeguards are also the petite pink ladies of the South Coast Community Hospital aux· iliary-lifeguards of another sort. Under the auxiliary's You Are Not Alone program, they pull people out of trouble. The hospital's program has been ada pted from a similar pro- ject of the San Clemente Police Department. Under the hospital's program. members of the auxHiary will <'all Laguna Reach residents who have s igned up fo r the service on· ce each weekday. If no answer is r eceived from the resident . the auxiliary volunteer will telephone a neighbor whose name has J)re· viously been registered as a person to call. If this is not possi- ble. the Laguna Beach Police Department will be called and an officer dispatc hed to check the home. · The You Are Not Alone pro- gram has been credited in San Clemente with saving several lives. cases where elderly men and women have been injured in their homes and unable lo sum- mon aid. The program in San Clemente was started after an. ~year-old man fell and, unable to reach help, starved to death before he was found. Uarda Olinger heads the pro· gram at South Coast Community Hospital. It is the aim of the aux- iliary to m a ke the program one of friendship and service, to pro· vide <'heerful bright spots in the days of the ''clients, .. Mrs. 01· inge r said. ''The slogan of the hospital is 'the hospital with a heart' and the auxiliary members wanted people to know that we care about the m," Mrs . Olinger said. ·'The main purpose of the pro- gram is to see that the client is physically alright, but it has its cheerful side. We want to em- phasize that it will be fun to have a volunteer call," she said. The prog ram currently is available only to Laguna Beach residents The Sheriff's Depart· ment which provides police and some emergency services in county territory is unable to cooperate in the program, Mrs . Olinger said. There is required registration to participate in the program. It may be done in person at the hospital, or a rrangements can be made for an a uxiliary volunteer to visit the potential client at the person's home. Further information is availa- ble by calling South Coast Com- munity Hospital at 499-lJll, and asking for the auxiliary office, ext. 644. One Whale More Sociable ENCIN I TAS (AP ) - Lifeguards and scientists are watching for a young California gray whale that's been coming unusually close to shor e and to divers. San Diego County lifeguard Peter Zovanyi said a yowig 1r~ whale, 15 to 20 feet long, was di•- ing in and out of kep beds Mon· day off Sea Cliffs County Park . Gray whales usually have nothing to do with kelp, he said. 1.ovanyi said the whale may be the same one that has been frightening divers along other SouU.em Callfornia bea~he$ by approaching cloeer to !bore than most whales ever come. Fro•P,,.eAI POSTAL ••. come to 11k Ir the lines are lone and then they complain about it. "In another week or so evet· )'thing wm be back to n0rmal,'' RJ.01sald. l Watergate Hearings 'Unfaii-' WASHI NGTON (AP) -A federal appeals court was told to· day that the Watergate cov~r·UP trial was preceded by publicity which whipped the American people into a "while heat" and denied the defendant~ a rair trial. "We did not get a fair trial in this case,'' the lawyer for former White House chief ot starr H.R. Haldeman told the U.S. Court of Appeals. Atty. John J . Wilson said lhat publicity made the trial a cause celebre and created th e "greatest. largest. most virulent situation" in American judicial history. "The American people were whipped up to a white heat against the appellants in this case," Wilson told the six ap- peals court judges hearing the case. Haldeman , John D . Ehrlichman and J ohn N. Mitchell were convicted on New Year's Day 1975 of obstructing Justice in the Watergate case. A fourth defendant, Robert C. Mar- dian a sometime San Clemente resident, was convicted of con· spiring to obstruct justice. They a re appealing thos~on· victions and the sentences they received but have not yet begun to serve. Peter M. Kreindler, a 30-year· old Harv a rd Law School graduate who argued for the special Watergate prosecutor 's office before the appeals court, s aid the trial "left no doubt whatever" as to the guilt of the defendants. "They were brought to account under the same system they sought to s ubvert," Kreindler said. Classes Set For Parents At College S~ddleback College is offering a course in Parent Education beginning Wednesday. During the course, which will be held on W~dnesdays and Fridays from 9 a .m. to noon in Valencia School, Laguna Hills, pal'ents will observe their children in group and individual activities. Beverly Cunningham, the in· structor, said the class also will read and discuss child growth and development and read and review the texts children will be using in elementary school. She said resource persons will present talks on dis cipline, perception and r eading reaai- ness. The eight-week course is open to parents and their preschool children between the ages of three and five Although the course is free, class size is limited Registration for the course will be taken at the first meeting Further information may be obtained by contacting the early childhood education department at the college 11.e-eleefed Shirley Grindle of Orange won re-election Monday as chakman of the Orange County Planning Com· mission, giving her the com- miss ion gavel for the second consecutive year. Mrs. Grindle was appointed to the commission in 1973 by County Supervisor Ralph Clark .. SJ C Council. Mulls Plan Aniendtnent San Juan Capis trano city councilmen will consider initiat- ing another General Plan amend· ment Wednesday for the un- developed land east of the exist- ing Mis sion Hills R a n c h subdivision. Mission Hills Ranch, Inc., has asked t hat the land use labels on 157 acres be changed to allow for the development of 274 units on . the property. Less than a month ago, the <'ouncil, confronte d with ob· jections from residents of the neighboring subdivision, reject· ed the developer's previous r e· quest for 380 units and changed the plan to allow 180 Wlits on the property. Councilmen will a lso consider including in the a mendment changes regarding ridgelines and density for the area east or Alto Capistrano w hich l'nay be af. fected by a new road which will be built in the area. During this m eeting, councilmen are also expected to deny a $4 million claim filed against the cit y by Mission Hills Ranch, Inc. T he developer's claim contends that, through the General Plan, the city has taken land from them for the use and Benefitoffhe public Without juS't compens'ation. Other items on the council's agenda include consideration of an application for federal hous- ing assistance funds to be used in improvements in the Los Rios area, a request from a mobile home resident to enact a rent control law and a presentation o n the American Freedom Train. The meeting begins at 7 p.m. in City Hall. Linked to Others? I Sex Mutilation Murder Probed By TOM BARLEY 01111eo.11,~ ...... A sexually mutilated man whose body was found Sunday in Silverado Canyon may be the victim of an unknown killer whose prime targets appear to be ·homosexuals between the ages of 17 and 25 years, Orange County Sherilr's officers theorized to- day. Investigators refused to spell out the mutilations inflicted on the body of the still unidentified victim but agreed that the killing had several factors in common with a number:or other Southland slayings in the past two years. "Many of the victims are known to have homosexual back· grounds,'' Sgt. Robert Reid said. "They all I all within a speeillc age froup-17 to 25--end they were all mutilated in a way that stresses what we believe are the homosexual overtones of all these killings," be added. "But it's useless to say that we are looklng for one particular killer," be stressed. "We coold be looking for a man, a grot(p of men, a woman or a sn>uP or women-the posaibUltles are end.less and we are looking at all of them.'' Amoni tb• muWations spatted oo the body of the late.t vlcUm. whoM body was found near lbe lop of Bedford Peak last weekend. were cttU and tttatcbft and bums, s,t. Reid .. 1d. "There wes one o<her slJt,n.ifi-~l mulllaUon/' be added, But · he declined to specify the nature of that mutilation. Several of t he known 12 victims-six· were found in Orange County communlties- came from the Belmont Shores section of Long Beach, Sgt. Reid said . "That's a homosexual-Oriented area in the sense that there are a number of homosexual bars there," he said. "It's possible that these crimes, if they are con- nected. had their origin in that area." Among the killings being tenatively linked to the Sllverado Canyon slaying are the murder or a young m an wl)oM body wu found in the South Laguna area in June 1974 and the lei.I.ling of a 19- year-old man in tbe Irvine area in November 1974. Other murdert being reviewed in the same file include the kill· i ns in April 1973 of an un· identified man whose body 1Ves found in the Huntlncton Beach area and a 20-year-old man who was found dead on the freeway near Seal Beach ln Jub J9'73. Los AnJeles Collftty l\lthortties have related lbe klllinp ol men • whose dismembered bodlee were scattered in the Lon8 Beach area to the Oranie Cowit..Y k.llllntl. ".8-,.t It'• much tooeartyto1Q that the1 were all the vtctllBI of one killer or a 1roue of klllen," Reid aald. "Moat of theai have age , bomoaexaallty end mutllaUons lo (Omrnon, 11«1& that doean't add up to U.. ••m• Jdller.'' Murder· By AaTRUR R. VINSEL a. ..... .., ...... ..., Huntinston Beaeb poUce today were invesUeaUna the alleged at-J tempted muroer or a U.S. In-1 ternal Revenue a(ent after someone fired a shOt into his f moblle home Mon<MY nilht. J Anthony GubblotU fled the re· ' sidence )ca a park near Pacific Coast Highway and reported the incident to police investigators. He said following the 8:35 p.m .. assault tha t he has received threats in the past that he ls a murder target due to bis IRS in· -« vesti1ative activities. No one ever tried to carry out threats of violence, however, Gubbiotti told investigators. Only o ne shot was fired, Detective Sgt. Monty McKennon c6nfirmed today but it would be difficult to determine H the • would-be slayer took deliberate , aim or fired at random. A thorough search of the area failed to turn up the s lug or !rag-• ments of it, investigators said. ''No projectile was found," said Sgt. Mc~ennon, adding that a bullet hole was indeed found In IRS Agent Gubbiolti's borne.. / The Thigh's The Limit ' I .I TEL AVIV, Israel (UPI) -It could rank as one of the biggest cover-ups in Israeli military history. The commander of the country's wom~n soldiers annou nced a ban on m iniskirts Monday, saying that henceforth their khaki military uniforms must drop be low the knees . Col. Dalia Raz said :;he was acting on nume rous complaints that the short- skirted uniform now al- lowed a nd the res ulting ex- posed knees and thighs were offensive to religious citizens. . :, I Current regulations al· low Israeli female soldiers to wear their uniform skirts almost five inches above the knee. I 1 Burned Body Found Near Marine Base The -body of an unidentified man was found Monday in a burned out car near the main entrance of the Marine Corps Helicopter Station in Tustin. An Orange County coroner's spokesman said today the body was badly burned and only a tentative identification bad been made. That was being withheld until deputies are sure of the victim 's identity, t1'e spokesman said. Tustin police said an in· vestigation is under way to de- termine if the death was ac- cidental or a homicide. T h e car was parked on Valencia Avenue just west of the Marine base entrance. Murder Count Against Toro Man Dropped Murder ct\argea have been dis· mined following a Santa Ana municipal court hearing into al- legations filed against Terry Dean Hawkins, 21, of 22933 Rum. ble Road. El Toro. Hawkins was arrested in April after the body of Mrs. Guadalupe McClelland , 40, of 8342 Westminster Ave., Westminster, was foUJld in a partly filled drainace d itch near Canada Road in El Toro. Orange County sheriff's of. ficers booked Hawkins after purauing reports that be had been seen leaving a local bar with the victim. Jter body. naked from tbe waist down, was found in the draJnaae ditch with a hqe rock In the middle o( bet back to insure that it r ema.i.Dted lD tba.t k>caUoa. Tbe dlembtsal of cbarps was soucht by the district •UorneJ's omce. Sheriff's 1nvest11at.on are 1tlD woTkJng on the cue. they say. Alabama Blasl8 BREWTON, Ala. (UPI) -AD ea l1 momlnJ explOlkm and fire lewled two b111lJle11W in the ' downton lft'llon of W. 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II U Jl +IV. hi T .so t o Ul.Q -\lo 'Wall 8115.60 t 14 1t\lo+ "' "·'° • '' 17~• "' w.11M1 .eoa s 11 uv.-11.10 6 4 11\<'t+ \\ WlllMllri Olll ~ ~+I I llltl 2 61 ]"+ Vt W-Lb 10 IS 11 l lli't+ 14 =va'i.= ·~ 1201 ;l~! ~ w.rd Foods 1• n •'h \4 &os ens .a. i 16 1\11-v. w~ .IO ·· Jt 1-.. ... 0 L/SC DAILY PILOT WT Those Telephone Calls Steeper By SYLVIA ~RTER • To the average telephOne user, one of the most irritating. boosts in living costs bas been in the cost ot calls trom phone booths and to the information operator. Jn recent months, phone companies in 27 state.s and the T>istrict of Columbia ha ve incr eased or sought authority from st ate Public Service Commissions to jack up the price of pay phone calls from 10 cents to IS or 20 cents • JS SEVES STATES, CUSTOMERS who need the help ot the informa tion operator now have to pay a charge of either 10 or 20 cents per request once they have exceeded their free monthly allowa nce of from three to five calls. Jn 13 other sta tes, phone companies have r equested similar tariffs. It's a nationwide trend. In 1975 alone, for instance, BeU Syste m companies in 34 states were granted autborizatiQla for ra te hikes totaling $1.2 billion -and action is pending bt 26 states and the Distncl ·or Columbia on rate-rise rt· quests a mounting to $1.5 billion. Hard as the impact is on us. r esidential phone users, these and other t ypes of rate in· r reases hit businesses, both large and small, Money's Worth • 7 much harde r . The reason is simple: businesses pa y mote for the same phone service than we do. • In Washington, D C .. for instance, a residential user ts charged SI0.96 a month for a touch-tone phone and a n UD· limited numbe r or calls wit hin the city. The installation f~ for a home phone is $17. A business firm, though, must pa~ $12.50 per m onth for the same phone. is allowed only 'a specified number of free inner city calls, and is cha rged $25 for installation. . HERE, TOO, IT'S A NATIOSWIDE pattern. Accordint to a study commissioned by the U.S. Independent Telephone Assn. -a group of l .641 independent telephone compani~ that own and oper a te one out of every six phones in lb(> count ry -t he aver age residential user pays less than half what the average busineiS customer does. ' The independents figure that it costs their a ve rage re- sidential client S5.51 a month for a main phone, while ttt•e average business customer pays $12.85 for his company~:; main phone. <The Bell System 's statistics are different, bOt tell the same tale: the lower rate tor residential users is sub· sidized by long-ha ul and business services.) Underlining the contrasts even more. AT&T s ays tb•t the 5365 mitli on increase granted for out-of-state calls !n 1975 hit businesses much ha rder than individuals. The hike cost the average business an extra S3.29 a month or an ad· ditiona l $39.47 a year. Meanwhile, the aver age home user's bill rose 38 cents a month or $4 .52 a year. OF COURSE, THE PllO'.'JE COi\1PA:'.'IJIES -both n'I· dependent companies and the Bell System, which owns a'iic operates about 85 percent or the phones in the U.S. -arg'1e that phone ser vice is comparatively cheap. Spec1fical lJ, they point out that over the past decade, the price of phoQe service has climbed only one-third as much as t~ Consumer Price (cost of living) Index. And in recent months. the a verage residential bill has risen less than(t percent. Moreover. they warn that !-!UCh relatively low increas+s in phone rates are threatened by the Federal Com· munications Com mission ·s rulings the past seven years Uat AT&T and the independents'~cannol prevent other fir~s from m a rketing special ser vices and telephone atlacfl · ments. Among these new devices are automatic diale~. answering machines, office switchboa rds and fancy French telephones. "Nonsense." retorts John Eger, acting c!irector of tlre Wttite House Office of Telecommunications Policy. Eger in fact, reeently told a House subcommittee that the telephone companies' claims are "grossly exaggerat· ed'' and not based on reliable data. He praised the FCC fer enabling new firms to compete with AT&T's Bell Systein and said t hat the telephone giant's m arketing innovations are a major r eason to believe that 'it will retain a major portion of the telephone business in this country. . WHJl.F: Tiff: FIGIIT IS GOl~G O~ at this high poltey level, however. the pnce hikes continue to hit you particularly as today's report has underlmed. you, the busi· ness phone user. What can you do to cut your phone costs in view of the clear trend toward ever more cosUy phone service? How a ccurate are your phone bills, anywav? Wednesdau: Cutting business phone costs. $219 Million Budg~t Adopted by SDG&E1 • Special t-0 the DaUy Pilot SAN DIEGO -San Diego Gas & Electric Co. says it has adopted a $219.2 mimon capital budget for 1976. Of the total. $152.6 million will go for electric production projects, $55.9 million for ad· d i tions to electric transmission and distribution facilities and $10 million tor impr ovements to the com· pany 's gas storag e , transmission and distribution sys tem. MAJOR BUDGETED ex · penctitures include $75 million as its s hare for continuing work on generating units 2 an! 3 at the San Onofre nu tear generating station an $16.8 million for the start or construction of generating unit 5 at the Encina power plant ln Carlsbad. In addition to the ex· penditures ror construction of F.nclna 5 l~elf, the company budgeted $4.5 million for ·the start of construction of a 4oQ. foot stack to serve the new generating unit and the four existing units and $.1.3 million for the start of transm.islion line construction for Encina 5. AMONG OTHER e x · penditures budgeted for m a- jor electric production ~ro­ jects was $9 million tor geotechnical and environmental studies. lfTe· Hminary engineering •nd licensing activities for the company's planne d ~un Desert nuclear plant •ar Blythe . The largest expendi~re .budgeted for the comp~·s distribution system is sas.s million for undergroundinl of electric lines, including $fl.7 million for undergrounding lines to serve new customers and $6 .8 million for conY'trt· ing existing overhead l1M* to an underground system. p l (hOll) 0-~ --ww- • Nt4 Pl~I 0.. .'(l.Q --WW- .... f ~ .... _ ...... .. DAJLV PlLOT She'll Retire 23 Years in Office From Wlre Sttvltts Assemblywoman Pauline DaviS (D-PortoJa), recuperating rrom a 1all bladder operatioo, de· C'ided to retire alter s rving 23 yea.rs -the longest tenure or any woman legislator in California his- tory, her office announced. Mrs. Dnvis, who celebrated her S9tb birthday Saturday and did not attend the first day 1976 session because of doctor's orders to rest. made the announcem~nt through her administrative assis- tant. La.st year she was named to the newly created ):>0$ition of assistant Assembly speaker pro tern. She is one of two women who serve in the 80-member Assembly and is c hairman of tbe Joint Fairs Al· location committee. .. Judge Ted Abrams or IOamath County <Ore.) C'ircwt Court ruled that the lone survivor of a Dec. 21 plane crash , 11-year-old Theresa Seymour, will be returned to her natural father in El Paso, Tex. Theresa was a passenger in a single engine plane which s mashed into the side of Bryant Moun· tain, 35 miles east or Klamath Falls. Killed in the crash were her s tepfather and the plane's pilot, Robert L. Conduff, :n, of Ft. Hood, Tex.; her mother, FYances M . Conduff, 47, and her half-sister, Maria Frances Foster, 14. Theresa spent several hours in near-freezing weather, wa r med in part by her pet puppy, which also survived. • Agriculture Secretary Earl L . Butz laughed, telling the American Farm Bu reau Federation con· vention it had given him only three minutes to speak. .. Hubert Humphrey can't even say hello in that length of time." the Republi~ Cabinet member said amid laughter, in St. Louis. Butz also got a chuckle when he said it inter ested him that he came on the platform as the or- gan played "Back Home in In- auu di an a." Butz grinned and asked if that m eant the c rowd wanted him "back home in Indiana." .. Actor Marlon Brando has been r eleased a fter eight days in a Santa Monica hospital for treatment of a blood infection, a hospitaJ official says. The 51-year-old Academy Award·winning actor was admitted Dec. 26 after fl ying there from Tetiaroa, his South Pacific atoll near Tahiti. Brando was s uffering from septicemia, a bac· terial blood infection that norma lly is treated with antibiotics, said Patricia Kelvin, the hospital's public relations director. .. Mrs. Judity Quist, 29, wearing opaque s tock· ings to hide her leg hair, returned to her job at t he Plaza Resta urant in Somers. Conn. She w as fired almost two years ago because s he refused to s have her legs, but r eached a n out·of· court settlem ent with the ( PEOPLE J restaurant's o wn e r . _ _ Jt-rome Young, allowing her to return. The agreement allows her lei:?s to remain un· shaven as long as they are covered by navy blue or black opaque s tockings. • Former Oregon Gov. Tom McCall returned to the state Capitol for the first time in his current r ole as a televis ion reporter-commentator. McCall, who left the office of governor last January, covered the m eeting of the Land Conservation and Development Commission as the commission considered applications from various local governments for e xte n sion s of planning de· ad.lines. McCall now works as a re- porter -commentator for Portla nd t elevision s tation KATU. .. King Juan Carlos celebrated M t CALI. his first birthday as Spain's monarch. Carlos, who turned 38, spent lhe day quietly at Zarzuela Palace. He became the country's first king sin ce the Spanish Civil War following Generalissimo Francisco Franco's death late last year. • A bulletproof 19-M Mercedes 770K, built for German Luftwaffe chlef Hermann Goering, was ~old for $160.000 at the Kruse Classic Auction Co. 's annual classic auto sale in Scottsdale. Ariz. The buyer, who refused to be identified, said the car will be used as part of a traveling display which eventua lly will become stationary, "hopefully in the San Francisco area.'' The dis play will illus trate a history o f Amenca's military conmcts and feature the 51f.z.ton Mercedes, World War IJ German airplanes and re· lies from the Spanish·American war, the buyer said. • French President Valery Giscard D'estaing said he will fly to the United States aboard the Concorde supersonic jetliner in May to pay an official visit to Washington. Giscard D'estaing made the statement while U.S. authorities pondered a decision on whether to let the French· British jet land on U.S. soil. Powerful American ecological circles are demand· ing that the plane be denied landing rights on the ground it is too noisy. (Story, A4). GIKARO • Legislation to close the 24 -mile gap of Interstate 5 freeway from Stockton to Sacramento County was introduced by an assemblyman who has ridden the route on horseback todrama~ize his bill. Mokelumne Hill Democrat John Garamendi said his bill would s~pend the law that requires a 6CMO split of state highway constructjon funds, with Soutb~rn California getting the large r share. • A six·man U.S. congressional committee, beaded by Rep. Lawrmce H. Foantain (D·N .C.), arrtved ln Cal ro for two days of talks with Egyptian leadt!1's, American officials said. The group will meet with Foreign Minister Is m1lil Fahml and with President Anwar Sadat bdoredeparture. Tbe visitors, representatives on the House In· ternallonal Affairs Committee, are WUUam S. llroo111fleld (R·Mich.), Paul Findley CR ·tll.), Claaaies WIJMa CD-Texas). Lan')' Wlnn Jr. (R- ,Kan.), and &obertJ. ~omanlno CR·CaUO. Committee Cbainnan T'9om11 E. Morgan <D· Pa.) wa1 forced to remain In Naples, Italy, • becaU.. of a medical ailment. U.S. officials said. • T~ L. WUIOll. promlalng an eye toward beJ...,.. Md cleveloprncmt. btta.rM Salt Lake City's 2ILb mayor, ad at 38 the younsest chle! executive of tbe cttJ lD this century. · I ..... ... . . . . .. -· .......... -... , ~=-~ ..... ..... --... - Winds Whip Up Idaho ::-C~l~l.·~.~~~, . .:=j.;£_ .... T " -"'90UHT•""-MAftVUf"', .. New Enu/anden Brace Under Arctic Col,d ~~~c.. .. lAM. =r::_~::.;:::: •-e• TN1~I·~~-~ I -•-' -~It T-..... a"•-NAllON .... Wt"'"" , .. Vl(l fQetCA .... ,.. U1 I•' --""--· r•• ........ ''*"'..... ....... Cel ........ ,.,,..,,.._,, ~-r-· a • .,..., :>O::t•'°.11' ~~ .,..11,,_f,...,.trw" OMf'lltMe•I ~~...,,.,Cal...,.. H ... ~ ~ hr """'-· u,... ................ _. lNt .... """" .... "'" "'"' .... ..:.~~ ... ··~·•·,-· .\l_.,.Y 14 ·IO 'lj •• ,,~, ~'~ ...._out .. IMS...... .. Mlllldl._.. OMllYO..-.,Or-..Gewlt\'•DK. -·1--••1 .. ••L..,.. ., • '• 4 " ... nwtel MJWe ttOf ... llul~ '1 lfU ...,." __,_.. ...... ' .. Al~ 42 n , ....... ·~· ~---·--remlnl~ . ...,.. ""°°UCTS.tNC. :=~dt ~ ~ °'" ~ ~ "' '! a wltMttn'*oef"TMWlunlefOI'', flll*ltflMOn111t11C.Uo.llyfliUet. IC.af'MHwl9 ~ 1> t1 • (~ 1 ft ... ,_u!!lla W~WMcto-. T,_._..,_ JM, .. tl.».tl,1'76 t).1t ""'9 ~: ftteif _.. .. Wf•.. ,, 11 .01 ( -, ,,_.. lftdM9 .. -piled.,. en CN1t1 om.,~ CllllltY • ~:::... u ~ PAii .... l'•llt. .... _.two..... PUBLIC N011CE ~U,ttJs. io • I • ... 111tllM.Nev. •------------• ...... ~~-18 12 .... , .... coac:o orHvu "-.... t..,..C ""*'°"" fll IM f'tC'l'l'10USaUSIMl.U ~0r-..c..11tewtr,._. '-' 31 On9' U... anCI h '*11'1tm ,,. MAMI UATIMINT OK. a, lttt -JM. 6t ta, a °''"'"r ~ 11 P•l•c:hlM• Mon4•Y· A tou,.IMll n. ... MwlngperMNer• ....... • ~· ~}::'!u ..a .~: SMWtall lllt nortlW•ll•m Olllo,...,.. ""'"' Hti.n. 31 0 .OS lllO en ,._Inell aMW<over In IDfN i.•P.CAI.. tlOt Port c:ariow "''°'· PUBUC NOTICB tl'<dl-OOllS 21 . IS . ~ -•ISO whitened pot11oM Newponleecll .• C.llfonll•~ ""·~·sClly ... -.l.tlft A. Coclclff. "" CINWV ~.. .... •• ~h ;: ;; tOWtU U•fl~l\1UIU ,,, WMl"ltefl $1"1•. tlOISterlM tltl Clll&11MH4c.el..,lll•.,.,. PICT1Tl-..IU~•·ua l.wl,vllle lS IS ~·-~~: >l wolritt .. alllttiMtownenwtffflnt .Jo11n M. Cllrtf, llOI ~ (Mlqo;it MAMISTATIMaNT Mi..,,I .. .. UI "' -.. u.lr ..,.t ~ •IMU If\ lltect ..... ~ .. Klt,C.lllOmlHM60 Ttlt""-lnt...-.-.-.. ... Milwa~H u 11 ~ .,..,.,, 1'11• !llllsl,,.u 15 conduclacl l>y • ""'"' Ml-~us ,, h ~ Ql9Mfelper1Mnl\lp. . l(IMSTONI. u .. ,..,."VII• ...... ~ -• J A.'"~ lttwt.S..C.Alle,cat.._le.,,.. HewO!'IHll\ ., :i. ~··•" " • ~Now CoatalWeatMr ™' u~ .. .;t"was "*' wlt11 tttt Klnwttc11, i11e.. 22'1 ....,. v• New VOfk ,. 11 ~ ~ ..... County Clerlc of Or-'ltt ~ .. tn ... t.s.ntaAM.C:.llfot'l'll•tl* ~~City ~~ ~ ... ~$HO'#tO fl Ow SuMy .,.. ll'llld tnf'OilOfl WtdNS-OKwntltr1t, ms, ~ ";"~nua la ,..,~ .. a.,• UroWll\IHUIOIO<A\1'"' ... y -__ ,.....,, P•lm5Ptlf'>llS U 37 -' r_.,., ICIM$toc:KINC. ' ~he ., • Phll.otlpllla 21 u LO' A1'19'les Md• CIVIC Center hlQlll 1.loht varleble winch nlgM and ~ltfled Or.nte CMU Delly flllot, 'nlla ~t -• fl._ _... tM 01 '3.ll'wWIN HMond•Y· .~!"'d..,.,tw!AKS.s. H19hS Wedneldly In ,_DK_._i_,._.,_._.,,._.,_.,,_._._. ,_._. ,_,,_,_._u_-H_. Otunty ClerlL .. Oret1t11 CIUlllY -PH1.a>uron 19 • Portland. Me. ,. ·10 31 ·" TM Air PollutlOft Cor1trol Olllrlct ••'"' -• -tlS predicted 11n1e or no e.,. lrrltellon Co.est•I tampereturas Wiii renoe PUBLIC NOftCE Dtcllf'l'MrtJ, l ,_. Ollily rilof o..,_., hG..-......-~~,.,.F,~., ti 'IOU 00 "C'f ~.\119 Portland, Ore, Rapid City 47 ~7 I .11 from MnOQ lfl lhe basin. belwffn 0 •nd 60. lnl•nd t•m· COHt CMllY ,. ... Mount•lns and Cle5erts ... ,. •lso Wat-will rMOt bet-n 4S Md ~lllllllMd Orafttlt f;t ><v -· O\' S 30 ll m c.od befOte I r m AM YOll' COl>Y """ be -"-"" ~no S.Cramento 41 SJ 20 )6 .01 SUMY with wme nrl•bl• nlgn doudS. tt, n. water temper•ture will lie 5'i. '-1441 DK. *>. 101t end .left, .. tt_ ~Jf Hltf'$ ranged from the ullt*' «>I •l NOTfC.I TO CalDITOllll S.utO" ""' Svl\dn II .ou clo nol ,_._..._. '((k#t t(IC)y t)y 9 e M $.lut • °"'I• I'\ ~uno•y c.ah a.b~ 10 • "' .no )'WI COOY w1H be......,.,"° Cir<_T...,._. -0.•"9• Cou"I\< fve• M:!-4UI NottPtwt-\t t4ut1hnQIO" 8e«tt "'° Wt\ttn1n.tft't le .. Ult s.nc~"'• l •P'"''•nu&-«.f' S....Ju•f'(iM'!'~lr•no 0.n" Potnl S.outh l 19Un.a l,,guna N09U1>f •->t Military Warring On Abuse WASHINGTON (AP) -The armed services are launching major ef· forts to com bat child abuse a mong military families. M i lit a ry experts believe some child abuse problems in ser vice families may stem from stresses peculiar to what one called "the mobile military lifestyle ." AN AIR FORCE m e di cal s ervi ce publication said "Recur- rent or prolonged family separation by duty as· signment all too orten leaves the m other with the full respons ibility of home and c hildre n. " •.. Many younger servicemen and their wives a re often unable to adequately manage their financial affairs, thereby provoking additional problems for themselves. ''SOME JOINED the service because they were neglected by socie· ty, and because of this they m ay b e poorly equipped e motionally to be parents." The Army and Air Force already have in· augurat ed new pro· grams to cope w ith the child abuse problem, while the Navy said it is preparing to establish a si m ilar program for itself and the Marine Corps. UNDER THE Army's plan, s pecial "child advocacy program of- ficers" will be assigned at virtually all bases. "The problem calls for identification of child abuse cases, protection of the child 's rights and professional h elp for the parents," the Army circular said. S.I. Louls 32 23 S.11 UkeClty 3* 1t .II S.n Franc;IS<O ~ ... .01 5Httlt 4.3 31 ,10 Wa "11 rw;iton 32 19 CaHlornla Early morning clouds nur19 •lont 1119 S.Olllhern Calllornl• coul todtY t>ut clured •w•y durl<19 the morning In most areu •nd there _,. ~y "°IH wilh 1emperatures In thtllOs. ..-uln reiOrtS, thr0119h ,,. '°5 In SUNIUO•cou•TOl'ntl lht nlQtl oawrts end Into tlW IT'Udle S-,llfooa, 'J1U. STAYIOl'CAL.tl'IO"NIAl'Ott """'lntne •-deMrt valleys, TMI COUNTYOf O"ANOtl ""' TUl!SOA Y A .... 1 11.s.s .... a,.,, Twin F•llS, ldlhO, tooktd lllce a scent lrom IM "Wizard of Ol.'' bolt the K.,..rlo In ,,,.,, ot IM rest of ll1t ... uon wu mo,. Il k• wmet11lngfrom "Jaclc Frost.'' A norm Monday sent winds whl~ !Mno through Twin Falls at SO mlltt SICOfldhl9" 11:3U.m. U lntMM9tttroftlte!stat .. tH!LEN S.Cond low •:t4 p.m. 0.6 C. SICKELS, 0.CHsad. WIEONIHOAY NotlGe Is IWnby 9fven to uedlton l<lntltlQlll t:ta•.m. •.2 ltevl"9 cl1lrns •galnst the said dtc.-Flrst low ?:Ol•.m, 2.• Otnt to Ille Mid clalmt In tlW otfke of SKondnlQlll 11:2U.m, J ,7 ""elm ot the •foresald court or to Second low 7:01 p.m. 1. I pretent t!Wm to the underilQMd at the SUn rises 7:00a.m., HIH:S7 p.m. office. of STEWART, WOODRUFF, & MDOl'lflt.att:Ua.m .• MIS to: 12p.m. FRAZEE -Att~neys •• L•w -10S$ North Main St. -Sull• 1020 In ttte city of Senta Ana, In Or•nta County, Wfllch PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NO'J'ICE • PUBLIC NOTICE 1a1m ott1u '' tne place of IMlness ot ------------l------------i--........ ---------llWundenlgned Inell mattersPfftaln-SUP'EtlllOlt COUATOFTHE STATE OF CALI FORHIA FOR THECOUNTYOFOAANGE No.A .... st NOTICE OF HEAil iNG OF PETITION t<Olt Pll08ATE OF WILi. ANO FOR LETTEll S TE$TAM£NTAAV Estele of MA URICE GOULD. 0eCH sed NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN 11\al JEAN GOULD nu filed herein • pe1lll011 IM Probate 01 Wiii •nd tor Is· suenct ol Ulllers TeSlamentary to the Pltlllloner reference lo which is maele for further perttcul•rs, and that Ille time end piece of tteerln9 Ille same has l>a9n sel for January 20, 1976, at 10:00 1 m , In Ille courtroom of Oepertment No. 3 of said courl, at 700 Civic Center Ortve W.sl, In the Clly ol Santa Ana, C..lllOnll• OlteclJ•nuary7, lt7• lltWINGOLDlllNG ISJllWlls"lre 81vd Suite 50' .. vertyHllh,C.90211 Attwner for f'elltlener Pul>llshtd OranC)e C.Oul Daily Piiot J•nuarvS.6, 13, 1916 1~16 PUBLIC NOTICE STATEMENT Ot<WITHOaAWAL titCTITIOUS 8USIN£SS lllQ to said Hl41te. Such clalms with the FllOMPARTNEUHIP NAMaSTATEMENT ne<esMlf'I' YOU<hen must be filed or OPERATINGUNOEll Tiie foltowlno person Is dOlng bus!· prHenlad as .toresald within tour FICTITIOUSIUSINESSNAME . -as: montllt oft.r llle tlnl publlcellonottllls The tollowlr19 1>9rson n.s wltlldra-E )( E CUT IV E SAUNA & "°'~:~JM, t, t97' u • Qtneral P•rlner from Ille MASSAGE. 1121 W. Soutl'I Slrfft, UNITEOSTATESBANIC 119rtnenhlp operallno under the nc· Anaheim. CA 92I01 E .... I 11 tltlous buslneu n•me of MADERA Dorothy Mae Se•-rth, 2•17 W. of ~~tw 1 CREAT IONS •• 2'40 Grace une. cosu l.lflcofn No. 7•, ANIMlm, CA 92901 STIEWA•T. WOOOltUFf', F1'AllE Mtw, C.llfoml• This t>uslMss Is condlKtad bY 111 In-...__,-et-uw The fictlllous business n-sl•· Cll~I menl for lhe ~rtnerSl\lp wH lllecl on OorolllyS.._,11 ::.'='Mein St. 1·2•·7Slnlne Countyof0r•nCJe Tiils statement •as tiled with the SMUAH CA'270l Full Na mt and Address of the fl9non County Cleric of Or ante County °" PubU~ Or ante Co.st Dally Piiot, wi1';!',~;~~ ~nd Jclln L. Ntwton. 22'14 Dtcetftbff It, ms P'"'4 J.tn. •. u, 20, 27. 1976 24-'6 Vl$1a HOQ•r, Newport B .. ch ,,,.,.lshad 0rM99 COast Dally PllOt, llfMnl• 92660 DK. t•, U , 30, \t7SandJan. •· lf7' PUBLIC NOTICE SloM<l:SallvM.NeW1on....;..... 472t-7S1 _____ ..,,..... ______ _ ..._ S-t ... Pllblls,hed Oranoe Coe st Dally flflol. NOTICIE TO C•IEOITOltS c.23,30,•ndJan.•. n.1'7s •1•1s PUBLIC N1vw.CE suPa"'o"c:ouaTotrTHI! vaa STATl!OfCAllt<O"NIAP01' PUBLIC NOTICE S-1)6S NOTICE TO CaE OITOftS SUPIE"IOll COU"TOf THIE STATEO .. CALtl'Oa .. IA POlt THE COUNTYOfO"ANGa A-IMll TH a COUNTY OP OaANGI! l'ICTITIOUS8USINHS A"'*7 NAMIESTATIEMl!NT In the Metter of the Estate of Tiie fOll-1119 person Is doing bus!-ELIZABETH B. HINES also knOwnii nevn: ELIZABETH BRUCE HINES "'° THE Pl.AYERS EOGE, a.J c.n.. lcnown as ELIZABETH 8, HINES. Ill.IS Or1w, Suite 8·2 .• Newport &t«h, OtcMsad. Galllomla '2660 Nolle• Is hereby glwn to cl'9dltot'l Donald E. Day. 8SSM1gellar,cosu nevlng claims •;elnsl th• said dtce- Mtw, C.lllornla '2•~ denl 10 Ille wld cl alms In the offk• ol SUPUUOACOURTOFTHE In Ille Matter of Ille Estate ol This business IS conducted 1>V an I~ t11t cltf'll of Ille aforesaid couo1 or to STATE Of< CALIFORNIA FOR DONALD R. SMITH, Deceased. dlvlduel. pr'tWnt lhem 10 the underslgoed at the THECOUNTYOFORANGE Nolle• IS hereby 91.,.n lo crtdltori OoNldE.Oay oftlc• of HARRIS ROBISON -At· Ho. A~ navlno clalm' •oa lnst 111• said dice· This statement wu flied wllh the twney at l..lw -S50 So. FhMff s.1., H 0 TICE 0 F H EA It ING 0 F dint lo Ille Wld claims In the oftke of County Clerk of Orange County on Suitt 910, In the city of LOS AngtleS, In PETITION FOA PA08ATE OF WILL Ille clel"ll of Ille aforn•ld c-1 Cit' lo Otctmber It, tt7S. LG'Anteles COunly, which lltteroffke A N D F 0 It L E T T E R s ~t them 10 Ula unelersl91*1 el IN AOnl Is , ... place ot t>uslntn of the 1111· TESTAMENTARY office of BOYLE . ATWILi. AN O PllbllShad 0raft91 Colst O.Uy Pliot dtr\19ned In •II maners pertalnlno lo Est••• ol CARL F . SCHUHOLZ. ROBINSON, Attorneys et Uw, 170 Otc.23,30,andJM.4 tJ 1975 ., .. ,; said Ht•t•. Such claims with tlM Decu~ Soulh Euclid Avenue, In Ille Otv of ' • nKHSet"Y voucnen must 11e llltd or NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\al Pasadena, In Los AnttlU Gounty, PUBLIC N.n.wosCE pr~nled as •lores•ld within four PHVLLIS. H. SCHUHO LZ has llltd wNch tanerottlce lslhe plactofbull· vaa ll"OntMattertheflrstlNbllcetionotthis herein • petlllon tor Prot>ale of Will and neu of Ille unde~IQfted In all mattef's 1 tor Issuance of Letrers Tes1amentcVy to perUlnlng lo wld estate. Such claims s-1u2 not ct. lhl! Pthlloner reference lo Wl>l<h Is with the ne<nwry vouchers MUSI be SUH"IO"COU"TOfTHE OetadJan. 2• 1976 S ' m-tor lurthl!r particulars, and that flltd Of' presented as alweMld wlltllft STATl!OfCAl.lt<O"NIAFOa PAULA. HINE 'JR, In. tl""I and Place of hurlng lhe! samP fOUt months 11ter the first publlcatlon ntE COUNTYO,.OllANGI! EicecutM of the wlll nasbHnseHorJanuary20, 1976,allO:OO otthlsnotlca. '" A.._, otselddeceoent 1.m., In 1111! counroom ol Oepartmenl Olllael Dec. II, lt1S MOT I CI! 0 ... H EA 9' t NG 0 tr HAa"tS aOalSON 'Anlf'My.el•l..IW No. l of wla court, at 100 Civic Center R08ERTl..SMITHend ~l!TITION l'Oll ~R08ATE Of WILL UUe "'-tSt. Drive West. In IM Coly ol Sanla Ana. LLOYDS BAHi( CALIFORNIA A N 0 I' 0 It l. I! T T E " S Wtttt• Calltomla. EncutMSofllM TnTAMaNTA"V '-~CA OetedJanuary2.1976 wlll of Wlddecedlflt. Esta U of BE AT RICE B. Pul>llShed 0Hn9t Coast, Dally Pilot, JOt4NT.HEL.MICIC 90\'l.E,ATWILL. ... "OllNSOM TOMLIN50H,OeceaMd. J111.6 ll 20 27 1976 2S-76 mSCIOll"EuulyplusA.,., f1UMtlllEllCl .. Ave. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that ' ' • ' 1 ..... -.ocl.C~toJOt l'e1MeN,CAt11t1 DOROTHY JEAN MATZ OORFF l------------CZU16n·6'Cl7 flubl li.hld 0reft9e C.O.st Dally Pilot, CTOMl.INSON> end OONl.AO B. At-..ferP'IUtloner Otc. lt,23,lO, 1'7S endJan.•, 197• TOMLINSON llffflled tlereln•petltlon PUBLIC NOTICE PUl>ll\l\ed Oranoe Coast Daily Pllol '711-71 for Pl'CIMt• of tl'le Wiii and f<K I-• JanuaryS,•, 13, 1916 11·76 of \.•tttrs T•st•mentuy to the S.t06 PUBLIC NOTICE t<ICTITIOUS 8USINE5S NAME STATEMENT The followlno persons are dolno busl- nes.s u : BRA.MAN'S ART GALLERY, 17'12 MaQnoha S.t., Founlaln Valley, CA 92l'OI Kenneth James Braman, t1S1S San· ta Tom41W Cir., Fountain V1lley, CA '2709 OoM.a Joyce Braman, llSIS Sent• Tomasa Cir . Fountain Valley, CA 92709 This buslneu Is conducted by • gtneral P«tnershlp C>on<la J. Braman TlllS stalemet'll WU flled with the County Clerk of Orang• County on O.<tmber It, lt7S ,_, Plltltlsnad o,-.,,9' Coast O•lly Piiot. Dtc. t•, 23, JO, 197.S end January 4. 1976 4W·7S 1------------1 petlliofte1' roftrenc;e to Wiilen Is m.cte NOT'ICl!TOC"l!OITOltS PUBLIC NOTICE tor turtMr oartlcuters. •ftd INt tht Na. A .. IU tl-•nd piece of ne1rlnt lhe -hes s.wtwCHnoftN l--NO-....T-IC __ l!_O_f_P..,.U_8_L_l_C_H'""E"-A"""-ING-.,...-1 _,, t.at for January 20, 197•, at 10:00 ..._efC.llMnlilfer NOTICE IS HEREBV GIVEN tltel a.m .. In Ille courtroom of O.pertment .. C..ty.rOrellte Ille City Council of IM Clly of Newport No. l of said court, at 700 Civic Qnlff Ill Ille Matter of the Estate of RUTH Beach Wiii hOld. public MMlllQ ,.. Ori..,. Wtst. In tM City of same Anl, JULIACHURCHILL.OKHMO. oal'dlng Ordinance No. 1651, being. AN Gallfol'nl•. Nolle• Is hereby 9lven to crecllton ORDI NANCE OF THE CITY OF OlltedJanuary2,t97• n.vlno clelrns etelnst Ille said dK:e· NEWPORT BEACH RE!ZONING "°91!"T•.LISKE" dlflt1oflt.Yld<lalmslntlleotflceof PROPERTY ANO AMENDING t•Mant!H~Aw .. w-m ""(Nnt of tlW etor9Wld ccut or to ?~~6:~~;.P~ti~~c~~::,~ u =~=, :="~~":t~g:K~v'=~": NOTICE IS. HEREBY FURTHEll Published 0rafl9' Coast Dally Pilot J.MEl.CHIONE,Attorneyset~w.•17 GIVEN tNt the said llUO!lc hfff'1"9wlll Jan1194'yS.•. U , 197• ·~7' Soutll ouve St .• Sultia 1211 In !tie Oty of 11e held on the 12t11 csa1ofJenl*"y,197•. Los A19les, In Los Anotles CilwllY, at ttle hour of 7:JO P.M. In the COuncll PUBLIC NO'nCE wtliCll letter offla Is the plea 1111 IMI· O\amben of the City Hall of tnt OIY of nns of the undersigned In all m1tt11n .,.wpor1 8Hch. C.llton1la, et wflich ------------par\llfnlnt 1o Mid est.a ... Such clalms ume end place any •nd all ~In· S-tm wtttt the necessary voutlttr• mwt bt tereslad m•y appur tnd be llMrd NOTICITOCalOITOllS flied or prewnted H afwesald within lnerton. SUPl"to" cou "'Of THI ,_. month& etwr the first publlc.atlon L.auraLetlos nATIOfCALlfO"NIAPOR ofllll5notlw. Clt1C1er11 TMICOUNTVOfO"ANO& OlftedOll~H, 197S City of N•""1JOf't 8Hch Ne.A.eMn ltobert I.. (Jlurclllll Publlthtd Orente eoast O.lly Piiot, Ill the M•tter of tit• Eatett of l!iecvtorofltle•lll PAT1'1CJC ELLE" JAC08AZZI •k• ofMlddecaclent ------------Januarv•.m• .,.,. PAT"ICIC E. JACOBAZZI •le• UtllLOAK&.aYllM PUBLIC NOTICE PATi.1c1e N. JACOBAZZt. •.JI• 1EDOAaJ.Mnae10N• ------------1------------PAT"ICK NICHOLIS JAC08AZll. ~eU.1w PICTITIOUS 8U51NESS PUBLIC NO'nCE •• ttOBERT JACOBSON. Oeaued. •t1Silllellott..St1'Mt NAMIESTATEMEHT Noll« ls llK'aby QIWft to Cf'ldlton WtlttJ11 Thtfoltowtngpeoons are40inobusl· s..1a.t hlvll'IQ da4ms ... Inst the Mid 1111<»-lM~CM....._...,. rwun· SUPIE .. IOR C:OUtllTO .. THE dlrlt to flt. Mid cla4ms In lM oftkeof """"lllltd Or...-C..11 Deity Piiot, s T 0 R E s ER v I c Es c 0 . STATE o~ CALlt<ORIUA "°" "" clen of ... aforHeld c~ or to DK. JO, t97S end Jan .•• '3, 20, ,,,. ~!~.~v::~~/r;~i.::;~ng st, THec:ou~T.:,:~ouNOe ='::"'s~:':::':~~;~": ----------"20.-1s ~ NewPort Auto SuPC>IY. Inc., • In Ille Mitter ot 1111 Estate Oii E. MOOfltl!, Attorneva et uw, 15111 I!. PUBLIC NOnCE C.lltornla torpor•llon, 2902 VW" Cols\ RUTHHIHKELMAN OecHSitd. Whittler 91¥d. In tneCltyof Wlllttler, In H1°'1W.Y, Newport Beech, Callfomla Nollet Is hereby tl'ffn to crecflton lAIAllOtlflCouftty,wtllcltlattwofflc•t------------, ALL ALLEGED cases '2660 havlno cl•lms against th• wkl dlCe-ls .... place of IMlslnftS of Ille un-NOtlCIOfSALEOf Or Child abuse W 1•11 r""~ This buslM\t ls con®cted by • cor· dim 10 Ill• wld cl alms In tlW offl« of Oenl9'*I 111 •II metters PlllU!nlftO to PtEiSONAL. ~"OPl!ttTY .. -PQf'atlon. ,,. clerll of t.l'llt .,~•Mid c-1 Of' '° MIO estate. Such cl1lms with the Na ~..,.,., quire examination by a OPS NEWPORT present t11em to IM undersl!IMd •t ttte l'IKffMil'Y -...,.. '""st _.,. fli.ct <K '" tt1e su.ier~ Court of ti. M• Clf AUT05UPPLY,INC. ofll ce of RUSTON NANCE preMftt.d es eforeseld Wittlin four Gallfomla forttwCollntyofOr-. military doctor. After an Thi• statement was flled ""'"'the McCORMICK,& OICAi.O-Attor'N~ tNlftl9'uftlrltwtlrstpubllcellOnofltlh 1nt11e~nwoftheest•teaf\IE1iNA initial exam, an Army c-nty Cleric of Orange COuMY on Ml..lw -USS E.OlepmanAve .. lnltle ~. M, 81lOS51A, •Ice VERNA #ARV hos pl-t a l commander Otamllet22, lt7S. clly of Fullerton, In Orange Goullty, °""'~ .. ·,!!NTJACOIAZZJ B..OSSIA,0.<NMd. ..,.,, wfllcn lattw office Is IM ptac.e Of b!S· ......, "' ._lee 1s ltffeby .iwn ttwt IM ~ may report the incident Pl.lbllsNct <>ranot Coait Dllty Poot, neu of"" undet'll\lllad '" •11 IMttWI "*'""'*11"•eft11e ~wt11M11•tpr111•se11t.tolhl to law enforcement o.c. 30• 1975 end J11n. '· ,,, 20• 1"7• par11in1no towi4estete. s-Klldek'M _. .... Id~ hltllfttetlclt>estl>IOder,suetl«t•-"'"1s ...itn ttw neceswry _,_. ""-'be mAtllNI, •-.OSS a MOO~E flmwtlwl °'MN Super!« Cow\ on• agencies, irnecessary. 1------------nled"' pnsantec1 ., •foreMfcl wtWn mn1.w.-..r..-. .tt1tr.leftueryttt11 tt76 attt1eoH1ctof Jn general, the Army PUBLIC NOTICE tour montllf lftw tt1e flrtt PlfbllClltlOn ~=-eoest Ditty,..... HAR"Y v. oo?A; JR.: 1flls °"""' -------v.=:---__,,_,. !/lthltnotlc.a. -..--..,.._,._ C:.llfOnlle •II tM rljlll, lltle s aid its program is 41.. 0t1adJan.2,tt76 0tc.t4.U..JO,tt7sM1CSJen.t.m• ane1 ine..-of wid deCMSed at 111e aimed at developing SU"ll"IO"COURTOP HA•OLOC.ELOE" 07S.1S tlmeofdNttl,etld•llrlgM.tld•.lftdl~ "emotionally h ealthy c:ou~~\!r:~:~Noe. ~':t::'..=.wui PUBLIC NO'nCE ~::r:\-;t=:;.:!d~ families rather than re· 1oee1111ec-ter~lv•Wfft "uSTON. NANCIE, othtl'Wlte otn.r ttwtn or In addition to 5H'• An•, CA 927tt McCOttNM CK & OICAtllO IUN"tOft COU "T 01' CA.LI IJIOi,.IA Nt Of .. Id dK•sad, ti tlle tlnw of._ moving the child from CAH NUMH" AltenWJ .. t•LAW COUNTYOl'O"ANGC IOI, In •nd to'" tlltt ~tln...,...,.... the home and punishing 011us. mss.oa.....iaw. CAI• MUMH• Allm propeortydtscrll>edas: • h " SUMMONSlllAA""IAGIE> ... ...._CA • O"H"TOIHOWCAl#sa t. c:.rtlfl<•te of Mamllenflip No. t e pa rents , In re the l'ftlrrl1911 of Pe\ltlonff~ PIMINd Oranot Coast O.lly fll!Ot l'CMtCHANO&Of flfAIM M .. f1. Ser1ft , .. y of SKll!ld U1911n1 I ". DIVIDU.aL AND OOl.l.Y CAIRNS SMITH and~ J111.6, tJ,20,U, 197• ,._,. lfl ttlt Metlff of tfle ""4lcMlon of HlllSMu!WI, • .....,ofll (Mperetlofl. ·" rt. dlftt.SC:OTTCHARl.E5SMITH SEAN ~AT"ICK Wll.90UtllNE Md .c.i1tom11Corporatl011, group therapy, counsel· NOTtcu v .. i.aw-.... ..... nie PUBLIC N011CE 0tAHa RENE w11.eov"NE. Mtnots 2. ""1 .. nt Mtmt1tra11111 I n g a n d C b a D g e 0 f ~ -y ~I* ... lllSt YM _..... "V ... ""Wiii Kettllffft AM Hiiton, Otnltkata No. t•t:M 0.ldtft tt.111 .,_ ..... llMN llftlesl.,.. ..._..., ~....,. .. mother. F« 0-.... Of ~ton.•~·t~· environment are listed wta1111 • .Pya. ... Mai..,....,,....... ..... ,. "*"'· c.eilfMll•coroor•1ton. , f t t t ...... 1tOT1c•TOu101TOM '"""""'" wt•tioun1e .... ~ s.1c1c.r1111c ..... ~ ... Mtt. as 1orms o reat~en · •v11<>1 u~ f1ut• •~· 11 ..... ""'" -.. WI"*"-heft"""'• tMtltlon 111 ~ •1111 '"'1111l•U°"' .. Mid ~· Army Officials a}sd are ........... c"6rca11trau&tlll-~Qwt.... tltlt <Mrt for H •rder ellewlne perlltlef\. entllle lhe -of .. UM l · t I• hone ._ .. • ,,._"' uc. ,........ 11Me1tc:........,..., ......._, .. dlolflllit tllelr -from IM«<UPeMY .. •<MteltlcMettlfto-p ann1ng e ~P ....,.. ........... ._....,,.,_._ ... c-eu•0r-.. s-it111tt1<1tW11t1ow'lluMKMw,_. tt.~t1&.ot2.Tnct6*.•11 .. ·'hot lines•' manned by ........ '" tll• M•n•r •• 01e htat• .. _....,,,.. .. s... ~•lrkll ....... .,.. C'Mdy., 0r...,., ..... of c:.tHMll• trained volunteers, 1.ToU.ReSPO"dtnt 011 "T" u o a w 1",. t El.D, OllM""'9 .... ...,./'1'14"Ct...... • ........ ~ ........ ...... a. Tl'ltpetlt!GMrtlmflled•ll9th*' MCMICHA•L elle Gl!lltT"U09 W. II It._..,°"*" tlMt ............ ..,,, ti M<twlvie. et Mf~ "parents anonymows" ~en11119 yaur mllf'r ..... You,,,.., McM10tAl!L.011C1111• .........._.111 a. -cw.._...,.., ..._....'" .. .nice 11.,. c-tty programs for group e11u-ittenf'MllOftHwltM11••110f Noun 1a 11erotty ,1,,.,. •• ''-..., w.. ...._-' i. D•,..••=• .._......,_...CMnty . .. _..\tle\VU•a.utnmontlutt*90ll < ......... Nvtftt C ... fN ......... -.a .. MOYkc:.MtrDrlw..._ AL.SO IC"OWN AS:,...... Vie therapy and other """' ..., ........ me.-.a.....11t .. ~Alle.Ctl....,. .. • ,..,_.,., ~\Afl!MHl...,.c.tlf. educational approaches 11. 11 you tall 10 ma • ""'""' 1ctef1Mc:1er11•._., ..... _. ...., .. n •'Cledl ....... .,.. ._.., en .... ....,,..,."*" wtn .. ..,. " ,...._w1tt11nwc1tt1me v-dllfaun •111~._,..,. .. YMlt•• ••• ........ ~.lf .. ythoy~"""' .w~Olltet._.nelw• to help parents cope _.,11o..,.~•not11e~nmayel'll.tr 111a emu•• CH"1no"41" &... .... ~..,a-.e,,,,.....-...i _....,..1 with the frustrations of • J"""*" contt1n1no lnlunctlvt or" CA"~INTl!lt, IHT, Its~.••_. .. ........._ ~"""-tlltMf'l.tlr_.. • · f i} " alller0f'dtnconcernl11941vlllonef~ ~,_tlGE", 4a Or ... """"'~. 0. It It fW1Mr...,... lhlt • Olll'r .. ·~· •1-..atier, TV , .... _. ra1smg a am y. .,.,,. wiout.ei '""°" c11ild CllltDdy ... •• 1111M cny .. "1---. 111 .,...,.,._....,.~ .. __..._...,. "•"'• -.~••·•""._.,.. The Air Force pro· 'c.Nld~ •• n-v·~1 .. ,,cesu...,,d 1Uvier.,..COl!ftly,wtlk11111tweMco Dllty Pti.t, •_......,of,.._.. ...... ,.,,...., •. gram ls slmilar An Alr IUtltolher rellef •• ,,,. ... 91'atMdbY1 ........... fttftOfttltWlldlrll ..... <lrWIMlell, puMltlled In 1111•~· T-10fNtecufll11lewNt-vllf : "" court, Wlllch could rewlt In tlW 111 ell !NtWa PttU111l11411 to Mid..,.... 1tet1t Mt• • WMtt tor tour COl*Cloftlvie .. Uftlted .... Oft C811flrfNlllft f/I Force regulation pro· oarnlV1me"lof•ll9ls,t•klll9aff!'llJ'1'Y kc;11 ctelm• with 1110 11eceuery --•twltrtoeM .. yefaeldi.r...._ fMt< Teit •Cllftt ef ·~ ••• vides for establishment or'""'1v.orotflerrellef. _._.mutt ... fllecl.,,......... It,, fur1Mr ..,., .. tllat the~ ............ "'~ c. 11.,.. .,..,, .. _. .._ "'*-.. ...,.. .. wct1111t tour IMlttM.,.. .._ °"'1llMll fNft 111tkeef 1t11 ..._..,.. 11••~••!,.•lllntMll_.ll of child advocacy com· ...._,111 .,.. ....... .,....._.. ... n"t11M11utlOftetW•Mtlce. u-., 1111• ...., .... 10..,. ...._ .. ea...,_. 11 u. etorNMt "'1ce 11 mitteets dire ctly under ..,....Y ..... ,...,. .... t11111,..._., DMM01ciM1•a..1'" .....,,L.r1N1111eu1wi1e..w11 .. t: .,,,., .-.... •""' u. fll'llt .-.~ ....... -.llofl ... •UIM OAl.LASSC:OT'THC>t.Ma &,Yf'I" ,_.., Wll'*-'M, a.t Via ......,_,....,..._ .. ofa,le. b as e c o m m a n d er s • o.t... Auo. • 1t7s • el9C1Mret .. w111 v... c:.tttrMS IMtl\,. c:.tlflmle. °"'" ""' tnti ..., ., °""1'W, ThHe committees wtU WILL.iAMlt.5tJOHN,Otlll .. llJH........ DMMDKlf'llllort7,tt'7S tm. lnclude medical, legal, ..,.0:~~.1,":~°"·o.P!Ay ::inOl'tt•f' '" CAtHllfTH, rv=ILC:-~ivc ~~-~ ch.apJain, lttUrity policy tCIT'\'IL.VO.WUT •nCMH18'UTLAW .. .,.... IUflUIC>ttCOUltT .... ...,~~~;:it and special se"ices ol· IUIT•• ...,,...,..::.u••H• -....:·•CLMHY --~ CMlAltCMl,CAU,.... ---.. ,,,....... ...,...__.,. fiettt. TIL.JOMJ6M-*' ~.O...... ....... ...... _ ............. Detaib of the Navy. ~MIYN•:nTIT.-U •::=:.:-e>r":::.,.,.._ ==.e:,=.IMwss -=...ca:::....,,_ Marine prognm still are twi~ 0r-. c:.eest o.tty l"tot. OK. ., ms ..,,. ..-. .: "'-a. "" ~ .:'-.:7.' ,'::" _, '::. _ .:A"-.. ..,__,*"· being developed. .-... u.-.17.•97• ZW• l •ws -• • -· 1 l PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ..once 01t SALi Of' ttaA&. ""°~E ttTY AT ,tlltVATI S.\l.a UAUNIT ... .... ,...a s.wtwCMn .... SUt•ef C.I'"""• ... tlltc:.-tyefl.MA ...... In llW Metler of llM Eat•• of JAMii HARRISONCRAVENS 0.CMtld. Notice ls IWrel>y 11;/.11 lhel ... -denloned wtll sell at privet• tete, .,._. efter tlW ttll O.y of JMuery, tW .. ll IN affke of G. W. STACICMAH, et Trwe "••I Estate Division of Socwlly PllKlflC Hatlol\al a.1111, m Sowttl ..._ Street, 40tlt t<loor. I.es Anee .. s. Callfomla 90051, Te~ •t>ntt. Countr of l.os An9el .. , 5'1lt ef cat~ lo Ula hl9'19Jt ......... w. dtt'. end lutlitct to contlnMtlen-.., Mid SUparlor Cevn, all the rltf\t, tllle Md Interest ot uld dtceaMd et IN 111'111 .. CIMth end •II the ntM, title et'#.,....._, ltMlt tlle Htata of Mid CltUaMd Na ec- qulracl bY oper etlon Of l1w or oltlerwl•, ollltr then or In addition to tllet Of Mid ~ dltc..-d, at \tie time of dNth, lftW to •" the cart.tin ,..., pr09erty lit_... In the County of Oran9t. Sl•t• ot• Gatltomi•, Nrtlculerly 4etctffllill • fGltows,ID-Wlt: 40/4DOOIM fJ'llMral ,,,..,..,. • .. flllflt In ~ of lllllCfS Ill Or-.. <:DuftlJ, C.llfornle, kllOWft es lolsa I.ands dln<rll>ed as Ptrc•I• ' .. t i... ch'51ve Elltlllllt A In ll9M ~ ,.. COt'dlct '576/Qt M-63 OHlclal --- ol 0renoe OM1nty, c.11ton11•, '"''"''° fw • sal4 Im.mt pertelm to tM .001 ... decimal Interest ro._.ity re• calYtd ,...,,. Standard Oil ~ ., Callfonlla tor tMlr oil !fflOl ltfttWI\ • B70 Md • 71. T etn\S of Nie c.llSh '" 1.-flfl ,__., 9f the UrtllllCI States on te11llr1Ntl0n of· sale, or parl cash •n• lllfltftc. rtldtftc.acl by llO'-sac.11rlCI try~ or Trust Deed on llie P"OtlertY • mt4. Tan r-centof •mount bid tDllo _.. ... ad with llld. Bldl or offers to be 111 •ltlftt..., .Cit be rece!Ytd et tllO .. ~. eftlct et "'' tll'lle ... tlW tlr1t Pl*ludolt hereof Ind llefof"l dlllll of Nie. Dated Otc:emlltorU, 1975 SECU"ITY PAClfllC NATIOHAl. BAl'OC ey A. c. Parez TnatOttkw E..cutor Of Ille &tile tll M Id dJK«ltflt aalllMJ . .IOMHl 11a-..0twa.k•""' &M....-S.C.. ...... •*1• ,..., .... ....,..,I~ PIA!fl"*' Orenea o.st Dlftr ,.~ 00<. JO,,,, 1915 Md Jtlft. '· ""' .nws PUBLIC N011CB NOTICl!OI' lfl,.OINOOl'llO SIOftlfllCANT Sl'l'•CTONTM• l!NV1"0NM•NT JM\llf'f t-tf7 .. -~ ' .. \ ) I I .. .· ) I { --·-·-----...... - EDITION Today's Closln N.Y.Stoeks ' 1 TEN CENTS ,,... ot..._DMtr " ... """ work for $493,900, almost $100,000 mended that Saddleback Valley representative had no comment dleback or other districts, when school can hold from 1,800 to The 1up of a silver dollar won less thab the architects bad Unified School District trustees other than a loud groan. bids were identical. 2,200. KkW Corporation a balf·mllllon estimated. follow the law and decide by hav· "Boy. Las Vegas here I come," Twelve other companies also dollar conttact for the expansion Under state law. the lowest ing their president nip a coin. said Henry ... It was a bucket of bid for the job. ·and remodeling of Mission Viejo bidder ls awarded the contract George Henry threw the silver chance. There was no other Additional classrooms and the HlgbSchool Monday. fortbe work. In the event of a tie. pie<:e into the air and demanded way." expansion of the library-media The La Habra firm tied with however, the law says the school that the KRW representative call District Superintendent center, and music and gym another company, Bullsaki board may determine by lot it. He said "heads," and the coin Richard Welte described it as a facilities are to be included in Framers.,on the low bid for the which bid to accept. landed on the floor heads up. "freak situation.'' No one could the work aimed at increasing the Ernployes Campaigned f Q..r Brown ' ' The work, which is being financed through state school funds and local bonds, is expect- ed to begin Jan. 26. It is s cheduled to be completed in mid-August. .. • I I , 2 Cella Hospitals Paid Politicos · D•llY Pllol Sl.tt Pltote Campaign Crew On the Payrolls By GARV GRANVILLE Of IN O.lty Pl '<It St.ff Two hospitals once controlled by Dr. Louis Cella added personnel to their payrolls in 1974 who re- portedly did nothing more than work on Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. 'selection campaign. Use of hos pital-paid employes in the Brown campaign is under investigation by both a Federal Grand Jury in Los Angeles and the Orange Coun- ty Gra nd Jury, authorities said Monday And a s pokes man for the hospitals said Internal Revenue Service agents have already asked for and received copies of payroll records covering the workers who manned campaign phones anchored in the hospitals CELLA ) { RATE HIKES BLAMED FOR CROWDS THAT WA~T IN LAGUNA BEACH POST OFFICE Postmaster Rios Suggests Buying Stamps By Mall But Said Some Like Lines THERE IS NO INDICATION that either Brown or his statewide campaign man~ers knew the workers were on the hospital payrolls Cella, California's top campaign contnbutor in 1974 with declared donations of more than $500,000 to 54 candidates and causes, 1s under investigation by federal and county grand Junes as \\ell as the In- ternal Revenue Service Wanna Play Post Office? 7 f ]wt Go Stand in Any Line for Stamps At the forefront of the imesugauon are allegations that Santa Ana phys ician inflated two hospitals' Medi-Cal and Medicaid reimbursements bases by ' ' . By JACK CHAPPEU. OftM0.1!1.Pllllt~ If you like the minute waltz. you could have heard it 34 times in a row while waiting in the line at the Laguna Beach pos' office Monday And, Laguna Postmaster David Rios said· today the Laguna Beach office was not re ally the busiest office in the area The Laguna Hills branch is Rios said the problem of long lines at the post.. offices was one of a shortage or qualified personnel and huge demand brought on by the change in postal rates. "It is like that all over the nation right now People are buy- ing the three-cent and 13-cent stamps It happens every lime there is a rate change," Rios said He suggested rather than com- ing to the post office to buy stamps that people buy their stamps by mail All that 1s needed 1s for postal customers to mail a self-addressed envelope to 'the postmaster include a check . payable to him for the amont of the stamps plus 40 cents return postage and handling charges Rios said the stamps should ar rive withm a day or two Contributing to the "cns1s' at Override Protesters ;called Bad Losers " :The committee (CJs:Jned to op· ~e S.adctteback Valley Unlfaed S~bool D'-trtct •s tax override e~ection is ~·just anothet: ~ B1 TOM BARLEY Ot .. o.My ........ An Orange County Superior Court jury was wanMd today that it must oot allow t.ulllOQY ln Congreaam an Andrew ' llluha•'• recently concluded ~orce trial to affect J,betr Jud.a· 'ttlent when the time comet to 1'lle on hls guilt or indocenee on bflbery char1es. Judie Robert P. Kneeland aiked any member ol the Jury wfao thought that he or •he had )>ecome prejudiced ar1inst l:f.it\Shaw by developmenb In the cltwrce action to raJSe a band. There w ae no respome from tM Jucy box. Judse Kneeland ftren carefully repeated bis ldmontbon that Juron .. not. Clee mNSHA W, Pate Al> grapes outcry of two people who wert! losers in last year's election," according to Trustee Dennis Smith. Smit!\ reacted to a Daily Pilot story about the override op· position. The trustee made his comments during tbe Board of Education meeting Monday. "Normally, in these types of thinge, democracy will take its course," he said. But he said some statements are so out- rageous, misleading and not factual" that it would not be in the public interest it they were not cbalJenged. Leaden of the Committee of Saddleback Taxpayers Opposing the ProposJtion to Increase Tax· es include Joseph A. Peterson, Jr.· and Chester Briner. both former board members who lost their reelection bldn last year. P~rsdn blamed the present board's budget as the cause or the proposed 70--cent tax hike. But Smith sald the district's financial condition under the pre- ~ vtOt.11 boardt whtch he served on wlth Petenon and Briner, was bad. It was so bad, ho aald, that WU It am Zogg, the district's former superintendent, told him "we were on the brink of CSee TAX t'LAP. Page A2) I the Laguna Beach station, Rios said, one of th~qualified window clerks is out because of illness "People standing m line will look into the back of the post of. fice and see other people back there who they figure could be selling stamps "Only certain qualified people can sell the stamps They are ac- countable items and the clerk ts Just like a teller at a bank "The people m the back are processing mail. Rios said In addition dunng the morn mg hours s ome of the quahfied window clerks may have to pro cess mail m order to have it r&- ady for the carriers to dlStnbute, Rios said Rios said that simply hlnng more people was not the entire answer, and was not possible because or budgetary .limitations "The budget is not available ·and the postal .department is looking very seriously at how to (See POST AL. Page A2) MAC Backers Report438 Signatrues By ANNE COOPER Of .. O.llypt ....... Backers of an El· Toro municipal advisory council (MAC) have collected enough signatures to put the MAC issue oo the ballot next June. illegally cha rgmg political costs to the hospitals. . Brown campaign disclosure statements filed m Sacramento show that Cella •and his wife, Marian, taJce credit for contributmg $4,806 worth of m kind services to two Brown committees A statement filed by Orange County Fnends of Brown indicates that Mrs Cella m 1974 donated $1,806 m uns pecified "polhng costs " AN AMENDED STATEMENT of the statewide Brown for Governor comnuttee shows that Cella con- tnbuted $3,000 m undetatled ''phonecosts " Managers for both committees said Monday they could not furnish details covering the Cella con· tnbutions Though a mmonty owner m both Mission Communi- ty Hospital, Mission Viejo, and Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana, Cella by his own admission was moperabonal control of the hospital until last fall. It was m the spring of 1974 that extra phones were installed at the two hospitals to accommodate the need of at least 11 s pecially hired campaign workers. Robert Zunich, controller at Mi ssion, said he doesn't know who ordered six telephone extensions in- stalled in the hospital's personnel department in April, 1974. . Nor does he know, Zunich said, who authori:ied the hiring of five persons in September of 1974 , to man the phones. ~ "mEY CAME IN DURING the evening hours so most of us never saw them,'' he noted. Zunich emphasized that none of the hospital's medical employes was involved in the campaigning and that none of Mission's present operators was in- volved in the political activities. (See CELLA, Page A2) ,o • Motorhome Driver Flees Viejo Crash Sharron Bedard. secretary or Things were bot for the driver the El Toro Homeowners Al.-of a luxury motorbome that burs~ having a difficult time determin· in_g who it is registered lo, the CHP spokesman said. sociation.· reported today that into flames after an early· volunteers hllVe collect.C11-438 morning collision today with a signatures. A total of 430 wrt>ng.way rteeway driver in signatures, or 10 pe~nt of El Minion Viejo. Toro's registered voters, is re· The motorbome driver fled the quired to submit the petition to scene of the crash near the the county Board of SUpervbon Crown Valley Parkway over- for a decision. croHlJll and the Cali torn la "We'll be going door to door Ri&b.wm•.Y Pa. trot ls still looking this weekend," . Mrs. Bedard for }ti ::J said, .. to collect a couple hundred ''We don't know if he ran out of more sipatures. We don't want s!Mer terrol' or because the to lose out on a technlca.llt,y, and motor home was 'hot' -stolen there are always some people thal 11:• a CMP spokesman said who sign the peUtlon but aren't tollay. regiStered voters." 'D. Jar1e vchlcle burned down <See BACKERS. P•.U. >. • • toltlllnaaeend inv Ugaton are :~~~~·~i.l . . . Meanwhile. the wrong.way driver who started the whole thing was taken to Orange Coun· ty Medical Center where he was listed in serious but stable coo· dition with burns and other in· juries. He was tdentiried by the CHP as Robert L. Nunno, 31 , San Diego. , The CH P s pokesman said Nunno was drivlng north in the southbound lanes or the San Dieao Freeway when the 1:50 a.m. crash occurred. O.ily Piiot $gff """° RETAINS GAVEL County Supervisor Diedrich Diedrich To Retain OC Gavel By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of tM O.ily Pllet SUH Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton was re-elected today to serve another year as chairman of the Orange County Board o f Supervisors. Supervisor Laurence Schmit of Garden Grove was elected vice chairman, succeeding Anaheim Supervisor Ralph Clark. Both votes at today's board meeting were without opposition, though Diedrich abstained from voting for his own election. Diedrich 's selection came as no surprise despite his emphatic statements last month he did not want another term as chairman. At the time. Diedrich said he would support either Schmit or Supervisor Thomas Riley Cor the job as nominal head of the five - member board. But reports that Diedrich in - deed would seek a second term started mounting two weeks ago and Diedrich himself changed hls stance from a position firmly against re-election to one of a non-committal nature. In accepting the nomination and election for a new term (See DIEDRICH, Page AZ> Coast Weather Sunny skies Wednesday. Warmer te mperatures with highs of 65 at the beaches rising to 70 inland. Lows tonight 35 to 45. I NSIDE TODAY Con Angolo become another Vietnam? Prize-winning re· porter-photographer Peter Arnett, one of the most familiar bylinu from the Sou1hto3t Asia war. e.romines the poslibilities. 89. Index ' 2 DAILY PILOT SB Tuesday, January 8. 1978 LAUR~L . N.Y <AP> With his 3-ye.ar-c$cai>ed without isert~ injury. i>olice said the fire brok& out in a downstairs bedroom about 11 :20 p.m .• aod Gerard fought it with a bucket of water. When that failed, he ran outside to get help because the house had no telephone. old daughter trapped in a flaming bedroom, a desperate father tried in vain to flag down 11 passlng cars In an effort to call the f1rc depart- ment. The 12th car stopped, but by the time firemen arrived at this small community on the north fork or Long Island Monday night, the two-story frame home had burned to the ground, taking the ltCe of the daughter, Mac Helen Gerard. Police estimated that he was trying to get help tor eight to 10 minutes befo,rc a motorist stopped. . Harry Gerard, 56, and hts wife, Bertha, 41, both suffered burns when they tried to ext- inguis h the b laze themselves. Another daughter also was injured Three sons Firemen actually received the alarm from police, who received a telephone call from a neighbor who saw the names. Gerard a nd daughter Donna, 7, we re list- ed in fair condition al a hos pital in Riverhead, N. Y. The mother was listed m poor condi ·on. Fro•Pa~AJ CELLA ... Mi ssion Hospital personnel director Pat Wood. who was abo Mercy's personnel chief in 197·1. said she has already test1f1ed before the county Grand Jury re- g&rding the employment of the political workers. However, Mrs. Wood refused to d iscus s details of her testimony because of thl' jury·s instruction to her not to talk about her testimony. I THE CAM P A I G~IN G AT '.\lercy Hospital reportedly was heavier than that at its Mission \'iejo counterpart Those employed to man thl' telephones have already been in terrogated by investigators One. a college student, said m an inter\'lew that he understood he was hired to work on the Brown campaign However. he said his duties in· \Olved calling the homes of re- gistered voters of both parties to :.isk election related questions not ~pecifically involving Brown In addition to a $13,300 con- tribution from the Orange Coun- ty Friends of Brown, California's governor received $18,500 in Orange County contributions, most of it from a Sept 5, 1974 , s.500-a -plate lum·heon at the Villa F'ontana in Orange Present at the exclusive luncheon with the then future governor was his father. forme r governor Edmund G "Pat" Brown LISTED AMONG DONORS to the Brown for Governor commit tee that received the proceeds for election were non-Democratic party members Loran Norton and Randall Smith The October. 1974, s tatement filed by the committee shows that both Smith and Norton con tributed Sl.000 to the committee Listed as a SS,000 donor to the Brown committee was nalboa Insurance Company of ~ewport Reach. · Although Cella. a registered Republican, reportedly attended the Villa Fonta na luncheon. he is not listed as a cash donor in the schedule of t hose present at the Orange fund-raiser One Whale More Sociable EN CINITAS CAP ) Lifeguards and scientists are watching for a young California gray whale that's been coming unusually close to shore and to divers. - San Diego County lifeguard Peter Zovanyi said a young gray whale, 15 to 20 feet long, was div- ing in a nd out of kep beds Mon· day off Sea Cliffs County Park. Gray whales us ually h ave nothing to do with kelp, he said. Zovanyi said the whale may be the same one that has been frightening divers along other Southern California beaches by approaching closer to shore than most whales ever come. ORANGE COAST II r~ ou"9f '""'' 0.111 P11o1, ... 1i. "'"''", ,...,. ~ttw.._,PW1. Pre".t•PVOtt~CJy1ht 0,~ C..il Publ•\htl'Q Con,P•"• S.p.tt.,.,.t-O•t·'~\ ,.,, .,Wlltlhtd Mol>Clo IMouqlt F110.y "' CO'oS. ~. N•wPof'I IHAclt. HwnUl'IQlon IW«ll r...,., t•ifll V•lltV. lrv1"~· S.t<:ldltbf(k V.t1lt1t tnd ~~·<" !.oullt(NSI j\$•"QIP•09-~1.n. ti.> •• puOllSh<'d ~l~•dh$ -s,-..,, Tt.• ,,.w.o,ef PobhSf\t,..,. P••nt ·~ .. )JO ..,_..\I ""'" StitttL C~t• Mu•, C•t1forn1t '1ili Robert N. Weed l"t>•denl •NI l"IAll•"'-'' Jack R. Curley 1110 PrO\lcknt •na 0.Mrtl Mn"olQrl Thomas Keevil fclilor Thomas A. M urptune M•Mtl"9 Ecllla< (Nlr .. sH. Loos Richard P. Nall ,. ........ .twlaMG•"9 C•tO<"\ -· ,...lt!tMI<, ll•llf"r -()41.c .. 111-6110 ,,_w,,c•-~• '""°'JO • Linked to Otla s? Sex Mutilation Murder Probed By TOM BARLEY Of tlw 0• lly Piiot St.II A sexually mutilated man whose body ":as found Sunday in Silverado Canyon may be the victim of an unknown killl'r whose pnme targets appear to be ho mosexuals between the <1ges of 17 and 25 years, Orang<' County Sheriff's officers theorized to- dav. investigators refused to spell out the mutilations inflicted on the body of the still urudentified \ 1ct1m but a greed that the killing had several factors in common \\ ith a number of other Southland :::.layings in the past two years. 'M(\nv o f the victims are known lto have homosexual back- grounds,·' Sgt_ Robert Reid said. ··They all fa ll within a specific :ige group-17 to 25 -and they were all mutilated in a way that stresses what we believe are the homosex ual overtones of a ll these killings," he added. .. But it 's useless to say that we are looking for one particular killer.·· he stressed. ''We could be looking for a man. a group of men. a woman or a group of women -the possibilities are <'ndless and we are looking at all of them ·• Among the mutilations spotted on the body of the latest victim. whose body was found near the top of Bedford Peak last weekend . were cuts a nd scratches and burns, Sgt Reid said "There was one other signifi- cant mutilation," he added. Bu~ he declined to sp ecify the nature of that mutilation Several of the known 12 victi m s -six were found in Orange County communities- came from the Belmont Shor es section of Long Beach, Sgt Reid :said. "That's a homosexual-oriented area in the sense that there are a number of homosexual bars there." he said "It 's possible that these crimes. 1f they are con nected had their origin in that area·· Among the ktllsngs being tenatively linked to the Silverado C'anyon slaying are the murder of a )oung m<1n whose body was found in the South Laguna area in June 1974 and the killing of a 19- year-old man 10 the Irvine area 10 ~ovember 1974 From Page A J TAX FLAP. • financial disaster and this fact wa::. hidden from the board and . community. He s aid the present board and administration are trying to lay the facts out. "unpleasant though they may be." Smith said the previous board ~pent their money irresponsibly. If they had made the cuts the pre- sent board has made, he said, they could have had enough money in reserves to postpone the election. The trustee also objected to Peterson's reference to a deficit budget. Under law, he said, every school district must have a balanced budget. Instead. he said, the district has had deficit spending, which means they end up with less in the bank than they started out with. He also objected to Peterson's statements that no other district is seeki ng a t ax override . Newport-Mesa Unified School District r ecently had a suc· cessful tax election. he said, and a northern district is also seeking an election. Smith said the board will have a balanced budget . U they have less revenue than anticipated, he ~aid, they will make the needed cuts. "The question is, does the com- munity want those kinds or cuts,•· he said. He said he hopes to debate Peterson "any time, any place," preferably in Mission Viejo, El Toro and Leisure World. AlthouKh no other board mem· bers had any comments on the opp<>sition group, Oeorie Ht&ry, the board president, said, "I kind of miss Joe <Peterson) not be.int up here." Other murders being reviewed in the same file include the kill- ing in Ap ri I 1973 of an un- identified man whose body was found in the Huntington Beach area and a 20-year-old man who was found dead on the freeway near Seal Beach in July 1973. Los Angeles County authorities have related the killings of men whose dismembered bodies were scattered in the Long Beach area to the Orange County killings. .. But it"s much too early to say that they were all the victims of one killer or a group of killers," Reid said. "Most of them have age, hom osexua lity a n d mutilations in common, but that does n't add up to the same killer.'' Murder Count Against Toro Man Dropped Murder charges have been dis- missed following a Santa Ana municipal court hearing into al- legations file d against Terry Dean Hawkins, 21, of 22932 Rum- ble Road. El Toro Hawkins was arrested in April aft er the body of Mrs Guadalupe McClelland, 40 , o f 8342 Westminster Ave., Westminster, was round in a partly filled drainage ditch n ear Canada Road in El Tort>. Orange County sheriH's of- ficers,i b.ook~ H a wkins after pursu117g reports that he had been seen leaving a local bar with the victim He r body, naked from the waist down, was found in the drainage ditch with a large rock in the middle of her back to insure that it remained in that location The dismissal of charges was sought by the district attorney's oCfice Sheriff's investigators are still working on the case, they say Local Pot Fines Eyed SACRAMENTO (UPI ) - Man1uana fines authonzed by a new state law would go to city and county governments mstead of the state unde r a bill m troduced by Assemblyman Paul T Banna1 CR-Gardena) The new law, which took effect Thursday, c reated a maximum $100 fine for possession of ·less than an ounce of marijuana It provided that 75 percent of the money derived from fines be turned over to the s tate with the remaining money going to local governments . Under Bannai's bill , in - troduced Monday. virtually all the fm e money would be kept by cities and counties to provide for rehabilitation centers and to pay for other costs of enforcing the law. The Thigh's The Limit TEL A VIV, Israel <UPn -It could rank as one of the biggest cover-ups in Israeli military history. The commander of the country's women soldiers anno un ced a ban on miniskirts Monday, saying that hencetorth their khaki military uniforms must dn?P below the knees. Col. Da.lla R az said she wu acting on numerous complaints that tt\e Short· skirted unllorm now al- lowed and the resu.Jtina ex· posed knees and thlgbs wen offensive to reli&ious dtir.em. Current regulations af. low Israeli female 1oldlen to •ear their uniform sklrtl almost llve tnchel above the knee. . l 'Reduced' The proposed 70-cent tax hlke in the Saddleback Valley Unified School Dis trict will cost the average homeown~r as mucti as $4 less than originallY estimated, according t o figures gi ven Superintendent Richard Welte by Trustee Dennis A. Smith. Di s trict ad minis trators originally said the override, if approved on March 2, would cost the average homeowner over $7 a month. But Smith s aid it could cost this person as little as $3.77 a month "in decreased s pendable in- come." The tru s t ee sa id administrators didn't add all the homeowners' deductions, which reduce the overall financial burden, into their calculations. The largest figure missing in the previous calculations, he said, was the homeowners de- duction which reduces the as- sessed valuation. The average market value of a home in the valley, he explained, is $50,000. Although this property normally would have an assessed valuation of $12,500, he said, the deduction reduces the fi gur e, which is used as a base for pro- perty tax computations, to sio,750. I In addition, he said, the st~te's financial legislation (or schools enables the district to cut the tax rate by 10 cents. The effect ot the 70-cent override, he said, wpuld actually be a 60-cent hike. Based on the reduced assessed valuation a nd the net tax hike, he said, the average homeowner would pay only $5.38 a month. The a mount of money the tax- payer would actually have to pay o ut, h e a dded, is even less because the property tax is de- ducted from state and federal in- come taxes. If the valley's average homeowner is in the 30 percent income tax brac ket, he said, "then $1.61 of the increase would have gone to pay income taxes anyway." Thus. he said, the net effect of the school's proposed tax hike would be only $3.77. Smith said these figures are "far more accurate" than the earlier cost estimates. He said in his memo to the superintendent that they "certainly indicate that our job of developing public s uppo rt is muc h more of a bargain t h a n w e originally anticipated." Front Page A J BACKERS. • Mrs. Bedard said the petition would be presented at the Jan 26 general meeting of the El Toro Homeowners and turned in lo the Board of Supervisors the follow ingday It will be up to the supervisors whether the issue will appear on the June ballot An El Toro MAC was first pro· posed in September, whe n leaders of the Saddleback Area Coordmatmg Council (SACC) re- Jected a valley-wide MAC They said at the ttme that the SACC s atisfied community needs. The difference between the SACC a nd a MAC is that SACC leaders are not elected by a vote of the people Mission Viejo has the only MAC to date in Orange County. Its members we re elected in Nov, 1974. When SACC leaders nixed a valleywide MAC in September, Bill Monoson, president of the El Toro Homeowne rs Assn., an· nounced that El Toro would set up its own MAC. The El Toro MAC would represent all of coun- ty Service Area 6, including Lake Fores t, although the Lake Forest Community Association took a position opposing the MAC. Monoson s ubsequently r e .. signed his office to protest public apathy toward plans to establish the El Toro MAC. Mrs. Bedard s aid today that half of the signatures collected favoring formation of an El Toro • MAC are from residents of the Lake Forest section of El Toro. "People realize," said Mrs. Bedard, "that h a ving our own MAC will give us more say in county policies affecting our area. It seems to make a di!· lerence that MA C represenlati ves are elected and homeowner association officer& appointed. "lt la itanllicant that the Mis· slon VlejO MAC hu never had a recommendation turned down by the Board of Supervisors. Homeowner asaoclatlons Jus t don't bave that klnd of in· fluenc:e. '' Mn. Bedard said ahe expects parb to be an area of c:onc.-em for the new El Toro MAC 11 It ls eventually established. '"nils comrnunlty hat only one five-acre part,•• Mrs. Bedard aald. "Others are planned, but they've been planned for aaes. We want to 1pc1 d tb.lnCs u.p. We :eeed the parka now.'' t -u .. n....,.._ DONALD DUCK SHOWS CARL HEART AROUND.DISNEYLAND Kansas Youngster Loses Battle With Leukemia Youngster's Blittle With Leukemia Lost I SALINA, Kan. <UPI) -Carl Heart, who battled leukemia for 16 months, d ied Monday one day before his 11th birthday, sur- r.ounded by mementos of hi:; dream vacation tQ Disneyla nd. When news of Carl's termina l condition _was first publicized. area businesses and residents · contributed to a fund to give the Fro• Page A J POSTAL ... reduce its costs. "There are som e post offices in the country, that are not as busy as we are .•• We're looking at transferring people from where they are not needed to where they areneeded," Rios said. "Hopefully, we will be getting some," he apded. The local re- gion just did hire three new workers, he said. Another part of the problem is the inability of the post office to predict the buying habits or the customers, Rios said. He noted that the stamps by ma.ii program has been in effect for a year, but has not been successful. He s aid some people like lo stand in line, that it apparently serves as a "social outlet" for them. "I look out there and see the same people standing in line two or three limes a day,'' Rice said. He said he had r eceived com- plaints. "The complaints are coming, and some people call before they come to as k if the lines are long and then they complain about it. ''In another week or so ever - ~rthing will be back to normal," Rios said. Front Page A J HINSHAW. • read news paper accounts of the trial or listen to radio or television discussion before they reach their verdict. He questioned the jury today immediately after rejecting de- fense m otions for dismissal of three felony bribery counts on the basis that the prosecution had failed to establish a case against the former county assessor. Hinsbaw's two lawyers said their first witness in what they expect will be a two to three- week defense of their client will be former auditor-appraiser George Upton . Upton, who served ~days of a six-month county jail t erm or· dered after he pleaded guilty to bribery c harges, has testified as a prosecution witness in the cur- rent trial. Upton testified that he was the recipient or stereo equipment - given to him without charge by • Tandy Corporation officials and that at least two sets were passed on to Hinshaw and members of his family. Hinshaw. 54, is accused in a grand jury indictment of accept· ing stereo equipment as bribes and of accepting a $1,000 campaign contribution from Tandy· Vice President James Buxton, who also appeared as a prosecution witness. The Newport Beach Republitan is further accused of soliciting a bribe from a lawyer representing Beckman Instru- ments of Fullerton 1n return for his !avorable action as county as- sessor in a 1971 assessment ap- peals bearing. Hinshaw spent two d&\YI in the witness stand last week during the trtal in anothei: courtroom of the divorce action tUed by hls second wile, Thats Hinshaw. Judge Lloyd E. Blanpied Jr. has withheld hil 1 rullnc oo that action unW the Jury rucbel IU verdict ln the current bribery trial. Mrs. Hiubaw, 48, of Newport Beach, ii demandiq a monthlY supPort payment o_f ~~11500 and a ~ order that wowd compel Hinsbaw to help meet heav1 medical and hospital costs sus· talned bY treatment ol her mulU· ple acleroel• condlUon. J-llnshaw'1 lawyen eaid lod•Y that they experl to call him u a witness at tome point in the de· tense phaae of tho trlal. boy his biggest wish, a trip to Disneyland and a chance to see some movie stars in person. I Carl, along with his parents, made the trip in November. Ac· cording to the 10-year-old, the hig hli g ht wa s visiting his favorite actor, John Wayne. I Monday Carl woke up about 8 'l a.m ., sat up in bed and started breathing heavily. "Then he lay back down and that was the end," said his m other , Sheila Heart. "We prayed to God to take rum easy, and he did.'' A cardboard box at the Cecil Heart home bulges with greet- ings and get-well wishes from across the United States, Europe and the Far East . Donations con· tinue to come in to the Carl Heart F\lnd at a local Salina bank. Carl s pent much of his last few months undergoing tre~tment at St. Francis Hospital in Wichita. He was able to go home for both Thanksgiving and Christrf\as. Mrs. H eart said doctors thought the boy might not sur- vive until Christmas, but she said be fought orr one crisis after another and spent a beautiful holiday with the family. , The family knew death was im- minent since last Wednesday. "They wanted to try some new medicaljon on him, but there was only a 2!> percent chance that it could have helped him," Mrs. Heart said . "I was afraid it would kill him Tight there.·• 1.· Fro• Page Al 1 DIEDRICH .. Diedrich said he considered it a "great ho nor to serve even though it mean~ a lot of extra work for m yself and my staff." Diedrich conceded that 1975 was "a tough year in many ways but Orange County is in better financial condition now than any other county in the state.'' Reading from a prepared text, indicating that the election had apparently been in the works for at least a few days, Diedrich said, "There are many major tasks in mid-stream and many new tasks th.a t will start toward the middle of the year." Diedrich referred to the fre. quent clashes between board members during 1975 but said "Our diflerences were always' 'honest." Threat Arrest BRIGDGEPORT, Conn. (UPI ) -State police today charged a Bridgeport man with threatening ·the lite of Gov. Ella Grasso and Bridgeport Mayor John Mandanici. Shirley Grindle of Oranae won re-election Monday as. chairman of the Orange County Plann\ng Com- mission, glvlng her the com. mi ss ton 1 a vel for the secortd consecutJve year. Mrs. Grlndle was appointed to the commission in 1973 by county Suporvlsor Ralph CJark. l l , EDITION T oday's Closlag ( I N.Y.Stoeks VO~. 69, t. 6, 2 SECT IO~ 26 PAGES TEN CENTS Watergate Trial Claiined 'Not F . ' ~air WASHINGTON (AP) -A 'ederal appeals court waa told to- Jay that the Watergate cover.up :rial was preceded by publicity Nhich whipped the American oeople into a "white beat" and lenied tbe defendants a fair trial. "We did not get a fair trial in :his case," the lawyer for former White House chief of staff H.R. ~aldeman told the U.S. Court of \ppeals. Atty. John J . Wilson said that publicity made the trial a cause eelebre and created the- "greatest, largest, most virulent situation" in American judicial history. "The American people were whipped up to a white beat against the appellants in this case," Wilson told the six ap· peals court judges hearing the case. Haldeman, John D. Ehrlicbman and John N. Mitchell were convicted on New Year's Day 1975 of obstructing justice in the Watergate case. A fourth defendant, Robert C. Mar· dian, a sometime San Clemente resident, was convicted of con· spiring to obstruct justice. They are/ppealing those con· victions an the sentences they received but have not yet begun Employes Ca~paigned for Bruwn to serve. Peter M. Kreindler, a 30-year· old Harvard Law School graduate who argued for the special Watergate prosecutor's office before the appeals court, said the trial "left no doubt whatever" as to the guilt of the defendants. ' "They were brought to acc<}UDt under the same system .they sought to subvert," Kreindler said. William Hundley. attorney for former Atty. Gen. Mitchell, said U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica, who presided at the trial, did not probe deeply enough into the possible prejudjces harbored by jurors in the case, Hundley said there was ''un· conscious thinking on the part of the judge in suggesting ad'Swers'' •.o the prospective jurors. • Atty. William Frates said his client, Ehrlichman, had been de; nied bis con"Stitutional rights because former President Nixoo was not made available to testify. Nixon fell critically ill after the start of the trial and Frates asked the court to delay the com· pletioo of the trial until Nixon was w e ll enough to give <See APPEALS, Page A2) \ 2 Cell& Hospitals Paid -PoliticoS. No Good Samaritans Motorists Ignore Plea; Girl Dies in Fire LAUREL, N.Y. (AP) -With his 3·year· old daughter trapped in a flaming bedroom, a desperate father tried in vain to flag down 11 passing cars in an effort to call the fire depart- ment. escaped without serious injury. Police said the fire broke out in a downstairs bedroom about 11:20 p.m., and Gerard fought it with a bucket of water. When that failed, he ran outside to get help because the house had no telephone. The 12th car stopped, but by the time firemen arrived at this small community on the north fork of Long Island Monday night, the two-story frame home had burned to the ground, taking the life of the daughter, Mae Helen Gerard. Police estimated that he was trying to get help for eight to 10 minutes before a motorist stopped. Firemen actually received the alarm from police, who received a telephone call from a neighbor who saw the flames. Harry Gerard, 56, and his wife, Bertha, 41, both suffered bums when they tried to ext· inguish the ' blaze themselves. Another daughter also was injured. Three sons . Gerard and daughter Donna, 7, were list· ed in fair condition at a hospital in Riverhead, N. Y. The mother was listed in poor condition. 'Don't Confuse Trials' I \.,. "••. - • • ' '·"' .. "'4'! "' . .. '. ·~ts' Hinshaw J11ry Warned· ! By TOM BARLEY Of .... Dally ...... sc.tt I An Orange County Superior Court jury was warned today that it must not allow testimony 1n Congressman Andrew Hinshaw's recently concluded divorce trial to affect their judg- ment when the time comes to rule on his guilt or innocence on bribery charges. Judge Robert P. Kneeland asked any member of the jury who thought that he or she had become prejudiced against Hinshaw by developmen\s in the divorce action to raise a band. There was no response from the jury box. Judge Kneeland then carefully repeated bis admonition that jurors must not read newspaper accounts or the trial or listen to radio or television discussion before they ref}ch their verdict. He questioned the jury today immediately after rejecting de· fense motions for dismissal of three felony bribery counts on the basis that the prosecution had failed to establish a case against the former county assessor. Hinshaw's two lawyers said their first witness in what they expect will be a two to three- week defense of their client will be former auditor-appraiser George Upton. Upton, who served fr1 days of a ' six·rnontb county jail term or- ' dered after be pleaded guilty to Coas t We athe r · • Sunny skies Wednesday. Warmer temperatures with highs of 65 at the beaches rising to 70 inland. U>ws tonight 35 to 4S. INSIDE TODAY am Angola become .~her Vietnam? Prtze.wmmno re-- 1 ·portn·photogrojh•r P1tn- , Arnttt, one o the mod •' /amfUor b11Unu from t~ SoutM<llt Alfa war, emmint• ,,.. f'O'libil.Uifl. 89. ,. bribery charges, bas testified as a prosecution witness in the cur. rent trial. Upton testified that he was the recipient of stereo equipment' given to him without charge by' Tandy Corporation officials and that at 'least two sets were passed on to Hinshaw and members of his family. Hinshaw, 54, is accused in a ~~d jury in_dictment of accept- • ing stereo equipment as bribes and of accepting a $1,000 campaign contribution from ·Tandy Vice President James Buxton, who also appeared as a prosecution witness. The Newport Beach Republican is further accused of soliciting a bribe from a lawyer representing Beckman Jnstru· ments of Fullerton in return for (See WNSHA W, Page A2) Before Primary Sanford, Reagan Stump Hampshire . By the Associated Press With President Ford in Washington and Sen. Henry M. Jackson CD-Wash.), in Massachusetts, presidential candidate Ronald Reagan and Terry Sanford had the voters of New Hampshire to themselves today as they toured the state with the earliest primary election. Sanford, former governor of North Carolina, began his New Hampshire campaign with a pledge to make it a contest "of is· sues, not just shaking hands.•' The Democrat, on leave as pre· sident of Duke University, called himself a "nonpolitician" and his campaign staff in New Hampshire ''inadequate.'' But he said be wants to bring "fresh and innovative and bold approaches to the straightening out of gov- ernment." Reagan, former governor of California campaigning for the Republican presidential nomination, pushed his bm tour through the White 'Mountains, starting bis round of morning ap. pearances with temperatures between nine and 11 degrees below zero. He sipped coffee and ate doughnuts at a ski lodge at Mt~ Cranmore and then watched a group of local slti instructors in a brief demonstration. "I'm bavlng a great time. If I could only adjust the air con· d1t1onin1, everything would be all right,•• be quipped. The President, who races Reagan in the Feb. i4 New Hampshire primary, was bACk in Wuhlngton after 1pcndJn1 Mon· day in St. Louts, wheTe he $PokO to the American Farm Bureau Federation. (Photo, A4) Ford's appearance was bllled • u nonpollUcat, but he spe~t much of his time praising bis own Jann policies. . The President also told a group of newspaper executives be still plans to enter every presidential primary, although be will not actively campaign in each state. (See REAGAN, Page A2) ~Jed Shirley Grindle of Orange won re-election Monday as. chairman of the Orange County Planning Com· mission. giving her tbe com· miss ion gavel for the second consecutive year~ Mrs. Grindle was appointed to the commission in 1973 · by County Supervisor Ralph Clark. ' Daily " ... SUft ....... RETAINS GAVEL County Sus_>ervlsor Dledl1ch Second Time As Chairman For Diedrich By WILLIAM SCHREIBER OtlMO.llylll'IMtSUff • Ralph Diedric b of Fullerton was re-elected \today to serve another year as chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Supencisor Laurence Schmit of Garden Grove was elected vice chairman, succeeding Anaheim Supervisor Ralph Clark. Both votes at today's board meeting were without opposition, though Diedrich abstained from voting for his own election. . Diedrich's selection came as no surprise despite his emphatic statements last month he did not want another term as chairman. At the time, Diedrich said be would support either Schmit or Supervisor Thomas Riley for the job as nominal bead of the five. member board. But reports that Diedrich in· deed would seek a second term started mounting two weeks ago and Diedrich himself changed his stance from a position firmly against re-election to one of a non-committal nature. In accepting the nomination and election for a new term Diedrich said be considered it a ••great honor to serve even • though it means a lot of extra work for myself and my staff." Piedrich conceded that 1975 was "a tough year in many ways but Orange County is in better financial condition now than any other county in the state." Reading from a prepared text. indicating that the election had apparently been in the works for at least a few . days, Diedrich said, .. There are many major tasks in mid·stream and many new tasks that will start toward the middle of the year.'' Diedrich ref erred to the fre· (See DIEDRICH, Page A2) County Airport Chief Recovering Oranee County AirpoTt .J>lrtttor Robert Bresnahan ls re·. coverln1 from a serious bout with poeumonia. A spokesman ror Fountain Valley Community Ho,pital. where 8Hfnahan was admitted· Jut w.ek, Hid tOday the airport thief ls "doing uUsfactorily .'' Betty Paul, Bresnahan's secretary, said f am Uy members told her he ls "getting better:• Campaigners On Payrolls By GARY GRANVILLE Of .,,. °'"' Pl lot Staff Two hospitals once controlled by Dr. Louis Cella added personnel to their payrolls in 1974 who re· portedly did nothing more than work on Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. 'selection campaign. Use of hospital·paid employes in the Brown campaign is under investigation by both a Federal Grand Jury in Los Angeles and the Orange Coun· .ty Grand Jury, authorities said Monday. And a s pokes man for the hospitals said Internal Revenue Service agents have already asked for and received copies of payroll records covering the workers who manned campaign phones· anchored in the hospitals. · ' THERE IS NO INDICATION that either Brown or his statewide campaign managers knew the workers were on the hospital payrolls. ~ Cella, California's top campaign contributor in 1974 with declared donations of more than $500,000 to 54 candidates and causes, is under investigation by federal and county grand juries as well as the In· ternal Revenue Service. At the forefront of the investigation are allegations that Santa An a physician inflated two hospitals' Medi·Cal and Medicaid reimbursements bases by illegally charging political costs to the hospitals. Brown campaign disclosure statements filed in Sacramento show that Cella and his wife, Marian, take credit for contributing $4,806 worth of in kind services to two Brown committees. A statement filed by Orange County Friends of Brown indicates that Mrs. Cella in 1974 donated $1,806 in unspecified "polling costs." AN AMENDED STATEMENT of the statewide Brown for Governor committee shows that Cella con· tributed $3,000 in undetailed "phon e costs." ~ Managers for both committees said Monday they could not furnish details covering the Cella con· tri butions. Though a minority owner in both Mission Communi • ty Hospital, Mi ssion Viejo, and Mercy General Hospital, Santa Ana, Cella l?Y his own admission was in operational control of the hospital until last fall .. It was in the spring of 1974 that extra phones were installed at the two hospitals to accommodate the need of at least 11 specially hired campaign workers. Robert Zunich, controller at Mission, said he doesn't know who ordered six telephone extensions in· stalled in the hospital's personnel department in April, 1974. Nor does he know, Zunich said, who authorized the hiring of five persons in September of 1974, to man the phones. ~ "mEY CAME IN DURING the evening hours so most of us never saw them," he noted. Zunich emphasized that none of the hospital's medical employes was involved in the campaigning and that none of Mission's present operators was in· volved in the political activities. (See CELLA, Page A2) • ~ ·~ Woman's· Screams . Drive Off Assailant' A 2S·yoar·old woman was Jddnaped and raped at knifepoint at a Costa Mesa construction site this morning but the struggle ended when a security guard beud'ber screaming and the as. sallant ran off. Police said that the woman suf • fered some knife cuts but she told officers that she also cut the Youth in the tight. Detectives said that a trail or blood that was not the woman's from the construction site at the Vista del Lago apartment com· plex. confif!lled tba~~ sus~t was injured. The woman, who was treated and released by a doctor, was accosted by the YoUth in the parking lot of an apartment com· ptex at 425 Merrilnac Way at 12:52a.m. Police said that be then rorced her to drive her car to the con· struction site at 1555 Mesa Verda Drive East where the uaaultoe. curred. The youth fled on foot when tho security guard approached. The descrlptton was given ot a white <SeeATTA<t, PageA.%l .; . I 2 OAJL Y PILOT Tuesday. JanulfY e. 1118 UPI Te ...... DONALD DUCK SHOWS CARL HEART AROUND DISNEYLAND Kansas Young•ter loses Battle With Leukemia Yo ungster 's B attle With L eukemia LfJs t SALINA. Kan. <UPI> -Carl Heart. who battkd leukemia for 16 months . died Monday one day before his I Ith birthday, sur· rounded by m ementos of his dream vacation to Disneyland. Police Probe 'Murder ·Try' On IRS Agent By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot tM 0..lly P11.t Staff Huntington Beach police today were investigat ing the alleged at- tempted murder of a US. In- ternal Re,·enue agent aft er someone fired a s hot into his mobile home Monday ni ght. Anthony Gubbiotti fled the re- sidence in a park near Pacific Coast Highw ay and reported the incident to police investigators. He said following the 8:35 p.m. assault tha t he has received threats in the past that he 1s a murder targe t due to his J RS in - vestigative activities. Onl y one shot was f ired, Detective Sgt. Monty McKennon confirmed todar but it would be difficult to determine if the would-be slayer took deliberatP aim or fired at random. :"Jo one ever tried to carry out threats of violence. however , Gubb1otti told investigators. A thorough search of the area failed to turn up the slug or frag- ments of it. investigators said. a buJJet hole w a s indeed found in JRSAgent Gubbiotti's home. \ When news of Carl's terminal condition was first publiciz~d. area businesses and residents contributed to a fund to give the boy his biggest wish, a trip to Disneyland and a chance to see some movie stars in person. Carl. alm1g with his parents. made the trip in ;'llovember. AC· cording to the l0-year-0ld, the hig hlight was vis iting h is favorite actor, John Wayne. Menday Carl woke up about 8 a.m .. sat up in bed and started breathing heavily. ··Then he lay back down and that was the end," said hi s m other, Shei la Heart. "We prayed to God to take him easy, and he did.·· A cardboard box at the Cecil Heart home bulges with greet- ings and get-well wishes from across the United States. Europe and the Far East. Donations con- tinue to come in to the Carl Heart Fund at a local Salina bank. Carl s pent much of his last few months undergoing treatment at St. Francis Hospital in Wichita. He was able to go home fo r both Thanksgiving and Christmas. Mrs . Heart sai-0 doctors thought the boy might not sur- vive until Christmas, but she said he fought off one crisis after another and s pent a beautiful holiday with the family. The family knew death was im- minent since last Wednesday. "They wanted to try some new medication on him, but there was only a 25 percent chance that it could have helped him," Mrs. Heart said. '· J was afraid it would kill him right there.'' fil.tt S p y Buried As H e ro WASHINGTON (J\P) - Richard S . Welch, a brilUant scholar-spy the embattled CIA ·could llttle aftord t.o los~ was buried today a t Arlington National Cemetery,. the llrst agent to be honored by a presi· ·dent's attendance a t his funeral. President Ford, Secretary of State Henry A. J<issinger and . CIA Director William E. Colby occupied front-row ,-;eats in the funeral chapel during a somber 20-minute service conducted for Welch by Col.· Duncan C. Stewart, an Army chaplain. The President offer ed con- dolences to Welch's widow and shook hands with other members of the Welch family after the chaplain read from scriptures and led some 500 mourners in prayer. The agent's' body was borne to the cemetery in a flag- draped casket. Welch, assassinated two weeks ago outside his home in Athens, was buried in a military ceremony. The President had waived restrictions limiting Arl- ington Nation a l cemetery to members of the a rmed forces. Meanwhile in Athens. police said they still have no clues that might lead them to Welch's three masked assailants. {)(ficers said they have interrogated almost 500 persons including members of extremist opganizations. The Greek government is of- fering a $160,000 reward for in- for,mation leading to the arres t of Welch's kille rs. The funeral service was held in a modernistic brick and glass chapel at nearby Ft. Myer, Va., from where the agent's casket was carried on a horse-drawn caisson about five blocks to the cemetery . . Also attending the service was George Bush, nominated by Ford to replace Colby as director of the CIA. Ford did not attend the burial, but returned to the White House after the funeral service. Welch, 46, was shot down as he returned home from a Christmas pa r ty a fte r being publicly identified as a CIA official. He had been listed officially as · a special assisiant at the U.S. Embassy in Athens but recently was identified by a Washington quarterly c,alle<S "Counterspy" as the CIA representative in Peru before being a s$igned to Athens · last May. An Athens newspaper named him as one of a number of CIA offici a ls operating in Greece. He had earlier been ident ifie d by a Peruvian newspaper as a CIA age~t. One W hale Mor e S o ciable E:"JCIN J TAS <AP ) Lifeguards a nd scientists are watching for a young Califorma gray whale that ·s been commg unusually close to shore and to divers. Motorhome Driver Flees Viejo Crash San Diego County lifeguard Peter Zovanyi said a young gray whale, 15 to 20 feet long, was div- jng in and out of kep beds Mon- day off Sea Cliffs County Park. Gray whales u sually have nothing to do with kelp, he said. Zovanyi said the whale may be the s ame one that has been frightening divers along other Southern California beaches by approaching closer to s hore than most whales ever come. Fro•· P age A J DIEDR I CH .. quent clashes between board members during 1975 but said. ·'Our di!f erences were always hones t." ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT T"4' Oun9f Co•nt Deity P iiot, "'4111 wll•<ll I< com blrw<I the Ntw> p,.U, II PUDllll-l>y ,,..,. °''""~ Coa>t Pllbll\illt>Q Company S.Nfatr "°'''°"' ••• oubfl!.lleO Monoo IPlfouort Frldey for Co•t• ~>I. N•wOOrl 8•&<11, HWlllllOlon IWit<ll r nun IA In V1llt1 v, ., Vint". S•d•llrb•< k Vftill' ~ An(I lAOY,,d ~•t h 1South (OA\t A "'lQt. ft>qlnMI t>4)1 t1~ I\ publt\hf!d ~4'fU,f'f•V' Mt(f ''"'°.¥' f"f' pt1nttp111111 puhth.~too 01Ant ., "' »n Wf\i.f A•r \tr.-.t, (.o"• M t ... C1hto1n11117&16 Robert N. Weed Pt t \•6tnl 4'Nt Pubf•W-r Thomas Keevll to1tor ThOmlS A. Murphlne M9 ..... ,.. Ed1IM , ........... (714) .. Mn, c.MISlfled Actwr11sl,., .. 1·5671 s..d••-k V•1t•, Nt-Onoo stt-6310 , ,.,., Safi C.ttl'IWI\ .. 4ts-Ma0 Things were hot for the driver of a luxury motorhome that burst mto _flames_ ~fte r a n early- mornmg colhs1on today with a wrong-way freeway driver in Mi ssion Viejo. The motorhome driver.fled the scene of the c r ash near the f'rorn Page Al . CELLA··· Mission Hos pital personnel director Pat Wood , who was also Mercy's personnel chief in 1974, said she has already testified before the county Grand Jury re- garding the employment of the political workers. However, Mrs. Wood refused to d isc u ss details of he r testimony because of the jury's mstruction to her not to talk about her testimony. THE CAMPAIGNING AT ·Mercy Hospital r eportedly was heavier than that at its Mission • Viejo counterpart. Those employed to man the telephones have already been in- terrogated by investigators. One, a coll ege student, said in an interview that he understood he was hired to work on the Brown campaign. However, he said his duties in- volved calling the homes of re- gistered voters or both parties to ask election related questions not specifically involving Brown. Jn addition -to ·a $13,~ con· tribution from the Oran,e Coun· l)' Friend.I of Brown, Calllomia'I governor received $18,500 lo Orance County contributions, most of it from a Sept. s. 1974, $500-a-plate luncheon at the Vllla Fontana in Oran,e. Present at the exclusive luncheon with the then future governor was his father, former governor Edmund G. "Pat" Brown . Crown Valley Parkway over· crossing a nd th e California High.way Patrol is still looking for him. ''We don't know if be ran out of sheer terror or because the motor ~ome was 'hot' -stolen that is, • a CHP spokesman said today. The large vehicle burned down to its frame and investigators are having a difficult time determin-• ing who it is registered to, the CHP spokesman said. Meanwhile, the wrong-way driver who started the whole thing was taken to Orange Coun· ty Medical Center where be was listed in serious but stable con- dition with burns and other in- juries. He was identified by the CHP as Robert L. Nunno, 31, San Diego. The CHP spokesman said Nunno was driving north in the southbound lanes of the San Diego Freeway when the 1:50 a. m .. crash occurred. Fro.Page Al REAGAN ••• In Cl~weland, former Treasury Secretary John B. Connally said in an interview that he will re- ·conaider his own poaltJon 1f Ford drops out or the Republican pre· s\denUal nomlnation race. But Connally, in Ohio t.o speak to a prtvate group ol business- and community leaders, said be la at present neither a GOP candldate nor willing to become a candidate aa a favorite son or for a third party. Jack.Ion lancbed hls candidacy today in MutacJnatettt. He II not canu>alintna in New lWnJ11hire. I P~lke Kill Beatle Agent LOS ANGELES <UPI) -Malcolm F. Evans, the Beatles' lonallme road m•naier and personal Mend of mernbers of tho singinf froup, was shot and kille when he alleged- ly pointed a rifle at two policemen, the pollce de· partment said today. Evans, 40, was 1hot Sun. day night at the home of Frances Hughes where he had been living. Investigators said Miss Hughes , who is un· employed, told them she got into an argument with Evans who was having business proble m s and Evans went to an upstairs bedroom, taking a jar of pills and a rifle with him. She called police who responded to a "man with a gun-suicide attempt" call. F r o111 Page Al APPEALS .•• testimony in some form -either in person , by d epos ition or through a videotape question and answer session. "He was the focal point of this entire trial," Frates said. ··At no time did an yone s uggest his testimony was not material or re- levant. "I submit that if anyone had said that, they would have been laughed out of the cotirtroom," Frates said. One of the appeals judges, J . Skelly Wright, asked if an effort had been m ade since the trial to obt ain an affidavit from Nixon. Frates said he had been told that while two grand jurors·a nd prosecution lawyers questioned the former president at his home in San Clemente, "the govern- . ment says we didn't ask him about the cover -up case." Ehrlichman ·s lawyer said that failing to get Nixon's testimony was e ithe r a v iolatio n of Ehrlichman's Sixth Amendment right or an abuse of the judge·s discretion. He said Nixon could have bolstered Ehrlichman's con - tention that he counseled full dis- closur e of the facts in the Watergate case rather than participating in a cover-up, and that Ni.°'on misled Ehrlichman in saying he would not discuss clemency for the Watergate perpetrators at the•same time that he w.as having such dis- cussions. F ront Page Al HINSHAW. • his favorable action as cowity as- sessor in a 1971 assessment ap- peals bearing. Hinshaw s pent two days in the witness stand last week during the trial in a nother courtroom of the divorce action filed by his second wife, Thais Hinshaw. J udge Lloyd E . Blanpied J r . has withheld his ruling on that action until the jury reaches its verdict in the c urrent bribery trial. Mrs. Hinsha w, 48, of Newport Beach, is demanding a monthly support payment of $1,500 and a court order that would compel Hinshaw to help meet heavy medical and hospital costs sus- tained by treatment of her multi- ple sclerosis condition. Hinshaw's lawyers said today that they expect to call him as a witness at some point in the de- fense phase of the trial. Clemency Unit PraUesSelf W ~HINGTON (UPI) -'lbe Presidential Clemency Board, in an as yet unpublished report, ha£ praised itself as "partners in a mission of national re· concWatton, wisely cooceived by tbe President." But a cf'ltic of the board sald s uch a 1elf ·apprai1al wu an at- tempt to .. make a vindictlve pro. gram appear magnanimous." By TOM BAllLEY OIU.DallrPCi..llllH · A sexually mutilated man whose body was tound Sunday in Silveraqo Canyon ·may be the victim o'f an unknown kJller whose prime targets appear to be · bomose~uals between the ages of 17 and 25 years, Orange County Sheriff'• omcers theorized to-day. fnvestigators ref used to spell out the mutilations inflicted on the body of the still unidentified victim but agreed that the killing had several factors in common with a num~r of other Southland slayings in the past two years. "Many of the victims are known to have homosexual back· grounds,'' Sgt. Robert Rejd said. "They all fall 'within a specific age group-17 to 25-end they were all mutilated in a way that stresses what we believe are the homosexual overtones of all these killings," he added. ' Firm Chosen ·To E valuate Irvine School The Newport Beach appraisaL firm of Foreman-Thompson and Associates has been chosell to de. termine the value of the old Irvine School property for use as a new Orange County Transit District bus maintenance yard. District directors Monday ap- proved the $2,400 pact after re- viewing three proposals ranging downward froni about $3,000. The school site on Sand Canyon Road was declared surplus by the Irvine Unified School District because of the impact of jet noise from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station . Several fires have damaged structures on the site but transit district planners say enough is left to make the site a worthwhile acquisition. Sibling Cleare d I n Drug Death LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A jury deliberated four days before finding Harlan Noble, 26, inno· cent of the drug overdose death of his brother. The panel decided there was no evidence that tile death of Randall Noble, 24, who died last September after an in- jection of heroin or cocaine, was not accidental. Noble and Tom Bennett, 30, were arrested after the victim was found dead in his North Hollywood apartment. Bennett is scheduled to go on trial on the murder charge Jan. 27. Paris Kidn.ap Ransom Ready PARIS (AP) -Six gunme n holding the chief of France's big- gest record company for $3.4 million ransom made telephone contact today with the kidnaped man's wife. Police said the ransom money was ready for de· livery to the kidnapers. Mrs. Louis Hazan said there was no progress toward securing her husband's release. The 54· year-old president ot Phonogram Co., was kidnaped Dec. 3l Crom a board meeting in bis company's offices in the center of Paris and carried oft in a wicker basket. Woman Stabbed HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Diana Nakubimi, 31, wu attacked and stabbed to death Mooday nllbt while walking on a street near her home. Witnesses told poUce a man approached 'her Sn a possi· ble robbery atteJJlpt, and ahe did nothing to indicate she knew him. Diaper Drop · Plane's Load Not Pot I CHQWCIDLLA (AP) -Madera County sh eriff's officers thought they m1gtrt be on the trail of a mari- juana smuggler when a Cbowchllla·area resident r~ ported a white package had been dropped from a low· flying airplane. Loads of marijuana flown to California from Mex· ico often are dropped in open fields, 10 deputi• scoured the area but didn't find any pot, officers 1ald Monday. · 'lbe mystery was solved when a neal"by realdent Debbie McDonald, told inquiring, deputies she uke;f her husband Tim to bring home a box of dilpoeable diapers before flying his plane Sunday. lnatead, ahe added, McDonald 'bc>Udit the c1lApera, took off ln his plane and dropped lhl cardboard box out when he paased over the f 's front yard. USTED AMONG DONOJLCJ lo lbc Brown for Governor commJ~ tee that received the proceeds for elecUon were non-DemocraUc party members Loran. Nortoo and flandallfmlth. ID remaru prepared for de- livery in Boston, Jaa.a.idemed • ••a wave ot C)'Dicitm ~ Ud.I nauoo•1 polltlcl .... ThMe head·ln-the-cloud1 polltlclana eeem to !eel it will be aood for the ~try '1 soul lf we lower °"" . horil()CW and it Wf. nctuc. our atandardlef Uvlns." l -•211.,. ....... . "But ft'3 useless to say that we are looking for one particuler killer" he stnaed. "We could be toJtioa tor a man, a group of 1 men, a womQ or a group of • women-the possibilities are J f5ddless and w e are looking at all ofthem.'' • Amon1 the mutilations spotted on the body of the latest vic;Um, whose body was fowid neat the • ·top of Bedford Peak last 11 weekend. were cuts and scratches and burns, Sgt. Reid said. "There was one other signifi- cant mutIJation, P he added. But ·be decllne<I 'to specify the nature of that mutilation . Se veral of the known 12 victims -six were fr:nd in Orange County comm ities- came from the Belmon Shores l section of Long Beach, Sgt. Reid said . "That's a homosexuat-oriented area in the sense that U.ere are a number . 9f homosexual bars there," be said. "It's possible that these crimes, if they are con- nected , had their origin in that area." A~on g _the killings being l tenahvely linked to the Silverado . 1 Canyon slaying are the murder I of a young man whose body was found in the South Laguna area in June 1974 and the killing of a 19- year-old man in the Irvine area in November 1974. I Burned Body Found Near Marine Base The body of an unidentified man was found Monday in Tustin in a burned out car near the main. entrance of the Marine Corps Helicopter Station. \ 1 ! • r An Orange County coroner's spokesman said today the body was badly burned and only a tentative identification bad been m ade. That was being withheld until deputies a re sure of the victim 's identity, the spokesman said. _ Tustin police said an in· vestigation is under way to de- ter mine if the death was ac- cidental or a homicide. • The car was p arked on Valencia Avenue just west of the Marine base entrance. 'The Thigh's The Limit TEL A VIV, Israel -'(UPI) -It could rank as one of the biggest cover-ups in Israeli military history. The commander of the country's women soldiers announced a ban on · miniskirts Monday, saying that henceforth their khaki. military uniforms must drop below the knees. Col. Dalia Raz said she was acting on numerous complaints that the short· skirted uniform now al- lowed and the resulting ex. Posed knees and thighs were offensive to religious citizens. Current r egulations al· low Israeli female soldiers to wear their uniform skirts almost five inches above the knee. Woman Threatens But, Rohs Bank • CARSON (t1PJ) - A woman robbed a branch of Security Pacific National Bank of $1,000 after walking up to a teller and . lhreatenina to ""blow the bank up" unless her demands were met. Sberlff 's deputies said the woman walked into the Del Amo branch Monday and handed a note to the teller demandirig money. Sb• then pojnted to her purse and threatened to blow up tbe bank, deputiet •aid. . r ..... r.,.eAJ A'ITACK ••• youth, aged Crom lT to 20 about Ove feet alx lnobes tab, 140 . ~di. thin, J11bt complmoa, upt brown to blond natural cur- ly bair ot collar lel\#b. He w• weartna a dirk trench coat over· a wltite dreu abJrt and dark pants. PoJJce noted that the youth ap- parenUy thew of tbe C'ODl1rucUoo. 'site and had pre·plao.nect the patlon Lor the utault. I I \ VOL. 69, NO. 6, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES A controversy from out of the past -tbe issue of animal con· trol-fiared again Monday night to bao.:nt Huntington Beach of· ficials. The city was accUM!d of cur· rently pursuing another plan for private animal control services after turning to Orange County· last fall when its contract 9itb California Animal Control went sour. An ordinance deallni wttb the city·Orange County animal con- trol service agreement also came under attack from a resi- dent. Att.omey Thomas Whaling said he bas learned that the city ·administration is negotiating wjtb other cities to set up a satellite animal control shelter on its property on Newland street. City Admlnillrator Dave Rowlands said he bas ~ talks with officials from Costa Mesa. Westminster, Fountain Valley and Irvine on a plan to combine efforts into a joint powers shelter, perhaps in con- junction with the Orange County Animal Control service. Two city council members ex- pressed surprise and anger at this revelation at Monday night's Ernplo yes Campaigned· for Brown '1976 • Afteraooa N.Y.Seoeka TEN CENTS Dl BuntingtOnl ~Uncil meeting. Jerry Matney and Henry Duke said they h ad not given authorization for negotiations with other cities. "If negotiations have been go- ing on, why was the council not informed?" Duke asked angrily. "I don't like to be surprised." Matney also demanded to know what is going on, and now. Rowlands said that when the city and California Animal Control severed their agreement, be was told by some council ·members to explore other alternatives. He said an animal control shelter in this city would be of great convenience to residents. The city•s ordinance with Orange County animal control also came under attack from r~ sident Marie Buckland wbo de. mantled to know Its statu.s. Administrative Analyst Darrel Cohoon said today that when an interim agreement was signed with Orange County it wat believed the city merely bad to give its consent to enforce the county ordinance. However, it was later found that if that took effect, the city would no longer be able to colled <See ANIMAL, Page A!) 2 Ce,a_ Hospitals Paid Politicos UPIT~ DONALD DUC K SHOWS CAAL HEART AROUND DISNEYLAND Kansas You~er Loses Pattie With Leukemia -Youngster's Battle With Leukemia Lost SALINA , Kan. (UPI) -Carl Jteart, who battled leukemia for 16 months, died Monday one day before his 11th birthday, sur- rounded by m ementos of his dream vacation to Disneyland. When news of Carl's terminal condition was first publicized, area businesses and residents contributed to a fund to give the boy his biggest wish, a trip to . Disneyland and a chance to see some movie stars in person. Thanksgiving and Christmas. Mrs. Heart s aid doctors thought the boy might not sur- vive until Christmas, but she said he fought off one crisis after another and spent a beautiful holiday with the family. ·The family knew death was im· minent since last Wednesday. "They wanted to t'ry some new medication on him, but there was onty a 25 percent chance that it could have helped him," Mrs. Heart said. "I was afraid it would kill him right there.'' Murder Attempt Probed By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. Dally ........ Huntington aeach police today were investigating the alleged al· tempted murder of a U.S. In· ternal ~evenue agent after someone fired a shot into his mobHe home MQnday night. Anthony Gubbiotti fled the re· sidence in a park near Pacific Coast Highway and reported the incident to police investig.ators. He said following the 8:35 p.m. a11ault ·that he hQ · receiftd tbrelts in the past that be is a m~er taraet due to bis IRS lD· vestlgative activities. No one ever tried to carry out threats of violence, however, Gubbiotti told investigators. ' Only one shot was tired, Detective Sgt. Monty McKennon confirmed today but it would be difficult to deter mine if the would·be slayer took deliberate aim or fired at random. A thorough search of the area failed to turn up the slug or frag- ments of it, investigators said. · ''No projectile was ~ found, .. sai<t Sgt. McKennon, adding that a bullet hole was indeed found in IRSAgentGubbiotti'sbome. Carl, along with his parents, made the trip in November. Ac- cording to the 10-ye81"-0ld, the Highlight was visiting b is favorite actor, John Wayne. Monday Carl woke up about 8 a.m., s at up in bed and started breathing heavily. Polke Seek Aetion "Then he lay back down and that was the end," said bis mother, Sheila Heart. .. We prayed to God to take him easy, and he did." A cardboard box at the Cecil Heart home bulges with greet·· ings and get·well wishes from across the United States, Europe and the Far East. Donations con- tinue to come In to the Carl Heart F\lnd at a local Salina t,>ank. Carl spent much of his last few months undergoing treatment at St. Francis Hospital in Wichita. He was able to go home. for both Co ast Weather Swiny skies Wednesday. Warmer temperatures with highs of 65 at the beaches rising to 70 inland. Lows tonight 35 to 45. Nude ~odels Eye Huntin~on Beach.? Huntington Beach took action Monday night to slam the door. sbut.'on nµde or semi·nude model· · ing studios which may have de. signs on settiqg up shop in this city .. Police Chief Earl~ !tobitaille told City Council members •'the Jieat's on" in Los Angeles and that there is pressure for an ex- odus to Orange County. 11Tbey're all moving this way," he said when he req~ted that the council draft an or- dinance keeping the studios out · ol the city. Council members qreed to take action to nip 'the move over ~lone objection of Al Coen who said be was opposed to the measure against victimless crime. u . 'D. L. Brownl in charse or the vice and oroo zed crime de· tail said there are no studios in Huntington Beach at preMDt, but the clttts looted upon as a bilblY potential area. He aald tbat It is a recooi1ed fact tllat many buslnelMs utilt1· m, made or aemi·nude modella1 • a front actually -. primarily _,.,..r ta pro1titutlon. A definition Of a nude or a Eecapee Nahlied MONTEBl!LLO <AP> -A five·mlle cbase endtd ln th1I Loi Anaelea suburb with the arrest of Albert J. Silva, 22. of Sodth El Moote. l.:MnUfi•d by ihertfr.a d~ ~ M&COWltJ J&Ut1eapee. semi-nude in a rouah draft "means any pel'Son who exposes his or her genitals, pubic hair, or cleft of the buttocks or exposes• any device wbicb is intended to simulate the same." "Also any female wbo exposes any portion of her breast at or below the areola or any fem ale who wears any type of clothing so that any portion of such part of the breast may be observed." ~ Bandit Robs valley Bank, ·Then Eict;ipes A lone bandit fied with about $100 in mutilated bills from a Fountain V aUey bank Monday after handing a teller a note de- manclina cash. Fountain Valley Detective Vic Deuttdt aaJd the male Latin en- t ere d Home Bsak'. 11010 MapollaSt., about2p.m. • M be handed the teller his note, Deutsch Mid, tbe man au.er held • sun in .. pocketM pret.nclM to be Wldlng a pn in . hltpoeket. nae tell~r btftded JWn about $JOO in cash. a apeelaf s.ket of damJ1ed bllls tb1t bad been pepercllpl)ed toaether ta tbe cafh drawer, Deuttcla Hid. Tiit bandit ....... --uaa <leeMNDIT,PilliM> -I ...., .............. ROMee9 GAVEL • Cou"'1 Supe"laor Diedrich Diedrich To Retain OC Gavel By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of .. Oelty ...... SIMf Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton was re-elected today to serve another year as chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Supervisor Laurence Schmit of Garden Grove was elected vice chairman, succeeding Anaheim Supervisor Ralph Clark. Both votes at today's board meeting were without opposition, though Diedrich abstained from voting for his own election. • Diedrich's selection came as no surprise despite his emphatic statements last month he did not want another term as chairman .. At the time~ Diedrich said he would support either Schmit or Supervisor Thomas Riley for the job as nominal bead of the five. member board. But reports that Diedrich in· deed would seek a second term started mounting two weeks ago and Diedrich himself changed his stance from a position firmly against re-election· to one of a non·committal nature. lo accepting the nomination and election for a new term Diedrich said he considered it a "great honor to serve even though it means a lot of extra work !or myself and my staff.'• Diedrich conceded that · 1975 was "a toueb year in many ways ¥ Orange County is in better financial condition now than any other county in the state." R~lng from a prepared text, indlcating t hat-the election bad apparently been in the works for at least a few days, Diedrich said, "There are many major tasb in mid-stream and many new tasks that wil' start toward the middle of the year." Diedrich ref erred to the fre· quent clashes between board me•lterJ during 1975 but said. ..Our dtff erences were always m.t.·· Dhdrtcb, Jllley, and ~r Robert Battin all face re elecltion eff orta ha June. BREWTON, Ala. <VP.ll -An early momU.. eltpl~'lild fire leveled two l>uaJn.... bl tbe • downtqwn aectloD of tbtl South ~aaatowatCMk1UdWiCMI· ll •aaa•1•d U to 80 e>Qar eltabllahrrientt. • \ Campaign Crew On the Payrolls By GARY GRANVIUE ot .. D111Y ,.. ... SIMI Two hospitals once controlled by Dr. Louis Cella added personnel to their payrolls in 1974 who re· portedly did nothing more than work on Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.'s election campaign. Use of hospital-paid employes in the Brown campaign is under investigation by both a F eder al Grand Jury in Los Angeles and the Orange Coun- ty Grand.Jury, authorities said Monday. And a spokesman for the hospitals said Internal Revenue ~a1ents ha.ealready asked for and received copies of payroll records covering the workers who manned campaign phones anchored in the hospitals. THERE IS NO INDICATION that either Brown or his statewide campaign managers knew the workers were on the hospital payrolls. Cella, Calif ornia•s top campaign contributor in 1974 with declared donatiOM of more t han $500,000 to 54 candidates and causes, is under investigation by federal and county grand juries. as well as the In· temal Revenue Service. At the forefront of the investigation are allegations that Santa Ana physician inflated two hospitals' Medi-Cal and Medicaid reimbursements bases by illegally charging political costs to the hospitals. Brown campaign disclosure statements filed in Sacramento show that Cella 'and his wife, Marian, take credit for contributing $4,806 worth of in kind services to two Brown committees. A statement filed by Orange County Friends of Brown indicates that Mrs. Cella in 1974 donated $1,806 in unspecified "polling co.5ts. 0 AN A M ENDED Sl'ATEMENT of the statewide Brown for Governor committee shows that Cella con- tributed $3,000 in undetailed "phone costs!' Managers for both committees said Monday they could not furnish details covering the Cella con· tributions. Though a minority owner in both Mission Communi· ty Hospital, Mission Viejo, and Merey General Hospital, Santa Ana, Cella by his own admission was ln operational control of the hospital until last fall .. It was·in the spring of 1974 that extra phones were (See CELLA, Page AZ) • Lawyers ~harge 'White Heat' Hurt . W.ater/!Ote Trial?'. WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal appeals court was told to- day that the Watergate cover .. up trial was preceded by publicity which whipped the American ~le into a .. white heat" and derued the def end ants a fair trial. "We did not eet a fair trial in this case,•• the lawyer foc former White House· chief of st.aft' H.R. Haldeman told the U.S. Court o( Appeals. Alts-John I. Wilson uld that publl&y made the trial a e ... eelebr• aad created the ··..--iaraeat. nat Yinlhat sltu61on" bl Amerlctn j\lllldal 1ditor7. • 0 '119e American peaple were whipped ap to a white beat agallllt . the apte_tlants in this oaae,•• Wllaon Mid t.be six a~ peal• court Jucljea hearin& ~ cue. HaldeSQan, John D. BbrUctlaaan and John N. Mitchell ,,.. coovld.ed GD New . \ Year's Day 1975 of obstructing justice in the Watergate case. A fourth defendant, Robert C. Mar· dian, a sometime San Clemente resident, "f&S convicted of con· spiring to obstruct juatice., Thet are appealing those con- victions and the sentences they received but have not yet begun to serve. Peter M. Krelndler, a 30-year· • old Harv.ard Law School traduate who argued for tbe special Water1ate prosecutor's office before the appeals ~ •aid the trial \'left no doubt whatever" as to the guil1 oC tho defendants. "'Ibey were brouabt to account under the same system tbey sought to subve~" Kreindler aald. William Hundley. MtomeJ fer former Atty. Gen. Mit.cMll. aalcl U.S. Oiall'lct Judge 4'oa. J. Slrlca. who presided al U. tNJ. . <1eeAPPEALS,P119AZ) ~ ' l A2 OAILYPILOT H /F Tueldey, January 8. 1 ~18 ,,...._Ai CEUA C·AMP AIGNING. • • imtalled at the two hospitals to accommodate the need of at least 11 specially blred campaian workers. Robert Zunich, controller at Misslon. said . he doesn't know who ordered six telepbone extenaloos ln· stalled in the hospital's personnel department 1n April, 1974. Nor does he know, Zunich said, who authorized the hiring or five persons in September of 1974, to man the phones. "TREY CAME JN DtJRING the evening hours so most of us never saw them." he noted. Zunich emphasized that non~ of the hosplt~l's medical employes was involved m the campaigning and that none of Mission's present operators was ln· :volved ln the political activities. . . Three Youths HeldinHB I Airport Theft A loud crash that wasn't a plane crash grounded three yot1ths at Huntington Beach's Meadowlark Airport late Mon- day nig ht when a patrolling policeman heard it and stopped to ihvestigate. Patrolman Arden Fick subse- quently captured the trio inside a haogar at tbe small field at 5141 Warner Ave., a s they were al- legedly burglarizing the office. The suspects were taken into custody without resistance when cornered shortly before midnight, investigators said. Booked on burglary charges were Robert F. Dove, 18, or 16141 Fantasi a Lane, Huntington Beach. Richard A. Soy, 18, of 13086 Blackbird Road, Wes tminster, and Mark W. Brooks, 19, or Buena Park. Bail for the jailed suspects was set at $5.000 pending arraign· ment in West Orange County Judicial District Court. Bandits Hit HBMarket • A pair of swarthy men menaced a Huntington Beach market clerk with a sttaight raz- or and robbed her early today. The bandits fled the Stop N Go Market at 17490 Beach Blvd., with an undisclosed sum of money. Investigators said the female clerk told them the pair, each about 35 years old, fled the coove- nience store at Beach BouJevard near Slater A venue in an old car. Cops to Keep Flag Patclws COLUMBUS, Ohio <AP) -The American flag patches on 600 ci- ty police unHorms won't be stripped off this bicentennial year as ordered earlier, Police Chief Earl Burden says. Burden said Monday the flag patches, which a five· man un-. iform committee recommended be removed, will stay "since we wish to retain the good will and sup port or the citizens of ·Columbus." Burden's order to remove the flag patches was to have be~n e~­ fective Feb. l , but he said 1t caused "considerable con- troversy in the community." He said it was obvious that citizens wish police to continue wearing tire flag. R ed Sea Strike EILAT, Israel <UPI) -A 24- hour general strike by residents of this Red Sea port ended today with a government pledge not to dose King Solomon's mines until a majority of the miners find other jobs. • ORANGE COAST Hr DAILY PILOT flw 0.M>lll' CN\I Oally PilOI, W11'1 -r<" '' «>n>ll.ned I"" N•-Pu\~ i\ pVl>lt-by I ... 0.M>Qe Co•tt P"OltY\lf'Q (O-t. ~••tt Ml·I-\ .,., pullll\fl<'d Monday ll!l'OUQll F"04Y "" Co-I• Mftot, N••-· 9"<11, ~ ...... ~ fl••(h/Fo11ntt111 V•ll•1· ,,.,. ..... S.OdlUl.Cli veno and u,...,.. eur11~h CIH>ll " \<n91e • •t9-' edition '' put>tt\Md !MttU<dllY• Mid~­.. ,, T"" !>'In< 1p•I publ• h•NI p!ftnl I\ Al Ull Will a.y f>Cfttt, (~II M .. I , (AlotorN• t?•~ Robert N. Weed Pr9'1clllll lllCI l"lil!llV. Jeek R. Curlev Vk e ,.,t\ldelll -Ci4Mf.tl Mt"""r Thomes Keevll [dllO< ThOmH A. Murphlne M<on•9l119 CO.Mr Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall Ao ut ... t M<on"'JI~ I "'kin Robert Barkff Wt\1 O<anot C.Wflh 1011 .. HwttlMtofta..OOffke 111/J &e<t<ll -cl ~11"'9 441f'tU ,. 0 ... 1'0, .,._ Offk• L..-. ...... 11•c.·-~ c;a.11~" JJDW.t ... Str"' ....... <II v.tlf1 Ullll u ,..., ,,,.., ..... ~,,,......, TtllJll , ... 0'4) 6CMlt1 . ' ~~M>tm , __ ... Or ..... c..lf~- 161111 ~-.. " Ot-~·· ...... 1.,,. ... °""' ... . .. ., .,., .. " •lhlfl••-...... , .. =:rjllt .,. ·•~••tt.--flh llWOlll 1"9' Mc ==.::,•-•I , .. <l•I ""'1hll~ OI .t< .. ~ ........... , ... "' (Al\" -" .. • ~-;..•••"' .. ..., ., <«ti-~' u -~,~.u__...,, """'" ... , ...... ' Mission Hospital personntl director Pat Wood·, who was also Mercy's personnel chief in 1974. said sbe has already testified before the county Grand Jury re- garding ~he employment of the political workers. However. Mrs. Wood refused to discuss details of her testimony because of the jury's instruction to her not to talk about her testimony. T H E CAMPAIGNING AT ·Mercy Hospital reportedly was heavier than that at its Mission . Viejo counterpart. Those employed to man the telephones have already been in· terrogated by investigators. One, a college student, said in an interview that he understood he was hired to work on the Brown campaign. However, he said his duties in- volved calling the homes of re- gistered voters of both parties to ask election related questions not specifically involving Brown. In addition to a $13,300 con- tribution from the Orange Coun· t y Friends of Brown. California's governor received $18,500 in Orange County contributions, most of it from a Sept. 5, 1974, $500-a·plate luncheon al the Villa Fontana in Orange. Present at the exclusive luncheon with tbe then future governor was his father, former governor Edmund G. "Pat'' Brown. LISTED AMONG DONORS to the Brown for Governor commit· tee that received the proceeds for election were non-Democratic party members Loran Norton and Randall Smith. The October, 1974, statement filed by the committee shows that both Smith and Norton con- tributed $1,000 to the committee. Listed as a $5,000 donor to the Brown committee was Balboa Insurance Company of Newport· Beach. Although Cella, a registered Republican, reportedly attended the Villa Fontana luncheon, he is not listed as a cash donor in the schedule of those present at the Orange fund·raiser. Fro•P~AJ APPEALS ••• did not probe deeply enough into the possible prejudices harbored by jurors in the case. Hundley said there was ccun· conscious thinking on the part of t he judge in s uggesting answers" to the prospective jurors. Atty. William Frates said his client, Ehrlichman, had been de· nied his constitutional rights because former President Nixon was not made available to testify. Nixon fell critically ill after the start of the trial and Frates asked the court to delay the com- pletion of the trial Wltil Nixon was well enough to give testimony in some form -either in person, by deposition or through a videotape question and answer session. "He was the focal point of this entire trial," Frates said. "At no time did anyone suggest his testimony was not material or re· levant. .. I submit that if anyone had said that. they would have been laughed out of the courtroom,'· Frates said. One of the appeals judges, J . Skelly Wright, asked if an effort had been made since the trial to obtain an affidavit from Nixon. Frates said he had been told that while two grand jurors and prosecution lawyers questioned the former president at his home in San Clemente, "the govern· ment says we didn't ask him about the cover·up case.'' E hrlichman's lawyer said that failing to get Nixon's testimony was either a violation of Ehrlichman's Sixth Amendment right or an abuse of the Judge's discretion. Bowler's Car Hit For 8555 Burglary A car burglar bn*e iato a parked Yehicle at HunUnlton Lanes bowllnl allq ln Hunt-tniton Beach Monday night and scored for~. •blle bis victim was in the bowling aJley, poUce said. .Francis Poncy, of 5lt Frankton St., told inYeaUgatora the las! Included a citizen band (CB> racllo and antenna 1toltn by tomtOft.e who used a coat banter to jtmlll)' t.be locked MO. ' iR.e~an Chilly lnNH · i • By the Associated Press With President Ford in Washington and Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D·Wash.), in Mauachusetts, presidential candidate RQDald Reagan and Terry Sanford' had the voters of New Hampshire to themselves today as they toured the state with the earliest primary election. Sanford. former governor of North Carolina. began his New Hamps hire campaign with a pledge to make it a contest "of is· sues, not just shaking hands." The Democrat, on leave as pre- sident of Duke University, called himself a •·nonpolitician" and his campaign s taff in New Hampshire "inadequate." But he said he wants to bring "fresh and innovative and bold approaches to the straightening out of gov· ernment." ~lected Shirley Grindle of Orange won re-election Monday as. chairman of the Orange CountY. J>lanning Com· mission ~ giving her the com· miss ion gavel for the second consecutive year. Mrs. Grindle was appointed to the commission in 1973 by County Supervisor Ralph By TOM BAU.EY Qt t11t o.ur .,...,. ...,. A sexually mutilated man whose body was found Sunday ln SUverado Canyon may be the victim of an unknown killer whose prime targets appear to be . ·homosexuals between the aaes or J7 and 2S yeaTs, Orange County Sheriff's officers theorized to- day. Investigators refused to spell out the mutilations inflicted on the body of the still unidentified victim but agreed that the killing had several factors in common with a number of other Southland slayings in the past two years. "Many of the victims are known to have homosexual back· groWlds,'' Sgt. Robert Reid said. • • J . .. . . . -• ... . . he decllned to 1pe~if y the nature • wtbalmuWallon. .. Se•eral of the known 12 vlcUma-slx were found in Orange County communltles-• came from the Belmont Shores section or Lqng Beach. Sgt. Reid , said. . • "That's• bomosexual~ented .. area in the sense that there are a number of hooiosexual bars there " he said. ..It's possible that these crimes, ilthey are con- nected, bad their Origin in that area." • Among the killings being tenatively linked to the Silverado Canyon slaying are the murder of a young man whose body was found in the South Laguna area in June 1974 and the killing of a 19- year-old man in the Irvine area in November 1974. Other murders be Reagan, former governor of California campaigning for the Republ ican presidential nomination, pushed his bus tour through the White Mountains, starting his round of morning ap. pearances with temperatures between nine and 17 degrees below zero. .Clark. "They all fall within a spedfic age group-17 to 25-end they were all mutilated in a way that stresses what we believe are the homosexual overtones of all these killings," he added. ''But it's useless to say that we are looking for one particular killer," be stressed. "We could be looking for a man, a group or men, a woman or a group or women-the possibilities are endless and we are looking at all of them.'' in the same file incl the kill - ing in April 1973 of n un- identified man whose bod was found in the Huntington Be ch area and a 20·year-old man o was found dead on the freew y near Seal Beach in July 1973. He sipped coffee and ate doughnuts at a ski lodge at Mt. Cranmore and then watched a group of local ski instructors in a brief demonstration. "I'm having a great time. If I could only adjust the air con- <illloning, everything would be all right," he quipped. Huntington's City Insurance Doubles in '7 6 Huntington Beach City Council members have approved new liability insurance coverage agreements for 1976 that more than doubles last year's rates. And officials said they feel fortunate at getting coverage al the price they did. Council members gave un- animous approval to a proposal by City Treasurer Warren Hall and an insurance committee that will raise premiums from $293,000 to $594,745. Hall said the city is lucky to get coverage with "only" a 100 per· cent increase. He told the council that other cities are paying as much as six times last year 's rates. City Administrator Dave Rowlands explained the higher c05ts by saying that cities are in much the same position a s doctors with mou nt i ng malpractice insurance costs. "Cities are being sued more frequently and for greater a mounts," he pointed out. Rowlands said that an extra $325,000 will have to be raised to cover the increase in premiums. "We'll just have to get the money by squeezing the budget,•' he told council members. Mayor Norma Gibbs added that it is getting quite difficult to get liability insurance. "Nobody wants to insure cities.'' she said. Officials said that they will be looking into a self ·insurance pro- · gramfor the future. Plans for HB Reef Delayed Plans to put up an artificial re- ef in the waters of HlDltington Beach off the Santa Ana river jet- ty have been delayed until J an. 17. A spokesman for the Orange Coast College Marine Technology Club said the delay was caused by a conflict in the use of amphibious equipment" from the U.S. Army Reserve. The work had been scheduled for Jan. 3. The four.foot high reef of con· crete blocks will be constructed in the hopes of attractina lobster and abalone, according to OCC instructor Den n is Kelley. No 'Strike' For Firemen .. An article in the Dally Pilot hu incorrectly stated that Hunt- ington Beacb firemen had threatened to strike for hlaher · pay last July . Firemen at no Ume raised a strike threat. •ccol'dlna to Larry Richards, president ~ the Kun~ inrton Beach Firem~.n·s Al· soclatlon, and Don Lewis, aut1- tant personnttl director. The firemen and the city a1reed tn September to arblttatlon that. gave the U· IOdttJon a l2 percent pa1 ln- t;rute for lbe year. } ' 1 Recreation Expansion Plan Aired Fountain Valley residents will be asked to voice their views on expansion plans for ~he c~ty recreation complex m Mile Square P ark at an 8 o'clock public hearing tonight. The City Council will consider a June 8 bond election to finance what could total $6.2 million in s wimming pools, a cultur~l building and expanded athletic areas. . But Public Works Director Wayne Osborne has said the staff will recommend that the council appoint a citizen. committe-: to review the plans -and possibly trim them -before any election is officially set. The council has until March to decide how much, ii any, it wants to include on the JWle election ballot. Among the mutilations spotted on the body of the latest victim, whose body was found near the top of Bedford Peak l ast weekend, were cuts and scratch~ and bums. Sgt. Reid said. "There was one other signifi. cant mutilation." he added. But Fr081PageAI ANIMAL ••• dog license revenues. Cohoon said that the city plans. to formally approve the Orange County ordinance but with the amendment the permits the city to continue collecting license re- venue. He said council action is ex- pected soon. Cohoon said that so far the city has collected nearly $13,000 in license revenues and will make a bigger push as soon as the or· dinance is adopted. Los Angeles County authoriti have related the killings of men whose dismembered bodies were scattered in the Long Beach area to the Orange County killings. "But it's much too early to say that they were all the victims of one killer or a group of killers," Reid said. •"Most of them have age, homosexuality and mutilations in common, but that doesn't add up to the same killer." Two Injured In Hmitington Car C·ollision The second traffic collision in one week at a downtown Hunt- ington Beach intersection sent two men to the hospital with head injuries Monday night. Due to head injuries and s~k. neither victim could remember the crash at 14th Street and Orange A venue nor whether they had stopped for stop signs, police said today. · The city already has invested about $2 million in its Recreation and Cultural Center, built in part of the county-owned park. Most or that construction was financed with park fees de- velopers pay the city, as well as county and federal grants. The interim agreement with Orange County runs until June ~.he said. Clem.ency Unit PraUesSelf Pacifica Hospital aides said • neither William R. Prange, 32, of llll Orange Ave., HlDltington Beach, or Gary P. Taylor, 32, of Belmont Shore, was admitted after emergency treatment. Ci ty officials said those funds are now exhausted and a bond is- sue would be required to expand the park additionally. The $6.2 million addition would include a $1.6 million cultural building, a three·pool swim com- plex for $2.6 million, as ~el~ as. expansion of the existin g facilities. If the council· were to ask voters to approve the entire amount, it would add 40 cents per $100 of assessed valuation to cur- rent tax rates. . In addition, officials said they. would propose a tax override above that amount of perhaps 20 cents per $100 or assessed value to finance operation of the new !acilities. F.._.PageAl BANDIT ••• bills in a pocket and fled either on foot or in a waiting car. Officers said they searched the neighborhood near the bank after the holdup, but turned up no trace of their suspect. Both police and FBI agents are investigating t he case, police said. Oil Fire Quelled NEW YORK (AP)-A stub- born fire that has already smoldered in a Brooklyn oil storage tank for three days was fanned by a second explosion that ignited oil ift an aclfoining ~nk before being controlled today. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Presidential Clemency Board, in an as yet unpublished report, has praised itself as "partners in a mission o f nation al r e· conciliation, wisely conceived by the President.•' But a critic or the board said such a self-appraisal was an at- tempt to "make a vindictive pro- gram appear magnanimous." The report, submitted to Presi· dent Ford by the 19-member board and summarizing the work or Ford's limited and conditional clemency program, h as not yet been released by the White House. Burglars Hit Mexican Cafe Some bad hombre broke down the door of Su nset Beach's picturesque Dunes Cantina and stole nearly $600 worth of items including Mexican antiques. HW'ltington Beach police were told Monday. Loss from the restaurant at 16232 Pacific Coast Highway, which lies just a few feet inside Huntington Beach city limits after years as a Sunset Bea~h landmark, included a set of mag wheels for the owner's van, police said. The burglary apparenUy oc· curred just after closing time Saturday night. Traffic Accident Investigator Patrick Gildea said both cars sustained major damage in the 8 p.m. collision at the spot where a hit -and -run crash injured a young woman last week. 'Ilireat Arrest BRIGDGEPORT, Conn. (UPI> -State police today charged a Bridgeport man with thrtµitening ·the lite of Gov. Ella Grasso and B r idgeport Mayor John Mandanici. · Police Kill Beatle Agent LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Malcolm F. Evans, the Beatles' l ongtime road man ager and personal friend of members of the singing grou~; was shot and killed when be alleged- ly pointed a rifle at two policemen, the police de~ partment said today. Evans, 40, was shot Sun· day night at the home of Frances Hughes where he had been living. Investigators said Miss Hughes . who is un· employed, told them she got into an argument with Evans who was having business problems and Evans went to an upstairs bedroom, taking a jar or pills and a rtne with him. She called police who responded to a "man with a ... gun.suicide attempt" call. • No Good Samaritans MotorUts Ignore Plea; Girl Dies in Fire LAUR EL, N.Y. (AP) -Wlth bis 3--year- old daqbter trapped in a flaming bedroom, a desperate f atber tried iD vain lo nag down ll pusln& can In u elfort to call the fire depart· meat. Thi 12th car stopped, but by the tJme ftremm &rrlyed at thi:I" a.mall community on U. DOl'tb forll of Lona bland Mond•J nJpt, the two·1tory frame borne had burned to UM a:rouad. talU& the llfe ~the dauibter. M1e Jc.lea Gerard. Harry G.rard, !16, Ind hi.$ wile, Bertha • 41, both 1aUeNd burna •hen they tried lo al· in1ut1b t b• bl110 themselvet. A.Aother d 1u1bter al1q was if1,jured. ThrM aona eacaped without serious Injury. , ~oUce said the fire broke out in a downstatn bedroom about 11:20 p.m., and OerJrd foul.ht it with a bucket of water. When tb.i fa1Jed,1te ran outside to iet help because the boule bad no teleJ)hone. Police esUmatt<t that be was teying to eet help for elg.ht to 10 minutes before a motortat atap~men actually received the alarm from police. who received • telephone call trom a nel•bbor wbo1aw ~names. Gerard and daU1ht4!r t>onna, 7, •ere l.bt· ed In f-tr ~dlUon at a hosJliital ln IUnrhead, N. Y. 'lbe mother wu llsted in PQOJ" COJ>ditlon. ~/ Y ~.·ouay7s ~•o 1ng J N.Y. Stoeks / I * * OL. 69, NO. 6, 2 seb-10Ns, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN{A T~ESOAY, JANUARY. 6, 1976 N TEN CENTS ~mployes CampaigOOd for Brown 2 €eDa Hospitals Paid Politicos .. '. • . .Watergate Appeal 'c ·ampaigners On Payrolls 'Unfair Trial' F ~r Coverup 4 I By GARY GRANVILLE • Ol tlle Delly ...... sc.tf Two hospitals once controlled by Dr. Louis Cella added pe~sonnel to their payrolls in 1974 who re· portedly did ~othin~ more than work on Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. selection campaign. •WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal appeals court was told to- day that the Watergate cover-up trt~l was ~receded by publicity which Whl)>ped the American people into a "white heat" and denied the defendants a fair trial. "We did not get a fair trial in this case," the lawyer for former CIA Agent Honored At Funeral · WASHINGTON {AP) - Richard S. Welch, a brilliant scholar.spy the embattled CIA could little afford to lose, was buried today at Arlington National Cemetery, the first ag~nt to be honored by a presi- dent's attendance at his funeral. President Ford, Secretary or State Henry A. Kissinger and CIA Director William E . Colby occupied front-row seats in the "funeral chapel during a somber 20·minute service conducted for Welch by Col. Duncan C. Stewart, an Army chaplain. The President offered con· dolences to Welch's widow and shook bands with other members of the Welch family after the chaplain read from scriptures and led some 500 mourners in peayer. The agent's body was b6rne to the cemetery in a flag. draped casket. Welch, assassinated two weeks ago outside his home in Athens, was buried in a military ceremony. The President had waived restrictions limiting Ari· ington National cemetery to members of the armed forces. Meanwhile in Athens, police said they still have no clues that might lead them to Welch's three masked assailants. Hinshaw Cases White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman told the U.S. Court of Appeals. Atty. John J. Wilson said that publicity made the trial a cause celeb re and create d the .. greatest, largest, most virulent situation" in American judicial history. "Tbe American people were wbippe<J up to a white lieat against the appellants in this case," Wilson told the six ap- peals court judges hearing the case. Haldeman, John D. Ehrlichman and John N. Mitchell were convicted on New Year's Day 1975 of obstructing justice in the Watergate case. A fourth defendant, Robert C. Mar- dian, a sometiQ'le San Clemente resident, was convicted of con· spiring to obstruct justice. They are appealing those con· victions and the sentences they received but have not yet begun to serve. Peter M. Kreindler, a 30-year· old Harvar d Law School graduate who argued for the special Watergate prosecutor's office before the appeals court, said the trial ''left no doubt whatever" as to the guilt of the defendants. "They were brought to account under the same system they sought to subvert," Kreindler said. ·Newport Planners Set Study Session Members oC the Newport Beach Planning Commission will huddle in a study session Wed· nesday afternoon to discuss a variety of proposals including traffic circulation for new com· mercial and industrial develop· ment. Tbe meeting will be held in city hall Crom 2 p.m . to 5 p.m. prior to the working session of the com· mission at 7 p.m. 0.lly ....... ~ WINS COURT ROUND Former Aide Hirschberg NB Aide Must Be Reinstated Orange County Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner ruled late Monday that the City of Newport Beach must reinstate Stanley Hirschberg to bis former post of municipal business license in- spect.or immediately. Judge Sumner further ruled in granting the writ demanded by Hirschberg that the city must re- imburse him the salary he lost by his demotion to storekeeper on Oct. 15, 1973. City Manager Robert Wynn said today he will be analyzing the city's "options" beforedecid· ing what further action the city should take in the case. "I haven't seen the order yet," Wynn explained, "but I expect to receive it soon. I want to study it and see what the judge based his ruling on before I make a de· cision on the next course of action." Wynn said the city can either comply with Judge Sumner's rul· ing or appeal it. Use of hospital·p~id employes in the Brown campaign is under investigation by both a Federal Grand Jury in Los Angeles and the Orange Coun· .ty Grand Jury, authorities said Monday. And a spokesman for the hospitals said Internal Revenue Service agents have already asked for and received copies of payroll records covering the workers who manned campaign phones · anchored in the hospitals. THERE IS NO INDICATION that either Brown or his statewide campaign managers knew the workers were on the hospital payrolls. Cella, California's top campaign contributor in 1974 with declared donations of more than $500,000 to 54 candidates and causes, is under investigation by federal and county grand juries as well as the In· ternal Revenue Service. · At the forefront of the investigation are allegations that Santa Ana physician inflated two hospitals' ~edi-Cal and. Medi~~d reimbursements bases by illegally charging political costs to the hospitals. Brown campaign disclosure statements filed in Sacramento show that Cella and his wife, Marian, take. credit for contributing $4,~ worth of in kind services to two Brown committees. A statement filed by Orange County Friends of Brown indicates that Mrs. Cella in 1974 donated $1 fK>6 in unspecified ''polling costs.•• ' AN AMENDED SI'ATEMENT of the statewide Brown for Governor committee shows that Cella con- tributed $3,000 in undetailed "phone costs:• Managers for both committees said Monday they c~uld . not furnis h details covering the Cella con· tnbutions. Though a minority owner in both Mission Communi· ty H.ospital, Mission Viejo, and Mercy General f!ospital" Santa Ana, Cella QY his own admission was m operational control of the hospital until last fall.. . It was in the spring of 1974 that extra phones were installed at the two hospitals to accommodate the need of at le a st 11 specially hired campaign workers. Robert Zunich, controller at Mission said he doesn't know who ordered six telephone ext~nsions in· stal~ed in the hospital's personnel department in Apnl, 1974. Nor does he know, Zunich said, who authorized the <See CELLA, PageA2) < .... Don't Mix Trial Testimony-Judge The ruling climaxed a court battle that began last Sept. 29 when Hirschberg accused City Manager Robert Wynn of being biased against him when he re· fused to accept the city Civil Service Board 's recom· mendation that Hirschberg be re· instated. Hirschberg was demoted to the position of storekeeper by the ci· ty more than two years ago after city officials claimed that he was ··overly aggressive'' and that local businessmen frequently complained about his attitude towards them. On Probation Anaheim Man Held On 'Meter Theft' Rap By TOM BARLEY Ottlle O.llr ll'lloU&lff An Orange County Superior Court jury was warned today that it must not allow testimony in Con gress man Andrew Hinshaw's recently concluded divorce trial to affect their judg- ment when the time comes to rule on his guilt or innocence on bribery charges. Judge Robert P. Kneeland asked any member of the jury who thought that he or she bad become prejudiced against Hinshaw by developments in the MARKET ADDS TO ''16 GAINS NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices C'los ed sharply and broadly higher today in heavy trading on U.. New YoTk Stock Exchange as investors stormed lnto action to keep a new year rally alive. The Dow Jones industrial :weraie. whose 19.12·point gain Monday was the best in Cour months, added 12.99 points to 81>.82. ~dvanccs led declines by about a four-to-one margin. <Tables ~). Turnover amount e d to -3.210.000 shares. up sharply from the 21,960,000 traded during the same period M~y. The NYSE hlsh·apeed transaction tape ran late all day. · Prices were higher in acUve tradJn1 on the A mcrican Stock. ll divorce action to raise a hand. There was no response from the jury box. Judge Kneeland then carefully repeated his admonition that jurors must not read newspaper accounts of the trial or listen to radio or television discussion before they reach their verdict. Hirschberg's lawyer argued successfully that their client was denied a fair trial and that his rights were ignored when Wynn contended that Hirschberg !ailed to seek a hearing within a re- asonable time after his de· motion. By JOANNE REYNOLDS • OftMO.llrPl•-.n An Anaheim man who gave his name to a landmark U. S. Supreme Court decision on search and seizure was arrested by Newport Beach police Mon- day night on charges of con· spiracy and grand theft. He questioned the jury today immediately after rejecting de· fense motions for dismissal of three felony bribery counts on the basis that the prosecution had failed to establish a case against the former county assessor. (SeemNSHAW, PageA2) Red Cosmos Up MOSCOW <UPI> -The Soviet Union today launched an earth satellite, Cosmos 7frl, to continue exploration of outer space, Tass said. Ted Steven Chime!, 53 of 823 s. Beach St., Anaheim, was picked 'up with two companions as they allegedly used a homemade key No Good Samaritans MotoristJJ Ignore Plea; Girl Dies in Fire LAUREL, N.Y. (AP) -With his 3-year· old dauahter trapped ln a naming bedroom, a desperate f atber tried in vain to nag down J l passing cars in an effort to call the fire depart- ment. The 12th car stopped, but by the time firemen arrived at this small community on · tbe north fork of Long Island Monday night, the hvo-story frame home had burned to the around, taklna the Ute of the dauthter, Mae Helen Gerard. Harry Gerard, 56, and bis wlf e, Bertha, .U, both auff ered bums when they tried to ext· in a uisb tba blaze themselves . Another . d au1bter a lso was injured. Three sons escaped without serious injury. Police said the lire broke out in a &wnslairs bedroom aboUt 11 :20 p.m., and Gerard fought it with a bucket of water. When that tailed, be ran outalde to get help because the house bad no telepbooe. Police estim ated that be was trying to gel help for ei1ht to 10 minutes before a motorist stopped. Firemen actually received the alarm from police, who nceived a telel)bone call from a nei1bbor who saw the names. Gerard and da\llhtet Donna. 7, were list.· ed tn fair condition at a boepita1 tn Riverhead, N. Y. The mother was Uated tn poor coodltlon. to open and empty parking meters near the Newport Pier. Police were called to the scene at about 10 p.m . by a passerby who became suspicious of the trio. , Held today in Newport City Jail along with Chimel are Thomas Hinkle, 35. and his wife Patricia, 31 who say they live at the same apartment building as Cbimel. Chimel was arrested on identical charges by Newport Beachipolice in August 1974. He pleaded guilty to the charges and served eight months in Orange County Jail. He is still serving out a five-year probation sen· tence from that conviction. Cbimel 's name became famous after a 1969 Supreme Court decision based on an ap· peal of an earlier case involving the Orange County man. In September 1965, Chimel was charged with burglary when police raided his Santa Ana home and found stamps and coins valued at $24,000 which allegedly had been stolen from an oranse coins~p._ 'The blgh court overturned bis conviction on the grounds that police had no authority to enter his home. The decision was one of a series or rulings during the 1960s which changed the process of search, seizure of evidence, arTest and questioning of sus· pect.a ln the U. S. ' ------------; 0.11,,.. ... MMf,..... RETAINS GAVEL County Supervisor Diedrich) Diedrich To Retain OC Gavel By WILLIAM SCHREIBER . Oftlle O.lly Pllolsc.tt ~ Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton ! was re-elected today to serve another year as chairman of the Orange County Boa rd of Supervisors. • . ' Supervisor Laurence Schmit of Garden Grove was elected vice chairman. succeeding Anaheim Supervisor Ralph Clark. Both votes at today's board meeting were without opposition. though Diedrich abstained from voting for his own election. Diedrich's selection came as no surprise despite his emphatic statements last month he did not want another term as chairman. I At t he time, Diedrich said he would support either Schmit or Supervisor Thomas Riley for the job as nominal bead o! the five· " member board. But reports that Diedrich in· deed would seek a second term started mounting two weeks ago and Diedri<!h himselC changed hls stance from a position fll'mly against re-election to one or a non.committal nature. In accepting the nominati9n and election for a new term • Diedrich said he considered it a ••great honor to serve even though it means a lot of extra work for myself and my staff.'' · Diedrich conceded that 1975 was "a tough year in many ways but Orange County is in better financial condition now than any 1 other· county in the state." Reading from a prepared text. indicating that the election bad apparently been in the works for at least a few days, Diedrich ·said, "Ther e are many major tasks in mid·stream and many new tasks that will start toward , the middle oflhe year." Coast Weather Sunny skies Wednesday. Warmer t emperatures with highs of 65 at the . beaches rising to 70 inland. Lows tonight 35 to 45. INSIDE TODAY Con Angola become .another Vietnam? Priu-wnming re· porter-photographer Peter Arnett. one of the most familiar bylines from the Southtclt Asia wor, tio!'Tll'Ms the pouibilitits. 89. ladex 4 .. -. • 0 2 DAILY PILOT ·Murder Attempt Probe d N Ry ARTHUR R. VINSEL OUM Dally ...... s.e..tf Huntington Beach Police today were inv~sligating the alleged at- tempted murder of a U.S. ln· ternal R evenue agent afte r someone fired a shot into his mobile home Monday nlgbt. Anthony Gubbiotli fled the re- sidence In a park near Pacific Coast Highway and reported the IDcident to police investigators. He said following the 8:35 p.m. assault that he has received threats in the past that he is a murder target due to his IRS in- vestigative activities. Only one shot was firect , Detective Set. Monty McKennon confirmed today but it would be difficult to d etermine if the would-be slayer took deliberatP aim or fired at random. No one ever tried to carry out threats of violence, however Gubbiotti told investigators. ' A thorough search of the area failed to turn up the slug or frag- ments of it\ investigators said. a bullet ho1e was indeed found in IRS Agent Gubbiotti 's home. Carpenter Won't Hit At Reagan SACRAMENTO -State Sen. Dennis Carpenter <R-Newport Beach >, said today that Califor. ruans intending to campaign in other states on behalf of Presi- dent Ford want no confrontation with Ronald Re agan. ··r certainly won•t run around s ho we rin g bad things o n Reagan,·· said Carpenter, co- <'hairman of Ford's California <'ampaign. who plans to stump for him in New Ha mpshire. The President's national com- mittee disclosed plans earlier for California Re publicans who ser ved with a nd supported Reagan when he was governor to c ampaign for Ford in other states. Carpenter. a former FBI agent and one of Reagan's staunchest supporters in the Legislature signed on with Ford in Nov: ember. He refused to identity other California GOP legislators who would work in early primary election states for Ford, butsaid, ··There's a group -there aren't many of us." He and assemblyman Jerry Lewis (R·Highland), who also was asked to travel for Ford, stressed they intended to strike a "positive" theme for Ford and not track Reagan thrOugh snowy New Hampshire as a "truth squad." ':.It isn't a big confrontation," Carpenter said. "We want to ex- plain why we pr~fer President Ford. You don 't have to attack Reagan to do that and I wouldn't attack him." But he said, "A guy has to be prepared to discuss Reagan's governorship, bis successes and his failures.·· Lewis said so far no firm plans have been made for him to travel outside California and "there is some question of wbether it's got- ten together.'• At least one GOP lawmaker supporting Ford read a news s tory men tioning him as a potential out-of -state stumper and told the national campaign committee no thanks. Assemblyman Dixon Arnett of Redwood City, who collided with Reagan over increased finances for schools, said he had no pro- blem campaigning in his own dis- trict for Ford and "assessing Ronald Reagan's years in California.'' ORANGE COAST N n. Or-Co.H I o.i1, Ptlo4. Wit~ ""'<" .• CombttWd tM N•w~·l"fHI, I\ pubtllHd t>y !PIP 0.-C:O.•l PulMl\1'11"9 c....._, S.-·"t' ~·-' ¥• publl~ Mond•Y lhrOUQll Ft1CS..y for Co\l• ~, •• Mowpo•I u. .... H""''"91"" 8o c11 ~oun1e1n Velley, l•vl,,.. SM!cll•l><ln v1110 •"" LilOllfte 8u c111\oul11 COA\t • .t. """" ·~-· .. olllon " Pllbli~•d ~'"'°"''..,a !tun 0.1" The e><IMtjMll pVbllllllnQ pl<lftl I\ •I llO Wr\I k Y ~""'·(OH• Mt w , 0 111"'"'• .,,,. Robert N. Weed Pr••ICHnl •rtd Publ•-• Jack R. Curley V•O Pr•\10.M Incl G4t11f<ll Mon.ttJ< r Thomas Keevll Cdllo• Thomas A . Murphlne MAM91"111 [0110< Charle$ H. Loos Richard P. Nall lln"1.,.1 Ma<191"' E Cl<IO<\ 1 \ TOeeday, January 8. 197' r Bit by Car Newport Beach paramedics administer aide to Donald Soss. 16, of 205 Vi a Lido Soud, aft er he was struck by a car Mon- day afternoon on Pacific Coast Highway between Tustin and Riverside Avenues. Youth was listed in serious condition to- day at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Police said the driver of the car, Martin Ehman; 17 , of 18322 Roberta Circle, Huntington Beach, was not cited after the 3:45 p.m. accident: Sanford, Reagan In New Hampshire By the Associated Press Wi th Presi d e nt Ford in Washington and S~n. Henry M. J ac k so n (D -Wa s h .). in Mass a chus etts, preside ntial candidate Ronald Reagan and Terry Sanford had the voters of New Hamps hire to themselves today as they toured the state with t he e arli est primary . election. Sanford. former governor of North Carolina, began his New Ha mpshire campaign with a pledge to make it a contest ''of is- sues. not just shaking hands." The Democrat, on leave as pre- sident of Duke University, called himself a "nonpolitician'' and bis c ampai g n s taff in N e w Hampshire "inadequate." But he said he wants to bring "fresh and innovative and bold approaches to the straightening out of gov· emment." Reagan, former governor of California campaigning for the Republican presidential nomination, pushed his bus tour through the White Mountains. starting his round of morning ap- pearances with temperatures between nine and 17 degrees below zero. He s ipped coffee and ate doughnuts at a ski lodge at Mt. Cranmore and then watched a group of local ski instructors in a brief demonstration. 'Tm having a great time. If I could only adjust the air con- d1t1oning, everything would be all right," he quipped. The Pres ident, who faces Reagan in the Feb. 24 New Hampshire primary, was back in Washington after spending Mon- day in St. Louis, where he spoke to the American Farm Bureau Federation. (Photo, A4 ) Ford's appe arance was billed as nonpolitical, but he spent much of his time praising rus own farm policies. The President also told a group of newspaper executives he still plans to enter every presidential primary, although he will not actively campaign in each state. In Cleveland, former Treasury Secretary John B. Connally said in an interview that he will re- consider his own position if Ford drops out of the Republican pre- sidential nomination race. But Connally, in Ohio to speak to a private group of business· and community leaders. said he is at present neither a GOP candidate nor willing to become a candidate as a favorite son or for a third party. Jackson lanched his candidacy today in Massachusetts. He is not campaigning in NewHamiishire. In remarks prepared for de- livery in Boston, Jackson decried "a wave of cynicism engulfing this nation's politicians. Thes e hea.d-in -the-clouds politicians seem to feel it will be good for the country's soul if we lower our horizons and if we reduce our standards of living. "What they don't seem to re- a Ji ze is that millions of Americans have already reduced their standards of living -that m11lions of people are far worse off today than they were five and 10 years ago.•• Fro•PogeAl CELLA CAMPAIGNING. • • . hiring of five persons in September of 1974, to man the phones. "THEY CAME IN DURING the evening hours so most of us never saw them,•• he noted. Zunich emphasized that none of the hospital's medi cal employes ~~ involved in the campaigning and that none of Mission's present operators was in- volved in the political activities. Mission Hos pital personnel Insurance Company of Newport director Pat Wood, who was aJso Beach. Mercy's personnel chief in 1974 Although Cell a, a registered said she has already testified Republican, reportedly attended before the county Grand Jury re-the VilJa Fontana luncheon. he is gardiog the employment of the not listed as a cash donor in the political workers. schedule of tbose present at the However, Mrs. Wood refused Orange fund-raiser. to disc u s s details of her Present at the exclusive testimony because of the jury's luncheon with the then future instruction to her not to talk governor was his father former aboutbertestimony. gove rnor Edmund G.' "Pat'' Brown. THE CAMPAIGNING AT . Mercy Hospital reportedly was heavier than that at its Mission Viejo counterpart. Those employed to man the telephones have already been in- terrogated by investigators. One, a coltege s tudent, said in an interview that he understood he was hired to work oa the Brown campaign . However. he said hia duties in· volved calling the homes of re- gistered voters of both parties to ask election related questions not s~cifically involving Brown. In addition to a $13,300 con- tribution from the Orange Coun· ty Friends of Brown, Caillorrua·s governor received $18,SOO lb Orange County contr1buUon1, most of it from a Sept. s, 197,, SSOO.a-plate luncheon at the VWa Fontana ln Orange. Tbe October, 197,, statement filed by the com mtttee shows that both Smith and Norton con- tributed $1,000 to the.committee. Listed as a '5.000 donor to the Brown committee was BaJboa USTED AMONG DONORS to the Brown for Governor commit- tee that received the proceeds for election were non-Democratic party members Loran Norton and Randall Smith. Paris Kidnap Ransom Ready PARIS (AP) -Six f\Ulmen holding the chief of France's big- gest record company for $3.4 million ransom made telephone contact today with the lddnaped man's wife .• Police said the ransom money was ready for de- livery to the kidnapen. Mrs. Louis Hazan 1aJd there was no prof?'ess toward securtng her husband's release. The 54- ycar·old president of Pbonogam Co .. w11 Jddnaped Dec. 31 from a board meeting lo his company·• offices In the center of Paris and carried off in a wicker ball.et. r f'ro• Page Al HINSHAW. • Hinshaw.'s two lawyers said their first witness in what they. • expect will be a two to three- week defense of their client will be former auditor-appraiser George Upton. Upton, who served 87 days or a six-month county jail term or- dered after he pleaded guilty to bribery charges , has testified as a prosecution witness in the cur- rent trial. Upton testified that he was the recipient of stereo equipment given to him without charge by Tandy Corporation officials and that at leas t two sets were passed on to Hinshaw and members of his family. Hinshaw, 54, is accused in a grand jury indictment or accept- ing stereo· equipment as bribes a nd of accepting a $1,000 campaign contribution from ·Tandy Vice President J ames Buxton, who also appeared as a prosecution witness. The· Newport Beach Republican is further accused of soliciting a bribe from a lawyer rep.resenting Beckman Instru- ments of Fullert.on in return for his favorable action as county as- sessor in a 1971 assessment ap- peals hearing. Jlinshaw spent two days in the witness stand last week during the trial in another courtroom of the divorce action filed by his second wife, Thais Hinshaw. Judge Lloyd E . Blanpied Jr. has withheld bis ruling on that· action until the jury reaches its verdict in the current bribery trial. · Mrs. Hinshaw, 48, of Newport Beach, is dem·anding a monthly support payment of $1,500 and a court order that would compel Hinshaw to help meet heavy medical and hospital costs sus- tained by treatment of her multi- ple sclerosis condition. Hinsbaw's lawyers said today that they expect to call him as a witness at some point in the de- ' f ense phase of the trial . Clenwncy Unit Praises Self WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Presidential Clemency Board, in an as yet unpublished report, har praised itself as "partners in a mission of nationa l r e - conciliation, wisely conceived by the President.'' But a critic of the board said such a self-appraisal was an at- tempt to ''make a vindictive pro- gram appear magnanimous." The Thigh's The Lindt TEL AVIV, Israel (UPI) -It could rank as one of the biggest cover-ups in Israeli mllltary history. . The commander of the country's women soldiers announced a ban on miniskirts Monday, saying• that henceforth their khaki military uniforms must drop below the knees. Col. Dalla Raz said she was actin1 on numerous complaints that the short-' slclrted uniform now al- lowed and the re1ultlng ex- posed knees and tbJgbs were offensive to retlcJous cllliets. Currtnt regulations aJ. low Israeli female soldiers to wear their uniform aldrtt almost five lnchea above the knee. , B).'. TOM Bt\RLEY Oft ... INllJ ""4...,, · A sexually mutilated man whose body was found Sunday in Silverado Canyon may be the victim of an unknown ktuer whose prime targets appear to be· ·homosexuals bet ween Ute aaes of 17 and 2S years, Orange County Sheriff's officers theorized to· day. Investigators refused to spell out the mutilations inflicted on Appraisal FinnOK'd In 'Newport The Newport Beach appraisal firm of Foreman-Thompson and Associates has been chosen to de- termine the value of the old Irvine School property for use as a new Orange County Transit District bus maintenance yard. District directors Monday ap- proved the $2,400 pact after re- viewing three proposals ranging downward from about $3,000. The school site on Sand Canyon Road was declared surplus by the Irvine Unified School District because of the impact of jet noise from E l Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Several fires have damaged structures on the site but transit district planners say enough is left to make the site a worthwhile acquisition. Sibling Cleared In Drug Death LOS ANGELES <UPI> -A jury deliberated four days before finding Harlan Noble, 26, inno- cent of the drug overdose death of his brother. The panel decided there was no evidence that the death of Randall Noble, 24, who died last September after an in- jection of heroin or cocaine, was not accidental. Noble and Tom Bennett, 30. were arrested after the victim was found dead in his North Hollywood apartment. Bennett is scheduled to go on trial on the murder charge Jan. 27. ,,~I Escapee Nabbed MONTEBELLO CAP) -A five-mile chase ended in this Los Angeles suburb with the arrest of Albert J . Silva, 22, of South El Monte, identified by sheriff's de· puties as a county jail escapee. the body of the still unide.ntifled victim but agreed that the killing had several factors in common with a nuinber of other Southland slaytnga ln the past two years. "Many or the vlctlms are known to have homosexual back· grounds," Sgt. Robert Reid said. "They all fall within a specific age group-17 to 25-end they were alt muWated in a way that stresses what we believe are the homosexual overtones of all these klllings," be added. "But it 's useless to say that we are looking for one particular killer," be stressed. 0 We could be looking for a man, a group of men, a woman or a group of women-the possibilities are endless and we are looking at all of them." Among the mutilations spotted on the body of the latest victim, whose body was found near the ·top of Bedford Peak Jast weekend. were cuts and , scratches and burns, Sgt. Reid said. "There was one other signifi-, cant mutilation ," he added. But he declined to specify the nature 1 of that mutilation. Several of the known 12 victims-six were found in Orange County communities-1 came from the Belmont Shores section of Long Beach, Sgt. Reid said. "Tbat•s a homosexual-oriented area in the sense that there are a number of homosexual bars there," he said. "It's possible that these crimes, if they are con- nected, had their origin in that area." Amon g the kilJings being tenatively linked to the Silverado Canyon slaying are the murder of a young man whose body was found in the South Laguna area in June 1974 and the killing of a 19- year.old man in the Irvine area in November 1974. • . One Whale More Sociable I ENCINITAS (AP) - Lifeguards and scientists are watching for a young California . gray wbale that's been coming unusually close to shore and to div'? rs. San Diego County lifeguard Peter Zovanyi said a young gray whale, 15 to 20 feet long, was div- ing in and out of kep beds Mon- day off Sea Cliffs County ~rk. Gray whales usually fi ave nothing to do with kelp, he said. Zovanyi said the whale may be the same one that has been frightening divers along other Southern California beaches by approaching closer to shore than most whales ever come. · Youngster's Battle With Leukemia Lost SALINA, Kan. <UPI> -Carl Heart, who battled leukemia for 16 months, died Monday qpe day before bis 11th birthday, sur- rounded by mementos of his dream vacation to Disneyland. When news of Carl'• terminal condition was first publicized area businesses and restdent.S contributed to a fund to give th'" boy his biggest wish, a trip to Disneyland and a chance to see some movie stars in person. Carl, aJong with hia parents, made the trip in November. Ac- cording to the lO·year~ld. tho hiablight was visiting his favorite actor, John W.,ne. Monday Carl woke '-'I> about 8 a.m., sat up ln bed and started breathing heavily. "Then he lay back down and that was the end," said his mother, Sheila Heart. ••we prayed to God lo take him easy, andhedld." A cardboard box at the Cecil Heart home bulges with greet- ings and get-well wishes from across the United States, Europe and the Far East. Dooations con- tinue to come in to the Carl Heart Fund at a local Salina bank. Carl spent much of his last few months undergoing treatment at St. Francis Hospital ln Wtcblta. He wu able to go home for both Thanksgiving and Christmas. Mrs . Heart said doctors thought the boy might not sur- vive until Christmas, butabeaatd he fouiht off one crisis after another and spent a beautiful holiday with the f amity. The f am Uy knew death wu 1.m. mlnent &ince last Wednesday. · "They wanted to try some new medtcatton on him, but there wu only a 2S percent chance that It could have helrd him,.. Mra. Heart s&ld. " wae alrald il would kill him rif bt there. •• .~ 1 • .. , .. NEW -YORK ~sTOCK: EXCHANGE "4~ "°''"' w.-.. -.... ~ s.. ..... 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S 77 11Yt-\\ la lnll •t 3\9 t '-' WllMltr1 ... 21 S30 11fll + 1 yCp .Otb 41 120S 10"' +-1o41 Wang Lb 10 IS 72 11~ + U, 5oo lJI I tod 8 S ,.._ V. Wtf'll Foon 1' 29 • ...., • 'I• '°S Clls )I S ,, I V. ~ Wll'fteOI IO • • 3'2 l 'lt ... TU!!Cf!y, January 8, t978 N DAILY PILOT .7 Those · Telephon~ Calls Steeper By SYLVIA PO.lltER To the aver:ige telephQne user, one of the most irritat:4\g boosts in living costs has been in the cost of calls from phone· booths and to the in!ormation operator . In recent months, phone companies in 27 states and the District of Columbia have increased or sought jlulbority from state Public Service Commissions to jack~ the price of pay phone calls from 10 cents to 15 or 20 cents. IN SF.VEN STATES, CUSTOMERS who need the help of the information operator now have to pay a charge ot either 10 or 20 cents per request once they have exceeded their tree monthly allowance of from three to five calls. ln 13 other s tates, phone companies have requested similar tariffs. It's a nationwide trend. Jn 1975 alone, for instance.~ System companies in 34 states were granted authorizatiot for rate hikes totaling $1.2 billion -and action ls pending 8\ 26 states and the District -of Columbia on rate·ris~ rt- quests amounting to $1.5 r billion. ( Hard as the impact M , is ·on us . residential oney s phone users, these and Worth ' other t ypes of rate in- <'reases hit businesses. both large and small, much harder. The reason is simple: businesses pay mo'f for the same phone service than we do. In Washington. D.C., for instance, a residential user t; charged $10.96 a month for a touch·tone phone and an ulf limited number of calls within the city. The installation fer for a home phone is $17. A business firm, though, must p• $12.50 per month for the same phone, is allowed only e spe<'ified number of free inner city calls, and is charged $f for installation. · ~ ~ HE RE , TOO, IT'S A NATIONWIDE pattern. Accord~ to a study commissioned by the U.S. Independent Telepbore Assn. -a group of 1,641 independent telephone compani$ that own and operate one out of e very six phones in the country -the average residential user pays less than half what the average business customer does. The independents figure that it costs their average r•· sidential client $5.51 a month for a main phone, while t~ average business customer pays $12.lf> for his company•§ main phone. (The Bell System's statistics are different, bdt tell the same tale·: the lower rate for residential users is su~­ sidized by long·haul and business services.) Underlining the contrasts even more, AT&T says th~ the S365 million increase granted for out-of-state calls~ 1975 hit businesses much harder than individuals. The hi cost the average business an extra $3.29 a month or an • ditional $39.47 a year. Meanwhile, the average home user bill rose 38 cents a month or $4.52 a year. ' • OF COURSE, THE PROSE COMPANIES -both it· <iependent companies and the Bell System, which owns ai.c operates about 85 percent of the phones in the U.S. -arg\(e that phone service is comparatively cheap. SpecificallJ. they point out that over the past decade, the price of pho•e service has climbed only one-third as much as t~ Consumer Price (cost of living) Index. And in receat months. the average residential bill has risen less thanilil percent. ~ Moreover. they warn that suc h relatively tow increastl; in phone rates are threatened by the Federal Co* munications Commission's rulings the past seven years th AT&T and the independents cannot prevent other fir s from marketing special services and telephone attac • ments. Among these new devices are automatic diale~. answering machines, office switchboards and fancy Frensn telephones. ··~onsense ." retorts John Eger, acting <!irector oft~ White House Office of Telecommunications Policy. Eger in fat't, recently told a House subcommittee thft the telephone companies' claims are "grossly exagger~* eel" and not based on reliable data. He praised the FCC for enabling new firms to compete with AT&T's Bell Syste'~ and said that the telephone g1anrs marketing innovatio96 are a ma1or reason to believe that it will retain a majtr portion of the telephone business in this country. WHil.F. THE FJGJrr IS GOJ~G ON at this high policy level, howe ver, the pzice hikes continue to hit you - particularly as today's report has underlined, you, the busi- ness phone user. What can you do to cut your phone costs in view of the clear trend toward ever more costly phone· service? How accurate are your phone bills, anyway? W ednesdau: CllttiruJ business phone cost$. Market lndexe• NftDVork .: J 5 /Jlo•t A ~d.,~ By Unltff Puu I llltrNtioft.tl NYSE lndu •t.SI up 0 S7 ASE llldelt 81 ll up I 38 0o .... 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' 4 !10 ,,, .. , ~ *°' 1MYf't Coro It~ U •~+ ' f.tr.JtriRao 1 n "' U\.\ ••• ' •I 1 J • H DAILYPILOT • She'll Retire 23 Yean in Office From Wire Service• Assemblywom&A Pa.tine Davi.a (D·PortoJ1), recuperating from a gall bladder operation., do- cided to retire after serving 23 years -lhe longest tenure or any woman legislator in Cealitomla bis· tory, her office announced. Mrs. Davis, who celebrated her S9th birthday Saturday and did DOl attend the first day 1976 sesslon because or doctor's orders to rest, made the announcemenl through her administrative assis-tant. Last yei'.11' she was named to the newly created position of assistant Assembly speaker pro tem. She is one of two women wbo serve in the 80·mcmber Assembly and is chairman of the Joint Fairs Al· location committee. · • Judge Ted 1\brams of Kl amath County (Ore.) Cir('uil Court ruled that the lone survivor of a Dec. 21 plane crash, 1J -year-old Theresa Seymour, will be returned to her natural father in El Paso, Tex. Theresa was a passenger in a single engine plane which smas hed into the side of Brya nt Moun· lain, 35 miles east of Klamath Falls. Killed in the crash were her stepfather and the plane's pilot, Robert L. Conduff, 37. or Ft. Hood, Tex.; her mother. Frances M. Conduff, 47, and her half-sister, Maria Frances Foster, 14. The res.a s pe nt several hours in near-freezing weather, warmed in part 'by her pet puppy, which also survived. • .'\gricultur e Secretary Eai-1 L. Butz laughed , telling the Ameri can Farm Bureau Federation con · vention it had given him only three minutes to speak. "Hubert llumphrey can't even say hello in that length of ti me," the Republican Cabinet member said amid laughter, in St. Lou.is. Rutz also got a chuckle "'hen he said it interested him that he came on the platform as the or· gan played "Rack Home in In· •uTJ: d iana."' Butz grinned and asked if that meant the c rowd wanted him ''back home in. Indiana." • . .\ctor Marlon Brando has been r eleased after E'tght days in a Santa !\1onica hospital for treatme nt of a blood infec tion, a hospital offi cial says. The SI-year.old Academy Award-winning actor was admitted Dec. · 26 after flying there from Tetiaroa. his South Pacific atoll near Tahiti. Brando was s uffering from septicem ia. a bac- terial blood infection that normally is treated with .antibiotics, said Patricia Kelvin, the hospital's public relations director . • ~trs. Judity Quist, 29, "·earing opaque stock- ings to hide her leg hair. returned to her job at the Plaza Restaurant in Somers. Conn. She was fired almost two years ago because s he refused to shave her legs, but reached a n out-of-~----------., <'OUrt settlement with the ( PEOPLE ) restau ra nt 's owner , _ _ Jerome Young, allo"ing ~-------~ her to return. .. . . . .. . . .... -.. , ... -. Winds Whip Upldaho P.UllUC NO'llCB r-••'1WIMllN1.1$ ..... ., ........... ............................... PUllUC "fOTICB -.•: ' MACV llllAt.TY, llJf ~ New EP.ulanders Bm£e Under Arctic <:old -==~~-~ ..... •oa.e' l'WllirW.c. ... T ~ OIAl!Otl&l wt .. IM!t ,, .... 1(. 10UCA•1 .. ,,,, ... ,, .... ..... ,... ....... ,.,,,. ,.... ,_..... 1'flll_t-.....Ulr~..----- ... hr ~---~· -~ )0..,. P5 "",.. _.... tlM& wt,._ _ a.-..Mut• ft91pet'"Oa•rn :ao.M -. ~ >000 .Wllll'llMfl'Ml"""s. .... ...,.. .... ... Ali.nr " ·• ,.. __ •• " Atlltlll " " Bhm1rd1. " ·• _,.. " " <~ ,-.,. ') -Mtifth9'"---R-·-fllh ~ Wiit ti ... t•tlfl .. ••·1 ·~· • '·~~-·. ~ -• -· Qurlfy~Of()f ..... ~cinOK. '~·.•·,I.~,:. ' .f ' \ ::.::::.-:....:~-:flli~= Jl,ttJJ J11-~ ·;.,, ~ __}. ~TOOi wl~MtMlll,tif''TllolWl ....... OI'', 11\1116! ..... ()r ..... GMl!o.Al'/p~w::. ·" ( ( -, '~l'\IW~f M'*"'"'"'!!!!.1 ..t. .. ,~ ... W"i'Ofllll ::::i:...toirMdioK-.Tllit,._..M JM. .. 11,IO,fP,"1'6 ~ft ....... " .. ""'-.. .. OM ...... .. " ...... _ " " 0.UM " " .,.,_ .. " ....... .. .. Fllrbll'lllt ·• . .. ... _ " 1Y · ·~·ti " . l(.lftY1 Cl1y " " UolV-..~ .. " l.ouls.,U1 .. " ..... .. .. Mil •tUI< .. ,, " Mlnnt-111 " .. NttwOr .. 1ns " " _ ... CH'_ ,. " Ol<lahonwCll t " " """~ .. "' ~lm5cH1ftllS .. " Pr>Uldtlpnl• " .. D.ity ...... Ool•...Y loG..., .......... -.. ·r•"'•• ",..,.....,""' -..,..._b.~30 .... e.llt.oob-• I I>'"' ...:I '°"' '°"" Ml! M 00--~ s...,.....,....,sv""•• ""°"°""Col ·..e-"''" ....... ~· 9 .... s .. .,.-. ot•,<itl l '" SvnO•• LOll..,~_vo 10 • "'· oncl rOu< <O~• "I" 0.<M<""''"" c_,,,_,..,.._, "'°"'°'·~'°""'• .......... 011 -.. vnt•!"l!<>tl u..i:.r .,... _,,....,..,.,~, -·n• $onC-"'e C-11-&e..;.Po. S.-0~(..oo .... ~..., o-Poon1 s-•~l-• L01N'l&N>gv.. tt-H ·" 1.51 Military Warring On Abuse WASHINGTON (AP> -The armed services are launching major ef- forts to combat c hild abuse among military families. ~1ilitary e xperts believe some child abuse proble m s in service families inay stem from stresses peculiar to what one called "the mobile military lifestyle." AN AIR FORCE medical se rvi ce publication s aid "Recur- rent or prolonged family separation by duty as- signme nt all too often leaves the mother with the full responsibility or home and children. \. '•11 \'"'IC'"!l~ r~ 1.!:"~~.S:.:':.~='=-= PUBUC NO'nCE 1 I , fMl-41!.IU,Hev. , ••, .. , •• ~••CO or .. vo:•/ -•Atl $MW •IM ...... !Mort ...... U. ' y Gr•M ""•ott ..,.. tr. ~~ Apo ftlCTITIOUIBU .. Nlll ( .... _ , -I . .,.,~,,1.,., Mot1d•Y· A l~r·lll(fl MMaSTATIMIN1' -~ ·Ttlet.llowlllfHtMM••~tir.i.I· \o•• .. ••••• /. • .. ,,t .. ''\ ~.!111~::1=':.t°'t°''".,. ,...":. PUBUCN~ a. ft"' "-llllll'>CAL.t•1Pwtc...i..,...., va-.;..:.. o~,,•,.. .,._, ~k«fl..e.llfllml1'2WO •------------~ • ~ ..._ --'to whlt-.t PWHoM .IMwl A. eoopw, am c-y or.,•, ..-. o• \-........ el '#Miii~! .. St111, llolt~ Ult °'""'""·c.llfon1l1t!IH lflCTITIOIH.au11 ...... ouw0-1•• .. • oi, '""'Ml 591f'lb of ikl .-1 _,,_,, Mlltwi"' Jolwl M. 0..... ... 1901 ~ Qr1o-.> No\MltTAT8MINT J -of INlr wont MIMlfl llM'll lo\ "••.He-a..c:"' C•lllOftll•-,,.flil09ttfll~wt ... ~ -llGIHO ~ ~... Thia o.isln'.S. I• 'Cot11111CIN 11, ........ : -- IOWIU 11111•1~ .. tUlll ., !Jll WI "'"I• 1010(' .. ~T (!I """"" " " Plll'°"'!I" " • Por11...0.MI. .. .. , POrtl....,, Ore. .. " "' Ra l)ldClty " ' '" -.. ,. Sacr-lo " ,. "' SI. LOll>ls " " Sattlak1 CU' " " ... San Frl<>CIKO ~ .. "' ~lttl• " " ·" W11hlngton " " Callfornfa E•rly mor"ll'>ll tlou<n huftll along the Sout....-n c1111orn1• cwst toaay boll Cleared 1••Y during Int morn•ng Jn rno1.I •rffS Ind t~ere were \....,t ~kitt with 1em~r ature1 'n 1111 60\. PUBLIC NOTICE •••IH~$H0W m"";'l .._ ..... l.t.l.:.J~llS ..,. l lOW Los Anotlli had• Clwk Genter hlgll of u. the lo.I"" •s Mond•Y. Tiii Air Pollution Conlftl OIJtrkt CJAdl<le<I 111111 or no •YI 1"1t.oiic.t ''°"" 1mog lnll\I bl sin. MOUnl•IM .lfld c11ntons _,., Mso Sl..IMY wllfl -1r1ti.tllt PilgfoCIOUd5. Hlghl tlflllld from !ht llPOf' '°5 tt ,,_11in rnorts, ll'lrOl.IOfl !I'll SOI l'I 11'1111'119"' CMMrtt Ind lnl1 1111 ml«lll lo(ls Int,.. IOWOl!lerl r1l1t-1s. Twin Fills, IOl-llO, loMff HU I Ker>e from U1t ''Y(IUlfd oi Oi," but the K-•lo In most oi 11\1 ,.ii ol tl'lll 1>eUon w•s ""°"' II-• loOmltfll""' from "Jeck Frost ... A "°'m Mllnd1y w<1I winch lllNp. pl""' 111rou911 Tw!n F•lls 1t SO mllti , QOlfltt1IP11rtNf'tlllp. . ktMSTOHE, 1tN So11tlt Velo '4.Coofllr $1t'-.S1m. ....... c..1ttvt.-~•* co .. talW'eatller Tlllt :i.l•IMfll Wll fllld "1ttl ,.... kl-toe.II, llK, Hlf loo.Ith '\"•II C.Vntr CJer11 of Or.a11911 c;;ountt lfl Slrtort,StmoM.l,GlllMmMi"* SWlflr ll'ld mild tllrouell WMriet-OKeornbw it, ltJS. Tlll1 WSll'IHI 11 clflWlt• W • dey. .... Clr)llri!IM Llfl'il Ylrlllll• wll>dl fllOJ'lt •r<I ~llMll Or"'99 COllll o.!lr Pl tot, ICIMSTOCIC IN~ W """ ttlt ...,..111g llour1. Hftht W.d""41V lfl Dloc:.2',.JIO,lftdJM .•. tJ.1t1S -1~1S 1'lli. stale!Wt wtt I u.m1c1w1. ooumy Olrk 1r 0!'•119t eo.wiitv lfl Coa•t•I tefl'lllt'f'1h11"11 w111 ,..,. PUBLIC N~CE Dldfl'IMrU.lt1S ,_.. ...tWHfl •S •nd •O, tfll•flll ,..,... Vlll w.i""" will rer191 Wtwfffl ff and!-----~=-----£ PllMl:lhl\IOr ...... (.Mteo.l"lllllllt.. •1.'nll•ltrllfnCIW•l11,.wfllt.5S.. 1-IMJ OK. a, 101S .. JM.'-IJ,, ~"?! MOTIC•TOC•IOITOttS .,.,,...~ TUIESOAY IU ... llllOll COU.TO"T"" STATI O" CAU ..OlllNIA l"Otl: TMIC:OU.TTO•OlllAMCM: PUBLIC NO'l1CE A41al 1-IMJ' •.3 lfl llllMltttrol IN ll1talldHEl.EH ..OTICITOCllllOnOl:S O.• C.Sl(Kl!LS, DKuWd. SUP9•1ottCDUlllTOPTMa- SlcolldlllQh 11 :16•.m. SKDfldlow •:t•o.m. WIEONl!SOAY Fln;IPllQh 1:111.m. 4.2 First !OW 7:011.m. 2.4 S«oftcll'llfl'i 12:141-.m. 3.1 SKDfldlow 1:01p.m. 1.1 SUllrl"' 1:00•.m., 11114 :1111.m, Moon rlwst:»•.m,. Slh IO:Uo.m. NOtk.1 It ti.t'tbt gl-to cl"ldlon fllvl119 tl•lmt ... lftt.t t"' Nld ci.c.. )TAT•OPCALIPOlllNIAPOll -.ot to lilt llolldcltolms ill tl'lll9"1k•ol TMIClOUMTTOPO• ...... llW c:19r11 ol ""' "-Id t~ Of' to ......,. -""' tlltm to the u.-rtl.,.cls!tht lnU.MattitrtltllWEttltletHAZl!L oftkl ol Sfl!WART, WOOOlllUFF, a .... POlllDl!llt.OecnMd. FRAZEE -AltOl'IMYI •I Uw -1oss NDtlc• II llll"tby QlYlfl to """°"' ••• , 5 lllvlno ct•lmt •linl 1111 Mid cltclto 1------------1------------INOrlh,...n t.-~ll•lO'XllnllWclly .,_WtlltMldci.1m1ln ... oftklfll Of Stnta An•. In°"''* Glllfllt, .... h PUBLIC NOTICE •.tt• o1t1e• is ti. pltce of btn!...u., tt111 c1w1t o1 ""' ....,.,." <-' " to PUBLIC NOTICE ,....,. "'""II tM undlr"ligflldlt tt... !------------!-~----------· 11111 Ulldtf'slgnl'd In '11 ._tleo P8rtlfr>. oflkoOI LESLIE MANN,Jlll.,A....,.., 5UPE1t101t COUlllTOFT"E STATEMEHTOI" WITHOlltAWAL ••CTtTIOUS BUStN•ss ,,. to ..... •il.te. SKh U•lmsMtllllW .. Llw, ... Nlttlt ~,....., A¥1., lfltlll 5TATE OFCALIFORHIAFOR l"ROMPARTN•RtHIP lllAMISTAT•M•NT MCK......, YOIKlltt'S """"lie""" Of' Otv ··' Po1Mn•. In Lff A ..... , THECOUHTYOFOltANGE OPl!RATIHGUNOl!lt ,.... lollowl1111 IM'""" Ii eolf"lll llUSI• llA'Hftled ·~ tofo,.w ld wlll'lln lour OMlrllY . .tlld'llltttrollkohUllpl-No.A·MOSt FICTITIOUSBUSINl!SSNAME· nKSH· montht.ittrtl'lllrirltpubllt•lklflolthls ol Minn• II""' \lfllN,..,..... In .ii NOTI c IE 0 F HIE A It I NG 0 F The IOtlO•ll'>ll p!lr\,O'I h•S wllhdr_,, IE x E c UT Iv E s .. u NA .. nof~J ' .,. "'91'trl"'"-'"Jflcl lowlcl KtMt. M" PETlflON FOR PROBATE 01" WILL •s 1 91neral 111rtner lrom Ille MASSAG E, 1121 W. SOuHI Slrtet, u:Ti:hSTATES BANI( tlllms With I .. flKff""Y ~ AND I" 0 R LIE TT ER S p1rtn1rsnl11 Ol)ef"lll""' under lhe Ile· .,,,..lm,CA9H02 E utorof ti. Ill nustlllllled0f'~•salor'9Slld TESTAMENTARY lill°"S b\111._Sl namt-of MADERA OOroth' ~ S.1-rth, 2•71 W. ol~dK.c:..,lw 1'illlln ftur rftOf'IUIS tof1t' ltll flr&t Eslate ol MA URICE GOULO, CllEATIONS•tn.ctGr•ceU .. ,Gosta Llnc:olnNo.1•,A ... ri-/m,CAftlOI STEWAlllT WOOD•UI",. ,.lllAl.EI! pUlllOcatloflolDl/sJIOOU, Oecffwd Mew. C•Hforni•. Tiiis IMn.ll'IHI Is t .. dllcled b'I' .,. ~ .....,,.. .. i.ww • O.ltdOtc. tJ, 1t1S NOTICE IS HEllE8Y GIVEN , ... t The UcllUous busl11ess .. _ sttlf· c11 .. 1 ... 1 .,~ ..... SI MARIEIE.OOLOPA.1118 JEA N GOUl.0 /las lo led llere l<1 • ""'"' f<H' ll>e 11<1rtnershlo wn filed on Dorolh' 51-1-rth W..1'11 • l!llKVIOroltlll..itl ll'l itlon lor P1oba!e ol Will •nd Tor 15.-T·2•·151<1 ll'lll C""ntyolOr1n.,.. n.1$ 1lll•""n1 w•s llltd With the ,..,,......._ CAm•t ollolWldlqdtnt. wat\(e of Letters Te1t1-mentary IO Ille full Nam. -Addfts~ol IN~ County Clfr• ol Otange Go<Mlty on Pl.lbllWd Orin,. C•••• D•" -.. L.DUIMAlllN,J•. Petl!lo,.r rt-terel'>(e To Wll•Cll !s m-Wlllldl'•wlftll: DllC.tmlll1'11, 1t1S .... r'"' • ~,..,.09,..,a,.., lor lurthe• p1rtlcu1ar~. and that 111e s.u, M. •nd Johft L. Newton. m~ ,._... Jlfl.6, 13,20,2f, 197• 2'-76 ......... CAt17'1 Time1ndp.l.c1oltit1rlngt.,.,,..,,.,has v1st1 Hog ar, Mew11orl Be•cll IP\AlllihtdOrAfl!llColUDlllYPlfol, "'-'Clll...,.Oraito1COlsto.ltrPl1ot, ~ UI fo, J1nu.1ry 10, "''·at 10.0D C..lllol'nl1'2'60 CIK.16,1:t,JD, lt15andJ1n,6, lt1• PUBLIC NODCE DK. l .. Zl,J0, 1'7SMMllJ.,,&.. tfl'I •.m., In !I'll' court'°""' or Oe!IM'lment Slgnea ~ SallyM ,Nttwton , •n1-1s'-----.,;:-----I "7>15 NO. 3 OI wkl ce>u•I . at 100 Ci vic Cente• · ~ I s-1 ... Dtl""' Welt. In Ille Clly of SMtt" Anll, Pllbllihed Or..,119 c .. u 0..lly Piiot, -----------~! NOTICl!TOClllEOITOH Qo!Uorn,., C.c.U,lO, 1nd J111.•, tl, 197$ 4 1+75 PUBLIC N~CE SUl"l!RIOR COUlllTOt<'fHE PUBLIC NO'l1CE O.tedJenu1,y2, 1976 V & & STATE O"CALI •OlllNIA l'Oll IRWIMGOLDRING THE COUNTY 01' OlllAltOI! 1S3ltllllll"'"' B1-.ds1111• ~ PUBLIC NOTICE "tCTIT1ous •us11o1Ess A.-.U M011c• o,.IAL• o• """"'rt1HUt1.Cato111 NAMESTATl!Ml!NT In tllt-Miller 01 HI• E11•1• Of abLl"ltOP••TYAT A.ttorftlr .... Pwllllone, n. toU-11'!111 p+rson b doing busl· EL11A8ETH e. HINES 1!1o11 !!.-n P•IYATIU.LI Publlslwd °'""ye Co•~! 0.ilr Piiot NOTICl!fo1:':EOITOltS nlVTft<' p VE E ELIZABETH Bll:UCE HINES alloO AlAUlrltlT J.,,...ryJ,t,lJ,1916 IS-lb SUPERIOlllCOUJl,TO•THI! H U. AS DGE,.QUC.... known •s ELIZABETH B, HINES. ....P61Mt STATl!O .. CALIPOllNIAl'Olll -°'1""· suii. 8·J, M1w1111rt BH<;I\, CIKHWCI. ,....,..°""' .... PUBLIC NOTICE Calllornl4ottMO Molle. ii Ml'fby gl¥e11 10 C...:lllton. ttltl .. C..l"-"'ilfw T"ECOU,.,TYO,.OlllANGIE Oon1ld E. O.y, 155MIOt1lt•,C:OS11 i..v1...,. ct1lms. 1galn1t tllt said dKI· •c-tyll .... "'-"" 5UPEll:IORCOUJITOI' THE lft 1h• ""'":~~Ill• Esta!• ot ""':.~,· C.llllornl• '2'2• dent to 11 .. Hid cl•ltni In lfle ollke ol lntrw Mtttlrof lftl IEttat• all .IAM£$ STATE Ot<CALI FORN IA t<OR OOf<IAL O R. SMITH , O.ce1M'd. ••• :;..~_bll,, ,, .. SS Is COfl!lll(ft!d """.., 1 ... 11'111 cltrk of t ... alor•sald court Of' lo KAR RISON (lltAVEHS, De~. ,,,._ llf'IWfll thtm lo the unoertl{lr*:I 11 the Notk• I• "'"llt , • ....., 11\11 ._ ...,. THIECOUNT't'OFORANGE Nolke Is l'lllrlby 9l'tln lo uwdltors DoflllldE.Oit offke ol HARll:IS ROBISON _ Al· _.......,wlllwllat1H1¥tll-Mie,W10t No.A~ ,ha¥lft11 claims •0tlnst 1r.. sakl llKll-Tiiis Jtatement w•s fllld wUll Ille 1or,,., 11 Uw -sso !io. Fi-r SI., llltwl1'11111'1derolJM111f',1'7i,.M._ MOT ICE 0 F H IE A JI IN G 0 I' l»ft1 lo 1111 Mid ClaJms In the offkl ol COunty Cler-of Orin gt County Of1 Suite tlO. In t"e tlly Of LOI AngeJn. In dfk• d G. W. ST ACKMAN, IC Trust PETITION FOR PROIA TE Ol'WJLL 11'111 d t-ni .. , .... •lorei.ald <""'1or10 O!Klt<T'lbtrlt "" LosAngelesCO\Hlly,•hkl\1-oltke R••I Etl•I• Olrhl•n ot S.c11r11, A N D , 0 R L IE T T E Ill s -11"""' to'"' 1111der1!gned al.. . . ...S01'11 ls 11'111 pi Kl of 1>vsln111 ol tflt Ul'I-Pa(ltlc Mall-• IS•n-, m SOvtl'I "°"' TESTAMENTAR Y fo111t1 Of BOYLE • AT WI LL AMO P\lblli.lltd Otlfl!l'I Co.isl O•lty Pilcll der"'9tW11 In toll mll\•r' Pl'rtalning to Streit, '01h fl oor• LOI Anotles, E1!1t1 OI CAllL F_ '!oCHUHOLZ. ROBINSON, Allorneys •I LAw, 11!1 O.C.JJ,lD,•ndJ•11.• ,, 1915 ., .. ,; will 1st111. s .. c11 <l•lms with'""' ClllloN!i.11 t00S1, T111Pl!Dfll 6U.12ff. C.c•a..., so.rtl'I l[<l(lkl Avenut, In 11'111 Oly ol ' ' MCHYl'Y YOIKhers mull IM fillc:l CH' Co11ntr of LOI Aft1•tes. Sitt• Of NOTICE IS HEREBY GtVEN Iha! P1~n1, In Los Anoel1s County, PUBLIC NOTICE IH'Hlflled •s •lorts•ld wl!llln lour •Clllfonlk,tetMlllQhnlMclbntMdo PHYLLIS H. SCHUHOL Z ... ~ Ille!! Wflkh litter oftlCI l' , .... place ol bl.isl· monlM•tMrllle firs! PllDllc.ttlonol this .... Mid~ to<ontlffl'lllloflb'l'Mld herflfla llflllion tor Prob.lie ol Wlll •"" ..u of lhe unOe,.,ltned In 111 ,......... notki. S..--lor COur1. ell tM "91'!!. lltlt lld !or lisulnet of Letter~ Te111mer11ary to perttlnl"ll to s.tld Hlllt. Such clllmt 5-1•Jt 0.ledJlfl.2• 1.,, ''"""' ol wld ditc••ucl tot thl ~all tl'le ll'lllloner ri•ference lo -•<n '~ •ltll ! .... MCHMrr 1t01Kfle•l mull be SUl>t!RIOR COURTOFTI+E PAULA. HINES, JR, dMll'IMld•ll trll rlQhl, lllllM!d ll'Cifrnl ma$ tor furt"'r oarllcullrs, And llw! llltd or IH'twntt!d IS 1tor111kl within STATE OF CALIJIORNIA l'Ollt E .. cutorollll• will thlt !ht Hiiie ol uld dK•IMd '-M;• the time Ind pi,c, ol nt1r ln11 the \amt 1aur monlllS to01r llw first pubUc.atlon THIECOUNTYOFORANGE ofwlddecldl<1l flUlf'ed b'l'OMt•llon ol I•• CH"olPltr'wl•, • The agreem ent allows her legs to remain un- shaven as long as they are covered by navy blue or black opaque stockings. • " ... Many younger servicemen a nd their "'ives are often unable to adequately manage their financial affairs. thereby provoking additional problems f or themselves. 111\bffnsei lo' J"<1u.1<y 10, 1~16.al 10:00 ol lhlsnollc1. "" a...eu I Id a,m.,int,,.courtroomotOe1>11rtment D&t.d0ec.ll,lf7S ND,,CE 0 ·,. HEA•tNG 0 ,. MARllll,ROllSOM otlltrlhlfl0t fl.lilkllllonlotl'Mtoltt ~ · AIWM',.-t·W• dlcffltcl,11tllilrt1-of'9Nlh.lllll'llllO NO. J ol will court. al 700 Clwk ~\tr ROIERfL .WITH-P'l.TITION l'OR PRO•ATE 01" WILL UIS. ,.,_,St. Ill tt. ctr1tlft rNI P"OMr1r ,,._..In 0..1 ... ....,.,,,Int ... Clly or s.nta Ant. Ll0't'OS8ANKCALIFORNtA AH 0 ,. 0 JI L I! T TE • s '"'"''" "" Co11<1ly of o, ... , •. Stal• of' Former Oregon Gov. Tom McCall returned to the stat e Capitol for the first time in his current ro le :as a televisio ri r eporter-commentator. McCall, who left the office of governor last January. covered the m eeting of the Land Conservation and Developme nt Commission as the commission consider e d app lications fro m \1arious local governments for exte ns ions or planning de- adlines. McCall now works as a re- porter · co m m cn t ato r fo r Portland t elevision station K.<\.TU. • King Juan Carlos celebrated his first birthday as Spain's monarch. Carlos. y.·ho turned 38, spent the day quietly at Zarzuela P alace. He became the country's first ki ng sin ce the Spanis h Civil Wa r fol lowing C..eneralissimo Francisco Franco's death late last year. • A bulletproof 1944 Mercedes 770K, built for German Luftwaffe chief Hermann Goering, was sold for $160.000 at the Kruse Classic Auction Co. 's annual classic auto sale in Scottsdale, Ariz. The buyer . who re-fused to be identifi ed . s aid the car y.·ill be used as part of a traveling display "'hi ch eventually v.·111 become stationary, '"hopefully in the San F'rancisco area." The dis play will illustrate a h is tory of • <\.merica's m ilit ary conflicts and featur e t he Slf2·ton ~1ercedes , World War II German airplanes and re· lies from the Spanish-American war, the buyer s aid. .. SOME JOINED the service becaus e they were neglected by socie· ty, and because of this they may be poorly equipped emotionally to be parents :· The Army and Afr Force already have in· augurated n ew pro- grams to cope with the child abuse problem, while the Navy said it is preparing to establish a s imilar program for itself a nd the Marine C-Orps. UNDER THE Army's plan, s pecial ''child advocacy program of. ficers" will be assigned at virtually all bases. "The problem calls (or identification of c hild abuse cases, protection or the child's r ights and professional help for the parents,'' the Army circular said . Colllfvrnl•. En<ulCH'solthe TESTAMIENTAll:Y Lel......-S.CA· Cllltortlll, llWflcllllf'IJ NM:rlllld at Dlle!IJ1nuary2,tt76 wlllolwiddl<l"deflt. Est1te ot 8EATRICE.8 . PuOllMlltdO!'•noe:COolst,OillrPOol:, lollow$,to-wll: JOHNT.HELMI CK BOYLE, ATWILL ..... •OBIN'°"' TOMl...INSOH. Dt<e1se<1. • JM .•. \J, 20, 11, 197• u.16 ..Of..:tOltli mkllr•I lllhrKt H 1 .. tt5SWl~IE11Cllyphn,An. 17'SffllllE11ClldAYI. ~TICE IS H°EREBY Gl\tEN 11111 Nf1t In common o1 llftlh In Or .. lfll .. woocl,C.M>Ol Pa......_.,CAtU01 OOlllOTHY JEAN MATZOORFF Otuflly c;...!lfomlto --a 9otH1 ltUl'17-•to7 P\lbl l"""' Oranoe Coast Oa!ly Pl!Ot, !TOML INSON I and OONLAO 8 . PUBLIC NOTICE I.ands d.ttcrlllld.; ""'"' 1 W • ~ .Attomeii'l<H',..llllOfter Dot<. II, Jl, lO, 191, ... dJan. 6, 1t1• TOMLINSON 1111 llted herein to lltllllon . ch ... W EJ!hllllt A lfl tMld :).2)4) _. Publ11>1>e<1 or1<1~ Co•st 0111y Pilol •m-1s 1or Pl"o09t• °' '"' w1111ne1 tor l!o!.l*llC• con:lld ..n.1611 6+63 OlrlClal ~ ..i.t1111rr5,6,IJ,l911 17·16 ol L1l11r1 Tesl1m1<1ttory lo 1111 s-1•'6 of()r ....... CourJty,C..l~.-'!Y"'• l------------l11t11tlorltr rwf1rence to """'lch Is llllde NOTICIETOCllll!Ol'TOllS I• M Mid 11'11•..-.SI ~llnl lo fhlo PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE for~ ptrtkut•rl, Ind"'-!""' .... A .. MI .00*'6 d9c:lm.I lft1-st IO'f'lllY ,.. --====.,--.,---,.,.,----11..,.and p.t.ceofht1rlno 1111,,_-. h.ls s..wtw°""1.rtllol (lll'tlld fl'OPfl Sttflcllrd Oii ~of •ICTITIOUSBUSIHES' l-c .. =,"""•"•"•"•"•"•"'"'"'"""•"•"•"'•"•~; ... "' fOf" J ... 111ry 10, 1916, ., IO:OO Mot.MCat........... Qllloml• lor thtlr on.._~-NAME 'TATEMENT ro+OTI CE IS HEll:EBY GlllEN 1 ... 1 a.m., In 11'111 courtroom of 0.P11r1menl .. c-tyof0r.... 81119111911. The lollo•lno;t ~•1o11ns •re clolftllbusl· 11'111 City CO\lntll of tllol cu, of Ntt....,.,,, No. J ol Hld court, 11 100 Clwlc c.ent« lfl tllt Mitter ol thl' Est1t• ol RUTM Ttnfllol Mlt cffl'I lft llw!\11,._.,ol -•s: Be.ell w!U llolll a PMbUc l'llllrlng rt· Drlw 'lftst. In"" City of SMll• Al\I, JULIAQIURCHlt.;1.,,0.U.W!I. 1111 Urllltd $11111 Ofl tonflrrnltlon of· BRA.MAN'S ARY GALLEll:'t', 11'tU ~rOlnQ O.-dln1nce No. 16)1, !Jloll!D, AN Ct!ltomll. Mltl<t IS fllftll' Qt¥1fl It Cl'ldllon l•I•, O' ••rt t•11'1 •11111 lllllM~I Mlgno U1 SI., Pounta!n llill•r. CA ORDINANCE OF THI!: CITY OF Dlle<IJll'l\ltry2,1•1• hl'lll'O C:llllflS tplflSt IN lo.lid dKI-~bynolt9Klll' .. br'*"""' 91:)111 NEWPOlllT BEACH REZONING lt091!RT•.LltKElll dtl'lltofl ..... dcltolmslftlllloffk•ol orTtvR0....lfll .... pr(lfttr1, ..... K•rnetl'IJ•mH 8r.tm1n, 11SUS."" 11 TClmto!.I Cir., Founl.in Vall1y, CA ~"' Oon111 Joyce 8r1m1n, llSU S.n!a Totn11o.1Cir., Fovnt11n V1U1r. CA911U! This DuslnHs Ii conducted Dy 1 OtN•ll lllf'1lllr"1!p Donni J. Br1m1<1 Thi' S1•tlmtnl ••s Tiit!! wltll the CO\Hltr Cltrk 01 0••11111 County on O.Ctmblr 11. 197) ._, Pllbll"1ed Q,1nge Co•sl Qally Pllol. DK. H, 2J, lO, 1t7)andJ1n111ry 6, 1'116 •n1.15 p llOP E Ill T"' AN 0 AM IE N 01 NG 1•N9rtl!Hl9"1 ..... An.,s.+ .. no tlll (19rk of '"' "°"'Mid ,_, ot .., TlflPtfUl'ltof lfl'IOlll'l'f llldtllll~· DISTRI CTING MAPS ~3 ANO·~ Lot.A ...... s,ca.tlttl PNWnlllllmtolheYl'Clers.JO'llll•ttlw ldwtlhllld. (8FU)A0MOOR·PACI FtC VIEW). A~, tor "'llllofllr offlu ol EARL. OAKLEY Wld EOGAR Bldsoroffln to M In wrltlllllfldwlll NOTICE JS HEll:E8Y FURTHER: Publlll'llld Oranoe c .. st 0..Uy Piiot J, MELOllONE, Attor ... 'l'S al Ww, '17 t. r'9Cliwd at 1111 .. WIMlll oflltl tot GI llEN th•l l""S.111 puDUch ..... !ngwltl JW1111ryS.•, 13, 197• 16"!• Soulll Oll¥1 SI., Sulll 1111 In h Otyol Wl'f ti"" :::,.1111 llrsl Pl*kltlon beheld on the 11111ci.yolJ•n1111"y, t"76. LoS ...,..._ .. ln Los """''"County, hlrwfMld Mt1ot11i.. 1111'111hourof1:JD P.M. In !he C.-.:11 PUBLIC NO'l1CE -"'<ti tltttr olflu 11 011 pi&C9ol Dull-DltMDK.tmllllrK. tt1t Chlmbtr'' ot '""City H1U o1 ttw Oty of nKS ol tlW lllldlri!Qfltd lfl aH lnlttln SECURITY •AOt<IC Newport 8'«11. Qotllol'flll, M Wflkl'I ------,,.,,=------llltrt91fll~ lo Mid Hiatt. Suth ~"" NATIONAL llANlt 11 .... Ind 111.ce '"Y tonct 111 ~ tn-•1m Mlfl ti-. l'll<llUIFY -lllt'• l'l"Mft bil •vA.C. ,.,. .. terttted "''' •ppear a<1d be hNtd NOTICl! TOClltlOIT'Oltl 111111 •· prlMfllff •1 aforl!Wld wttllln TrvttOtlklf' tr.er eon. ;'!,;~~':~~=~=~A"='" ._ mofllhs tltlr 1111 fin! publlc.llon Eacutarof tfl9 Wur1 UQI09 nt•COUJfTYOPOtlANO& olthl111Ml(ll. Ettll•ol Nldwa.dlfll City Cler-DllotlDHlffltltrH, 1t1S JOlllPM '· .IONISI c1trofNew1111rt8ttcll ""·.......,. llobtt11...0turc11111 11111""'oi,...ic....,.. Publl"""' Orlflll' COISI Diiiy Piiot, In lh1 M1l11f'" •I 1111 IEttlll of IEmclllorolttMwlll .._""""'~'919 -----------J..,11try•,l•7• 41 _7• PATRICK ELLElll JACOBAZZI 11<1 .. i.ekldKMlnt Tlt:--PATRIClt E. JACOllAZZI •kl lb.tll.o.t.KU:T_. ........, .... ~ '-----------~ PA Tit I CIC N. JACO BAZZI , a-A •DOA•..1. M•LctllOlole PllblltflM Or11191 a.st Oofly ...._, --=======~-1-PATRICk NICHOL.IS JACOllAUI, M11r9'111C""w P9(.,J0,11,lt7SandJlft ... 1916 ...,.JS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS PUBLIC N011CE ... R09ElllT JACOISON,Dlc.euld. '"'""'°""$1Ntt MAME STATEMENT NOiie• II fllr•br olwn lo Cf'llCll1or.I Wlttnt TlletotlowinoP1"rson1 tor111otno¥· s-144, hlvl~ ct•lm1 '911nsl tfll said me.. .._ ........ C....__"'11 ..U 1!: SUl"IElltlOR COUlllTO•ntlE """'to 11 .. Mkl c1•-lfl ""'offk• ol Publlttlld 0r8"Cll Coast °"'" POOll, NOTIC• o• PINOIM00"N0 s T 0 R IE s IE R v I c Es c 0. STATE o..-CALll"ORHIA FO• .. ( ...... of , .... oforHlld c~ Of' to DK. JD. lt1S llld Jlfl. '· 12. 20. ,.,. SIGlrltlJllCAMT •JIPIC1'0Mnt8 11'tS.S Slly P•r-Circle," Bulllfi"ll J7, T"l!COUNTYOl"OlllANGe ,.....itlllmtottM~llh "20-1$ Sulte G.lrYIM.Colt+tornl1t1J1• .,4 ,.,1 oll!C~ of STEARNS. GROSS"!------------llolYllltOWMllllT Ops Ht•port Auto Su1>91y, Inc. a In.,,. Mllllr 01 1.,. Estate ol E MOOlllE. Attor,..,. M Uw, 15111 E. E JMurtfr.tw .. C..Htornl1 c0fl)or11!on. 1'01 'MJI Cols\ lllUTH HINKEi.MAN, OKtls.d. Whlttltr Shrd. lfl 1111 City of WtiltUtr, lfl PUBLIC NOTIC ~'!;:'MlfllOtf'MflCAOlllCY PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Hlan-y, Notwr>0rt 811cti, C..Uton"111 Notk• 11 hereby 11.,.<1 lo cftdihln LOll At919t County, whlcl'I lltttf'olllct HOo.ISlnoPI-ISroncll ALI. ALLEGED cases "1660 ,..,.klD cltolm1 •9111Mt the wkl dlU-Is lht p.t1e1 °1 buslnHt 01 tl'lll wo-NO'TtCaOPSALl!OP ·po ao •* Of Child abuse Wi}J re• Tl'lll business Is condlict..:I br I-uW: .. nl lo fll9 Wld Clt-lms In ttw olfk1ol ~In tit -tterl Plf"l•nlflD to NttSOMALPlllOl"lllTY ~..!..Glllforftitoft10t fDflllon. ttw cl9t* of thl etorewld coul"I w to Wld 11ltot1. Suclt clalms with tr.. Mt ..... Mt TO AU. INTElllESTl!.O AGENCfES,, quire examination by a OPS NEW PORT Pl'Hlfll llllm 10 '"' -rslgne<11t lhe _,,....., "'1<fllni fl'IUlt 119 flllc:l or In tilt 5uper.W COUf'l of ... Slot• ol GlltOUPSANO PERSONS: ""t d t Aft AUTOSUPPL't',INC. olllt• of RUSTON NANCE PftWf'llN IS •lol"tMld Mlttlfl IWr (»I~ lorlheCovfllyofOrlftO' TM"'---.olOf--tl .... • m 1u ary oc or. er an 'Thi' s111'"""' .... , 1n1c11 w1111 '"" Mt~Mic11:. & DICARO -Anon-en rr.nt11111t•rt11111rs1 publ1c11 ... o1tr11t ,,. ""in'..ttw °'""'"'at• o1 V10ANA QWSt ;'U'l ~-7..0.,,..., French President Valery Giscard D'est1ing initial exam, an Army Cou11t1 Clerk 01 0••noe eoo..n.r on 11ww -15s5E.O\apm1nA....,.,1ntt1e flOtlco. M eROSStA "-•VERNA MARY .,... Urtllfl °'""''~' "'~ 'd h 'II II t th U . ed S bo d h h 't I C d OtcMlber12,1915. cily ot Fulll-lion, In°''"" COul'llY, OMldOlc.t?,i1t1S Moss1a o.cffttc1. ,,_.,ll.......,""""'°TMi.1ottt1tW.... S8l e w1 y o e nit tales a ar t e osp1 a omman er ..-... o ...,,.chl•tt•ottlc•h t"'pttctoltJW-ettRIS•YA.JACOllAZZI Not1ctist11rillrtl¥1lltl'lltt111-llllllldCOrl'MfluflltvO.,.. ...... Act Concorde supersonic jetliner in may report the incident Publl$l'lt!I Oranoe eo.11 oany Pllcll, rwu of iN 1111c11ersl'o1Md lfl •II """"s MmlfllWllrl•ol1111 ......,....i11 ,.11•1"1,.1w....,tott111 o1 ...,., Utt. twlal to 111 -..,.,.,. May to pay an official visit to to law enforcement DK. '°· 19'5 •nd Jin. 1• IJ. ai, "''• """1"1""' to w111 '"1"'· sue"' tllkns "'°"pr .. wdlKHMI tl!QhKttMMstblddw Mftd•<*t> ..._1111'"'9dr · "'13-1J with 1"' nKKHrr _,.rs~ "9 STIAlltNS,CMltOISAMOORE , flnNtlofl ol MW SolJlll'ior C.ourl.lfl• UnlflCl"""tftlli Arff: I.At -Washington. agencies, if necessary. !------------1111c1 ., lll'""'t..t ., ''°'""" wllhlfl tSt1t •·......., ...._ · °""' JllMllrY tJtll. 1.,._ ~ ""offkltol HI~ St• ac.,i.s111111 °""" ... Gl·scard D'est·'ng made the Jn general, the Army PUBLIC N011CE ._months 111. t11111r11 put111ai1i.. ....,,CA-.. HAlllRY v. oou.. .111 .• 1m5 er... Y9fltllf'9 "".,,sen JtiM ,.1., -"--'· Gllthltnortlct. ,..,.ltllld Orlfllll ON-' Deity"'"'° ...._111., ~llfornl•, •It t1t1 rllM.1199 TM •Wl .. llOl'loftMMI_,,,..., statement while U .S. authorities said its program isl-----"M"•""~-----Oet.dJ1n.t,1'7• D1c.1'-2J.J0,1tt1M11.11n.,m• n 1..._1.,, .-1c1 ~""" CW11..0&111ilofltl'Mtlfl1t11Lo1MC11HI• pondered a decision on whether aimed at developing suP•1111o•cou•ToP HAROLOC.ELDER · ms.JS 11n11o1-.ui,111c11t1tr1gt1t,11ue,.min. torlulOlstrktofOrlflOtC-WV.s. t let th Fr h B "t' h · t I d .. t ' 11 h ltb CALlfOlltNIA E•cutorottll>twlll -lthltlhtHll .. oft.11ddlDl-.d JwnClpfs.lr-.Or ..... Co •• lU.-. o e enc · n is Je an emo 1o na Y ea Y couNTYOFOlllANOli ofwldOICl-de!lt PUBLIC N011CE "" • .,.,.. by °'*'"i.. of llW., """ bllfl ~lflld 1111 _,_,._ on U.S. soil. Powerful American families rather than re-101C1wkc:e11wr0r11re•tt lllUSTOM,NAlrltCI!, OCMrWIM ll"'r """ ... kl .-11on" .-t 11r ,.... o11111111• W\H ""(1111- eeological circles are demand-moving the child from 11111•Ani,cAtt1•1 McC011M1c••01u•o su,.•.a•cou•TOPCALIPOllN•• ._ofMldM•lld,11111111~•• ..._ .. 1etllfl'9llfkM4tY~ CASEHUM91ER .......... , .. 1-uw COUNTYO"O•ANOI!. all\, In 1-1'1111 tl&ll ... , clf'l•n..,.... ..... Hty of 1111 M#ftlfl '"~ ing that the plane be denied the home and punis hing 01•1m ISH•.a..,..,.._A..... CAHNUMa•111.t.1MS .,.._..,dftcl'lllld•: .. • an1.1emnllflOly,lfll~YolOrM01 landl'ng n"ghts on the g d "t. the parents .. SUMMONS(MARRIAGl!.I F•O••-.CA OllOSlllTOSMOWCAUM 1. Clf'llflclN et Mtl'llblnlllp No. d•< ldld 11111 10 •r•11•r• •11 roun I IS • '" , ...... mttrltge of PtU11ontr: Pllblltl'lld Orlt!Ot Cotll O•Uv Piiot, POllCMANOl!OPlrltAMI!" 1.it-11. s....i.s 1 .. Y ol IKofld LIOWll ltlvl"""""ll'll fmpKI ~ -too noisy. (Story, A4 ). • Gt~~lllD IN. DIVIDUAL AND OOLLY o.tANS SMtTH •nll Rilll)on· J.,. ... ,J.20,t1. 1•1• .,.,.,, tn 1111 Mttttr of tN ...,.,..1c.111 .. o1 H111s1111u1...i, •llOll•llM"Ollt CMpor.clClll, dWU.NllloMt Enrl"°"""'""' F'llllcr o:i.nt iS<DTTCHARLESSMITH SEA N PATllllCK WIL80UlllHE MCI 1-c.illlklml•C....llOl'atlofl. .vtef .... IPl.tl•ltOJ. Legl.s lati'on to closethe"'-m'ole gap or Interstate group therapy, counsel-MOTIC•t Yo11 "'" ...... ......_""' PUBLIC NO'nCE 01ANI!. 111eNE w1Laou111NE. Mlr«s 1. 1111sld•"1 M•mb•r•hlp 1111,...,.,.,, Mh *<l11M11Dt• """ in g and ch an g e of <-' _, ........ 1,,.1.,... '"'4illllll tw 11111""'°"Oh1C11t1...,. """,._,.,., Clr111k•t• NO. 1""' o.1dtfl ltlln ,,.... ....... '"""_ ........ : 5 freeway from Stockton to Sacramento County was ,_ --'• """' .... i.,. YMI .._..., ·...., flllwtt inolhtt'. '°' "*"" °' ~Ion. ,...,......11e«~• Tfllacwltllllllofaw.a..""*" .. environment are listed w1111111 • .. , .. Rt .. 1111 1111....,....._ 1-wt• Nlml. Co11ll9nll•cor111nit11t1. "...,.• u. ,..lllfllt .... ...,.., "''" introduced by an assemblyman who has ridden the ~ forms or treatment ....... NOTICITOClltlOtTOM .._ ..irkk Wllbllwftl _. ~ S11Curt!tk ...... ~ .. u..,,,.., tont•I Pl.u .. "'" l'ftlllt .. ...., route on horseback to dramatize his bill. Army olri·ci"als also are av1501 u1iw111 ","'"'"'~* ... ·a N1.A.fl111 l'-fllWllDOunllft ..... fl ... •ltlt"_, ...... """-.,... r9tlllltllfls o1 u1111 e.:· ••mP1r•r., ... 111111c1u1111 t• 'tN Molcelumne Hl.11 Democrat J-Garamendl plann1'ng telephone ~,.....•cldrt11111ra--~°""'.... 111111 '""' ro..-•n •rcttr •U 119 POl'•O"'-llllttllllll.,...ol'H• ......... ,,.,...,...,....,. ..... 111-•• • --... uc11. .......... ..... .. ca....,..•• 111t11to...r tt dwfl9ll tfllir -'"'"' WMl~r••c'"1•n,_lllnttllfi.: ¥ e.i,,..,....._ •• , .._.._...,. said bis bill would suspend the law that requires a "hotli'nes·• manned by .....,.,. ,.,. ... LH 1• lilfll• • •c-tvofor... S.-"'9tu'1Ct.W1"*""9M11Dlw""" 1t,•l....,...•1.ott.Tr.o.-.1r1at '*'""".,.....,.~·fllltlll:M 60-40 lit of Stat e highway COD!lruct' f d •th _...... lfl tfll-Mlll•r of lllt l!stll• • WI,__. WSMft Petrick ---o-ity of Or&flll, St-. of~ ft'ltdl 't1 VII ... ,, MtM4 a sp ion un s,wi trained volunteers t.To1ht1tttp011c11911t 011.11tT1tuoE wtN~ll!Lo , OMR1 ............ f'IM«I""""· .. ,.,_.,..,....11t...,.a.,,_. ...... ,. .... ._ -Soutbem California getting the larger s hare • .. """pallUOfler 1111 lllld•IJllltbl McMICHAIEL lkl GIAT•UOE .. n .. ........,.......,... tlMl4 Oft,.,... • WV " •• .,. ... MllCIM1 I I I ......... htl ,r•l•d ... • • ••parents anonymous'' _.,,..,..'fOlll'_..1 .... v.,_,, lr:k.MICH.u.1..o.c..-. ~11\tllt_...,......_ • ...._... ....... .,.iu•1111c:...tr ...., ........ .._._. Programs for group flll•wrHllfl•IWIOfl••llfll""°"'" HOiie• 11 "'''"'''""to'"' ,...,.._.tNscewt"' Dt••••• ~ ...... c..i:,. St•t•fMlit I• fl.i: ':'.;!:'; n• . A six-man U .S . congressional ~ommittee, th d tb ... ,...u..11111•--••• .......... le,...• "'Wit c111"" .--.. ..._ ,. Mo .. 1e °"'"' D:1'4--. ALIO ICNOWN as1 ,...,, ¥ta a11t1aawww• ......,. •• ..... l«led by Rep. Lawr&K-e H. Foant1ln (0-N.C.), erapy an o 8r,..,.. -.ic11CMtM1o1111,....cNiNM'lfl .. ._..AM.C1ilfonlta.1t1,...._,.a. ..,..,\.lfllft9~•ts.c..11t. ........... ...,... ..... ._... ~ educational approac•-• ,, ,_ 1,,11, ,,,,, _. __ i-1c1a111111cllo'11o11Mo1.,.....owt mt.-11 .. clo(ka.m. • .,......_ ... ,,..,.....,.,......,..wr11_....., •tW..-ic: ..... 1""0 .... ~ arrtvedtnCalrofortwodays oftalkswithEgyplian "to help pa •-nas ,...;.11 "';;;."W(htln'll,'l'Ollt#;:H i;'t.PllMftt"""'"..,...,.,..,.. ......... c.w.M....,1111Y.....,..., .-.~ .. ,..,...,. .... _......._., •• ........_.1 leaden. American officials said. ren .... cope _,,.,.~""'tro1tti.clllll'1mtY.,. ti.. 0111c1 •• CH11tlSTOPHl11t L. Nltl"9ttlMtw<fillllttfllMMttfllllld 111r11111J11t1 .,.. •tt,., •1 .,, ....... Ill · h F . with the frustrations of •I~ c1nu.1t11ng 1ni1111e11 ... .,. t.t.11tl"INTl!1t, •EST, 111T, •• ,.. .. .,....._ ~..,.., ... ,...~ ,.._••••:••tr. The group w meet w1l ore1gn Minister raisins 8 family." .,.,...,,_•t'fll~oiv1.-.. ,,. 11:1111EGl!.111, ooo o...,.... klwt. P. o. 11 k,.....,.,...... IMI •°""'" '""''· 4'•1111••'· TV c11111 atld ,......., 1o+t1aaw•...._M Jsm.U Fahmi and with Pr~ident Anwar Si!dat The Air Force Pf"'--""'-~~.tlllld~ .... ,oa1nt11tc11yofa1--._!I' •..,~., .. .._c_,.,,....,. -~. 111aiJL\11"'-"•Clfldt+"'·••"HIH. .... ~ ... ---.,•.., .......... :.,......_., d r ....-'dlllclWllOO'l,ln-''tlMt,CMb.MCI Rl_,..Olufl!Y.wtlklla.ttlrollk:lfk •• ,., , • _,...... .._, ...... ClllCfttllllor., ,......1_ ,_ before eparture. gram is similar. An Air we;no1"" "'._.. •• ,,..v"' ,....wdll'I'• 1NP'Kto1111111 ...... .,1111--.1111 .. dmlllltlfl. ""'41"*' 1n 11111~111 ''""'"w11c.11111"11-.M_.,o1 ,...,..,.._... . , ; 1be visitors, representatives on the House ln· F IN cOllrt, """'1c11 cO\fld '""'' I.fl 1111 ln•lt ftllltll'1 ...,...,,.,.10 ww....-.. tMtt MCI• WMlll. kit *'' t~ ... "",..... si-°" cOflflrlM!llll o1 "'' lfltltlMed "*"''"' ~ -•-•tlonal Affair& Committee. are Wiiiiam S. 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PolitieoS Watergate Appeal MARKET ADDS TO '76 GAINS Campaigners On Payrolls 'Unfair Trial' NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices closed sharply and broadly higher today in heavy trading on the New York Stock Exchange as investors stormed into action to keep a new year rally alive. For Coverup 4 "' The Dow Jones industrial average, whose 19.12-point gain Monday was the best in four month's, added 12.99 points to 800.82. By GARY GRANVILLE Of Ille 0.11.-fltlot SIMI Two hospitals once controlled by Dr. Louis Cella added personnel to their payrolls in 1974 who re- portedly did nothing more than work on Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. 'selection campaign. WASHI NGTON (AP) -A federal appeals court was told to- day that the Watergate cover-up trial was preceded by publicity which whipped the American people into a "white beat" and denied the defendants a fair trial. "We did not get a fair trial in this case," the lawyer for former White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman told the U.S. Court of Appeals. • CIA Agent Horwred At Funeral WASHINGTON (AP) - Richard S. Welch, a brilliant scholar-spy the embattled CIA could little afford to l05e, was buried today at Arlington National Cemetery, the first agent to be honored by a presi· dent's attendance at his funeral. President Ford, Secretary of State Henry A. J(issinger and CIA Director William E. Colby occupied front-row seats in the funeral chapel during a somber 20-minute service conducted for Welch by Col. Duncan C. Stewart, an Army chaplain. The President offered con- dolences to Welch's widow and shook hands with other members of the Welch family after the chaplain read from scriptures and led some 500 mourners in prayer. The agent's body was borne to the cemetery in a flag- draped casket. Welch, assassinated two weeks ago outside his home in Athens, was buried in a military ceremony. The President had waived restrictions limiting Arl- ington National cemetery to members of the armed forces. Meanwhile in Athens, police s~d they still have no clues that might lead them to Welch's three masked assailants. Officers said they have interrogated almost 500 persons including members of extremist organizations. The Greek government is of· fering a $160,000 reward for in- formation leading lo thf arrest of Welch's killers. Hinshaw Cases Atty. John J. Wilson said that publicity made the trial a cause celebre and created the "greatest, largest, most virulent situation'' in American judicial history. "The American people were whipped up to a white heat against the appellants in this case," Wilson told the six ap. peals court judges bearing the case. Haldeman, John D. Ehrlicbman and John N. Mitchell were convicted on New Year's Day 1975 of obstructing justice in the Watergate case. A fourth defendant, Robert C. Mar· dian, a sometime San Clemente resident, was convicted of con· spiring to obstruct justice. They are appealing those con· victions and the sentences they received but have not yet begun to serve. Peter M. Kreindler, a 30-year- o l d Harvard Law School graduate who argued for the special Watergate prosecutor·s office before the appeals court, said the trial "left no doubt whatever" as to the guilt of the defendants. "They were brought to account under the same system they sought to subvert," Kreindler said. William Hundley, attorney for former Atty. Gen. Mitchell, said U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica, who presided at the trial, did not probe deeply enough into the. possible prejudices harbored by jurors in the case. Hundley said there was "un· conscious thinking on the part or the judge in suggesting answers" to the prospective jurors. County Airport Chief R ecovering Orange County Airport . Director Robert Bresnahan is re· covering from a serious bout with pneumonia. A spokesman for Fountain Valley Community Hospital, where Bresnahan was admitted· last week, said today the airport chief is "doing satisfactorily." Betty Pa u 1, Bresnahan 's secretary, said family members told her he is '•getting better.•' Advances led declines by about a four-to-one margin. (Tables B7>. Turnover amounted to ..3,270,000 shares, up sharply from the 21,960,000 traded during the same period Monday. The NYSE high-speed transaction tape ran late all day. Prices were higher in active trading on the American Stock. Mesa Nixes Foster H onie Bid An angry Costa Mesa City Council denied 5-0 a conditional use permit for a home for foster children in a residential area Monday night and instructed the city attorney to cl)allenge the state law authorizing such a use. City Attorney Roy J lDle said that the city of Los Angeles had already challenged the law in court and lost. june insisted that the way to seek r~ was to work for repeal of the law in Sacramento. The council stuck to fts guns. however, and maintained that the law should be tested on con· stitutional grounds in addition to any approaches being made to legislators. The issue is over the establish· ment of a foster home at 550 Sturgeon Dti ve by an or· ganization called the Family Group Homes. Area residents protesting the home complained that it bad been in operation since Sep- tember and yet had not obtained a city permit. The planning s taff report on the application noted, however. that the borne -for a maximum of six foster children aged from JO to 16, and with a supervisory couple living in -is licensed by the state and bas met all state re· quiremeots. The report also cited the law • that angered the councilmen, the law which stipulates that for the purpose df zoning such a home must be considered a residential use of property. Use of hospital-paid employes in the Brown Cl!LLA · campaign is under investigation by both a Federal Grand Jury in Los Angeles and the Orange Coun· .ty Grand Jury, authorities said Monday. And a spokesman £or the hospitals said Internal Revenue Service agents have already asked for and received copies of payroll records covering the workers who manned campaign phones anchored in the hospitals. THERE IS NO INDICATION that either Brown or his statewide campaign managers knew the workers were on the hospital payrolls. Cella, California's top campaign contributor in 1974 with declared donations of more than $500,000 to 54 candidates and causes, is under investigation by federal and county grand juries as well as the In· temal Revenue Service. ! At the forefront of the investigation are allegations that Santa Ana physician inflated two hospitals• Medi-Cal and Medicaid reimbursements bases by illegally charging political costs to the hospitals. Brown campaign disclosure statements filed in Sacramento show that Cella and bis wife, Marian, take credit for contributing $4,806 worth of in kind services to two Brown committees. A statement filed by Orange County Friends or Brown indicates that Mrs. Cella in 1974 donated $1,806 in unspecified ''polling costs ... ' AN AMENDED STATEMENT of the statewide Brown for Governor committee shows that Cella con· tributed $3,000 in undetailed •'phone costs.•• Managers for both committees said Monday they could not furnish details covering the Cella con· tributions. Though a minority owner in both Mission Communi· ty Hospital, Mission Viejo, and Mercy General Hosoital, Santa Ana, Cella QY his own admission was in operational control ofthe hospital until lastf all .. It was in the spring of 1974 that extra phones ·were installed at the two hospitals to accommodate the need of at least 11 specially hired campaign workers. ~· Robert Zunich, controller at Mission, said he doesn't know who ordered six telephone extensions in- stalled in the hospital's personnel department in ; April, 1974. ·· Nor does he know, Zunich said, who authorized the & hiring of five persons in September of 1974, to m an the phones .... "THEY CAME IN DURING the evening hours so most of us never saw them," he noted. (See CELLA, P~ge A2) Hawaii Tour ... Don't Mix Trial Testimony-Judge Several neighbors complained about the home, saying that there was a lack of supervision, that the boys have used foul language and have walked around with their shirts off. Some residents said that the or· ganization running the home is a business, and that such a use of property in a residential area· will lower the values of their homes. Two neighbors SPoke in favor of the facility. Council members protested the state law mandating such a use and said that the home was being run for profit. Council Yotes Down · Estancia Band Trip Last year the Costa Mesa City Council agreed to give the Estancia High School Band $7,000 toward the cost of sending the band on a tour of the Eas t Coast in the bicentennial year. the council to ream.rm the al· location. By TOM BARLEY Of .. 0.lty ...... IUft An Orange County Superior Court jury was warned today that it must not allow testimony JI) Congressman Andrew Hinsbaw's recen\ly concluded divorce trial to affect their judg- ment when the· time comes to role on his guilt or innocence on bribery charges. Judge Robert P. Kneeland aslced any member or the jury who thought that be or she had become prejudiced against Hinshaw by developments in the dlvorce actlon to raise a band. There was no resPon.se fn>m the jury box. Judae Kneeland ttren carefully repeated bis admoniUon that Juron must not read newspaper accounts ot the tJ'ial or Hsten to radio or television discussion before they rpch their verdict. •He questioned tbe Jury today immedJately after rejecting de~ tense motJons ror dlsmlssaJ or three felony bribery counts on the basis that the prosecut.lon bad tailed to establitb a cue against the former county Uff.SIOI'. Hloabaw's two lawyers said their firal. witness in "bat they expect will be a two to three· week de!ense of their client will be former auditor-appraiser George Upton. Upton, who served 87 days of a six-month county jail term or· dered after be pleaded guilty to (See W NSHAW, P age A2) ''People here are helpless:• Councilman Jack Hammett said. "This is truly a business." Monday night leaders of the band returned to the council to say that the band was planning to go to Hawaii instead and to ask June pointed out that state law makes no distinction on woother <See HOME, Page A2) . No Good Samaritans MotoristA Ignore Plea; Girl Dies in Fire LAUR EL, N.V. (AP> -With his 3·yeai·· old daughter trapped In a naming bedroom, a desperate f ath~r trled in vain to flag down 11 passing cars In an effort to call the fire depart- ment. Tbe 12th car s~ped. but by the time firemen arrived at this small communlty on the north fork or Long Island Monday night, the two-story frame home had burned to th~ ground, taking the life of the daughter, Mae Helen Gerard. Harry G~rant. 56, and hi.a wife, Bertha, .U, both 1ulfered burns when they lrled to ext- inguleh the blue t hemselves. Anothar dauabter also was Injured. Three sons escaped wilhobt serious injury. Police said the fire broke out in a dowmtaJrs bedroom about 11:20 p.m., and Gerard fought lt with a bucket of water. When that failed , be ran outside to get help because the house bad no telephone. Police estimated that be WM trying to get help for eight to 10 minutes be:f ore a motorist stopped. Firemen actually received the aJarm from police, who received a tclcphone call from a neighbor who saw the names. Gerard-and daughter DoMa. 7, were list· eel in fair condition at a hospital ln Rlverbead, N. Y. 'n\e mother was lLS-ted ht poor condition. Band director Peter Fournier gave three reasons for the band's withdrawal from th~ Cavalcade of Bands tour of the East Coast this summer: The identity of the band and the city would be lost because of the number or bands in the cavalcade; the quality of other bands would not be high: and the high cost of the trip to the East Coast compared to a shorter visit to Hawaii. Band president Gary Sparks emphasized. that tbe band would perform at military bases and hospitals in Rawail, but added, ''We realize that we have lost: some of the bicentennial impact from the East Coast trip. but hope . You will still support us.·' The council denied the rt>Quest s.o. Council members said that the ball.a for maxing the original al· location was that the students would ~em lrom visiting his· tort cal Sites on the East coast. They dld not consider the same basil applied to visiting Haw all. Band officials have estimated that the cost of the Hawaii trip ...Ul total about $30,000, while the East Coast tour would have cost. ·• about $80,000. , D•llY fll lllt SUit PtlotG RETAINS GAVEL County Supervisor Diedrich Diedrich To Retain OC Gavel By WILLIAM SCHREIBER OC tllle DAllr Pilot 5'aff ) Ralph Diedrich of. Fullerton was r e-elected today to serve another year as chairman of the Orange County Board of. Supervisors. Su~or Laurence Schmit of Gatdm Grove was elected vice chairman. succeeding Anaheim SUpervisor R alph Clark. Both votes at today's board meeting were without opposition. tho~-Diedrich abstained from voting-t6l' bis own election. Diedricb's selection came as no surprise despite his emphatic statements last month he did not want another term as chairman. At the time, Diedrich said be would support either Schmit or- Supervisor Thomas Riley for the job as nominal head of the five. member board. But reports that Diedrich in· deed would seek a second term started mounting t•o weeks ago and Diedrich himselI changed hls stance from a position firmly against re-election to one of a non-committal nature. In accepting the nomination and election for a new term Diedrich said he considered it a .. great honor to serve even though it mearts a lot of extra work for myself and my staff." Diedrich conceded that· 1975 was "a tough year in many ways :>ut Orange County is in better- 5nancial condition now than any other county in the state." Reading from a prepared text. indicating that the election had apparentiy been in the works for: at least a few days, Diedrich said, "There are many major tasks in mid-stream and many new t asks that will start toward the middle of the year." Coast We a t h e r Sunny skies Wednesday. Warmer temperatures with highs of 65 at the . beaches rising to 70 inland. Lows tonight 35 to 45. I NSIDE TODAY Can Angola become .cmothtt' Vietnam? Prfu~wlnnblg re- ·µorttr-photographer Peter Arnttt, one of the most familiar bylines frcnn the SwtMa$t Alia tD<lr, aomzne1 tlie possibititiea. 89. l•dex ' f\2 DAIL V PILOT c l uescsay. January 6. 1976 Wo•an S~rea•s Kidnap, Rape In Mesa Ended A 25 -year-old woman was kidnaped and raped u.t knifepoinl at a Costa Meis a construction site this morning but the struggle ended when a isecunty guard heard her s t'reaming and the as· ~ailant ran oft Police said that the woman sul · (ered some knife cuts but she told officers that she also cut the youth in the fight Detectives said that a trail of blood that was not the woman ·~ from the construt'tion site at tht• Vista del Lago apartment com plex confirmed that the suspect was injured The woman, who was treated a od released by a doctor . was accosted by the youth in the parking lot of an apartment com- plex at 425 Merrimac Way at 12:52 a .m . Police said that he then forced her to drive her car to the con- struction site at l 555 Mesa Verde Drive East where the assault OC· curred. The youth fled on foot when the security guard approached. The descriP,tion was given of a white Front Page A J HOME •.. :-uch a home is provided by a business or a charitable or- ~anizat1on. He s uggested that one avenue open to the city would he compliance with laws against public nwsances. Richard Kaufman told the C"OtlllCll that the Family Group Homes was run by ,.,. general partnt'r~h1p consisting of himself Lmd two doctors. "l beheve there 1s proper supervision at the home.·· he said. "I believe it's true that somC't1mes the boys do r.uss and go with their shirts off. Rut I can't see fhem in an in stitution or a com mcrc1al zone · Council"oman :'llorma Hertzog sa id that she agreed philosoph1cally with the state that such youths belong in re· s1dences rather than institutions. but objected to the state prl'· empting the city. She suggested that perhaps such homes should be in higher density residential areas. · After the meeting, Kaufman said that the home would con- tinue until some action was taken against it. •'The problem is that cities don't want these homes," he added. "Th at's why they are mandated by the state." Hijacking Probe MANILA , ThC' Philippines <U PI) -Military authorities to· day were investigatin g the possibility th a t two young Filipino brothers who hijacked a Japan Air Lines DC8 jetliner were <'Onnected with subversive elements. Air Force officials said. TO SIGHT '·BEH I ND THE HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T Rrown lecturer. OCC Forum, 7 ·30 p.m . WEDNESDAY, JAN. 7 OCC DRAMA -"Th e American Dream" by Edward Albee, OCC Drama Lab Theater, Jan. 1·8. 8 p.m . Free. ORANGE COAST < DAILY PILOT .. T~ Or•n~ tou t O••IY P•lol, "'•th ""°'h • tOf'r'lb•"t'd tNt-Htw\ ..,.,H .. ,, ~IWd n., ., .... o..._ Co•\I Publl\flll'IQ con ...... ~IM'A"' rdOKln' ,.,..-publhMd Mond•v tN°"9'1 r ,.11.,., •or Co t• Iii-•,•, Nf'lwport S..-ch, M~l"'J1~~ ~·Ch I ')Unt•ln \l•U•Y. it'll""". ~.Od.,r .. H \ V•tltv "'"'° I "0""" B••<h S,O~;tn c,o..,, .. ~-f)Qlf' '"''°.,.' tcllhO" '' ovb"•""<I ~111<0.v• -~ O•;> Tn• l>'lllCIP•I P~bu.n111Q OI~ ••• , llO W.•f 8•v ~tre.t, Cott• Mt>4, c.1110<ni• t7H• Jack R. Curley "*'" p, .. ,.o.l\t •"«> GtM'" MINIO"' Thomas Keevll fidller ThomH A. Muf1lf'line Nl•,..CllncJ Edllor O..rles H. Loos Richard P. Nall JIHltl ... 1 "'-"•Ol"f C411'°"' Offices Lott~ .. «" 11 .. C.••,...<ffl'Sln" M..,,.1"91°" k.WI\ 1"1l .. Kii ....... ~·· ~lob.ott. V•ll•• UlOI Y ,., .._ el '91' D .... , t-•• , \ I youth, aged from 17 to 20, about Cive feet six inches tall, 140 pounds, thin, light complexion, light brown to blond natural cur- ly hair ot collar length. He was wearing a dark trench coat over a white drus shirt and d ark pants. Police noted that the youth ap· parently knew of the construction site a nd had pre-planned the location for the assault. Carpenter Won't Hit At Reagan SACRAMENTO -State Sen. Dennis Carpenter <R-Newport Beach>. said today that Califor- nians intending to campaign in other states on behalf of Presi- dent Ford want no confrontation ~ith Ronald Reagan. · · r certainly won't run around s howering bad things on Reagan," said Carpenter, co- chainnan of Ford's California t'ampaign, who plans to stump for him in New Hampshire. The President's national com· mittee disclosed plans earlier for California Republicans who served with and supported Reagan when he was governor to campaign for Ford in other states. Carpenter. a former FBI agent and one of Reagan's staunchest supporters in the Legislature. signed on with Ford in Nov· ember. He refused to identify other California GOP legislators who would work in early primary election states for Ford, but said. "There's a group -there aren't many of us." He and assemblyman Jerry Lewis CR-Highland>. who also was asked to travel for Ford, stressed they intended to strike a .. positive" tbeme for Ford and not track Reagan through s nowy :"Jew Hampshire as a "truth squad.·· "It isn't a big confrontation," Carpenter said. "We want to ex· plain why we prefer President Ford. You don't have to attack Reagan to do that and I wouldn't attack him." But he said, "A guy has to be ,.Prepared to discuss Reagan's governors hip, his successes and his failures." Lewis said so far no firm plans have been made for him to travel outside California and "there is some question of whether it's got· ten together." At least one GOP lawmaker supporting Ford read a news story mentioning hi" as a potential out-of-state S\umper and told the national campaign comm ittee no thanks. Assemblyman Dixon Arnett of Redwood City, who collided with Reagan over increased finances for schools. said he had no pro· blem campaigning in his own dis· trict for Ford and "assessing Ronald R eaga n 's years in California." Burned Body Found Near Marine Base The body or an unidentified man was found Monday in Tustin in a burned out car near the main entrance of the Marine Corps Helicopter Statiqn. An Orange County coroner's spokesman said today the body was badly burned and only a tentative identification had been made. That was being withheld until deputies are sure of the victim 's identity, the spokesman said. Tustin police said a n in - vestigation is under way to de· termine if the death was ac· cidental or a homicide. The car was parked on Valencia A venue just wut of the Marine base entrance. Woman Tbreatene Blast, Rob& Bank • CARSON (UPt) -A woman robbed a branch ot Security Pacific National Bank of $1,000 after walking up to a teUeT and threatenlng to "blow the banlc up" unless her demands were met Sbt'titf '1 deputies Hid the woman walked tnto the ~l Amo brBncb Monday and banded a note to Ute teller d~mandJn1 mone1. She then polnted to her ~ and threatened to blow up the banlc, dcpuUes .•aid. F.,...P ... Al IDNSHAW. • brl~ry cbarfes. bu tcsllfted u a prosecu:tion witneu ln the eur- ttnt trlaJ. Upton testified that he wu tbe recipient of stereo t(lUlpaient oven to lrlm wlthOut c~-by Tandy Corpor ation officials and that at least two sets were paased on to Hinshaw and members or tusfamlly. Hinshaw, 54. is acc~ed in n grand jury indictment of accept- ing stereo equipment as bribes and o r accepting a $1,000 . campaign contribution frorn Tandy Vice President James Buxton. wbo also appeared as a prosecution wit ness. · The Newport Beach Republican is further accused of soliciting a bribe from a lawyer representing Beckman l nstru· ments of Fullerton in return for his favorable action as county as· sessor in a 1971 assessment ap- peals hearing. Hinshaw spent two days int.he witness stand Jast week dunng the trial in another courtroom of the divorce action filed by his second wife. Thais Hinshaw. Judge Lloyd E. Blanpied Jr. has withheld his ruling on that action until the jury reaches its verdict in the current bribery trial. Mrs. Hinshaw, 48, of Newport Beach. is demanding a monthly support payment of SI ,500 and a court order that would compel Hinshaw to help meet heavy medical and hospital costs sus- tained by treatment of her multi- ple sclerosis condition. Hinshaw's lawyers said today that they expect to call him as a witness at some point in the de- fense phase of the trial. Police Probe 'Murder Try' OnIRSAgelu By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tll• 0• 11 y Pilot Staff Huntington Beach police today were investigating the alleged at- tempted murder of a U.S. Jn- t ern al Revenue agent after someone fired a shot into his mobile home Monday night. Anthony Gubbiotti fled the re- sidence in a p ark near Pacific Coast Highway and reported the incident to police investigators. He said following the 8 :35 ~.m. assault that he has r eceived threats in the past that he is a murder tar1et due to bis IRS in- vestigative activities. O nly one shot was fired , Detective Sgt. Monty McKennon confirmed today but it would be difficult to determine u the would-be slayer took deliberate> aim or fired at random. No one ever tried to carry out threats or violence, however. Gubbiotti told investigators. A thorough search of the area failed to turn up the slug or frag- ments of it, investigators said. a bullet hole was indeed found in IRSAgentGubbiotti's bome. Youngster's Cancer Fight Ends in Death SALINA, Kan. (UPI) -Carl Heart, who battled leukemia for • 16 months, died Monday one day before his 11th birthday, sur- rounded by m ementos of his dream vacation to Disneyland. When news of Carl's terminal condition was first publicized, area businesses and residents contributed to a fund to give th-- boy his biggest wish, a trip to Disneyland and a chance to see ~me movie stars in person. Carl, along with his parents, made the trip in November. Ac- cording to the 10-year-old, the hig hlight was visiting his favorite act or, John Wayne. Monday Carl woke up about 8 a.m .. sat up in bed and started breathing. heavily. ·'Then be lay back down and that was the end," said his mothe r, S heila Heart. "We prayed to God to take him easy, and he did.·· ~l~rted Shir-ley Grindle of Orange won re-election Monday as. c ha irm an of the Orange County P l anning Com - mission, giving her the com- mission gavel for the second consecutive year. Mrs. Grindle was appointed to the commission in 1973 by County•Sup ervi.sor Ralph Clark . Sandy Good's Bail Dropped To $20,000 SACRAMENTO CAP) -A federal iudge ordered one of Lynette Fromme's cl06e friends released without bail today and reduced the bail o f Miss Fromme's former roommate. U.S. District Court Judge Philip Wilkins said he thought the $50,000 bail for Sandra Good and Susan Murphy was too high. He ordeted Miss Murphy re· leased without bail and cut Miss Good's bail to $20,000. The two wome n are charged with conspiring to mail 171 threatenin g letters to business and government leaders. Miss Fromme, who lived with Miss Good, was convicted in Nov· ember of trying to kill President Ford. She and Miss Good are followers of convicted mass murderer Charles Manson . Both Miss Good, 31, and Miss Murphy, 33, asked to be released on their own Tecognizance but Wilkins said he felt Miss Good might leave Sacramento to be cl06e to either M iss Fromme or Manson. Miss Murphy. who has lived with the two Manson women from time to t im e, told the judge in a statement that she was not a Manson clan m ember. · Wilkins said he thought that Miss Murphy would not leave Sacramento as long as Miss Good was in custody. ''The court. feels that she is a follower in this m atter," Wilkins said. "If Miss Good is here, Miss Murphy will be here." The Thigh's The Limi,t TEL AVIV, Israel (UPI) -It cduld rank a s one of the biggest cover-ups in Israeli m ilitary history. The commander of the country's women soldiers a nno unced a ban on miniskirts Monday, saying that henceforth their khaki. military unUorms must drop below the knees. Col. Dalia Raz said she was acting on numerous complaints that the short-· skirted uniform now al- lowed and the resulting ex- posed knees and thighs were offensive to religious citizens. Current re(Ulations al- low Israeli female soldiers to wear their uniform skirts a lmost five inches above the knee. Mesa May Get Japan 'Sister' A cardboard box at the Cecil Heart home bulges with greet- ings a nd get-well wishes from across the United States, Europe and the Far East. Donations con- tinue to come in to the Carl Heart Costa Mesa may soon have a F\tnd at a local Salina bank. sil~rclty In Japan. The city council was told MOf\· Carl spent much of his last tew day ru1ht that negotiations are months undergoina treatment at under way with the city of St. Francis Hospital in Wichita. MJtata. population 1~.000 and 10 He was able to go home for both miles west or Tokyo, for such a Thanksgiving and Christmas. ret.Uon.shlp. • Contact. wltb the city have Mrs. Hear t aald doctors been made byTakaaki Ono of the thought the boy might not sur-Sumitomo Bank and Tom vive untilChrlstmas.butsbesaJd Maruyama of tbe Orange Coast he fought off one crisis after ()ptlmia• t Club on behaU o! Coeta another and spent a buutiful M••· hoUdaywiththefamUy. Maruy•ma s aid be hoped The ramlly knew d~lh was Im -youna people from lbe 1lller mln~tslnceJast weanesctay. cities would become lnvolv in exclun.ae vfllt.. ·'They w•nled to try aome n.w The council membert asked medication on him, butlberewaa Ono and Maruyama to report only a 25 percent~ that tt back at the Jan. 19 CO\Ulcil meet~ could have helped bim,'' Mn. ini on what costa would be in- Heart utd. "I was afraid lt volved In havlna a slster city In would kill him rifb~ there." 1 Jal)M. , . Mutilated Body :· New Sex €rime?;· By TOM BARLEY Oflllto.ttrpt ....... .. Sherl!f•a olflcers theorized to-. day. t. \ A sexually mutilated man whose body was found Sunday In S1lver~do Canyon may be the victim of an unknown klller wbaee prtrne targets appear to be ·homosexuals between the aces of 17 and 25 ye,ars, Orqe County lnvesUgators r efused to spell out the mutilations inflicted on . the body of the stiU unidentified , victim but acreed that. the killing : had sewraJ factors in common i ,, with a nu 01ber of other Southland · sl~p in the past two years. Motorhoine Fire Sends Driver Off Things were bot for the driver of a luxury motorhome that burst into flames after a n early- morning collision today with a wrong-way free way driver in Mission Viejo. The motorhome driver fled the scene of the crash near the Crown Valley Parkway over- crossing a nd the California High.way Patrol is sWl looking for him. "We don't know if he ran out of sheer terror or because the motor home was 'hot' - stolen that is," a CHP spokesman said today. The large vehicle burned down to its frame and investigators are having a difficult time determin- fag who it is r egistered to, the CHP spokes man said. Meanwhile, the wrong-way driver who s tarted the whole thing was taken to Orange Coun- ty Medical Center where he was listed in serious but stable con- dition with burns and other in- juries. He was identified by the CHP as Robert L . N unno, 31, San Diego. T he CHP s pokesm an said Nunno was driving north in the southbound lanes of the San Diego Freeway when the 1:50 a.m . crash occurred. '·Many of the victims are known to h11ve homosexual back· grounds.'• Sgt. Robert Reid said. "Tbe~ all fall wltbln a specific age group-17 to 25-and they were •ll mutilated ln a way that stresses what we b&lieve are the homosexual overtones of all these killings," he added. "But it's useless to say that we are looking for one particular killer," he stressed. "We .could be looking for a man, a group of men, a woman or a group of women-the possibilities are endless and we are looking at all of them." Among the mutilations spotted on the body of the latest victim. whose body was found near the top of Bedford P eak last week end , were cuts and scratches and burns, Sgt. Reid said. "There was one other signifi. cant mutilat ion," he added. But he declined to specify the nature of that mutilation. Several of the known 12 victims-six were found i n Orange County communities-· came from the Belmont Shores section of Long Beach, Sgt. Reid said. ''That's a homosexual-oriented area in the sense that there a re a number of h o mosexual bars there," he said . "It's possible that these crimes, if they are con- nected, had their origin in that a rea." Among the kiJlings being tenatively linked to the Silverado Canyon slaying are the murder of a young man whose body was found in the South Laguna area in June 1974 a nd the killing of a 19· year-old m an in the Irvine area in November 1974. Bel ore Prinaarg Sanford, Reagan In New Hampshire By the Associated Press With Presid e nt Ford in Washington and Sen. Henry M. Jackso n (D -Wa s h .), in Massachusetts, pres idential candidate Ronald Reagan and Terry Sanford had the voters of New Hampshire to themselves today as they toured the state with the earliest primary election. Santor~ former governor of North Carolina, began his New Hampshire campaign with a pledge to make it a contest "of is- sues, not just shaking hands.•• The Democrat, on leave as pre- sident of Duke University, called himself a "nonpolitician" and his campaign staff in New Hampshire •'inadequate.'' But be said be wants to bring "fresh and innovative and bold approaches to the s traightening out of gov- ernment." Reagan, form er governor of California campaigning for the Republi ca n presidential nomination, pushed his bus tour through the White Mountains, starting his round or morning ap- pearances with temperatures between nine and ii degrees below zero. 'He sipped coffee and a te doughnuts at a ski lodge at Mt. Cranmore and then watched a group of local ski instructors in a brief demonstration. ·'I'm having a great time. It J could only adjust the air con- ditioning, everything would be all right," he quipped. The President, who faces Reagan in the Feb. 24 New Hampshire primary, was back in Washington after spending Mon- day in St. Louis, where he spoke to the American Farm Bureau Federation. (Photo, A4) Ford's appearance was billed as nonpolitical, but he spent much of bis t\me praising his own farm policies. The President also told a group of newspaper executives be still plans to enter every presidential primary, although he will not actively campaign in each state. F ..... PageAI CELLA C·AMP AIGNING. • • Zunich emphasized that none of the hospital's medical employes was involved in the campaigning and that none of Mission's present operators was in- volved In the political activities. 1.lission Hospital personnel ty Friends of Br?wn, Califoniia_'s director Pat Wood, who was also governor received $~8,500 in Mercy's personnel chief tn 1974, Orange County contnbuti.ons, said she has already testified most of it !rom a Sept. s. 1~4, before the county Grand 1ury re· S500·a·plate luncheon at the Villa garding the employment of the Fontana in Orang~. political workers. . T he October, 19741 statement However, Mrs. Wood refused flled by the comnuttee shows to discus• detail• of her that both Smith and Norton con- j I testimony became ol the jury's trtbuted$1,000totbecommtttee. tn.strucUcm to her not to talk Lilted u a SS,000 donor to the ·- .about her tesUmony. Brown committee was Balboa THE CAKPAIGNING AT Mercy Hospital reportedly was heavier tban that at ita llllaion Viejo counterpart. Tbole emplo)'ed to man the telephones have alreed,y been ln· tttrogated by invaUaatora. One, a colleae 1Wdent, •aid tn an interview that be UDdentood he WU hired to work OJ' the Brown campaJp. HoweveT, be HJd bis duUa in- Insurance Company of Newport Beach. Althouab Cella, a regilt.ered Republlcaa, reportedly attended the Villa Fcmtua luncheon, he t. not lla~ed u a cash donor in the schedule of those present at the Orance fund-rai5er. Preaent at the exclualve luncheon with tha then Mure governor was his f atber. former 1overnor Edmund G. "Pat" Brown. volved calllni the bomee of ~-Ull'Bl> AMONG DONOU to Ptered vawrs of both fel'tie1 to . , the Brown for Governor commlt- •k election related qwUoml not tee that received UM proceeds for ~cally lnvolvinl Brown. electlon were noo-DemocraUc ·· u. •attdWoa to a $13,300 COG-party membua Loran .Norton trlbut.lon trom the Oraqa Coun· and Randall Smith. ••